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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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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #67423 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/67423)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 2 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 2 of 4)
-
-Author: E. K. Chambers
-
-Release Date: February 17, 2022 [eBook #67423]
-
-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 2
-OF 4) ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE
-
- VOL. II
-
-
-
-
- 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 ENGRAVING BY WENCESLAUS HOLLAR IN DUGDALE’S
-
- _St. Paul’s_ 1658]
-
-
-
-
- THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE
-
- BY E. K. CHAMBERS. VOL. II
-
-
- OXFORD: AT THE CLARENDON PRESS
-
- M.CMXXIII
-
-
-
-
- Printed in England
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
- VOLUME II
-
-
- BOOK III. THE COMPANIES
-
- PAGE
-
-
- XII. INTRODUCTION. THE BOY COMPANIES 1
-
- A. Introduction 3
-
- B. The Boy Companies--
-
- i. Children of Paul’s 8
-
- ii. Children of the Chapel and Queen’s Revels 23
-
- iii. Children of Windsor 61
-
- iv. Children of the King’s Revels 64
-
- v. Children of Bristol 68
-
- vi. Westminster School 69
-
- vii. Eton College 73
-
- viii. Merchant Taylors School 75
-
- ix. The Earl of Leicester’s Boys 76
-
- x. The Earl of Oxford’s Boys 76
-
- xi. Mr. Stanley’s Boys 76
-
-
- XIII. THE ADULT COMPANIES 77
-
- i. The Court Interluders 77
-
- ii. The Earl of Leicester’s Men 85
-
- iii. Lord Rich’s Men 91
-
- iv. Lord Abergavenny’s Men 92
-
- v. The Earl of Sussex’s Men 92
-
- vi. Sir Robert Lane’s Men 96
-
- vii. The Earl of Lincoln’s (Lord Clinton’s) Men 96
-
- viii. The Earl of Warwick’s Men 97
-
- ix. The Earl of Oxford’s Men 99
-
- x. The Earl of Essex’s Men 102
-
- xi. Lord Vaux’s Men 103
-
- xii. Lord Berkeley’s Men 103
-
- xiii. Queen Elizabeth’s Men 104
-
- xiv. The Earl of Arundel’s Men 116
-
- xv. The Earl of Hertford’s Men 116
-
- xvi. Mr. Evelyn’s Men 117
-
- xvii. The Earl of Derby’s (Lord Strange’s) Men 118
-
- xviii. The Earl of Pembroke’s Men 128
-
- xix. The Lord Admiral’s (Lord Howard’s, Earl of
- Nottingham’s), Prince Henry’s, and
- Elector Palatine’s Men 134
-
- xx. The Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord Hunsdon’s)
- and King’s Men 192
-
- xxi. The Earl of Worcester’s and Queen Anne’s
- Men 220
-
- xxii. The Duke of Lennox’s Men 241
-
- xxiii. The Duke of York’s (Prince Charles’s) Men 241
-
- xxiv. The Lady Elizabeth’s Men 246
-
-
- XIV. INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES 261
-
- i. Italian Players in England 261
-
- ii. English Players in Scotland 265
-
- iii. English Players on the Continent 270
-
-
- XV. ACTORS 295
-
-
- BOOK IV. THE PLAY-HOUSES
-
-
- XVI. INTRODUCTION. THE PUBLIC THEATRES 353
-
- A. Introduction 355
-
- B. The Public Theatres--
-
- i. The Red Lion Inn 379
-
- ii. The Bull Inn 380
-
- iii. The Bell Inn 381
-
- iv. The Bel Savage Inn 382
-
- v. The Cross Keys Inn 383
-
- vi. The Theatre 383
-
- vii. The Curtain 400
-
- viii. Newington Butts 404
-
- ix. The Rose 405
-
- x. The Swan 411
-
- xi. The Globe 414
-
- xii. The Fortune 435
-
- xiii. The Boar’s Head 443
-
- xiv. The Red Bull 445
-
- xv. The Hope 448
-
- xvi. Porter’s Hall 472
-
-
- XVII. THE PRIVATE THEATRES 475
-
- i. The Blackfriars 475
-
- ii. The Whitefriars 515
-
-
- XVIII. THE STRUCTURE AND CONDUCT OF THEATRES 518
-
-
-
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- Domus Capitularis S^{ti} Pauli a Meridie Prospectus.
- By Wenceslaus Hollar. From Sir William Dugdale,
- _History of St. Paul’s Cathedral_ (1658) _Frontispiece_
-
- Diagrams of the Blackfriars Theatres p. 504
-
- Interior of the Swan Theatre. From the drawing
- after Johannes de Witt in Arend van Buchell’s
- commonplace book p. 521
-
-
-
-
- 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.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK III
-
- THE COMPANIES
-
- ‘Has led the drum before the English tragedians.’
- _All’s Well that Ends Well._
-
-
-
-
- XII
-
- INTRODUCTION. THE BOY COMPANIES
-
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The first systematic investigation
- into the history of the companies was that of F. G. Fleay,
- which, after tentative sketches in his _Shakespeare Manual_
- (1876) and _Life and Work of Shakespeare_ (1886), took shape in
- his _Chronicle History of the Stage_ (1890). Little is added by
- the compilations of A. Albrecht, _Das Englische Kindertheater_
- (1883), H. Maas, _Die Kindertruppen_ (1901) and _Äussere
- Geschichte der Englischen Theatertruppen_ (1907), and J. A.
- Nairn, _Boy-Actors under the Tudors and Stewarts_ (_Trans. of
- Royal Soc. of Lit._ xxxii). W. W. Greg, _Henslowe’s Diary_
- (1904–8), made a careful study of all the companies which had
- relations with Philip Henslowe, and modified or corrected many
- of Fleay’s results. An account of the chief London companies
- is in A. H. Thorndike, _Shakespeare’s Theater_ (1916), and
- utilizes some new material collected in recent years. W.
- Creizenach, _Schauspiele der Englischen Komödianten_ (1889),
- and E. Herz, _Englische Schauspieler und Englisches Schauspiel_
- (1903), have summarized the records of the travels of English
- actors in Germany. C. W. Wallace, besides his special work on
- the Chapel, has published the records of several theatrical
- lawsuits in _Advance Sheets from Shakespeare, the Globe, and
- Blackfriars_ (1909), in _Nebraska University Studies_, ix
- (1909), 287; x (1910), 261; xiii (1913), 1, and in _The Swan
- Theatre and the Earl of Pembroke’s Servants_ (1911, _Englische
- Studien_, xliii. 340); the present writer has completed the
- information drawn from the _Chamber Accounts_ in P. Cunningham’s
- _Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels at Court_ (1842) by
- articles in _M. L. R._ ii (1906), 1; iv (1909), 153 (cf. App.
- B); and a number of documents, new and old, including the texts
- of all the patents issued to companies, have been carefully
- edited in vol. i of the _Collections of the Malone Society_
- (1907–11). Finally, J. T. Murray, _English Dramatic Companies_
- (1910), has collected the published notices of performances
- in the provinces, added others from the municipal archives
- of Barnstaple, Bristol, Coventry, Dover, Exeter, Gloucester,
- Marlborough, Norwich, Plymouth, Shrewsbury, Southampton,
- Winchester, and York, and on the basis of these constructed
- valuable accounts of all the London and provincial companies
- between 1558 and 1642. Most of the present chapter was written
- before Murray’s book appeared, but it has been carefully
- revised with the aid of his new material. I have not thought
- it necessary to refer to my original provincial sources, where
- they are included in his convenient Appendix G, but in using
- his book it should be borne in mind that he has made a good
- many omissions in carrying data from this Appendix to the
- tables of provincial visits, which he gives for each company.
- For a few places I have had the advantage of sources not drawn
- upon by Murray, and these should be treated as the references
- for any facts as regards such places not discoverable in
- Murray’s Appendix. They are:--for Belvoir and other houses
- of the Earls of Rutland, _Rutland MSS._ (_Hist. MSS._), iv.
- 260; for the house of Richard Bertie and his wife the Duchess
- of Suffolk at Grimsthorpe, _Ancaster MSS._ (_Hist. MSS._),
- 459; for Wollaton, the house of Francis Willoughby, _Middleton
- MSS._ (_Hist. MSS._), 446; for Maldon and Saffron Walden in
- Essex, A. Clark’s extracts in _10 Notes and Queries_, vii.
- 181, 342, 422; viii. 43; xii. 41; for Newcastle-on-Tyne, G. B.
- Richardson, _Reprints of Rare Tracts_, vol. iii, and _10 N.
- Q._ xii. 222; for Reading, _Hist. MSS._ xi. 177; for Oxford,
- F. S. Boas in _Fortnightly Review_ (Aug. 1913; Aug. 1918; May
- 1920); for Stratford, J. O. Halliwell, _Stratford-upon-Avon in
- the Time of the Shakespeares, illustrated by Extracts from the
- Council-Books_ (1864); for Weymouth, H. J. Moule, _Weymouth and
- Melcombe Regis Documents_ (1883), 136; for Dunwich, _Various
- Collections_ (_Hist. MSS._), vii. 82; for Aldeburgh, Suffolk,
- C. C. Stopes, _William Hunnis_, 314. References for a few other
- scattered items are in the foot-notes. The warning should
- be given that the dates assigned to some of the provincial
- performances are approximate, and may be in error within a
- year or so either way. For this there are more reasons than
- one. The zealous antiquaries who have made extracts from local
- records have not realized that precise dates might be of
- value, and have often named a year without indicating whether
- it represents the calendar year (Circumcision style) or the
- calendar year (Annunciation style) in which a performance fell,
- or the calendar year in which a regnal, mayoral, or accounting
- year, in which the performance fell, began or ended. When they
- are clearly dealing with accounting years, they do not always
- indicate whether these ended at Michaelmas or at some other
- date. They sometimes give only the year of a performance, when
- they might have given, precisely or approximately, the month
- and day of the month as well. But it is fair to add that the
- accounts of City Chamberlains and similar officers, from which
- the notices of plays are generally derived, are not always so
- kept as to render precise dating feasible. Some accountants
- specify the days, others the weeks to which their entries
- relate; others put their entries in chronological order and
- date some of them, so that it is possible to fix the dates of
- the rest within limits; others again render accounts analysed
- under heads, grouping all payments to players perhaps under a
- head of ‘Gifts and Rewards’, and in such cases you cannot be
- sure that the companies are even entered in the order of their
- visits, and if months and days are not specified, cannot learn
- more than the year to which a visit belongs. Where, for whatever
- reason, I can only assign a performance to its accounting year,
- I generally give it under the calendar year in which the account
- ends. This, in the case of a London company and of a Michaelmas
- year (much the commonest year for municipal accounts), is pretty
- safe, as the touring season was roughly July to September. Some
- accounting years (Coventry, Marlborough, Stratford-on-Avon) end
- later still, but if, as at Bath, the year ends about Midsummer,
- it is often quite a toss-up to which of two years an entry
- belongs. In the case of Leicester performances before 1603, I
- have combined the indications of Michaelmas years in M. Bateson,
- _Leicester Records_, vol. iii, with those of calendar years in
- W. Kelly, _Notices Illustrative of the Drama_ (1865), 185, and
- distinguished between performances before and after Michaelmas.
- I hope Kelly has not misled me, and that he found evidence in
- the entries for his dating. After 1603 he is the only source. I
- do not think that the amount of error which has crept into the
- following chapter from the various causes described is likely to
- be at all considerable. I have been as careful as possible and
- most of Murray’s own extracting is excellently done. I should,
- however, add that the Ipswich dates, as given both here and by
- Murray, ii. 287. from _Hist. MSS._ ix. i, 248, are unreliable,
- because some of the rolls from which they are taken contain
- membranes properly belonging to those for other years; cf. my
- notes on Leicester’s (pp. 89, 91), Queen’s (p. 106), Warwick’s
- (p. 99), Derby’s (p. 120), King’s (p. 209).]
-
-
- A. INTRODUCTION
-
-The present chapter contains detailed chronicles--too often, I
-fear, lapsing into arid annals of performances at Court or in the
-provinces--of all the companies traceable in London during any year
-between 1558 and 1616. The household and other establishments to which
-the companies were attached are taken as the basis of classification.
-This principle is open to criticism. Certainly it has not always the
-advantage of presenting economic units. It is improbable that there
-was any continuity as regards membership between the bodies of actors
-successively appearing, often after long intervals, under the names of
-Sussex or Hunsdon or Derby. On the other hand, particular associations
-of actors can sometimes be discerned as holding together under a change
-of patrons. Thus between 1571 and 1583 Laurence and John Dutton seem to
-have led a single company, which earned the nickname of the Chameleons,
-first in the service of Sir Robert Lane and then, turn by turn, in that
-of the Earls of Lincoln, Warwick, and Oxford. The real successors,
-again, of the Derby’s men of 1593 are less the Derby’s men of 1595–1618
-than the Hunsdon’s men of 1594–1603, who in course of time became the
-King’s men without any breach of their unity as a trading association.
-Nevertheless, an arrangement under patrons is a practicable one, since
-companies nearly always appear under the names of their patrons in
-official documents, while an arrangement under trading associations
-is not. Actors are a restless folk, and the history of the Admiral’s
-men, or the Queen’s Revels, or the Lady Elizabeth’s men, will show how
-constantly their business organizations were disturbed by the coming
-and going of individuals, and by the breaking and reconstruction of the
-agreements on which they were based. It is but rarely that we have any
-clue to these intricacies; and I have therefore followed the households
-as the best available guides, indicating breaches of continuity and
-affiliations, where these appear to exist, and adopting as far as
-possible an order which, without pretence of being scientific, will
-bring each household under consideration roughly at the point at
-which its servants become of the greatest significance to the general
-history of the stage. The method may perhaps be described as that of a
-λαμπαδηφορία.
-
-A study of the succession of the companies gives rise to a few general
-considerations. During the earlier years of Elizabeth’s reign the drama
-is under the domination of the boy companies. This may be in part due
-to the long-standing humanistic tradition of the Renaissance, although
-the lead is in fact taken not so much by schoolboys in the stricter
-sense, as by the trained musical establishments of the royal chapels
-and still more that of the St. Paul’s choir under Sebastian Westcott.
-More important points perhaps are, that the Gentlemen of the Chapel,
-who had been prominent under Henry VIII, had ceased to perform, that
-the royal Interluders had been allowed to decay, and that the other
-professional companies had not yet found a permanent economic basis in
-London, while their literary accomplishment was still upon a popular
-rather than a courtly level. Whatever the cause or causes, the fact is
-undeniable. Out of seventy-eight rewards for Court performances between
-1558 and 1576, twenty-one went to the Paul’s boys, fifteen to the royal
-chapels, and ten to schoolboys, making a total of forty-six, as against
-only thirty-two paid to adult companies. And if the first half of this
-period only be taken, the disproportion is still greater, for by 1567
-the Paul’s boys had received eleven rewards, other boys two, and the
-adult companies six. A complete reversal of this position coincides
-rather markedly with the building of the first permanent theatres in
-1576. Between 1576 and 1583 the adult companies had thirty-nine rewards
-and the boys only seventeen. There is also a rapid growth in the number
-of companies. Before 1576 the Earl of Leicester’s men and the Duttons
-were alone conspicuous. After 1576 the entertainment of a London
-company seems to become a regular practice with those great officers
-the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord Admiral, as well as with special
-favourites of the Queen, such as the Earl of Leicester himself or the
-Earl of Oxford. Stockwood in 1578 speaks of ‘eighte ordinarie places’
-in the City as occupied by the players. A Privy Council order of the
-same year limits the right to perform to six companies selected to take
-part in the Court festivities at Christmas, namely Leicester’s men,
-Warwick’s, Sussex’s, Essex’s, and the Children of the Chapel and St.
-Paul’s. Gabriel Harvey, writing to Edmund Spenser of the publication of
-his virelays in the following summer, says:
-
- ‘Ye have preiudished my good name for ever in thrustinge me
- thus on the stage to make tryall of my extemporall faculty,
- and to play Wylsons or Tarletons parte. I suppose thou wilt
- go nighe hande shortelye to sende my lorde of Lycesters or my
- lorde of Warwickes, Vawsis, or my lord Ritches players, or sum
- other freshe starteupp comedanties unto me for sum newe devised
- interlude, or sum maltconceivid comedye fitt for the Theater, or
- sum other paintid stage whereat thou and thy lively copesmates
- in London maye lawghe ther mouthes and bellyes full for pence or
- twoepence apeece.’[1]
-
-Doubtless many of this mushroom brood of ‘freshe starteupp comedanties’
-never succeeded in making good their permanent footing in the
-metropolis. Lord Vaux’s men, whom Harvey mentions, were never fortunate
-enough to be summoned to Court; and the same may be said of Lord
-Arundel’s men, Lord Berkeley’s, and Lord Abergavenny’s. Such men, after
-their cast for fortune, had to drift away into the provinces, and pad
-the hoof on the hard roads once more.
-
-The next septennial period, 1583–90, witnessed the extinction, for
-a decade or so, of the boy companies, in spite of the new impulse
-given to the latter by the activity as a playwright of John Lyly. Of
-forty-five Court payments made during these years, thirty apparently
-went to men and only fifteen to boys. This ultimate success of
-the professional organizations may largely have been due to their
-employment of such university wits as Marlowe, Peele, Greene, Lodge,
-and Nashe in the writing of plays, with which Lyly could be challenged
-on his own ground before the Court, while a sufficient supply of
-chronicle histories and other popular stuff could still be kept on
-the boards to tickle the ears of the groundlings. The undisputed
-pre-eminence lay during this period with the Queen’s men, who made
-within it no less than twenty-one appearances at Court. This company
-enjoyed the prestige of the royal livery, transferred to it from the
-now defunct Interluders, which had a ready effect in the unloosing of
-municipal pockets. And at its foundation in 1583 it incorporated, in
-addition to Tarlton, whose origin is unknown, the leading members of
-the pre-existing companies: Wilson and Laneham from Leicester’s, Adams
-from Sussex’s, and John Dutton from Oxford’s. The former fellows of
-these lucky ones were naturally hardly able to maintain their standing.
-In January 1587 Leicester’s, Oxford’s, and the Admiral’s were still
-setting up their bills side by side with those of the Queen’s.[2] But
-the first two are not heard of at Court again, and even the Admiral’s
-were hardly able to make a show except by coalition with other
-companies. Thus we find the Admiral’s combining with Hunsdon’s in
-1585, and with Strange’s perhaps from 1589 onwards, and it became the
-destiny of this last alliance, under the leadership of Edward Alleyn,
-to dispossess the Queen’s men, after the death of Tarlton in 1588, from
-their pride of place. The fall of the Queen’s men was sudden. In 1590–1
-they gave four Court plays to two by their rivals; in 1591–2 they gave
-one, and their rivals six. In their turn they appear to have been
-reduced to forming a coalition with Lord Sussex’s men.
-
-The plague-years of 1592–4 brought disaster, chaos, and change
-into the theatrical world. Only the briefest London seasons were
-possible. The necessities of travelling led to further combinations
-and recombinations of groups, one of which may have given rise to
-the ephemeral existence of Lord Pembroke’s men. And, by the time the
-public health was restored, the Queen’s had reconciled themselves
-to a provincial existence, and continued until 1603 to make their
-harvest of the royal name, as their predecessors in title had done,
-without returning to London at all. The combination of which Alleyn
-had been the centre broke up, and its component elements reconstituted
-themselves as the two great companies of the Chamberlain’s and the
-Admiral’s men. Between these there was a vigorous rivalry, which
-sometimes showed itself in lawsuits, sometimes in the more legitimate
-form of competing plays on similar themes. Thus a popular sentiment
-offended by the Chamberlain’s men in _1 Henry IV_ was at once appealed
-to by the Admiral’s with _Sir John Oldcastle_. And when the Admiral’s
-scored a success by their representation of forest life in _Robin
-Hood_, the Chamberlain’s were quickly ready to counter with _As You
-Like It_. I think the Chamberlain’s secured the better position of the
-two. They had their Burbadge to pit against the reputation of Alleyn;
-they had their honey-tongued Shakespeare; and they had a business
-organization which gave them a greater stability of membership than
-any company in the hands of Henslowe was likely to secure. If one may
-once more use the statistics of Court performances as a criterion,
-they are found to have appeared thirty-two times and their rivals only
-twenty times from 1594 to 1603. Between them the Chamberlain’s and the
-Admiral’s enjoyed for some years a practical monopoly of the London
-stage, which received an official recognition by the action of the
-Privy Council in 1597. But this state of things did not long continue.
-Ambitious companies, such as Pembroke’s, disregarded the directions of
-the Council. Derby’s men, Worcester’s, Hertford’s, one by one obtained
-at least a temporary footing at Court, and in 1602 the influence of
-the Earl of Oxford was strong enough to bring about the admission to
-a permanent home in London of a third company made up of his own and
-Worcester’s servants. Even more dangerous, perhaps, to the monopoly
-was the revival of the boy companies, Paul’s in 1599 and the Chapel in
-1600. The imps not only took by their novelty in the eyes of a younger
-generation of play-goers. They began a warfare of satire, in which they
-‘berattled the common stages’ with a vigour and dexterity that betray
-the malice of the poets against the players which had been a motive in
-their rehabilitation.[3]
-
-No material change took place at the coming of James. The three adult
-companies, the Chamberlain’s, the Admiral’s, Worcester’s, passed
-respectively under the patronage of James, Prince Henry, and Queen
-Anne.[4] On the death of Prince Henry in 1612 his place was taken
-by the Elector Palatine. The Children of the Chapel also received
-the patronage of Queen Anne, as Children of the Queen’s Revels. The
-competition for popular favour continued severe. Dekker refers to it in
-1608 and the preacher Crashaw in 1610.[5] It is to be noticed, however,
-that Dekker speaks only of ‘a deadly war’ between ‘three houses’,
-presumably regarding the boy companies as negligible. And in fact
-these companies were on the wane. By 1609 the Queen’s Revels, though
-still in existence, had suffered from the wearing off of novelty,
-from the tendency of boys to grow older, from the plague-seasons of
-1603–4 and 1608–9, which they were less well equipped than the better
-financed adults to withstand, from the indiscretions and quarrels of
-their managers, and from the loss of the Blackfriars, of which the
-King’s men had secured possession.[6] The Paul’s boys had been bought
-off by the payment of a ‘dead rent’ or blackmail to the Master. A
-third company, the King’s Revels, had been started, but had failed to
-establish itself.[7] The three houses were not, indeed, left with
-an undisputed field. Advantage was taken of the predilection of the
-younger members of the royal family for the drama, and patents were
-obtained, in 1610 for a Duke of York’s company, and in 1611 for a Lady
-Elizabeth’s company. These also had but a frail life. In 1613 the
-Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels coalesced under the dangerous
-wardenship of Henslowe. In 1615 the Duke of York’s, now Prince
-Charles’s, men joined the combination. And finally in 1616 the Prince’s
-men were left alone to make up the tale of four London companies,
-and the Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels disappeared into the
-provinces. The list of men summoned before the Privy Council in March
-1615 to account for playing in Lent contains the names of the leaders
-of the four companies, the King’s, the Queen’s, the Palsgrave’s, and
-the Prince’s. The King’s played at the Globe and Blackfriars, the
-Queen’s at the Red Bull, whence they moved in 1617 to the Cockpit, the
-Palsgrave’s at the Fortune, and the Prince’s at the Hope. The supremacy
-of the King’s men during 1603–16 was undisputed. Of two hundred and
-ninety-nine plays rewarded at Court for that period, they gave one
-hundred and seventy-seven, the Prince’s men forty-seven, the Queen’s
-men twenty-eight, the Duke of York’s men twenty, the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men nine, the Queen’s Revels boys fifteen, and the Paul’s boys three.
-Their plays, moreover, were those usually selected for performance
-before James himself. It is possible, however, that the Red Bull and
-the Fortune were better able to hold their own against the Globe when
-it came to attracting a popular audience.
-
-
- B. THE BOY COMPANIES
-
- i. Children of Paul’s.
- ii. Children of the Chapel and Queen’s Revels.
- iii. Children of Windsor.
- iv. Children of the King’s Revels.
- v. Children of Bristol.
- vi. Westminster School.
- vii. Eton College.
- viii. Merchant Taylors School.
- ix. Earl of Leicester’s Boys.
- x. Earl of Oxford’s Boys.
- xi. Mr. Stanley’s Boys.
-
-
- i. THE CHILDREN OF PAUL’S
-
-_High Masters of Grammar School_:--William Lily (1509–22); John Ritwise
-(1522–32); Richard Jones (1532–49); Thomas Freeman (1549–59); John Cook
-(1559–73); William Malim (1573–81); John Harrison (1581–96); Richard
-Mulcaster (1596–1608).
-
-_Masters of Choir School_:--? Thomas Hikeman (_c._ 1521); John Redford
-(_c._ 1540);? Thomas Mulliner (?); Sebastian Westcott (> 1557–1582);
-Thomas Giles (1584–1590 <); Edward Pearce (> 1600–1606 <).
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The documents bearing upon the early
- history of the two cathedral schools, often confused, are
- printed and discussed by A. F. Leach in _St. Paul’s School
- before Colet_ (_Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 191) and in _Journal of
- Education_ (1909), 503. M. F. J. McDonnell, _A History of St.
- Paul’s School_ (1909), carries on the narrative of the grammar
- school. The official chroniclers of the cathedral, perhaps
- owing to the loss of archives in the Great Fire, have given
- no connected account of the choir school; with the material
- available on the dramatic side they appear to be unfamiliar.
- Valuable contributions are W. H. G. Flood, _Master Sebastian_,
- in _Musical Antiquary_, iii. 149; iv. 187; and H. N. Hillebrand,
- _Sebastian Westcote, Dramatist and Master of the Children of
- Paul’s_ (1915, _J. G. P._ xiv. 568). Little is added to the
- papers on _Plays Acted by the Children of Paul’s and Music in
- St. Paul’s Cathedral_ in W. S. Simpson, _Gleanings from Old St.
- Paul’s_ (1889), 101, 155, by J. S. Bumpus, _The Organists and
- Composers of St. Paul’s Cathedral_ (1891), and W. M. Sinclair,
- _Memorials of St. Paul’s Cathedral_ (1909).]
-
-Mr. Leach has succeeded in tracing the grammar school, as part of
-the establishment of St. Paul’s Cathedral, to the beginning of the
-twelfth century. It was then located in the south-east corner of the
-churchyard, near the bell-tower, and here it remained to 1512, when it
-was rebuilt, endowed, and reorganized on humanist lines by Dean Colet,
-and thereafter to 1876, when it was transferred to Horsham in Sussex.
-Originally the master was one of the canons; but by the beginning
-of the thirteenth century this officer had taken on the name of
-chancellor, and the general supervision of the actual schoolmaster, a
-vicar choral, was only one of his functions. Distinct from the grammar
-school was the choir school, for which the responsible dignitary was
-not the chancellor, but the precentor, in whose hands the appointment
-of a master of the song school rested.[8] There was, however, a third
-branch of the cathedral organization also concerned with the training
-of boys. The almonry or hospital, maintained by the chapter for the
-relief of the poor, seems to have been established at the end of the
-twelfth century, and statutes of about the same date make it the duty
-of a canon residentiary to assist in the maintenance of its _pueri
-elemosinarii_, and prescribe the special services to be rendered them
-at their great annual ceremony of the Boy Bishop on Innocents’ Day.[9]
-In the thirteenth century the supervision of these boys was in the
-hands of another subordinate official, appointed by the chapter and
-known as the almoner. The number of the boys was then eight; it was
-afterwards increased, apparently in 1358, to ten.[10] The almoner is
-required to provide for their literary and moral education, and their
-liturgical duties are defined as consisting of standing in pairs at
-the corners of the choir and carrying candles.[11] A later version of
-the statutes provides for their musical education, and it is clear
-that these _pueri elemosinarii_ were in fact identical with or formed
-the nucleus of the boys of the song school.[12] During the sixteenth
-century the posts of almoner and master of the song school, although
-technically distinct, were in practice held together, and the holder
-was ordinarily a member of the supplementary cathedral establishment
-known as the College of Minor Canons.[13] To this college had been
-appropriated the parish church of St. Gregory, on the south side of St.
-Paul’s, just west of the Chapter or Convocation House, and here the
-song school was already housed by the twelfth century.[14] The college
-had also a common hall on the north of the cathedral, near the Pardon
-churchyard; and hard by was the almonry in Paternoster Row.[15] The
-statutes left the almoner the option of either giving the boys their
-literary education himself, or sending them elsewhere. It naturally
-proved convenient to send them to the grammar school, and the almoners
-claimed that they had a right to admission without fees.[16] On the
-other side we find the grammar school boys directed by Colet to attend
-the Boy Bishop ceremony and make their offerings.[17] Evidently there
-was much give and take between song school and grammar school.
-
-As early as 1378 the scholars of Paul’s are said to have prepared a
-play of the History of the Old Testament for public representation
-at Christmas.[18] Whether they took a share in the other miracles
-recorded in mediaeval London, it is impossible to say. A century and
-a half later the boys of the grammar school, during the mastership
-of John Ritwise, are found contributing interludes, in the humanist
-fashion, to the entertainment of the Court. On 10 November 1527 they
-gave an anti-Lutheran play in Latin and French before the King and
-the ambassadors of Francis I, and in the following year the _Phormio_
-before Wolsey, who also saw them, if Anthony Wood can be trusted, in
-a _Dido_ written by Ritwise himself.[19] There is no evidence that
-Ritwise’s successors followed his example by bringing their pupils
-to Court; and the next performances by Paul’s boys, which can be
-definitely traced, began a quarter of a century later, and were under
-the control of Sebastian Westcott, master of the song school, and were
-therefore presumably given by boys of that school. Westcott in 1545 was
-a Yeoman of the Chamber at Court.[20] He was ‘scolemaister of Powles’
-by New Year’s Day 1557, when he presented a manuscript book of ditties
-to Queen Mary.[21] Five years earlier, he had brought children to
-Hatfield, to give a play before the Princess Elizabeth; and the chances
-are that these were the Paul’s boys.[22] With him came one Heywood,
-who may fairly be identified with John Heywood the dramatist; and this
-enables us, more conjecturally, to reduce a little further the gap
-in the dramatic history of the Paul’s choir, for some years before,
-in March 1538, Heywood had already received a reward for playing an
-interlude with ‘his children’ before the Lady Mary.[23] There is
-nothing beyond this phrase to suggest that Heywood had a company of
-his own, and it is not probable that he was ever himself master of
-the choir school.[24] But he may very well have supplied them with
-plays, both in Westcott’s time and also in that of his predecessor John
-Redford. Several of Heywood’s verses are preserved in a manuscript,
-which also contains Redford’s _Wyt and Science_ and fragments of other
-interludes, not improbably intended for performance by the boys under
-his charge.[25] A play ‘of childerne sett owte by Mr. Haywood’ at Court
-during the spring of 1553 may also belong to the Paul’s boys.[26]
-Certain performances ascribed to them at Hatfield, during the Princess
-Elizabeth’s residence there in her sister’s reign, have of late fallen
-under suspicion of being apocryphal.[27]
-
-From the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign Westcott’s theatrical
-enterprise stands out clearly enough. On 7 August 1559 the Queen was
-entertained by the Earl of Arundel at Nonsuch with ‘a play of the
-chylderyn of Powlles and ther Master Se[bastian], Master Phelypes,
-and Master Haywod’.[28] If ‘Master Phelypes’ was the John Philip or
-Phillips who wrote _Patient Grissell_ (_c._ 1566), this play may also
-belong to the Paul’s repertory. Heywood could not adapt himself again
-to a Protestant England, and soon left the country. Sebastian Westcott
-was more fortunate. In 1560 he was appointed as Head of the College
-of Minor Canons or Sub-dean.[29] Shortly afterwards, being unable to
-accept the religious settlement, he was sentenced to deprivation of
-his offices, which included that of organist, but escaped through the
-personal influence of Elizabeth, in spite of some searchings of the
-heart of Bishop Grindal as to his suitability to be an instructor of
-youth.[30] In fact he succeeded in remaining songmaster of Paul’s for
-the next twenty-three years, and during that period brought his boys to
-Court no less than twenty-seven times, furnishing a far larger share of
-the royal Christmas entertainment, especially during the first decade
-of the reign, than any other single company. The chronicle of his
-plays must now be given. There was one at each of the Christmases of
-1560–1 and 1561–2, one between 6 January and 9 March 1562, and one at
-the Christmas of 1562–3.[31] During the next winter the plague stopped
-London plays. At the Christmas of 1564–5 there were two by the Paul’s
-boys, of which the second fell on 2 January, and at that of 1565–6
-three, two at Court and one at the Lady Cecilia’s lodging in the Savoy.
-There were two again at each of the Christmases of 1566–7 and 1567–8,
-and one on 1 January 1569. During the winter of 1569–70 the company
-was, exceptionally, absent from Court. They reappeared on 28 December
-1570, and again at Shrovetide (25–7 February) 1571. On 28 December
-1571 they gave the ‘tragedy’ of _Iphigenia_, which Professor Wallace
-identifies with the comedy called _The Bugbears_, but which might, for
-the matter of that, be Lady Lumley’s translation from the Greek of
-Euripides. At the Christmas of 1572–3 they played before 7 January. On
-27 December 1573 they gave _Alcmaeon_. They played on 2 February 1575,
-and a misfortune which befell them in the same year is recorded in a
-letter of 3 December from the Privy Council, which sets out that ‘one
-of Sebastianes boyes, being one of his principall plaiers, is lately
-stolen and conveyed from him’, and instructs no less personages than
-the Master of the Rolls and Dr. Wilson, one of the Masters of Requests,
-to examine the persons whom he suspected and proceed according to law
-with them.[32] Five days later the Court of Aldermen drew up a protest
-against Westcott’s continued Romish tendencies.[33] The next Court
-performance by the boys was on 6 January 1576. On 1 January 1577 they
-gave _Error_, and on 19 February _Titus and Gisippus_. They played on
-29 December 1577, and one wonders whether it was anything amiss with
-that performance which led to an entry in the Acts of the Privy Council
-for the same day that ‘Sebastian was committid to the Marshalsea’.[34]
-Whether this was so or not, the Paul’s boys were included in the
-list of companies authorized to practise publicly in the City for
-the following Christmas. On 1 January 1579 they gave _The Marriage
-of Mind and Measure_, on 3 January 1580 _Scipio Africanus_, and on 6
-January 1581 _Pompey_. A play on 26 December 1581 is anonymous, but may
-possibly be the _Cupid and Psyche_ mentioned as ‘plaid at Paules’ in
-Gosson’s _Playes Confuted_ of 1582.[35]
-
-In the course of 1582 Sebastian Westcott died, and this event led to
-an important development in the dramatic activities of the boys.[36]
-Hitherto their performances, when not at Court, had been in their own
-quarters ‘at Paules’, although the notice of 1578, as well as Gosson’s
-reference, suggests that the public were not altogether excluded from
-their rehearsals. Probably they used their singing school, which may
-have been still, as in the twelfth century, the church of St. Gregory
-itself.[37] This privacy, even if something of a convention, had
-perhaps enabled them to utilize the services of the grammar school
-when they had occasion to make a display of erudition.[38] After
-Westcott’s death, however, they appear to have followed the example
-of the Chapel, who had already in 1576 taken a step in the direction
-of professionalism, by transferring their performances to Farrant’s
-newly opened theatre at the Blackfriars. Here, if the rather difficult
-evidence can be trusted, the Paul’s boys appear to have joined them,
-and to have formed part of a composite company, to which Lord Oxford’s
-boys also contributed, and which produced the _Campaspe_ and _Sapho and
-Phao_ of the earl’s follower John Lyly. Lyly took these plays to Court
-on 1 January and 3 March 1584, and Henry Evans, who was also associated
-with the enterprise, took a play called _Agamemnon and Ulysses_ on 27
-December. On all three occasions the official patron of the company
-was the Earl of Oxford. In _Agamemnon and Ulysses_ it must be doubtful
-whether the Paul’s boys had any share, for in the spring of 1584
-the Blackfriars theatre ceased to be available, and the combination
-probably broke up.[39] This, however, was far from being the end of
-Lyly’s connexion with the boys, for the title-pages of no less than
-five of his later plays acknowledge them as the presenters. They had,
-indeed, a four years’ period of renewed activity at Court, under the
-mastership of Thomas Giles, who, being already almoner, became Master
-of the Song School on 22 May 1584, and in the following year received
-a royal commission to ‘take up’ boys for the choir, analogous to that
-ordinarily granted to masters of the Chapel Children.[40] There is
-no specific mention of plays in the document, but its whole basis
-is in the service which the boys may be called upon to do the Queen
-in music and singing. Under Giles the company appeared at Court nine
-times during four winter seasons; on 26 February 1587, on 1 January
-and 2 February 1588, on 27 December 1588, 1 January and 12 January
-1589, and on 28 December 1589, 1 January and 6 January 1590. The
-title-pages of Lyly’s _Endymion_, _Galathea_, and _Midas_ assign the
-representation of these plays at Court to a 2 February, a 1 January,
-and a 6 January respectively. _Endymion_ must therefore belong to 1588
-and _Midas_ to 1590; for _Galathea_ the most probable of the three
-years is 1588. _Mother Bombie_ and _Love’s Metamorphosis_ can be less
-precisely dated, but doubtless belong to the period 1587–90. At some
-time or other, and probably before 1590, the Paul’s boys performed a
-play of _Meleager_, of which an abstract only, without author’s name,
-is preserved. It is not, I think, to be supposed that Lyly, although
-he happened to be a grandson of the first High Master of Colet’s
-school, had any official connexion either with that establishment or
-with the choir school. It is true that Gabriel Harvey says of him in
-1589, ‘He hath not played the Vicemaster of Poules and the Foolemaster
-of the Theatre for naughtes’.[41] But this is merely Harvey’s jesting
-on the old dramatic sense of the term ‘vice’, and the probabilities
-are that Lyly’s relation as dramatist to Giles as responsible manager
-of the company was much that which had formerly existed between John
-Heywood and Sebastian Westcott. Nevertheless, it was this connexion
-which ultimately brought the Paul’s plays to a standstill. Lyly was
-one of the literary men employed about 1589 to answer the Martin
-Marprelate pamphleteers in their own vein, and to this end he availed
-himself of the Paul’s stage, apparently with the result that, when
-it suited the government to disavow its instruments, that stage was
-incontinently suppressed.[42] The reason may be conjectural, but the
-fact is undoubted. The Paul’s boys disappear from the Court records
-after 1590. In 1591 the printer of _Endymion_ writes in his preface
-that ‘Since the Plaies in Paules were dissolved, there are certaine
-Commedies come to my handes by chaunce’, and the prolongation of this
-dissolution is witnessed to in 1596 by Thomas Nashe, who in his chaff
-of Gabriel Harvey’s anticipated practice in the Arches says, ‘Then we
-neede neuer wish the Playes at Powles vp againe, but if we were wearie
-with walking, and loth to goe too farre to seeke sport, into the Arches
-we might step, and heare him plead; which would bee a merrier Comedie
-than euer was old Mother _Bomby_’.[43]
-
-A last theatrical period opened for the boys with the appointment about
-1600 of a new master. This was one Edward Pearce or Piers, who had
-become a Gentleman of the Chapel on 16 March 1589, and by 15 August
-1600, when his successor was sworn in, had ‘yealded up his place for
-the Mastership of the children of Poules’.[44] I am tempted to believe
-that in reviving the plays Pearce had the encouragement of Richard
-Mulcaster, who had become High Master of the grammar school in 1596,
-and during his earlier mastership of Merchant Taylors had on several
-occasions brought his boys to Court. Pearce is first found in the
-Treasurer of the Chamber’s Accounts as payee for a performance on 1
-January 1601, but several of the extant plays produced during this
-section of the company’s career are of earlier date, and one of them,
-Marston’s _I Antonio and Mellida_, can hardly be later than 1599. A
-stage direction of this play apparently records the names of two of the
-performers as Cole and Norwood.[45] The Paul’s boys, therefore, were
-‘up again’ before their rivals of the Chapel, who cannot be shown to
-have begun in the Blackfriars under Henry Evans until 1600.[46] This
-being so, they were probably also responsible for Marston’s revision
-in 1599 of _Histriomastix,_ which by giving offence to Ben Jonson, led
-him to satire Marston’s style in _Every Man Out of His Humour_, and so
-introduced the ‘war of the theatres’.[47] Before the end of 1600 they
-had probably added to their repertory Chapman’s _Bussy d’Ambois_, and
-certainly _The Maid’s Metamorphosis_, _The Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll_,
-and _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_, all three of which were entered on
-the Stationers’ Register, and the first two printed, during that year.
-_Jack Drum’s Entertainment_ followed in 1601 and contains the following
-interesting passage of autobiography:[48]
-
- _Sir Edward Fortune._ I saw the Children of _Powles_ last night,
- And troth they pleas’d me prettie, prettie well:
- The Apes in time will doe it handsomely.
-
- _Planet._ I faith, I like the audience that frequenteth there
- With much applause: A man shall not be chokte
- With the stench of Garlick; nor be pasted
- To the barmie Iacket of a Beer-brewer.
-
- _Brabant Junior._ ’Tis a good, gentle audience, and I hope the boies
- Will come one day into the Court of requests.
-
- _Brabant Senior._ I, and they had good Plaies. But they produce
- Such mustie fopperies of antiquitie,
- And do not sute the humorous ages backs,
- With clothes in fashion.
-
-The criticism, being a self-criticism, must not be taken too seriously.
-So far as published plays are concerned, _Histriomastix_ is the only
-one to which it applies. In Marston, Chapman, and Middleton the company
-had enlisted vigorous young playwrights, who were probably not sorry to
-be free from the yoke of the professional actors, and appear to have
-followed the exceptional policy of printing some at least of their new
-plays as soon as they were produced.
-
-On 11 March 1601, two months after the boys made their first bow at
-Court, the Lord Mayor was ordered by the Privy Council to suppress
-plays ‘at Powles’ during Lent. It is to be inferred that they were,
-as of old, acting in their singing school. Confirmation is provided
-by a curious note appended by William Percy to his manuscript volume
-of plays, presumably in sending them to be considered with a view to
-production by the boys. The plays bear dates in 1601–3, but it can
-hardly be taken for granted that they were in fact produced by the
-Paul’s or any other company. The note runs:
-
- A note to the Master of Children of Powles.
-
- Memorandum, that if any of the fine and formost of these
- Pastorals and Comoedyes conteyned in this volume shall but
- overeach in length (the children not to begin before foure,
- after prayers, and the gates of Powles shutting at six) the
- tyme of supper, that then in tyme and place convenient, you do
- let passe some of the songs, and make the consort the shorter;
- for I suppose these plaies be somewhat too long for that place.
- Howsoever, on your own experience, and at your best direction,
- be it. Farewell to you all.[49]
-
-Both parts of Marston’s _Antonio and Mellida_ were entered on the
-Stationers’ Register in the autumn of 1601 and printed in 1602. The
-second part may have been on the stage during 1601, and in the same
-year the boys probably produced John Marston’s _What You Will_, and
-certainly played ‘privately’, as the Chamberlain’s men did ‘publicly’,
-_Satiromastix_ in which Dekker, with a hand from Marston, brought his
-swashing blow against the redoubtable Jonson. This also was registered
-in 1601 and printed in 1602. There is no sign of the boys at Court
-in the winter of 1601–2. In the course of 1602 their play of _Blurt
-Master Constable_, by Middleton, was registered and printed. They
-were at Court on 1 January 1603, for the last time before Elizabeth,
-and on 20 February 1604, for the first time before James. Either the
-choir school or the grammar school boys took part in the pageant
-speeches at the coronation triumph on 15 March 1604.[50] To the year
-1604 probably belongs _Westward Ho!_ which introduced to the company,
-in collaboration with Dekker, a new writer, John Webster. _Northward
-Ho!_ by the same authors, followed in 1605. The company was not at
-Court for the winter of 1604–5, but during that of 1605–6 they gave two
-plays before the Princes Henry and Charles. For these the payee was not
-Pearce, but Edward Kirkham, who is described in the Treasurer of the
-Chamber’s account as ‘one of the Mr^{es} of the Childeren of Pawles’.
-Kirkham, who was Yeoman of the Revels, had until recently been a
-manager of the Children of the Revels at the Blackfriars. It may have
-been the disgrace brought upon these by _Eastward Ho!_ in the course
-of 1605 that led him to transfer his activities elsewhere.[51] With
-him he seems to have brought Marston’s _The Fawn_, probably written
-in 1604 and ascribed in the first of the two editions of 1606 to the
-Queen’s Revels alone, in the second to them ‘and since at Poules’. The
-charms of partnership with Kirkham were not, however, sufficient to
-induce Pearce to continue his enterprise. The last traceable appearance
-of the Paul’s boys was on 30 July 1606, when they gave _The Abuses_
-before James and King Christian of Denmark.[52] Probably the plays were
-discontinued not long afterwards. This would account for the large
-number of play-books belonging to the company which reached the hands
-of the publishers in 1607 and 1608. The earlier policy of giving plays
-to the press immediately after production does not seem to have endured
-beyond 1602. Those now printed, in addition to _Bussy D’Ambois_, _What
-You Will_, _Westward Ho!_ and _Northward Ho!_ already mentioned,
-included Middleton’s _Michaelmas Term_, _The Phoenix_, _A Mad World,
-my Masters_, and _A Trick to Catch the Old One_, together with _The
-Puritan_, very likely also by Middleton, and _The Woman Hater_, the
-first work of Francis Beaumont. _The Puritan_ can be dated, from a
-chronological allusion, in 1606. The title-pages of _The Woman Hater_,
-_A Mad World, my Masters_, and _A Trick to Catch the Old One_ specify
-them to have been ‘lately’ acted. It is apparent from the second quarto
-of _A Trick to Catch the Old One_ that the Children of the Blackfriars
-took it over and presented it at Court on 1 January 1609. This was
-probably part of a bargain as to which we have another record. Pearce
-may have had at the back of his mind a notion of reopening his theatre
-some day. But it is given in evidence in the lawsuit of _Keysar v.
-Burbadge_ in 1610 that, while it was still closed, he was approached
-on behalf of the other ‘private’ houses in London, those of the
-Blackfriars and the Whitefriars, and offered a ‘dead rent’ of £20 a
-year, ‘that there might be a cessation of playeinge and playes to be
-acted in the said howse neere S^t. Paules Church’.[53] This must have
-been in the winter of 1608–9, just as the Revels company was migrating
-from the Blackfriars to the Whitefriars. The agent was Philip Rosseter
-who, with Robert Keysar, was financially interested in the Revels
-company. When the King’s men began to occupy the Blackfriars in the
-autumn of 1609, they took on responsibility for half the dead rent, but
-whether the arrangement survived the lawsuit of 1610 is unknown.
-
-
- ii. THE CHILDREN OF THE CHAPEL AND OF THE QUEEN’S REVELS
-
- The Children of the Chapel (1501–1603).
- _Masters of the Children_: William Newark (1493–1509),
- William Cornish (1509–23), William Crane (1523–45), Richard
- Bower (1545–61), Richard Edwardes (1561–6), William Hunnis
- (1566–97), Richard Farrant (acting, 1577–80), Nathaniel Giles
- (1597–1634).
-
- The Children of the Queen’s Revels (1603–5).
-
- The Children of the Revels (1605–6).
- _Masters_: Henry Evans, Edward Kirkham, and others.
-
- The Children of the Blackfriars (1606–9).
-
- The Children of the Whitefriars (1609–10).
- _Masters_: Robert Keysar and others.
-
- The Children of the Queen’s Revels (1610–16).
- _Masters_: Philip Rosseter and others.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Official records of the Chapel are
- to be found in E. F. Rimbault, _The Old Cheque Book of the
- Chapel Royal_ (1872, _Camden Soc._). Most of the material for
- the sixteenth-century part of the present section was collected
- before the publication of C. W. Wallace, _The Evolution of the
- English Drama up to Shakespeare_ (1912, cited as Wallace, i),
- which has, however, been valuable for purposes of revision.
- J. M. Manly, _The Children of the Chapel Royal and their
- Masters_ (1910, _C. H._ vi. 279), W. H. Flood, _Queen Mary’s
- Chapel Royal_ (_E. H. R._ xxxiii. 83), H. M. Hildebrand, _The
- Early History of the Chapel Royal_ (1920, _M. P._ xviii. 233),
- are useful contributions. The chief published sources for
- the seventeenth century are three lawsuits discovered by J.
- Greenstreet and printed in full by F. G. Fleay, _A Chronicle
- History of the London Stage_ (1890), 127, 210, 223. These are
- (a) _Clifton v. Robinson and Others_ (Star Chamber, 1601), (b)
- _Evans v. Kirkham_ (Chancery, May–June 1612), cited as _E. v.
- K._, with Fleay’s pages, and (c) _Kirkham v. Painton and Others_
- (Chancery, July–Nov. 1612), cited as _K. v. P._ Not much beyond
- dubious hypothesis is added by C. W. Wallace, _The Children of
- the Chapel at Blackfriars_ (1908, cited as Wallace, ii). But
- Professor Wallace published an additional suit of importance,
- (d) _Keysar v. Burbadge and Others_ (Court of Requests,
- Feb.–June 1610), in _Nebraska University Studies_ (1910), x.
- 336, cited as _K. v. B._ This is apparently one of twelve suits
- other than Greenstreet’s, which he claims (ii. 36) to have
- found, with other material, which may alter the story. In the
- meantime, I see no reason to depart from the main outlines
- sketched in my article on _Court Performances under James the
- First_ (1909, _M. L. R._ iv. 153).]
-
-The Chapel was an ancient part of the establishment of the Household,
-traceable far back into the twelfth century.[54] Up to the end of
-the fourteenth, we hear only of chaplains and clerks. These were
-respectively priests and laymen, and the principal chaplain came to
-bear the title of Dean.[55] Children of the Chapel first appear under
-Henry IV, who appointed a chaplain to act as Master of Grammar for them
-in 1401.[56] In 1420 comes the first of a series of royal commissions
-authorizing the impressment of boys for the Chapel service, and in
-1444 the first appointment of a Master of the Children, John Plummer,
-by patent.[57] It is probably to the known tastes of Henry VI that the
-high level of musical accomplishment, which had been reached by the
-singers of the Chapel during the next reign was due.[58] The status
-and duties of the Chapel are set out with full detail in the _Liber
-Niger_ about 1478, at which date the establishment consisted of a Dean,
-six Chaplains, twenty Clerks, two Yeomen or Epistolers, and eight
-Children. These were instructed by a Master of Song, chosen by the Dean
-from ‘the seyd felyshipp of Chapell’, and a Master of Grammar, whose
-services were also available for the royal Henchmen.[59] There is no
-further record of the Master of Grammar; but with this exception the
-establishment continued to exist on much the same footing, apart from
-some increase of numbers, up to the seventeenth century.[60] Although
-subject to some general supervision from the Lord Chamberlain and
-to that extent part of the Chamber, it was largely a self-contained
-organization under its own Dean. Elizabeth, however, left the post of
-Dean vacant, and the responsibility of the Lord Chamberlain then became
-more direct.[61] It probably did not follow, at any rate in its full
-numbers, a progress, but moved with the Court to the larger ‘standing
-houses’, except possibly to Windsor where there was a separate musical
-establishment in St. George’s Chapel.[62] It does not seem, at any
-rate in Tudor times, to have had any relation to the collegiate chapel
-of St. Stephen in the old palace of Westminster.[63] The number of
-Children varied between eight and ten up to 1526, when it was finally
-fixed by Henry VIII at twelve.[64] The chaplains and clerks were
-collectively known in the sixteenth century as the Gentlemen of the
-Chapel, and the most important of them, next to one who acted as
-subdean, was the Master of the Children, who trained them in music
-and, as time went on, also formed them into a dramatic company. The
-Master generally held office under a patent during pleasure, and was
-entitled in addition to his fee of 7½_d._ a day or £91 8_s._ 1½_d._
-a year as Gentleman and his share in the general ‘rewards’ of the
-Chapel, to a special Exchequer annuity of 40 marks (£26 13_s._ 4_d._),
-raised in 1526 to £40, ‘pro exhibicione puerorum’, which is further
-defined in 1510 as ‘pro exhibicione vesturarum et lectorum’ and in
-1523 as ‘pro sustencione et diettes’.[65] To this, moreover, several
-other payments came to be added in the course of Henry VIII’s reign.
-Originally the Chapel dined and supped in the royal hall; but this
-proved inconvenient, and a money allowance from the Cofferer of the
-Household was substituted, which was fixed in 1544 at 1_s._ a day for
-each Gentleman and 2_s._ a week for each Child.[66] The allowance for
-the Children was afterwards raised to 6_d._ a day.[67] Long before
-this, however, the Masters had succeeded in obtaining an exceptional
-allowance of 8_d._ a week for the breakfast of each Child, which was
-reckoned as making £16 a year and paid them in monthly instalments of
-26_s._ 8_d._ by the Treasurer of the Chamber. The costs of the Masters
-in their journeys for the impressment of Children were also recouped
-by the Treasurer of the Chamber. And from him they also received
-rewards of 20_s._ when _Audivi vocem_ was sung on All Saints’ Day, £6
-13_s._ 4_d._ for the Children’s feast of St. Nicholas on 6 December,
-and 40_s._ when _Gloria in Excelsis_ was sung on Christmas and St.
-John’s Days. These were, of course, over and above any special rewards
-received for dramatic performances.[68] In the provision of _vesturae_
-the Masters were helped by the issue from the Great Wardrobe of black
-and tawny camlet gowns, yellow satin coats, and Milan bonnets, which
-presumably constituted the festal and penitential arrays of the
-choir.[69] The boys themselves do not appear to have received any
-wages but, when their voices had broken, the King made provision for
-them at the University or otherwise, and until this could be done, the
-Treasurer of the Chamber sometimes paid allowances to the Master or
-some other Gentleman for their maintenance and instruction.[70]
-
-The earlier Masters were John Plummer (1444–55), Henry Abyngdon
-(1455–78), Gilbert Banaster (1478–83?), probably John Melyonek
-(1483–5), Lawrence Squier (1486–93), and William Newark
-(1493–1509).[71] Some of these have left a musical or literary
-reputation, and Banaster is said to have written an interlude in
-1482.[72] But until the end of this period only occasional traces of
-dramatic performances by the Chapel can be discerned. An alleged play
-by the Gentlemen at the Christmas of 1485 cannot be verified.[73] The
-first recorded performance, therefore, is one of the disguisings at the
-wedding of Prince Arthur and Katharine of Spain in 1501, in which two
-of the children were concealed in mermaids ‘singing right sweetly and
-with quaint hermony’.[74]
-
-Towards the end of Henry VII’s reign begins a short series of plays
-given at the rate of one or two a year by the Gentlemen, which lasted
-through 1506–12.[75] Thereafter there is no other play by the Gentlemen
-as such upon record until the Christmas of 1553, when they performed
-a morality of which the principal character was Genus Humanum.[76]
-This had been originally planned for the coronation on the previous 1
-October, and as a warrant then issued states that a coronation play
-had customarily been given ‘by the gentlemen of the chappell of our
-progenitoures’, it may perhaps be inferred that Edward VI’s coronation
-play of ‘the story of Orpheus’ on 22 February 1547 was also by the
-Gentlemen.[77] In the meantime the regular series of Chapel plays at
-Court had been broken after 1512, and when it was taken up again in
-1517 it was not by the Gentlemen, but by the Children.[78] This is,
-of course, characteristic of the Renaissance.[79] But an immediate
-cause is probably to be found in the personality of William Cornish, a
-talented and energetic Master of the Children, who succeeded William
-Newark in the autumn of 1509, and held office until his death in
-1523.[80] Cornish appears to have come of a musical family.[81] He took
-part in a play given by the Gentlemen of the Chapel shortly before
-his appointment as Master. And although it was some years before he
-organized the Children into a definite company, he was the ruling
-spirit and chief organizer of the elaborate disguisings which glorified
-the youthful court of Henry VIII from the Shrovetide of 1511 to the
-visit of the Emperor Charles V in 1522, and hold an important place in
-the story, elsewhere dealt with, of the Court mask.[82] In these revels
-both the Gentlemen and the Children of the Chapel, as well as the King
-and his lords and ladies took a part, and they were often designed so
-as to frame an interlude, which would call for the services of skilled
-performers.[83]
-
-In view of Cornish’s importance in the history of the stage at Court,
-it is matter for regret that none of his dramatic writing has been
-preserved, for it is impossible to attach any value to the fantastic
-attributions of Professor Wallace, who credits him not only with the
-anonymous _Calisto and Meliboea_, _Of Gentleness and Nobility_, _The
-Pardoner and the Frere_, and _Johan Johan_, but also with _The Four
-Elements_ and _The Four P. P._, for the authorship of which by John
-Rastell and John Heywood respectively there is good contemporary
-evidence.[84] Cornish was succeeded as Master of the Children by
-William Crane (1523–45) and Crane by Richard Bower, whose patent was
-successively renewed by Edward VI, presumably by Mary, and finally
-by Elizabeth on 30 April 1559.[85] His service was almost certainly
-continuous, and it is therefore rather puzzling to be told that a
-commission to take up singing children for the Chapel, similar to that
-of John Melyonek in 1484, was issued in February 1550 to Philip van
-Wilder, a Gentleman of the Privy Chamber.[86] Neither the full text nor
-a reference to the source for the warrant is given, and I suspect the
-explanation to be that it was not for the Chapel at all. Philip van
-Wilder was a lutenist, one of a family of musicians of whom others were
-in the royal service, and he may not improbably have had a commission
-to recruit a body of young minstrels with whom other notices suggest
-that he may have been connected.[87] Bower himself had a commission
-for the Chapel on 6 June 1552.[88] Although the Children continued to
-give performances at Court both under Crane and under Bower, it may
-be doubted whether they were quite so prominent as they had been in
-Cornish’s time. Certainly they had to contend with the competition of
-the Paul’s boys. Crane himself is not known to have been a dramatist.
-It has been suggested that Bower’s authorship is indicated by the
-initials R. B. on the title-page of _Apius and Virginia_ (1575), but,
-in view of the date of the publication, this must be regarded as very
-doubtful. The chief Marian producer of plays was Nicholas Udall, but it
-remains uncertain whether he wrote for the Chapel Children. Professor
-Wallace has no justification whatever for his confident assertions
-that John Heywood ‘not only could but did’ write plays for the Chapel,
-that he ‘had grown up in the Chapel under Cornish’, and that ‘as
-dramatist and Court-entertainer’ he ‘was naturally associated with
-the performances of the Chapel’.[89] There is no proof whatever that
-Heywood began as a Chapel boy, and although he certainly wrote plays
-for boys, they are nowhere said or implied to have been of the Chapel
-company. There are scraps of evidence which indicate that they may have
-been the Paul’s boys.[90] It is also conceivable that they may have
-been Philip van Wilder’s young minstrels.
-
-When Elizabeth came to the throne, then, the Chapel had already a
-considerable dramatic tradition behind it. But for a decade its share
-in the Court revels remains somewhat obscure. The Treasurer of the
-Chamber records no payments for performances to its Masters before
-1568.[91] A note in a Revels inventory of 1560 of the employment of
-some white sarcenet ‘in ffurnishinge of a pley by the children of
-the Chapple’ may apparently refer to any year from 1555 to 1560, and
-it is therefore hazardous to identify the Chapel with the anonymous
-players of the interlude of 31 December 1559 which contained ‘suche
-matter that they wher commondyd to leyff off’.[92] Bower may of course
-have retained Catholic sympathies, but he died on 26 July 1561, and
-it is difficult to suppose that the high dramatic reputation of his
-successor Richard Edwardes was not based upon a greater number of Court
-productions than actually stand to his name.[93] Edwardes had been a
-Gentleman of the Chapel from 1556 or earlier. His patent as Master is
-dated on 27 October 1561, and on the following 10 December he received
-a commission the terms of which served as a model for those of the next
-two Masterships:[94]
-
- Memorandum quod x^o die Januarii anno infra scripto istud
- breve deliberatum fuit domino custodi magni Sigilli apud
- Westmonasterium exequendum.
-
-Elizabeth by the grace of God Quene of England Fraunce & Ireland
-defender of the faythe &c. To our right welbeloved & faythfull
-counsaylour Sir Nicholas Bacon knight Keper of our great Seale of
-Englande, commaundinge you that vnder our great Seale aforsayd
-ye cause to be made our lettres patentes in forme followinge. To
-all mayours sherifs bayliefes constables & all other our officers
-gretinge. For that it is mete that our chappell royall should be
-furnysshed with well singing children from tyme to tyme we have & by
-these presentes do authorise our welbeloved servaunt Richard Edwardes
-master of our children of our sayd chappell or his deputie beinge
-by his bill subscribed & sealed so authorised, & havinge this our
-presente comyssion with hym, to take as manye well singinge children
-as he or his sufficient deputie shall thinke mete in all chathedrall
-& collegiate churches as well within libertie[s] as without within
-this our realme of England whatsoever they be, And also at tymes
-necessarie, horses, boates, barges, cartes, & carres, as he for the
-conveyaunce of the sayd children from any place to our sayd chappell
-royall [shall thinke mete] with all maner of necessaries apperteynyng
-to the sayd children as well by lande as water at our prices ordynarye
-to be redely payed when they for our service shall remove to any place
-or places, Provided also that if our sayd servaunt or his deputie or
-deputies bearers hereof in his name cannot forthwith remove the chyld
-or children when he by vertue of this our commyssyon hathe taken hym or
-them that then the sayd child or children shall remayne there vntill
-suche tyme as our sayd servaunt Rychard Edwardes shall send for him
-or them. Wherfore we will & commaunde you & everie of you to whom
-this our comyssion shall come to be helpinge aydinge & assistinge to
-the vttermost of your powers as ye will answer at your vttermoste
-perylles. In wytnes wherof &c. Geven vnder our privie seale at our
-Manor of St James the fourth daye of Decembre in the fourth yere of our
-Raigne.
-
- R. Jones.
-
-At Christmas 1564–5 the boys appeared at Court in a tragedy by
-Edwardes, which may have been his extant _Damon and Pythias_.[95] On
-2 February 1565 and 2 February 1566 they gave performances before the
-lawyers at the Candlemas feasts of Lincoln’s Inn.[96] There is nothing
-to show that the Chapel had any concern with the successful play of
-_Palamon and Arcite_, written and produced by Edwardes for Elizabeth’s
-visit to Oxford in September 1566. Edwardes died on the following 31
-October, and on 15 November William Hunnis was appointed Master of
-the Children.[97] His formal patent of appointment is dated 22 April
-1567, and the bill for his commission, which only differs from that of
-Edwardes in minor points of detail, on 18 April.[98] Hunnis had been a
-Gentleman at least since about 1553, with an interval of disgrace under
-Mary, owing to his participation in Protestant plots. He was certainly
-himself a dramatist, but none of his plays are known to be extant,
-and a contemporary eulogy speaks of his ‘enterludes’ as if they dated
-from an earlier period than that of his Mastership. It is, however,
-natural to suppose that he may have had a hand in some at least of the
-pieces which his Children produced at Court. The first of these was a
-tragedy at Shrovetide 1568. In the following year is said to have been
-published a pamphlet entitled _The Children of the Chapel Stript and
-Whipt_, which apparently originated in some gross offence given by the
-dramatic activities of the Chapel to the growing Puritan sentiment.
-‘Plaies’, said the writer, ‘will never be supprest, while her maiesties
-unfledged minions flaunt it in silkes and sattens. They had as well
-be at their Popish service, in the deuils garments.’ And again, ‘Even
-in her maiesties chappel do these pretty upstart youthes profane
-the Lordes Day by the lascivious writhing of their tender limbs,
-and gorgeous decking of their apparell, in feigning bawdie fables
-gathered from the idolatrous heathen poets’. I should feel more easy in
-drawing inferences from this, were the book extant.[99] But it seems
-to indicate either that the controversialist of 1569 was less careful
-than his successors to avoid attacks upon Elizabeth’s private ‘solace’,
-or that the idea had already occurred to the Master of turning his
-rehearsals of Court plays to profit by giving open performances in
-the Chapel. That the Court performances themselves took place in the
-Chapel is possible, but not very likely; the usual places for them seem
-to have been the Hall or the Great Chamber.[100] But no doubt they
-sometimes fell on a Sunday.
-
-The boys played at Court on 6 January 1570 and during Shrovetide 1571.
-On 6 January 1572 they gave _Narcissus_, and on 13 February 1575 a
-play with a hunt in it.[101] On all these occasions Hunnis was payee.
-An obvious error of the clerk of the Privy Council in entering him as
-‘John’ Hunnis in connexion with the issue of a warrant for the payment
-of 1572 led Chalmers to infer the existence of two Masters of the name
-of Hunnis.[102] During the progress of 1575 Hunnis contributed shows to
-the ‘Princely Pleasures’ of Kenilworth, and very likely utilized the
-services of the boys in these.[103] And herewith his active conduct
-of the Chapel performances appears to have been suspended for some
-years. A play of _Mutius Scaevola_, given jointly at Court by the
-Children of the Chapel and the Children of Windsor on 6 January 1577,
-is the first of a series for which the place of Hunnis as payee is
-taken by Richard Farrant. To this series belong unnamed plays on 27
-December 1577 and 27 December 1578, _Loyalty and Beauty_ on 2 March
-1579, and _Alucius_ on 27 December 1579.[104] Farrant, who is known
-as a musician, had been a Gentleman of the Chapel in 1553, and had
-left on 24 April 1564, doubtless to take up the post of Master of the
-Children of Windsor, in which capacity he annually presented a play
-at Court from 1566–7 to 1575–6.[105] But evidently the two offices
-were not regarded as incompatible, for on 5 November 1570, while still
-holding his Mastership, he was again sworn in as Gentleman of the
-Chapel ‘from Winsore’.[106] A recent discovery by M. Feuillerat enables
-us to see that his taking over of the Chapel Children from Hunnis
-in 1576 was part of a somewhat considerable theatrical enterprise.
-Stimulated perhaps by the example of Burbadge’s new-built Theatre, he
-took a lease of some of the old Priory buildings in the Blackfriars;
-and here, either for the first time, or in continuation of a similar
-use of the Chapel itself, which had provoked criticism, the Children
-appeared under his direction in performances open to the public.[107]
-The ambiguous relation of the Blackfriars precinct to the jurisdiction
-of the City Corporation probably explains the inclusion of the Chapel
-in the list of companies whose exercises the Privy Council instructed
-the City to tolerate on 24 December 1578. It is, I think, pretty clear
-that, although Farrant is described as Master of the Chapel Children by
-the Treasurer of the Chamber from 1577 to 1580, and by Hunnis himself
-in his petition of 1583,[108] he was never technically Master, but
-merely acted as deputy to Hunnis, probably even to the extent of taking
-all the financial risks off his hands. Farrant was paid for a comedy
-at Lincoln’s Inn at Candlemas 1580 and is described in the entry as
-‘one of the Queen’s chaplains’.[109] On 30 November 1580 he died and
-Hunnis then resumed his normal functions.[110] The Chapel played at
-Court on 5 February 1581, 31 December 1581, 27 February 1582, and 26
-December 1582. One of these plays may have been Peele’s _Arraignment
-of Paris_; that of 26 December 1582 was _A Game of Cards_, possibly the
-piece which, according to Sir John Harington, was thought ‘somewhat
-too plaine’, and was championed at rehearsal by ‘a notable wise
-counseller’.[111] On the first three of these occasions the Treasurer
-merely entered a payment to the Master of the Children, without giving
-a name, but in the entry for the last play Hunnis is specified. It
-is known, moreover, that Hunnis, together with one John Newman, took
-a sub-lease of the Blackfriars from Farrant’s widow on 20 December
-1581. They do not seem to have been very successful financially, for
-they were irregular in their rent, and neglected their repairs. It
-was perhaps trepidation at the competition likely to arise from the
-establishment of the Queen’s men in 1583, which led them to transfer
-their interest to one Henry Evans, a scrivener of London, from whom,
-when Sir William More took steps to protect himself against the breach
-of covenant involved in an alienation without his consent, it was
-handed on to the Earl of Oxford and ultimately to John Lyly.[112] In
-November 1583, therefore, Hunnis found himself much dissatisfied with
-his financial position, and drew up the following memorial, probably
-for submission to the Board of Green Cloth of the royal household:[113]
-
- ‘Maye it please your honores, William Hunnys, M^r of the
- Children of hir highnes Chappell, most humble beseecheth to
- consider of these fewe lynes. First, hir Maiestie alloweth for
- the dyett of xij children of hir sayd Chappell daylie vi^d a
- peece by the daye, and xl^{li} by the yeare for theyre aparrell
- and all other furneture.
-
- ‘Agayne there is no ffee allowed neyther for the m^r of the
- sayd children nor for his ussher, and yet neuertheless is he
- constrayned, over and besydes the ussher still to kepe bothe a
- man servant to attend upon them and lykewyse a woman seruant to
- wash and kepe them cleane.
-
- ‘Also there is no allowance for the lodginge of the sayd
- chilldren, such tyme as they attend vppon the Courte, but the
- m^r to his greate charge is dryuen to hyer chambers both for
- himself, his usher chilldren and servantes.
-
- ‘Also theare is no allowaunce for ryding jornies when occasion
- serueth the m^r to trauell or send into sundrie partes within
- this realme, to take vpp and bring such children as be thought
- meete to be trayned for the service of hir Maiestie.
-
- ‘Also there is no allowance ne other consideracion for those
- children whose voyces be chaunged, whoe onelye do depend vpon
- the charge of the sayd m^r vntill such tyme as he may preferr
- the same with cloathing and other furniture, vnto his no smalle
- charge.
-
- ‘And although it may be obiected that hir Maiesties allowaunce
- is no whitt less then hir Maiesties ffather of famous memorie
- therefore allowed: yet considering the pryces of thinges present
- to the tyme past and what annuities the m^r then hadd out of
- sundrie abbies within this realme, besydes sondrie giftes from
- the Kinge, and dyuers perticuler ffees besydes, for the better
- mayntenaunce of the sayd children and office: and besides also
- there hath ben withdrawne from the sayd chilldren synce hir
- Maiesties comming to the crowne xij^d by the daye which was
- allowed for theyr breakefastes as may apeare by the Treasorer
- of the Chamber his acompt for the tyme beinge, with other
- allowaunces incident to the office as appeareth by the auntyent
- acomptes in the sayd office which I heere omytt.
-
- ‘The burden heerof hath from tyme to tyme so hindred the M^{rs}
- of the Children viz. M^r Bower, M^r Edwardes, my sellf and M^r
- Farrant: that notwithstanding some good helpes otherwyse some of
- them dyed in so poore case, and so deepelie indebted that they
- haue not left scarcelye wherewith to burye them.
-
- ‘In tender consideracion whereof, might it please your honores
- that the sayde allowaunce of vj^d a daye apeece for the
- childrens dyet might be reserued in hir Maiesties coffers during
- the tyme of theyre attendaunce. And in liew thereof they to be
- allowed meate and drinke within this honorable householde for
- that I am not able vppon so small allowaunce eny longer to beare
- so heauie a burden. Or otherwyse to be consydred as shall seeme
- best vnto your honorable wysdomes.
-
- ‘[_Endorsed_] 1583 November. The humble peticion of the M^r of
- the Children of hir highnes Chappell [_and in another hand_]
- To have further allowances for the finding of the children for
- causes within mentioned.’
-
-The actual request made by Hunnis seems a modest one. He seems to
-have thought that for his boys to have the run of their teeth at the
-tables of Whitehall would be a better bargain than the board-wages
-of 6_d._ a day. Doubtless he knew their appetites. I do not think
-that the Green Cloth met his views, for in the next reign the 6_d._
-was still being paid and was raised to 10_d._ for the benefit of
-Nathaniel Giles.[114] Possibly Hunnis did get back the £16 a year for
-breakfasts, which seems to be the fee described by him as 1_s._ a day,
-although that in fact works out to £18 5_s._ a year, and the £9 13_s._
-4_d._ for largess, if that also had been withdrawn, since these are
-included in fee lists for 1593 and 1598.[115] The ‘perticuler ffees’
-to which he refers are presumably the allowances occasionally paid by
-Henry for the maintenance of boys whose voices had changed. In any
-case Hunnis’s personal grievance must have been fully met by liberal
-grants of Crown lands which were made him in 1585.[116] It will be
-observed that he says nothing of any profits derived by him from the
-dramatic activities of the Children; whether in the form of rewards
-at Court or in that of admission fees to public performances. Plays
-were no part of the official functions of the Chapel, although it is
-consistent with the general policy of the reign towards the London
-stage to suppose that Elizabeth and her economical ministers were
-well enough content that the deficiencies of her Chapel maintenance
-should be eked out, and her Christmas ‘solace’ rendered possible, out
-of the profits of public exercise. So far, however, as the Chapel was
-concerned, this convenient arrangement was, for the time, nearly at
-an end. The facts with regard to the boy companies during 1584 are
-somewhat complicated. The Treasurer of the Chamber paid the Master
-of the Chapel Children, without specifying his name, for plays on 6
-January and 2 February 1584. He also paid John Lyly for plays by the
-Earl of Oxford’s ‘servants’ on 1 January and 3 March 1584, and Henry
-Evans for a play by the Earl of Oxford’s ‘children’ on 27 December
-1584. Were this all, one would naturally assume that Oxford had brought
-to Court the ‘lads’ who appeared under his name at Norwich in 1580,
-and that these formed a company, quite distinct from the Chapel, of
-which the Earl entrusted the management either jointly or successively
-to Lyly and Evans. Lyly, of course, is known to have been at one time
-in the Earl’s service.[117] One would then be left to speculate as
-to which company played at the Blackfriars during 1584 and where the
-other played. But the real puzzle begins when it is realized that in
-the same year 1584 two of Lyly’s plays, _Campaspe_ and _Sapho and
-Phao_, were for the first time printed, that these have prologues ‘at
-the Blackfriars’, that their title-pages indicate their performance at
-Court, not by Oxford’s company, but by the Chapel and the Paul’s boys,
-of which latter the Treasurer of the Chamber makes no mention, and
-that the title-pages of the two issues of _Campaspe_ further specify,
-in the one case Twelfth Night, and in the other, which is apparently
-corrected, New Year’s Day, as the precise date of performance, while
-that of _Sapho and Phao_ similarly specifies Shrove Tuesday. But New
-Year’s Day and Shrove Tuesday of 1584 are the days which the Treasurer
-of the Chamber assigns not to the Chapel, but to Oxford’s company; and
-even if you accept Professor Feuillerat’s rather far-fetched assumption
-that the days referred to in the title-pages were not necessarily
-those falling in the year of issue, you will not find a New Year’s Day,
-or for the matter of that a Twelfth Night, since the opening of the
-Blackfriars, which, if a play-day at all, is not occupied either by
-some Chapel or Paul’s play of which the name is known, or by some other
-company altogether.[118] The conjecture seems inevitable that, when he
-found himself in financial straits and with the rivalry of the Queen’s
-men to face in 1583, Hunnis came to an arrangement with the Paul’s
-boys, who had recently lost Sebastian Westcott, on the one hand, and
-with the Earl of Oxford and his agents Lyly and Evans on the other, and
-put the Blackfriars at the disposal of a combination of boys from all
-three companies, who appeared indifferently at Court under the name of
-the Master or that of the Earl. In the course of 1584 Sir William More
-resumed possession of the Blackfriars. Henry Evans must have made some
-temporary arrangement to enable the company to appear at Court during
-the winter of 1584–5.[119] But for a year or two thereafter there were
-no boys acting in London until in 1586 an arrangement with Thomas
-Giles, Westcott’s successor at St. Paul’s, afforded a new opportunity
-for Lyly’s pen.[120]
-
-The Chapel had contributed pretty continuously to Court drama for
-nearly a century. They now drop out of its story for about seventeen
-years.[121] In addition to the two plays of Lyly, one other of their
-recent pieces, Peele’s _Arraignment of Paris_, was printed in 1584.
-Two former Children, Henry Eveseed and John Bull, afterwards well
-known as a musician, became Gentlemen on 30 November 1585 and in
-January 1586 respectively.[122] Absence from Court did not entail
-an absolute cessation of dramatic activities. Performances by the
-Children are recorded at Ipswich and Norwich in 1586–7 and at Leicester
-before Michaelmas in 1591. There is, however, little to bear out the
-suggestion that the Chapel furnished the boys who played at Croydon,
-probably in the archbishop’s palace, during the summers of 1592 and
-1593, other than the fact that the author of the play produced in 1593,
-_Summer’s Last Will and Testament_, was Thomas Nashe, who was also part
-author with Marlowe of _Dido_, one of two plays printed as Chapel plays
-in 1594. The extant text of the other play, _The Wars of Cyrus_, seems
-to be datable between 1587 and 1594. Hunnis died on 6 June 1597, and on
-9 June 1597 Nathaniel Giles, ‘being before extraordinary’, was sworn as
-a regular Gentleman of the Chapel and Master of the Children. Giles,
-like Farrant, came ‘from Winsore’. Born about 1559, he was educated
-at Magdalen College, Oxford, and was appointed Clerk in St. George’s
-Chapel, Windsor, and Master of the Children on 1 October 1595. He
-earned a considerable reputation as a musician, and died in possession
-of both Masterships at the age of seventy-five on 24 January 1634.[123]
-His patent of appointment to the Chapel Royal is dated 14 July and
-his commission 15 July 1597.[124] They closely follow in terms those
-granted to Hunnis.[125]
-
-Three years later the theatrical enterprise which had been dropped in
-1584 was renewed by Giles, in co-operation with Henry Evans, who had
-been associated with its final stages. The locality chosen was again
-the Blackfriars, in the building reconstructed by James Burbadge in
-1596, and then inhibited, on a petition of the inhabitants, from use
-as a public play-house. Of this, being ‘then or late in the tenure or
-occupacion of’ Henry Evans, Richard Burbadge gave him on 2 September
-1600 a lease for twenty-one years from the following Michaelmas at a
-rent of £40.[126] According to Burbadge’s own account of the matter,
-Evans ‘intended then presentlye to erect or sett vp a companye of boyes
-... in the same’, and knowing that the payment of the rent depended
-upon the possibility of maintaining a company ‘to playe playes and
-interludes in the said Playhowse in such sort as before tyme had bene
-there vsed’, he thought it desirable to take collateral security in
-the form of a bond for £400 from Evans and his son-in-law Alexander
-Hawkins.[127] Long after, the Blackfriars _Sharers Papers_ of 1635
-describe the lease as being to ‘one Evans that first sett vp the boyes
-commonly called the Queenes Majesties Children of the Chapell’.[128] I
-find nothing in this language to bear out the contention of Professor
-Wallace that Evans’s occupation of the Blackfriars extended back long
-before the date of his lease, and that, as already suggested by Mr.
-Fleay, the Chapel plays began again, not in 1600, but in 1597.[129]
-Burbadge speaks clearly of the setting up of the company as still an
-intention when the lease was drawn, and the reference to earlier plays
-in the house may either be to some use of it unknown to us between
-1596 and 1600, or perhaps more probably to the performances by Evans
-and others before the time of James Burbadge’s reconstruction. Mr.
-Fleay’s suggestion rested, so far as I can judge, upon the evidence for
-the existence of Jonson’s _Case is Altered_ as early as January 1599
-and its publication as ‘acted by the children of the Blacke-friers’.
-But this publication was not until 1609 and represents a revision
-made not long before that date; and as will be seen the company
-did not use the name Children of the Blackfriars until about 1606.
-There is no reason to suppose that they were the original producers
-of the play. A confirmatory indication for 1600 as the date of the
-revival may be found in the appearance of the Chapel at Court, for
-the first time since 1584, on 6 January and 22 February 1601. On both
-occasions Nathaniel Giles was payee. The performance of 6 January,
-described by the Treasurer of the Chamber as ‘a showe with musycke
-and speciall songes’ was probably Jonson’s _Cynthia’s Revels_, which
-that description well fits; that of 22 February may have been the
-anonymous _Contention between Liberality and Prodigality_. Both of
-these were published in 1601. Jonson has preserved for us in his Folio
-of 1616 the list of the principal actors of _Cynthia’s Revels_, who
-were ‘Nat. Field, Sal. Pavy, Tho. Day, Ioh. Underwood, Rob. Baxter
-and Ioh. Frost’. The induction of the play is spoken by ‘Iacke’ and
-two other of the Children, of whom one, impersonating a spectator,
-complains that ‘the vmbrae, or ghosts of some three or foure playes,
-departed a dozen yeeres since, haue bin seene walking on your stage
-heere’. _Liberality and Prodigality_ may be one of the old-fashioned
-plays here scoffed at, but it is probable that Jonson also had in
-mind Lyly’s _Love’s Metamorphosis_, which was published in 1601 as
-‘first playd by the Children of Paules, and now by the Children of
-the Chappell’, and there may have been other revivals of the same
-kind. The company was included in the Lenten prohibition of 11 March
-1601. Later in the year they produced Jonson’s _Poetaster_, containing
-raillery of the common stages, which stimulated a reply in Dekker’s
-_Satiromastix_, and which, together with their growing popularity,
-sufficiently explains the reference to the ‘aerie of children, little
-eyases’ in _Hamlet_.[130] The _Poetaster_ was published in 1602 and
-the actor-list of the Folio of 1616 contains the names of ‘Nat. Field,
-Sal Pavy, Tho. Day, Ioh. Underwood, Wil. Ostler and Tho. Marton’. The
-full name of Pavy, who died after acting for three years, is given as
-Salathiel in the epigram written to his memory by Jonson; it appears
-as Salmon in a document which adds considerably to our knowledge both
-of the original constitution of the company and of the lines on which
-it was managed. This is a complaint to the Star Chamber by one Henry
-Clifton, Esq., of Toftrees, Norfolk, against a serious abuse of the
-powers of impressment entrusted under the royal commission to Nathaniel
-Giles.[131] Clifton alleged that Giles, in confederacy with Evans,
-one James Robinson and others, had set up a play-house for their own
-profit in the Blackfriars, and under colour of the commission had taken
-boys, not for the royal service in the Chapel Royal, but employment in
-acting interludes. He specified as so taken, ‘John Chappell, a gramer
-schole scholler of one Mr. Spykes schole neere Criplegate, London;
-John Motteram, a gramer scholler in the free schole at Westmi[n]ster;
-Nathan ffield, a scholler of a gramer schole in London, kepte by one
-Mr. Monkaster; Alvery Trussell, an apprentice to one Thomas Gyles;
-one Phillipp Pykman and Thomas Grymes, apprentices to Richard and
-Georg Chambers; Salmon Pavey, apprentice to one Peerce’. These were
-all children ‘noe way able or fitt for singing, nor by anie the sayd
-confederates endevoured to be taught to singe’. Finally they had
-made an attempt upon Clifton’s own son Thomas, a boy of thirteen,
-who had been seized by Robinson in Christ Church cloister on or
-about 13 December 1600, as he went from Clifton’s house in Great St.
-Bartholomew’s to the grammar school at Christ Church, and carried off
-to the play-house ‘to exercyse the base trade of a mercynary enterlude
-player, to his vtter losse of tyme, ruyne and disparagment’. Clifton
-went to the Blackfriars, where his son was ‘amongste a companie of
-lewde and dissolute mercenary players’, and made a protest; but Giles,
-Robinson, and Evans replied that ‘yf the Queene would not beare them
-furth in that accion, she should gett another to execute her comission
-for them’, that ‘they had aucthoritie sufficient soe to take any noble
-mans sonne in this land’, and that ‘were yt not for the benefitt they
-made by the sayd play howse, whoe would, should serve the Chappell
-with children for them’. Then they committed Thomas Clifton to the
-charge of Evans in his father’s presence, with a threat of a whipping
-if he was not obedient, and ‘did then and there deliuer vnto his sayd
-sonne, in moste scornefull disdaynfull and dispightfull manner, a
-scrolle of paper, conteyning parte of one of theire sayd playes or
-enterludes, and him, the sayd Thomas Clifton, comaunded to learne
-the same by harte’. Clifton appealed to Sir John Fortescue and got
-a warrant from him for the boy’s release after a day and a night’s
-durance. It was not, however, until a year later, on 15 December 1601,
-that he made his complaint.[132] During the following Christmas Giles
-brought the boys to Court on 6 and 10 January and 14 February 1602,
-and then with the hearing of the case in the Star Chamber during
-Hilary Term troubles began for the syndicate. Evans was censured ‘for
-his vnorderlie carriage and behauiour in takinge vp of gentlemens
-childeren against theire wills and to ymploy them for players and
-for other misdemeanors’, and it was decreed that all assurances made
-to him concerning the play-house or plays should be void and should
-be delivered up to be cancelled.[133] Evans, however, had apparently
-prepared himself against this contingency by assigning his lease to
-his son-in-law Alexander Hawkins on 21 October 1601. This at least
-is one explanation of a somewhat obscure transaction. According to
-Evans himself, the assignment was to protect Hawkins from any risk
-upon the bond given to Burbadge. On the other hand, there had already
-been negotiations for the sale of a half interest in the undertaking
-to three new partners, Edward Kirkham, William Rastall, and Thomas
-Kendall, and it was claimed later by Kirkham that the assignment to
-Hawkins had been in trust to reassign a moiety to these three, in
-return for a contribution of capital variously stated at from £300 to
-£600. No such reassignment was, however, carried out.[134] But although
-the lease from Burbadge was certainly not cancelled as a result of the
-Star Chamber decree, it probably did seem prudent that the original
-managers of the theatre should remain in the background for a time.
-Nothing more is heard of James Robinson, while the partnership between
-Evans and Hawkins on the one side and Kirkham, Rastall, and Kendall on
-the other was brought into operation under articles dated on 20 April
-1602. For the observance of these Evans and Hawkins gave a bond of
-£200.[135] Kirkham, Rastall, and Kendall in turn gave Evans a bond of
-£50 as security for a weekly payment of 8s., ‘because after the said
-agreements made, the complainant [Kirkham] and his said parteners would
-at their directions haue the dieting and ordering of the boyes vsed
-about the plaies there, which before the said complainant had, and for
-the which he had weekely before that disbursed and allowed great sommes
-of monie’.[136]
-
-Of the new managers, Rastall was a merchant and Kendall a haberdasher,
-both of London.[137] Kirkham has generally been assumed to be the
-Yeoman of the Revels, but of this there is not, so far as I know,
-any definite proof. The association did not prove an harmonious one.
-According to Evans, Kirkham and his fellows made false information
-against him to the Lord Chamberlain, as a result of which he was
-‘comaunded by his Lordship to avoyd and leave the same’, had to quit
-the country, and lost nearly £300 by the charge he was put to and the
-negligence of Hawkins in looking after his profits.[138] This seems
-to have been in May 1602. Meanwhile the performances continued. The
-company did not appear at Court during the winter of 1602–3, but _Sir
-Giles Goosecap_ and possibly Chapman’s _Gentleman Usher_ were produced
-by them before the end of Elizabeth’s reign; and on 18 September
-1602 a visit was paid to the theatre by Philipp Julius, Duke of
-Stettin-Pomerania, of which the following account is preserved in the
-journal of Frederic Gerschow, a member of his suite:[139]
-
- ‘Von dannen sind wir auf die Kinder-comoediam gangen, welche
- im Argument iudiciret eine castam viduam, war eine historia
- einer königlichen Wittwe aus Engellandt. Es hat aber mit dieser
- Kinder-comoedia die Gelegenheit: die Königin hält viel junger
- Knaben, die sich der Singekunst mit Ernst befleissigen müssen
- und auf allen Instrumenten lernen, auch dabenebenst studieren.
- Diese Knaben haben ihre besondere praeceptores in allen
- Künsten, insonderheit sehr gute musicos.’
-
- ‘Damit sie nun höfliche Sitten anwenden, ist ihnen aufgelegt,
- wöchentlich eine comoedia zu agiren, wozu ihnen denn die Königin
- ein sonderlich theatrum erbauet und mit köstlichen Kleidern zum
- Ueberfluss versorget hat. Wer solcher Action zusehen will, muss
- so gut als unserer Münze acht sundische Schillinge geben, und
- findet sich doch stets viel Volks auch viele ehrbare Frauens,
- weil nutze argumenta und viele schöne Lehren, als von andern
- berichtet, sollen tractiret werden; alle bey Lichte agiret,
- welches ein gross Ansehen macht. Eine ganze Stunde vorher höret
- man eine köstliche musicam instrumentalem von Orgeln, Lauten,
- Pandoren, Mandoren, Geigen und Pfeiffen, wie denn damahlen ein
- Knabe cum voce tremula in einer Basgeigen so lieblich gesungen,
- dass wo es die Nonnen zu Mailand ihnen nicht vorgethan, wir
- seines Gleichen auf der Reise nicht gehöret hatten.’
-
-This report of a foreigner must not be pressed as if it were precise
-evidence upon the business organization of the Blackfriars. Yet it
-forms the main basis of the theory propounded by Professor Wallace
-that Elizabeth personally financed the Chapel plays and personally
-directed the limitation of the number of adult companies allowed to
-perform in London, as part of a deliberate scheme of reform, which
-her ‘definite notion of what the theatre should be’ had led her to
-plan--a theory which, I fear, makes his _Children of the Chapel at
-Blackfriars_ misleading, in spite of its value as a review of the
-available evidence, old and new, about the company.[140] Professor
-Wallace supposes that Edward Kirkham, acting officially as Yeoman of
-the Revels, was Elizabeth’s agent, and that, even before he became a
-partner in the syndicate, he dieted the boys and supplied them with the
-‘köstlichen Kleidern zum Ueberfluss’ mentioned by Gerschow, accounting
-for the expenditure either through the Revels Accounts or through some
-other unspecified accounts ‘yet to be discovered’.[141] Certainly no
-such expenditure appeared in the Revels Accounts, and no other official
-account with which Kirkham was concerned is known. It may be pointed
-out that, if we took Gerschow’s account as authoritative, we should
-have to suppose that Elizabeth provided the theatre building, which
-we know she did not, and I think it may be taken for granted that her
-payments for the Chapel were no more than those with which we are
-already quite familiar, namely the Master’s fee of £40 ‘pro exhibicione
-puerorum’, the board-wages of 6_d._ a day for each of twelve children,
-possibly the breakfast allowance of £16 a year and the largess of £9
-13_s._ 4_d._ for high feasts, and the occasional rewards for actual
-performances. None of these, of course, passed through the Revels
-Office, and although this office may, as in the past, have helped to
-furnish the actual plays at Court, the cost of exercising in public
-remained a speculation of the Master and his backers, who had to look
-for recoupment and any possible profits to the sums received from
-spectators. If it is true, as Gerschow seems to say, that performances
-were only given on Saturdays, the high entrance charge of 1_s._ is
-fully explained. The lawsuits, of course, bear full evidence to the
-expenditure by the members of the syndicate upon the ‘setting forward’
-of plays.[142] Nor is there any ground for asserting, as Professor
-Wallace does, that there were two distinct sets of children, one lodged
-in or near the palace for chapel purposes proper, and the other kept
-at the Blackfriars for plays.[143] It is true that Clifton charged
-Giles with impressing boys who could not sing, but Gerschow’s account
-proves that there were others at the Blackfriars who could sing well
-enough, and it would be absurd to suppose that there was one trained
-choir for the stage and another for divine service. Doubtless, however,
-the needs of the theatre made it necessary to employ, by agreement
-or impressment, a larger number of boys than the twelve borne on the
-official establishment.[144] And that boys whose voices had broken were
-retained in the theatrical company may be inferred from the report
-about 1602 that the Dowager Countess of Leicester had married ‘one
-of the playing boyes of the chappell’.[145] I cannot, finally, agree
-with Professor Wallace in assuming that the play attended by Elizabeth
-at the Blackfriars on 29 December 1601 was necessarily a public one
-at the theatre; much less that it was ‘only one in a series of such
-attendances’. She had dined with Lord Hunsdon at his house in the
-Blackfriars. The play may have been in his great chamber, or he may
-have borrowed the theatre next door for private use on an off-day. And
-the actors may even more probably have been his own company than the
-Chapel boys.[146]
-
-The appointment of a new Lord Chamberlain by James I seems to have
-enabled Evans to return to England. He found theatrical affairs in a
-bad way, owing to the plague of 1603, and ‘speach and treatie’ arose
-between him and Burbadge about a possible surrender of his lease.[147]
-By December, however, things looked brighter. Evans did some repairs
-to the Blackfriars, and the enterprise continued.[148] Like the adult
-companies, the partners secured direct royal protection under the
-following patent of 4 February 1604:[149]
-
-[Sidenote: De licencia speciali pro Eduardo Kirkham et aliis pro le
-Revell domine Regine.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Mayors Shiriffes Justices
- of Peace Baliffes Constables and to all other our officers
- mynisters and lovinge Subiectes to whome theis presentes shall
- come, greeting. Whereas the Queene our deerest wief hath for her
- pleasure and recrea[~c]on when she shall thinke it fit to have
- any playes or shewes appoynted her servauntes Edward Kirkham
- Alexander Hawkyns Thomas Kendall and Robert Payne to provyde and
- bring vppe a convenient nomber of Children, whoe shalbe called
- children of her Revelles, knowe ye that we have appointed and
- authorized and by theis presentes doe authorize and appoynte
- the said Edward Kirkham Alexander Hawkins Thomas Kendall and
- Robert Payne from tyme to tyme to provide keepe and bring vppe a
- convenient nomber of Children, and them to practize and exercise
- in the quality of playinge by the name of Children of the
- Revells to the Queene within the Black-fryers in our Cytie of
- London, or in any other convenient place where they shall thinke
- fit for that purpose. Wherefore we will and commaunde [you] and
- everie of you to whome it shall appertayne to permytt her said
- Servauntes to keepe a convenient nomber of Children by the name
- of Children of her Revells and them to exercise in the quality
- of playing according to her pleasure. Provided allwaies that noe
- such Playes or Shewes shalbee presented before the said Queene
- our wief by the said Children or by them any where publiquelie
- acted but by the approbacion and allowaunce of Samuell Danyell,
- whome her pleasure is to appoynt for that purpose. And theis
- our lettres Patentes shalbe your sufficient warraunte in this
- behalfe. In witnes whereof &c., witnes our self at Westminster
- the fourth day of February.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-Apparently it was still thought better to keep the name of Evans out of
-the patent, and he was represented by Hawkins; of the nature of Payne’s
-connexion with the company I know nothing. The adoption of the name of
-Children of the Queen’s Revels should perhaps be taken as indicating
-that, as the boy-actors grew older, the original connexion with the
-Chapel became looser. The use of Giles’s commission as a method of
-obtaining recruits was probably abandoned, and there is no evidence
-that he had any further personal association with the theatre.[150]
-The commission itself was, however, renewed on 13 September 1604,
-with a new provision for the further education of boys whose voices
-had changed;[151] and in December Giles was successful in getting the
-board-wages allowed for his charges raised from 6_d._ to 10_d._ a
-day.[152]
-
-The Revels children started gaily on the new phase of their career, and
-the _Hamlet_ allusion is echoed in Middleton’s advice to a gallant,
-‘if his humour so serve him, to call in at the Blackfriars, where he
-should see a nest of boys able to ravish a man’.[153] They were at
-Court on 21 February 1604 and on 1 and 3 January 1605. Their payees
-were Kirkham for the first year and Evans and Daniel for the second.
-Evidently Daniel was taking a more active part in the management than
-that of a mere licenser. Their play of 1 January 1605 was Chapman’s
-_All Fools_ (1605), and to 1603–5 may also be assigned his _Monsieur
-d’Olive_ (1606), and possibly his _Bussy d’Ambois_ (1607), and _Day’s
-Law Tricks_ (1608). I venture to conjecture that the boys’ companies
-were much more under the influence of their poets than were their
-adult rivals; it is noteworthy that plays written for them got
-published much more rapidly than the King’s or Prince’s men ever
-permitted.[154] And it is known that one poet, who now began for the
-first time to work for the Blackfriars, acquired a financial interest
-in the undertaking. This was John Marston, to whom Evans parted, at
-an unspecified date, with a third of the moiety which the arrangement
-of 1602 had left on his hands.[155] Marston’s earliest contributions
-were probably _The Malcontent_ (1604) and _The Dutch Courtesan_
-(1605). From the induction to the _Malcontent_ we learn that it
-was appropriated by the King’s men, in return for the performance
-by the boys of a play on Jeronimo, perhaps the extant _I Jeronimo_,
-in which the King’s claimed rights. Marston’s satirical temper did
-not, however, prove altogether an asset to the company; and I fear
-that the deference of its directors to literary suggestions was not
-compatible with that practical political sense, which as a rule enabled
-the professional players to escape conflicts with authority. The
-history of the next few years is one of a series of indiscretions,
-which render it rather surprising that the company should throughout
-have succeeded in maintaining its vitality, even with the help of
-constant reconstructions of management and changes of name. The first
-trouble, the nature of which is unknown, appears to have been caused
-by Marston’s _Dutch Courtesan_. Then came, ironically enough, the
-_Philotas_ of the company’s official censor, Samuel Daniel. Then, in
-1605, the serious affair of _Eastward Ho!_ for which Marston appears
-to have been mainly responsible, although he saved himself by flight,
-whereas his fellow authors, Jonson and Chapman, found themselves in
-prison and in imminent danger of losing their ears.[156] I do not
-think that the scandal arose on the performance of the play, but on
-its publication in the late autumn.[157] The company did not appear
-at Court during the winter of 1605–6, but the ingenious Kirkham seems
-to have succeeded in transferring one of its new plays, Marston’s
-_Fawn_, and possibly also _Bussy D’Ambois_, to Paul’s, and appeared
-triumphantly before the Treasurer of the Chamber’s paymaster the
-following spring as ‘one of the Masters of the Children of Pawles’.
-Meanwhile the Blackfriars company went on acting, but it is to be
-inferred from the title-pages of its next group of plays, Marston’s
-_Sophonisba_ (1606), Sharpham’s _The Fleir_ (1607), and Day’s _Isle of
-Gulls_ (1606), that its misdemeanour had cost it the direct patronage
-of the Queen, and that it was now only entitled to call itself, not
-Children of the Queen’s Revels, but Children of the Revels.[158]
-Possibly the change of name also indicates that thereafter, not
-Daniel, but the Master of the Revels, acted as its censor. Anne
-herself, by the way, must have felt the snub, for it was probably at
-the Blackfriars that, if the French ambassador may be trusted, she had
-attended representations ‘to enjoy the laugh against her husband’.[159]
-The alias, whatever it connoted, proved but an ephemeral one. By
-February 1606 one of the plays just named, the _Isle of Gulls_, had
-given a new offence. Some of those responsible for it were thrown into
-Bridewell, and a fresh reconstruction became imperative.[160] It was
-probably at this date that one Robert Keysar, a London goldsmith, came
-into the business. Kirkham, like Evans before him, discreetly retired
-from active management, and the Children, with Keysar as ‘interest
-with them’, became ‘Masters themselves’, taking the risks and paying
-the syndicate for the use of the hall.[161] Kirkham claims that under
-this arrangement the moiety of profits in which he had rights amounted
-to £150 a year, as against £100 a year previously earned.[162] Shortly
-afterwards the dissociation of the Chapel from the Blackfriars was
-completed by a new commission issued to Giles on 7 November 1606, to
-which was added the following clause:
-
- ‘Prouided alwayes and wee doe straightlie charge and commaunde
- that none of the saide Choristers or Children of the Chappell
- so to be taken by force of this commission shalbe vsed or
- imployed as Comedians or Stage players, or to exercise or acte
- any Stage playes Interludes Comedies or tragedies, for that it
- is not fitt or decent that such as shoulde singe the praises
- of God Allmightie shoulde be trayned vpp or imployed in suche
- lascivious and prophane exercises.’[163]
-
-It is presumably to this pronouncement that Flecknoe refers in 1664,
-when he speaks of the Chapel theatre being converted to the use of the
-Children of the Revels, on account of the growing precision of the
-people and the growing licentiousness of plays.[164] It is, however,
-curious to observe that the abandoned titles of the company tended to
-linger on in actual use. Evans in 1612 speaks of the syndicate as ‘the
-coparteners sharers, and Masters of the Queenes Maiesties Children
-of the Revells (for so yt was often called)’ in 1608;[165] while the
-name Children of the Chapel is used in the Stationers’ Register entry
-of _Your Five Gallants_ in 1608, at Maidstone in 1610, and even
-in such official documents as the Revels Accounts for 1604–5 and the
-Chamber Accounts for 1612–13.
-
-Under Keysar the name was Children of the Blackfriars. For a couple
-of years the company succeeded in keeping clear of further disaster.
-But on 29 March 1608 the French ambassador, M. de la Boderie, reported
-that all the London theatres had been closed, and were now threatened
-by the King with a permanent inhibition on account of two plays which
-had given the greatest offence.[166] Against one of these, which
-dealt with the domestic affairs of the French king, he had himself
-lodged a protest, and his description leaves no doubt that this was
-one of the parts of Chapman’s _Conspiracy and Tragedy of Byron_,
-which was published, without the offending scene, later in the year,
-as ‘acted at the Black-Friars’. The other play was a personal attack
-upon James himself. ‘Un jour ou deux devant’, says La Boderie, ‘ilz
-avoient dépêché leur Roi, sa mine d’Escosse, et tous ses favorits
-d’une estrange sorte; car aprés luy avoir fait dépiter le ciel sur
-le vol d’un oyseau, et faict battre un gentilhomme pour avoir rompu
-ses chiens, ils le dépeignoient ivre pour le moins une fois le jour.’
-This piece is not extant, but I have recently come across another
-allusion to it in a letter of 11 March 1608 to Lord Salisbury from
-Sir Thomas Lake, a clerk of the signet in attendance upon the King at
-Thetford.[167]
-
- ‘His ma^{tie} was well pleased with that which your lo.
- advertiseth concerning the committing of the players y^{t}
- have offended in y^{e} matters of France, and commanded me to
- signifye to your lo. that for y^{e} others who have offended in
- y^{e} matter of y^{e} Mynes and other lewd words, which is y^{e}
- children of y^{e} blackfriars, That though he had signified
- his mynde to your lo. by my lo. of Mountgommery yet I should
- repeate it again, That his G. had vowed they should never play
- more, but should first begg their bred and he wold have his vow
- performed, And therefore my lo. chamberlain by himselfe or your
- ll. at the table should take order to dissolve them, and to
- punish the maker besides.’
-
-Sir Thomas Lake appears to have been under the impression that two
-companies were concerned, and that the ‘matters of France’ were not
-played by the Children of Blackfriars. If so, we must suppose that
-_Byron_ was originally produced elsewhere, perhaps by the King’s
-Revels, and transferred to the Blackfriars after ‘reformation’ by the
-Council. M. de la Boderie, however, writes as if the same company
-were responsible for both plays, and perhaps it is on the whole more
-probable that Sir Thomas Lake misunderstood the situation. I feel
-very little doubt that the maker of the play on the mines was once
-more Marston, who was certainly summoned before the Privy Council and
-committed to Newgate, on some offence not specified in the extant
-record, on 8 June 1608.[168] And this was probably the end of his
-stormy connexion with the stage. He disappeared from the Blackfriars
-and from literary life, leaving _The Insatiate Countess_ unfinished,
-and selling the share in the syndicate which he had acquired from Evans
-about 1603 to Robert Keysar for £100. Before making his purchase,
-Keysar, who tells us that he put a value of £600 on the whole of the
-enterprise, got an assurance, as he thought, from the King’s men
-that they would not come to any arrangement with Henry Evans which
-would prejudice his interests.[169] This the King’s men afterwards
-denied, and as a matter of fact the negotiations, tentatively opened
-as far back as 1603, between Evans and Burbadge for a surrender of
-the lease were now coming to a head, and its actual surrender took
-place about August 1608.[170] On the ninth of that month Burbadge
-executed fresh leases of the theatre to a new syndicate representing
-the King’s men.[171] The circumstances leading up to Evans’s part in
-this transaction became subsequently the subject of hostile criticism
-by Kirkham, who asserted that the lease, which Alexander Hawkins
-held in trust, had been stolen from his custody by Mrs. Evans, and
-that the surrender was effected with the fraudulent intention of
-excluding Kirkham from the profits to which he was entitled under the
-settlement of 1602.[172] According to Evans, however, Kirkham was at
-least implicitly a consenting party, for it was he who, after the
-King’s inhibition had brought the profits to an end, grew weary of
-the undertaking and initiated measures for winding it up. On or about
-26 July 1608 he had had the ‘apparells, properties and goods’ of the
-syndicate appraised and an equitable division made. When some of the
-boys were committed to prison he had ‘said he would deale no more with
-yt, “for”, quoth he, “yt is a base thing”, or vsed wordes to such, or
-very like effect’. And he had ‘delivered up their commission, which he
-had vnder the greate seale aucthorising them to plaie, and discharged
-divers of the partners and poetts’. In view of this, Evans claimed that
-he was fully justified in coming to terms with Burbadge.[173]
-
-After all, the King’s anger proved only a flash in the pan. Perhaps
-the company travelled during the summer of 1608, if they, and not
-the King’s Revels, were ‘the Children of the Revells’ rewarded at
-Leicester on 21 August.[174] But by the following Christmas they were
-in London, and with Keysar as their payee gave three plays at Court,
-where they had not put in an appearance since 1604–5. Two of these were
-on 1 and 4 January 1609. As they still bore the name of Children of
-Blackfriars, they had presumably remained on sufferance in their old
-theatre, which the King’s men may not have been in a hurry to occupy
-during a plague-stricken period.[175] But when a new season opened in
-the autumn of 1609, new quarters became necessary. These they found at
-Whitefriars, which had been vacated by the failure of the short-lived
-King’s Revels company, and it was as the Children of Whitefriars that
-Keysar brought them to Court for no less than five plays during the
-winter of 1609–10. He had now enlisted a partner in Philip Rosseter,
-one of the lutenists of the royal household, who carried out a scheme,
-with the co-operation of the King’s men, for buying off with a ‘dead
-rent’ the possible competition of the Paul’s boys, who had closed their
-doors about 1606, but might at any moment open them again.[176] More
-than this, through the influence of Sir Thomas Monson, Rosseter was
-successful in obtaining a new patent, dated on 4 January 1610, by which
-the Children once more became entitled to call themselves Children of
-the Queen’s Revels.[177] It ran as follows:
-
-[Sidenote: De concessione Roberto Daborne & aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c., To all Maiors Sheriffes Iustices
- of peace Bayliffes Constables and to all other our Officers
- Ministers and loving Subiects to whome theis presentes shall
- come Greeting. Whereas the Quene our deerest wyfe hathe for
- hir pleasure, and recreacion, when shee shall thinke it fitt
- to have any Playes or Shewes, appoynted hir servantes Robert
- Daborne, Phillippe Rosseter, Iohn Tarbock, Richard Iones, and
- Robert Browne to prouide and bring vpp a convenient nomber of
- Children whoe shalbe called Children of hir Revelles, knowe ye
- that wee haue appoynted and authorised, and by theis presentes
- do authorize and appoynte the said Robert Daborne, Phillipp
- Rosseter, Iohn Tarbock, Richard Iones, and Robert Browne from
- tyme to tyme to provide keepe and bring vpp a convenient nomber
- of children, and them to practice and exercise in the quality of
- playing, by the name of Children of the Revells to the Queene,
- within the white ffryers in the Suburbs of our Citty of London,
- or in any other convenyent place where they shall thinke fitt
- for that purpose. Wherfore wee will and commaund you and euery
- of you to whome it shall appertayne to permitt her said seruants
- to keepe a conuenient nomber of Children by the name of the
- Children of hir Revells, and them to exercise in the qualitye
- of playing according to hir pleasure, And theis our lettres
- patentes shalbe your sufficient warrant in this behaulfe.
- Wittnes our self at Westminster, the ffourth daye of Ianuary.
- per breve de priuato sigillo.
-
-Of the new syndicate Browne and Jones were old professional actors
-who had belonged to the Admiral’s men a quarter of a century before,
-and had since been prominent, Browne in particular, as organizers
-of English companies for travel in Germany. Daborne was or became a
-playwright. Of Tarbock I know nothing; he may have been a nominee of
-Keysar, whose own name, perhaps for reasons of diplomacy, does not
-appear in the patent. He may, of course, have retired, but a lawsuit
-which he brought in 1610 suggests that his connexion with the company
-was not altogether broken. The Whitefriars had not the tradition of
-the Blackfriars, and Keysar was aggrieved at the surrender of the
-Blackfriars lease by Evans over his head. On 8 February 1610 he laid a
-bill in the Court of Requests against the housekeepers of the King’s
-men, claiming a share in their profits since the date of surrender,
-which he estimated at £1,500, on the strength of the one-sixth interest
-in the lease assigned by Evans to Marston and by Marston to him.[178]
-He asserted that he had kept boys two years in the hope of playing
-‘vpon the ceasing of the generall sicknes’, and had spent £500 on
-that and on making provision in the house, and had now, at a loss of
-£1,000, had to disperse ‘a companye of the moste exparte and skilful
-actors within the realme of England to the number of eighteane or
-twentye persons all or moste of them trayned vp in that service, in
-the raigne of the late Queene Elizabeth for ten yeares togeather and
-afterwardes preferred into her Maiesties service to be the Chilldren
-of her Revells’.[179] Burbadge and his fellows denied that they had
-made £1,500, or that they had attempted to defraud Keysar either about
-the surrender of the lease or, as he also alleged, the ‘dead rent’ to
-Paul’s, and they pointed out that his losses were really due to the
-plague. He could recover his share of the theatrical stock from Evans.
-Evans had had no legal right to assign his interest under the lease.
-As only the pleadings in the case and not the depositions or the order
-of the court are extant, we do not know what Evans, who was to be a
-witness, had to say.[180] The fact that one of the new Blackfriars
-leases of 1608 was to a Thomas Evans leaves the transaction between
-Henry Evans and Burbadge not altogether free from a suspicion of bad
-faith. Kirkham also found that he had been either hasty or outwitted in
-1608, and as the deaths of Rastall and Kendall in that year had left
-him the sole claimant to any interest under the arrangement of 1602, he
-had recourse to litigation. In the course of 1611 and 1612 he brought
-a ‘multiplicitie of suites’ against Evans and Hawkins, and was finally
-non-suited in the King’s Bench.[181] Then, in May 1612, Evans in his
-turn brought a Chancery action against Kirkham, in the hope of getting
-his bond of 1602 cancelled, and thus securing himself against any
-further persecution for petty breaches of the articles of agreement.
-The result of this is unknown, but in the course of it many of the
-incidents of 1600–8 were brought into question, and Kirkham claimed
-that not merely had Evans shut him out in 1604 from certain rooms in
-the Blackfriars which he was entitled to use, but that by the surrender
-of the lease in 1608 he had lost profits which he estimated at £60
-a year.[182] Finally in July 1612 Kirkham brought a Chancery action
-against Evans, Burbadge, and John Heminges, and also against the widow
-of Alexander Hawkins and Edward Painton, to whom she was now married,
-for reinstatement in his moiety of the lease. In this suit much of the
-same ground was again traversed, but the Court refused to grant him any
-relief.
-
-It is not altogether easy to disentangle the plays produced at the
-Blackfriars under Keysar from those produced immediately afterwards
-at the Whitefriars. The only title-page which definitely names the
-Children of the Blackfriars is that of Jonson’s _The Case is Altered_
-(1609). But Chapman’s _Byron_ (1608) and _May Day_ (1611) and
-Middleton’s _Your Five Gallants_ (n.d.?1608) also claim to have been
-acted at the Blackfriars. The Q_{1} of Middleton’s _A Trick to Catch
-the Old One_ (1608) assigns it to Paul’s; the Q_{2} both to Paul’s and
-Blackfriars, with an indication of a Court performance on New Year’s
-Day, which can only be that of 1 January 1609. This play, therefore,
-must have been taken over from Paul’s, when that house closed in 1606
-or 1607. As Middleton is not generally found writing for Blackfriars,
-_Your Five Gallants_ may have been acquired in the same way. It is also
-extremely likely that Chapman’s _Bussy d’Ambois_ passed from Paul’s
-to Blackfriars on its way to the King’s men. No name of company or
-theatre is attached to Beaumont and Fletcher’s _Knight of the Burning
-Pestle_ (1613) or to _The Faithful Shepherdess_ (_c._ 1609). But the
-_K. B. P._ was published with an epistle to Keysar as its preserver
-and can be securely dated in 1607–8; it refers to the house in which
-it was played as having been open for seven years, which just fits
-the Blackfriars. _The Faithful Shepherdess_ is of 1608–9 and a boys’
-play; the commendatory verses by Field, Jonson, and Chapman justify
-an attribution to the company with which they had to do. Chapman’s
-_The Widow’s Tears_ (1612) had been staged both at Blackfriars and at
-Whitefriars before publication, and was probably therefore produced
-shortly before the company moved house. The greatest difficulty is
-Jonson’s _Epicoene_ (S. R. 20 September 1610). No edition is known to
-be extant earlier than the Folio of 1616, in which Jonson ascribed the
-production to ‘1609’ and to the Children of the Revels. According to
-the system of dating ordinarily adopted by Jonson in this Folio, ‘1609’
-should mean 1609 and not 1609–10. Yet the Children were not entitled
-to call themselves ‘of the Revels’ during 1609. Either Jonson’s
-chronology or his memory of the shifting nomenclature of the company
-has slipped. The actor-list of _Epicoene_ names ‘Nat. Field, Gil.
-Carie, Hug. Attawel, Ioh. Smith, Will. Barksted, Will. Pen, Ric. Allin,
-Ioh. Blaney’. Amongst these Field is the sole direct connecting link
-with the Chapel actor-lists of 1600 and 1601. Keysar’s pleading shows
-us that from 1600 to 1610 the company had maintained a substantial
-identity throughout all its phases, as successively Children of the
-Chapel, Children of the Queen’s Revels, Children of the Blackfriars,
-Children of the Whitefriars; but part of his grievance is its
-dispersal, and possibly the continuity with the second Children of the
-Revels may not have been quite so marked. ‘In processe of time’, say
-the Burbadges in the _Blackfriars Sharers Papers_ of 1635, ‘the boyes
-growing up to bee men, which were Underwood, Field, Ostler, and were
-taken to strengthen the King’s service’.[183] This, which is written in
-relation to the acquisition of the Blackfriars, is doubtless accurate
-as regards Ostler and Underwood, and their transfer may reasonably be
-placed in the winter of 1609–10. But it was not until some years later
-that Field joined the King’s men.
-
-The career of the second Queen’s Revels, but for the temporary
-suppression of _Epicoene_ owing to a misconstruction placed on it by
-Arabella Stuart, was comparatively uneventful. They are recorded at
-Maidstone as the Children of the Chapel about March 1610. They made
-no appearance at Court during the following winter, and were again
-travelling in the following autumn, when they came to Norwich under
-the leadership of one Ralph Reeve, who showed the patent of 4 January
-1610, and at first claimed to be Rosseter, but afterwards admitted
-that he was not. As he could show no letters of deputation, he was not
-allowed to play, although he received a reward on the following day,
-which was recorded, not quite correctly, as paid to ‘the master of the
-children of the King’s Revells’. By 29 August Barksted and Carey had
-left the company to join the newly formed Lady Elizabeth’s men. We may
-therefore place at some time before this date Barksted’s completion of
-Marston’s _Insatiate Countess_, which was published in 1613 as ‘acted
-at Whitefriars’. The entry in the Stationer’s Register of Field’s
-_A Woman is a Weathercock_ (1612) on 23 November 1611 shows that he
-also had begun to experiment in authorship. As this had been acted at
-Court, as well as by the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars, it probably
-dates back to the winter of 1609–10. The company returned to court on
-5 January 1612 with Beaumont and Fletcher’s _Cupid’s Revenge_, and the
-Clerk of the Revels entered them as the Children of Whitefriars.[184]
-The travels of 1612 were under the leadership of Nicholas Long, and on
-20 May another _contretemps_ occurred at Norwich. The instrument of
-deputation was forthcoming on this occasion, but the mayor chose to
-interpret the patent as giving authority only to teach and instruct
-children, and not to perform with them; and so once again ‘the Master
-of the Kings Revells’ got his reward of 20s., but was not allowed to
-play. Between Michaelmas and Christmas ‘the queens maiesties revellers’
-were at Bristol, and at some time during 1612–13 ‘two of the company of
-the childeren of Revells’ received a reward at Coventry. Conceivably
-the provincial company of Reeve and Long was a distinct organization
-from that in London. Rosseter was payee for four performances at Court
-during the winter of 1612–13. On the first occasion, in the course of
-November, the play was Beaumont and Fletcher’s _Coxcomb_; on 1 January
-and again on 9 January it was _Cupid’s Revenge_; and on 27 February it
-was _The Widow’s Tears_. In one version of the _Chamber Accounts_ the
-company appears this year as the Children of the Queen’s Revels, but
-in another under the obsolete designation of Children of the Chapel.
-In addition to the plays already named, Chapman’s _Revenge of Bussy_
-had been on the Whitefriars stage before it was published in 1613; and
-it is conceivable that Chapman’s _Chabot_ and Beaumont and Fletcher’s
-_Monsieur Thomas_ and _The Nightwalker_ may be Queen’s Revels plays of
-1610–13. They may also, indeed, be Lady Elizabeth’s plays of 1613–16,
-but during this period the Lady Elizabeth and the Queen’s Revels appear
-to have been practically amalgamated, under an arrangement made between
-Henslowe and Rosseter in March 1613 and then modified, first in 1614,
-and again on the addition of Prince Charles’s men to the ‘combine’
-in 1615. Yet in some way the Children of the Revels maintained a
-separate individuality, at least in theory, during these years, as
-may be seen from the patent of 3 June 1615, which licensed Rosseter
-and Reeve, together with Robert Jones and Philip Kingman, to build a
-new Blackfriars theatre in the house known as Porter’s Hall.[185] The
-main purpose of this undertaking was expressed to be the provision
-of a new house for the Children of the Queen’s Revels instead of the
-Whitefriars, where Rosseter’s lease was now expired, although it was
-also contemplated that use might be made of it by the Prince’s and the
-Lady Elizabeth’s players. Porter’s Hall only stood for a short time
-before civic hostility procured its demolition, and the single play,
-which we can be fairly confident that the Children of the Revels gave
-in it, is Beaumont and Fletcher’s _Scornful Lady_. This presumably
-fell after the amalgamation under Henslowe broke up about the time
-of his death early in 1616. Field appears to have joined the King’s
-men about 1615. The Queen’s Revels dropped out of London theatrical
-life. Their provincial travels under Nicholas Long had apparently
-terminated in 1612, as in 1614 he is found using the patent of the
-Lady Elizabeth’s men (q. v.) in the provinces. But some members of the
-company seem to have gone travelling during the period of troubled
-relations with Henslowe, and are traceable at Coventry on 7 October
-1615, and at Nottingham in February 1616 and again later in 1616–17. On
-31 October 1617 a new Queen’s Revel’s company was formed by Rosseter,
-in association with Nicholas Long, Robert Lee of the Queen’s men, and
-William Perry of the King’s Revels.[186]
-
-
- iii. THE CHILDREN OF WINDSOR
-
- _Masters of the Children_:--Richard Farrant (1564–80),
- Nathaniel Giles (1595–1634).
-
-The Chapel Royal at Windsor was served by an ecclesiastical college,
-which had been in existence as far back as the reign of Henry I, and
-had subsequently been resettled as St. George’s Chapel in connexion
-with the establishment of the Order of the Garter by Edward III,
-finally incorporated under Edward IV, and exempted from dissolution at
-the Reformation. Edward III had provided for a warden, who afterwards
-came to be called dean, 12 canons, 13 priest vicars, 4 clerks, 6
-boy choristers, and 26 ‘poor knights’. The boys were to be ‘endued
-with clear and tuneable voices’, and to succeed the clerks as their
-voices changed. Their number was altered from time to time; during
-the greater part of Elizabeth’s reign it stood at 10. Each had an
-annual fee of £3 6_s._ 8_d._ They were lodged within the Castle, in a
-chamber north of the chapel, and next to a building founded by James
-Denton in 1520, known as the ‘New Commons’. This is now merged in the
-canons’ houses, but a doorway is inscribed ‘Edes pro Sacellaenorum
-et Choristarum conviviis extructae A. D. 1519’. There were also an
-epistoler and a gospeller.[187] The music was ‘useyd after ye order and
-maner of ye quenes chappell’.[188] One of the clerks, whose position
-corresponded to that of the Gentlemen of the household Chapel Royal,
-was appointed by the Chapter of the College to act as Organist and
-Master of the Children. The College was privileged, like the Chapel
-Royal itself, to recruit its choir by impressment. A commission for
-this purpose, issued on 8 March 1560, merely repeats the terms of one
-granted by Mary, which itself had confirmed earlier grants by Henry
-VIII and Edward VI.[189]
-
-The Master at Elizabeth’s accession was one Preston.[190] But he was
-deprived, as unwilling to accept the new ecclesiastical settlement;
-and the first Master under whom the choristers appear to have acted at
-Court was Richard Farrant. He had been a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal
-from about 1553, but was replaced on 24 April 1564, doubtless on his
-appointment as Master at Windsor.[191] On the following 30 September
-the Chapter assigned a chantry to the teacher of the choristers for
-an increase of his maintenance.[192] On 5 November 1570, Farrant was
-reappointed a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, but evidently did not
-resign his Mastership.[193] On 11 February 1567 he began a series of
-plays with the ‘Children of Windsor’ at Court, which was continued at
-Shrovetide 1568, on 22 February and 27 December 1569, at Shrovetide
-1571, on 1 January 1572, when he gave _Ajax and Ulysses_, on 1 January
-1573, on 6 January 1574, when he gave _Quintus Fabius_, on 6 January
-1575, when he gave _King Xerxes_, and on 27 December 1575. With the
-winter of 1576–7 the entries of his name in the accounts of the
-Treasurer take a new form; he is no longer ‘M^r of the children of
-the Chappell at Wyndsore’ but ‘M^r of the children of the Chappell’.
-The Revels Accounts for the same season record that on 6 January 1577
-_Mutius Scaevola_ was played at Court by ‘the Children of Windsore and
-the Chappell’, and it is a fair inference that Farrant, in addition to
-exercising his own office, was now also acting as deputy to William
-Hunnis, the Master by patent of the Children of the Chapel Royal, and
-had made up a combined company from both choirs for the Christmas
-delectation of the Queen.[194] This interpretation of the facts was
-confirmed when Professor Feuillerat was able to show from the Loseley
-archives that in 1576 Farrant had taken a lease of rooms in the
-Blackfriars from Sir William More and had converted them into the first
-Blackfriars theatre.[195] Whether boys from Windsor continued to take
-a share in the performances by the Chapel during 1577–8, 1578–9, and
-1579–80, for all of which Farrant was payee, we do not know; there is
-no further mention of them as actors in the Court accounts, although
-they accompanied the singing men from Windsor to Reading during the
-progress of 1576.[196] Farrant died on 30 November 1580, leaving a
-widow Anne, who in 1582 obtained the reversion of a small lease from
-the Crown, and was involved in controversies with Sir William More over
-the Blackfriars tenement at least up to 1587.[197] He had acquired some
-reputation as a musician, and amongst his surviving compositions are
-a few which may have been intended for use in plays.[198] Farrant was
-succeeded at Windsor by Nathaniel Giles, but only after an interval
-of either five or fifteen years. Ashmole reports Giles’s monument as
-crediting him with forty-nine years’ service as Master of St. George’s
-before his death in 1634.[199] There must be an inaccuracy, either
-here or in the date of 1 October ’37 Eliz.’ (1595) upon a copy of his
-indenture of appointment by the Windsor chapter, which is amongst
-Ashmole’s papers.[200] This recites that the chapter ‘are now destitute
-of an experte and cunnynge man’, and that Giles ‘is well contented to
-come and serve’ them. He is granted from the previous Michaelmas to the
-end of his life ‘the Roome and place of a Clerk within the said ffree
-Chappell and to be one of the Players on the Organes there, and also
-the office of Instructor and Master of the ten Children or Choristers
-of the same ffree Chappell, And the office of tutor, creansor, or
-governor of the same tenn Children or Coristers’. He is to have an
-annuity of £81 6s. 8d. and ‘tholde comons howse’, wherein John Mundie
-lately dwelt, which he is to hold on the same terms as ‘one Richarde
-ffarrante enjoyed the same’ at a rent of £1 6_s._ 8_d._ His fee is
-to be ‘over and besides all such giftes, rewardes or benevolences as
-from time to time during the naturall lief of him the said Nathanaell
-Gyles shall be given bestowed or ymployed to or upon the Choristers
-for singinge of Balattes, playes or for the like respects whatsoever’.
-He is to maintain the children and to supply vacancies, ‘her Maiesties
-comission for the taking of Children which her highnes hath alredie
-graunted to the said Dean and Canons being allowed vnto him the said
-Nathanaell Gyles for that purpose’. Evidently the door was left open
-for a resumption of theatrical activities, such as was afterwards
-brought about at the London Chapel Royal during the Mastership of Giles
-there; but there is no proof that such a resumption ever took place at
-Windsor. It is perhaps a fanciful conjecture that the boys may have
-helped with _The Merry Wives of Windsor_ about 1600.[201]
-
-
- iv. CHILDREN OF THE KING’S REVELS
-
- _Masters_:--Martin Slater and others.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The chief source of information
- is J. Greenstreet, _The Whitefriars Theatre in the Time of
- Shakspere_ (_N. S. S. Trans. 1887–92_, 269), which gives
- the text of the bill and answer in _Androwes v. Slater_
- (1609, Chancery).]
-
-The accident of litigation brings into light a company of boys, who
-appear to have acted for a brief and troubled period, which probably
-ended in 1608 or early in 1609. The story is told by one George
-Androwes a silk-weaver of London, and begins in February 1608. At
-that date a part of the dissolved Whitefriars monastery was held, in
-contemplation of a lease from Lord Buckhurst, by Michael Drayton and
-Thomas Woodford. The lease was actually executed about the following
-March, and was for six years, eight months, and twenty days, at a rent
-of £50. Woodford had assigned his interest to one Lording Barry; and
-Barry in turn persuaded Androwes to take over a third of it, and to
-join a syndicate, of which the active manager was Martin Slater, who
-is described as a citizen and ironmonger of London, but is, of course,
-well known as an actor in the Admiral’s and other companies. The bill
-incorporates the terms of Articles of Agreement entered into on 10
-March 1608 by Slater on the one hand and Barry, Androwes, and Drayton,
-together with William Trevell, William Cooke, Edward Sibthorpe, and
-John Mason, all of London, gentlemen, on the other. They throw a
-good deal of light upon the business organization of a theatrical
-enterprise. Slater is to have a sixth part of the net profits of ‘any
-playes, showes, interludes, musique, or such like exercises’ in the
-Whitefriars play-house or elsewhere, together with lodging for himself
-and his family on the premises, and any profits that can be made in the
-house ‘either by wine, beere, ale, tobacco, wood, coales, or any such
-commoditie’. When the ‘pattent for playinge’ shall be renewed, Slater’s
-name is to be joined in it with Drayton’s, because ‘if any restrainte
-of their playinge shall happen by reason of the plague or other
-wise, it shalbe for more creditt of the whole company that the said
-Martyn shall travel with the children, and acquainte the magistrates
-with their busines’. During any such travel his allowance is to be
-increased to a share and a half, no apparel, books, or other property
-of the company is to be removed without the consent of the sharers,
-and none of them is to print any of the play-books, ‘except the booke
-of Torrismount, and that playe not to be printed by any before twelve
-monthes be fully expired’. In order to avoid debt, a sixth part is
-to be taken up each day of the ‘chardges of the howse’ for the week,
-including ‘the gatherers, the wages, the childrens bourd, musique,
-booke keeper, tyreman, tyrewoman, lights, the Maister of the revells’
-duties, and all other things needefull and necessary’. The children are
-to be ‘bound’ for three years to Slater, who undertakes not to part
-with ‘the said younge men or ladds’ during their apprenticeship except
-on the consent of his fellow sharers.
-
-The theatrical experience of the syndicate presumably rested with
-Slater and Drayton. Of Trevell, Cooke, and Sibthorpe I know nothing,
-except that Trevell, like Woodford, seems still to have had an interest
-in the lease of the Whitefriars (cf. ch. xvii) in 1621. But Mason
-and Barry were the authors respectively of _The Turk_ (1610, S. R.
-10 March 1609), and _Ram Alley_ (1611, S. R. 9 November 1610), the
-title-pages of which ascribe them to the children of the King’s Revels,
-and thereby enable us to give a more definite title to the boys, who
-are only described in the Chancery pleadings as ‘the Children of the
-revells there beinge’, that is to say, at the Whitefriars. And we
-can trace the King’s Revels a little farther back than February 1608
-with the aid of the earliest of similar entries on the title-pages of
-other plays, which are, in the chronological order of publication,
-Sharpham’s _Cupid’s Whirligig_ (1607, S. R. 29 June 1607), Middleton’s
-_Family of Love_ (1608, S. R. 12 October 1607), Day’s _Humour Out Of
-Breath_ (1608, S. R. 12 April 1608), Markham’s (and Machin’s) _The
-Dumb Knight_ (1608, S. R. 6 October 1608), and Armin’s _Two Maids of
-Moreclack_ (1609). If Lewis Machin was the author of the anonymous
-_Every Woman In Her Humour_ (1609), it is possible that this ought to
-be added to the list. Clearly the boys were playing at least as early
-as the first half of 1607 and the agreement of 1608 must represent a
-reconstruction of the original business organization. I do not find
-anything in the plays to prove an earlier date than 1607, but it is
-quite conceivable that the King’s Revels may have come into existence
-as early as 1606, perhaps with the idea of replacing the Queen’s Revels
-after their disgrace over _The Isle of Gulls_. But if so, the Queen’s
-Revels managed to hold together under another name, and in fact proved
-more enduring than their rivals. Mr. Fleay, however, suggests that the
-King’s Revels were a continuation of the Paul’s boys, and played at the
-singing-school, and apparently also that they were themselves continued
-as the Duke of York’s men (_H. of S._ 152, 188, 202, 206). He did not,
-I think, know of _Androwes v. Slater_, but _Androwes v. Slater_ does
-not indicate that the King’s Revels were at Whitefriars before 1608;
-rather the contrary.[202] The dates render Mr. Fleay’s conjectures
-tempting, although it must be admitted that there is not much evidence.
-But _The Family of Love_ was played in a round theatre and the Paul’s
-house was round. The curious description of the Duke of York’s men at
-Leicester in 1608 as ‘of the White Chapple, London’, might conceivably
-be a mistake for ‘of the Whitefriars’, but more probably indicates that
-they came from the Boar’s Head (cf. ch. xvi). ‘The Children of the
-Revells’ followed them at Leicester on 21 August 1608, but these may
-have been the Blackfriars children under a not quite official name. A
-complete search through the Patent Rolls for 1606–8 might disinter the
-patent for the King’s Revels, which is referred to in the Articles of
-Agreements; I find no obvious clue to it in the printed index of signet
-bills. It seems possible that William Barksted (cf. ch. xv) may have
-belonged to the King’s Revels.
-
-The syndicate did not hold together long. It will be noticed that, in
-spite of the attempt in the articles to bar the printing of plays,
-these had begun to reach the stationers again as early as April 1608.
-The inhibition of 1608 hardly gave the company a chance, and then came
-the plague. They were probably broken before the end of 1608, and
-although Mason and Barry had at least the consolation that they had
-got their own plays staged, other members of the syndicate could only
-reflect that they had lost their money. And when dissensions broke
-out, and Slater sued Androwes on a bond of £200 given by the sharers
-for observance of the articles, and this for defaults which Androwes
-himself had not committed, it is not surprising that Androwes drew the
-conclusion that he had been a gull. He took Slater to Chancery, and
-alleged that he had been asked £90 and paid £70 for his share in the
-expectation of a profit of £100 a year, and on the understanding that
-the apparel was worth £400 when it was not worth £5, that he had been
-led into building and other expenses to the tune of £300, that the
-lease had been forfeited for non-payment of rent before any assignation
-had been made to him, and that he had been clearly told by Slater
-that his obligation was not to extend beyond any breaches of covenant
-that he might himself commit. Slater denied any responsibility for
-Androwes’s misunderstandings, and pointed out that he had himself been
-the principal sufferer by the breakdown of the enterprise, since he and
-his family of ten had been illegally turned out of the rooms to which
-they were entitled under the articles of agreement, and were now driven
-to beg their bread. The view taken by the court is not upon record.
-
-The company which was described as the King’s Revels at Norwich in 1611
-and 1612 was travelling under the Queen’s Revels patent of 1610, and
-was therefore clearly misnamed. But a second King’s Revels company did
-in fact come into existence through a licence given to William Hovell,
-William Perry, and Nathan May under the royal signet on 27 February
-1615. It performed only in the provinces, and is traceable at Norwich,
-Coventry, and Leicester. Its warrant was condemned and withdrawn by an
-order of the Lord Chamberlain on 16 July 1616 (Murray, ii. 343), and
-in the following year the company seems to have amalgamated with the
-provincial relics of the Queen’s Revels.
-
-
- v. CHILDREN OF BRISTOL
-
- _Masters_:--John Daniel (1615–17); Martin Slater, John
- Edmonds, Nathaniel Clay (1618).
-
-A signet bill for a patent for a company of Children of Bristol under
-the patronage of Queen Anne was passed in June 1615, perhaps as a
-result of her visit to that city in 1613.[203] On 10 July Sir George
-Buck wrote to John Packer, the Earl of Somerset’s secretary, to say
-that the grant had been made through the Queen’s influence on behalf
-of Samuel Daniel, and that he was prepared to assent to it, without
-prejudice to his rights as Master of the Revels.[204] The actual
-patent, dated 13 July, is made out to Daniel’s brother John.[205]
-
-[Sidenote: De concessione regardante Iohannem Daniell.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Iustices of peace, Mayors,
- Sheriffes, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes and other our
- lovinge subjectes and Officers greetinge. Knowe yee that wee at
- the mocion of our most deerelie loved consort the Queene have
- licenced and authorised, And by theise presentes do licence
- and authorise, our welbeloved subjectes Iohn Daniell and his
- Assignes to entertaine and bringe vp a company of children
- and youthes vunder the name and title of the children of her
- Maiesties royall Chamber of Bristoll, to vse and exercise the
- arte and qualitie of playinge Comedies, histories, Enterludes,
- Moralles, Pastoralles, Stageplayes, and such other like, as they
- have alreadie studied or hereafter shall studie or vse, aswell
- for the solace and delight of our most derely loved Consort the
- Queene whensoever they shalbe called, as for the recreacion
- of our loving Subiectes, And the said Enterludes or other to
- shewe and exercise publiquely to their best commoditie, aswell
- in and about our said Citie of Bristoll in such vsuall houses
- as themselves shall provide, as other convenient places within
- the liberties and freedomes of any other Cittie, vniversitie,
- Towne, or Burrowe whatsoever within our Realmes and Dominions,
- willing and commaundinge you and every of you, as you tender our
- pleasures, not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein without
- any your lettes, hinderances, molestacions, and disturbances
- during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be aydinge and assistinge
- vnto them, yf any wronge be done vnto them or to them offred,
- and to allowe them such further curtesies as have bene given
- to other of the like qualitie, And alsoe what further grace
- and favour you shall show vnto them for our sakes wee shall
- take kindly at your handes. Provided alwaies and our will and
- pleasure is, all authoritie, power, priviledge, and profitt
- whatsoever belonginge and properlie apperteyninge to the Maister
- of the Revelles in respect of his office shall remayne and abide
- entire and in full force, effect, and vertue, and in as ample
- sort as if this our Commission had never byn made. In witnes
- whereof &c., witnes our selfe at Westminster the seaventeenth day
- of Iuly.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-The company is not traceable in London, but Daniel brought it to
-Norwich in 1616–17. By April 1618 he had assigned his privilege
-to Martin Slater, John Edmonds and Nathaniel Clay, who obtained,
-presumably from the Privy Council, supplementary letters of assistance
-in which they are described as ‘her Maiesties servants’, and are
-authorized to play as ‘her Maiesties servants of her Royall Chamber
-of Bristoll’.[206] From a complaint sent in the following June by
-the Mayor of Exeter to Sir Thomas Lake, it emerges that, although
-the patent was for children, the company consisted of five youths
-and several grown men.[207] Slater and Edmonds still held their
-_status_ as Queen’s men (q.v.) in 1619.
-
-
- vi. WESTMINSTER SCHOOL
-
- _Head Masters_:--John Adams (1540); Alexander Nowell
- (1543–53); Nicholas Udall (1555–6); John Passey (1557–8, with
- Richard Spencer as usher); John Randall (1563); Thomas Browne
- (1564–9); Francis Howlyn (1570–1); Edward Graunte (1572–92);
- William Camden (1593–8, Undermaster 1575–93); Richard Ireland
- (1599–1610); John Wilson (1610–22).
-
- _Choir Masters_ (?):--William Cornish (1480); John Taylor
- (1561–7); John Billingsley (1572); William Elderton (1574).
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The best sources of information are: R.
-Widmore, _History of Westminster Abbey_ (1751); J. Welch [--C. B.
-Phillimore], _Alumni Westmonasterienses_, ed. 2 (1852); _Appendix to
-First Report of the Cathedral Commissioners_ (1854); F. H. Forshall,
-_Westminster School, Past and Present_ (1884); J. Sargeaunt, _Annals
-of Westminster School_ (1898); A. F. Leach, _The Origin of Westminster
-School in Journal of Education_, n. s. xxvii (1905), 79. Some valuable
-records have been printed by E. J. L. Scott in the _Athenaeum_, and
-extracts from others are given in the _Observer_ for 7 Dec. 1919. A. F.
-Leach has fixed the dates of Udall’s life in _Encycl. Brit._ s.v.]
-
-There is no trace of any grammar school in the abbey of Westminster
-until the fourteenth century. The _Customary_ of 1259–83 (ed. E. M.
-Thompson for _Henry Bradshaw Soc._) only contemplates education for the
-novices, and in the earliest almoner’s accounts, which begin with 1282,
-entries of 1317 ‘in maintaining Nigel at school for the love of God’
-(Leach, 80) and 1339–40, ‘pro scholaribus inueniendis ad scolas’ (E. H.
-Pearce, _The Monks of Westminster Abbey_, 79), need only refer to the
-support of scholars at a University. But from 1354–5 there were almonry
-boys (_pueri Elemosinariae_) under the charge of the Sub-Almoner, and
-these are traceable up to the dissolution. To them we may assign the
-_ludus_ of the Boy Bishop on St. Nicholas’ day, mentions of which have
-been noted in 1369, 1388, 1413, and 1540 (_Mediaeval Stage_, i. 360;
-Leach, 80). They had a school house near ‘le Millebank’, and from 1367
-the Almoner paid a _Magister Puerorum_. From 1387 he is often called
-_Magister Scolarum_ and in the fifteenth century _Magister Scolarium_.
-From 1510 the boys under the _Magister_ become _pueri grammatici_,
-and may be distinct from certain _pueri cantantes_ for whom since
-1479–80 the Almoner had paid a separate teacher of singing. The first
-of these song-masters was William Cornish, doubtless of the family so
-closely connected with the Chapel Royal (q.v.). In 1540 the _pueri
-grammatici_ were reorganized as the still existing College of St.
-Peter, Westminster, which is therefore generally regarded as owing its
-origin to Henry VIII, who on the surrender of the abbey in 1540 turned
-it into a college of secular canons, and provided for a school of forty
-scholars. This endured in some form through the reactionary reign of
-Mary, whose favourite dramatist Nicholas Udall became its Head Master,
-although the date of his appointment on 16 December 1555 (A. F. Leach
-in _Encycl. Brit._, s.v. Udall) makes it probable that, if he wrote his
-_Ralph Roister Doister_ for a school at all, it was for Eton (q.v.)
-rather than Westminster. His predecessor Alexander Nowell is said
-by Strype to have ‘brought in the reading of Terence for the better
-learning the pure Roman style’, and, as the Sub-Almoner paid ‘xvi_d._
-for wryting of a play for the chyldren’ as early as 1521 (_Observer_),
-the performance of Latin comedies by the boys may have been
-pre-Elizabethan. It is provided for in the statutes drafted by Dean
-Bill (_c._ 1560) after the restoration of her father’s foundation by
-Elizabeth. These statutes also contemplate a good deal of interrelation
-between the choir school and the grammar school. They are printed in
-the _Report of the Cathedral Commission_ (App. I, 80). The personnel
-of the foundation was to include (a) ‘_clerici duodecim_’, of whom
-‘_unus sit choristarum doctor_’, (b) ‘_decem pueri symphoniaci sive
-choristae_’, presumably in continuation of the former singing boys,
-(c) ‘_praeceptores duo ad erudiendam iuventutem_’, (d) ‘_discipuli
-grammatici quadraginta_’. The ‘_praeceptores_’ are distinguished later
-in the document as ‘_archididascalus_’ and ‘_hypodidascalus_’, and the
-former is also called ‘_ludimagister_’. By c. 5 the choristers are to
-have a preference in elections to the grammar school. The following
-section ‘_De Choristis et Choristarum Magistro_’ forms part of c. 9:
-
- ‘Statuimus et ordinamus ut in ecclesia nostra praedicta sint
- decem choristae, pueri tenerae aetatis et vocibus sonoris ad
- cantandum, et ad artem musicam discendam, et etiam ad musica
- instrumenta pulsanda apti, qui choro inserviant, ministrent,
- et cantent. Ad hos praeclare instituendos, unus eligatur qui
- sit honestae famae, vitae probae, religionis sincerae, artis
- musicae peritus, et ad cantandum et musica instrumenta pulsanda
- exercitatus, qui pueris in praedictis scientiis et exercitiis
- docendis aliisque muniis [? muneribus] in choro obeundis
- studiose vacabit. Hunc magistrum choristarum appellari volumus.
- Cui muneri doctores et baccalaureos musices aliis praeferendos
- censemus. Volumus etiam quoties eum ab ecclesia nostra
- abesse contingat, alterum substituat a decano vel eo absente
- prodecano approbandum. Prospiciat item puerorum saluti, quorum
- et in literis (donec ut in scholam nostram admittantur apti
- censebuntur) et in morum modestia et in convictu educationem
- et liberalem institutionem illius fidei et industriae
- committimus. Quod si negligens et in docendo desidiosus, aut in
- salute puerorum et recta eorum educatione minime providus et
- circumspectus, et ideo non tolerandus inveniatur, post trinam
- admonitionem (si se non emendaverit) ab officio deponatur. Qui
- quidem choristarum magister ad officium suum per se fideliter
- obeundum iuramento etiam adigetur. Choristae postquam octo
- orationis partes memoriter didicerint et scribere mediocriter
- noverint, ad scholam nostram ut melius in grammatica proficiant
- singulis diebus profestis accedant, ibique duabus minimum horis
- maneant, et a praeceptoribus instituantur.’
-
-The following section ‘_De Comoediis et Ludis in Natali Domini
-exhibendis_’ comes in c. 10:
-
- ‘Quo iuventus maiore cum fructu tempus Natalis Christi terat,
- et tum actioni tum pronunciationi decenti melius se assuescat:
- statuimus ut singulis annis intra 12^m post festum Natalis
- Christi dies [? diem], vel postea arbitrio decani, ludimagister
- et praeceptor simul Latine unam, magister choristarum Anglice
- alteram comoediam aut tragoediam a discipulis et choristis suis
- in aula privatim vel publice agendam, curent. Quod si non
- prestiterint singuli quorum negligentia omittuntur decem solidis
- mulctentur.’
-
-The statutes appear never to have been confirmed by the Crown, and
-their practical adoption was subject to certain exceptions. Thus, it
-is stated in the report of the Public Schools Commission in 1864 (i.
-159) that there is no reason to believe that the provision giving a
-preference to choristers in elections for the grammar school was ever
-attended to.
-
-Of plays and the like, however, there are various records. The first
-since 1521 is at the Lord Mayor’s Day of 1561, when the Merchant
-Taylors’ expenses for their pageant included items ‘to John Tayllour,
-master of the Children of the late monastere of Westminster, for his
-children that sung and played in the pageant’, and ‘to John Holt
-momer in reward for attendance given of the children in the pageant’.
-Similar payments were made to Taylor as ‘M^r of the quirysters’ for
-the services of the children on the Ironmongers’ pageant of 1566.[208]
-In 1562 the choristers of Westminster Abbey performed a goodly play
-before the Society of Parish Clerks after their annual dinner.[209]
-In 1564–5 comes the first of a series of Court performances, which
-received assistance from the Revels office. To this occasion belongs
-a memorandum of ‘Thexpenses of twoo playes viz. Heautontimoroumenos
-Terentii and Miles Gloriosus Plauti plaied by the children of the
-grammer schoole in the colledge of Westminster and before the Quenes
-maiestie anno 1564’.[210] The items include, ‘At ye rehersing before
-Sir Thomas Benger for pinnes and suger candee vj_d._’, ‘For a lynke
-to bring thapparell from the reuells iiij_d._’, ‘At the playing of
-Miles Glor: in M^r. Deanes howse for pinnes half a thousand vj_d._’,
-‘Geuen to M^r. Holte yeoman of the reuells x_s._’, ‘To M^r. Taylor
-his man’, ‘For one Plautus geven to ye Queenes maiestie and fowre
-other vnto the nobilitie xj_s._’ It is not quite clear whether the
-_Heautontimorumenus_, as well as the _Miles Gloriosus_, was given
-before the Queen, but I think not. In 1565–6 Elizabeth was again
-present at the play of _Sapientia Solomonis_, and there were payments
-‘For drawing the city and temple of Jerusalem and paynting towers’,
-‘To a woman that brawght her childe to the stadge and there attended
-uppon it’, and for a copy of the play bound ‘in vellum with the Queenes
-Ma^{tie} hir armes and sylke ribben strings’, almost certainly that
-still extant as _Addl. MS._ 20061 (cf. App. K), which shows that
-Elizabeth was accompanied by Cecilia of Sweden.[211] Whether these
-plays were at the school or at Court is not quite clear. I should,
-on the whole, infer the latter, but no rewards were paid for them
-by the Treasurer of the Chamber. John Taylor was, however, paid for
-plays by the Children of Westminster during the Shrovetide of 1566–7
-and the Christmas of 1567–8; John Billingesley for their _Paris and
-Vienna_ on 19 February 1572; and William Elderton for their _Truth,
-Faithfulness, and Mercy_ on 1 January 1574. In 1567 also the boys are
-recorded (_Observer_) to have played at Putney before Bishop Grindal.
-I suppose that Billingesley and Elderton succeeded Taylor as _Magistri
-Choristarum_. Taylor himself is probably the same who on 8 September
-1557 was Master of the singing children at the hospital of St. Mary
-Woolnoth. Elderton is presumably the same who brought the Eton boys
-to Court in 1573. Whether he is also the bibulous balladist of the
-pamphleteers (cf. ch. xv) is more doubtful. The absence of a payment
-for _Miles Gloriosus_ may suggest that this was given by the grammar
-school who, like the Inns of Court, did not expect a reward, and that
-the English plays were given by the choristers, who were on the same
-footing as the choristers of Paul’s. I am not sure, however, that the
-wording of the statutes quite implies such a sharp distinction between
-the two sets of boys, and it will be noticed that Taylor, or his man,
-was in some way concerned with the Latin play. Very possibly grammar
-boys and choristers acted together. With 1574 the Court performances
-end, but expenses of plays are traceable in the college accounts in
-1604–5, 1605–6, 1606–7, and 1609–10, and up to about 1640, when they
-stop for sixty-four years.[212]
-
-
- vii. ETON COLLEGE
-
- _Head Masters_:--William Malim (c. 1555–73); William Smyth (c.
- 1563); Reuben Sherwood (c. 1571); Thomas Ridley (1579); John
- Hammond (1583); Richard Langley (1594); Richard Wright (1611);
- Matthew Bust (1611–30).
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The best sources of information are J.
- Heywood and T. Wright, _Ancient Laws of King’s College and Eton
- College_ (1850); _Report of Public Schools Commission_ (1864);
- W. L. Collins, _Etoniana_ 1865); H. Maxwell-Lyte, _History of
- Eton_ (1875, 4th ed. 1911); W. Sterry, _Annals of Eton College_
- (1898).]
-
-The King’s College of Our Lady of Eton beside Windsor was founded
-by Henry VI in 1441. The Statutes of 1444 provide for a Boy Bishop
-(_Mediaeval Stage_, i. 365), but the custom was discontinued before
-1559–61, when William Malim prepared a _Consuetudinarium_ for a Royal
-Commission appointed to visit the college. By this time, however,
-Christmas plays by the boys had become the practice, and Malim
-writes:[213]
-
- ‘Circiter festum D. Andreae [Nov. 30] ludimagister eligere
- solet pro suo arbitrio scaenicas fabulas optimas et quam
- accommodatissimas, quas pueri feriis natalitiis subsequentibus
- non sine ludorum elegantia, populo spectante, publice aliquando
- peragant. Histrionum levis ars est, ad actionem tamen oratorum,
- et gestum motumque corporis decentem tantopere facit, ut nihil
- magis. Interdum etiam exhibet Anglico sermone contextas fabulas,
- quae habeant acumen et leporem.’
-
-There are ‘numerous’ entries of expenditure on these plays in the
-Audit Books from 1525–6 to 1572–3, of which a few only have been
-printed.[214] There is also an inventory, apparently undated, of
-articles in ‘M^r. Scholemasters chamber’, which includes ‘a great
-cheste bound about with yron to keepe the players coats in’, and a list
-of the apparel, beards, and properties. The Eton boys played under
-Udall before Cromwell in 1538 (_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 196, 451), and
-it is possible that _Ralph Roister Doister_ may belong to his Eton
-mastership.[215] The only Court performance by Eton boys on record was
-one on 6 January 1573, for which the payee was Elderton, presumably
-the William Elderton who was payee for the Westminster boys in the
-following year.
-
-
- viii. MERCHANT TAYLORS SCHOOL
-
- _Head Masters_:--Richard Mulcaster (1561–86); Henry Wilkinson
- (1586–92); Edmund Smith (1592–9); William Hayne (1599–1625).
-
-The London school of the Merchant Taylors was founded in 1561, and
-its first master was Richard Mulcaster, or Moncaster, as his name
-is spelt in some of the earlier records.[216] He was a student of
-King’s, Cambridge and Christ Church, Oxford, who had been teaching
-in London since 1559. The first performances by his boys, of which
-record remains, were in 1572–3. In that and the following year they
-played before the Merchant Taylors Company at the Common Hall.[217]
-Unfortunately the audience, who had paid for their seats, and very
-likely Mulcaster himself, paid more attention to the plays than to the
-dignitaries in whose hall they were given. The plays were therefore
-stopped, and the following pleasing example of civic pomposity inserted
-in the archives of the Company on 16 March 1574:[218]
-
- ‘Whereas at our comon playes and suche lyke exercises whiche
- be comonly exposed to be seene for money, everye lewd persone
- thinketh himself (for his penny) worthye of the chiefe and most
- comodious place withoute respecte of any other either for age
- or estimacion in the comon weale, whiche bringeth the youthe to
- such an impudente famyliaritie with theire betters that often
- tymes greite contempte of maisters, parents, and magistrats
- foloweth thereof, as experience of late in this our comon hall
- hath sufficyently declared, where by reasone of the tumultuous
- disordered persones repayringe hither to see suche playes as
- by our schollers were here lately played, the Maisters of this
- Worshipful Companie and their deare ffrends could not have
- entertaynmente and convenyente place as they ought to have had,
- by no provision beinge made, notwithstandinge the spoyle of this
- howse, the charges of this Mystery, and theire juste authoritie
- which did reasonably require the contrary. Therefore and ffor
- the causes ffirst above saide, yt is ordeyned and decreed by
- the authoritie of this presente Courte, with the assente and
- consente of all the worshipfull persones aforesaide, that
- henceforthe theire shall be no more plays suffered to be played
- in this our Comon Hall, any use or custome heretofore to the
- contrary in anywise notwithstandinge.’
-
-Mulcaster, however, found more tolerant critics than his own employers.
-His first appearance at Court was on 3 February 1573.[219] On 2
-February 1574 he presented _Timoclia at the Siege of Thebes_ and
-on 23 February _Percius and Anthomiris_; at Shrovetide 1575 and on
-6 March 1576 plays unnamed; and on 12 February 1583 _Ariodante and
-Geneuora_. A reminiscence of these performances has been left us by the
-seventeenth-century judge, Sir James Whitelocke, who entered the school
-in 1575 and left for St. John’s, Oxford, in 1588:
-
- ‘I was brought up at school under M^r Mulcaster, in the famous
- school of the Merchantaylors in London.... Yeerly he presented
- sum playes to the court, in which his scholers wear only actors,
- and I on among them, and by that meanes taughte them good
- behaviour and audacitye.’[220]
-
-In 1586 Mulcaster quarrelled with the Merchant Taylors and resigned.
-In 1596 he became High Master of St. Paul’s grammar school, but it is
-only conjecture that his influence counted for anything in the revival
-of plays by the choir master, Edward Pearce. Regular plays at Merchant
-Taylors probably ceased on his withdrawal. When Sir Robert Lee, one
-of the Company, became Lord Mayor in 1602, a payment was made to Mr.
-Haines, the Schoolmaster, for a wagon and the apparel of ten scholars,
-who represented Apollo and the Muses in Cheapside. But when James came
-to dine at the hall on 16 July 1607, it was thought best to apply for
-help to Heminges of the King’s men and Nathaniel Giles of the Chapel,
-on the ground that the Schoolmaster and children were not familiar with
-such entertainments.[221]
-
-
- ix. THE EARL OF LEICESTER’S BOYS
-
-Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Leicester’s men).
-
-
- x. THE EARL OF OXFORD’S BOYS
-
-Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Oxford’s men).
-
-
- xi. MR. STANLEY’S BOYS
-
-Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Derby’s men).
-
-
-
-
- XIII
-
- THE ADULT COMPANIES
-
-
- i. The Court Interluders.
- ii. The Earl of Leicester’s men.
- iii. Lord Rich’s men.
- iv. Lord Abergavenny’s men.
- v. The Earl of Sussex’s men.
- vi. Sir Robert Lane’s men.
- vii. The Earl of Lincoln’s (Lord Clinton’s) men.
- viii. The Earl of Warwick’s men.
- ix. The Earl of Oxford’s men.
- x. The Earl of Essex’s men.
- xi. Lord Vaux’s men.
- xii. Lord Berkeley’s men.
- xiii. Queen Elizabeth’s men.
- xiv. The Earl of Arundel’s men.
- xv. The Earl of Hertford’s men.
- xvi. Mr. Evelyn’s men.
- xvii. The Earl of Derby’s (Lord Strange’s) men.
- xviii. The Earl of Pembroke’s men.
- xix. The Lord Admiral’s (Lord Howard’s, Earl of Nottingham’s),
- Prince Henry’s, and Elector Palatine’s men.
- xx. The Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord Hunsdon’s) and King’s men.
- xxi. The Earl of Worcester’s and Queen Anne’s men.
- xxii. The Duke of Lennox’s men.
- xxiii. The Duke of York’s (Prince Charles’s) men.
- xxiv. The Lady Elizabeth’s men.
-
-
- i. THE COURT INTERLUDERS
-
- Henry VII (22 Aug. 1485--21 Apr. 1509); Henry VIII (22 Apr.
- 1509--28 Jan. 1547); Edward VI (28 Jan. 1547--6 July 1553); Mary
- (19 July 1553--24 July 1554); Philip and Mary (25 July 1554--17
- Nov. 1558); Elizabeth (17 Nov. 1558--24 Mar. 1603).
-
-The _doyen_ of the Court companies, when Elizabeth came to the throne,
-was the royal company of Players of Interludes. This had already half a
-century of history behind it. Its beginnings are probably traceable in
-the reign of Henry VII. Richard III had entertained a company, as Duke
-of Gloucester, in 1482; but nothing is known of it during his short
-reign from 1583 to 1585.[222] Nor is a royal company discoverable
-amongst the earlier records of Henry VII himself.[223] But from 1493
-onwards Exchequer documents testify to the continuous existence of
-a body of men under the style of _Lusores Regis_, or in the vulgar
-tongue, Players of the King’s Interludes. In 1494 there were four of
-them, John English, Edward May, Richard Gibson, and John Hammond, and
-each had an annual fee, payable out of the Exchequer, of £3 6_s._
-8_d._ In 1503 there were five, William Rutter and John Scott taking
-the place of Hammond, but the total Exchequer payment to the company
-of £13 6_s._ 8_d._ a year, seems to have remained unaltered to the
-end of the reign.[224] They received, however, additional sums from
-time to time, as ‘rewards’ for performances, which were charged to the
-separate account of the Chamber.[225] In 1503, under the leadership of
-John English, they attended the Princess Margaret to Edinburgh, for
-her wedding with James IV of Scotland. Here they ‘did their devoir’,
-both on the day of the wedding, 8 August, and on the following days.
-On 11 August they played after supper, and on 13 August they played ‘a
-Moralite’ after dinner.[226]
-
-The royal company continued under Henry VIII, who appears to have
-increased its numbers, and doubled the charge upon the Exchequer.[227]
-The financial records are, however, a little complicated. The
-Exchequer officials presumably continued to regard the establishment
-as consisting of four members drawing fees of ten instead of five
-marks each.[228] But the individual members were in fact paid on
-different scales. John English, the leader, got £6 13_s._ 4_d._
-Others got £3 6_s._ 8_d._ as before, and others again only two-thirds
-of this amount, £2 4_s._ 5_d._ By this arrangement, it was possible
-to maintain an actual establishment of from eight to ten within the
-limits of the Exchequer allowance. It seems also to have been found
-convenient to transfer the responsibility for some at least of the
-payments from the Exchequer to the Treasurer of the Chamber.[229]
-The same distinction between players of different grades is also
-reflected in the annual rewards paid by the Treasurer of the Chamber
-for Christmas performances. These were increased in amount, and for a
-time the general reward to the players as a whole was supplemented by
-an additional sum to the ‘old’ players. Ultimately an amalgamated sum
-of £6 13_s._ 4_d._ became the customary reward for the company.[230]
-Details of a performance of Henry Medwall’s _Finding of Truth_ on 6
-January 1514 are related by Collier from a document which cannot be
-regarded as free from suspicion.[231] The name of Richard Gibson now
-disappears from the notices of the company. He may, likely enough,
-have given up playing on his appointment to be Porter and Yeoman
-Tailor of the Great Wardrobe.[232] But in his capacity of officer in
-charge of the Revels he must have maintained close relations with his
-former fellows, and his Account for 1510 records the delivery to John
-English of a ‘red satin ladies garment, powdered, with tassels of
-silver of Kolen’.[233] English remained at the head of the company,
-and is traceable in the _Chamber Accounts_ up to 1531. John Scott
-died in 1528–9, in singular circumstances which are detailed by a
-contemporary chronicler.[234] Other names which come in succession
-before us are those of Richard Hole, George Maylor, George Birch, John
-Roll or Roo (_d._ 1539), Thomas Sudbury or Sudborough (_d._ 1546),
-Robert Hinstock, Richard Parrowe, John Slye, and John Young.[235]
-Some interesting information is disclosed by two lawsuits, in both of
-which George Maylor figured. The first of these was a dispute between
-John Rastell and Henry Walton as to the dilapidations of certain
-playing garments, during which George Mayler, merchant tailor, aged
-40, and George Birch, coriar, aged 32, were called to give evidence
-as to the value of the garments and their use for a royal banquet at
-Greenwich in 1527.[236] In the second Mayler was himself a party. He
-is here described as a glazier, and an agreement of November 1528 is
-recited between him and one Thomas Arthur, tailor, whom he took as an
-apprentice for a year, promising to teach him to play and to obtain
-him admission into the King’s company and the right to the privileges
-(_libertatem_) thereof and ‘the Kinges bage’. According to Mayler, he
-found Arthur meat and drink and 4_d._ a day, but after seven weeks
-Arthur left him, beguiling away three of his covenant servants upon a
-playing tour in the provinces, out of which they made a profit of £30.
-He was, adds Mayler, ‘right harde and dull too taike any lernynge,
-whereby he was nothinge meate or apte too bee in service with the
-Kinges grace too maike any plaiez or interludes before his highnes’.
-Arthur, on the other hand, alleged that it was Mayler who had broken
-the indentures, and sued him before the sheriffs of London for £26
-damages. Owing to the accident of Mayler’s being in Ludgate prison
-and unable to defend himself, the jury found against him for £4, and
-he appealed to Chancery to remove the action to that court.[237] The
-King’s men, even apart from their other occupations as Household
-servants or tradesmen, were not wholly dependent on the royal bounty.
-The reward at Christmas was supplemented by minor gifts from the
-Princess Mary, or from lords and ladies of the Court, such as the
-Duke of Rutland and the Countess of Devon;[238] and the glamour of
-the King’s badge doubtless added to the liberality of the company’s
-reception in many a monastery, country mansion, and town hall. They are
-found during the reign at the priories of Thetford, Dunmow (1531–2),
-and Durham (1532–3), at the house of the Lestranges at Hunstanton (23
-October 1530), at New Romney (1526–7), Shrewsbury (1527, 1533, 1540),
-Leicester (1531), Norwich (1533), Bristol (1535, 1536, 1537, 1541),
-Cambridge (1537–8), Beverley (1540–1), and Maldon (1546–7).[239]
-A private performance by the King’s men forms an episode in the
-Elizabethan play of _Sir Thomas More_, although the Mason there named
-cannot be traced amongst their number.
-
-No important change in the status of the company is to be observed
-under Edward VI. Some of the existing members seem to have retired,
-and four new ones, Richard Coke, John Birch, Henry Heryot, and John
-Smyth, were appointed.[240] The first three of these, together with
-two others, Richard Skinner and Thomas Southey, received a warrant to
-the Master of the Great Wardrobe on 15 February 1548, for the usual
-livery assigned to yeomen officers of the household, which consisted
-of three yards of red cloth, with an allowance of 3_s._ 4_d._ for the
-embroidering thereon of the royal initials.[241] The fees of these
-five, and of George Birch and Robert Hinstock, who were survivors
-from Henry VIII’s time, are traceable, as well as the annual reward
-of £6 13_s._ 4_d._, in the Chamber Accounts.[242] Each now got £3
-6_s._ 8_d._ a year, under a warrant of 24 December 1548. The same
-names appear in a list of 30 September 1552, with the exception of
-Robert Hinstock, whose place had probably been taken by John Browne,
-appointed as from the previous Christmas by a warrant of 9 June 1552,
-which introduced the innovation of granting him a livery allowance of
-£1 3_s._ 4_d._ a year instead of the actual livery.[243] If we suppose
-that John Smith and John Young continued to be borne on the Exchequer
-pay-roll, the total number of eight interlude-players provided for in
-fee-lists of Edward’s reign is made up.[244] John Smith is probably to
-be identified with the ‘disard’ or jester of that name who took part
-in George Ferrers’s Christmas gambols of 1552–3.[245] John Young may
-be the ‘right worshipful esquire John Yung’ to whom William Baldwin
-dedicated his _Beware the Cat_ in 1553. He certainly survived into
-Elizabeth’s reign and was still drawing an annuity of £3 6_s._ 8_d._
-as ‘agitator comediarum’ in 1569–70.[246] I have not noticed any
-provincial performances by the company during 1547–53, except at
-Maldon in 1549–50, but they are referred to more than once in the
-archives of the Revels. The Revels Office made them an oven and weapons
-of wood at Shrovetide 1548 and a seven-headed dragon at Shrovetide
-1549. At Christmas 1551–2 the Privy Council gave them a warrant to
-borrow ‘apparell and other fornyture’ from the Master, and Lord Darcy
-gave John Birch and John Browne another for garments to serve in an
-interlude before the King on 6 January 1552.[247] William Baldwin, in
-his _Beware the Cat_, relates that during the Christmas of 1552–3,
-they were learning ‘a play of Esop’s Crowe, wherin the moste part of
-the actors were birds’.[248] Their only other play of which the name is
-known is that of _Self Love_, for which Sir Thomas Chaloner gave them
-20s. on a Shrove Monday in 1551–3.[249]
-
-The company no doubt took their share in Court revels during the
-earlier part of Mary’s reign. But when the eclipse of gaiety came upon
-her later years they travelled. They are noted as the King and Queen’s
-men in 1555–6 at Ipswich and Gloucester, in 1557 at Bristol, and in
-1558 at Barnstaple, and as the Queen’s men in 1555 at Leicester, in
-1555–6 at Beverley, in 1556–7 at Beverley, Oxford, Norwich and Exeter,
-and in 1557–8 at Beverley, Leicester, Maldon, Dover, Lyme Regis, and
-Barnstaple. The nominal establishment continued to be eight.[250] But
-Heriot disappears after 1552 and John Birch, Coke, and Southey after
-1556, and their vacancies do not seem to have been filled.[251]
-
-Under Elizabeth the interlude players were certainly a moribund folk.
-They were reappointed ‘during pleasure’ under a warrant of 25 December
-1559, and apparently Edmund Strowdewike and William Reading took the
-place of George Birch and Skinner.[252] They drew their fees of £3
-6_s._ 8_d._ and livery allowances of £1 3_s._ 4_d._ from the Treasurer
-of the Chamber. The eight posts figure on the fee-lists long after
-there were no holders left.[253] The last ‘reward’ to the company, not
-improbably for the anti-papal farce of 6 January 1559, is to be found
-in the Chamber Account for 1558–60. It may be inferred that they never
-again played at Court. They were allowed to dwindle away. Browne and
-Reading died in 1563, Strowdewike on 3 June 1568, and Smith survived
-in solitary dignity until 1580.[254] Up to about 1573 he kept up some
-sort of provincial organization, doubtless with the aid of unofficial
-associates, and the Queen’s players are therefore traceable in many
-municipal Account-books. In October 1559 they were at Bristol and
-before Christmas at Leicester, in 1559–60 at Gloucester, in 1560–1 at
-Barnstaple, in 1561 at Faversham,[255] in October–December 1561 at
-Leicester, in 1561–2 at Gloucester, Maldon, and Beverley, in July 1562
-at Grimsthorpe, and on 4 October at Ipswich, in August 1563 at Bristol,
-in 1563–4 at Maldon, on 12 and 20 March 1564 at Ipswich again, and on
-2 August at Leicester, in 1564–5 at Abingdon, Maldon, and Gloucester,
-in 1565–6 at Maldon, Oxford, and Shrewsbury, in July 1566 at Bristol,
-before 29 September at Leicester, and on 9 October at Ipswich, in July
-1567 at Bristol, in 1567–8 at Oxford and Gloucester, in 1568–9 at
-Abingdon, Ipswich, and Stratford-upon-Avon, in August 1569 at Bristol,
-and on 7 December at Oxford, in 1569–70 at Gloucester and Maldon,
-before 29 September 1570 at Leicester, in 1570–1 at Winchester, and
-during October-December 1571 at Leicester, in 1571–2 at Oxford, on 23
-May 1572 at Nottingham, and on 20 November at Maldon, in 1572–3 at
-Ipswich, on 7 January 1573 at Beverley, and in 1573 at Winchester. This
-list is not exhaustive.[256] A reward to ‘the Queens Majesty’s men’
-in the Doncaster accounts for 1575 can hardly be assumed to refer to
-actors.
-
-
-
-
- ii. THE EARL OF LEICESTER’S MEN
-
- Robert Dudley; 5th s. of John, 1st Duke of Northumberland,
- _nat._ 24 June 1532 or 1533; m. (1) Amy, d. of Sir John
- Robsart, 4 June 1550, (2) Douglas Lady Sheffield, d. of William,
- 1st Lord Howard of Effingham, May 1573, (3) Lettice Countess of
- Essex, d. of Sir Francis Knollys, 1578; Master of the Horse, 11
- Jan. 1559; High Steward of Cambridge, 1562; Earl of Leicester,
- 29 Sept. 1564; Chancellor of Oxford, 31 Dec. 1564; Lord Steward,
- 1584–8; Absolute Governor of United Provinces, 25 Jan. 1586–12
- Apr. 1588; _ob._ 4 Sept. 1588.
-
-The earliest mention of Lord Robert Dudley’s players is in a letter
-which he wrote in June 1559 to the Earl of Shrewsbury, Lord President
-of the North, as Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire, asking licence for them
-to perform in that county, in accordance with the proclamation of 16
-May 1559.[257] The terms of the letter suggest that the company may
-already have played in London, but it is probable, as nothing is said
-of a hearing by the Queen, that they had not been at Court. They were
-there at each Christmas from 1560–1 to 1562–3, and then not for a
-decade. They were in 1558–9 at Norwich, in 1559–60 at Oxford, Saffron
-Walden, and Plymouth, in July 1560 at Bristol, in October 1561 at
-Grimsthorpe, in 1561–2 at Oxford, Maldon, and Ipswich, in September
-1562 at Bristol, where they are called ‘Lord Dudley’s’ players, on 12
-November 1563 at Leicester, and on 17 November at Ipswich, in 1563–4 at
-Maldon, on 2 January 1564 at Ipswich, and on 1 July at Leicester. They
-are also found, as the Earl of Leicester’s, in 1564–5 at Maldon, on 6
-April 1565 at York, on 11 August 1569 at Nottingham, in January 1570 at
-Bristol, on 4 May 1570 at Oxford, and in October-December at Leicester,
-in 1570–1 at Abingdon, Barnstaple, and Gloucester, on 9 August 1571
-at Saffron Walden,[258] in October–December at Leicester, in the
-same year at Beverley, on 15 July 1572 at Ipswich, and on 20 August
-at Nottingham. The gap in my records between 1565 and 1569 is bridged
-in the fuller list covering other towns given by Mr. Murray.[259]
-Information as to the company in 1572 is derived from the signatures to
-a letter asking for appointment by Leicester, not merely as liveried
-retainers but as household servants, in order to meet the terms of the
-proclamation of 3 January in that year.[260]
-
- To the right honorable Earle of Lecester, their good lord and
- master.
-
- Maye yt please your honour to understande that forasmuche as
- there is a certayne Procalmation out for the revivinge of a
- Statute as touchinge retayners, as youre Lordshippe knoweth
- better than we can enforme you thereof: We therfore, your humble
- Servaunts and daylye Oratours your players, for avoydinge all
- inconvenients that maye growe by reason of the saide Statute,
- are bold to trouble your Lordshippe with this our Suite, humblie
- desiringe your honor that (as you have bene alwayes our good
- Lord and Master) you will now vouchsaffe to reteyne us at this
- present as your houshold Servaunts and daylie wayters, not
- that we meane to crave any further stipend or benefite at your
- Lordshippes hands but our lyveries as we have had, and also your
- honors License to certifye that we are your houshold Servaunts
- when we shall have occasion to travayle amongst our frendes as
- we do usuallye once a yere, and as other noble-mens Players do
- and have done in tyme past, Wherebie we maye enjoye our facultie
- in your Lordshippes name as we have done hertofore. Thus beyinge
- bound and readie to be alwayes at your Lordshippes commandmente
- we committ your honor to the tuition of the Almightie.
-
- Long may your Lordshippe live in peace,
- A pere of noblest peres:
- In helth welth and prosperitie
- Redoubling Nestor’s yeres.
-
- Your Lordshippes Servaunts most bounden
- Iames Burbage.
- Iohn Perkinne.
- Iohn Laneham.
- William Iohnson.
- Roberte Wilson.
- Thomas Clarke.
-
-Several of these men were to achieve distinction in their ‘quality’;
-of none of them is there any earlier record, unless John Perkin is to
-be identified with the Parkins who had been in 1552–3 one of the train
-of the Lord of Misrule.[261] By 6 December 1571 the company were in
-London.[262] Three years later they obtained a very singular favour in
-the patent of 10 May 1574, the general bearings of which have already
-been discussed.[263]
-
-[Sidenote: pro Iacobo Burbage & aliis de licencia speciali]
-
- Elizabeth by the grace of God quene of England, &c. To all
- Iustices, Mayors, Sheriffes, Baylyffes, head Constables, vnder
- Constables, and all other our officers and mynisters gretinge.
- Knowe ye that we of oure especiall grace, certen knowledge,
- and mere mocion haue licenced and auctorised, and by these
- presentes do licence and auctorise, oure lovinge Subiectes,
- Iames Burbage, Iohn Perkyn, Iohn Lanham, William Iohnson, and
- Roberte Wilson, seruauntes to oure trustie and welbeloued Cosen
- and Counseyllor the Earle of Leycester, to vse, exercise, and
- occupie the arte and facultye of playenge Commedies, Tragedies,
- Enterludes, stage playes, and such other like as they haue
- alredie vsed and studied, or hereafter shall vse and studie,
- aswell for the recreacion of oure loving subiectes, as for oure
- solace and pleasure when we shall thincke good to see them,
- as also to vse and occupie all such Instrumentes as they haue
- alredie practised, or hereafter shall practise, for and during
- our pleasure. And the said Commedies, Tragedies, Enterludes,
- and stage playes, to gether with their musicke, to shewe,
- publishe, exercise, and occupie to their best commoditie during
- all the terme aforesaide, aswell within oure Citie of London
- and liberties of the same, as also within the liberties and
- fredomes of anye oure Cities, townes, Bouroughes &c. whatsoeuer
- as without the same, thoroughte oure Realme of England.
- Willynge and commaundinge yow and everie of yowe, as ye tender
- our pleasure, to permytte and suffer them herein withoute anye
- yowre lettes, hynderaunce, or molestacion duringe the terme
- aforesaid, anye acte, statute, proclamacion, or commaundement
- heretofore made, or hereafter to be made, to the contrarie
- notwithstandinge. Prouyded that the said Commedies, Tragedies,
- enterludes, and stage playes be by the master of oure Revells
- for the tyme beynge before sene & allowed, and that the same be
- not published or shewen in the tyme of common prayer, or in the
- tyme of greate and common plague in oure said Citye of London.
- In wytnes whereof &c. wytnes oure selfe at Westminster the
- x^{th} daye of Maye.
- per breve de priuato sigillo
-
-The names in this patent only differ from those in the letter of 1572
-by the omission of Thomas Clarke. By the time of its issue Leicester’s
-men were again a Court company. They had made their reappearance
-at the Christmas of 1572–3 with three plays, all given before the
-end of December. They continued to appear in every subsequent year
-until the formation of the Queen’s men in 1583. The building of the
-Theatre by James Burbadge in 1576 gave them a valuable head-quarters
-in London[264]; but they are still found from time to time about the
-provinces. Their detailed adventures are as follows. In 1572–3 they
-were at Stratford-on-Avon, on 8 August 1573 at Beverley, on 1 September
-at Nottingham, and in October at Bristol. On 26 December they played
-_Predor and Lucia_ at Court, on 28 December _Mamillia_, and on 21
-February 1574 _Philemon and Philecia_. In 1573–4 they were at Oxford
-and Leicester, on 13 June 1574 at Maldon, on 3 December at Canterbury.
-In 1574 they were also at Doncaster, where they played in the church.
-For the Court they rehearsed _Panecia_, and this was probably either
-their play of 26 December in which ‘my Lord of Lesters boyes’ appeared,
-or that of 1 January 1575, in which there were chimney-sweepers. From
-9 to 27 July 1575 Elizabeth paid her historic visit to Kenilworth, and
-there is no proof, but much probability, that the company were called
-upon to take their part in her entertainment. Its chronicler, Robert
-Laneham, may well have been a kinsman of the player. I have not come
-across them elsewhere this year, except at Southampton. They played
-at Court on 28 December 1575 and 4 March 1576, and are described in
-the account for their payment as ‘Burbag and his company’. A record
-of them at Ipswich in 1575–6 as ‘my Lorde Robertes’ men is probably
-misdated. On 30 December 1576 they acted _The Collier_ at Court. In
-1576–7 they were at Stratford-on-Avon, in September 1577 at Newcastle,
-and between 13 and 19 October at Bristol, where they gave _Myngo_.[265]
-In 1577–8 they were also at Bath. They were at Court on 26 December
-1577 and were to have performed again on 11 February 1578, but were
-displaced for Lady Essex’s men. They may have been at Wanstead in May
-1578 when Leicester entertained Elizabeth with Sidney’s _The May Lady_.
-On 1 September they were at Maldon, on 9 September at Ipswich, and on
-3 November at Lord North’s at Kirtling. They played _A Greek Maid_
-at Court on 4 January 1579.[266] Their play on 28 December 1579 fell
-through because Elizabeth could not be present, but they played on 6
-January 1580. In 1579–80 they were at Ipswich and Durham, and from 15
-to 17 May 1580 at Kirtling. Vice-Chancellor Hatcher’s letter of 21
-January 1580 to Burghley about Oxford’s men (_vide infra_) shows that
-Leicester’s had then recently been refused leave to play at Cambridge.
-They played _Delight_ at Court on 26 December and appeared again on 7
-February 1581. That Wilson was still a member of the company in 1581 is
-shown by the reference to him in the curious Latin letter written by
-one of Lord Shrewsbury’s players on 25 April of that year.[267] In the
-following winter they did not come to Court, but on 10 February 1583
-they returned with _Telomo_.[268]
-
-The best of Leicester’s men, including Laneham, Wilson, and Johnson,
-appear to have joined the Queen’s company on its formation in
-March 1583. Probably the Queen’s also took over the Theatre. James
-Burbadge himself may have given up acting. Nothing more is heard of
-Leicester’s men until 1584–5, when players under his name visited
-Coventry, Leicester, Gloucester, and Norwich. They were at Dover in
-June 1585, and at Bath as late as August. These may have been either
-the relics of the old company, or a new one formed to attend the Earl
-in his expedition to aid the States-General in the Low Countries.
-He was appointed to the command of the English forces on 28 August,
-and reached Flushing on 10 December. The pageants in his honour
-at Utrecht, Leyden, and the Hague were remarkable. Stowe records
-festivities at Utrecht on St. George’s Day, 23 April 1586. These
-included an after-dinner show of ‘dauncing, vauting, and tumbling, with
-the forces of Hercules, which gave great delight to the strangers, for
-they had not seene it before’.[269] It is a reasonable inference that
-the performers in _The Forces of Hercules_ were English.[270] And on 24
-March 1586 Sir Philip Sidney, writing to Walsingham from Utrecht, says:
-
- ‘I wrote to yow a letter by Will, my lord of Lester’s jesting
- plaier, enclosed in a letter to my wife, and I never had answer
- thereof ... I since find that the knave deliverd the letters to
- my ladi of Lester.’[271]
-
-That the ‘jesting plaier’ was William Shakespeare is on the whole less
-likely than that he was the famous comic actor, William Kempe; and this
-theory is confirmed by a mention in an earlier letter of 12 November
-1585 from Thomas Doyley at Calais to Leicester himself of ‘Mr. Kemp,
-called Don Gulihelmo’, as amongst those remaining at Dunkirk.[272]
-Leicester returned to England in November 1586. ‘Wilhelm Kempe,
-instrumentist’ and his lad ‘Daniell Jonns’ were at the Danish Court at
-Helsingör in August and September of the same year; and so, from 17
-July to 18 September, were five ‘instrumentister och springere’ whose
-names may evidently be anglicized as Thomas Stevens, George Bryan,
-Thomas King, Thomas Pope, and Robert Percy (cf. ch. xiv). Some or all
-of these men are evidently the company of English comedians referred to
-by Thomas Heywood as commended by the Earl of Leicester to Frederick II
-of Denmark. Stevens and his fellows, but not apparently Kempe, went on
-to Dresden. Some of them ultimately became Lord Strange’s men. But it
-seems to me very doubtful whether, as is usually suggested, they passed
-direct into his service from that of Leicester.[273] They did not leave
-Dresden until 17 July 1587. But Leicester’s were at Exeter on 23 March
-1586. They played at Court on 27 December 1586, and were in London
-about 25 January 1587. They were at Abingdon, Bath, Lathom, Coventry,
-Leicester, Oxford, Stratford-on-Avon, Dover, Canterbury, Marlborough,
-Southampton, Exeter, Gloucester, and Norwich during 1586–7. Kempe may,
-of course, have been with them on these occasions; but if Stevens and
-the rest passed as Leicester’s in the Low Countries, it is likely that
-they ceased to do so when they went to Denmark.
-
-Finally, Leicester’s men were at Coventry, Reading, Bath, Maidstone,
-Dover, Plymouth, Gloucester, York, Saffron Walden, and probably Exeter
-in 1587–8.[274] On 4 September they were at Norwich, and here William
-Stonage, a cobbler, was committed to prison at their suit, ‘for lewd
-words uttered against the ragged staff’.[275] As late as 14 September
-they did not yet know that the lord in whose name they wore this badge
-was dead, for on that day, unless the records are again in error, they
-were still playing at Ipswich.[276]
-
-
- iii. LORD RICH’S MEN
-
- Richard Rich; _nat._ _c._ 1496; cr. 1st Baron Rich, 26 Feb.
- 1548; Lord Chancellor, 23 Oct. 1548–21 Dec. 1551; m. Elizabeth
- Jenks; _ob._ 12 June 1567.
-
- Robert, s. of 1st Baron; _nat._ _c._ 1537; succ. as 2nd Baron,
- 1567; _ob._ 1581.
-
-The company was at Ipswich on 3 May 1564, Saffron Walden in 1563–4,
-Maldon in 1564–5, York on 6 April 1565, and Ipswich on 31 July 1567.
-Then it secured a footing in London, and appeared at Court during the
-Christmas of 1567–8, on 26 December 1568, and on 5 February 1570.
-On 2 February 1570 it played at the Lincoln’s Inn Candlemas ‘Post
-Revels’.[277] It was also at Canterbury in 1569, Saffron Walden in
-1569–70, and Maldon in 1570. Presumably it was a later company to which
-Gabriel Harvey referred in 1579 (cf. p. 4), and the death of Lord
-Rich in 1581 might naturally have led to its disbandment or change of
-service.
-
-
- iv. LORD ABERGAVENNY’S MEN
-
- Henry Neville, s. of George, 3rd Lord Abergavenny; succ. as 4th
- Lord, 1535; _ob._ 1586.
-
-The only London record of this company is a civic licence for it of 29
-January 1572 (App. D, No. xxi), but it is found in provincial records
-at Dover, Canterbury, Leicester, Bristol, and Faversham in 1571 and
-1572, and at Ludlow in 1575–6.
-
-
- v. THE EARL OF SUSSEX’S MEN
-
- Thomas Radcliffe, s. of Henry, 2nd Earl; _nat._ _c._ 1526; m.
- (1) Elizabeth, d. of Thomas Earl of Southampton, (2) Frances, d.
- of Sir William Sidney, 26 Apr. 1555; succ. as 3rd Earl, 17 Feb.
- 1557; Lord Chamberlain, 13 July 1572; _ob._ 9 June 1583.
-
- Henry Radcliffe, s. of Henry, 2nd Earl; _nat._ _c._ 1530; m.
- Honora, d. of Anthony Pound, before 24 Feb. 1561; succ. as 4th
- Earl, 1583; _ob._ 14 Dec. 1593.
-
- Robert Radcliffe, s. of 4th Earl; _nat._ _c._ 1569; m. (1)
- Bridget, d. of Sir Charles Morison, who _ob._ Dec. 1623, (2)
- Frances Shute; succ. as 5th Earl, 1593; acting Earl Marshal,
- 1597, 1601; _ob._ 22 Sept. 1629.
-
-The third Earl of Sussex had a company, which proved one of the most
-long-lived of the theatrical organizations of Elizabeth’s time and held
-together, now in London and now in the provinces, under no less than
-three earls. It first makes its appearance at Nottingham on 16 March
-1569, at Maldon in 1570, on 28 January 1571, and on 20 August 1572, at
-Ipswich in 1571–2, at Canterbury and Dover in 1569 and 1570, and in
-1569–70 at Bristol, Gloucester, and Ludlow, where it was of six men.
-Sussex became Chamberlain in July 1572 and in the following winter
-his company came to the Court, whose Christmases it helped to enliven
-pretty regularly until the death of its first patron in 1583. As I have
-shown elsewhere (ch. vi), Sussex seems to have had occasional deputies
-in Lord Howard of Effingham and Lord Hunsdon during his term of office,
-but it is probably justifiable to assume that, when the Chamberlain’s
-men are referred to at any time during 1572–83, Sussex’s men are meant,
-and in 1577 and 1581 there is clear evidence that the names are used
-synonymously. Oddly enough, Howard’s men are also referred to in one
-record of 1577 (cf. p. 134) as the Chamberlain’s, but that is probably
-a slip. The detailed history of the company during this period is as
-follows. In 1572–3 they were at Bath, in July 1573 at Leicester, on 14
-September at Nottingham, in 1573–4 at Coventry, in 1574, on some date
-before 29 September, at Leicester again, on 13 July at Maldon, and
-in September at Wollaton (Francis Willoughby’s). They rehearsed two
-Court plays for Christmas on 14 December, _Phedrastus_ and _Phigon and
-Lucia_, but in the end did not give a performance. In 1574–5 they were
-at Gloucester, in 1575 at Maldon, and before 29 September at Leicester.
-They played at Court on 2 February 1576. Their payee was John Adams,
-the only actor whose name is recorded in connexion with the company. In
-1575–6 they were at Ipswich, on 27 July 1576 at Cambridge, and between
-29 July and 5 August at Bristol, where they played _The Red Knight_. On
-2 February 1577 they played _The Cynocephali_ at Court. In 1576–7 they
-were at Coventry and Bath, on 30 May 1577 at Ipswich, and on 31 August
-at Nottingham. On 2 February 1578 they played at Court. In 1577–8 they
-were at Bath, on 15 July 1578 at Maldon, in the same year at Bristol,
-and in 1578–9 at Bath. Thereafter their activities seem to have been
-mainly confined to London. They were named by the Privy Council to the
-Lord Mayor among the Court companies for the Christmas of 1578–9 (App.
-D, No. xl), and played _The Cruelty of a Stepmother_ on 28 December
-1578, _The Rape of the Second Helen_ on 6 January, and _Murderous
-Michael_ on 3 March 1579. In the following winter their pieces were
-_The Duke of Milan and the Marquess of Mantua_ on 26 December, _Portio
-and Demorantes_ on 2 February, and _Sarpedon_ on 16 February 1580.[278]
-The names of their Court plays on 27 December 1580 and 2 February 1581
-are unfortunately not recorded. On 14 September they recur in the
-provinces, at Nottingham.[279] They missed the next winter at Court,
-and made their last appearance there for a decade in _Ferrar_ on 6
-January 1583.
-
-Either the death of their patron in June 1583, or possibly the
-formation of the Queen’s men in the previous March, eclipsed them, but
-in 1585 they reappear as a provincial company, visiting Dover on 15
-May, Bath on 22 July and in May 1586, Coventry twice in 1585–6, Ipswich
-in 1586–7, York in 1587, Leicester before Michaelmas of the same year,
-and Coventry in September. Here they were playing under the name of the
-Countess of Sussex. In 1587–8 they were at Coventry and Bath, on 18
-April 1588 at Ipswich, on 17 February 1589 at Leicester, on 1 March at
-Ipswich, on 19 November at Leicester again, in the course of 1589 at
-Faversham, and in 1588–9 at Aldeburgh. On 17 February 1590 they were
-at Ipswich. In the spring of 1591 they appear to have made a temporary
-amalgamation with a group of the Queen’s men (q.v.) and appeared with
-them on 14 February at Southampton, on 24 March at Coventry, and during
-1590–1 at Gloucester. This arrangement probably terminated in May, and
-on 11 August Sussex’s were alone at Leicester.[280]
-
-They enter the charmed London circle again with a Court performance
-on 2 January 1592.[281] It is possible that they had attracted the
-services of Marlowe, for Kyd in a letter, probably to be dated in 1593,
-speaks of himself as having been in the service of a lord for whose
-players Marlowe was writing, and there are some traces of connexion
-between Kyd and the house of Radcliffe. During the plague of 1593 the
-company were obliged to travel again, and on 29 April the Privy Council
-Register records the issue of
-
- ‘an open warrant for the plaiers, servantes to the Erle of
- Sussex, authorysinge them to exercyse theire qualitie of
- playinge comedies and tragedies in any county, cittie, towne or
- corporacion not being within vij^{en} miles of London, where the
- infection is not, and in places convenient and tymes fitt.’[282]
-
-The company were at Ipswich, Newcastle, and York in 1592–3. They
-were at Winchester on 7 December 1593; then came to London under the
-patronage of the fifth Earl, and, although not at Court, had a season
-of about six weeks, beginning on 26 December and ending on 6 February,
-with Henslowe, probably at the Rose. The names and dates of their
-plays and sums received at each, probably by himself as owner of the
-theatre, are noted by Henslowe in his diary. The company performed
-on thirty nights, in twelve plays. Henslowe’s receipts averaged £1
-13_s._, amounting to £3 1_s._ on the first night and £3 10_s._ on each
-of the next two, and thereafter fluctuating greatly, from a minimum of
-5_s._ to a maximum of £3 8_s._ This last was at the production of the
-one ‘new’ play of the season, _Titus Andronicus_, on 24 January. The
-enterprise was brought to an abrupt termination by a renewed alarm of
-plague, and a consequent inhibition of plays by the Privy Council on
-3 February. _Titus Andronicus_ was played for the third and last time
-on 6 February, and on the same day the book was entered for copyright
-purposes in the Stationers’ Register. The edition published in the
-same year professes to give the play as it was played by ‘the Earle
-of Darbie, Earle of Pembrooke, and Earle of Sussex their Servants’. I
-suppose it to have passed, probably in a pre-Shakespearian version,
-from Pembroke’s to Sussex’s, when the former were bankrupt in the
-summer of 1593 (cf. _infra_), and to have been revised for Sussex’s
-by the hand of Shakespeare. If so, it is a plausible conjecture that
-certain other plays, which were once Pembroke’s and ultimately came to
-the Chamberlain’s men, also passed through the hands of Sussex’s. Such
-were _The Taming of A Shrew_, _The Contention of York and Lancaster_,
-and perhaps the _Ur-Hamlet_, _1 Henry VI_, and _Richard III_. There
-is no basis for determining whether any of Shakespeare’s work on the
-York tetralogy was done for Sussex’s; but it is worth noting that one
-of their productions was _Buckingham_, a title which might fit either
-_Richard III_ or that early version of _Henry VIII_, the existence of
-which, on internal grounds, I suspect. Of Sussex’s other plays in this
-season, one, _George a Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield_, was published
-as theirs in 1599; another, Marlowe’s _Jew of Malta_, probably belonged
-to Henslowe, as it was acted in turn by nearly every company which he
-financed; and of the rest, _God Speed the Plough_, _Huon of Bordeaux_,
-_Richard the Confessor_, _William the Conqueror_, _Friar Francis_,
-_Abraham and Lot_, _The Fair Maid of Italy_, and _King Lud_, nothing is
-known, except for the entry of _God Speed the Plough_ in 1601 and an
-edifying tale related about 1608 by Thomas Heywood in connexion with
-an undated performance of _Friar Francis_ by the company at King’s
-Lynn.[283]
-
-At Easter 1594 Henslowe records another very brief season of eight
-nights between 1 and 9 April, during which the Queen’s and Sussex’s
-men played ‘together’. This suggests to Dr. Greg that the companies
-appeared on different nights, but to me rather that they combined
-their forces, as they seem to have already done at Coventry in 1591.
-Henslowe’s receipts averaged £1 17_s._ The repertory included,
-besides _The Fair Maid of Italy_ and _The Jew of Malta_, _King Leare_,
-doubtless to be identified with _King Leire and his Three Daughters_
-(1605), _The Ranger’s Comedy_, and _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_.
-The latter was published in 1594 as a Queen’s play. Both it and _The
-Ranger’s Comedy_ were played at a later date by the Admiral’s, and may
-have belonged to Henslowe. Strange’s had played _Friar Bacon_ in 1592–3.
-
-Thereafter Sussex’s men vanish from the annals; they may have been
-absorbed in the Queen’s men for travelling purposes. Later players
-under the same name are recorded at Coventry in 1602–3, Dover in
-1606–7, Canterbury in 1607–8, Bristol, Norwich, and Dunwich in 1608–9,
-Leicester on 31 August 1615, and Leominster in 1618, and it may be
-these to whom Heywood alludes as visiting King’s Lynn. If so, their
-possession of _Friar Francis_ suggests some affiliation to the earlier
-company.
-
-
- vi. SIR ROBERT LANE’S MEN
-
- Robert Lane, of Horton, Northants; _nat._ _c._ 1528; Kt. 2 Oct.
- 1553; m. (1) Catherine, d. of Sir Roger Copley, (2) Mary, d. of
- John Heneage.
-
-I have not come across Sir Robert Lane’s men except at Bristol in
-August 1570, and at Court during the Christmas of 1571–2. On 27
-December 1571 they played _Lady Barbara_ and on 17 February 1572
-_Cloridon and Radiamanta_. The first performance was paid for by a
-warrant of 5 January to Laurence Dutton; the second by a warrant of
-26 February, in which, according to the entry in the Privy Council
-Register, Dutton was again named.[284] But the Treasurer of the Chamber
-records the payment as made to John Greaves and Thomas Goughe. Probably
-this company is identical with that found next year in the service of
-the Earl of Lincoln.
-
-
- vii. THE EARL OF LINCOLN’S (LORD CLINTON’S) MEN
-
- Edward Fiennes de Clinton; s. of Thomas, 8th Lord Clinton and
- Saye, _nat._ 1512; m. (1) Elizabeth Lady Talboys, d. of Sir
- John Blount, 1534, (2) Ursula, d. of William Lord Stourton,
- _c._ 1540, (3) Elizabeth Lady Browne, ‘the fair Geraldine,’ d.
- of Gerald, 9th Earl of Kildare, _c._ 1552; succ. as 9th Baron,
- 1517; Lord High Admiral, 1550–3, and again 13 Feb. 1558; 1st
- Earl of Lincoln, 4 May 1572; ambassador to France, 1572; Lord
- Steward, 1581–5; _ob._ 16 Jan. 1585.
-
- Henry Fiennes de Clinton, s. of Edward and Ursula; _nat._ _c._
- 1541; m. (1) Catharine, d. of Francis, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon,
- Feb. 1557, (2) Elizabeth, d. of Sir Richard Morison and wid.
- of William Norreys, after 1579; Kt. 29 Sept. 1553; succ. as 2nd
- Earl, 16 Jan. 1585; _ob._ 29 Sept. 1616.
-
-Players serving the Lord Admiral were at Winchester in 1566–7. A
-company under the name of the Earl of Lincoln and led by Laurence
-Dutton played at Court during the Christmas of 1572–3, and a company
-under that of Lord Clinton, and also led by Dutton, in _Herpetulus
-the Blue Knight and Perobia_ on 3 January 1574, and on 27 December
-1574 and 2 January 1575. For 1574–5 they rehearsed three plays, one of
-which was _Pretestus_. Probably these are the same company transferred
-by the Lord Admiral to his son. Dutton was with Sir Robert Lane’s men
-in 1571–2 and with the Earl of Warwick’s in 1575–6. The whole company
-may have taken service with Lincoln instead of Lane as a result of the
-statute of 1572 (App. D, No. xxiv), but it does not seem to have been
-altogether absorbed in Warwick’s, as Lord Clinton’s men are found at
-Southampton on 24 June 1577, when they were six in number, at Bristol
-in July, and at Coventry in 1576–7. A later company under the name of
-the Earl of Lincoln has a purely provincial record in 1599–1604. There
-is an isolated notice at Norwich in 1608–9.
-
-
- viii. THE EARL OF WARWICK’S MEN
-
- Ambrose Dudley, 3rd s. of John, 1st Duke of Northumberland;
- _nat._ _c._ 1528; m. (1) Anne Whorwood, (2) Elizabeth Talboys,
- _c._ 1553, (3) Anne, d. of Francis, Earl of Bedford, 11 Nov.
- 1565; Master of Ordnance, 12 Apr. 1560; Earl of Warwick, 26 Dec.
- 1561; Chief Butler of England, 4 May 1571; Privy Councillor, 5
- Sept. 1573; _ob._ 20 Feb. 1590.
-
-Dudley seems to have had players in London in January 1562, when they
-were rewarded by the Duchess of Suffolk.[285] They are also found in
-1559–64 at Oxford, Gloucester, Bristol, Plymouth, Winchester, Dover,
-Canterbury, and Norwich. Their only Court performances upon record were
-two during the Christmas of 1564–5. In 1564–5 they were apparently at
-Canterbury.[286]
-
-After an interval of ten years there are Warwick’s men at Court on
-14 February 1575 and also at Stratford in the course of 1574–5, at
-Lichfield between 27 July and 3 August during the progress,[287] and
-at Leicester before 29 September 1575. At the following Christmas they
-gave three plays at Court, on 26 December 1575 and 1 January and on
-5 March 1576. John and Laurence Dutton and Jerome Savage were their
-payees. Laurence Dutton and possibly others of the company had been, a
-year before, in Lord Clinton’s service. During the next four winters
-they appeared regularly at Court, and are recorded at Leicester in
-1576 and Nottingham on 1 September 1577. On 26 December 1576 they
-played _The Painter’s Daughter_, and on 18 February 1577 _The Irish
-Knight_. The names of their plays on 28 December 1577 and 6 January
-and 9 February 1578 are not preserved. They were notified by the
-Privy Council to the Lord Mayor as one of the Court companies for the
-Christmas of 1578–9 (App. D, No. xl), and played _The Three Sisters of
-Mantua_ on 26 December and _The Knight in the Burning Rock_ on 1 March.
-A play intended for 2 February was not performed, but payment was made
-to Jerome Savage. Gabriel Harvey (cf. p. 4) mentions them as a London
-company in the summer of 1579. On 1 January 1580 they played _The Four
-Sons of Fabius_. A Winchester record of ‘Lord Ambrose Dudley’s’ men in
-1581–2 must be an error.
-
-The Duttons were evidently a restless folk, and the disappearance of
-Warwick’s men and the appearance of Oxford’s men in 1580 is to be
-explained by another transfer of their services. This is referred to in
-the following verses:[288]
-
- _The Duttons and theyr fellow-players forsakyng the Erle of
- Warwycke theyr mayster, became followers of the Erle of Oxford,
- and wrot themselves his_ COMOEDIANS, _which certayne Gentlemen
- altered and made_ CAMOELIONS. _The Duttons, angry with that,
- compared themselves to any gentleman; therefore these armes were
- devised for them._
-
- The fyeld, a fart durty, a gybbet crosse-corded,
- A dauncing Dame Flurty of alle men abhorred;
- A lyther lad scampant, a roge in his ragges,
- A whore that is rampant, astryde wyth her legges,
- A woodcocke displayed, a calfe and a sheepe,
- A bitch that is splayed, a dormouse asleepe;
- A vyper in stynche, _la part de la drut_,
- Spell backwarde this Frenche and cracke me that nut.
-
- Parcy per pillery, perced with a rope,
- To slythe the more lytherly anoynted with sope;
- A coxcombe crospate in token of witte,
- Two eares perforate, a nose wythe slytte.
- Three nettles resplendent, three owles, three swallowes,
- Three mynstrellmen pendent on three payre of gallowes,
- Further sufficiently placed in them
- A knaves head, for a difference from alle honest men.
-
- The wreathe is a chayne of chaungeable red,
- To shew they ar vayne and fickle of head;
- The creste is a lastrylle whose feathers ar blew,
- In signe that these fydlers will never be trew;
- Whereon is placed the horne of a gote,
- Because they ar chast, to this is theyr lotte,
- For their bravery, indented and parted,
- And for their knavery innebulated.
-
- Mantled lowsy, wythe doubled drynke,
- Their ancient house is called the Clynke;
- Thys Posy they beare over the whole earthe,
- Wylt please you to have a fyt of our mirthe?
- But reason it is, and heraultes allowe welle,
- That fidlers should beare their armes in a towelle.
-
-In 1587–8 tumblers were at Bath under Warwick’s name. I do not
-understand the entry of his men in the Ipswich accounts, as playing
-on 10 March 1592. Ambrose Dudley died in 1590, and his doubtfully
-legitimate nephew, Sir Robert Dudley, does not seem even to have
-claimed the title until 1597. The Ipswich records are unreliable, but
-possibly Lady Warwick maintained a company for a while. The Corporation
-of London were considering some ‘cause’ of hers as to plays in May 1594
-(App. D, No. xcviii).
-
-
- ix. THE EARL OF OXFORD’S MEN
-
- John de Vere, s. of John, 15th Earl of Oxford; _nat._ _c._ 1512;
- succ. as 16th Earl and Lord Great Chamberlain, 21 Mar. 1540; m.
- Margaret Golding, 1547; _ob._ 3 Aug. 1562.
-
- Edward de Vere, s. of John, 16th Earl of Oxford; _nat._ 2 Apr.
- 1550; succ. as 17th Earl and Lord Great Chamberlain, 3 Aug.
- 1562; m. (1) Anne, d. of William Lord Burghley, Dec. 1571,
- (2) Elizabeth Trentham, _c._ 1591; _ob._ 24 June 1604. Of his
- daughters by (1), Elizabeth m. William Stanley, 6th Earl of
- Derby, 26 Jan. 1595; Bridget m. Francis, Lord Norris; Susan m.
- Sir Philip Herbert, afterwards Earl of Montgomery, 27 Dec. 1604.
-
-The Earls of Oxford had their players as far back as 1492.[289] A
-company belonging to the 16th Earl caused a scandal by playing in
-Southwark at the moment when a dirge was being sung for Henry VIII
-in St. Saviour’s on 6 February 1547.[290] It is probably the same
-company which is traceable in 1555–6 at Dover, in 1557–8 at Ipswich, in
-1559–60 and 1560–1 at Maldon, and in 1561–2 at Barnstaple, Maldon, and
-Ipswich. Murray (ii. 63) adds a few notices. There is no sign of it at
-Court, and it is likely that the 17th Earl discontinued it soon after
-his succession. The last notices of it are at Leicester, Plymouth, and
-Ipswich in 1562–3.
-
-At a later date, however, this Earl was clearly interested in things
-dramatic. He took part in a Shrovetide device at Court in 1579, and
-is recorded in Francis Meres’s _Palladis Tamia_ (1598) to have been
-himself a playwright and one of ‘the best for comedy amongst us’ (App.
-C, No. lii). In 1580 the Duttons and the rest of the Earl of Warwick’s
-men transferred themselves to his service, and thereby laid themselves
-open to satire upon their fickleness (cf. _supra_). I do not know
-whether it was their resentment at this that brought them into trouble,
-but on 12 April 1580 the Lord Mayor wrote to Sir Thomas Bromley, the
-Lord Chancellor, about a disorder at the Theatre two days before, which
-he understood to be already before the Privy Council; and on 13 April
-we find the Council committing Robert Leveson and Laurence Dutton,
-servants of the Earl of Oxford, to the Marshalsea for a fray with the
-Inns of Court. On 26 May the matter was referred to three judges for
-examination, and on 18 July Thomas Chesson, sometime servant to the
-Earl, was released on bail (App. D, Nos. xliii, xliv). These notices
-suggest that the company had arranged, possibly during the absence of
-Leicester’s men from town, to occupy the Theatre. In view of their
-disgrace, it was no doubt better for them to travel, and on 21 June
-John Hatcher, Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, wrote to Lord Oxford’s
-father-in-law, Lord Burghley, to acknowledge recommendations received
-from him, as well as from the Lord Chancellor and Lord Chamberlain
-Sussex, that Oxford’s men should be allowed to ‘show their cunning in
-several plays already practised by them before the Queen’s majesty’,
-and to explain that, in view of pestilence, the need for industry
-at commencement, a previous refusal to Leicester’s men, and a Privy
-Council order of 1575 against assemblies in Cambridge, he had thought
-it better to give them 20_s._, and send them away unheard.[291] They
-are traceable provincially in 1580–3.[292] At Norwich (1580–1) the
-payment was made to ‘the Earle of Oxenfordes lads’, and at Bristol
-(Sept. 1581) there were nine boys and a man. These were probably boys
-of the Earl’s domestic chapel, travelling either with the Duttons or as
-a separate company.
-
-The Duttons joined the Queen’s company, John on its first establishment
-in 1583. It is in the following winter, however, that an Oxford’s
-company first appears at Court. Here the Earl’s ‘servauntes’ performed
-on 1 January and 3 March 1584. Their payee was John Lyly, who had
-probably been for some years in the Earl’s service. Provincial
-performances continue during 1583–5, and in the records the company
-are always described as ‘players’ or ‘men’.[293] On 27 December 1584
-_Agamemnon and Ulysses_ was played at Court by the Earl of Oxford’s
-‘boyes’. For this the payee was Henry Evans, probably the same who
-in 1600 set up the Chapel plays. I do not feel much doubt that the
-companies under Lyly and Evans were the same, or that in 1583–4 they
-in fact consisted of a combination of Oxford’s boys, Paul’s and the
-Chapel, working under Lyly and Evans at the Blackfriars theatre.[294]
-This arrangement had, no doubt, to be modified when Sir William More
-recovered possession of the premises in the spring of 1584, and after
-the performance of December 1584 Oxford perhaps ceased to maintain boy
-players and contented himself with another company of his servants, who
-made an appearance at Court on 1 January 1585, under John Symons, in
-feats of activity and vaulting. These tumblers had apparently been Lord
-Strange’s men in 1583, and by 1586 had returned into the service of the
-Stanley family.
-
-An Oxford’s company did not again perform at Court, but his ‘plaiers’
-were at Norwich in 1585–6, and Ipswich in 1586–7,[295] and players
-under his name were notified to Walsingham amongst others setting up
-their bills in London on 25 January 1587 (App. D, No. lxxviii). They
-were at York in June 1587 and Maidstone in 1589–90. Finally, at the end
-of the reign, comes a letter from the Privy Council to the Lord Mayor
-on 31 March 1602, which informs him that at the Earl’s suit the Queen
-has tolerated a new company formed by a combination of his servants
-and those of the Earl of Worcester, and that they are to play at the
-Boar’s Head (App. D, No. cxxx). Oxford’s men had probably then been
-established for some little time, as they are indicated as having
-played _The Weakest Goeth to the Wall_ (1600, S. R. 23 October 1600) by
-the title-page, and _The History of George Scanderbarge_ by the entry
-in the Stationers’ Register (3 July 1601). Meres’s reference to Oxford
-in 1598 suggests that they may have been in existence still earlier, as
-it is natural to suppose that he wrote comedies for his own men. Some
-of the writers, however, with whom Meres groups him belong to the early
-years of the reign, although others are contemporary. From 1602 the
-company was no doubt merged in Worcester’s, which in its turn became
-Queen Anne’s.
-
-
- x. THE EARL OF ESSEX’S MEN
-
- Walter Devereux, s. of Sir Richard Devereux and g.s. of Walter,
- Lord Bourchier and 1st Viscount Hereford; _nat._ 1541; succ.
- as 2nd Viscount Hereford, 1558; m. Lettice, d. of Sir Francis
- Knollys, _c._ 1561; 1st Earl of Essex, 4 May 1572; _ob._ 22
- Sept. 1576.
-
- Lettice, Countess of Essex, b. _c._ 1541; m. (2) Robert, Earl of
- Leicester, 21 Sept. 1578, (3) Sir Christopher Blount, July 1589;
- _ob._ 25 Dec. 1634.
-
- Robert Devereux, s. of 1st Earl of Essex; b. 19 Nov. 1566; succ.
- as 2nd Earl, 1576; m. Frances, Lady Sidney, d. of Sir Francis
- Walsingham, 1590; Master of the Horse, 23 Dec. 1587; Earl
- Marshal, 28 Dec. 1597; Chancellor of Cambridge University, 10
- Aug. 1598; rebelled, 8 Feb. 1601; executed, 25 Feb. 1601.
-
-The Bourchiers, Earls of Essex, whom the Devereux succeeded through
-an heiress, had their players well back into the fifteenth century.
-In fact, the earliest household troop on record is that of Henry
-Bourchier, first earl of the senior creation, which is found at Maldon
-in 1468–9 and at Stoke-by-Nayland on 9 January 1482.[296]
-
-Walter Devereux had a company, which visited Bath, Bristol, Gloucester,
-and Nottingham in 1572–3, Wollaton (Francis Willoughby’s) in July
-1574, Coventry on 29 August, and Leicester before 29 September 1574,
-Gloucester, Dover, and Coventry in 1574–5, Coventry and Leicester in
-1575–6, Nottingham in September 1576, and Bristol in September 1577.
-On the Earl’s death the Countess retained the company, and under her
-name it appeared at Coventry and Oxford in 1576–7. On 11 February 1578
-it gave its only performance at Court, taking the place of Leicester’s
-men, to whom that day had originally been assigned. It was included
-in the list of Court companies sent to the Lord Mayor in December
-1578 (App. D, No. xl), but gave no play that winter. The Privy Council
-described it as the Earl of Essex’s men, and it played under that
-name at Coventry in 1577–8 and at Ipswich in 1579–80; but at Oxford,
-Coventry, and Stratford-on-Avon in 1578–9, and at Oxford in 1579–80,
-it is still called the Countess of Essex’s. It could hardly have borne
-that name after August 1579, when the Countess’s secret marriage
-with Leicester was revealed to Elizabeth, and doubtless her disgrace
-debarred it from any further Court favour.
-
-Robert Earl of Essex had a provincial company from 1581 to 1596.
-In 1581–2 it was at Exeter, in July 1584 at Ludlow, in 1583–4 at
-Leicester, Stratford-on-Avon, and Ipswich, and in 1584–5 at Bath. On
-26 June 1585 it played at Thorpe in Norwich, in spite of a prohibition
-by the Corporation, and was sentenced to be excluded from civic reward
-in future. In 1585–6 it was at Coventry and Ipswich, in 1586 before
-29 September at Leicester, and possibly about May at Oxford, on 27
-February 1587 at York, on 16 July at Leicester, and in the course of
-the year at Stratford-on-Avon. In 1587–8 it was at Coventry, Ipswich,
-Saffron Walden, and Leicester, in 1588–9 at Bath, Saffron Walden, and
-Reading, on 7 September 1589 at Knowsley, on 31 October at Ipswich, and
-in the same year at Faversham. It was also at Coventry and Faversham in
-1589–90, at Maldon in 1590, and twice at Faversham in 1590–1, and is
-last recorded at Ludlow in April 1596. Murray adds some intermediate
-dates. A company of Essex’s men which appeared at Coventry in 1600–1 is
-probably distinct. The execution of Essex on 25 February 1601 must have
-brought it to a premature end.
-
-
- xi. LORD VAUX’S MEN
-
- William Vaux, 3rd Lord Vaux; _nat._ _c._ 1542; m. (1) Elizabeth
- Beaumont, (2) Mary Tresham; _ob._ 20 Aug. 1595.
-
- Edward Vaux, 4th Lord Vaux; _nat._ 1588; _ob._ 1661.
-
-These companies are extremely obscure. Gabriel Harvey mentions
-the first in 1579 (cf. p. 4); the second was at Leicester in
-October-December 1601, Coventry in 1603–4 and 1608, and Skipton in 1609.
-
-
- xii. LORD BERKELEY’S MEN
-
- Henry FitzHardinge Berkeley, Baron Berkeley; succ. 1553; m.
- Catherine, d. of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey; _ob._ 1613;
- father of Thomas Berkeley, _nat._ 11 July 1575; m. Elizabeth,
- d. of Sir G. Carey, afterwards 2nd Baron Hunsdon, 19 Feb. 1596;
- _ob._ 22 Nov. 1611.
-
-The only London record of this company is in July 1581, when some of
-them, including Arthur King and Thomas Goodale, were committed to the
-Counter after a brawl with Inns of Court men. Lord Berkeley apologized
-to the Lord Mayor on their behalf, and said that they would go to the
-country (App. D, Nos. xlix, l). Their other appearances are all in
-the country, at Bristol between 6 and 12 July 1578, where they played
-_What Mischief Worketh in the Mind of Man_, at Bath on 11 July 1578 and
-on another day in 1578–9, at Abingdon in 1579–80, Stratford-on-Avon
-in 1580–1, Maldon in 1581, Stratford-on-Avon in 1582–3, Barnstaple in
-1583–4, and Bath in 1586–7. Long after they, or a later company under
-the same name, reappear at Coventry in 1597–8, at Leicester in 1598
-before Michaelmas, at Saffron Walden in 1598–9, and at Coventry and
-elsewhere in 1603–10. Lord Berkeley’s name is sometimes misspelt in the
-account-books as ‘Bartlett’.[297]
-
-
- xiii. QUEEN ELIZABETH’S MEN
-
-The origin of this company, the most famous of all the London companies
-during the decade of the ’eighties, can be dated with an extreme
-minuteness.[298] The Revels Accounts for 1582–3 record an expenditure
-of 20s. in travelling charges by
-
- ‘Edmond Tylney Esquire Master of the office being sente for
- to the Courte by Letter from M^r. Secreatary dated the x^{th}
- of Marche 1582. To choose out a companie of players for her
- majestie.’[299]
-
-The date then was 10 March 1583, and the business was in the hands
-of Sir Francis Walsingham. Lord Chamberlain Sussex, to whom it would
-naturally have fallen, was ill in the previous September[300] and died
-on the following 9 June. Walsingham’s agency in the matter is confirmed
-in the account of the formation of the company inserted by Edmund Howes
-in the 1615 and 1631 editions of Stowe’s _Annales_:
-
- ‘Comedians and stage-players of former time were very poor
- and ignorant in respect of these of this time: but being now
- grown very skilful and exquisite actors for all matters, they
- were entertained into the service of divers great lords: out
- of which companies there were twelve of the best chosen, and,
- at the request of Sir Francis Walsingham, they were sworn the
- queens servants and were allowed wages and liveries as grooms
- of the chamber: and until this yeare 1583, the queene had no
- players. Among these twelve players were two rare men, viz.
- Thomas Wilson, for a quicke, delicate, refined, extemporall
- witt, and Richard Tarleton, for a wondrous plentifull pleasant
- extemporall wit, he was the wonder of his time. He lieth buried
- in Shoreditch church. [In a note] He was so beloved that men use
- his picture for their signs.’[301]
-
-Howes is not altogether accurate. ‘Thomas’ is obviously a mistake
-for ‘Robert’ Wilson. Elizabeth had maintained players before, the
-Interluders, although they had cut little figure in the dramatic
-history of the reign, and the last of them had died in 1580. Dr. Greg
-thinks that the players were not appointed as grooms of the Chamber, on
-the ground that their names do not appear in a list of these officers
-appended to a warrant of 8 November 1586.[302] But Tarlton is described
-as ‘ordenary grome off her majestes chamber’ in the record of his
-graduation as a master of fence in 1587, and both he and his ‘fellow’,
-William Johnson, are described as ‘grooms of her majesties chamber’
-in his will of 1588. Their absence from Dr. Greg’s list is probably
-due to their treatment as a special class of grooms of the chamber in
-ordinary without fee, who were not called upon to perform the ordinary
-duties of the office, such as helping to watch the palace.[303]
-That they had liveries, which were red coats, is borne out by the
-particular mention of the fact that they were not wearing them, in the
-depositions concerning a very untoward event which took place in the
-first few months of their service. On the afternoon of 15 June 1583
-they were playing at the Red Lion in Norwich. A dispute as to payment
-arose between a servant of one Mr. Wynsdon and Singer, who, in a black
-doublet and with a player’s beard on, was acting as gatekeeper. Tarlton
-and Bentley, who was playing the duke, came off the stage, and Bentley
-broke the offender’s head with the hilt of his sword. The man fled,
-pursued by Singer with an arming-sword which he took off the stage,
-and by Henry Browne, a servant of Sir William Paston. Both of them
-struck him, and one of the blows, but it was not certain whose, proved
-mortal.[304]
-
-Several other places, besides Norwich, received a visit from the
-Queen’s men during the first summer of their existence. In April they
-were at Bristol, on 9 July at Cambridge, and between 24 July and 29
-September at Leicester. Their travels also extended to Gloucester,
-Aldeburgh, Nottingham, and Shrewsbury.[305] In the winter they returned
-to London, and on 26 November the Privy Council wrote to the Lord Mayor
-to bespeak for them permission to play in the City and the liberties
-upon week-days until Shrovetide. The City accordingly licensed them to
-play at the Bull and the Bell, but with unwelcome limitations, for on
-1 December it was necessary for Walsingham to write a personal letter,
-explaining that it was not the intention of the Council that the
-licence to play should be confined to holidays. The City record gives
-the names of the twelve members of the company as Robert Wilson, John
-Dutton, Richard Tarlton, John Laneham, John Bentley, Thobye Mylles,
-John Towne, John Synger, Leonall Cooke, John Garland, John Adams, and
-William Johnson. The company made its initial appearance at Court on 26
-December, and played again on 29 December, and on 3 March 1584. Their
-public performances probably continued through the spring, but in June
-there were disturbances in and around the Middlesex theatres, and the
-City obtained leave from the Council to suppress plays. The Queen’s
-submitted to an injunction from William Fleetwood, the Recorder; and
-their leader advised him to send for the owner of the Theatre, who
-was Lord Hunsdon’s man, and bind him. They travelled again, and are
-found in 1583–4 at Bath and Marlborough, and in October or November at
-Dover. When the winter came on, they once more approached the Council
-and requested a renewal of the previous year’s privilege, submitting
-articles in which they pointed out that the time of their service was
-drawing near, and that the season of the year was past to play at
-any of the houses outside the City. They also asked for favourable
-letters to the Middlesex justices. The City opposed the concession,
-and begged that, if it were granted, the number and names of the
-Queen’s men might be set out in the warrant, complaining that in the
-previous year, when toleration was granted to this company alone, all
-the playing-places were filled with men calling themselves the Queen’s
-players. The records do not show whether the Council assented.[306] The
-company appeared four times at Court, giving _Phillyda and Corin_ on 26
-December, _Felix and Philiomena_ on 3 January 1585, _Five Plays in One_
-on 6 January, and an antic play and a comedy on 23 February. They had
-prepared a fifth performance, of _Three Plays in One_, for 21 February,
-but it was not called for. Mr. Fleay has conjectured that the _Five
-Plays in One_ and the _Three Plays in One_ may have been the two parts
-of Tarlton’s _Seven Deadly Sins_.[307] The payment for this winter’s
-plays was made to Robert Wilson.
-
-There is no evidence that the company were travelling in 1585. They
-were at Court again on 26 December and on 1 January and 13 February
-1586. During 1586 they were at Maidstone, in July at Bristol, on 22
-August and later at Faversham, and before 29 September at Leicester.
-In 1585–6 they were also at Coventry. On 26 December 1586 and on 1
-and 6 January and 28 February 1587 they were at Court, and in the
-same January a correspondent of Walsingham’s names them amongst
-other companies then playing regularly in the City (App. D, No.
-lxxviii). During 1586–7 they were at Bath, Worcester, Canterbury,
-and Stratford-on-Avon, whence Malone thought that they might have
-enlisted Shakespeare.[308] They were at Bath again on 13 July 1587,
-and at Aldeburgh on 20 May and 19 July. Before 29 September they were
-at Leicester, on 9 September at York, where it is recorded that they
-‘cam in her Majesties lyvereys’, twice in September at Coventry, and at
-Aldeburgh on 16 December. They were at Court on 26 December 1587 and on
-6 January and 18 February 1588.
-
-A subsidy list of 30 June 1588 shows that Tarlton, Laneham, Johnson,
-Towne, Adams, Garland, John Dutton, Singer, and Cooke were then still
-household players.[309] It can, perhaps, hardly be assumed that the
-whole of the company is here represented. Mills, Wilson, and Bentley
-may have dropped out since 1583. But one would have expected to find
-the name of Laurence Dutton beside that of John, as he was certainly
-a Queen’s man by 1589. Knell also acted with Tarlton in _The Famous
-Victories of Henry the Fifth_, and must have belonged to the company.
-He also may have been dead by 1588. And this must certainly be the case
-if he is the William Knell whose widow Rebecca John Heminges married on
-10 March 1588. There is some reason to suppose that Heminges himself
-joined the Queen’s men, perhaps in right of his wife. The composition
-of the list of 1583 generally bears out the statement of Howes, that
-the Queen’s men were selected as the best out of the companies of
-divers great lords, for Wilson, Laneham, and Johnson belonged to
-Leicester’s in 1572, Adams to Sussex’s in 1576, and Dutton, after a
-chameleon past, to Oxford’s in 1580. Mr. Fleay, who did not know either
-the list of 1583 or that of 1588, declares that the original members
-of the company included James Burbadge and William Slaughter, and
-probably John Perkyn.[310] Of these William Slaughter is merely what
-the philologists would call a ‘ghost’-name, for there is no evidence
-that any such actor ever existed.[311] Evidently James Burbadge did not
-join the Queen’s men. Probably Mr. Fleay was biased by his knowledge
-that these men acted at the Theatre, which was Burbadge’s property.
-But this could prove nothing, as the relations between particular
-companies and particular theatres were much less permanent than Mr.
-Fleay is apt to suppose. The Queen’s seem to have been acting at the
-Theatre when Fleetwood suppressed them in June 1584, but the owner
-of the house, who can hardly be any other than James Burbadge, is
-specifically described as Lord Hunsdon’s man, which of course does
-not necessarily signify that he was a player at all. Moreover, it is
-clear from the official correspondence of the following autumn, not
-only that, as we know from other sources, the companies regularly moved
-in from the suburban houses to the City inn-yards at the approach of
-winter, but also that the Queen’s in particular had in the winter of
-1583 dispersed themselves for their public performances over various
-play-places. The view that they did not exclusively attach themselves
-to Burbadge’s, or to any other one theatre, is further borne out by
-the indications in the _Jests_ of Tarlton, which there is no reason
-to reject, however apocryphal they may be in detail, as evidence of
-the theatrical conditions under which the famous mime appeared. The
-_Jests_ frequently speak of Tarlton as a Queen’s man and never mention
-any other company in connexion with him.[312] And, as it happens,
-they record performances at the Curtain,[313] the Bell,[314] and the
-Bull,[315] but none at the Theatre. Nashe, however, tells us that
-Tarlton made jests of Richard Harvey and his _Astrological Discourse_
-of 1583 there;[316] and an entry in the Stationers’ Register makes it
-possible to add that shortly before his death he appeared at the Bel
-Savage.[317] The stage-keeper in _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), Ind. 37,
-gives us a reminiscence of a scene between Tarlton and John Adams, ‘I
-am an Asse! I! and yet I kept the _Stage_ in Master _Tarletons_ time,
-I thanke my starres. Ho! and that man had liu’d to haue play’d in
-_Bartholmew Fayre_, you should ha’ seene him ha’ come in, and ha’ beene
-coozened i’ the Cloath-quarter, so finely! And _Adams_, the Rogue, ha’
-leap’d and caper’d vpon him, and ha’ dealt his vermine about, as though
-they had cost him nothing. And then a substantiall watch to ha’ stolne
-in vpon ’hem, and taken ’hem away, with mistaking words, as the fashion
-is, in the _Stage_-practice.’
-
-Tarlton’s own talent probably ran more to ‘jigs’ and ‘themes’ than to
-the legitimate drama. But the palmy days of the Queen’s company were
-those that intervened between its foundation in 1583 and his death on
-3 September 1588. To it belonged the men whom such an actor of the
-next generation as Thomas Heywood could remember as the giants of the
-past,[318] and whose reputation Edward Alleyn’s friends were ready to
-back him to excel.[319] From 1588 the future of the stage lay with
-Alleyn and the Admiral’s men and Marlowe, and it may reasonably be
-supposed that the Queen’s men were hard put to it to hold their own
-against their younger rivals. Adams probably survived Tarlton, and
-his name appears to be traceable as that of the clowns in _A Looking
-Glass for London and England_ (_c._ 1590) and _James IV_ (_c._ 1591).
-In 1587–8 the Queen’s visited Coventry and Exeter, and in 1588 Dover,
-and on two occasions Faversham. On 19 July and 14 August they were
-at Bath. The Bath accounts for this year also show a payment ‘to the
-quenes men that were tumblers’. Owing to Tarlton’s death or to some
-other reason, the Queen’s men prolonged their travels far into the
-winter. On 31 October they were at the Earl of Derby’s house at New
-Park, Lancashire; on 6 November ‘certen of’ them were at Leicester; on
-10 December they were at Norwich and on 17 December at Ipswich. But
-they reached the Court in time for the performance on 26 December, with
-which they seem to have had the prerogative of opening the Christmas
-season, and appeared again on 9 February. They must have had some
-share in the Martin Marprelate controversy, which raged during 1589.
-In the previous year, indeed, Martin was able to claim Tarlton as an
-ally who had ‘taken’ Simony ‘in Don John of London’s cellar’, and was
-himself accused of borrowing his ‘foolery’ from Laneham. But when the
-bishops determined to meet the Puritans with literary weapons like
-their own, they naturally turned to the Queen’s men amongst others.
-About April 1589 _A Whip for an Ape_ bids Martin’s grave opponents to
-‘let old Lanam lash him with his rimes’, and although it cannot be
-assumed that, if the _Maygame of Martinism_ was in fact played at the
-Theatre, it was the Queen’s men who played it, _Martin’s Month’s Minde_
-records in August the chafing of the Puritans at players ‘whom, saving
-their liveries (for indeed they are hir Majesty’s men ...) they call
-rogues’. Influence was brought to bear to suppress the anti-Martinist
-plays. A pamphlet of October notes that _Vetus Comoedia_ has been ‘long
-in the country’; and this accords with the fact that the provincial
-performances of the Queen’s men began at an unusually early date in
-1589. They are found at Gloucester on 19 April, at Leicester on 20
-May, at Ipswich on 27 May, at Aldeburgh on 30 May, and at Norwich on
-3 June. On 5 July they were at the Earl of Derby’s at Lathom, and
-on 6 and 7 September at another house of the Earl’s at Knowsley. On
-22 September Lord Scrope wrote from Carlisle to William Asheby, the
-English ambassador in Scotland, that they had been for ten days in that
-town. He had heard from Roger Asheton of the King’s desire that they
-should visit Scotland, and had sought them out from ‘the furthest parte
-of Langkeshire’.[320] One would be glad to know whether they did in
-fact visit Scotland. In any case they were back in England and at Bath
-by November. During 1588–9 they were also at Reading, at Nottingham,
-and twice at Coventry. Both the Nottingham records and those of
-Leicester furnish evidence that for travelling purposes they divided
-themselves into two companies. At Leicester the town account for 1588–9
-shows ‘certen of her Maiests playars’ as coming on 6 November, and
-‘others moe of her Mayestyes playars’ as coming on 20 May; that of
-Nottingham for the same year has an entry of ‘Symons and his companie,
-being the Quenes players’ and another of ‘the Quenes players, the two
-Duttons and others’. The arrangement was of course natural enough,
-seeing that even in London the Queen’s men were sufficiently numerous
-to occupy more than one inn-yard. Laurence Dutton was evidently by now
-a member of the company with his brother John. It is to be presumed
-that Symons is the John Symons who on not less than five occasions
-presented ‘activities’ at Court, in 1582–3 with Strange’s (q.v.), in
-1585 with Oxford’s, in 1586 with ‘Mr. Standleyes boyes’, in 1587–8 with
-a company under his own name, and in 1588–9 either with the Admiral’s
-or possibly with the Queen’s itself.
-
-Doubtless the incorporation of Symons into the Queen’s service explains
-the appearance of the Queen’s tumblers at Bath in 1589. Performances at
-Court, for which John Dutton and John Laneham received payment, took
-place on 26 December 1589 and 1 March 1590. During 1589–90 the company
-were at Coventry, Ludlow, Nottingham, Bridgnorth, and Faversham, on 22
-April 1590 at Norwich, on 24 June under the leadership of ‘Mr. Dutton’
-at Knowsley, and on 30 October at Leicester. Acrobatic feats still
-formed a part of their repertory, and in these they had the assistance
-of a Turkish rope-dancer.[321] There were further Court performances
-on 26 December and on 1, 3, and 6 January, and 14 February 1591. It is
-to be noted that payment was made for the play of 1 January to ‘John
-Laneham and his companye her maiesties players’ and for the rest by a
-separate warrant to ‘Lawrence Dutton and John Dutton her maiesties
-players and there companye’; and that this distinction indicates some
-further development of the tendency to bifurcation already observed may
-be gathered from a study of the provincial records for 1590–1. On the
-very day of the performance of 14 February Queen’s men were also at
-Southampton, and the form of the entry indicates that they were there
-playing in conjunction with the Earl of Sussex’s men. This was the case
-also at Coventry on 24 March and at Gloucester during 1590–1.[322] At
-Ipswich during the same year there are two entries, of ‘the Quenes
-players’ on 15 May 1591 and of ‘another company of the Quenes players’
-on 18 May. Obviously two groups were travelling this year and one
-had strengthened itself by a temporary amalgamation with Sussex’s.
-Perhaps the normal combination was restored when the two groups found
-themselves on the same road at the end of May, for Queen’s men are
-recorded alone at Faversham on 2 June 1591, at Wirkburn on 18 August,
-and at Coventry on 24 August and 20 October.
-
-It was probably during this summer that Greene, having sold _Orlando
-Furioso_ to the Queen’s men for twenty nobles, resold it ‘when they
-were in the country’ to the Admiral’s for as much more. The winter
-of 1591–2 marks a clear falling-off in the position of the company
-at Court, since they were only called upon to give one performance,
-on 26 December, as against six assigned to Lord Strange’s men, with
-whom at this date Alleyn and the Admiral’s men appear to have been
-in combination. Yet it was still possible for the City, writing to
-Archbishop Whitgift on 25 February 1592, to suggest that Elizabeth’s
-accustomed recreation might be sufficiently served, without the need
-for public plays, ‘by the privat exercise of hir Ma^{ts} own players in
-convenient place’.[323] That they were again making use of the Theatre
-may perhaps be inferred from a passage in Nashe’s _Summer’s Last Will
-and Testament_ of the following autumn, in which a Welshman is said
-to ‘goe ae Theater, and heare a Queenes Fice, and he make hur laugh,
-and laugh hur belly-full’.[324] During 1591–2 they were at Nottingham,
-Coventry, Stratfordon-Avon, twice at Aldeburgh, and twice at Bath. In
-1592 they were at Rochester, on 27 May at Norwich, before 29 September
-at Leicester, and early in September at Chesterton close to Cambridge.
-Here they came into conflict with the authorities of Cambridge
-University, who were apprehensive of infection from the crowds
-assembled at Sturbridge fair, and forbade them to play. Encouraged by
-Lord North and by the constables of Chesterton, they disobeyed, set
-up their bills upon the college gates, and gave their performance. It
-is interesting to note that ‘one Dutton’ was ‘a principale’, and to
-remember that, twelve years before, the Duttons had gone to Cambridge
-as Lord Oxford’s men and had been refused permission to play by the
-University authorities.[325] The outcome of the present encounter was
-a formal protest by the Vice-Chancellor and Heads of Houses to the
-Privy Council for which they requested Burghley’s support as Chancellor
-of the University. After a further appeal about a year later, they
-succeeded in obtaining a confirmation of their privileges.[326] Another
-letter from the University to their Chancellor, written on 4 December
-1592, is of a different character. Its object is to excuse themselves
-from accepting an invitation conveyed through the Vice-Chamberlain to
-present an English comedy before Elizabeth at Christmas. Sir Thomas
-Heneage appears to have given it as a reason for his request ‘that her
-Maiesties owne servantes, in this time of infection, may not disport
-her Highnes w^{th} theire wonted and ordinary pastimes’.[327]
-
-On 11 October 1592 the Queen’s men were at Aldeburgh, on the same day
-as, and conceivably in association with, Lord Morley’s men, although
-the payments are distinct. They did not in fact appear at Court during
-the Christmas of 1592–3, although both Lord Pembroke’s and Lord
-Strange’s did. They were at Coventry and Stratford-on-Avon in the
-course of 1592–3, at Leicester in June 1593 and again after Michaelmas,
-at Bath on 22 August, and at York in September. On 6 January 1594 they
-returned to Court and gave what proved to be their last performance
-there. On 1 April they began to play at one of Henslowe’s theatres ‘to
-geather’--that is to say, either alternately or in combination--with
-Sussex’s men, who had already performed there for the six weeks
-between Christmas and Lent. Possibly this was a renewal of an earlier
-alliance of 1591. Only eight performances are recorded, and of the five
-plays given only _King Leire_ can very reasonably be assigned to the
-repertory of the Queen’s men. The others were _The Jew of Malta_ and
-_The Fair Maid of Italy_, which Sussex’s men had been playing in the
-winter, Greene’s _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, which was played for
-Henslowe by other companies both before and after, and was probably
-his property, and _The Ranger’s Comedy_, the performances of which
-were being continued by the Admiral’s men in the following autumn,
-but which it is possible that they or Henslowe may have acquired from
-the Queen’s. For there can be no doubt that the Queen’s men, whether
-because they had ceased to be modish, or because their finances had
-proved unable to stand the strain of the plague years, were now at the
-end of their London career. On 8 May 1594 the significant entry occurs
-in Henslowe’s diary of a loan of £15 to his nephew Francis Henslowe ‘to
-lay downe for his share to the Quenes players when they broke & went
-into the contrey to playe’.[328] This by itself would not perhaps be
-conclusive, as there are other years in which the company began its
-provincial wanderings as early as May. But from the present journey
-there is nothing to show that they ever returned, and it may fairly be
-reckoned as another sign of defeat that while _The Troublesome Reign of
-King John_ (1591) was the only play certainly theirs which was printed
-before 1594, no less than nine found their way into the publishers’
-hands during that and the following year. These were, besides _Friar
-Bacon and Friar Bungay_ (1594, S. R. 14 May 1594), with which they
-probably had only a recent connexion, _A Looking Glass for London and,
-England_ (1594, S. R. 5 March 1594), _King Leire_ (1594, S. R. 14 May
-1594), _James IV_ and _The Famous Victories of Henry V_ (1598, S. R.
-14 May 1594), _The True Tragedy of Richard III_ (1594, S. R. 19 June
-1594), _Selimus_ (1594), Peele’s _Old Wive’s Tale_ (1595, S. R. 16
-April 1595), and _Valentine and Orson_ (S. R. 23 May 1595), of which
-no copy is known to be extant. Somewhat later came _Sir Clyomon and
-Clamydes_ (1599).
-
-The Queen’s men were at Coventry on 4 July 1594, at Bristol in August,
-and at Bath and Barnstaple, where they were unlucky enough to break
-down the ceiling in the Guildhall, during 1593–4, and thereafter they
-are traceable right up to the end of the reign, at Coventry, Oxford,
-and Bath in 1594–5, at Leicester both before and after Michaelmas
-1595, twice at Coventry and at Ludlow in 1595–6, at Stratford-on-Avon
-on 16 and 17 July 1596, at Bristol in August, at Leicester between
-October and December 1596, and at Faversham and Bridgnorth in the
-same year, at Coventry, at Dunwich, and twice at Bath in 1596–7, at
-Bristol again about Christmas 1597, at Nottingham on 8 July 1597, at
-Bristol about 25 July, at Bath in 1597–8, at Leicester on 9 January
-1598, at Maldon in 1598, at Ipswich and Reading in 1598–9, at Maldon
-in 1599, at Dunwich in 1599–1600, at Ipswich on 2 June 1600, and at
-Leicester before 29 September in the same year, at Coventry and Bath
-in 1600–1, at York in July 1602, at Leicester on 30 September 1602, at
-Belvoir in August or September of the same year, and at Coventry in
-1602–3. But little, naturally enough, is known of the _personnel_ of
-the company during this period of its decay. On 1 June 1595 Francis
-Henslowe borrowed another £9 from his uncle ‘to laye downe for his
-hallfe share w^{th} the company w^{ch} he dothe playe w^{th} all’,[329]
-and I see no particular reason to suppose that this was another company
-than the Queen’s. The loan is witnessed by William Smyght, George
-Attewell, and Robert Nycowlles, each of whom is described as ‘player’.
-It is likely enough that these were now fellows of Francis Henslowe.
-Attewell had been payee for Lord Strange’s men in 1591. The earlier
-loan was witnessed by John Towne, Hugh Davis, and Richard Alleyn. Davis
-and Alleyn appear elsewhere in connexion with Henslowe, but Towne was
-certainly a Queen’s man. He is in the 1588 list and is described as
-‘one of her Majesties plears’ when on 8 July 1597 he obtained a release
-of debts due to Roger Clarke of Nottingham.[330] The other men of 1588
-had nearly all vanished. John Singer had joined the Admiral’s by the
-autumn of 1594. I should not be surprised, however, to find that John
-Garland was still with the Queen’s. He was an associate of Francis
-Henslowe in the Duke of Lennox’s men in 1604, and was then ‘owld’
-Garland. Indeed, it seems probable that, when the Queen’s men lost
-their last shred of claim to a livery on Elizabeth’s death, they made
-an attempt still to hold together under the patronage of Lennox. John
-Shank was once a Queen’s man.
-
-
- xiv. THE EARL OF ARUNDEL’S MEN
-
- Henry Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel; _nat. c._ 1511; m. (1)
- Katherine, d. of Thomas Grey, Marquis of Dorset, before 1532,
- (2) Mary, Countess of Sussex, d. of Sir John Arundel, after
- 1542; succ. Jan. 1544; Lord Chamberlain, 1544; Lord Steward,
- 1553, and again 1558–64; _ob._ 24 Feb. 1580.
-
- Philip Howard, 13th Earl of Arundel, s. of Thomas Howard, 4th
- Duke of Norfolk, attainted 1572, and Mary, d. and h. of 12th
- Earl; _nat._ 28 June 1557; m. Anne, d. of Thomas, Lord Dacre,
- 1571; succ. Feb. 1580; sent to Tower, 25 Apr. 1585, and _ob._
- there, 19 Oct. 1595.
-
-The Earls of Arundel had players as far back as the fifteenth
-century.[331] The 12th Earl entertained Elizabeth with a mask at
-Nonsuch on 5 August 1559. He had players, who were rewarded by the
-Duchess of Suffolk, apparently during a London visit, in December
-1561. The 13th Earl had a company in 1584. It was in London when plays
-were suppressed in June, and obediently submitted. It seems to have
-been located at the Curtain. It can be traced at Ipswich on 1 July, at
-Leicester before 29 September, at Aldeburgh in 1583–4, at Norwich in
-1585–6, and thereafter no more.
-
-
- xv. THE EARL OF HERTFORD’S MEN
-
- Edward Seymour, s. of Edward, Protector and 1st and attainted
- Duke of Somerset; _nat._ 25 May 1539; cr. Earl of Hertford, 13
- Jan. 1559; m. (1) Lady Catherine Grey, d. of Henry, Duke of
- Suffolk, _c._ Nov. 1560, (2) Frances, d. of William, 1st Lord
- Howard of Effingham, before 1582, (3) Frances, d. of Thomas,
- Lord Howard of Bindon and widow of Henry Pranell, Dec. 1600;
- _ob._ 6 Apr. 1621.
-
-These are among the most obscure of the companies. They appeared at
-Canterbury in 1582, Faversham in 1586, Newcastle in October 1590,
-Leicester on 22 November 1590, and Bath, Marlborough, and Southampton
-in 1591–2. During the progress of 1591 Elizabeth was entertained from
-20 to 24 September by the Earl at Elvetham in Hampshire ‘beeing none
-of the Earles chiefe mansion houses’ (cf. ch. xxiv). This was really
-a visit of reconciliation, for much of Hertford’s life had been spent
-in disgrace, owing to his first marriage with the heiress, under
-Henry VIII’s will, to Elizabeth’s throne. The entertainment was very
-elaborate, and at its close Elizabeth protested to the Earl that it was
-so honourable ‘as hereafter he should find the rewarde thereof in her
-especiall favour’. No doubt Hertford’s players took a part, and shared
-the ‘largesse’ which she bestowed upon the ‘actors’ of the pastimes
-before she departed. I think it must have also been their success on
-this occasion which earned them their only appearance at Court, on the
-following 6 January 1592. I have elsewhere tried to show that there
-is a special connexion between this Elvetham entertainment and _A
-Midsummer-Night’s Dream_,[332] and if any special company is satirized
-in Bottom and his fellows, I feel sure that it must have been the Earl
-of Hertford’s and not, as Mr. Fleay thinks, the Earl of Sussex’s.[333]
-
-Probably the company went under in the plague of 1592–4, and in 1595
-Hertford was again in disgrace for presuming so far upon his favour
-as to claim a declaration of the validity of his first marriage. But
-there were players under his name at Coventry in 1596–7, at Ipswich in
-1600–1, and on 8 May 1602, at Norwich in 1601, and at Bath in 1601–2,
-and this company appeared at Court on 6 January 1603. Their payee was
-Martin Slater, formerly of the Admiral’s, and since then, possibly, an
-associate of Laurence Fletcher in his Scottish tours. In 1604–5 they
-were at Norwich. In 1606 they visited Leicester, on 9 July Oxford,
-and on 2 December the Earl of Derby wrote to the Mayor of Chester to
-bespeak for them the use of the town-hall. In 1606–7 they were at
-Coventry.
-
-
- xvi. MR. EVELYN’S MEN (1588)
-
- George Evelyn, of Wotton, Surrey; _nat._ 1530; _ob._ 1603.
-
-Collier gives no authority for the following rather puzzling
-statement:[334]
-
- ‘In Feb. 1587, the Earl of Warwick obtained a warrant for the
- payment of the claim of George Evelyn of Wotton, for provisions
- supplied to the Tower, and for the reward of actors on Shrove
- Tuesday for a Play, the title of which is not given nor the name
- of the company by which it was performed: the whole sum amounted
- to only 12_s._’
-
-The date intended must be 1588, as in 1587 Shrovetide fell in March.
-But there is probably some misunderstanding, as no such payment occurs
-in the Treasurer of the Chamber’s accounts, and the sum named is too
-small for a reward. Moreover, private gentlemen do not seem to have
-entertained Court companies at so late a date. The Revels Account for
-1587–8 only records seven plays. Of these the Treasurer of the Chamber
-paid for six, and the seventh was presented by Gray’s Inn.
-
-
- xvii. THE EARL OF DERBY’S (LORD STRANGE’S) MEN
-
- Henry Stanley, s. of Edward, 3rd Earl of Derby; _nat._ 1531;
- known as Lord Strange; m. Margaret, d. of Henry, 2nd Earl of
- Cumberland, 7 Feb. 1555; succ. as 4th Earl, 24 Oct. 1572; Lord
- Steward, 1588; _ob._ 25 Sept. 1593.
-
- Ferdinando Stanley, 2nd s. of Henry, 4th Earl of Derby; _nat.
- c._ 1559; m. Alice, d. of Sir John Spencer of Althorp, 1579;
- summoned to Parliament as Lord Strange, 28 Jan. 1589; succ. as
- 5th Earl of Derby, 25 Sept. 1593; _ob._ 16 Apr. 1594.
-
- William Stanley, s. of Henry, 4th Earl of Derby; _nat._ 1561;
- succ. as 6th Earl of Derby, 16 Apr. 1594; m. Elizabeth, d. of
- Edward, 17th Earl of Oxford, 26 Jan. 1595; _ob._ 29 Sept. 1642.
-
-The companies connected with the great northern house of Stanley
-present a history perhaps more complicated than that of any other
-group, partly because it seems to have been not unusual for the heir
-of the house to entertain players during his father’s lifetime. The
-3rd Earl had a company in Henry the Eighth’s reign. His successor
-had one as Lord Strange, which is only recorded in the provinces, in
-1563–70.[335] Four years later he had again a company as Earl of Derby.
-The earliest mention of it is at Coventry in 1573–4. It was at Dover
-and Coventry in 1577–8, at Ipswich on 28 May 1578, at Nottingham on 31
-August 1578, at Bristol in the same year, and at Bath in 1578–9. In the
-last three months of 1579 it was at Leicester; and during the following
-Christmas it made its first appearance at Court with a performance of
-_The Soldan and the Duke of ---- _ on 14 February 1580. In 1579–80
-it was at Stratford-on-Avon, Exeter, and Coventry, on 1 January 1581
-at Court, in 1580–1 at Bath, Leicester, Nottingham, Exeter, and
-Winchester, in 1581–2 at Nottingham, Winchester, and Abingdon, in
-October to December 1582 at Leicester, and in 1582–3 at Bath, Norwich,
-and Southampton. Its last appearance at Court was in _Love and Fortune_
-on 30 December 1582.
-
-I think that the Earl of Derby’s players must be taken to be distinct
-from another company, which was performing during much the same period
-of years under the name of Lord Strange. These men are found in 1576–7
-at Exeter, in 1578–9 at Bath, Ipswich, Rochester, Nottingham, Coventry,
-and Stratford-on-Avon. They also made their first appearance at Court
-in the winter of 1579–80. Their performance was on 15 January 1580,
-and they are spoken of, not as players, but as tumblers. On the other
-hand they appear as players at Bath, side by side with Derby’s men,
-in 1580–1 and 1582–3, and as players also at Bristol, Canterbury, and
-Gloucester in 1580–1, Plymouth in 1581–2, and Barnstaple in 1582–3 and
-1583–4. With the tumbling at Court in 1580 begins a rather puzzling
-series of records. There are further Court entries of feats of activity
-by Lord Strange’s men on 28 December 1581, and of feats of activity and
-tumbling on 1 January 1583. For this last occasion the payee of the
-company was John Symons. Two years later Symons and his ‘fellows’ were
-again at Court with feats of activity and vaulting, but they were then
-under the patronage, not of Lord Strange, but of the Earl of Oxford.
-There would be nothing extraordinary about such a transference of
-service, were it not that during the following Christmas, on 9 January
-1586, tumbling and feats of activity are ascribed to John Symons and
-‘Mr. Standleyes boyes’, and that by ‘Mr. Standley’ one can hardly help
-assuming either Ferdinando Stanley, Lord Strange, or some other member
-of his family to be intended. This inference is confirmed by a mention
-of Lord Strange’s men at Faversham in 1585–6, and it becomes necessary
-to assume that, after attaching himself for a year to the Earl of
-Oxford, Symons thought better of it, and returned to his original
-master. Symons and his company again showed feats of activity on 28
-December 1587. No patron is named on this occasion, but as Strange’s
-men are traceable at Coventry during 1587–8, it is natural to assume
-that they were still holding together. Now a new complication comes
-in. There were activities again at Court in the winter of 1588–9, and
-Symons certainly took part in them.[336] But the only men companies
-to whom payments were made were the Queen’s and the Admiral’s, who
-now reappear at Court after absence during two winters, and it is
-only in the case of the Admiral’s that the payment is specified to be
-for activities. If the restless Symons had joined the Admiral’s men,
-it cannot have been for long, since in the course of 1588–9 he was
-leading one section of the Queen’s men to Nottingham. Nor had Strange’s
-yet entirely broken up, for on 5 November 1589, both they and the
-Admiral’s, evidently playing as distinct companies, were suppressed by
-the Lord Mayor in the City.[337] Strange’s, who were then at the Cross
-Keys, played contemptuously, and some of them were imprisoned. A year
-later, the Admiral’s were with Burbadge at the Theatre, and there I
-conceive that the residue of Strange’s, deserted by Symons, had joined
-them. If they were too many for the house, we know that the Curtain
-was available as an ‘easer’. After the quarrel with Burbadge in May
-1591, the two companies probably went together to the Rose. The main
-evidence for such a theory is that, while the Privy Council record of
-play-warrants include two for the Admiral’s men in respect of plays
-and feats of activity on 27 December 1590 and 16 February 1591, the
-corresponding Chamber payments are to George Ottewell on behalf of
-Strange’s men.
-
-This amalgamation of Strange’s and the Admiral’s, tentative perhaps
-in 1588–9, and conclusive, if not in 1589–90, at any rate in 1590–1,
-lasted until 1594. So far as Court records are concerned, the company
-seems to have been regarded as Strange’s. But the leading actor, Edward
-Alleyn, kept his personal status as the Lord Admiral’s servant, and
-it is to be observed that, for whatever reason, both the Admiral’s
-and Strange’s continue to appear, not only in combination, but also
-separately in provincial documents.[338] Of this various explanations
-are conceivable. One is that the municipal officials were not very
-precise in their methods, and when an amalgamated company came before
-them, sometimes entered the name of one lord, sometimes of the other,
-sometimes of both. Another is that a few of the Admiral’s men may have
-been left out of the amalgamation and have travelled separately under
-that name. We know, of course, that Richard Jones and others went
-abroad in 1592, but they may have spent some time in the provinces
-first. And thirdly, it is possible that, while the combined company
-performed as a whole in London, they found it more economical to
-take their authorities from both lords with them, when they went to
-the country in the summer, and to unite or divide their forces as
-convenience prompted. I am the more inclined to this third conjecture,
-in that the ‘intollerable’ charge of travelling with a great company
-and the danger of ‘division and separacion’ involved were explicitly
-put forward by Lord Strange’s men in a petition to the Privy Council
-for leave to quit Newington Butts, where they had been commanded to
-play during a long vacation, and return to their normal quarters,
-doubtless at the Rose, on the Bankside. They particularly wanted to
-avoid going to the country, but Newington Butts did not pay, and they
-were backed by the Thames watermen, who lost custom when the Rose
-was not open. It is not clear whether this petition belongs to 1591
-or 1592.[339] The provincial records show that the company probably
-travelled during 1592, but not 1591. If the petition belongs to 1592,
-it is obvious that the plague intervened, and I strongly suspect that
-the company’s fears proved justified, and that the reorganization for
-provincial work did in fact lead to a ‘division and separacion’, by the
-splitting off of some members of the combine as Pembroke’s men (q.v.).
-
-This, however, anticipates a little. To Alleyn’s talent must be
-attributed the remarkable success of the company in the winter of
-1591–2, during which they were called upon to give six performances at
-Court, on 27 and 28 December, 1 and 9 January, and 6 and 8 February,
-as against one each allotted to the Queen’s, Sussex’s, and Hertford’s
-men. On 19 February 1592 the company began a season with Philip
-Henslowe, probably at the Rose, and played six days a week for a period
-of eighteen weeks, during which they only missed Good Friday and two
-other days. Henslowe records in his diary the name of the play staged
-at each of the hundred and five performances, together with a sum of
-money which probably represents his share of the takings.[340] If so,
-his average receipts were £1 14_s._ 0_d._; but the daily amounts
-fluctuated considerably, sometimes falling to a few shillings and again
-rising to twice the average on the production of a new or popular
-play or during the Easter or Whitsun holiday. Twenty-three plays in
-all were given, for any number of days from one to fifteen; the same
-play was rarely repeated in any one week. Five of the plays are marked
-in the diary with the letters _ne_, which are reasonably taken to
-indicate the production of a new piece. These were ‘Harey the vj’,
-probably Shakespeare’s _1 Henry VI_, _Titus and Vespasian_, probably
-the play on which was based Shakespeare’s _Titus Andronicus_, the
-_Second Part_ of _Tamar Cham_, _The Tanner of Denmark_, and _A Knack
-to Know a Knave_. The eighteen old plays included Marlowe’s _Jew of
-Malta_, Greene’s _Orlando Furioso_ and _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_,
-Greene and Lodge’s _A Looking Glass for London_; also _Muly Mollocco_
-which might be Peele’s _Battle of Alcazar_, _Four Plays in One_, which
-is conjectured to be a part of Tarlton’s _Seven Deadly Sins_, and
-_Jeronimo_, which is almost certainly Kyd’s _Spanish Tragedy_. There
-was also a play, sometimes given on the day before this last, under
-the varying titles of _Don Horatio_, the _Comedy of Jeronimo_, or _The
-Spanish Comedy_, which does not appear to have been preserved.[341] The
-same fate has befallen the other ten plays, of which the names were
-_Sir John Mandeville_, _Henry of Cornwall_, _Clorys and Orgasto_, _Pope
-Joan_, _Machiavel_, _Bindo and Richardo_, _Zenobia_, _Constantine_,
-_Jerusalem_, and _Brandimer_. From the financial point of view, the
-greatest successes were _Titus and Vespasian_, _The Jew of Malta_, _2
-Tamar Cham_, _1 Henry VI_, and _The Spanish Tragedy_. These averaged
-respectively for Henslowe £2 8_s._ 6_d._ for seven days, £2 3_s._ 6_d._
-for ten days, £2 1_s._ 6_d._ for five days, £2 0_s._ 6_d._ for fifteen
-days, and £1 17_s._ 0_d._ for thirteen days. The _Seven Deadly Sins_
-and perhaps also the _Looking Glass_ must have passed in some way into
-the hands of Strange’s or the Admiral’s, or into Henslowe’s, from the
-Queen’s.
-
-The performances came to an end on 23 June, for on that day the Privy
-Council inhibited all plays until Michaelmas. Whether the Newington
-Butts episode and the watermen’s petition followed or not, at any rate
-plague intervened in the course of the summer, and the company had to
-face the disadvantages of travelling. They were afoot by 13 July and
-still on 19 December. Ten days later, Henslowe resumed his account,
-and the resemblance of the list of plays to that of the previous spring
-renders it reasonable to suppose that the actors were the same.[342]
-The season lasted to the end of January 1593, and a play was given
-on each of the twenty-six week-days of this period. _Muly Mollocco_,
-_The Spanish Tragedy_, _A Knack to Know a Knave_, _The Jew of Malta_,
-_Sir John Mandeville_, _Titus and Vespasian_, _Friar Bacon and Friar
-Bungay_, _1 Henry VI_, and _2 Tamar Cham_ all made their appearance
-again. In addition, there were a comedy called _Cosmo_, and two new
-plays, _The Jealous Comedy_, which may, I think, be _The Comedy of
-Errors_, and _The Tragedy of the Guise_, which is usually accepted as
-Marlowe’s _Massacre of Paris_. The first representation of the former
-yielded Henslowe £2 4_s._ 0_d._, that of the latter £3 14_s._ 0_d._; as
-in the spring, his daily takings averaged £1 14_s._ 0_d._ Besides their
-public performances, Strange’s men were called upon for three plays at
-Court, on the evenings of 27 and 31 December 1592 and 1 January 1593.
-
-The plague made a new inhibition of plays necessary on 28 January, but
-it does not seem to have been for some months that Strange’s men made
-up their minds to travel. A special licence issued in their favour by
-the Privy Council on 6 May is registered in the following terms:
-
- ‘Whereas it was thought meet that during the time of the
- infection and continewaunce of the sicknes in the citie of
- London there shold no plaies or enterludes be usd, for th’
- avoiding of th’ assemblies and concourse of people in anie usual
- place apointed nere the said cittie, and though the bearers
- hereof, Edward Allen, servaunt to the right honorable the
- Lord Highe Admiral, William Kemp, Thomas Pope, John Heminges,
- Augustine Phillipes and Georg Brian, being al one companie,
- servauntes to our verie good the Lord the Lord Strainge, ar
- restrained their exercize of playing within the said citie and
- liberties thereof, yet it is not therby ment but that they
- shal and maie in regard of the service by them don and to be
- don at the Court exercize their quallitie of playing comodies,
- tragedies and such like in anie other cities, townes and
- corporacions where the infection is not, so it be not within
- seaven miles of London or of the Coort, that they maie be in the
- better readines hereafter for her Majesty’s service whensoever
- they shalbe therunto called. Theis therfore shalbe to wil and
- require you that they maie without their lett or contradiccion
- use their said exercize at their most convenient times and
- places (the accustomed times of Devine praiers excepted).’[343]
-
-The importance of this document is in the information which it gives
-as to the composition of the company. Presumably only the leaders
-are named, and of these Alleyn alone is specially designated as an
-Admiral’s man. Kempe, at any rate, and probably also Pope and Bryan,
-were in Leicester’s service in the Low Countries during 1586, and all
-three were together during the same year in Denmark. Whether they had
-belonged, as has sometimes been supposed, to Leicester’s long-enduring
-company of Court players is less certain. Pope and Bryan passed from
-Denmark to Germany, and may have joined the Admiral’s or Strange’s on
-their return. They also were acrobats as well as players.[344] Kempe,
-however, seems to have parted company from the others in Denmark, and
-may have joined Strange’s independently, presumably before 10 June
-1592, when _A Knack to Know a Knave_, in which he played ‘merrimentes’,
-was produced. Heminges may possibly have been a Queen’s man.
-
-Some details of the 1593 tour and the names of two or three more
-members of the company are found in the familiar correspondence of
-Alleyn with his wife, whom he had married on 22 October 1592, and with
-Philip Henslowe, who was her step-father.[345] On 2 May he writes from
-Chelmsford, and on 1 August from Bristol. Here he had received a letter
-by Richard Cowley and he sends his reply by a kinsman of Thomas Pope.
-At the moment of writing he is ready to play _Harry of Cornwall_.
-He asks that further letters may be sent to him by the carriers to
-Shrewsbury, West Chester, or York, ‘to be keptt till my Lord Stranges
-players com’. He does not expect to be home until All Saints’ Day. A
-reply from Henslowe and Mrs. Alleyn on 14 August is in fact addressed
-to ‘Mr. Edwarde Allen on of my lorde Stranges players’. This mentions
-an illness of Alleyn at Bath during which one of his fellows had had
-to play his part. With these letters is one written to Mrs. Allen on
-behalf of a ‘servant’ of Alleyn’s, whose name was Pige or Pyk, by the
-hand of Mr. Doutone, possibly Edward Dutton, but perhaps more probably
-Thomas Dowten or Downton, who was later a sharer among the Admiral’s
-men. The provincial records, subject to the confusion of company
-nomenclature already noted, appear to confirm the visits to Bath,
-Shrewsbury, and York, to indicate others to Southampton, Leicester,
-Coventry, Ipswich, and Newcastle, and to show that some temporary
-alliance had been entered into with the purely provincial company of
-Lord Morley.[346] After 25 September 1593 Strange’s men of course
-became Derby’s men.
-
-I now come to a difficult point. There exists amongst the Dulwich
-papers a ‘plott’ or prompter’s abstract of a play called _The Second
-Part of the Seven Deadly Sins_, which an ingenious conjecture of Mr.
-Fleay has identified on internal evidence with the _Four Plays in One_
-included in the Strange’s repertory of 1592.[347] In this leading parts
-were taken, not only by ‘Mr. Pope’, ‘Mr. Phillipps’, and ‘Mr. Brian’,
-but also by ‘Richard Burbadge’; lesser ones by Richard Cowley, John
-Duke, Robert Pallant, John Sincler, Thomas Goodale, William Sly, J.
-Holland, and three others described only as Harry, Kitt, and Vincent;
-and female parts by Saunder, Nick, Robert, Ned, Will, and T. Belt, who
-may be presumed to have been boys.[348] Alleyn, Kempe, and Heminges are
-not named, but there are several parts to which no actors are assigned.
-What, however, is the date of the ‘plott’? Not necessarily 1592, for
-the performance of _Four Plays in One_ in that year was only a revival.
-The authorship of the _Seven Deadly Sins_ is ascribed to Tarlton, and
-therefore the original owners were probably the Queen’s men. They are
-not very likely to have parted with it before Tarlton’s death in 1588
-brought the first shock to their fortunes, but clearly it may have
-come into the possession of Strange’s or the Admiral’s or the combined
-company before ever they reached the Rose. And surely the appearance
-of Richard Burbadge suggests that the ‘plott’ was brought from the
-Theatre, and represents a performance there. He is very unlikely to
-have joined at the Rose the company which had just been driven there
-by a quarrel with his father. It is true that in the ‘plott’ of _Dead
-Man’s Fortune_, which also probably dates from the sojourn of the
-Admiral’s (q.v.) at the Theatre, he was apparently not playing leading
-parts but only a messenger. But the wording is obscure, and after all
-the absence of the prefix ‘Mr.’ from his name in the ‘plott’ of the
-_Sins_ may indicate, in accordance with the ordinary usage of the
-Dulwich documents, that he was not yet a sharer when it was drawn up.
-Apparently, then, at least four of Strange’s men, as we find them in
-1593, besides Alleyn, had been playing at the Theatre about 1590–1.
-These were Pope, Phillips, Bryan, and Cowley. Obviously we cannot say
-whether it was to the original Admiral’s or the original Strange’s that
-they belonged. One other point of _personnel_ must not be overlooked.
-Shakespeare contributed to the repertory of Strange’s in 1592 and
-perhaps also in 1593. Greene calls him a Shake-scene, but neither the
-‘plott’ of 1590, nor the licence of 1593, nor the Alleyn correspondence
-of the same year, yields his name.[349]
-
-Derby’s men did not appear at Court during the winter of 1593–4. On 16
-April 1594 Lord Derby died. On 16 May the company used the Countess’s
-name at Winchester. It seems clear that during the summer there was
-some reshuffling of the companies, that Alleyn took the leadership of
-a new body of Admiral’s men, that several other members of the old
-combination, including Pope, Heminges, Kempe, and Phillips, joined
-with Burbadge, Shakespeare, and Sly, under the patronage of the Lord
-Chamberlain, Henry Lord Hunsdon, and that, after a short period of
-co-operation with each other and Henslowe, the two companies definitely
-parted. In the course of 1594 the name of Derby’s men appeared upon
-the title-page of _Titus Andronicus_, probably because they had
-played it in its earlier form of _Titus and Vespasian_ in 1592–3,
-before it passed to Pembroke’s and from them to Sussex’s. In the same
-year was published _A Knack to Know a Knave_ (S. R. 7 January 1594)
-as played ‘by Ed. Allen and his companie’ and with ‘merrimentes’ by
-Kemp. This also belongs to the 1592–3 repertory, of the other plays
-in which _1 Henry VI_, like _Titus Andronicus_, passed ultimately to
-the Chamberlain’s men, and a considerable number, either as their own
-property or that of Henslowe, to the Admiral’s. These included _Tamar
-Cham_, _The Battle of Alcazar_, _The Spanish Tragedy_, _The Jew of
-Malta_, _The Massacre of Paris_, _Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay_, and
-probably _Orlando Furioso_, of Orlando’s part in which a transcript,
-with alterations in Alleyn’s hand, is preserved at Dulwich.[350] The
-only play not named in Henslowe’s diary which can be traced to the
-company is _Fair Em_, which bears the name of Lord Strange’s men on its
-title-page, but of which the first edition is undated.
-
-It is possible that those of the fifth Earl of Derby’s men who did not
-take service with the Lord Chamberlain, passed into a provincial period
-of existence under his successor, the sixth Earl. A company bearing
-his name was at Norwich on 15 September 1594, at Dunwich in 1594–5
-and 1595–6, at Coventry, Bath, and Stratford in 1595–6, at Leicester
-between October and December 1596, at Bath in 1596–7, at Maldon in
-1597, at Coventry twice in 1597–8, at Leicester in 1597–8, and between
-October and December 1598, at Wollaton (Percival Willoughby’s) on 7
-October 1599, and at Leicester again on 16 October 1599. Letters of 30
-June 1599 relate that the Earl of Derby was then ‘busy penning comedies
-for the common players’, and it is perhaps natural to suppose that his
-own company were chosen as the exponents of his art.[351] This perhaps
-explains its appearance at Court during the winters of 1599–1600 and
-1600–1. Four performances were given, on 3 and 5 February 1600 and 1
-and 6 January 1601, and for these Robert Browne, who had been both
-with Worcester’s men and the Admiral’s, but much of whose dramatic
-career had been spent in Germany, was the payee. In an undated letter
-to Sir Robert Cecil, Lady Derby writes, ‘Being importuned by my Lord
-to intreat your favor that his man Browne, with his companye, may not
-be bared from ther accoustomed plaing, in maintenance wherof they have
-consumde the better part of ther substance, if so vaine a matter shall
-not seame troublesum to you, I could desier that your furderance might
-be a meane to uphold them, for that my Lord taking delite in them, it
-will kepe him from moer prodigall courses’.[352] To this company are
-doubtless to be assigned _Edward IV_, perhaps by Heywood (1600, S. R.
-28 August 1599), and the anonymous _Trial of Chivalry_ (1605, S. R.
-4 December 1604), both of which are credited to Derby’s men on their
-title-pages. It again becomes provincial and is traceable at Norwich on
-27 February and 9 June 1602, at Ipswich on 4 June 1602, and thereafter
-up to 1618, chiefly at Coventry and at Gawthorpe Hall, the house of
-Derby’s neighbours, the Shuttleworths.[353]
-
-John Taylor, the water-poet, returned from his journey to Scotland in
-1618 at the Maidenhead Inn, Islington, and here after supper on 14
-October ‘we had a play of the Life and Death of Guy of Warwick, played
-by the Right Honourable the Earl of Derby his men’. Presumably this
-was Day and Dekker’s play entered on the Stationers’ Register in 1619,
-which Mr. Bullen declines to identify with the _Guy of Warwick_
-published as ‘by B. J.’ in 1661.[354]
-
-
- xviii. THE EARL OF PEMBROKE’S MEN
-
- Henry Herbert, s. of William, 1st Earl of Pembroke; _nat. c._
- 1534; succ. as 2nd Earl, 17 Mar. 1570; m. (1) Catherine, d. of
- Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, 21 May 1553, (2) Catherine, d. of
- George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, 17 Feb. 1563, (3) Mary, d.
- of Sir Henry Sidney, _c._ Apr. 1577; President of Wales, 1586;
- residences, Baynard’s Castle, London, Wilton House, Wilts.,
- Ludlow Castle, &c.; _ob._ 9 Jan. 1601.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Halliwell-Phillipps collected
- provincial records and other notes on Pembroke’s men in _A
- Budget of Notes and Memoranda_ (1880). The Bill, Answer, and
- Replication in Shaw _et al._ v. Langley (1597–8, Court of
- Requests) are in C. W. Wallace, _The Swan Theatre and the Earl
- of Pembroke’s Servants_ (1911, _E. S._ xliii. 340).]
-
-There is an isolated record of a Pembroke’s company at Canterbury
-in 1575–6, hardly to be regarded as continuous with that which
-makes its appearance in the last decade of the century. Fleay, 87,
-puts the origin of the latter in 1589, and supposes it to be a
-continuation of Worcester’s men after the death of their original
-patron in 1589, and to be the company ridiculed by Nashe (iii. 324)
-for playing _Delphrigus_ and _The King of the Fairies_, in his preface
-to Greene’s _Menaphon_ (1589). But this Worcester’s company is not
-in fact traceable during 1585–9, and Fleay’s theory is only based
-on the allusion to _Hamlet_ in the same preface (iii. 315), and the
-assumption that the _Ur-Hamlet_, like some other plays, passed to
-the Chamberlain’s from Pembroke’s, whereas it may just as well have
-passed to them from Strange’s. As a matter of fact, there is no mention
-of Pembroke’s before 1592 and no reason to suppose that it had an
-earlier existence. It will be well to detail the few facts of its
-history before attempting anything in the nature of conjecture. It
-was at Leicester in the last three months of 1592 and made its only
-appearances at Court on 26 December 1592 and 6 January 1593. In the
-following summer it travelled, and is found at York in June, at Rye in
-July, and in 1592–3 at Ludlow, Shrewsbury, Coventry, Bath, and Ipswich.
-But it had little success. Henslowe wrote to Alleyn on 28 September,
-‘As for my lorde a Penbrockes w^{ch} you desier to knowe wheare they be
-they ar all at home and hausse ben this v or sixe weackes for they cane
-not saue ther carges w^{th} trauell as I heare & weare fayne to pane
-ther parell for ther carge’.[355] About the same time three of their
-plays came to the booksellers’ hands. These were Marlowe’s _Edward the
-Second_ (1594, S. R. 6 July 1593), _The Taming of A Shrew_ (1594,
-S. R. 2 May 1594), and _The True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York_
-(1595). Probably the play to which this last is a sequel, _1 Contention
-of York and Lancaster_ (1594, S. R. 12 March 1594) was also theirs,
-although the name of the company is not on the title-page. It is on the
-title-page of _Titus Andronicus_ (1594), and its position suggests that
-the play passed to them from Strange’s and from them before publication
-to Sussex’s. All these plays, with the exception of _Edward II_, seem
-to have been worked upon by Shakespeare, and probably they ultimately
-became part of the stock of the Chamberlain’s men. These men were
-playing _Titus Andronicus_ and _The Taming of The Shrew_ in June 1594,
-and that they also owned _The Contention_ in its revised form of _2,
-3 Henry VI_ is suggested both by its inclusion in the First Folio and
-by the reference in the Epilogue to _Henry V_ not only to the loss of
-France but also to the bleeding of England ‘which oft our stage hath
-shown’.
-
-I now enter a region of conjecture. It seems to me, on the whole,
-likely that the origin of Pembroke’s men is to be explained by the
-special conditions of the plague-years 1592–3, and was due to a
-division for travelling purposes of the large London company formed
-by the amalgamation of Strange’s and the Admiral’s. Such a division
-had been foreshadowed as likely to be necessary in the petition sent
-by Strange’s men to the Privy Council during the summer of 1592 or
-earlier, and may actually have become necessary when, after all, the
-plague rendered travelling imperative. If this suggestion is well
-founded, it becomes not difficult to explain some of the transferences
-of acting rights in certain plays which seem to have taken place. Thus
-Strange’s may have handed over _Titus Andronicus_ in its earlier form
-of _Titus and Vespasian_ to Pembroke’s for the travels of 1593, and may
-also have handed over _The Contention of York and Lancaster_, if that
-was originally theirs, as is suggested by their production of _1 Henry
-VI_, which belongs to the same closely related series. This opens up a
-more important line of speculation. It is usual to assume that one of
-the members of Strange’s from 1592 or earlier until its reconstitution
-as the Chamberlain’s in 1594 was William Shakespeare, and there is no
-reason to doubt his authorship at any rate of the Talbot scenes, which
-we know from Nashe to have been staged as part of _1 Henry VI_ in 1592.
-At the same time, the names of at least seventeen of Strange’s and
-the Admiral’s men in 1590–3 are otherwise known, and his is not one
-of them, and in particular his prominence amongst the Chamberlain’s
-men from the very beginning renders it extremely unlikely that, if
-he had been a member of the company in 1593, he would not have been
-mentioned in the Privy Council warrant of 6 May. Further, it seems
-to me impossible to resist the inference that the attribution to him
-of _Titus Andronicus_ both by Francis Meres in 1598 and in the First
-Folio of 1623 can only be explained by his revision under that name of
-_Titus and Vespasian_, and that this was for the second production of
-the play as ‘ne’ for Henslowe by Sussex’s men on 24 January 1594. There
-is, therefore, really some basis for the suggestion made long ago by
-Halliwell-Phillipps that he is to be looked for during these years in
-Pembroke’s company until its collapse and then in Sussex’s, and that
-it was from this rather than directly from Strange’s that he went to
-the Chamberlain’s.[356] On the other hand, it may be that for a time he
-was not attached as an actor to any company at all. It is possible that
-he took advantage of the plague-interval to travel in Italy and only
-resumed the regular exercise of his profession when the Chamberlain’s
-company was formed. In any event, it must have been he who revised
-_The Contention_ as _2, 3 Henry VI_, and the close stylistic relation
-of these plays to _1 Henry VI_ makes it probable that the work on all
-three belongs to about the same date. The limitations of conjecture on
-so intricate a question are obvious, but I can conceive the order of
-events as being somewhat as follows. Shakespeare’s first dramatic job,
-which earned him the ill will of Greene, was the writing or re-writing
-of _1 Henry VI_ for Strange’s, in the early spring of 1592. During
-the winter of 1592–3 he revised _The Contention_ for Pembroke’s and
-completed the series of his early histories with _Richard III_, and, as
-I am inclined to suspect, also an _Ur-Henry VIII_. He also wrote _The
-Jealous Comedy_ or _Comedy of Errors_ for Strange’s. In the summer of
-1593 Sussex’s took over the plays of the bankrupt Pembroke’s, including
-the Shakespearian histories _Titus and Vespasian_ and _The Taming of
-A Shrew_. Some at least of these Pembroke’s had themselves derived
-in 1592 or 1593 from Strange’s. During the winter of 1593–4 Sussex’s
-played either _Richard III_ or _Henry VIII_ as _Buckingham_, and
-also _Titus and Vespasian_ revised for them by Shakespeare as _Titus
-Andronicus_. Alarmed at the further inhibition of plays in February,
-they allowed the revised _Titus_ and unrevised texts of _The Taming of
-A Shrew_ and _The Contention_ to get into the hands of the booksellers.
-Whether Shakespeare had already revised _A Shrew_ or did so later for
-the Chamberlain’s (q.v.) I am uncertain. Finally, by the transfer of
-their plays to the Chamberlain’s men, who at once revived _A Shrew_
-and _Titus Andronicus_, and by the incorporation of Strange’s men in
-the same company, the original stock of Strange’s plays, as distinct
-from the Admiral’s, came together in the same hands once more. On the
-assumption that Shakespeare never left Strange’s, it is difficult to
-explain either the fortunes of _Titus Andronicus_, or the absence from
-the lists of Strange’s plays in Henslowe’s diary of _Richard III_,
-which must have been written about 1592–4. The silence as regards
-Strange’s both of the Court records and of Henslowe’s diary during the
-winter of 1593–4 makes it unlikely that they were in London, and they
-would surely not produce a new play in the country.
-
-Nothing further is heard of a Pembroke’s company for three or four
-years.[357] But in 1597 one appeared in London about which we have
-rather full information, recently increased by Mr. Wallace’s discovery
-of a Court of Requests suit in which they were concerned. Towards
-the end of February in that year Robert Shaw, Richard Jones, Gabriel
-Spencer, William Bird _alias_ Borne, and Thomas Downton, who describe
-themselves in a suit of the following November as Pembroke’s servants,
-together with others their ‘accomplices and associates’, entered into
-an agreement with Francis Langley to play for twelve months ending on
-20 February 1598 at the Swan. Each man gave a bond of £100, which was
-apparently to safeguard Langley against any failure by the company as
-a whole or of Robert Shaw or a sufficient substitute in particular
-to perform during this period, or against any performance elsewhere,
-otherwise than ‘in private places’, within five miles of London.
-Langley found £300 for apparel and, as he claimed, making ready of
-the play-house, and was to receive a moiety of the takings of the
-galleries and to be repaid for the apparel out of the other moiety.
-Of the men concerned, Jones and Downton had been Admiral’s men during
-1594–7, and their transference coincides with a three weeks’ break in
-the performances of the Admiral’s at the Rose from 12 February onwards.
-Mr. Wallace (_E. S._ xliii. 357) says that Shaw, Spencer, and Bird were
-also of the Admiral’s, but of this there is no evidence. If Pembroke’s
-had any continued life during 1594–7, they may have shared it. But this
-seems improbable, and on the whole I am inclined to think that they
-came from the Chamberlain’s (q.v.). Plays were given at the Swan for
-some months, and Langley took £100 from the galleries, and £100 more
-for apparel. Then came an inhibition of plays near London on 28 July
-1597, caused by the production of _The Isle of Dogs_, as a result of
-which one of the authors, Nashe, fled, and the other, Jonson, together
-with Shaw and Spencer, was committed to the Marshalsea. The definite
-evidence that Shaw and Spencer were Pembroke’s men at the Swan, now
-produced by Mr. Wallace, confirms my conjecture (_M. L. R._ iv. 411,
-511) that _The Isle of Dogs_ was an adventure of that house and not,
-as has sometimes been thought, of the Rose. Either in anticipation of
-a prolonged closing of the house or for some other reason, the company
-now desired to shake off their relations with Langley. Early in August
-Jones returned to Henslowe and made a new covenant with him. His
-example was followed by Shaw, Spencer, and Bird, and early in October
-by Downton. Their prescience was justified, for when in the course of
-October the chief offenders were released, and the inhibition, which
-was nominally terminable on 1 November, was in practice relaxed, it
-proved that, while Henslowe was able to get a new licence for the
-Rose, Langley could get none for the Swan. He urged them to try their
-fortunes without a licence, as others of their company were willing to
-do, but they not unnaturally refused, and Henslowe (i. 54) records,
-‘The xj of October begane my lord Admerals and my lord of Penbrockes
-men to playe at my howsse 1597’. He describes the company under the
-double name again on 21 and 23 October and 5 November, but on 1
-December and thereafter as the Lord Admiral’s (i. 68–70). A study
-of the Admiral’s repertory for 1597–8 suggests that some or all of
-the plays _Black Joan_, _Hardicanute_, _Bourbon_, _Sturgflattery_,
-_Branholt_, _Friar Spendleton_, _Alice Pierce_, and _Dido and Aeneas_
-may have been brought in by Pembroke’s men.
-
-The five seceders had not heard the last of Langley. He sued them
-at common law on the bonds given not to play in a rival house. They
-successfully applied to have the case transferred to the Court of
-Requests, and in the course of the pleadings maintained, firstly, that
-they were prevented from playing at the Swan by the restraint and
-Langley’s failure to get a licence; secondly, that Langley had orally
-assented to their transfer to Henslowe; thirdly, that they could not
-appear at the Swan as a company, since Langley had ‘procured from
-them’ two (or, as they afterwards said, three) of their associates,
-to whom he had returned their obligations; and fourthly, that Langley
-had suffered no damage, since other men were occupying his house.
-They also complained that Langley had never handed over the apparel
-for which they had recouped him out of their gallery takings. The
-negotiations with Langley which they describe seem to have taken place
-during October. About the covenants entered into with Henslowe as far
-back as the beginning of August they said nothing, and whether either
-Langley or the court ever found out about these, and what the ultimate
-decision of the court on the main issue was, must remain uncertain. But
-certain loans entered in Henslowe’s diary suggest that in March 1598
-Langley was in a position to arrest Bird, and that in September of the
-same year some kind of agreement was arrived at, under which Langley
-received £35, as well as £19 or more for a rich cloak (i. 63, 72, 73,
-95, 96). It is possible that a ‘sewt agenste Thomas Poope’ of the
-Chamberlain’s, for which Henslowe (i. 72) made a personal advance of
-10_s._ to William Bird on 30 August 1598, may also have been connected
-with the shiftings of companies in 1597.
-
-The names of the two or three members of the company to whom Langley
-gave back their bonds are not stated in the pleadings. Perhaps one
-was Jonson, and the other two might conceivably have been Humphrey
-and Anthony Jeffes, since the name of ‘Humfrey’ stands with that of
-‘Gabriel’ in stage-directions to _3 Henry VI_, and Henslowe’s list of
-the reconstituted Admiral’s company as it stood in October 1597–January
-1598 contains ‘the ij Geffes’, who are not traceable in the 1594–7
-company and may well have come in with the five Pembroke’s men. Langley
-tells us that certain ‘fellows’ of his opponents had taken a more
-reasonable line than theirs and returned to the Swan. How long these
-men remained there we do not know, but probably they secured Pembroke’s
-patronage after the five had been definitely merged in the Admiral’s,
-for by the end of 1597 there was clearly a distinct Pembroke’s company
-again. Provincial records yield the name, not only at Bath in 1596–7
-and at Bristol in September 1597, which may point to a tour of the
-undivided Swan company during the period of restraint, but also at Bath
-in 1598–9, at Bristol in July 1598, at Leicester between October and
-December, at Dover on 7 October, at Coventry on 12 December, and at
-Bewdley on 22 December. They were at Norwich in April 1599, at Coventry
-on 4 July, and at Bristol in July. They were at York on 21 January
-1600, Bristol in April, Marlborough in May, and Leicester before
-Michaelmas. In October they were in relationship with Henslowe, who
-notes ‘my Lordes of Penbrockes men begane to playe at the Rosse’, and
-records performances of _Like Unto Like_ and _Roderick_ on 28 and 29
-October respectively.[358] The former brought him 11_s._ 6_d._ and the
-latter 5_s._, and there apparently the experiment ended, and with it,
-so far as is known, the career of Pembroke’s men. It is just possible
-that they were merged in Worcester’s company, which arose shortly
-afterwards. Mr. Fleay expands this possibility into a definite theory
-that Kempe, Beeston, Duke, and Pallant left the Chamberlain’s men for
-Pembroke’s in 1599, and ultimately passed from these to Worcester’s.
-This is improbable as regards Kempe, and unproved as regards the
-rest.[359]
-
-
- xix. THE LORD ADMIRAL’S (LORD HOWARD’S, EARL OF NOTTINGHAM’S),
- PRINCE HENRY’S, AND ELECTOR PALATINE’S MEN
-
- Charles Howard, s. of William, 1st Baron Howard of Effingham,
- g.s. of Thomas, 2nd Duke of Norfolk; _nat._ 1536; m. (1)
- Catherine Carey, d. of Henry Lord Hunsdon, Lady of the Privy
- Chamber, (2) Margaret Stuart, d. of James Earl of Murray, _c._
- 1604; succ. as 2nd Baron, 29 Jan. 1573; Deputy Lord Chamberlain,
- 1574–5; Vice-Admiral, Feb. 1582; Lord Chamberlain, _c._ Dec.
- 1583; Lord High Admiral, 8 July 1585–1619; Earl of Nottingham,
- 22 Oct. 1596; Lord Steward, 1597; _ob._ 14 Dec. 1624.
-
- Henry Frederick, s. of James VI of Scotland and I of England;
- _nat._ 19 Feb. 1594; cr. Duke of Rothesay, 30 Aug. 1594; succ.
- as Duke of Cornwall, 24 Mar. 1603; cr. Earl of Chester and
- Prince of Wales, 4 June 1610; _ob._ 6 Nov. 1612.
-
- Frederick, s. of Frederick IV, Count Palatine of the Rhine;
- _nat._ 19 Aug. 1596; succ. as Frederick V, 1610; m. Princess
- Elizabeth of England, 14 Feb. 1613; elected King of Bohemia,
- 1619; _ob._ 1632.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The material preserved amongst the
- papers of Philip Henslowe and Edward Alleyn at Dulwich has
- been fully collected and studied by W. W. Greg in _Henslowe’s
- Diary_ (1904–8) and _Henslowe Papers_ (1907), which replace the
- earlier publications of Malone, Collier, and others from the
- same source. I have added a little from Professor Wallace’s
- researches and elsewhere, and have attempted to give my own
- reading of the evidence, which differs in a few minor points
- from Dr. Greg’s.]
-
-It was perhaps his employment as deputy to the Earl of Sussex in the
-office of Lord Chamberlain which led Lord Howard to encourage players.
-A company, under the name of Lord Howard’s men, appeared at Court for
-the first time at the Christmas of 1576–7. On 27 December they played
-_Tooley_, and on 17 February _The Solitary Knight_.[360] They came
-again for the last time in the following winter, and performed on 5
-January 1578. They were also at Kirtling on 3 December 1577, Saffron
-Walden in 1577–8, Ipswich on 24 October 1577, in 1578–9, and perhaps
-on 8 October 1581, Bristol, where they gave _The Queen of Ethiopia_,
-between 31 August and 6 September 1578, Nottingham on 19 December 1578,
-and Bath and Coventry in 1578–9.
-
-Howard again had players at Court, after he became Admiral in 1585.
-The first record of them is at Dover in June 1585. Later in the year
-they were playing in conjunction with the Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord
-Hunsdon’s). ‘The Lorde Chamberlens and the Lord Admirall’s players’
-were rewarded at Leicester in October-December 1585, and ‘the servants
-of the lo: admirall and the lo: Chamberlaine’ for a play at Court on 6
-January 1586.[361] During the same Christmas, however, the Admiral’s
-played alone on 27 December 1585, and as Hunsdon’s survived in the
-provinces, the two organizations may have been amalgamated for one
-performance only. The Admiral’s were at Coventry, Faversham, Ipswich,
-and Leicester in 1585–6. They were reported to Walsingham amongst other
-London companies on 25 January 1587 (App. D, No. lxxviii), although
-they did not appear at Court during this winter. In 1586–7 they were at
-Cambridge, Coventry, Bath, York, Norwich, Ipswich, Exeter, Southampton,
-and Leicester. By November they were back in London, and on the 16th
-an accident at their theatre is thus related by Philip Gawdy to his
-father:[362]
-
- ‘Yow shall vnderstande of some accydentall newes heare in this
- towne thoughe my self no wyttnesse thereof, yet I may be bold
- to veryfye it for an assured troth. My L. Admyrall his men
- and players having a devyse in ther playe to tye one of their
- fellowes to a poste and so to shoote him to deathe, having
- borrowed their callyvers one of the players handes swerved his
- peece being charged with bullett missed the fellowe he aymed
- at and killed a chyld, and a woman great with chyld forthwith,
- and hurt an other man in the head very soore. How they will
- answere it I do not study vnlesse their profession were better,
- but in chrystyanity I am very sorry for the chaunce but God his
- iudgementes ar not to be searched nor enquired of at mannes
- handes. And yet I fynde by this an old proverbe veryfyed ther
- never comes more hurte than commes of fooling.’
-
-Possibly the company went into retirement as a result of this disaster;
-at any rate nothing more is heard of them until the Christmas of
-1588–9. They then came to Court, and were rewarded for two interludes
-and ‘for showinge other feates of activitye and tumblinge’ on 29
-December 1588 and 11 February 1589.[363] On 6 November 1589 they were
-playing in the City, and were suppressed by the Lord Mayor, because
-Tilney, the Master of the Revels, misliked their plays. Probably
-they had been concerning themselves with the Marprelate controversy.
-Strange’s men, who were evidently performing as a separate company,
-shared their fate. It may have been this misadventure which led the
-Admiral’s to seek house-room with James Burbadge at the Theatre (q.v.),
-where some evidence by John Alleyn, who, with James Tunstall, was of
-their number, locates them in November 1590 and May 1591. A relic of
-this period may be presumed to exist in the ‘plot’ of _Dead Man’s
-Fortune_, preserved with other plots belonging to the company at
-Dulwich, in which Burbadge, doubtless Richard Burbadge, then still a
-boy, appeared. Certainly there is nothing to connect Burbadge with the
-company at any other date. Other actors in the piece were one Darlowe,
-‘b[oy?] Samme’, and Robert Lee, later of Anne’s men. The Admiral’s
-again showed ‘feats of activitie’ at Court on 28 December 1589, and
-a play on 3 March 1590. In 1589–90 they were at Coventry, Ipswich,
-Maidstone, Marlborough, Winchester, and Gloucester, and in 1590–1 at
-Winchester and Gloucester. Marlowe’s _Tamburlaine_ was published in
-1590 as ‘shewed upon stages in the City of London’ by the Admiral’s
-men. The Court records for the following winter present what looks at
-first sight like a curious discrepancy. The accounts of the Treasurer
-of the Chamber include payments for plays and activities on 27 December
-1590 and 16 February 1591 to Lord Strange’s men. The corresponding
-warrants, however, were made out, according to the Privy Council
-Register, for the Admiral’s. Probably there is no error here, and the
-entries are evidence of an amalgamation between the two companies,
-which possibly dated from as far back as the winter of 1589, and
-which seems to have endured until the summer of 1594. Technically,
-it would seem that it was the Admiral’s who were merged in Strange’s
-men. It is the latter and not the former who generally appear in
-official documents during this period. I have therefore dealt with
-its details for both companies, with the question of the precise date
-of the amalgamation, and with the possibility that the plot of _The
-Seven Deadly Sins_ and its list of actors also belong to a Theatre
-performance of about 1590, in my account of Strange’s men, and need
-only remark here that the name of the Admiral’s does not altogether
-fall into disuse, especially in provincial records, and that the
-leading actor, Edward Alleyn, in particular, is shown by an official
-document to have retained his personal status as an Admiral’s servant.
-
-It is a question of some interest how early Alleyn’s connexion with
-the Admiral’s may be supposed to have begun. Was he, for example,
-the original Tamburlaine of 1587, and was it as an Admiral’s man
-that Nashe referred to him, if it was he to whom Nashe referred, as
-the Roscius of the contemporary players in his _Menaphon_ epistle of
-1589? He is known to have been a member of Worcester’s company in
-1583. Dr. Greg is disposed to think that he remained with them until
-the death of the third Earl of Worcester on 22 February 1589, and
-then joined the Admiral’s.[364] It is, however, to be observed that
-there is no trace of Worcester’s men between 1584 and 1590, and that
-it is in 1585 that the Admiral’s men begin to appear at Court. On the
-whole, it commends itself to me as the more probable conjecture that
-the first Earl of Worcester’s company passed into Howard’s service,
-when he became Admiral in 1585, and that the players of the fourth
-Earl of Worcester between 1590 and 1596 were distinct from those of
-his father. The issue concerns others besides Edward Alleyn himself.
-Amongst the members of Worcester’s company in 1583 were Robert Browne,
-James Tunstall, and Richard Jones; and all three of these are found
-concerned with Alleyn in matters of theatrical business during 1589–91.
-The most important document is a deed of sale by ‘Richarde Jones of
-London yoman’ to ‘Edwarde Allen of London gent’ for £37 10s. of ‘all
-and singuler suche share parte and porcion of playinge apparrelles,
-playe bookes, instrumentes, and other comodities whatsoeuer belonginge
-to the same, as I the said Richarde Jones nowe haue or of right ought
-to haue joyntlye with the same Edwarde Allen, John Allen citizen and
-inholder of London and Roberte Browne yoman’.[365] This is dated 3
-January 1589. There are also three deeds of sale to Edward and John
-Alleyn of theatrical apparel between 1589 and 1591, and to two of these
-James Tunstall was a witness.[366] On Dr. Greg’s theory as to the date
-at which Alleyn took service with the Lord Admiral, the organization
-in whose properties Richard Jones had an interest would naturally be
-Worcester’s men; on mine it would be the Admiral’s, and it would follow
-that Jones and Browne, as well as Alleyn, had joined that company.
-We have seen that James Tunstall had done so by 1590–1. John Alleyn
-was an elder brother of Edward. There is nothing to connect him with
-Worcester’s men. He was a servant of Lord Sheffield in November 1580
-and of the Lord Admiral in 1589.[367] A letter of one Elizabeth Socklen
-to Edward Alleyn refers to a time ‘when your brother, my lovinge cozen
-John Allen, dwelt with my very good lord, Charles Heawarde’, and this
-rather suggests that his service was in some household capacity, and
-not merely as player.[368] If so, it may have been through him that
-Edward Alleyn and his fellows became Admiral’s men. The first period of
-their activity seems to have lasted from 1585 to 1589, and it was no
-doubt Edward Alleyn’s genius, and perhaps also his business capacity,
-which enabled them to offer a serious rivalry to the Queen’s company.
-I suspect that in 1589 or 1590 they were practically dissolved, and
-this view is confirmed by the fact that their most important play was
-allowed to get to the hands of the printers. Alleyn, with the help of
-his brother, bought up the properties, and allied himself with Lord
-Strange’s men, and so far as the Admiral’s continued to exist at all
-for the next few years, it was almost entirely in and through him
-that it did so. After a financial quarrel with James Burbadge in May
-1591, the combined companies moved to the Rose. There is nothing to
-show whether the Alleyns bought up Robert Browne’s interest as well as
-that of Richard Jones. At any rate Browne began in 1590 that series
-of continental tours which occupied most of the rest of his career
-(cf. ch. xiv). Jones joined him in one of these adventures in 1592,
-and it is possible that John Bradstreet and Thomas Sackville, who went
-with them, were also old Admiral’s men. But I do not think that it is
-accurate to regard this company, as Dr. Greg seems to be inclined to
-do, as being itself under the Admiral’s patronage. It is true that they
-obtained a passport from him, but this was probably given rather in his
-capacity as warden of the seas than in that of their lord. His name is
-not mentioned in any of the foreign records of their peregrinations.
-It is not possible to say which, other than Alleyn, of the members
-of the 1592–3 Strange’s and Admiral’s company, whose names have been
-preserved, came from each of the two contributing sources. They do
-not include either John Alleyn or James Tunstall, or Edward Browne,
-a Worcester’s man of 1583, who reappears with Tunstall among the
-Admiral’s after 1594. Nor is it possible to say how far the repertory
-of Strange’s men, as disclosed by the 1592–3 entries in Henslowe’s
-diary, included plays drawn from the Admiral’s stock. This may have
-been the case with _The Battle of Alcazar_, which was printed as an
-Admiral’s play in 1594, and with _Orlando Furioso_, which contemporary
-gossip represents Greene as selling first to the Queen’s and then to
-the Admiral’s. And it may have been the case with _1 Tamar Cham_, which
-passed to the later Admiral’s. Neither _Tamburlaine_ nor _The Wounds of
-Civil War_, printed like _The Battle of Alcazar_ as an Admiral’s play
-in 1594, is recorded to have been played by Strange’s.
-
-When the companies settled down again to a London life after the
-conclusion of the long plague in 1594, the Admiral’s men reconstituted
-themselves as an independent company with Alleyn at its head, leaving
-the greater number of their recent comrades of the road to pass, as
-the Lord Chamberlain’s men, under the patronage of Lord Hunsdon. The
-personal alliance between Alleyn and Henslowe, whose step-daughter,
-Joan Woodward, he had married on 22 October 1592, led to the
-institution of close business relations between the company and the
-pawnbroker, and the record of these in the famous diary enables us to
-follow with a singular minuteness the almost daily fortunes of the
-Admiral’s men during the course of some nine or ten years, broken into
-two periods by a reconstruction of the company in 1597 and finally
-closing about the time of their conversion into Prince Henry’s men in
-1604. The precise nature of the position occupied by Henslowe has been
-carefully investigated by Dr. Greg,[369] and has already been briefly
-considered in these pages (ch. xi). He was not a member of the company,
-but its landlord, and, probably to an increasing extent, its financier.
-In the former capacity he received, after every day’s performance,
-a fluctuating sum, which seems to have represented half the amount
-received for admission to the galleries of the house; the other half,
-with the payments for entrance to the standing room in the yard, being
-divided amongst such of the players as had a share in the profits.
-Out of this, of course, they had to meet all expenditure other than
-by way of rent, such as the wages of hired men, payments for apparel
-and play-books, fees to the Master of the Revels for the licensing of
-plays, and the like. In practice it became convenient for Henslowe, who
-was a capitalist, while many of the players lived from hand to mouth,
-to advance sums to meet such expenditure as it fell due, and to recoup
-himself from time to time out of the company’s profits. It seems likely
-that, when the system was in full working, the moiety of the gallery
-money, which remained after the deduction of the rent, was assigned for
-the purpose of these repayments. During the period 1597–1604 Henslowe’s
-entries in his diary are mainly in the nature of a running account of
-these advances and of the receipts set off against them; for 1594–7
-similar entries occur irregularly, but the principal record is a daily
-list, such as Henslowe had already kept during his shorter associations
-with Strange’s, the Queen’s, and Sussex’s companies in the course of
-1592–4, of each performance given, with the name of the play and of
-the amount accruing to Henslowe himself in the form of rent. This list
-renders possible a very interesting analysis, both of the repertory of
-the company and of some at least of the financial conditions of their
-enterprise.
-
-The entries start with the heading, ‘In the name of God Amen begininge
-the 14 of Maye 1594 by my lord Admeralls men’. After three days, during
-which _The Jew of Malta_, _Cutlack_, and _The Ranger’s Comedy_, all
-of which are found in the later repertory of the company, were given,
-they stop abruptly.[370] To about the same date may be assigned a
-fragmentary account, headed ‘Layd owt for my Lorde Admeralle seruantes
-as ffoloweth 1594’, and recording expenditure for coming and going to
-Court and to Somerset House, the residence of the Lord Chamberlain,
-‘for mackinge of our leater twise’, and ‘for drinckinge with the
-jentellmen’, all evidently concerned with the initial business of
-forming and licensing the company.[371] On 5 June the account of
-performances is resumed with a fresh heading, ‘In the name of God Amen
-begininge at Newington my Lord Admeralle men and my Lorde Chamberlen
-men as ffolowethe 1594’.[372] Henslowe’s takings only averaged 9_s._
-for the first ten days, probably on account of the distance of
-Newington Butts from London.[373] The takings for the three days in
-May averaged 41_s._, and it may perhaps be inferred that these May
-performances were at the Rose, and that some fear of renewed plague
-on the part of the authorities led to their being relegated to a
-safer quarter. The tentative character of these early performances
-is shown by the fact that the Admiral’s were still sharing a theatre
-with the Chamberlain’s. To the repertory of the latter it seems safe
-to assign three of the seven plays produced, _Titus Andronicus_,
-_Hamlet_, and _The Taming of A Shrew_, and probably also a fourth,
-_Hester and Ahasuerus_, as there is no later sign of this amongst
-the Admiral’s plays. This leaves three others to be regarded as the
-Admiral’s contribution, _The Jew of Malta_ and _Cutlack_, which they
-had played in May and were often to play again, and _Belin Dun_, to
-which are attached the letters ‘ne’, Henslowe’s normal indication of a
-new play.[374] There is nothing in the order in which the plays were
-taken to indicate an alternation of the two companies, and it is likely
-enough that neither was yet fully constituted, and that they actually
-joined forces in the same performances.
-
-After the tenth play on 15 June, Henslowe drew a line across the
-page, and although the entries continue without any indication of a
-change in the conditions under which the performances were given, I
-can only concur in the conjecture of Mr. Fleay and Dr. Greg that at
-this point the Admiral’s plays were transferred to the Rose, and the
-combination with the Chamberlain’s ceased.[375] A sudden rise in the
-amount of Henslowe’s takings, and the absence from the rest of the
-list of the four plays named above and of any other attributable to
-the Chamberlain’s repertory, are alike strongly in favour of this
-view, which may be treated as a practical certainty. Henceforward the
-fortunes of the company seem to have followed a smooth course for the
-space of three years. Their proceedings may be briefly summed up as
-follows. They played for thirty-nine consecutive weeks from 15 June
-1594 to 14 March 1595, appearing at Court during this season on 28
-December, 1 January, and 6 January. After a break of thirty-seven days
-during Lent, opportunity of which was taken to repair the Rose, they
-played again for ten weeks from Easter Monday, 21 April, to 26 June
-1595. Then came a vacation of fifty-nine days, with visits to Bath and
-Maidstone. They began again in London on 25 August 1595 and played for
-twenty-seven weeks to 28 February 1596, giving Court performances on
-1 January, 4 January, and 22 and 24 February. This took them to the
-end of the first week in Lent. After forty-three days’ interval, they
-played for fifteen weeks, from Easter Monday, 12 April, to 23 July
-1596. Their summer vacation lasted for ninety-five days, and they are
-noted during 1595–6 at Coventry, Bath, Gloucester, and Dunwich. In the
-autumn they started playing on 27 October, but the receipts were low,
-and if the record is complete, they suspended performances between
-15 and 25 November, and then went on to 12 February 1597, making up
-a season of about fourteen weeks in all. They do not seem to have
-played at Court at all this winter. This year they rather disregarded
-Lent, stopping for eighteen days only, during a reconstruction of the
-company, and then playing three days a week until Easter, and then
-regularly until the end of July, in all twenty-one weeks. To certain
-irregularities at the close of this season it will be necessary to
-refer later. During the three years, then, there were three winter
-and three summer seasons of London playing, covering about a hundred
-and twenty-six weeks. Except in Lent or at the beginning or end of
-a season, or occasionally, probably for climatic reasons, at other
-times, especially in December, plays were given upon every week-day.
-It emerges from Dr. Greg’s re-ordering of Henslowe’s very inaccurate
-dates that there were no plays on Sundays.[376] On the other hand, a
-summons to play at Court in the evening did not necessarily entail a
-blank day in the afternoon. The total number of performances during
-the three years was seven hundred and twenty-eight. It is reasonable
-to assume that Henslowe’s takings varied roughly with those of the
-company, although the reserve must be made that different plays
-might prove the most attractive to the galleries and to the yard
-respectively. The amounts entered range from a minimum of 3_s._ to a
-maximum of 73_s._ Dr. Greg calculates the average over ‘certain typical
-periods of 1595’ as 30_s._;[377] during the first half of 1597 it was
-24_s._ The fluctuations are determined, partly by the popularity or
-novelty of the plays presented, partly by the season of the year, and
-doubtless the weather and the competition of other amusements. There
-were generally some high receipts during Christmas, Easter, and Whitsun
-weeks. Unfortunately there is no means of estimating the proportion
-which Henslowe’s share bore to that which fell for division among the
-players. Some light is thrown upon the expenses by the subsidiary
-accounts of advances, which Henslowe began to keep from time to time
-in 1596. In May of that year he lent Alleyn ‘for the company’ a total
-amount of £39 in several instalments, and recovered it by small sums of
-£1 to £3 at a time during the next three months.[378] A longer account
-extending from October 1596 to March 1597 reaches, with the aid of a
-miscalculation, a total of £52. Of this £22 was repaid during the same
-period, chiefly by deductions from the profits of first nights, and an
-acknowledgement given for the balance of £30.[379] The advances were
-made through various members of the company, and the purposes specified
-include apparel for three new plays, travelling expenses, and fees to
-playwrights. A third account, if I am right in the interpretation of
-some very disputable figures, shows an expenditure at the average rate
-of 31_s._ a day during the six months from 24 January to 28 July 1597,
-of which, however, nearly half was in fact incurred during the first
-twenty-four days of the period. In this case only the sums and not the
-purposes for which they were advanced are entered.[380]
-
-During the three years the Admiral’s men produced new plays to the
-total number of fifty-five, and at the average rate of one a fortnight.
-The productions were not at regular intervals, and often followed each
-other in successive weeks. There is, however, no example of two new
-productions in the same week.[381] These are the names and dates of the
-new plays:
-
- _Belin Dun_ (10 June 1594).
- _Galiaso_ (28 June 1594).
- _Philipo and Hippolito_ (9 July 1594).
- _2 Godfrey of Bulloigne_ (19 July 1594).
- _The Merchant of Emden_ (30 July 1594).
- _Tasso’s Melancholy_ (13 Aug. 1594).
- _The Venetian Comedy_ (27 Aug. 1594).
- _Palamon and Arcite_ (18 Sept. 1594).
- _The Love of an English Lady_ (26 Sept. 1594).
- _A Knack to Know an Honest Man_ (23 Oct. 1594).
- _1 Caesar and Pompey_ (8 Nov. 1594).
- _Diocletian_ (16 Nov. 1594).
- _The Wise Man of West Chester_ (3 Dec. 1594).
- _The Set at Maw_ (15 Dec. 1594).
- _The French Comedy_ (11 Feb. 1595).
- _The Mack_ (21 Feb. 1595).
- _Olympo_ (5 Mar. 1595).[382]
- _1 Hercules_ (7 May 1595).
- _2 Hercules_ (23 May 1595).
- _1 The Seven Days of the Week_ (3 June 1595).
- _2 Caesar and Pompey_ (18 June 1595).
- _Longshanks_ (29 Aug. 1595).
- _Crack me this Nut_ (5 Sept. 1595).
- _The New World’s Tragedy_ (17 Sept. 1595).
- _The Disguises_ (2 Oct. 1595).
- _The Wonder of a Woman_ (16 Oct. 1595).
- _Barnardo and Fiammetta_ (30 Oct. 1595).
- _A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies_ (14 Nov. 1595).
- _Henry V_ (28 Nov. 1595).
- _Chinon of England_ (3 Jan. 1596).
- _Pythagoras_ (16 Jan. 1596).
- _2 The Seven Days of the Week_ (23 Jan. 1596).
- _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_ (12 Feb. 1596).
- _Julian the Apostate_ (29 Apr. 1596).
- _1 Tamar Cham_ (7 May 1596).
- _Phocas_ (20 May 1596).
- _2 Tamar Cham_ (11 June 1596).
- _Troy_ (25 June 1596).
- _The Paradox_ (1 July 1596).
- _The Tinker of Totnes_ (23 July 1596).
- _Vortigern_, _Valteger_, or _Hengist_ (4 Dec. 1596).
- _Stukeley_ (10 Dec. 1596).
- _Nebuchadnezzar_ (18 Dec. 1596).
- _That Will Be Shall Be_ (30 Dec. 1596).
- _Jeronimo_ (7 Jan. 1597).
- _Alexander and Lodowick_ (14 Jan. 1597).[383]
- _Woman Hard to Please_ (27 Jan. 1597).
- _Guido_ (21 Mar. 1597).
- _Five Plays in One_ (7 Apr. 1597).
- _A French Comedy_ (18 Apr. 1597).
- _Uther Pendragon_ (29 Apr. 1597).
- _The Comedy of Humours_ (11 May 1597).
- _The Life and Death of Henry I_ (26 May 1597).
- _Frederick and Basilea_ (3 June 1597).
- _The Life and Death of Martin Swart_ (30 June 1597).
-
-Oblivion has overtaken the great majority of these plays. _Longshanks_
-is possibly Peele’s _Edward I_, and _Jeronimo_ certainly Kyd’s _Spanish
-Tragedy_. The title of _The Wise Man of West Chester_ agrees with the
-subject of Munday’s _John a Kent_ and _John a Cumber_, the manuscript
-of which is dated December 1595. One would be more willing to identify
-_Henry V_ with _The Famous Victories_, if the latter had not been
-printed in 1598 with the name of the Queen’s men on its title-page. _A
-Knack to Know an Honest Man_ was printed, as acted ‘about the Citie
-of London’, but without any company name, in 1596 (S. R. 26 November
-1595). _Stukeley_ was also printed without a name, as _The Famous
-History of the Life and Death of Captain Thomas Stukeley_, in 1605 (S.
-R. 11 August 1600). _1 Tamar Cham_ and _Frederick and Basilea_ are
-extant in ‘plots’ alone, and _Belin Dun_, or _Bellendon_, as Henslowe
-writes it, was entered in the Stationers’ Register on 24 November 1595
-as _The true tragicall historie of Kinge Rufus the first with the
-life and deathe of Belyn Dun the first thief that ever was hanged in
-England_, but is not known to be extant. The list also contains two of
-the early works of George Chapman, _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_
-(1598, Admiral’s, S. R. 15 August 1598), and _The Comedy of Humours_,
-which can be safely identified with _A Humorous Day’s Mirth_ (1599,
-Admiral’s). Ingenious attempts have been made to trace in some of the
-remaining titles other plays by Chapman, or by Heywood, Dekker, and
-the like, or presumed early drafts of these, or the English originals
-of plays or titles preserved in German versions; but in most cases
-the material available is so scanty as to render the game a hazardous
-one.[384] It appears, however, from Henslowe’s notes of advances during
-1596–7 that payment was made to Heywood for a book, from which it
-may be inferred that his activity as a dramatist for the company had
-already began. Payments to ‘marcum’ and ‘Mr. porter’ perhaps indicate
-the same of Gervase Markham and Henry Porter.[385]
-
-It is evident that some of the plays marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe cannot
-have been new in the fullest sense. This applies to _Jeronimo_, which
-had been played by Strange’s men as an old play during 1592–3, and
-to _2 Tamar Cham_, which had been produced by the same company on 28
-April 1592, and on that occasion also marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe. It
-applies also to _Longshanks_ and _Henry V_, if these are really the
-same as _Edward I_ and _The Famous Victories_. And it may, of course,
-apply also in other cases, which cannot now be distinguished. Two
-explanations are possible. One is that plays were treated as new, for
-the purpose of Henslowe’s entries, which were only new to the repertory
-of the particular company concerned, having been purchased by them or
-by Henslowe from the stock of some other company. There is, however,
-no indication that Henslowe received any special financial advantage
-from the production of a new play, such as would give point to such an
-arrangement. The other, and perhaps the most plausible, is that an old
-play was marked ‘ne’ if it had undergone any substantial process of
-revision before revival. But it must be admitted that the problem set
-is one that we have hardly the means to solve.
-
-In addition to their new and revised plays, the Admiral’s had a
-considerable stock of old ones. Some of these they were playing, when
-they began their first season in June 1594. Several others were revived
-in the course of that season, and a few at later dates. The only new
-play of the repertory which reached the stage of revival during the
-three years was _Belin Dun_, which was originally produced on 10 June
-1594, played to the end of the year, then dropped, and afterwards
-revived for a single performance on 11 July 1596, and for a series
-in the spring of 1597. But it is not likely that many new plays were
-written during the plague years, and probably most of the revived plays
-of 1594–5 were a good deal more than two or three years old. A list of
-the plays not marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe, nineteen in number, follows.
-It is, however, possible that some of them are only plays in the list
-already given, masquerading under different names.
-
- _Cutlack._
- _The Ranger’s Comedy._
- _The Guise_, or, _The Massacre of Paris._
- _The Jew of Malta._
- _Mahomet._
- _1 Tamburlaine._
- _Dr. Faustus._
- _The Love of a Grecian Lady_, or, _The Grecian Comedy_.[386]
- _The French Doctor._
- _Warlamchester._
- _2 Tamburlaine._
- _The Siege of London._
- _Antony and Valia._[387]
- _1 Long Meg of Westminster._[388]
- _The Welshman._[389]
- _1 Fortunatus._
- _Osric._
- _Time’s Triumph and Fortune’s._
- _The Witch of Islington._
-
-Five plays of Marlowe’s are conspicuous in the list. _Mahomet_ might
-be either Greene’s _Alphonsus_, _King of Arragon_ or Peele’s lost
-_Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek_. _Fortunatus_, as revised
-by Dekker in 1599, is extant, but it is doubtful whether Dekker was
-writing early enough to have been the author of the original play.
-Conjectural identifications of some of the other titles have been
-attempted.[390] There is, perhaps, a natural inclination to eke out
-our meagre knowledge of the repertory of the earlier Admiral’s men,
-as it was constituted before 1590, by the assumption that the old and
-the revised new plays of 1594–7 belong to that stock. But this can
-only be proved to be so in the case of _1 and 2 Tamburlaine_, where
-the title-page of the 1590 edition comes to our assistance. There is
-no trace between 1594 and 1597 of any of the other three plays, _The
-Battle of Alcazar_, _The Wounds of Civil War_, and _Orlando Furioso_,
-which there is independent evidence for connecting with the Admiral’s.
-And it must be borne in mind that there were several other sources from
-which a supply of old plays might be drawn. Alleyn seems to have bought
-up the books and properties of the pre-1590 men, and we do not know
-how far he also retained rights in some or all of the plays produced
-during his alliance with Strange’s. Moreover, there were plenty of
-opportunities for either Alleyn, Henslowe, or the Admiral’s men as a
-whole, to acquire copies from one or more of the companies, Pembroke’s,
-the Queen’s, Sussex’s, which went under in the plague years. _Henry
-V_, if identical with _The Famous Victories_, had certainly been a
-Queen’s play; _The Ranger’s Comedy_ had been played for Henslowe by the
-Queen’s and Sussex’s in April 1594; _Jeronimo_ and _The Guise_ had been
-similarly played by Strange’s in 1592–3; and the fact that Strange’s,
-the Queen’s, Sussex’s, and the Admiral’s, all in turn played _The Jew
-of Malta_ leads to a strong suspicion that it was Henslowe’s property
-and placed by him at the disposal of any company that might from time
-to time be occupying his theatre.
-
-The Rose was what is now known as a ‘repertory’ house. A very
-successful play might be repeated on the night after its first
-production or revival, or in the course of the same week. But as a
-rule one performance a week was the limit, and after a play had been
-on the boards a few weeks, the intervals between its appearances
-rapidly became greater. _The Wise Man of West Chester_, which was
-presented thirty-two times between December 1594 and July 1597, had a
-longer life than any other new play during the three years. Next came
-_A Knack to Know an Honest Man_, with twenty-one performances in two
-years, _1 Seven Days of the Week_, with twenty-one performances in
-fifteen months, and _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_, with twenty-two
-performances in fourteen months. _Belin Dun_, although not continuously
-upon the stage for long together, achieved with the aid of its revival
-a total of twenty-four performances. The only other new plays, that
-outlived a year, were _2 Godfrey of Bulloigne_ and _A Toy to Please
-Chaste Ladies_. Even such highly successful plays as _1 and 2 Hercules_
-ceased to be heard of after six months. The usual run of a play was
-anything from six to seventeen nights, but sixteen plays failed to
-obtain even such a run, and several plays, which apparently did well
-enough on the first night, were not repeated at all. As a rule the
-first night of a play brought Henslowe the highest returns; but this
-was by no means invariably the case, and the success of any play, which
-held the boards for as many as six nights, can perhaps best be measured
-by its average returns. By far the most fortunate was _The Comedy of
-Humours_ which averaged 53_s._ for the eleven nights available before
-the summer season of 1597 closed. Next came _1 and 2 Hercules_ with
-42_s._ and 43_s._ respectively, _1 Seven Days of the Week_ with 35_s._,
-and _The Wise Man of West Chester_ with 34_s._ On the other hand the
-average of _Henry I_ was no more than 19_s._ and that of the second
-_French Comedy_ no more than 16_s._ The highest individual returns
-were those from the first nights of _1 and 2 Hercules_, _2 Godfrey
-of Bulloigne_, and _1 Seven Days of the Week_, which yielded 73_s._,
-70_s._, 71_s._, and 70_s._ respectively, and that from the sixth night
-of the _Comedy of Humours_, which was also 70_s._ The booking for this
-play shows a curious progress, being 43_s._, 55_s._, 58_s._, 64_s._,
-66_s._, 70_s._, for the first six nights. Similarly _The Wise Man of
-West Chester_, which began with a bad first night of 33_s._, rose to
-a good average, while _2 Godfrey of Bulloigne_, for all its start of
-70_s._, ended with an average of only 28_s._ The worst first night
-taking was the 22_s._ of _Nebuchadnezzar_, and this affords another
-curious example of box-office fluctuations, for, though it achieved
-no higher average than 22_s._, it rose on its third night to 68_s._
-The worst takings, on other than first nights, were 3_s._ for _Chinon
-of England_,[391] 4_s._ for _Vortigern_, and for _Olympo_, and 5_s._
-twice over for _A Woman Hard to Please_. Probably these were due to
-weather or other accidents, as each play averaged enough to justify a
-reasonable run. The success of the old plays followed much the same
-lines as that of the new ones. They ran for anything from one night
-to twenty-four, this total being reached by _Dr. Faustus_. The best
-average returns were the 32_s._ and 38_s._ of _1 and 2 Tamburlaine_,
-the 30_s._ of _Mahomet_, the 29_s._ of _1 Long Meg of Westminster_,
-the 27_s._ of _The Guise_, and the 26_s._ of _The Jew of Malta_;
-the best individual returns the 72_s._ and 71_s._ yielded by the
-respective first nights of _Dr. Faustus_ and _1 Tamburlaine_. The
-persistent popularity of Marlowe’s work comes out quite clearly from
-the statistics; and the success of Chapman’s first attempts is also not
-to be overlooked.
-
-The _personnel_ of the Admiral’s men during 1594–7 can be determined
-with some approach to certainty. They were Edward Alleyn, John Singer,
-Richard Jones, Thomas Towne, Martin Slater, Edward Juby, Thomas
-Downton, and James Donstone. Their names are found in a list written in
-the diary, without any explanation of its object, amongst memoranda of
-1594–6.[392] There can be little doubt that it represents the principal
-members of the company, and in most cases corroborative evidence is
-available. The books of the Treasurer of the Chamber indicate Alleyn,
-Jones, and Singer as payees for the Court money of 1594–5, and Alleyn
-and Slater for that of 1595–6. Alleyn, Slater, Donstone, and Juby are
-noted in Henslowe’s subsidiary accounts for 1596 as responsible for
-advances made by him on behalf of the company.[393] Another advance was
-made to Stephen the tireman, and he is doubtless the Stephen Magett
-who also appears in personal financial relations with Henslowe during
-1596.[394] Transactions by way of loan, sale, or pawn are also noted by
-Henslowe during 1594–7 with Slater, Jones, Donstone, Singer, and Towne,
-and also with Edward Dutton and Richard Alleyn.[395] These latter were
-probably not sharers in the company, but can be traced with others
-amongst its subordinate members by means of the ‘plot’ of _Frederick
-and Basilea_, which it is reasonable to connect with the performances
-of the play in June and July 1597, since it was a new play on 3 June,
-and it is recorded in the diary that Martin Slater, who figures in the
-‘plot’, left the company on 18 July. It is to be inferred from the
-plot that the principal parts in _Frederick and Basilea_ were taken
-by Mr. Alleyn, Mr. Thomas Towne, Mr. Martin [Slater], Mr. Juby, Mr.
-Donstone, and R. Alleyn; that minor male parts were taken by Edward
-Dutton, Thomas Hunt, Robert Ledbetter, Black Dick, Pigge, Sam, Charles,
-and the ‘gatherers’ or money-takers and other ‘attendants’; and that
-female parts were taken by Edward Dutton’s boy Dick and two other boys
-known as Will and Griffen. Apparently the play, although not employing
-all the principal actors, made considerable demands on the minor staff.
-Dr. Greg may be right in identifying Sam and Charles with the Samuel
-Rowley and Charles Massey who became members of the company at a later
-date.[396] It will be seen that the only name in Henslowe’s undated
-list which cannot be verified as that of a member of the company during
-1594–7 is that of Thomas Downton; but it may safely be accepted.
-Downton had accompanied Alleyn on the provincial tour with Strange’s
-men in 1593. So had Pigge or Pyk. Jones and Donstone, who is the same
-as Tunstall, had belonged to Worcester’s men in 1583, and probably to
-the Admiral’s men before 1590; Jones had been abroad, as we have seen,
-during the plague years. John Singer had been a member of the Queen’s
-men in 1588. The other names now come into the story for the first
-time. Henslowe’s advances for 1596 included sums ‘to feache Fletcher’
-and ‘to feache Browne’.[397] It can only be matter of conjecture
-whether there is evidence here of negotiations for the incorporation in
-the company of Robert Browne and of Laurence Fletcher, at a later date
-a colleague of Slater’s, and if so, whether they led to any fruitful
-result.
-
-The departure of Martin Slater on 18 July 1597 was only one of several
-changes which profoundly modified the composition of the company in
-the course of that year.[398] In February Richard Jones and Thomas
-Downton went to the Swan as Pembroke’s men, and the disturbance thereby
-caused probably accounts for the three weeks’ cessation of playing
-during Lent. The Swan enterprise was brought to a disastrous conclusion
-after five months by the production of _The Isle of Dogs_, which not
-only brought personal trouble on the chief offenders, but also led to
-a restraint of plays at all the theatres. This event synchronizes with
-the first appearance in the diary of Nashe’s collaborator in _The Isle
-of Dogs_, Ben Jonson. On 28 July Henslowe lent him no less a sum than
-£4, and took Alleyn and Singer as witnesses. On the same day he opened
-an account headed ‘℞ of Bengemenes Johnsones share as ffoloweth’ with
-a first instalment of 3_s._ 9_d._[399] On this very day of 28 July
-the Privy Council’s inhibition fell, and Jonson went to prison and
-paid no more instalments. It is impossible to say whether his ‘share’
-was in the Admiral’s company or in Pembroke’s. In any event, although
-he continued to write for the Admiral’s men after 1597, there is no
-further sign that he was either a ‘sharer’, or indeed an actor in any
-capacity.
-
-One result of the restraint was that Jones and Downton not merely
-returned to the Rose, but brought at least three other of Pembroke’s
-men, Robert Shaw, Gabriel Spencer, and William Bird, known also by
-the _alias_ of Borne, with them. Henslowe was thus enabled, almost
-immediately after playing stopped, to set about the reconstitution of
-his company, and the memoranda of agreement which he noted in his diary
-during the next fourteen months are so interesting for the light which
-they throw upon his relations with the actors, that I think it well,
-before discussing them, to transcribe them in full. There are in all
-eleven of them, as follows:[400]
-
-
- i. (_Thomas Hearne_)
-
- Memorandom that the 27 of Jeuley 1597 I heayred Thomas Hearne
- with ij pence for to searve me ij yeares in the qualetie of
- playenge for fyve shellynges a weacke for one yeare & vj^s
- viij^d for the other yeare which he hath covenanted hime seallfe
- to searue me & not to departe frome my companey tyll this ij
- yeares be eanded wittnes to this
-
- John Synger.
- Jeames Donston.
- Thomas Towne.
-
-
- ii. (_John Helle_)
-
- Lent John Helle the clowne the 3 of Aguste 1597 in redy money
- the some of x^s. At that tyme I bownd hime by ane a sumsett of
- ij^d to contenew with me at my howsse in playinge tylle Srafte
- tid next after the date a boue written yf not to forfytte vnto
- me fortipowndes wittneses to the same
-
- E Alleyn
- John Synger
- Jeames Donstall.
- Edward Jubey
- Samewell Rowley.
-
-
- iii. (_Richard Jones_)
-
- Memorandom that the 6 of Aguste 1597 I bownd Richard Jones by &
- a sumsett of ij^d to contenew & playe with the companye of my
- lord Admeralles players frome Mihelmase next after the daye a
- bowe written vntell the eand & tearme of iij yeares emediatly
- followinge & to playe in my howsse only known by the name of the
- Rosse & in no other howse a bowt London publicke & yf restraynte
- be granted then to go for the tyme into the contrey & after to
- retorne agayne to London yf he breacke this a sumsett then to
- forfett vnto me for the same a hundreth markes of lafull money
- of Ingland wittnes to this E Alleyn & John Midelton.
-
-
- iv. (_Robert Shaw_)
-
- More over Richard Jones at that tyme [6 Aug. 1597] hath tacken
- one other ij^d of me vpon & asumset to forfet vnto me one
- hundrethe markes yf one Robart Shaee do not playe with my lordes
- Admeralles men as he hath covenanted be fore in euery thinge &
- time to the oter moste wittnes E Alleyn John Midellton.
-
-
- v. (_William Borne_)
-
- Memorandom that the 10 of Aguste 1597 William Borne came &
- ofered hime sealfe to come and playe with my lord Admeralles
- mean at my howsse called by the name of the Rosse setewate
- one the back after this order folowinge he hath receued of me
- iij^d vpon & a sumsette to forfette vnto me a hundrethe marckes
- of lafull money of Ingland yf he do not performe thes thinges
- folowinge that is presentley after libertie being granted for
- playinge to come & to playe with my lordes Admeralles men at
- my howsse aforsayd & not in any other howsse publicke a bowt
- London for the space of iij yeares beginynge imediatly after
- this restraynt is recaled by the lordes of the cownsell which
- restraynt is by the meanes of playinge the Jeylle of Dooges
- yf he do not then he forfettes this asumset afore or ells not
- wittnes to this E Alleyn & Robsone.
-
-
- vi. (_Thomas Downton_)
-
- Memorandom that the 6 of October 1597 Thomas Dowton came & bownd
- him seallfe vnto me in xxxx^{ll} in & a somesett by the receuing
- of iij^d of me before wittnes the covenant is this that he
- shold frome the daye a bove written vntell Sraftid next come
- ij yeares to playe in my howsse & in no other a bowte London
- publickely yf he do with owt my consent to forfet vnto me this
- some of money a bove written wittnes to this
-
- E Alleyn
- W^m Borne
- Dicke Jonnes
- Robarte Shawe
- John Synger
-
-
- vii. (_William Kendall_)
-
- Memorandum that this 8^{th} of December 1597 my father Philyp
- Hinshlow hierd as a covenauant servant Willyam Kendall for ij
- years after the statute of Winchester with ij single penc a to
- geue hym for his sayd servis everi week of his playng in London
- x^s & in the cuntrie v^s for the which he covenaunteth for the
- space of those ij years to be redye att all tymes to play in the
- howse of the sayd Philyp & in no other during the said terme.
-
- Wittnes my self the writer of this E Alleyn.
-
-
- viii. (_James Bristow_)
-
- Bought my boye Jeames Brystow of William Agusten player the 18
- of Desember 1597 for viij^{li}.
-
-
- ix. (_Richard Alleyn_)
-
- Memorandom that this 25 of Marche 1598 Richard Alleyne came &
- bownde hime seallfe vnto me for ij yeares in & asumsette as a
- hiered servante with ij syngell pence & to contenew frome the
- daye aboue written vnto the eand & tearme of ij yeares yf he do
- not performe this covenant then he to forfette for the breache
- of yt fortye powndes & wittnes to this
-
- W^m Borne.
- Thomas Dowton.
- Gabrell Spencer.
- Robart Shawe.
- Richard Jonnes.
-
-
- x. (_Thomas Heywood_)
-
- Memorandom that this 25 of Marche 1598 Thomas Hawoode came and
- hiered hime seallfe with me as a covenante searvante for ij
- yeares by the receuenge of ij syngell pence acordinge to the
- statute of Winshester & to begine at the daye a boue written &
- not to playe any wher publicke a bowt London not whille these ij
- yeares be expired but in my howsse yf he do then he doth forfett
- vnto me by the receuinge of these ij^d fortie powndes & wittnes
- to this
-
- Antony Monday
- Gabrell Spencer
- Robart Shawe
- Richard Alleyn.
- W^m Borne
- Thomas Dowton
- Richard Jonnes.
-
-
- xi. (_Charles Massey and Samuel Rowley_)
-
- Memorandom that this 16 of November 1598 I hired as my covenant
- servantes Charles Massey & Samewell Rowley for a yeare & as
- mvche as to Sraftide begenynge at the daye a bove written after
- the statute of Winchester with ij syngell pence & for them they
- haue covenanted with me to playe in my howes & in no other
- howsse dewringe the thime publeck but in mine yf they dooe with
- owt my consent yf they dooe to forfett vnto me xxxx^{li} a pece
- wittnes
- Thomas Dowton
- Robart Shawe
- W^m Borne
- Jubey
- Richard Jonnes.
-
-Evidently the position of James Bristow is distinct from that of the
-other players. He was a ‘boy’ or apprentice, whose indentures had been
-transferred to Henslowe for a consideration by his former master. In
-the rest of the cases, the essence of the agreement appears to be the
-undertaking by the player under bond to play only with the Admiral’s
-men at Henslowe’s house. It is interesting to notice that in the
-agreement with Hearne Henslowe calls the company ‘my company’; and the
-fact that its members were constituted Henslowe’s covenant servants
-seems to argue a closer personal relation between the organization
-and its financier, than might on other grounds have been inferred.
-Dr. Greg, indeed, draws a distinction between the agreements with
-Jones, Shaw, Borne, and Downton, whom he regards as merely ‘binding
-themselves to play at Henslowe’s house like other sharers’, and those
-with the rest, whom he regards as ‘placing themselves in the position
-of covenant servants to him, which would seem to imply that they
-were merely hired men’.[401] But I do not think that there is any
-justification for this theory in the terms of the documents, and it
-immediately gets Dr. Greg into difficulties about Massey and Rowley,
-who, as we shall see, were in fact on the footing of full members of
-the company even before the date of their agreement. I do not mean
-that I deny the distinction between sharers and hired men, which is of
-course important, but that I do not think that it is relevant to the
-contractual relations set up by the agreements. I am not quite clear
-whether Henslowe’s memoranda, which are written throughout, including
-the names of the witnesses, in his own hand or Alleyn’s, constitute
-the formal instruments under which the agreements were effected, or
-are merely notes for his own information. But in either event their
-terminology is loose. They are not always expressed as being agreements
-of hiring, or for service, even in the cases of those men whom Dr.
-Greg does not suppose to have been sharers, and they are not careful
-to specify the considerations, other than the formal 2_d._ or 3_d._,
-which the actors were to receive. Wages are, in fact, provided for only
-in the agreements with Hearne and Kendall, and it is quite possible
-that, if we had the full terms before us, we should find that, while
-some of the others were also to receive wages, some were to find their
-recompense in a share of such profits as the company might make. It is
-probable that, even where Henslowe undertook to pay wages, the general
-agreement between him and the company provided for the shifting of that
-liability to them. They certainly had to pay him, at the rate of 3_s._
-a week, for the services of his boy Bristow.[402] To a slightly later
-date belongs an agreement with an unnamed actor, in which the hirer is
-not Henslowe but Thomas Downton, and this I add in order to complete
-the series.[403]
-
-
- xii.
-
- Thomas Downton the 25 of Janewary 1599 ded hire as his couenante
- servante ---- for ij yers to begyne at Shrofe Tewesday next & he
- to geue hime viij^s a wecke as longe as they playe & after they
- lye stylle one fortnyght then to geue hime hallfe wages [ extra
- spaces ]wittnes P H & Edward Browne & Charlles Masey.
-
-The appearance of Jones as guarantee for Shaw is due to the fact
-that, as a result of _The Isle of Dogs_, the latter was languishing
-with Gabriel Spencer and Ben Jonson in the Marshalsea. Meanwhile some
-at least of the company travelled. Henslowe lent Alleyn 40_s._ for
-John Singer and Thomas Towne ‘when they went into the contrey’ and
-noted that this was ‘at ther last cominge’. There is another entry
-of a small loan to Singer on 9 August, so they cannot have started
-before that; and they must have been back by 6 October, when Singer
-witnessed the agreement with Thomas Downton. Possibly Edward Dutton
-and Richard Alleyn, who also borrowed money from Henslowe, went with
-them.[404] The Privy Council warrants for the release of the prisoners
-in the Marshalsea were signed on 3 October,[405] and a few days later
-Henslowe, more successful than Langley of the Swan in getting the
-licence for his house renewed, even before the formal expiration of
-the restraint on 1 November, was in a position to resume his play list
-with the heading, ‘The xj of Octobe begane my lord Admerals & my lorde
-of Penbrockes men to play at my howsse 1597’.[406] The entries of
-plays are few and irregular up to 5 November, and then stop. A note
-is appended that on 26 November the Master of the Revels was paid for
-four weeks. The performances included one new play, _Friar Spendleton_,
-and five old ones, _Jeronimo_, _The Comedy of Humours_, _Dr. Faustus_,
-_Hardicanute_, and _Bourbon_, of which the last two do not belong to
-the 1594–7 repertory, and may have been contributed by Pembroke’s men.
-The diary also contains an account of weekly receipts running from 21
-October 1597 to 4 March 1598, under the heading, ‘A juste a cownte of
-all suche monye as I haue receyed of my lord Admeralles & my lord of
-Penbrocke men as foloweth be gynynge the 21 of October 1597’, and some
-notes of individual advances and repayments, mainly through Robert Shaw
-and Thomas Downton, on behalf of the company, from 23 October to 12
-December.[407] In the course of these the company is again described
-on 23 October and 5 November as ‘the company of my lord Admeralles
-men & my lord Penbrockes’, but on 1 December as ‘the companey of my
-lord Admeralles men’; and the substance of the whole of these advances
-is set out again, without any reference to Pembroke’s men, at the
-beginning of a continuous account from 21 October onwards, which is
-headed, ‘A juste a cownt of all suche money as I haue layd owt for my
-lord Admeralles players begynyng the xj of October whose names ar as
-foloweth Borne Gabrell Shaw Jonnes Dowten Jube Towne Synger & the ij
-Geffes’.[408] Nothing very certain is known of the previous career of
-Humphrey and Anthony Jeffes, but if the former is the ‘Humfrey’ who
-appears with ‘Gabriel’ [Spencer] in the stage-directions to _3 Henry
-VI_ it is most likely that these men also came from Pembroke’s.[409]
-
-The responsible members of the Admiral’s company at the beginning
-of the third period of their existence were, then, so far as their
-relations to Henslowe were concerned, Thomas Downton, Richard Jones,
-Edward Juby, Thomas Towne, John Singer, Robert Shaw, William Borne, who
-seems to have had the regular _alias_ of William Bird, Gabriel Spencer,
-Humphrey Jeffes, and Anthony Jeffes. To these must probably be added
-a number of hired men, including Thomas Hearne, John Helle, William
-Kendall, Richard Alleyn, Thomas Heywood, and probably Charles Massey,
-Samuel Rowley, Thomas Hunt, and Stephen Maget the tireman, and of
-apprentices, including James Bristow and Pigge. Of the sharers Downton,
-Jones, Juby, Towne, and Singer had alone belonged to the earlier
-Admiral’s men. Slater’s departure involved the company in a lawsuit,
-the nature of which is not stated in the diary. Professor Wallace,
-however, has found an independent record of a Queen’s Bench action by
-Thomas Downton to recover £13 6_s._ 8_d._, the value of a playbook
-which Downton had lost in the parish of St. Mary le Bow on 1 December
-1597, and Slater had ‘found’, refused to surrender, and was alleged to
-have disposed of for his own profit. Damages of £10 10_s._ were awarded
-on 3 November 1598.[410] Donstone also seems to have dropped out or
-may have been dead; he witnessed Helle’s agreement on 3 August 1597,
-and thereafter no more is heard of him. But incomparably the greatest
-loss was that of Edward Alleyn, who now retired from the stage and did
-not return to it for a period of three years.[411] From 29 December
-1597 to 8 November 1598 Henslowe made notes of playing goods bought
-‘sence my sonne Edward Allen leafte [p]laynge’, and it would appear
-that the company acknowledged a debt of £50 in respect of his interest
-on retirement.[412] In place of Alleyn, it would seem that the lead was
-taken by Robert Shaw and Thomas Downton, perhaps as representing the
-two elements of which the company was made up. These two were joint
-payees for the Court money of both 1597–8 and 1598–9. For 1599–1600
-Shaw was sole payee. It was, moreover, most often, although by no means
-always, to one or other of these men that Henslowe’s advances on behalf
-of the company were made. It must be added that some of the new-comers
-appear to have sought private assistance from Henslowe in order to
-enable them to take up their shares. On 14 January 1598, he opened an
-account of sums received ‘of Humfreye Jeaffes hallfe share’, entered
-seven instalments up to 4 March, amounting to a total of 60_s._ 6_d._,
-and then noted, ‘This some was payd backe agayne vnto the companey
-of my lord Admeralles players the 8 of Marche 1598, & they shared yt
-amonste them’. There is a later account, running from 29 April to 21
-July 1598, and amounting by small instalments to 35_s._, of ‘all such
-money as I dooe receue for Umfrey Jeaffes and Antoney Jeaffes ... of
-the companey’.[413] Possibly the brothers only held a single share
-between them. A similar transaction took place with Gabriel Spencer. On
-20 April 1598 this actor gave an acknowledgement for £4 and between 6
-April and 24 June Henslowe carried to an account headed ‘℞ of Gabrell
-Spencer at severall tymes of his share in the gallereyes’ a total of
-25_s._ 6_d._, of which 5_s._ 6_d._ was paid over to Downton.[414] In
-addition, personal loans were negotiated from time to time by various
-members of the company, and the reasons given for these indicate that
-in the course of 1598, besides the dispute of the ex-Pembroke’s men
-with Langley, Bird and perhaps the company as a whole were engaged in
-litigation with Thomas Pope, presumably the actor in the Chamberlain’s
-company.[415]
-
-There does not seem to have been much further change in the composition
-of the Admiral’s men during 1597–1600. An acknowledgement of the state
-of their account with Henslowe between 8 and 13 March 1598 bears the
-signatures of ‘J. Singer, Thomas Downton, William Birde, Robt Shaa,
-Richard Jones, Gabriell Spenser, Thomas Towne, Humfry Jeffes, Charles
-Massye, and Samuell Rowlye’.[416] The last two had evidently become
-sharers in the course of the year. Juby and Anthony Jeffes do not sign,
-but this is probably due to an accident, as they were certainly sharers
-both in 1597 and in 1600.[417] Gabriel Spencer was killed by Ben Jonson
-(cf. ch. xxiii) on 22 September 1598. On 26 September Henslowe wrote
-to Alleyn at the Brill in Sussex, ‘Now to leat you vnderstand newes I
-will teall you some but yt is for me harde & heavey. Sence you weare
-with me I haue loste one of my company which hurteth me greatley;
-that is Gabrell, for he is slayen in Hogesden fylldes by the handes
-of Bengemen Jonson bricklayer’.[418] No doubt Henslowe wrote from the
-heart. Probably Spencer’s share was not yet paid for, and in addition
-small personal loans to the amount of 66_s._ stand undischarged against
-him in the diary, of which the last was on 19 May ‘to bye a plume of
-feathers which his mane Bradshawe feched of me’. Richard Bradshaw
-was an actor and may have played as a hired man with the company. A
-fragmentary ‘plot’ of _Troilus and Cressida_, probably to be dated
-in April 1599, yields the names of ‘Mr. Jones’ and his ‘boy’, Thomas
-Hunt, Stephen, Proctor, and Pigge. Mr. Jones’s boy is shown by a note
-of 17 November 1599 in the diary to have been called James.[419] Of
-Proctor no more is known. Stephen is probably Stephen Magett, the
-tireman, and Pigge was with Alleyn on the tour of Strange’s men in
-1593. He is also mentioned, with Dobe, Whittcombe, and Anderson, who
-may have been actors, in some inventories of properties belonging to
-Alleyn or to the company in March 1598.[420] Thomas Downton also had
-in June 1600 a ‘boye’ who played in _Cupid and Psyche_.[421] Another
-acknowledgement of account, dated on 10 July 1600, only differs from
-the former one by the omission of Spencer’s name and the inclusion of
-those of Juby and Anthony Jeffes.[422] The alleged manuscript notes to
-a copy of Dekker’s _Shoemaker’s Holiday_ (q.v.), produced in January
-1600, which are discredited by Dr. Greg, give the cast as composed of
-‘Jones, H. Jeffes, Rowley, Shawe, Massy, Dowton, Singer, Jewby, Towne,
-A. Jeffes, Birde, Wilson, Flower, Price, Day, Dowton’s boy Ned and
-Alleine’; the last for a female part. Certainly nothing is known of Day
-or Wilson as actors for the Admiral’s, or of Price at any such early
-date, or of Flower at all. But if the document is a forgery, it is a
-very pointless, and at the same time a very cautious one. And how did
-the forger, unless he were Collier or Cunningham, know that Day was an
-actor at all?
-
-The records kept by Henslowe for the period 1597–1600 differ
-considerably in character from those for 1594–7. The diurnal list of
-plays performed and of rent-takings disappears altogether. On the
-other hand, the records of advances made, for the books and licensing
-of plays, for costumes and properties, and for certain miscellaneous
-items of expenditure, become full and systematic. A _per contra_
-account is also kept of weekly sums received by Henslowe in repayment
-of such advances, and from time to time a balance is struck, and the
-hands of the company taken to a settlement or acknowledgement of debt.
-Henslowe’s book-keeping, however, if not exactly faulty, is not always
-sufficiently lucid to make the whole of the financial transactions
-perfectly clear. In the absence of the daily entries of performances,
-the weekly records of repayments make it possible to determine roughly
-the periods covered by the theatrical seasons.[423] The company played
-for twenty continuous weeks from 11 October 1597 to about 4 March 1598,
-apparently with some irregularity at the beginning and again about
-Christmas time. Their Court plays were on 27 December and 28 February.
-In Lent they had a three weeks’ interval, during the course of which
-they met to read a book in New Fish Street, and ‘played in Fleatstreet
-pryuat’.[424] Playing was resumed about 25 March and lasted for some
-fifteen weeks, until about 8 July, making thirty-five weeks in all
-for the year 1597–8. The company only took two weeks’ vacation in the
-summer and are not likely to have travelled, although on 27 September,
-after the new season had begun, Borne is found riding to the Lord
-Admiral at Croydon at the time of the Queen’s visit there.[425] They
-played for thirty-one weeks from about 22 July to 24 February 1599,
-with performances at Court on 27 December, 6 January and 18 February,
-and stopped for three weeks in Lent. The summer season lasted for
-eleven weeks from about 19 March to 3 June, making forty-four weeks
-playing for 1598–9. On Easter Eve Towne and Richard Alleyn went to
-Court for some unspecified purpose. About the same time Anthony Jeffes
-was making purchases against St. George’s Day.[426] The interval
-of this summer was seventeen weeks, but I have no evidence of any
-travelling. The next season was one of nineteen weeks from about 29
-September 1599 to 10 February 1600, with Court performances on 27
-December and 1 January, and was followed by a Lenten interval of
-about four weeks. At the beginning of February they bought a drum and
-trumpets ‘when to go into the contry’.[427] Whether these were for
-use during the short break in Lent or not until the following summer
-must remain uncertain; at any rate the purchase confirms the view that
-there had been no provincial tour since 1596.[428] Finally they played
-for nineteen weeks from about 2 March to 13 July, thus completing
-thirty-six weeks for 1599–1600. Apparently the summer season was
-diversified by a visit to Windsor for the Garter installation of Henri
-IV of France on 27 April.[429] In all they seem to have played for
-about 115 weeks or something under 690 days in 1597–1600, as compared
-with 728 days in 1594–7.
-
-The entries of sums paid for plays usually give the names of the
-authors as well as those of the plays, and therefore furnish a good
-deal of material for reconstituting the literary side of the company’s
-activity. Henslowe’s terminology is neither precise nor uniform, but
-it is clear that, while the payments were always entered as loans to
-the company, they were often made direct by him to the playwrights, on
-the ‘appointment’ of one or more of its members. Sometimes they are
-expressed as being ‘to bye a boocke of’ a play; that is to say, for
-the purchase outright of an old or even a new manuscript. But a new
-play was generally commissioned, upon the strength of a sample or of an
-outline of the plot, and in such cases payment was made by instalments,
-of which the earlier ones were ‘lent upon’ or ‘in earneste of’ or
-‘in parte paymente of’, and the last ‘in full paymente of’ the book.
-Portions of the manuscript were handed over as security for the earlier
-payments. Production was very rapid, and a play put together in two or
-three weeks often represented the collaboration of as many as four or
-even five or six authors. The procedure, which prevailed during the
-whole of the period covered by the diary, is illustrated by a small
-group of letters preserved amongst the miscellaneous papers found at
-Dulwich. Thus on 8 November 1599 Shaw writes with regard to _2 Henry
-Richmond_, ‘Mr. Henshlowe, we haue heard their booke and lyke yt. Their
-pryce is eight poundes, which I pray pay now to Mr. Wilson, according
-to our promysse’; and accordingly Henslowe includes in his account, by
-an entry written and signed by Wilson, a sum of £8 ‘by a note vnder the
-hand of Mr. Rob: Shaw’.[430] On 14 June 1600 Shaw writes again, ‘I pray
-you, Mr. Henshlowe, deliuer vnto the bringer hereof the some of fyue &
-fifty shillinges to make the 3^{ll} fyue shillinges which they receaued
-before full six poundes in full payment of their booke called the fayre
-Constance of Roome, whereof I pray you reserue for me Mr. Willsons
-whole share which is xj^s. which I to supply his neede deliuered him
-yesternight.’ The diary duly records the payment to Drayton, Hathway,
-Munday, and Dekker ‘at the a poyntment of Roberte Shawe’ of 44_s._[431]
-Similarly Samuel Rowley writes on 4 April 1601, ‘Mr. Hinchloe, I haue
-harde fyue shetes of a playe of the Conqueste of the Indes & I dow
-not doute but it wyll be a verye good playe; tharefore I praye ye
-delyuer them fortye shyllynges in earneste of it & take the papers into
-your one hands & on Easter eue thaye promyse to make an ende of all
-the reste’. The earnest and several supplementary earnests were paid
-to Day, Haughton, and Smith, but the completion of the play lagged
-until the following September.[432] An undated letter of Rowley’s
-relates to the withdrawal of a play, ‘Mr. Hynchlo, I praye ye let Mr.
-Hathwaye haue his papars agayne of the playe of John a Gante & for the
-repayement of the monye back agayne he is contente to gyue ye a byll
-of his hande to be payde at some cartayne tyme as in your dyscressyon
-yow shall thinke good; which done ye may crose it oute of your boouke
-& keepe the byll; or else wele stande so much indetted to you & kepe
-the byll our selues’. Henslowe appears to have thought it safer to
-adopt the second alternative, as incomplete payments to the amount of
-£1 19_s._ 0_d._ for _The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt_ still
-stand in his ‘boouke’.[433] Other letters of the same kind concern _Six
-Yeomen of the West_, and _Too Good to be True_.[434] The normal price
-for a new play during 1597–1601 seems to have been £6, but sometimes it
-fell to £5 or possibly even £4, and sometimes the playwrights succeeded
-in squeezing out a few shillings more. One or two of them, notably
-Chapman, were able to secure a higher rate from the beginning; and
-about 1599 a general tendency towards a higher scale of prices becomes
-discernible. The ‘book’ of an old play could generally be purchased for
-about £2.
-
-In attempting to estimate the actual ‘output’ of the company, one
-is faced by the difficulty that some of the plays commissioned are
-not shown by the diary to have reached the stage of payment in full,
-and that it must, therefore, remain doubtful whether they were ever
-completed. It is possible that, as Dr. Greg thinks,[435] some of the
-payments were made direct by the company, instead of through Henslowe.
-But the correspondence just quoted rather suggests that any such
-arrangement would be exceptional; and it would not be inconsistent with
-human nature, if the extremely out-at-elbows men of letters who hung
-about the Rose occasionally found it profitable to take their ‘earnest’
-for a play, and then to find plausible reasons for indefinitely
-delaying its completion. Probably in the long run they had to account
-for the advance, but the example of _The Conquest of Spain_ shows that
-such a repayment would not necessarily find its way into Henslowe’s
-account. This view is borne out by an examination of the affairs of
-one of the most impecunious of them all, Henry Chettle, during 1598–9.
-During the first six months of the year, he had a hand in half a dozen
-plays, all of which were completed and paid for in full. But on one of
-these, _1 Black Bateman of the North_, Henslowe appears, perhaps by
-an oversight, to have paid him £1 too much. At the beginning of May
-£1 was lent to Chettle upon this play, and the loan does not appear
-to have been considered when, on 22 May, a further sum of £6 was laid
-out upon ‘a boocke called Blacke Battmane of the North ... which coste
-sixe powndes’. On 24 June Chettle borrowed 10_s._, not apparently on
-any particular play, and Henslowe seems then to have recalled the
-overpayment, and noted against Chettle’s name in the diary, ‘All his
-parte of boockes to this place are payde which weare dew unto hime & he
-reastes be syddes in my deatte the some of xxx^s.’ Chettle collaborated
-in several other plays, which got completed during the year, but no
-deduction seems to have been made from his share of the fees in respect
-of this debt. In addition he had £5 upon _A Woman’s Tragedy_, upon
-condition ‘eather to deliver the playe or els to paye the mony with in
-one forthnyght’; he had 5_s._ in earnest upon _Catiline’s Conspiracy_;
-and he had £1 14_s._ 0_d._ in earnest upon _Brute_, probably a
-continuation of an older _1 Brute_ bought by the company. When the
-last payment on _Brute_ was made on 16 September Henslowe noted, ‘Hary
-Cheattell vntell this place owes vs viij^{li} ix^s dew al his boockes
-& recknynges payd’. This amount is precisely made up of the 30_s._ due
-on 24 June and the sums paid on account of these three plays. By 22
-October Chettle had completed _2 Brute_ and managed somehow to get £6
-for it in full. On the same day he gave Henslowe an acknowledgement of
-a debt, not of £8 9_s._ 0_d._, but of £9 9_s._ 0_d._ In November he
-got an earnest of £1 for _Tis no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver_, and
-£1 for ‘mending’ _Robin Hood_, and in January 1599 30_s._ ‘to paye his
-charges in the Marshallsey’. Small loans of a shilling or two are also
-noted in the margin of the book, and appear to be quite distinct from
-the company’s account with him, and to indicate private generosities of
-Henslowe. In February 1599 Chettle had finished _Polyphemus_, and it is
-recorded that in full payment of £6 he got £2 10_s._ down, ‘& strocken
-of his deatte which he owes vnto the companey fyftye shelenges more’.
-A separate entry in the diary indicates that he paid off yet another
-10_s._ out of his fee for _The Spencers_ in March.[436] Material is
-not available for the further tracing of this particular chain of
-transactions, but the inference that credit obtained for an unfinished
-play had sometimes to be redeemed out of the profits of a finished one
-is irresistible. Chettle, at least, does not seem to have been hardly
-treated, but obviously the unbusinesslike methods of the playwrights
-kept down the price of plays, and a familiar device of the modern
-Barabbas was anticipated when Henry Porter was obliged, on the receipt
-of an earnest, to give Henslowe ‘his faythfulle promysse that I shold
-haue alle the boockes which he writte ether him sellfe or with any
-other’.[437] Whatever Henslowe’s precise financial relations with the
-company may have been, by the way, he seems to have been in a position
-to pose as paymaster, so far as the poets were concerned.
-
-On the whole, I think it must be concluded that, if the diary fails
-to record payments to the amount of at least £5 for a new play, there
-is _prima facie_ evidence that that play never got itself finished.
-Occasionally, of course, apparently incomplete payments may be
-explained by the fact that the same play is entered under more than
-one name. Occasionally, also, a particular play may have been tacitly
-debited with payments not specifically expressed in the diary to have
-been made in respect of that play. Thus a sum of £2 paid on 4 February
-1598 ‘to dise charge Mr. Dicker owt of the cownter in the Powltrey’
-was probably treated as an instalment of the price of _Phaethon_ on
-which Dekker was then working, and for which otherwise only £4 is
-entered. Another sum of £3 10_s._ paid on 30 January 1599 ‘to descarge
-Thomas Dickers frome the a reaste of my lord Chamberlens men’ seems
-similarly to have gone towards _The First Introduction of the Civil
-Wars of France_. And Haughton probably got 10_s._ less than he would
-otherwise have done for _Ferrex and Porrex_, because he had required
-a loan of that amount on 10 March 1600, ‘to releace him owt of the
-Clyncke’.[438] The record, again, for a few plays is most likely
-rendered imperfect by the loss of a leaf or two from the manuscript,
-which once contained entries for the end of April and beginning of May
-1599.[439] When these factors have been taken into consideration, the
-resultant total of possibly unfinished plays is not a very large one,
-amounting for 1597–1600 on my calculation to not more than twenty as
-against fifty-six new plays duly completed and paid for in full. Of
-these twenty it is very likely that some were in fact finished, either
-for other companies, or for the Admiral’s men themselves, later than
-the period covered by the diary. It is, however, consonant with the
-literary temperament to suppose that some at least remained within the
-category of unrealized projects. The most puzzling problem is that of
-Haughton’s _A Woman will have her Will_. For this it is impossible to
-trace payments beyond £2 10_s._, and these are not stated to be in
-full. Yet the play is not only now extant but was certainly extant in
-1598. In this case I see no alternative to Dr. Greg’s theory of direct
-payments by the company.
-
-Henslowe’s notes of advances to authors are not the sole material
-which is available for drawing up an account of the repertory of the
-Admiral’s men. There are also entries of the purchase of costumes
-and properties for certain plays, and of fees for the licensing of
-plays by the Master of the Revels. And there is a valuable series of
-inventories, formerly preserved at Dulwich, and dating from 1598, which
-record respectively the stock of apparel and properties in the hands of
-the Admiral’s men during the second week of March, their play-books at
-the same date, and the additions made out of Henslowe’s purchases up
-to about the following August.[440] The theory that some of the plays
-recorded in the diary were never finished receives confirmation from
-the absence of any corroborative proof of their existence in these
-subsidiary entries and documents, whereas such evidence exists in
-the case of a very large proportion of the plays for which the diary
-records payment in full. It must not, however, be assumed, either that
-every play completed necessarily got produced, although it is not
-likely that many were withheld, or that a play was necessarily not
-produced, because no special apparel or properties were bought for it,
-since it may have been quite possible to mount some plays out of the
-company’s existing stock. The number of fees paid for licensing is so
-small in proportion to the number of plays certainly produced, that
-these fees cannot all be supposed to have passed through Henslowe’s
-hands.
-
-Subject to the difficulties discussed in the foregoing paragraphs, I
-think that the following is a fairly accurate account of the repertory
-of the company for the three years now in question.[441] During 1597–8
-they purchased seventeen new plays. These, with the names of their
-authors, were:
-
- _Mother Redcap_ (Drayton and Munday).
- _Phaethon_ (Dekker).
- _1 Robin Hood_ (Munday).
- _2 Robin Hood_ (Chettle and Munday).
- _The Triangle of Cuckolds_ (Dekker).[442]
- _The Welshman’s Prize_, or, _The Famous Wars of Henry I and the
- Prince of Wales_ (Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton).[443]
- _1 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons_ (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton,
- and Wilson).
- _2 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons_ (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton,
- and Wilson).
- _King Arthur_ (Hathway).
- _Love Prevented_ (Porter).[444]
- _A Woman will have her Will_ (Haughton).
- _1 Black Bateman of the North_ (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and
- Wilson).
- _2 Black Bateman of the North_ (Chettle and Wilson).
- _The Madman’s Morris_ (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).
- _The Funeral of Richard Cœur de Lion_ (Chettle, Drayton, Munday,
- and Wilson).
- _Hannibal and Hermes_ (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).[445]
- _Valentine and Orson_ (Hathway and Munday).
-
-There is evidence of the actual performance of _Mother Redcap_,
-_Phaethon_ (January), _1 and 2 Robin Hood_ (March), _1 Earl Godwin_
-(April), _King Arthur_ (May), _2 Earl Godwin_ (June), _1 Black Bateman_
-(June). Properties were bought for _The Madman’s Morris_ in July, and
-the next season probably opened with it. To the new plays must be added
-_Friar Spendleton_, produced as ‘ne’ on 31 October, and _Dido and
-Aeneas_. A loan of 30_s._ on 8 January ‘when they fyrst played Dido at
-nyght’ suggests a supper, not a night performance. Either play may have
-been purchased at the end of 1596–7, or may have come from Pembroke’s
-stock. The same applies to _Branholt_ and _Alice Pierce_, which were
-probably new when properties were purchased for them in November and
-December. The company also bought on 12 December two jigs from two
-young men, for which they paid 6_s._ 8_d._ Hardly any of the 1597–8
-new plays are extant. The two parts of _Robin Hood_ are _The Downfall
-of Robert Earl of Huntingdon_, and _The Death of Robert Earl of
-Huntingdon_, printed without Munday’s name as Admiral’s plays in 1601.
-Haughton’s _A Woman will have her Will_ was entered on the Stationers’
-Register on 3 August 1601, and printed with the alternative title of
-_Englishmen for my Money_ in 1616. _Phaethon_ probably underlies Dekker
-and Ford’s _The Sun’s Darling_, and it is a plausible conjecture of
-Mr. Fleay’s that _Love Prevented_ may be _1 The Two Angry Women of
-Abingdon_, printed as an Admiral’s play in 1599, and not to be traced
-elsewhere in the diary. The payments for four plays during the year,
-besides the puzzling _A Woman will have her Will_, were incomplete. I
-take it that the £2 paid to Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson for
-_Pierce of Exton_ was transferred to the account for _2 Earl Godwin_,
-which otherwise lacks just that amount of the full £6; that Chettle
-failed to deliver _A Woman’s Tragedy_; that Chapman’s _Isle of a
-Woman_ was held over until 1598–9; and that a projected tragedy of Ben
-Jonson’s was similarly held over, and then indefinitely postponed owing
-to the tragedy in real life of Spencer’s death. There are two entries
-with regard to this. On 3 December 1597, Henslowe lent Jonson 20_s._
-‘vpon a boocke which he showed the plotte vnto the company which he
-promysed to deliver vnto the company at Cryssmas next’. On 23 October
-1598, a month after the duel, not Jonson, but Chapman, received £3
-‘one his playe boocke & ij ectes of a tragedie of Bengemenes plotte’.
-I think that Chapman’s own play was _The Four Kings_ and that he
-finished it in 1599; but I see no sign that he ever did anything with
-‘Bengemenes plotte’.
-
-Of older plays the Admiral’s revived at the beginning of the year
-Chapman’s success of the previous spring, _The Comedy of Humours_; also
-the perennial _Dr. Faustus_, and two pieces which, as they formed no
-part of the 1594–7 repertory, may have been brought in by Pembroke’s
-men, _Hardicanute_ and _Bourbon_. They bought for £8 from Martin
-Slater _1 and 2 Hercules_, _Phocas_, _Pythagoras_, and _Alexander and
-Lodowick_, all of which had been produced between May 1595 and January
-1597, and had evidently been retained by Slater when he left the
-company. These books presumably do not include that which became the
-subject of the lawsuit between Slater and the Admiral’s men, and as
-they had afterwards to buy back some of their old books in a precisely
-similar way from Alleyn, it is probable that a retiring member of
-the company had a right to claim a partition of the repertory. They
-also bought _The Cobler of Queenhithe_,[446] and from Robert Lee,
-formerly of the Admiral’s men and afterwards of Queen Anne’s, _The
-Miller_. But of these seven purchased plays, the only one that they
-can be proved to have revived is one of the _Hercules_ plays, for
-which they bought properties in July. The book-inventory shows that
-they had plays called _Black Joan_ and _Sturgflattery_,[447] also
-possibly from Pembroke’s stock; and the property-inventories that
-they had properties and clothes, if not in all cases books,[448] for
-_The Battle of Alcazar_[449] and for a number of pieces staged during
-1594–7, including _Mahomet_,[450] _Tamburlaine_,[451] _The Jew of
-Malta_,[452] _1 Fortunatus_,[453] _The Siege of London_,[454] _Belin
-Dun_,[455] _Tasso’s Melancholy_,[456] _1 Caesar and Pompey_,[457] _The
-Wise Man of West Chester_,[458] _The Set at Maw_,[459] _Olympo_,[460]
-_Henry V_,[461] _Longshanks_,[462] _Troy_,[463] _Vortigern_,[464]
-_Guido_,[465] _Uther Pendragon_.[466] To these must be added _Pontius
-Pilate_,[467] revived in 1601 and perhaps from the Pembroke’s stock,
-and others now unidentifiable.[468] As the company revived _The Blind
-Beggar of Alexandria_ in 1601 they probably had this also.[469]
-
-The new plays purchased in 1598–9 were twenty-one in number:
-
- _Pierce of Winchester_ (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).
- _Hot Anger Soon Cold_ (Chettle, Jonson, and Porter).
- _Chance Medley_ (Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and
- Wilson).[470]
- _Worse Afeared than Hurt_ (Dekker and Drayton).[471]
- _1 Civil Wars of France_ (Dekker and Drayton).
- _The Fount of New Fashions_ (Chapman).[472]
- _2 The Conquest of Brute_, or, _Brute Greenshield_
- (Chettle).[473]
- _Connan, Prince of Cornwall_ (Dekker and Drayton).
- _2 Civil Wars of France_ (Dekker and Drayton).
- _3 Civil Wars of France_ (Dekker and Drayton).
- _The Four Kings_ (Chapman).[474]
- _War without Blows and Love without Suit_ (Heywood).[475]
- _First Introduction of the Civil Wars of France_ (Dekker).
- _2 Two Angry Women of Abingdon_ (Porter).
- _Joan as Good as my Lady_ (Heywood)
- _Friar Fox and Gillian of Brentford_ (Anon.).
- _The Spencers_ (Chettle and Porter).
- _Troy’s Revenge and the Tragedy of Polyphemus_ (Chettle).
- _Troilus and Cressida_ (Chettle and Dekker).
- _Agamemnon_, or, _Orestes Furious_ (Chettle and Dekker).[476]
- _The World Runs on Wheels_, or, _All Fools but the Fool_
- (Chapman).[477]
-
-The property and licence entries only make it possible to trace
-the actual performance during the year of _Pierce of Winchester_
-(October), _1 and 2 Civil Wars of France_ (October and November),
-_The Fount of New Fashions_ (November), _2 Angry Women of Abingdon_
-(February), _2 Conquest of Brute_ (March), _The Four Kings_ (March),
-_The Spencers_ (April), and _Agamemnon_ (June). Probably, in view of
-the extant fragment of a ‘plot’ _Troilus and Cressida_ should be added.
-The production of _Troy’s Revenge_ was deferred until the following
-October. No one of this year’s new plays is extant, unless, as is
-possible, _All Fools but the Fool_ was an early form of Chapman’s _All
-Fools_.[478] Earnests were paid in the course of 1598–9 for _Catiline’s
-Conspiracy_ (Chettle), _Tis no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver_
-(Chettle), _William Longsword_[479] (Drayton), _Two Merry Women of
-Abingdon_ (Porter), and an unnamed pastoral tragedy by Chapman, but
-there is no reason to suppose that any one of these was ever finished.
-On 9 August 1598 Munday had 10s. in earnest of an unnamed comedy ‘for
-the corte’ and Drayton gave his word for the book to be done in a
-fortnight, but the project must have been dropped, as the entry was
-cancelled. Of old plays the company revived in August _Vayvode_, in
-November _The Massacre at Paris_, in which Bird played the Guise,[480]
-in December _1 The Conquest of Brute_, bought from John Day, and in
-March _Alexander and Lodowick_, bought from Martin Slater in the
-preceding year. As to _Vayvode_, the entries are rather puzzling. In
-August Chettle received £1 ‘for his playe of Vayvode’, and the purchase
-of properties show that the production took place. But in the following
-January there was a payment of £2 to Alleyn ‘for the playe of Vayvod
-for the company’. Possibly Alleyn had some rights in the manuscript,
-which were at first overlooked. On 25 November Chettle had 10_s._
-‘for mendinge of Roben Hood for the corte’. Either _1_ or _2_ _Robin
-Hood_ was therefore probably the play given on 6 January 1599. At the
-beginning of the year the company bought _Mulmutius Dunwallow_ from
-William Rankins and another old play called _Tristram of Lyons_, but it
-must be uncertain whether they played them. A reference in Guilpin’s
-_Skialetheia_ suggests that _The Spanish Tragedy_ may have been on the
-boards of the Rose not long before September 1598.[481]
-
-The new plays completed during 1599–1600, twenty in all, were:
-
- _The Gentle Craft_ (Dekker).[482]
- _Bear a Brain_ (Dekker).[483]
- _Page of Plymouth_ (Dekker and Jonson).
- _Robert II_, or, _The Scot’s Tragedy_ (Chettle, Dekker, Jonson,
- and Marston).[484]
- _The Stepmother’s Tragedy_ (Chettle and Dekker).
- _1 Sir John Oldcastle_ (Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson).
- _Cox of Collumpton_ (Day and Haughton).
- _2 Henry Richmond_ (Wilson).
- _2 Sir John Oldcastle_ (Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson).
- _Patient Grissell_ (Chettle, Dekker, and Haughton).
- _The Whole History of Fortunatus_ (Dekker).
- _Thomas Merry_, or, _Beech’s Tragedy_ (Day and Haughton).
- _Jugurtha_ (Boyle).[485]
- _The Seven Wise Masters_ (Chettle, Day, Dekker, and Haughton).
- _Ferrex and Porrex_ (Haughton).
- _Cupid and Psyche_, or, _The Golden Ass_ (Chettle, Day, and
- Dekker).
- _Damon and Pythias_ (Chettle).
- _Strange News out of Poland_ (Haughton and Pett).
- _1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ (Chettle and Day).
- _1 Fair Constance of Rome_ (Dekker, Drayton, Hathway, Munday,
- and Wilson).
-
-It is possible to verify the actual performance of _Page of Plymouth_
-(September), _1 Sir John Oldcastle_ (November),[486] Fortunatus
-(December), _The Gentle Craft_ (January), _Thomas Merry_ (January),
-_Patient Grissell_ (January), _2 Sir John Oldcastle_ (March), _The
-Seven Wise Masters_ (March), _Ferrex and Porrex_ (May), _Damon and
-Pythias_ (May), _Strange News out of Poland_ (May), _Cupid and
-Psyche_ (June). _Sir John Oldcastle_ must of course be regarded as
-a counterblast to the _Henry IV_ plays of the Chamberlain’s men,
-in which the character of Falstaff originally bore the name of the
-Lollard hero. One infers that it had a considerable success, for the
-company gave 10s. for ‘Mr. Mundaye and the reste of the poets at the
-playnge of Sr John Oldcastell the ferste tyme’, and Henslowe notes
-in the margin that this was ‘as a gefte’. It is with some hesitation
-that I have included _Fortunatus_ in the list of new plays, because
-it is impossible to suppose that it was not based upon the earlier
-_Fortunatus_, already an old play in 1596, of the properties of which
-the Admiral’s men certainly retained possession. But Dekker was paid on
-the scale of a new play, for he got a full £6 in the course of November
-for the book, together with an additional £1 ‘for the altrenge of the
-boocke’ and £2 a fortnight later ‘for the eande of Fortewnatus for the
-corte’. I take it that this was the Court play of 27 December. That of
-1 January was another of Dekker’s, _The Gentle Craft_, also called _The
-Shoemaker’s Holiday_, which was published in the year ‘1600’ as played
-before the Queen ‘on New Year’s Day at night last’ by the Admiral’s
-men. _Fortunatus_, _1 Sir John Oldcastle_,[486] _Patient Grissell_,
-and _1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ have also been preserved, while
-the publication, also in the course of the twelve months ending on 24
-March 1601, of _Look About You_ as an Admiral’s play must surely render
-plausible the hypothesis, rejected by Dr. Greg, of its identity with
-_Bear a Brain_. It would seem that _Thomas Merry_ furnishes one of the
-two parallel plots of Robert Yarington’s _Two Lamentable Tragedies_,
-and a notice by Simon Forman suggests that _Cox of Collumpton_ was
-ultimately finished.[487] An outline of the opening scenes of _2 Henry
-Richmond_ is among the Dulwich papers.[488] Publication was a form of
-popularity which the actors were apt to resent. The Admiral’s men spent
-£2 on 18 March 1600 ‘to geue vnto the printer to staye the printing
-of Patient Gresell’. This did not prevent the play being entered on
-the Stationers’ Register on 28 March, but does perhaps explain why the
-earliest known edition is dated 1603. The unfinished plays of 1599–1600
-were _The Poor Man’s Paradise_ (Haughton), _The Orphans’ Tragedy_
-(Chettle),[489] an unnamed Italian tragedy by Day, _The Arcadian
-Virgin_ (Chettle and Haughton), _Owen Tudor_ (Drayton, Hathway, Munday,
-and Wilson), _Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight_ (Dekker),[490] _The
-Spanish Moor’s Tragedy_ (Day, Dekker, and Haughton),[491] _The English
-Fugitives_ (Haughton), _The Devil and his Dame_ (Haughton),[492] _The
-Wooing of Death_ (Chettle), _Judas_ (Haughton),[493] _2 Fair Constance
-of Rome_ (Hathway), and an unnamed play by Chettle and Day.[494] Except
-in so far as _Fortunatus_ was an old play, I find no trace of a revival
-during 1599–1600, but it may be assumed that some of the productions of
-the last two years still held the boards.
-
-The year 1600 was another turning-point in the history of the company.
-Probably at some date between 14 August, when the first entry in a
-fresh account was made, and 28 October, when Pembroke’s men were in
-occupation of the Rose, they crossed the river, and took up their
-quarters at Alleyn’s recently built Fortune, on the north-west boundary
-of the City. A more important event still was the return of Alleyn
-himself to the stage, from which he had been absent for three years.
-It is suggested in the Privy Council letter of 8 April 1600 to the
-Middlesex justices in favour of the Fortune project, that this step
-was determined by the personal wish of the Queen to see the great
-actor at Court with his fellows again.[495] It is not quite clear on
-what terms he rejoined the company. There was a ‘composicion’ or
-agreement, in connexion with which a payment of £4 was made to him
-on 11 November. The next entry, which is undated, runs, ‘P^d vnto my
-sonne Alleyn for the firste weckes playe the xj parte of xvij^{ll} ix^s
-which came to therti & ij shellinges’. There are no further entries
-of the same kind until the date of a reckoning in February 1602, when
-Henslowe paid Alleyn 27_s._ 6_d._ ‘dew to my sone out of the gallery
-money’. Probably this was a share of some small residue, the origin of
-which cannot now be traced. The earlier payment suggests that Alleyn
-received one full share of the actors’ takings, for, if I am right in
-supposing that the brothers Jeffes only held half a share each, there
-would have been just ten sharers besides himself. Or possibly his share
-may have been limited to the actors’ moiety of the gallery takings,
-and the outgoings may all have been charged to the receipts from the
-yard. Certainly Alleyn does not seem to have had any responsibility for
-these outgoings. His name is never put with those of other sharers to
-Henslowe’s periodical reckonings, and if his play-books were used, they
-were bought from him. On the other hand, he sometimes, although not so
-often as some of his fellows, ‘appointed’ payments, and he received the
-Court money for the company, alike in 1601, 1602, and 1603. That his
-share did not pass through Henslowe’s hands after the date of the first
-instalment is perhaps explained by the assumption that, as the owner
-and joint occupier with Henslowe of the Fortune, the appointment of a
-‘gatherer’ for the gallery money may naturally have fallen to him.
-
-Some such change in the financial arrangements may also account for the
-fact that, while Henslowe’s record of advances continues on the same
-lines as that for 1597–1600, the notes of weekly repayments are now
-discontinued. As a result it is no longer possible to determine with
-any exactness the length of the theatrical seasons, since, naturally
-enough, the outgoings did not altogether stop while the house was
-closed. Their course, however, suggests intervals in February and March
-1601, February to April 1602, August 1602 and January and February
-1603. It is possible, although not very likely, that there was no
-cessation of playing during the summer of 1601. I find no evidence of
-further provincial travels before the end of the reign. These were, I
-think, years of prosperity. The players still required small personal
-advances from time to time, and Thomas Towne was reduced to pawning
-a pair of stockings on 13 March 1602.[496] But it is noticeable that
-about the previous June Henslowe opened an account under the heading,
-‘Begininge to receue of thes meane ther privet deates which they owe
-vnto me’, and was able to enter in it a series of repayments by Jones,
-Downton, Bird, and Shaw.[497] Bird, however, still owed £10 10_s._
-on 12 March 1602, and Henslowe noted, ‘He is cleere of all debtes &
-demaundes except theis debtes and such stocke & covenentes as I maie
-clayme & challendge of him by reason of his coniunction with the
-companie’.[498] Whether the playwrights reaped any benefit may be
-doubted. The tendency to a rise of prices which showed itself in 1599
-was hardly maintained. Some of them were still impecunious enough.
-The company had, on more than one occasion to redeem a play which the
-unfortunate Chettle had pawned with one Bromfield, a mercer; and in
-March 1602 he seems to have followed Porter’s example and put his hand,
-for a consideration of £3, to an instrument binding him to write for
-them alone.[499] There were some legal troubles in the course of 1601.
-A sum of £21 10_s._ had to be paid on a bond to a Mr. Treheren during
-March, and in August there were fees to a jury and a clerk of assizes.
-The company had also to find 10_s._ in May ‘to geatte the boye into
-the ospetalle which was hurt at the Fortewne’.[500] Information as to
-the composition of the company at some time between Alleyn’s return
-and February 1602 is given by the ‘plot’ of _The Battle of Alcazar_,
-although, as this is mutilated, it must not be treated as negative
-evidence, and in particular the names of W. Borne and John Singer are
-missing.[501] All the other sharers, however, are found in it--‘Mr. Ed.
-Allen, Mr. Doughton, Mr. Juby, Mr. Shaa, Mr. Jones, Mr. Towne, Antony
-Jeffes, H. Jeffes, Mr. Charles [Massey], and Mr. Sam [Rowley]’. There
-are also Mr. Rich. Allen and Mr. Hunt, who were not sharers, but whose
-long service had apparently earned them the dignity of the ‘Mr.’, W.
-Kendall, Jeames, who was possibly Henslowe’s apprentice James Bristow
-and possibly Jones’s boy of the same name, and Dob, who was probably
-the Dobe of the 1598 inventory. The remaining names, all of which
-are new, are those of W. Cartwright, who, however, had witnessed a
-loan for Henslowe as far back as 21 April 1598,[502] Dick Jubie, Ro.
-Tailor, George Somerset, Tho. Drum, [Thomas] Parsons, Harry, and the
-‘boys’ of Mr. Allen and Mr. Towne. The only important woman’s part,
-that of Callipolis, is assigned by the ‘plot’ to Pisano, which does
-not look like an actor’s name and may be a mistake. The services of
-Bristow were evidently leased out by Henslowe to the company or some
-one of its members, at a rate of 3_s._ a week. Antony Jeffes paid two
-weeks’ arrears ‘for my boyes Jeames wages’ in August 1600, and Henslowe
-charged the company £6 10_s._ on the same account in the following
-February.[503] Another boy attached to the company about the same time
-must have been ‘Nick’, for whom hose ‘to tumbell in be fore the quen’
-were bought on 25 December 1601. Hugh Davis, for the mending of whose
-tawny coat ‘which was eatten with the rattes’ 6_s._ 7_d._ was paid
-in November 1601, was perhaps a hired man. A list of the responsible
-members of the company is attached by Henslowe to a reckoning cast
-between 7 and 23 February 1602. They were then ‘John Singer, Thomas
-Downton, William Byrd, Edward Juby, Thomas Towne, Humphrey Jeffs,
-Anthony Jeffs, Samuel Rowley, and Charles Massy’.[504] A note is added
-that £50 had been advanced ‘to geve vnto Mr. Jonnes & Mr. Shaw at
-ther goinge a waye’. This departure must have been quite recent. Shaw
-had been agent for the company on the previous 21 January, and the
-list of continuing members is in fact in his handwriting. The last
-instalment of Jones’s private debt had been paid off on 1 November.
-His three years’ agreement with Henslowe had expired at Michaelmas
-1600. Richard Alleyn must have died in September 1602, for on the
-19th of that month his widow borrowed £5 10_s._ to take her mantle
-and sheet and face-cloth out of pawn.[505] Neither Shaw nor Jones nor
-Richard Alleyn is in the plot of _1 Tamar Cham_, which may reasonably
-be assigned to a date in the vicinity of the purchase of the book from
-Alleyn on 2 October 1602. This is of interest, partly because it is
-complete, and partly because there was a procession in the play, and
-the number of supernumeraries required must have tried the resources
-of the establishment to their utmost. All the principal members of the
-company appeared--‘Mr. Allen, Mr. Denygten, Mr. Boorne, Mr. Towne, Mr.
-Singer, Mr. Jubie, H. Jeffs, A. Jeffs, Mr. Charles [Massey], and Mr.
-Sam [Rowley]’; and in addition Dick Jubie, W. Cart[wright], George
-[Somerset], Tho. Parsons, and Jeames [Bristow], who were in _The Battle
-of Alcazar_, and W. Parr, Tho. Marbeck, Jack Grigorie, Gedion, Gibbs,
-Tho. Rowley, Rester, ‘old Browne’, Ned Browne, ‘the red fast fellow’
-and several boys, described, perhaps in some cases twice over, as
-Jack Jones, ‘little Will’, ‘little Will Barne’, who do not seem to be
-identical, ‘Gils his boy’, ‘Mr. Denyghtens little boy’, perhaps the
-same already recorded in 1600, and ‘the other little boy’. ‘Old Browne’
-can hardly be Robert Browne, who seems to have been in Germany; but
-Ned Browne may be the Edward Browne who, like Robert, was a member of
-Worcester’s company in 1583. Little is added by the only other extant
-‘plot’, the fragmentary one of _2 Fortune’s Tennis_. This is difficult
-to date, but it must be later than Dekker’s _1 Fortune’s Tennis_ of
-September 1600, and may not improbably be Munday’s _Set at Tennis_
-of December 1602. The few names which it contains--Mr. Singer, Sam,
-Charles, Geo[rge Somerset], R. Tailor, W. Cartwright, Pavy--suggest
-proximity to _The Battle of Alcazar_ and _1 Tamar Cham_. The only
-fresh one is that of Pavy, who may or may not be connected with the
-Salathiel Pavy of Ben Jonson’s epitaph. Both _1 Tamar Cham_ and _2
-Fortune’s Tennis_ must be earlier than January 1603, a month which
-saw the retirement of the old Queen’s man, John Singer. So at least
-may be inferred from the fact that he makes no further appearance in
-the diary after 13 January, when he received £5 ‘for his play called
-Syngers Vallentarey’. I take ‘vallentarey’ to mean ‘valediction’. His
-name is absent from the next list of the company, which belongs to
-1604. He probably left to become an ordinary Groom of the Chamber in
-the royal household, a post which he is found occupying at the time of
-Elizabeth’s funeral.[506]
-
-The succession of new plays was not quite so rapid during 1600–3 as
-in previous periods. I can only trace thirty-one in all, as against
-fifty-five in 1594–7 and sixty-two in 1599–1600. It may well have
-been the case that Alleyn, who had ‘created’ parts in the ’eighties
-and early ’nineties, had a tendency towards revivals. For 1600–1 the
-company bought only seven new books. These were:
-
- _1 Fortune’s Tennis_ (Dekker).
- _Hannibal and Scipio_ (Hathway and Rankins).
- _Scogan and Skelton_ (Hathway and Rankins).
- _All is not Gold that Glisters_ (Chettle).
- _2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ (Day and Haughton).
- _The Six Yeomen of the West_ (Day and Haughton).
- _King Sebastian of Portugal_ (Chettle and Dekker).
-
-None of these plays is extant, but the purchase of properties testifies
-to the performance of _2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ in April
-and _The Six Yeomen of the West_ in July. Moreover, Day received a
-bonus of 10_s._ between 27 April and 2 May ‘after the playinge of’
-the former piece. Only £1 was paid for _1 Fortune’s Tennis_, but the
-existence of a ‘plot’ for _2 Fortune’s Tennis_ suggests that it must
-have been completed. Probably it was a short topical overture designed
-to celebrate the opening of the Fortune.[507] Unfinished plays were
-_Robin Hood’s Pennyworths_ (Haughton)[508] and _The Conquest of
-Spain by John of Gaunt_ (Hathway and Rankins). The revivals included
-_Phaethon_ (January), _The Blind Beggar of Alexandria_ (May), and _The
-Jew of Malta_ (May). Dekker had £2 for ‘alterynge of’ _Phaethon_ for
-the Court, and this was therefore the Admiral’s play of 6 January 1601.
-They also appeared on 28 December and 2 February. _Dr. Faustus_ was
-entered on 7 January; the earliest print (1604) bears their name. The
-new books of 1601–2 were fourteen in number, as follows:[509]
-
- _The Conquest of the West Indies_ (Day, Haughton, and Smith).
- _3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ (Day and Haughton).
- _The Life of Cardinal Wolsey_ (Chettle).[510]
- _1 The Six Clothiers_ (Hathway, Haughton, and Smith).
- _The Rising of Cardinal Wolsey_ (Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and
- Smith).
- _Friar Rush and the Proud Woman of Antwerp_ (Chettle, Day, and
- Haughton).
- _Judas_ (Bird and Rowley).[511]
- _Too Good to be True_ (Chettle, Hathway, and Smith).
- _Malcolm King of Scots_ (Massey).
- _Love Parts Friendship_ (Chettle and Smith).
- _Jephthah_ (Dekker and Munday).
- _Tobias_ (Chettle).
- _The Bristol Tragedy_ (Day).
- _Caesar’s Fall_, or, _The Two Shapes_ (Dekker, Drayton,
- Middleton, Munday, and Webster).
-
-At least ten of these appear to have been played: _2 Cardinal Wolsey_
-(August), _3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_ (September), _Judas_
-(January), _The Conquest of the West Indies_ (January), _Malcolm
-King of Scots_ (April), _Love Parts Friendship_ (May), _1 Cardinal
-Wolsey_ (June), _Jephthah_ (July), and at uncertain dates, _Tobias_
-and probably _The Bristol Tragedy_.[512] None is now extant. The
-unfinished plays were _The Humorous Earl of Gloucester with his
-Conquest of Portugal_ (Wadeson), _2 Tom Dough_[513] (Day and Haughton),
-_The Orphan’s Tragedy_ (Chettle),[514] _2 The Six Clothiers_ (Hathway,
-Haughton, and Smith),[515] _The Spanish Fig_ (Anon.),[516] _Richard
-Crookback_ (Jonson),[517] _A Danish Tragedy_ (Chettle),[518] and _A
-Medicine for a Curst Wife_ (Dekker).[519] There was considerable
-activity of revival during the year. Six old plays belonging to the
-1594–7 repertory, for some of which the company already held the
-properties,[520] were bought from Alleyn at £2 each, _Mahomet_ in
-August, _The Wise Man of West Chester_ in September, _Vortigern_
-in November, and _The French Doctor_, _The Massacre at Paris_, and
-_Crack Me this Nut_ in January. The first and the last three of these
-certainly were played, and the revival of _The Massacre at Paris_
-appears to have caused annoyance to Henri IV.[521] In addition,
-properties were bought for one of the _Hercules_ plays in December,
-Dekker got 10_s._ for a prologue and epilogue to _Pontius Pilate_[522]
-in January, and Jonson wrote additions to _The Spanish Tragedy_,
-possibly those now extant, in September, although it may be doubted
-whether the further additions contemplated in the following June were
-ever made. There is nothing to show what was selected, other than
-Nick’s tumbling, for the Admiral’s only Court play of 1601–2, which
-took place on 27 December.
-
-The season of 1602–3 was, of course, shortened by the death of
-Elizabeth and the outbreak of plague. The new plays numbered nine. They
-were:
-
- _Samson_ (Anon.).
- _Felmelanco_ (Chettle and Robinson).
- _Joshua_ (Rowley).
- _Randal Earl of Chester_ (Middleton).
- _Merry as May Be_ (Day, Hathway, and Smith).
- _The Set at Tennis_ (Munday).
- _1 The London Florentine_ (Chettle and Heywood).
- _Singer’s Voluntary_ (Singer).
- _The Boss of Billingsgate_ (Day, Hathway, and another).[523]
-
-It must be added that in September properties were bought for a ‘new
-playe’ called _The Earl of Hertford_, which it seems impossible to
-identify with any of the pieces bought. This looks like one of the rare
-cases in which payment did not pass through Henslowe’s hands. This and
-_Samson_ are the only new plays of the year, the actual performance
-of which can be verified; and none of these plays is extant.[524] I
-suspect, however, that Munday’s _Set at Tennis_ is the _2 Fortune’s
-Tennis_ of which a ‘plot’ survives. The payment, of only £3, was ‘in
-full’, and it may, like _1 Fortune’s Tennis_, have been a short piece
-of some exceptional character, motived by the name of the theatre in
-which it was presented. Unfinished plays at the end of the season were
-_The Widow’s Charm_ (Munday or Wadeson),[525] _William Cartwright_
-(Haughton), _Hoffman_ (Chettle),[526] _2 London Florentine_ (Chettle
-and Heywood), _The Siege of Dunkirk and Alleyn the Pirate_ (Massey).
-The revival of old plays continued. Costumes for _Vortigern_, one of
-those bought from Alleyn in the previous year, were in preparation
-during September, and Alleyn’s stock yielded three more, _Philip of
-Spain_ and _Longshanks_ in August and _Tamar Cham_, probably the second
-part, as the extant ‘plot’ testifies, in October. The last two of
-these belonged to the Admiral’s repertory of 1594–7, but the origin of
-_Philip of Spain_ is unknown. A book of _The Four Sons of Aymon_, for
-which £2 was paid to Robert Shaw, was probably also old, and was bought
-on condition that Shaw should repay the £2, unless the play was used by
-the Admiral’s or some other company with his consent by Christmas 1604.
-Bird and Rowley had £4 in September for additions to _Dr. Faustus_.
-Dekker completed some alterations of _Tasso’s Melancholy_, another
-1594–7 play, in December, and in the same month Middleton wrote ‘for
-the corte’ a prologue and epilogue to Greene’s _Friar Bacon and Friar
-Bungay_, which I should suppose to have been Henslowe’s property, as
-it was played by Strange’s men in 1592–3 and the Queen’s and Sussex’s
-in 1594. This probably served for the first of the three appearances
-made by the Admiral’s at Court, on 27 December. The other two were on
-6 March and on a date unspecified. For one of these occasions Chettle
-was writing a prologue and epilogue at the end of December, but the
-play is not named.[527] One of the new plays, _Merry as May Be_, was
-intended for Court, when the first payment on account of it was made on
-9 November.
-
-On 12 March 1603 Henslowe practically closes the detailed record
-which he had kept continuously in his diary since October 1597 of
-his financial transactions, otherwise than by way of rent, with the
-Admiral’s men. A brief review of these is not without interest.[528]
-His advances from 21 October 1597 to 8 March 1598 amounted to £46
-7_s._ 3_d._, and to this he took the signatures of the company, with
-the note, ‘Thes men dothe aknowlege this deat to be dewe by them by
-seatynge of ther handes to yette’. By 28 July a further amount of £120
-15_s._ 4_d._ had been incurred, making a total of £166 17_s._ 7_d._ for
-1597–8.[529] During the same period he entered weekly receipts from the
-company to a total of £125. These must have gone to an old debt, for
-he did not balance them with the payments for the year, but carried on
-the whole debit of £166 17_s._ 7_d._ to 1598–9. Apparently, however, he
-was not satisfied with the way in which expenditure was outstripping
-income, for he headed a new receipts account, ‘Here I begyne to receue
-the wholle gallereys frome this daye beinge the 29 of July 1598’, and
-the weekly entries become about double what they were during 1597–8.
-On the other hand, there is also a considerable increase in the rate
-of expenditure. It is an ingenious and, I think, sound conjecture of
-Dr. Greg’s, that throughout 1594–1603 Henslowe was taking half the
-gallery money for rent, and that, at different times, he also took
-either the other half, or another quarter only, to recoup himself for
-his advances.[530] The outgoings entered during 1598–9 reach £435 7_s._
-4_d._, but some items for March and April 1599 are probably missing,
-owing to a mutilation of the manuscript.[531] The receipts for the same
-period were £358 3_s._ On 13 October 1599, about a fortnight after
-the beginning of the 1599–1600 season, a balance was struck. Henslowe
-credited the company with the £358 received from the gallery money, and
-debited them with £632 advanced by him. This includes £166 17_s._ 7_d._
-for 1597–8, £435 7_s._ 4_d._ for 1598–9, and £29 15_s._ 1_d._, which
-may reasonably be taken as the sum of the missing entries for March and
-April 1599. The balance of £274 remained as a debt from the company.
-They did not, however, set their hands to a reckoning until the end of
-the next year, on 10 July 1600. During 1599–1600 a fresh account had
-been running, on which Henslowe’s receipts were £202 10_s._ and his
-payments £222 5_s._ 6_d._ At the reckoning the company’s indebtedness
-is calculated at £300, and is admitted by the formula, ‘which some
-of three hundred powndes we whose names are here vnder written doe
-acknowledge our dewe debt & doe promyse payment’. To this their
-signatures are appended. There is, however, an unexplained discrepancy
-of £6 4_s._ 6_d._, as the old debt of £274 and the 1599–1600 debit
-balance of £19 15_s._ 6_d._ only make up £293 15_s._ 6_d._
-
-From 1600 onwards there are no records of receipts. A continuous
-account of payments is kept up to 7 February 1602. The total amounts to
-£304 10_s._ 4_d._, but Henslowe sums it in error as £308 6_s._ 4_d._,
-and notes, ‘Frome ther handes to this place is 308^{ll}-06^s-04^d dewe
-vnto me & with the three hundred of owld is £608-06-04^d’. He then
-adds the £50 paid to Jones and Shaw on retirement, ‘which is not in
-this recknynge’. Above this summary comes a list of names, said by Dr.
-Greg to be in Shaw’s hand, of those sharers who were continuing in the
-company, headed by the figures ‘211. 9. 0.’ I think the interpretation
-is that £386 17_s._ 4_d._ of the £608 6_s._ 4_d._ was paid out of
-gallery money or other sources, leaving £211 9_s._, together with the
-£50 for Jones and Shaw, chargeable on the company. This is borne out
-by the remnant of the accounts, which is headed, ‘Begininge with a new
-recknyng with my lord of Notingames men the 23 daye of Febreary 1601
-as foloweth’. The expenditure on this new reckoning up to 12 March
-1603 was, as calculated by Henslowe, £188 11_s._ 6_d._, and he adds
-to this total a sum of £211 9_s._ ‘vpon band’, being evidently the
-residue of the debt as it stood at the close of the old reckoning, and
-makes a total of £400 0_s._ 6_d._ This, with the £50 for Jones and
-Shaw, was no doubt what the company owed when the detailed account in
-the diary closed. There was, however, an unstated amount of gallery
-receipts during 1602–3 to set against it; and in fact a retrospect
-of the whole series of figures shows that there would have been a
-pretty fair equivalence of gallery money and advances throughout, but
-for the exceptionally heavy expenditure of 1598–9, £465 2_s._ 5_d._
-in all, which left the company saddled with an obligation which they
-never quite overtook. This expenditure was more than half the total
-expenditure of £854 5_s._ 6_d._ for the _triennium_ 1597–1600, and
-nearly as much as the whole expenditure of £493 1_s._ 10_d._ for the
-_triennium_ 1600–3, during which it may be suspected that the business
-capacities of Alleyn brought about considerable economies.
-
-The accounts may be looked at from another point of view. If the
-unanalysable sum of £29 15_s._ 1_d._ for the missing items of March
-and April 1599 be neglected, there was a total expenditure for the six
-years of £1,317 11_s._ 3_d._ Of this £652 13_s._ 8_d._, being about
-half, went in payments in respect of play-books; £561 1_s._ 1_d._
-for properties and apparel; and £103 16_s._ 6_d._ in miscellaneous
-outgoings, such as licensing fees, legal charges, musical instruments,
-travelling expenses, merry-makings and the like. Thus, if the company
-supped together at Mr. Mason’s of the Queen’s Head, or met to read a
-‘book’ at the Sun in New Fish Street, Henslowe would put his hand into
-his pocket to pay the score, and would not forget afterwards to debit
-the company with the amount in his diary.[532] It must, of course, be
-borne in mind that only part of this miscellaneous expenditure was
-incurred through Henslowe. He certainly did not, for example, pay all
-the fees for the licensing of new plays by the Master of the Revels.
-And of course there were many matters, in particular the wages of hired
-actors and servitors, for which the company had regularly to find funds
-in other ways. It is probable that only play-books, properties, and
-apparel were normally charged to his account, although the convenience
-of an occasional extension of his functions can readily be understood.
-Dr. Greg may be right in thinking that his position as agent for the
-company in its purchases was a natural development of his pawnbroking
-business.[533] But during the period under review he did not, as a
-rule, supply them with goods himself. A sale of ‘A shorte velluett
-clocke wraght with bugell & a gearcken of velluet layd with brade coper
-sylver lace’ for £4 on 28 November 1598 was exceptional. Usually the
-payments are to tradesmen, to the mercers Stone, Richard Heath, and
-Robert Bromfield, to ‘him at the Eagell and Chylld’ for armour, to
-Mrs. Gosson for head-tires, and for wigs to one Father Ogle, who is
-mentioned also in the Revels Accounts and in the play of _Sir Thomas
-More_. Sometimes ready-made garments, new or second-hand, were bought.
-A doublet and hose of sea-water green satin cost £3 and a doublet and
-‘venesyons’ of cloth of silver wrought with red silk £4 10_s._ But
-often stuffs were obtained in piece and made up by tailors, of whom the
-company employed two, Dover and Radford, the latter known, for the sake
-of distinction, as ‘the little tailor’. These and William White, who
-made the crowns, probably worked at the theatre, in the tiring-house.
-The company gave 6_s._ a yard for russet broadcloth and the same for
-murrey satin, 12_s._ for other satins, 12_s._ 6_d._ for taffeties,
-and no less than £1 for ‘ij pylle velluet of carnardyn’. Laces cost
-1_d._ each; copper lace anything from 4_s._ a pound to 1_s._ 2_d._ an
-ounce. Of this they used quantities, and in the summer of 1601 they
-had run up a considerable ‘old debt’ to the copper lace-man, as well
-as another to Heath the mercer, which had to be paid off by degrees.
-The more expensive garments, such as a rich cloak bought of Langley
-for £19, were, of course, an investment on the part of the company,
-and were worn in their time by many sharers and hired men in different
-parts. But the principal actors had also, as Alleyn’s inventory shows,
-their private wardrobes. Henslowe was prepared to furnish these on the
-instalment system. Thus Richard Jones bought in 1594 ‘a manes gowne
-of pechecoler in grayne’ for £3 payable in weekly sums of 5_s._, and
-Thomas Towne in 1598 ‘a blacke clothe clocke layd with sylke lace’ for
-26_s._ 8_d._ at 1_s._ weekly. It was as hard to keep these glories
-as to procure them. On one occasion the company came to the rescue
-and lent Thomas Downton £12 10_s._, to fetch out of pawn two cloaks,
-‘which they exsepted into the stock’. The one was ‘ashecolerd velluet
-embradered with gowld’, the other ‘a longe black velluet clocke layd
-with sylke lace’.[534]
-
-The termination of the record of advances after 12 March 1603 indicates
-an interruption of performances, probably due to the increasing illness
-of Elizabeth, who died on the following 24 March. Thereafter there
-are only a few winding-up entries in the diary. The company must have
-immediately begun to travel under the leadership of Thomas Downton, who
-in the course of 1602–3 received a gift for them from the Corporation
-of Canterbury, ‘because it was thought fitt they should not play at
-all, in regard that our late Queene was then very sicke or dead as
-they supposed’. London playing, if resumed at all, must have very
-soon been stopped again by the plague. There was some further small
-expenditure, of which the details are not given, before Henslowe noted
-that, in addition to the bond for £211 9_s._, ‘Ther reasteth dew vnto
-me to this daye beinge the v daye of Maye 1603 when we leafte of playe
-now at the Kynges cominge all recknynges abated the some of a hundred
-fowerscore & sevntenepowndes & thirteneshellynges & fowerpence I saye
-dew--£197 13_s._ 4_d._ the fyftye powndes which Jonnes & Shawe had at
-ther goinge a way not reconed’. The company travelled again during the
-plague, being traceable as the Admiral’s men in 1602–3 at Bath and York
-and on 18 August 1603 at Leicester, and as the Earl of Nottingham’s in
-1602–3 at Coventry. The tour was over by 21 October, on which date Joan
-Alleyn wrote to her husband at the house of Mr. Chaloner in Sussex,
-telling him amongst other things that ‘all of your owne company ar
-well at theyr owne houses’, that all the other companies had returned,
-that ‘Nicke and Jeames be well’, and that ‘Browne of the Boares head’
-had not gone into the country at all, and was now dead, ‘& dyed very
-pore’. This might be either Edward Browne, or the ‘old Browne’ who
-appeared with him in _1 Tamar Cham_ in the previous autumn. In any
-case, it is clear from the reference to him that he was not a regular
-member of Alleyn’s company. ‘Jeames’ is no doubt James Bristow, who, as
-Henslowe’s apprentice, would be likely to form part of his household;
-and ‘Nicke’, who seems to have been in the same position, may be
-supposed to be the Nick who tumbled before the Queen at Christmas 1601.
-
-The Jacobean records of the company seem meagre in the absence of
-Henslowe’s detailed register of proceedings. About Christmas 1603 they
-were taken into the service of Prince Henry, and are hereafter known
-as the Prince’s players.[535] They are entered amongst other ‘Officers
-to the Prince’ as receiving four and a half yards of red cloth apiece
-as liveries for the coronation procession on 15 March 1604, and
-their names are given as ‘Edward Allen, William Bird, Thomas Towne,
-Thomas Dowton, Samuell Rowley, Edward Jubie, Humfry Jeffes, Charles
-Massey, and Anthony Jeffes’.[536] Alleyn, even if not a ‘sharer’,
-was therefore a member of the company in its official capacity. He
-is also named as the Prince’s servant, both in the printed account
-of the entertainment at which, dressed as a Genius, he delivered a
-speech, and in Stowe’s description of a bear-baiting which formed part
-of the festivities.[537] It may, however, be inferred that he took an
-early opportunity of leaving a profession to which he had only been
-recalled by the personal whim of the late Queen.[538] He was joint
-payee with Juby in the warrant of 19 February, but Juby’s name stands
-alone in another of 17 April and in those of all subsequent years up
-to 1615. And when the company received a formal licence by patent on
-30 April 1606, Alleyn’s name was omitted, and does not appear in any
-further list of its members. It is true that as late as 11 May 1611 he
-is still described in a formal document as the Prince’s servant, but
-he may have held some other appointment, actual or honorific, in the
-household.[539] A note of his resources about 1605, however, includes
-‘my share of aparell, £100’.[540] And he certainly remained interested
-in the company. They were his tenants at the Fortune, although an
-unexecuted draft of a lease to Thomas Downton dated in 1608 suggests
-that he may have taken steps to transfer the whole or a share of his
-direct interest to them. Under this lease Downton was to receive during
-thirteen years a thirty-second part of the daily profits accruing to
-Henslowe and Alleyn, and in return to pay £27 10_s._, a rent of 10_s._
-annually and his proportionate share of repairs, and to bind himself
-to play in the house and not elsewhere without consent.[541] On 11
-April 1612 Robert Browne is found writing to Alleyn on behalf of one
-Mr. Rose, lately ‘entertayned amongst the princes men’, to request
-his interest as one ‘who he knowes can strike a greter stroke amongst
-them then this’ to procure him a ‘gathering place’ for his wife.[542]
-Another letter from Bird to Alleyn, also about a gatherer, is amusing
-enough to quote in full. It is undated.
-
- ‘Sir there is one Jhon Russell, that by yowr apoyntment was made
- a gatherer w^{th} vs, but my fellowes finding often falce to vs,
- haue many tymes warnd him ffrom taking the box. And he as often,
- with moste damnable othes, hath vowde neuer to touch, yet not
- with standing his execrable othes, he hath taken the box, & many
- tymes moste vnconsionablye gathered, for which we haue resolued
- he shall neuer more come to the doore; yet for your sake, he
- shall haue his wages, to be a nessessary atendaunt on the stage,
- and if he will pleasure himself and vs, to mend our garmentes,
- when he hath leysure, weele pay him for that to. I pray send vs
- word if this motion will satisfie you; for him his dishonestye
- is such we knowe it will not, Thus yealding our selues in that
- & a farr greater matter to be comaunded by you I committ you to
- god. Your loving ffrend to comaunde. W Birde.’[543]
-
-With the exception of Alleyn, all the players of the 1604 list and no
-others appear in the patent of 1606, the text of which follows:[544]
-
-[Sidenote: De concessione licenciae pro Thoma Downton et aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
- Sheriffes, bailiffes, Constables, headboroughes and other our
- officers and loving subiectes greeting. Knowe ye that wee of
- our especiall grace, certaine knowledge, and meere mocion haue
- licenced and auctorized, and by theis presentes doe licence
- and auctorize Thomas Downton, Thomas Towne, William Byrde,
- Edwarde Iuby, Samuell Rowle, Humfrey Ieffes, Charles Massey, and
- Anthonie Ieffes, Servauntes to our dearest sonne the Prince, and
- the rest of theire Associates to vse and exercise the arte and
- facultie of playing Commedies, Tragedies, Histories, Enterludes,
- Moralls, Pastoralls, Stageplayes, and such other like as they
- haue alreadie studied or hereafter shall vse or studie, aswell
- for the recreacion of our loving subiectes, as for our solace
- and pleasure when wee shall thincke good to see them, during
- our pleasure, And the said Commedies, Tragedies, histories,
- Enterludes, Moralls, pastoralls, stageplaies, and suche like
- to shewe and exercise publiquelie to their best Commoditie,
- aswell within theire nowe vsuall house called the Fortune within
- our Countie of Middlesex, as alsoe within anie Towne halls or
- Moutehalls or other convenient places within the libertie and
- ffredome of anie other Cittie, vniversitie, Towne, or Boroughe
- whatsoever, within our Realmes and Domynions, willing and
- Commaunding you and everie of you, as you tender our pleasure,
- not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein without anie your
- lettes, hindraunces, or molestacions during our saide pleasure,
- but alsoe to be aiding and assisting vnto them yf anie wrong be
- to them offered, And to allowe them such former curtesies as
- hath been given to men of theire place and quallitie, And alsoe
- what further favour you shall shewe vnto them for our sake wee
- shall take kindelie at your handes. Prouided alwaies, and our
- will and pleasure ys, that all auctoritie, power, priuiledges,
- and profittes whatsoever belonging and properlie appertaining
- to the Maister of our Revells in respecte of his office, and
- everie Clause, article, or graunte conteined within the letteres
- patentes or Commission, which haue heretofore been graunted
- or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our deere Sister, or
- by our selves, to our welbeloued servantes Edmonde Tilney,
- Maister of the office of our said Revells, or to Sir George
- Bucke knighte, or to either of them in possession or reversion,
- shall be remayne and abide entire, and in full force estate and
- vertue, and in as ample sorte as yf this our Commission had
- never been made. In witnesse whereof etc. Witnesse our selfe at
- Westminster the Thirtith daie of Aprill.
- per breve de priuato sigillo.
-
-Between 1606 and 1610 it seems to have been thought desirable to
-strengthen the composition of the company by the introduction of
-new blood. A list of ‘Comedyanes and Playores’, included in the
-establishment book drawn up when Henry formed his own Household as
-Prince of Wales in 1610, contains six names in addition to the eight of
-the patent.[545] They are ‘Edward Colbrande, Wm. Parre, Rychard Pryore,
-William Stratford, Frauncys Grace, and John Shanke’. Of these William
-Parr, who is in the plot of _1 Tamar Cham_ in 1602, is alone traceable
-in the earlier records of the company. Shank had been of Pembroke’s and
-Queen Elizabeth’s men.
-
-Henslowe entered two more advances in his diary, one for ‘facynge
-of a blacke grogren clocke with taffytye’, the other to Dekker and
-Middleton in earnest of _The Patient Man and the Honest Whore_. This
-was entered in the Stationers’ Register on 9 November 1604, and printed
-as _The Honest Whore_ during the year. The name of Towne is in a
-stage-direction. On 14 March ‘1604’, which may have been either 1604
-or 1605, Henslowe had a final reckoning with the company and noted
-‘Caste vp all the acowntes frome the begininge of the world vntell this
-daye beinge the 14 daye of Marche 1604 by Thomas Dowghton & Edward
-Jube for the company of the prynces men & I Phillipe Henslow so ther
-reasteth dew vnto me P Henslow the some of xxiiij^{li} all reconynges
-consernynge the company in stocke generall descarged & my sealfe
-descarged to them of al deates’.[546] With this, so far as the extant
-book goes, the record of his transactions with the company practically
-ceases. The only exception is a note of receipts at the Fortune during
-the three days next after Christmas in 1608, which amounted to 25_s._,
-45_s._, and 44_s._ 9_d._ respectively.[547] Something of the career
-of the Prince’s men may be gleaned from other sources. They played at
-Court before James on 21 January and 20 February 1604, and before Henry
-on 4, 15, and 22 January; and during the following Christmas before
-Anne on 23 November 1604 and before Henry on 24 November, 14 and 19
-December, and on 15 and 22 January and 5 and 19 February 1605. On 8
-February 1605 their play of _Richard Whittington_, of which nothing
-further is known, was entered on the Stationers’ Register.[548] In the
-same year Samuel Rowley’s _When You See Me, You Know Me_, was printed
-as played by them. During the Christmas of 1605–6 they gave three
-plays before James and three before Henry.[549] In 1604–5 they were at
-Maidstone and Winchester, in 1605–6 at Bath, on 17 July 1606 at Oxford,
-and on 17 October at Ipswich. During the Christmas of 1606–7 they
-gave six plays before James. Dekker’s _Whore of Babylon_ was entered
-on the Stationers’ Register on 20 April 1607 and printed as theirs in
-the same year. In 1606–7 they were at Bath. During the Christmas of
-1607–8 they gave four plays before James and Henry. In 1607–8 they
-were at Maidstone and Saffron Walden, and on 1 October 1608 they were
-at Leicester; but a visit of the same year from ‘the Princes players
-of the White Chapple, London’ is rather to be assigned to the Duke of
-York’s men (q.v.). They gave three plays before James and Henry during
-the Christmas of 1608–9, four before James during that of 1609–10,
-and four before James during that of 1610–11. Middleton and Dekker’s
-_The Roaring Girl_ was printed in 1611 as lately played by them at the
-Fortune, and Field’s _Amends for Ladies_ (_c._ 1610–11) names ‘Long
-Meg and the Ship’ as in their repertory. Presumably their _Long Meg of
-Westminster_ of 1595 still held the boards.[550] In 1608–9 they were at
-Shrewsbury and Saffron Walden, in 1609–10 at Shrewsbury and Hereford,
-in 1610–11 at Shrewsbury and Winchester.
-
-They played at Court before James on 28 and 29 December 1611, giving
-on the second night _The Almanac_, and before Henry in February and
-Elizabeth in April 1612. On 1 October 1612 the lewd jigs, songs, and
-dances at the Fortune are recited in an order of the Middlesex justices
-as tending to promote breaches of the peace. One of these may have
-been the occasion on which an obscure actor, Garlick by name, made
-himself offensive to the more refined part of his audience.[551] On the
-following 7 November Henry died and on 7 December his players figured
-in his funeral procession.[552]
-
-They found a new patron in the Elector Palatine, then in England,
-and on entering his service got a new patent, which bears date 11
-January 1613 and closely follows in its terms that of 1606.[553] The
-house specified for them was again the Fortune, which they had no
-doubt continuously occupied since its opening in 1600. The players
-named were ‘Thomas Downton, William Bird, Edward Juby, Samuell Rowle,
-Charles Massey, Humfrey Jeffs, Frank Grace, William Cartwright, Edward
-Colbrand, William Parr, William Stratford, Richard Gunnell, John
-Shanck, and Richard Price’. Possibly Price may be the Pryor of the 1610
-list. Cartwright and Gunnell are new since that list, but Cartwright
-had been in _The Battle of Alcazar_ and _1 Tamar Cham_ plots of 1601
-and 1602. These two must be supposed to have taken the places of Thomas
-Towne and Antony Jeffes. Thomas Towne had enjoyed an annuity of £12 out
-of Alleyn’s manor of Dulwich from 28 October 1608 to 15 January 1612,
-but on 5 November 1612 ‘widow Towne’ is mentioned,[554] and further
-evidence of his death is supplied by a letter from Charles Massey to
-Alleyn, not dated, but from internal evidence written not very long
-after the prince’s death, to which reference is made. Massey is in debt
-and wants £50. He offers two things as security. One is ‘that lyttell
-moete I have in the play hovsses’; from which it may be inferred that,
-like Downton, he had obtained an interest in the Fortune, although what
-the second house may have been can hardly be conjectured. The other
-is his interest under ‘the composisions betwene ovre compenye that if
-any one give over with consent of his fellowes, he is to receve three
-score and ten poundes (Antony Jefes hath had so much) if any on dye his
-widow or frendes whome he appoyntes it tow reseve fyfte poundes (M^res
-Pavie and M^res Tovne hath had the lyke)’. In order to be in a position
-to repay the loan at the end of the year he undertakes to get Mr. Jube
-to reserve ‘my gallery mony and my quarter of the hovse mony’ for the
-purpose, and should it prove at the end of six months that this will be
-insufficient, he will be prepared to surrender his whole share, with
-the exception of 13_s._ 4_d._ a week for household expenses.[555] From
-this letter it may also be gathered that Antony Jeffes had retired, and
-apparently that Pavy, whose name is found in the plot of _2 Fortune’s
-Tennis_, which I assign to 1602–3, had at some time become a sharer
-in the company. One other player, originally in 1597 a hired man, had
-evidently reached some prominence between that date and 1614. William
-Fennor, in the course of a rhyming controversy with John Taylor, makes
-the following boast of his histrionic talent:
-
- And let me tell thee this to calme thy rage,
- I chaleng’d Kendall on the Fortune stage;
- And he did promise ‘fore an audience,
- For to oppose me. Note the accidence:
- I set up bills, the people throngd apace,
- With full intention to disgrace, or grace;
- The house was full, the trumpets twice had sounded,
- And though he came not, I was not confounded,
- But stept upon the stage, and told them this,
- My aduerse would not come: not one did hisse,
- But flung me theames: I then _extempore_
- Did blot his name from out their memorie,
- And pleasd them all, in spight of one to braue me,
- Witnesse the ringing plaudits that they gaue me.[556]
-
-As the Elector Palatine’s men the company played at Court during the
-winter of 1613–14, twice before James and once before Charles. They
-were amongst the companies which performed irregularly in the Lent
-of 1615, and Humphrey Jeffes and Thomas Downton were summoned before
-the Privy Council to account for their misdoing. One of the irregular
-licences condemned by the Lord Chamberlain on 16 July 1616 was an
-exemplification of the patent of 1613, taken out by Charles Marshall,
-Humphrey Jeffes, and William Parr for provincial purposes.
-
-
- xx. THE LORD CHAMBERLAIN’S (LORD HUNSDON’S) AND KING’S MEN
-
- Henry Carey, s. of William Carey and Mary, sister of Anne
- Boleyn; _nat. c._ 1524; cr. 1st Lord Hunsdon, 13 Jan. 1559;
- m. Anne, d. of Sir Thomas Morgan; Warden of East Marches and
- Governor of Berwick, Aug. 1568; Lord Chamberlain, 4 July 1585;
- lived at Hunsdon House, Herts., and Somerset House, London;
- _ob._ 22 July 1596.
-
- George Carey, s. of Henry, 1st Lord Hunsdon; _nat._ 1547;
- Kt. 18 May 1570; m. Elizabeth, d. of Sir John Spencer of
- Althorp; Captain-General of Isle of Wight, 1582; succ. as 2nd
- Baron, 22 July 1596; Lord Chamberlain, 17 Mar. 1597; lived at
- Carisbrooke Castle, Hunsdon House, Drayton, and Blackfriars;
- _ob._ 9 Sept. 1603.
-
-A company of Lord Hunsdon’s men was at Leicester in the last three
-months of 1564, at Norwich and Maldon in 1564–5, at Plymouth before
-Michaelmas in 1565, at Canterbury in the autumn of 1565, at Gloucester
-and Maldon in 1565–6, at Bristol in July 1566, and at Canterbury in the
-spring of 1567. Another makes its appearance at Ludlow on 13 July 1581,
-and at Doncaster in 1582. In the winter Lord Hunsdon was apparently
-deputy for the Earl of Sussex as Lord Chamberlain, and took occasion
-to bring his men to Court, where they acted _Beauty and Housewifery_
-on 27 December 1582. They did not again appear at Court, but when
-plays were temporarily suppressed on 14 June 1584 the owner of the
-Theatre, presumably James Burbadge, made a claim to be Lord Hunsdon’s
-man. Meanwhile ‘my L. Hunsdouns and my Lords Morleis players being
-bothe of one companye’ are recorded at Bristol in March 1583, and Lord
-Hunsdon’s alone at Norwich in 1582–3, Bath in June 1583, and Exeter
-in July 1583. Hunsdon became Lord Chamberlain on 4 July 1585. Between
-October and December of that year, a visit was paid to Leicester by
-‘the Lord Chamberlens and the Lord Admiralls players’, and on 6 January
-1586 ‘the servants of the lo: Admirall and the lo: Chamberlaine’ gave
-a play at Court. These entries suggest an amalgamation of Hunsdon’s
-men with those of Lord Admiral Howard, both of whom had perhaps been
-weakened by the formation of the Queen’s men in 1583. But if so, it
-was only a partial or temporary one, for while the Admiral’s men
-established themselves in London, the Chamberlain’s are traceable in
-the provinces, at Coventry in 1585–6, at Saffron Walden in 1587–8, and
-at Maidstone in 1589–90.
-
-An interval of four or five years renders improbable any continuity
-between this company and the famous Lord Chamberlain’s company, which
-first emerged on the resorting of the plague-stricken mimes in 1594,
-passed under royal patronage in 1603, and prolonged an existence
-illumined by the genius of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Beaumont and
-Fletcher, Massinger and Shirley, until the closing of the theatres in
-1642. The first notice of the new organization is in June 1594, when
-‘my Lord Admeralle men and my Lorde Chamberlen men’ played from the
-3rd to the 13th of the month, either in combination or separately on
-allotted days, for Henslowe at Newington Butts.[557] Some of the plays
-given during this period can be traced to the subsequent repertory
-of the Admiral’s men; others, which cannot, may be assigned to the
-Chamberlain’s. They are _Hester and Ahasuerus_, _Titus Andronicus_,
-_Hamlet_, and _Taming of A Shrew_, which, although so described, may
-of course have been really the _Taming of The Shrew_, Shakespeare’s
-adaptation of the older play entered in the Stationers’ Register on the
-previous 2 May. It is ingeniously, and I think rightly, inferred from
-a line drawn in Henslowe’s account after 13 June, that from that date
-all the performances recorded are by the Admiral’s men, probably at the
-Rose, and that his relations with the Chamberlain’s men had ceased.
-The company is found at Marlborough about September, and on 8 October
-Lord Hunsdon wrote to the Lord Mayor, asking permission for ‘my nowe
-companie’ to continue an occupation of the Cross Keys,[558] on which it
-seems to have already entered. Henceforward the company was regularly
-established in London, took the lead annually at Court, and except for
-brief periods of inhibition in 1596, 1597, and possibly 1601, does not
-appear to have travelled during the remainder of Elizabeth’s reign.
-Whether Hunsdon’s men got the Cross Keys for the winter or not, they
-probably had from the beginning the use of the Theatre for the summer
-seasons, for Richard Burbage, the son of the owner, was one of their
-leading members, and on 15 March 1595 appears as joint payee with
-William Kempe and William Shakespeare for two plays given at Court
-on 26 and 28 December 1594. These plays cannot be identified, but
-Shakespeare’s _Love’s Labour’s Lost_ and _Romeo and Juliet_ may well
-have been produced this winter.[559] Most likely the date 28 December
-was entered in the payment warrant by mistake for 27 December, for the
-Admiral’s men are also recorded as playing at Court on 28 December, and
-on the same night ‘a company of base and common fellows’, with whom
-one is bound to identify the Chamberlain’s men, played ‘a Comedy of
-Errors’ as part of the Christmas revels of the Prince of Purpoole at
-Gray’s Inn.[560] There seems to be some echo of _Romeo and Juliet_ in
-the Pyramus and Thisbe interlude of _A Midsummer-Night’s Dream_, which
-may very well have been given at Greenwich or Burghley House for the
-wedding of William Stanley, Earl of Derby, and Elizabeth Vere, daughter
-of the Earl of Oxford, on 26 January 1595. Another possible occasion
-for the production, however, is the wedding of Elizabeth, daughter
-of Sir George Carey and grand-daughter of Lord Hunsdon, to Thomas,
-son of Henry Lord Berkeley on 19 February 1596. This took place at
-Blackfriars, presumably in Sir George Carey’s house there.[561]
-
-To 1595 or thereabouts I also assign Shakespeare’s _Two Gentlemen of
-Verona_ and _King John_ and _Richard II_.[562] The company played at
-Court on 26, 27, and 28 December 1595 and 6 January and 22 February
-1596. In the warrant for their fees, dated on 21 December 1596, and
-made payable to John Heminges and George Bryan, they are described as
-‘servauntes to the late Lord Chamberlayne and now servauntes to the
-Lorde Hunsdon’. It is clear that, when the first Lord Hunsdon died on
-22 July 1596, the players had been retained by his son and heir, Sir
-George Carey. The Lord Chamberlainship passed to Lord Cobham; but he
-died on 5 March 1597, and on 17 March the post was given to the second
-Lord Hunsdon. The company, then, was properly known as Lord Hunsdon’s
-men from 22 July 1596 to 17 March 1597; before and after that period it
-was the Lord Chamberlain’s men.
-
-To 1596 I assign Shakespeare’s _Merchant of Venice_. Evidence of the
-occupation of the Theatre about this time by the company is to be
-found in Lodge’s allusion to a revival of _Hamlet_ there, for this
-play is not likely to have been in other hands.[563] It is not an
-unreasonable conjecture that James Burbadge destined to their use the
-play-house in the Blackfriars, which he purchased in February, and had
-converted for ‘publique’ use by November of this year. If so, he and
-they were disappointed, for a petition of the inhabitants, amongst
-the signatories to an alleged copy of which Lord Hunsdon himself is
-somewhat oddly found, led to an intervention of the Privy Council,
-who forbade plays to be given within the liberty.[564] At this time
-also the Corporation seem to have succeeded in finally and permanently
-expelling the players from the City inns which had long been their
-head-quarters, and Nashe connects this persecution with the loss of
-‘their old Lord’, by whom he doubtless means Henry Lord Hunsdon. It
-is possible that plays were inhibited altogether during the summer
-of 1596, although no formal order to that effect is preserved, for
-Hunsdon’s went to Faversham, and Nashe himself was disappointed of
-‘an after harvest I expected by writing for the stage and for the
-presse’.[565]
-
-In the following winter the company played at Court on 26 and 27
-December 1596 and on 1 and 6 January and 6 and 8 February 1597.
-Their payees, for this and for the next two years, were Thomas Pope
-and John Heminge. In 1597 began the printing of plays written by
-Shakespeare for this company, with a ‘bad’ quarto of _Romeo and
-Juliet_, bearing on its title-page the name of Lord Hunsdon’s men and
-‘good’ quartos of _Richard II_ and _Richard III_, bearing that of the
-Lord Chamberlain’s.[566] From the text of _Richard II_ was omitted
-the deposition scene, which did not appear in print until after the
-death of Elizabeth. The only Shakespearian productions that can be
-plausibly ascribed to this year are those of the two parts of _Henry
-IV_. The presentation of Sir John Oldcastle in the original versions
-of these seems to have led to a protest, and the character was renamed
-Sir John Falstaff. It is not improbable that the offence taken was by
-Lord Chamberlain Cobham, whose ancestress, Joan Lady Cobham, Oldcastle
-had married.[567] It is impossible to say whether either this scandal
-or any possible interpretation of disloyalty put upon _Richard II_
-contributed to the inhibition of plays on 28 July, of which the main
-exciting cause was certainly the performance of _The Isle of Dogs_
-at the Swan on the Bankside.[568] For the second time since their
-formation in 1594 the company had to travel. They are traceable at
-Rye in August, at Dover between 3 and 20 September, at Marlborough,
-Faversham, and Bath during 1596–7, and at Bristol about 29 September.
-This inhibition was removed early in October. There is some reason to
-believe that, when the Chamberlain’s men resumed playing, it was not
-at the Theatre, as to the renewal of the lease of which the Burbadges
-were disputing with their ground landlord, but at the Curtain. Marston,
-in one and the same passage of his _Scourge of Villainy_, entered in
-the Stationers’ Register on 8 September 1598, alludes to the acting
-of _Romeo and Juliet_ and to ‘Curtaine plaudeties’, while almost
-simultaneously Edward Guilpin in his _Skialetheia_, entered on 15
-September, speaks of ‘the unfrequented Theater’. The transfer may,
-however, not have taken place until 1598.[569]
-
-The company played at Court on 26 December 1597 and on 1 and 6 January
-and 26 February 1598. It is conceivable that one of these plays may
-have been a revised version of _Love’s Labour’s Lost_, which was
-printed as ‘newly corrected and augmented’ and ‘as it was presented
-before her Highnes this last Christmas’ in 1598. On the other hand,
-it is also possible that this print may have been intended to replace
-an earlier ‘bad’ quarto, not now preserved, and if so, the reference
-to the representation may have been carried on from the earlier
-title-page. In 1598 were also printed _1 Henry IV_, and the anonymous
-_Mucedorus_, which may have already belonged to the Chamberlain’s
-repertory, as it was certainly revised for them about 1610. _The
-Merchant of Venice_ was entered in the Stationers’ Register on 22 July,
-but with a proviso that it must not be printed ‘without lycence first
-had from the Right honorable the lord chamberlen’. On 7 September 1598
-was entered in the Stationers’ Register the _Palladis Tamia_ of Francis
-Meres, with its list of Shakespeare’s plays up to date, including the
-mysterious _Love’s Labours Won_, which I incline to identify with the
-_Taming of the Shrew_.[570] The earliest play not mentioned by Meres
-is probably _Much Ado about Nothing_, which may belong to 1598 itself.
-Another production of this year was Jonson’s _Every Man In his Humour_,
-which was still a new play about 20 September, when an Almain in the
-audience lost 300 crowns. Possibly John Aubrey has this period in mind
-when he says that Jonson ‘acted and wrote, but both ill, at the Green
-Curtaine, a kind of nursery or obscure play-house, somewhere in the
-suburbes, I thinke towardes Shoreditch or Clarkenwell’.[571] Jonson,
-however, was in prison soon after the production of the play for the
-manslaughter of Gabriel Spencer on 22 September in Hoxton Fields, and
-there is no other evidence that he ever acted with the Chamberlain’s
-men. His own name is not in the list of the original ‘principall
-Comoedians’ affixed to the text of _Every Man In his Humour_ in the
-folio of 1616. This is of great value, as being the earliest extant
-list of the company. The ten names given are:
-
- Will. Shakespeare.
- Aug. Philips.
- Hen. Condel.
- Will. Slye.
- Will. Kempe.
- Ric. Burbage.
- Joh. Flemings.
- Tho. Pope.
- Chr. Beeston.
- Joh. Duke.
-
-It must not, of course, be assumed, either that the list is in
-itself quite complete, or that there had been no changes amongst the
-Chamberlain’s men between 1594 and 1598; but as those named include
-five out of the six payees for that period, they may perhaps be taken,
-with the sixth payee, George Bryan, who does not reappear after
-1596, and was by 1603 an ordinary groom of the Chamber of the royal
-Household, as fairly representing the original constitution of the
-company.[572] And an inference to its origin at once becomes possible,
-for of these eleven men five (Kempe, Pope, Heminges, Phillips, and
-Bryan) formed, with Edward Alleyn, the company of Lord Strange’s men to
-whom Privy Council letters of assistance were granted in 1593, and at
-least six (Pope, Phillips, Bryan, Burbadge, Duke, and Sly) are to be
-found in the cast of _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ as performed by Strange’s or
-the Admiral’s or the two together about 1590–1. It will be remembered
-that the Strange’s company of 1593, known as the Earl of Derby’s after
-25 September 1593, was apparently formed by a combination of the
-earlier Strange’s and Admiral’s men somewhere near the time of this
-performance, if not earlier, and that its composite character never
-wholly disappeared, Alleyn in particular, who was its leading member,
-retaining his personal status as an Admiral’s man. It seems clear that
-in 1594 the combination broke up, that Alleyn became the nucleus of
-a new Admiral’s company at the Rose, and that the group with whom he
-had been travelling took fresh service with the Lord Chamberlain. It
-is not, I think, quite accurate to treat this transaction as a mere
-continuance of Lord Derby’s men under the style of Lord Chamberlain’s,
-entailing no reconstruction other than a change of patron following
-upon Lord Derby’s death on 16 April 1594. On the one hand a Derby’s
-company continued in existence, and is traceable under the sixth
-earl from 1594 to 1617. On the other hand, while we do not know what
-business reconstruction there may have been, a very fundamental change
-is involved in the replacement of Alleyn as principal actor by Richard
-Burbadge, who is not at all likely to have played with Strange’s men
-after the break between the Admiral’s and his father at the Theatre in
-1591. Except for Alleyn, all the more important members of the company,
-as it existed in 1593, seem to have been included in the transfer to
-Lord Hunsdon. It is, however, little more than conjecture that finds
-Henry Condell and Christopher Beeston in the ‘Harry’ and ‘Kitt’, or
-Alexander Cooke, Nicholas Tooley, and Robert Gough, who were numbered
-amongst the King’s men at a later date, in the ‘Saunder’, ‘Nick’, and
-‘R. Go.’ of the _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ plot. Alleyn’s correspondence of
-1593 adds Richard Cowley to the list of Lord Strange’s men, and, as we
-shall find him acting as a payee for the Chamberlain’s men in 1601, he
-may have been one of them from the beginning. In any case he had joined
-them by 1598, as the stage-directions of _Much Ado about Nothing_ show
-that he played Verges to Kempe’s Dogberry.[573]
-
-There is, of course, one conspicuous Chamberlain’s man who is not
-discoverable either in the Privy Council letter of 1593 or in the _2
-Seven Deadly Sins_ of 1590–1. Even the audacity of Mr. Fleay has not
-attempted to identify the ‘Will’ of the plot with Will Shakespeare.
-Some relations, if only as author, Shakespeare must have had with
-Lord Strange’s men, when they produced _1 Henry VI_ on 3 March 1592,
-and Greene’s satire of him as a ‘Shake-scene’ in the same year must
-indicate that he was an actor as well as an author.[574] He may have
-stood aside altogether during the period of the provincial tours,
-and devoted himself to poetry, and perhaps, although this is very
-conjectural, to travel abroad. Or he may, as I have already suggested,
-have joined Lord Pembroke’s men (q.v.), whom I suspect to have been
-an offshoot for provincial purposes of the Strange’s combination, and
-have passed from them to Lord Sussex’s, ultimately rejoining his old
-fellows in 1594. The possibility of identifying certain minor members
-of the Chamberlain’s company is also affected by this somewhat obscure
-problem of Pembroke’s men. The most obvious of these is John Sincler or
-Sincklo, who was in the cast of _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ as played by the
-Admiral’s or Strange’s about 1590–1, and must have ultimately joined
-the Chamberlain’s, as his name occurs in a stage-direction to Q_{1} of
-_2 Henry IV_ (1600), and in the induction to _The Malcontent_ (1604).
-It also occurs in stage-directions to _3 Henry VI_ and the _Taming of
-The Shrew_ in the Folio of 1623.[575] These both happen to be plays
-which passed through the hands of Pembroke’s, and the inference may be
-that Sincler had also passed through this company. But this is far
-from being conclusive. It is the revised and not the unrevised texts
-that yield the name, and although I think it likely, on stylistic
-grounds, that the revision of _3 Henry VI_ was done for Pembroke’s
-(q.v.), it is probable from the reference in _Henry V_, epil. 12,
-to the loss of France and the civil wars, ‘which oft our stage hath
-shown’, that the play was revived by the Chamberlain’s, and it may have
-been in such a revival that Sincler took part. As to the _Shrew_, it
-is impossible to say whether Shakespeare’s work upon it was before or
-after its transfer to the Chamberlain’s. In any case the Chamberlain’s
-were playing it in some form on 13 June 1594, so that here again the
-appearance of Sincler’s name cannot ear-mark him as Pembroke’s. We can
-now go a step farther. The stage-directions to _3 Henry VI_ contain not
-only Sincler’s name, but those of a certain ‘Gabriel’ and a certain
-‘Humfrey’, not common Elizabethan names even separately, and certainly
-suggesting, when found in combination, the Gabriel Spencer and Humphrey
-Jeffes, who were fellows of the Admiral’s in 1597. Now Spencer, and
-very likely also Jeffes, had come from Pembroke’s, the short-lived
-Pembroke’s of 1597 at the Swan. Had they been Pembroke’s men ever since
-1593? If so, it would be difficult to resist the conclusion that the
-performance which brought their names into the text of _3 Henry VI_,
-and with theirs John Sincler’s, was one by Pembroke’s about that date.
-The obstacle is that there is no known evidence, in provincial records
-or elsewhere, for any continuous existence of Pembroke’s between 1593
-and 1597. Pending the discovery of any such evidence, it seems better
-to assume that Sincler, Spencer, and Jeffes were all Chamberlain’s
-men before 1597, and that it was from a combination of discontented
-elements in that company and in the Admiral’s that the Pembroke’s of
-the Swan arose. If so, the rest of the Pembroke’s men not traceable as
-coming from the Admiral’s, namely Robert Shaw, William Bird _alias_
-Borne, and probably Anthony Jeffes, may also have come from the
-Chamberlain’s; and such an origin might explain the suit with Thomas
-Pope in which Bird was entangled in 1598.[576] Two other minor actors
-in the company about 1597 were probably Harvey and Rossill, whose names
-appear to have got into the text of _1 Henry IV_ in place of those of
-Bardolph and Peto, whom they represented.[577] The list of actors in
-Shakespeare’s plays given by the editors of the First Folio includes
-Samuel Crosse, of whom nothing more is known except that he was of
-an early generation. As the list in the Folio appears to be limited
-to Chamberlain’s and King’s men, excluding for example Alleyn, who
-certainly acted in Shakespearian plays, e.g. _1 Henry VI_, it may be
-that Crosse was for a short time a member of the company soon after
-1594.
-
-It is hardly possible to carry the analysis of origins any further with
-profit, or to assume that the groups which segregated themselves from
-the Strange-Admiral’s combination in 1594 bore any close correspondence
-to the respective contributions of Strange’s and the Admiral’s to that
-combination in 1589 or 1590. The only name that can be connected with
-Strange’s men before 1588 is John Symons and neither he nor George
-Attewell, their payee in 1591, became a Chamberlain’s man. Hypotheses
-have been framed, mainly in the hope of affiliating Shakespeare to
-Lord Leicester’s men, who are supposed to have carried him away from
-Stratford-on-Avon when they visited it in 1586–7, and ultimately
-to have become Lord Strange’s men.[578] So far as Shakespeare is
-concerned, the first record of him on the boards is in 1592, and
-the interval since his hegira from Stratford may have been quite
-otherwise spent. The proof of continuity between Leicester’s men and
-Strange’s altogether fails, since the latter made their appearance a
-decade before the former came to an end. The only member of the Lord
-Chamberlain’s company of 1594 who can be traced to Leicester’s service
-was Kempe, and he had left Leicester’s men by the summer of 1586 and
-was in Denmark. With him were Bryan and Pope, who afterwards spent a
-year in Germany, and may have joined either Strange’s or the Admiral’s
-on their return. The only other Chamberlain’s man, who can be assigned
-to an earlier company than Strange’s, is Heminges, who was probably at
-some time a Queen’s man.
-
-The Chamberlain’s men evidently started business in 1594 with something
-of a repertory derived by inheritance or purchase from antecedent
-companies. Our knowledge of this is mainly confined to plays with which
-Shakespeare was concerned as author or reviser. They certainly did not
-get all the plays produced by Strange’s men at the Rose during 1592
-and 1593. Some of these were Henslowe’s property; others passed with
-Alleyn to the Admiral’s men. But they got _The Jealous Comedy_, if I am
-right in identifying this with _The Comedy of Errors_. They probably
-got _1 Henry VI_, for although the appearance of a Shakespearian play
-in the 1623 Folio is not perhaps, in view of the composition of the
-1647 ‘Beaumont and Fletcher’ Folio, absolute proof that the King’s
-men possessed the copy, their stage had often shown both the loss
-of France and the bleeding of England before _Henry V_ was produced
-in 1599.[579] And they got _Titus and Vespasian_, as revised, after
-passing through the hands of Pembroke’s men, for production by Sussex’s
-under the title of _Titus Andronicus_. Three other of Pembroke’s men’s
-plays came to them, _The Taming of A Shrew_ and _2 and 3 Henry VI_,
-and probably _Hamlet_ belongs to the same group. It is of course only
-a guess of mine that these also went with Shakespeare to Sussex’s men
-and came thence with him. _Titus Andronicus_ and _A Shrew_, indeed,
-became available in print during 1594, but not _Hamlet_, and not _Henry
-VI_, except in the obsolete version called _The Contention of York and
-Lancaster_. I think Shakespeare must also have brought _Richard III_
-and possibly an early version of _Henry VIII_, and that one or other
-of these had already been played by Sussex’s as _Buckingham_. Of the
-_provenance_ of _Hester and Ahasuerus_ nothing can be said. It is not
-necessary to suppose that the Chamberlain’s acquired any plays from the
-stock of the Queen’s men. It is true that Shakespeare subsequently made
-some use of _The Troublesome Reign of King John_, _The Famous Victories
-of Henry V_, and _King Leire_, but these were all in print before he
-needed them.[580] _Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany_, published in 1654 as
-a play the King’s men at the Blackfriars is believed by some to be an
-early play, possibly by Peele, and if so, may belong to the repertory
-of 1594.
-
-I now return to the chronicle of the Chamberlain’s men from 1598
-onwards. The restriction of the London companies by the action of
-the Privy Council to two had left them in direct rivalry with the
-Admiral’s at the Rose. Disputes broke out. Henslowe made a loan to
-William Bird of the Admiral’s on 30 August 1598 to follow a ‘sewt
-agenste Thomas Poope’, and another to Thomas Downton on 30 January
-1599, ‘to descarge Thomas Dickers [Dekker] from the areaste of my lord
-chamberlens men’.[581] The company played at Court on 26 December 1598
-and 1 January and 20 February 1599. During this winter they undertook
-the enterprise of finding a new head-quarters on the Bankside. The
-disputes between landlord and tenants as to the lease of the Theatre
-had reached a crisis, and in December or January the Burbadges removed
-the timber of the house across the Thames, to serve as material for
-the construction of the Globe. The lease of the new site was signed
-on 21 February 1599. Under it one moiety of the interest was retained
-by Richard Burbadge and his brother Cuthbert, who was not himself an
-actor; the other was assigned to Shakespeare, Pope, Phillips, Heminges,
-and Kempe.[582] Shortly afterwards Kempe made over his share to the
-other four. Presumably he now quitted the company, having first, as a
-stage-direction shows, played Peter in the revised version of _Romeo
-and Juliet_ printed in 1599. His place was probably taken by Robert
-Armin, formerly of Lord Chandos’s men, who describes himself in two
-successive issues of his _Fool upon Fool_ (1600 and 1605), first as
-‘clonnico del Curtanio’, and then as ‘clonnico del Mondo’, and who
-had therefore probably joined the Chamberlain’s men before their
-actual transfer to the Globe. As the Theatre had to be built, this is
-not likely to have taken place until the autumn of 1599, and it must
-therefore remain doubtful which house was the ‘wooden O’ of _Henry V_,
-produced during the absence of Essex in Ireland between 27 March and
-28 September 1599. It was, however, certainly at the Globe that Thomas
-Platter saw _Julius Caesar_ on 21 September.[583] ‘This fair-filled
-Globe’, too, is named in the epilogue to Jonson’s _Every Man Out of his
-Humour_, which is ascribed in the Folio of 1606 to 1599, although if
-this be correct, an apparent allusion to Kempe’s journey to Norwich in
-the spring of 1600 must, on the assumption that it is a real allusion,
-be an interpolation. The ‘principall Comoedians’ in this play were
-Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips, Condell, Sly, and Pope. Four of the 1598
-names are missing. Shakespeare evidently stood aside. Kempe had gone.
-Beeston and Duke may have gone also, although it is only a conjecture
-of Mr. Fleay’s that they and Kempe now seceded to Pembroke’s men at the
-Rose, and they are not definitely heard of again until they are found
-with Worcester’s men in August 1602.[584] Mr. Fleay thinks that another
-Worcester’s man, Robert Pallant, had accompanied them; but, although
-Pallant was with Strange’s or the Admiral’s about 1590, there is no
-evidence that he was ever a Chamberlain’s man. Conceivably he may have
-joined the King’s men about 1619, but that is another matter.[585]
-About November 1599 was published _A Warning for Fair Women_, which
-belonged to the company.
-
-The Court plays called for from the Chamberlain’s men during the
-following winter were on 26 December 1599 and on 6 January and 3
-February 1600. Heminges was sole payee, and occupied the same position
-in every subsequent year, up to and beyond 1616, except in 1600–1, when
-Richard Cowley was associated with him, and for a special payment made
-to Burbadge in 1604. On 6 March 1600 the company had an opportunity
-of rendering direct service to their patron Lord Hunsdon, by playing
-_Henry IV_, still oddly called _Sir John Oldcastle_, after a dinner
-which he gave to the Flemish ambassador, Ludovic Verreyken, presumably
-at his house in the Blackfriars.[586] To 1600 I assign Shakespeare’s
-_Merry Wives of Windsor_, not improbably prepared for performance, with
-the aid of the boys of Windsor Chapel, at the Garter Feast on 23 April,
-and also _As You Like It_. This was a year of some activity among the
-publishers and, as in 1598, the company had to take steps to protect
-their interests. In May John Roberts was prevented from printing their
-moral of _Cloth Breeches and Velvet Hose_, until he could bring proper
-authority, and in August a note was made in the Stationers’ Register to
-stay the printing of _As You Like It_, _Henry V_, and _Much Ado about
-Nothing_.[587] The last two of these, but not the first, were in fact
-printed during the year, and so were _A Midsummer-Night’s Dream_, _The
-Merchant of Venice_, _2 Henry IV_, _Every Man Out of his Humour_, and
-_An Alarum for London_, all plays belonging to the company.
-
-The Chamberlain’s men played at Court on 26 December 1600 and on 6
-January and 24 February 1601. Shortly before this last performance,
-they had been involved in one of the tragedies of history. This was the
-abortive _coup d’état_ of 8 February 1601 in which the Earl of Essex,
-smarting under the disgrace which his failure in Ireland had brought
-upon him, attempted to secure his position and get rid of Sir Walter
-Raleigh and other enemies by taking forcible possession of the person
-of Elizabeth and the palace of Whitehall. Some of his followers seem
-to have conceived the idea of predisposing the mind of the populace
-to their cause by a dramatic representation of the dangers of evil
-counsellors and the possible remedy of a deposition, as illustrated
-in the case of Elizabeth’s predecessor Richard II, in whom for some
-obscure reason the political thought of the time was fond of finding
-an analogue to the Queen. Saturday, 7 February, the day before the
-outbreak, was chosen for the performance, and the players applied to
-were the Chamberlain’s. A deposition by Augustine Phillips, taken
-before Chief Justice Popham and Justice Fenner during the subsequent
-inquiries, records the transaction.[588]
-
- ‘The Examination of Augustine Phillips, servant unto the L.
- Chamberlain and one of his players, taken the xviij^{th} of
- February, 1600, upon his oath.
-
- ‘He saith that on Friday last was sennight or Thursday Sir
- Charles Percy Sir Josceline Percy and the Lord Mounteagle with
- some three more spoke to some of the players in the presence
- of this Examinate to have the play of the deposing and killing
- of King Richard the Second to be played the Saturday next,
- promising to get them xl_s._ more than their ordinary to play
- it. Where this Examinate and his fellows were determined to
- have played some other play, holding that play of King Richard
- to be so old and so long out of use that they should have small
- or no company at it. But at their request this Examinate and
- his fellows were content to play it the Saturday and had their
- xl^{_s._} more than their ordinary for it, and so played it
- accordingly.’
-
-The fact that Phillips speaks of the play as old and long out of
-use, which becomes in the narrative of Camden ‘exoleta tragoedia’,
-hardly justifies the suggestion that it was something earlier than
-Shakespeare’s _Richard II_. This, if produced in 1596, may well
-have been off the boards by 1601.
-
-A good deal of misunderstanding has gathered round the connexion of
-the Chamberlain’s men with this affair. Mr. Fleay is responsible for
-the theory that they fell into disgrace, had to travel, and were
-excluded from the Court festivities of the following Christmas.[589] As
-a matter of fact they played four times during that winter. This Mr.
-Fleay did not know, as he only had before him Cunningham’s incomplete
-extracts from the accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber. But he
-ought to have noticed that their last performance for 1600–1 was
-itself some days later than the examination of Augustine Phillips.
-Nor is any evidence that the company travelled in 1601 forthcoming
-from the provincial archives. Mr. Fleay’s identification of them with
-Laurence Fletcher’s Scottish company of that year merely rests upon
-the presence of Fletcher’s name in the patent of 1603, and this will
-not bear the strain of the argument.[590] Thus remains, however, the
-possibly autobiographical passage in _Hamlet_, ii. 2. 346, which
-assigns an ‘inhibition by the means of the late innovation’ as a
-cause of the travelling of players to Elsinore. The date of _Hamlet_
-may well be 1601, since the same passage refers to the theatrical
-competition set up by the establishment of boy companies at St. Paul’s
-in 1599 and at the Chapel Royal in 1600. But it must be borne in mind
-that this competition is the only reason given for the travelling in
-the 1603 edition of the play. In the 1604 edition the only reason
-is the inhibition, while in the text of the 1623 Folio both reasons
-stand somewhat inconsistently side by side.[591] No doubt the text
-of 1603 is an imperfect piratical reprint. On the other hand that of
-1604 almost certainly represents a revised version of the play, and
-the ‘inhibition’ cited, if it had an historical existence at all,
-may be that of 1603, during which certainly the company travelled. I
-suppose that ‘innovation’ might mean the accession of a new sovereign,
-although it does not seem a very obvious term. But then it does not
-seem a very obvious term for a seditious rising either.[592] On the
-whole, there is no reason to suppose that any serious blame was
-attached to the Chamberlain’s men for lending themselves to Sir Gilly
-Meyrick’s intrigue. It is certainly absurd to suggest, as has been
-suggested, that the ‘adorned creature’, whose ingratitude instigated
-the comparison between Elizabeth and Richard, was not Essex but
-Shakespeare.[593] At the same time the company may, of course, have
-been told to leave London for a few weeks. At some time, as the
-1603 title-page tells us, they took _Hamlet_ both to Oxford and to
-Cambridge, and it is at least tempting to find a reminiscence of the
-Cambridge visit in the scene from _2 Return from Parnassus_ cited
-below. It is possible that Phillips and his fellows, and even their
-relation to the Essex crisis itself, may be glanced at in the satirical
-picture of the Roman actors in Jonson’s _Poetaster_, produced by the
-Chapel boys in the course of 1601.[594] Certainly the play betrays its
-author’s knowledge of a counter-attack which the Chamberlain’s men
-were already preparing for him in Dekker’s _Satiromastix_. This play,
-in which Dekker may have had some help from Marston, was entered in
-the Stationers’ Register on 11 November 1601, and had probably been on
-the stage not long before. It is noteworthy that it was produced by
-the Paul’s boys, as well as by the Chamberlain’s men. It was actually
-published in 1602. Another play which may reasonably be assigned to
-1601 is _Twelfth Night_.
-
-In the following winter the company played at Court on 26 and 27
-December 1601 and on 1 January and 14 February 1602. They also gave
-_Twelfth Night_ at the Middle Temple feast on 2 February;[595] and I
-have very little doubt that it was they who furnished the play at which
-Elizabeth and her maids of honour were present in the Blackfriars after
-dining with Lord Hunsdon on 31 December.[596] The alleged production
-of _Othello_ before the Queen when Sir Thomas Egerton entertained
-her at Harefield from 31 July to 2 August 1602 rests on a forgery by
-Collier.[597] It is possible that, as Professor Wallace conjectures,
-the play was on the capture of Stuhl-Weissenburg, seen by the Duke of
-Stettin on 13 September 1602, may have been a Globe production.[598]
-_Sir Thomas Cromwell_, a play of unknown authorship belonging to the
-company, was published in the course of 1602, with an ascription on the
-title-page to W. S., and to this year I assign Shakespeare’s _All’s
-Well that Ends Well_ and _Troilus and Cressida_. If so, the portrait
-of Ajax in the latter play cannot very well have been the ‘purge’
-administered by Shakespeare to Jonson, to which reference is made in _2
-Return from Parnassus_. This is a Cambridge Christmas piece, probably
-of 1601–2, and in it Burbadge and Kempe are introduced as in search of
-scholars to write for them. Perhaps the Cambridge author did not know
-that Kempe had ceased to be the ‘fellow’ of Burbadge and Shakespeare in
-1599, and was at the time playing with Worcester’s men at the Rose. It
-is, however, just possible that after returning from his continental
-tour and before throwing in his lot with Worcester’s, he may have
-rejoined the Chamberlain’s for a while, and may have accompanied them
-to Cambridge, if they did travel in 1601.[599]
-
-The last performances of the company before Elizabeth took place on 26
-December 1602 and 2 February 1603, and on the following 24 March the
-Queen died. Playing immediately ceased in London. Strictly speaking,
-the Chamberlain’s men must have again become Lord Hunsdon’s men for
-a month or so, for the Household appointments naturally lapsed with
-the death of the sovereign, and Hunsdon, being in failing health, was
-relieved of his duties on 6 April. On 9 September he died.[600] The
-company, however, had already passed under royal patronage.
-
-A contemporary panegyrist records the graciousness of James in
-‘taking to him the late Lord Chamberlaines servants, now the Kings
-acters’.[601] The appointment was by letters patent dated 19 May 1603,
-of which the text follows.[602]
-
-[Sidenote: Commissio specialis pro Laurencio Fletcher & Willelmo
-Shackespeare et aliis]
-
- Iames by the grace of god &c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
- Sheriffes, Constables, hedborowes, and other our Officers and
- louinge Subiectes greetinge. Knowe yee that Wee of our speciall
- grace, certeine knowledge, & mere motion haue licenced and
- aucthorized and by theise presentes doe licence and aucthorize
- theise our Servauntes Lawrence Fletcher, William Shakespeare,
- Richard Burbage, Augustyne Phillippes, Iohn Heninges, Henrie
- Condell, William Sly, Robert Armyn, Richard Cowly, and the rest
- of theire Assosiates freely to vse and exercise the Arte and
- faculty of playinge Comedies, Tragedies, histories, Enterludes,
- moralls, pastoralls, Stage-plaies, and Suche others like as
- theie haue alreadie studied or hereafter shall vse or studie,
- aswell for the recreation of our lovinge Subjectes, as for
- our Solace and pleasure when wee shall thincke good to see
- them, duringe our pleasure. And the said Commedies, tragedies,
- histories, Enterludes, Morralles, Pastoralls, Stageplayes, and
- suche like to shewe and exercise publiquely to theire best
- Commoditie, when the infection of the plague shall decrease,
- aswell within theire nowe vsual howse called the Globe within
- our County of Surrey, as alsoe within anie towne halls or Moute
- halls or other conveniente places within the liberties and
- freedome of anie other Cittie, vniversitie, towne, or Boroughe
- whatsoever within our said Realmes and domynions. Willinge and
- Commaundinge you and everie of you, as you tender our pleasure,
- not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein without anie your
- lettes hindrances or molestacions during our said pleasure, but
- alsoe to be aidinge and assistinge to them, yf anie wronge be to
- them offered, And to allowe them such former Curtesies as hath
- bene given to men of theire place and quallitie, and alsoe what
- further favour you shall shewe to theise our Servauntes for our
- sake wee shall take kindlie at your handes. In wytnesse whereof
- &c. witnesse our selfe at Westminster the nyntenth day of May
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-Of the nine players named, eight are recognizable as the principal
-members of the Lord Chamberlain’s company as it stood at the end of
-Elizabeth’s reign. Only Thomas Pope is not included. He was near his
-end. He made his will on 22 July 1603, and it was proved on 13 February
-1604. In it he names none of his fellows, unless Robert Gough, who has
-a legacy, was already of the company; his interest in the house of
-the Globe passed to legatees and was thus alienated from the company.
-Laurence Fletcher, on the other hand, whose name heads the list in
-the patent, is not discernible as a Chamberlain’s man. His inclusion
-becomes readily intelligible, when it is recalled that he had headed
-English actors on tour in Scotland, and had already been marked by the
-personal favour of James.[603] Whether he ever joined the company in
-the full sense, that is to say, the association of actors as distinct
-from the body of royal servants, seems to me very doubtful. His name
-is not in the _Sejanus_ list, or in the Folio list of Shakespearian
-players, and that he was described as a ‘fellow’ by Phillips in 1605
-hardly takes the matter further. He may have held a relation to the
-King’s men analogous to that of Martin Slater to Queen Anne’s men.
-After 1605 nothing is heard of him.[604]
-
-The terms of the patent imply that it was issued during a suspension
-of playing through plague. Probably this had followed hard upon the
-suspension at Elizabeth’s death. The company travelled, being found at
-Bath, Coventry, and Shrewsbury in the course of 1602–3. A misplaced
-Ipswich entry of 30 May 1602 may belong to 1603. The visits to Oxford
-and Cambridge referred to on the title-page of the 1603 edition of
-_Hamlet_ must also have taken place in this year, if they did not
-take place in 1601. On 2 December 1603 the company were summoned
-from Mortlake to perform before the King at Lord Pembroke’s house of
-Wilton.[605]
-
-During the winter of 1603–4 the company gave eight more plays at
-Court, a larger number than Elizabeth had ever called for. They took
-place on 26, 27, 28, and 30 December 1603 and on 1 January and 2 and
-19 February 1604. On New Year’s Day there were two performances, one
-before James, the other before Prince Henry. The plague had not yet
-subsided by 8 February, and James gave his men £30 as a ‘free gifte’
-for their ‘mayntenaunce and releife’ till it should ‘please God to
-settle the cittie in a more perfecte health’. One of the plays of
-this winter was _The Fair Maid of Bristow_. Another, produced before
-the end of 1603, was probably Ben Jonson’s _Sejanus_. For alleged
-popery and treason in this play Jonson was haled before the Privy
-Council by the Earl of Northampton, but there is nothing to show that
-the players were implicated. The principal actors in _Sejanus_ were
-Burbadge, Shakespeare, Phillips, Heminges, Sly, Condell, John Lowin,
-and Alexander Cooke. This is Shakespeare’s last appearance in the
-cast of any play. He may have ceased to act, while remaining a member
-of the company and its poet. The names of Lowin and Cooke are new.
-Lowin had been with Worcester’s men in 1602–3. Cooke had probably
-begun his connexion with the company as an apprentice to Heminges. The
-identification of him with the ‘Sander’ of Strange’s men in 1590 is
-more than hazardous. The Induction to Marston’s _Malcontent_, published
-in 1604, records the names of Burbadge, who played Malevole, Condell,
-Sly, Lowin, Sincler, and a Tire-man. Sincler was probably still only
-a hired man. Nothing further is heard of him. This Induction seems to
-have been written by John Webster to introduce the presentation by the
-King’s men of _The Malcontent_, which was really a Chapel play. The
-transaction is thus explained:[606]
-
- _Sly._ I wonder you would play it, another company having
- interest in it?
-
- _Condell._ Why not Malevole in folio with us, as Jeronimo
- in decimo-sexto with them? They taught us a name for our play;
- we call it _One for Another_.
-
-The play of _Jeronimo_, which the Chapel are here accused of taking,
-cannot be _The Spanish Tragedy_, which was an Admiral’s play, and is
-not very likely to have been the ‘comedy of Jeronimo’ which Strange’s
-men had in 1592, and which was evidently related to _The Spanish
-Tragedy_ and may be expected to have remained with it. It might be the
-extant _First Part of Jeronimo_, written perhaps for the Chamberlain’s
-men about 1601–2, when Jonson was revising _The Spanish Tragedy_ for
-the Admiral’s. A reference in T. M.’s _Black Book_ shows that _The
-Merry Devil of Edmonton_, which belonged to the company, was already on
-the stage by 1604.[607]
-
-The coronation procession of James, deferred on account of the plague,
-went through London on 15 March 1604, and the Great Wardrobe furnished
-each of the King’s players with four and a half yards of red cloth. The
-same nine men are specified in the warrant as in the patent of 1603,
-and their names stand next those of various officers of the Chamber.
-They did not, however, actually walk in the procession.[608] From 9 to
-27 August 1604, they were called upon in their official capacity as
-Grooms of the Chamber to form part of the retinue assigned to attend
-at Somerset House upon Juan Fernandez de Velasco, Duke of Frias and
-Constable of Castile, who was in England as Ambassador Extraordinary
-for the negotiation of a peace with Spain. The descriptions of his
-visit, which have been preserved, do not show that any plays were given
-before him.[609]
-
-The company were at Oxford between 7 May and 16 June 1604. About 18
-December they had got into trouble through the production of a tragedy
-on _Gowry_, always a delicate subject with James.[610] But this did
-not interfere with a long series of no less than eleven performances
-which they gave at Court between 1 November 1604 and 12 February 1605,
-and of which the Revels Accounts fortunately preserve the names.[611]
-The series included one play, _The Spanish Maze_, of which nothing is
-known; two by Ben Jonson, _Every Man In his Humour_ and _Every Man Out
-of his Humour_; and seven by Shakespeare, _Othello_, _The Merry Wives
-of Windsor_, _Measure for Measure_, _The Comedy of Errors_, _Henry V_,
-_Love’s Labour’s Lost_, and _The Merchant of Venice_, which was given
-twice. _Othello_ and _Measure for Measure_ had probably been produced
-for the first time during 1604, but the rest of the list suggests
-that opportunity was being taken to revive a number of Elizabethan
-plays unknown to the new sovereigns. This is borne out by the terms of
-a letter from Sir Walter Cope to Lord Southampton with regard to the
-performance of _Love’s Labour ’s Lost_.[612]
-
-Between 4 May 1605, when he made his will, and 13 May, when it was
-proved, died Augustine Phillips. Unlike Pope, he was full of kindly
-remembrances towards the King’s men. He appointed Heminges, Burbadge,
-and Sly overseers of the will. He left legacies to his ‘fellows’
-Shakespeare, Condell, Fletcher, Armin, Cowley, Cooke, and Nicholas
-Tooley; to the hired men of the company; to his ‘servant’ Christopher
-Beeston; to his apprentice James Sands, and to his late apprentice
-Samuel Gilburne. We have here practically a full list of the company.
-The name of Nicholas Tooley is new, unless indeed he was the ‘Nick’ of
-Strange’s men in 1592. He speaks of Richard Burbadge in his will as his
-‘master’ and may have been his apprentice. The use of the term ‘fellow’
-suggests that Tooley and Cooke were now sharers in the company. On
-the other hand Lowin, who is not named among the ‘fellows’, may still
-have been only a hired man. Beeston’s legacy is doubtless in memory
-of former service as hired man or apprentice; he was in 1605 and for
-long after with the Queen’s men. Samuel Gilburne is recorded as a
-Shakespearian actor in the 1623 Folio, but practically nothing is known
-of him or of James Sands. The exact legal disposal of the interest held
-by Phillips in the Globe subsequently became matter of controversy, but
-in effect it remained from 1605 to 1613 with his widow and her second
-husband, and was thus alienated from the company.
-
-On some date before Michaelmas in 1605 the King’s men visited
-Barnstaple, and on 9 October they were at Oxford. This year saw the
-publication of _The Fair Maid of Bristow_ and of _The London Prodigal_,
-which was assigned on its title-page to Shakespeare. To it I also
-assign Shakespeare’s _Macbeth_ and _King Lear_.
-
-Ten Court plays were given in the winter of 1605–6, but the dates are
-not recorded. Three more were given in the summer of 1606 during the
-visit of the King of Denmark to James, which lasted from 7 July to 11
-August, and then the company seem to have gone on tour. They were at
-Oxford between 28 and 31 July, at Leicester in August, at Dover between
-6 and 24 September, at Saffron Walden and Maidstone during 1605–6, and
-at Marlborough in 1606. To this year I assign Shakespeare’s _Antony
-and Cleopatra_ and _Coriolanus_, and to the earlier part of it Ben
-Jonson’s _Volpone_, in which the principal actors were Burbadge,
-Condell, Sly, Heminges, Lowin, and Cooke.
-
-Nine Court plays were given during the winter of 1606–7, on 26 and 29
-December 1606, and on 4, 6, and 8 January and 2, 5, 15, and 27 February
-1607. The entry in the Stationers’ Register for _King Lear_ and the
-title-page of Barnes’ _The Devil’s Charter_, both dated in 1607, show
-these to have been the plays selected for 26 December and 2 February
-respectively. In the same year were also published Tourneur’s _The
-Revenger’s Tragedy_ and Wilkins’ _The Miseries of Enforced Marriage_,
-and to it I assign the production of _Timon of Athens_. On 16 July 1607
-Heminges lent his boy John Rice to appear as an angel of gladness with
-a taper of frankincense, and deliver an eighteen-verse speech by Ben
-Jonson as part of the entertainment of James by the Merchant Taylors at
-their hall.[613] During the summer the company travelled to Barnstaple,
-to Dunwich, to Oxford, where they were on 7 September, and possibly
-to Cambridge. _Volpone_ had probably been given in both Universities
-before its publication about February 1607 or 1608.
-
-During the winter of 1607–8 the company gave thirteen Court plays, on
-26, 27, and 28 December 1606, and on 2, 6, 7, 9, 17, and 26 January,
-and 2 and 7 February 1607. On each of the nights of 6 and 17 January
-there were two plays. In 1608 was published _A Yorkshire Tragedy_,
-with Shakespeare’s name on the title-page, and to it I assign the
-production of _Pericles_, in which Shakespeare probably had Wilkins for
-a collaborator. About May the company had to find their share of the
-heavy fine necessary to buy off the inhibition due to the performance
-of Chapman’s _Duke of Byron_ by the Queen’s Revels.[614] The year was
-in many ways an eventful one for the King’s men. They had, I suspect,
-to face a growing detachment of Shakespeare from London and the
-theatre; and the loss was perhaps partly supplied by the establishment
-of relations with Beaumont and Fletcher, whose earliest play for the
-company, _Philaster_, may be of any date from 1608 to 1610. About 16
-August died William Sly, leaving his interest in the Globe to his
-son Robert and legacies to Cuthbert Burbadge and James Sands. Both
-he and Henry Condell had been admitted to an interest at some date
-subsequent to November 1606, the moiety of the lease not retained by
-the Burbadges having been redistributed into sixths to allow of this.
-The deserts of Pope, Phillips, and Sly are all commemorated in the
-_Apology_ of Thomas Heywood, which, though not published until 1612,
-was probably written in 1608.[615] Sly’s death complicated an important
-transaction in which the King’s men were engaged. This was the
-acquisition of the Blackfriars, of which the freehold already belonged
-to the Burbadges, but which had been leased since 1600 to Henry Evans
-and occupied by the Children of the Revels. About July 1608 Evans was
-prepared to surrender his lease, and the Burbadges decided to take the
-opportunity of providing the King’s men with a second house on the
-north side of the Thames, suitable for a winter head-quarters. As in
-the case of the Globe, they shared their interest as housekeepers with
-some of the leading members of the company. New leases were executed
-on 9 August 1608, by which the house was divided between a syndicate
-of seven, of whom five were Richard Burbadge, Shakespeare, Heminges,
-Condell, and Sly, while the other two, Cuthbert Burbadge and Thomas
-Evans, were not King’s men. When Sly’s death intervened, his executrix
-surrendered his interest and the number of the syndicate was reduced
-to six. Probably, however, the King’s men did not enter upon the
-actual occupation of the Blackfriars until the autumn of the following
-year.[616] In fact the plague kept the London theatres closed from July
-1608 to December 1609. The King’s men were at Coventry on 29 October
-1608 and at Marlborough in the course of 1607–8. The plague did not
-prevent them from appearing at Court during the winter of 1608–9, and
-they gave twelve plays on unspecified dates. But their difficulties are
-testified to by a special reward ‘for their private practise in the
-time of infeccion’, which had rendered their Christmas service possible.
-
-The plague led to an early provincial tour. The company were at Ipswich
-on 9 May, at Hythe on 16 May, and at New Romney on 17 May 1609. Their
-winter season was again interfered with, and a further grant was made
-in respect of six weeks of private practice. Amongst the plays so
-practised may, I think, have been _Cymbeline_. They gave thirteen plays
-at Court on unspecified dates during the holidays of 1609–10.[617]
-One of these may have been _Mucedorus_, the edition of which with
-the imprint 1610 represents a revised version performed at Court on
-the previous Shrove Sunday. This might be either 18 February 1610 or
-3 February 1611. The epilogue contains an apology for some recent
-indiscretion of the company in a play of which no more is known, but
-which might conceivably be Daborne’s _A Christian Turned Turk_, since
-this certainly brought its players into some disgrace. By April the
-company were at the Globe, playing _Macbeth_ on 20 April, _Cymbeline_
-probably shortly before, and _Othello_ on 30 April.[618] To this year
-I assign _The Winter’s Tale_ and Beaumont and Fletcher’s _The Maid’s
-Tragedy_. It also saw the production of Jonson’s _Alchemist_, with
-a cast including Burbadge, Lowin, Condell, Cooke, Armin, Heminges,
-William Ostler, John Underwood, Tooley, and William Ecclestone. This is
-the last mention of Armin in connexion with the King’s men, but it is
-sufficient to show that the production of his _Two Maids of Moreclack_
-by the King’s Revels about 1608 did not involve any breach with his
-old company. Of Ecclestone’s origin nothing is known.[619] Ostler and
-Underwood came from the Queen’s Revels, probably when the Blackfriars
-was taken over in 1609. In fact an account of the transaction given by
-the Burbadges in 1635 suggests that the desire to acquire these boys
-was its fundamental motive. They say:
-
- ‘In processe of time, the boyes growing up to bee men, which
- were Underwood, Field, Ostler, and were taken to strengthen the
- King’s service; and the more to strengthen the service, the
- boyes dayly wearing out, it was considered that house would bee
- as fitt for ourselves, and soe purchased the lease remaining
- from Evans with our money, and placed men players, which were
- Heminges, Condall, Shakspeare, &c.’
-
-This narrative seems, however, to have antedated matters as regards
-Field. Or, if he did come to the King’s men in 1609, he almost
-immediately returned to the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars, joining the
-King’s again about 1616.[620]
-
-About 8 May 1610 some superfluous apparel of the company was sold
-by Heminges on their behalf to the Duke of York’s men (q.v.). On
-31 May Burbadge and Rice were employed by the City to make speeches
-on fish-back at the civic pageant of welcome to Prince Henry.[621]
-The autumn travelling took the company to Dover between 6 July and 4
-August 1610, to Oxford in August, and to Shrewsbury and Stafford in
-1609–10. During the following winter they gave fifteen Court plays on
-unspecified days. They were playing a piece on the story of Richard II,
-not now extant, at the Globe on 30 April 1611, and _A Winter’s Tale_ on
-15 May.[622] During 1611 Jonson’s _Catiline_ was produced, with a cast
-similar to that of _The Alchemist_, except that Armin was replaced by
-Richard Robinson, whose earlier history is unknown. Robinson, playing
-a female part, and Robert Gough also appear in the stage directions of
-_The Second Maiden’s Tragedy_, licensed for the stage by Sir George
-Buck on 31 October 1611. Gough was probably one of Strange’s men in
-1592. He appears in the wills of Pope in 1603 and of Phillips, who was
-his brother-in-law, in 1605, but with no indication that he belonged
-to the King’s men. Beaumont and Fletcher’s _A King and No King_ was
-also licensed by Buck in 1611, and to this year I assign Shakespeare’s
-_Tempest_. On 25 August 1611 the interest in the Blackfriars originally
-intended for Sly was assigned to Ostler. Ecclestone, on the other hand,
-later in the year than the production of _Catiline_, but before 29
-August, left the company for the Lady Elizabeth’s men.
-
-The only provincial visit by the King’s men recorded in 1610–11 was
-to Shrewsbury. They gave twenty-two plays at Court during a rather
-prolonged winter season extending from 31 October 1611 to 26 April
-1612. Two of these, on 12 and 13 January, were joint performances with
-the Queen’s men, and the plays used, Heywood’s _Silver Age_ and _Rape
-of Lucrece_, were from the repertory of the latter.[623] The King’s men
-also gave _The Tempest_ and _A Winter’s Tale_, _A King and No King_,
-Tourneur’s _The Nobleman_, and _The Twins’ Tragedy_. On 20 February
-1612 the actors’ moiety of the Globe was again redistributed, into
-sevenths, so as to allow of the admission as a housekeeper of Ostler,
-who had married a daughter of Heminges. From the statement of the
-interests held by the parties to this transaction, it is to be inferred
-that Heminges and Condell had between them bought out since 1608 the
-representatives of Sly. On 21 April 1612 the company was at New Romney
-and at some date during 1611–12 at Winchester. Heminges received a
-payment for services to the Lord Mayor’s pageant of this year, which
-was Dekker’s _Troja Nova Triumphans_.[624]
-
-The actor-list attached to _The Captain_ in the Beaumont and Fletcher
-Folio of 1679 probably belongs to the original production of the
-play between 1609 and 1612. It names Burbadge, Condell, Cooke, and
-Ostler. It was one of the plays selected for the Court season of
-1612–13, during which, on 14 February, took place the wedding of the
-Elector Palatine Frederick and the Princess Elizabeth, and which was
-therefore singularly rich in plays, notwithstanding the interruption
-of the festivities due to the death of Prince Henry on 7 November
-1612. Heminges lent a boy for Chapman’s mask on 15 February. The
-twenty plays given this winter by the King’s men, the exact dates of
-which are not upon record, were Shakespeare’s _Much Ado about Nothing_
-(performed twice), _The Tempest_, _A Winter’s Tale_, _Julius Caesar_,
-_Othello_, and _1 and 2 Henry IV_, Jonson’s _Alchemist_, Beaumont and
-Fletcher’s _Philaster_ (also performed twice), _The Maid’s Tragedy_,
-_A King and No King_, _The Captain_ and the lost play of _Cardenio_,
-Tourneur’s _Nobleman_, and four plays of unknown authorship, _The Merry
-Devil of Edmonton_, _The Knot of Fools_, _The Twins’ Tragedy_, and
-_A Bad Beginning Makes a Good Ending_. On 8 June there was a special
-performance of _Cardenio_ for the Savoyan ambassador. Some unknown
-cause seems to have brought Shakespeare back in 1613 to the assistance
-of his fellows, and he collaborated with Fletcher in _The Two Noble
-Kinsmen_ and in _Henry VIII_ or _All is True_, possibly a revision of
-the _Buckingham_ which formed part of the repertory of Sussex’s men in
-1594. During a performance of _Henry VIII_, on 29 June 1613, the Globe
-was burnt to the ground. Some contemporary verses mention Burbadge,
-Heminges, and Condell as present on this occasion. A levy was called
-for from the housekeepers to meet the cost of rebuilding, and owing to
-the inability of the representatives of Augustine Phillips to meet the
-call upon them, Heminges was enabled to recover one of the alienated
-interests, which he divided with Condell.
-
-The company was at Oxford before November in 1613, and also visited
-Shrewsbury, Stafford, and Folkestone during 1612–13. They played
-sixteen times at Court in the winter of 1613–14, on 1, 4, 5, 15, and
-16 November and 27 December 1613, and on 1, 4, and 10 January, 2, 4,
-8, 10, and 18 February and 6 and 8 March 1614. The rebuilding of the
-Globe was complete by 30 June 1614, and in the course of 1613–14 the
-company visited Coventry. Cooke died in February 1614, being then a
-sharer. Ostler died on 16 December, and his interests in the Globe
-and Blackfriars became matter of dispute between his widow and her
-father, John Heminges. The ascertained dates of Ostler’s career render
-it possible to assign to 1609–14, the period of his connexion with the
-King’s men, three plays in which he took part. These are Webster’s
-_Duchess of Malfi_, at the first production of which, if the actor-list
-of the 1623 edition is rightly interpreted, the parts of Ferdinand, the
-Cardinal, and Antonio were played respectively by Burbadge, Condell,
-and Ostler, Fletcher’s _Valentinian_, played by Burbadge, Condell,
-Lowin, Ostler, and Underwood, and his _Bonduca_, played by Burbadge,
-Condell, Lowin, Ostler, Underwood, Tooley, Ecclestone, and Robinson.
-_Bonduca_ must be either earlier than Ecclestone’s departure for the
-Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1611, or after he quitted that company and
-presumably rejoined the King’s in 1613.
-
-The King’s men gave eight plays at Court on unspecified days during the
-winter of 1614–15. On 29 March 1615 they were in trouble with other
-companies for playing in Lent, and Heminges and Burbadge appeared on
-their behalf before the Privy Council. In April 1615 they were at
-Nottingham. They gave fourteen plays at Court between 1 November 1615
-and 1 April 1616, and again the precise dates are not specified. They
-also appeared before Anne at Somerset House on 21 December 1615.
-
-Shakespeare died on 23 April 1616, and with this event I must close my
-detailed chronicle of the fortunes of the company. A new patent was
-issued to them on 27 March 1619, probably to secure their right to
-perform in the Blackfriars, which was being challenged by the action
-of the City.[625] Since 1603 Shakespeare, Phillips, Sly, Cowley,
-Armin, and Fletcher have dropped out of the list, and are replaced by
-Lowin, Underwood, Tooley, Ecclestone, Gough, and Robinson, together
-with Nathan Field, Robert Benfield, and John Shank, who now appear
-for the first time as members of the company.[626] Benfield and Field
-are last traceable with the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1613 and 1615
-respectively, Shank with the Palsgrave’s men in 1613. The only names
-common to both patents are those of Burbadge, Heminges, and Condell.
-But in fact Burbadge died on 13 March 1619, while the patent was going
-through its stages, and his place was almost immediately taken by
-Joseph Taylor, from Prince Charles’s men. About the same time Field
-left the company.[627] Heminges, described as ‘stuttering’ in 1613,
-cannot be shown to have acted since the _Catiline_ of 1611. He had
-probably devoted himself to the business management of the company, in
-which he always appears prominent. Condell also seems to have given up
-acting about 1619, and during the rest of the history of the company
-up to its extinction in 1642, its mainstays were Lowin and Taylor, who
-became depositaries of the tradition of the great Shakespearian parts.
-John Downes, who was prompter to the Duke of York’s men after the
-Restoration, relates how, when Betterton played Hamlet, ‘Sir _William_
-[Davenant] (having seen _Mr. Taylor_ of the _Black-Fryers_ Company Act
-it, who being instructed by the Author _Mr. Shakespear_) taught _Mr.
-Betterton_ in every Particle of it’; and how Davenant was similarly
-able to act as Betterton’s tutor for Henry the Eighth, for he ‘had it
-from Old _Mr. Lowen_, that had his Instructions from _Mr. Shakespear_
-himself’.[628] When Heminges and Condell came to print Shakespeare’s
-plays in 1623, they prefixed ‘the names of the principall Actors in
-all these playes’ as follows: ‘William Shakespeare, Richard Burbadge,
-John Hemmings, Augustine Phillips, William Kempt, Thomas Poope, George
-Bryan, Henry Condell, William Slye, Richard Cowly, John Lowine, Samuell
-Crosse, Alexander Cooke, Samuel Gilburne, Robert Armin, William Ostler,
-Nathan Field, John Underwood, Nicholas Tooley, William Ecclestone,
-Joseph Taylor, Robert Benfield, Robert Goughe, Richard Robinson, John
-Shancke, John Rice.’ The order is a little puzzling. The first ten
-entries may be those of the original members of the Chamberlain’s
-company in 1594; and if so, their order does not matter. But it is
-difficult to believe that the other sixteen can represent either the
-order in which the men began to play for the company, or the order in
-which they became sharers. Of course, there may have been comings and
-goings known to Heminges and Condell, but not now traceable. Thus Field
-and even Taylor may have come for a short while and gone again before
-1611. But it seems impossible that Tooley, who was ‘fellow’ to Phillips
-in 1605, could really have been junior to the recruits from the Queen’s
-Revels in 1609. On the whole, one must suppose that, if Heminges and
-Condell aimed at an exact chronology, their memory occasionally failed
-them. The omission from the Folio of Duke, Beeston, Sincler, and Sands
-may indicate that the list is confined to sharers. It is probable that
-Fletcher, who is also omitted, was not a sharer and did not act in any
-Shakespearian play.
-
-
- xxi. THE EARL OF WORCESTER’S AND QUEEN ANNE’S MEN
-
- William Somerset, _nat._ 1526; succ. as 3rd Earl of Worcester,
- 1548; m. Christian, d. of Edward, 1st Lord North; _ob._ 22 Feb.
- 1589.
-
- Edward Somerset, s. of William; _nat._ 1553; Lord Herbert of
- Chepstow; succ. as 4th Earl, 1589; m. Elizabeth, d. of Francis,
- 2nd Earl of Huntingdon; Deputy Master of the Horse, Dec. 1597;
- Master of the Horse, 21 Apr. 1601; Earl Marshal, 1603; Lord
- Privy Seal, 2 Jan. 1616; _ob._ 3 Mar. 1628.
-
- Henry Somerset, s. of Edward; _nat._ 1577; Lord Herbert of
- Chepstow from 1589; m. 16 June 1600, Anne, d. of John, Lord
- Russell; succ. as 5th Earl, 1628; cr. 1st Marquis of Worcester,
- 1642.
-
- Anne, d. of Frederick II, King of Denmark and Norway; _nat._ 12
- Dec. 1574; m. James VI, King of Scotland, 20 Aug. 1589; Queen
- Consort of England, 24 Mar. 1603; _ob._ 2 Mar. 1619.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The records of Worcester’s men in
- 1602–3 are printed and discussed by W. W. Greg in _Henslowe’s
- Diary_ (1904–8). The will of Thomas Greene (1612) was printed
- by J. Greenstreet in the _Athenaeum_ (29 August 1895), and the
- Bill, Answer, and Orders in the Chancery suit of _Worth et al.
- v. Baskerville et al._ (1623–6) by the same in the _Athenaeum_
- (11 July and 29 August 1885) and _N. S. S. Trans._ (_1880–6_),
- 489. Both are reprinted in Fleay, 192, 271. The Court of
- Requests suit of _Smith v. Beeston et al._ (1619–20) is printed
- by C. W. Wallace in _Nebraska University Studies_, ix. 315.]
-
-The first company under the patronage of this house had a long and
-wholly provincial career.[629] The earliest record of it is at
-Barnstaple in 1555. On 10 October 1563 it was at Leicester. On 13 and
-14 January 1565 it was at Sir George Vernon’s, Haddon Hall, Derbyshire,
-under the leadership of one Hamond.[630] It is further traceable in
-December 1565 at Newcastle, before Michaelmas 1566 at Leicester,
-in 1567–8 at Gloucester, in 1568–9 at Ipswich, Stratford-on-Avon,
-and Bath, on 11 August 1569 at Nottingham, in 1569–70 and 1570–1 at
-Gloucester and Barnstaple, in 1571 at Leicester and Beverley, on 9
-January 1572 at Nottingham, before Michaelmas at Leicester, on 31
-December 1572 at Wollaton, Notts. (Francis Willoughby’s), on 6 January
-1573 at Nottingham, in 1572–3 at Bath, in 1573–4 at Abingdon, and in
-January 1574 at Wollaton again. As the Earl of Worcester’s eldest
-son bore the courtesy title of Lord Herbert, it is probably the same
-company which appeared at Leicester, after Michaelmas in 1574, as
-‘Lorde Harbards’. But it is named as Worcester’s again in 1574–5 at
-Stratford-on-Avon, on 28 April 1575 at Nottingham, and after Michaelmas
-in the same year at Leicester, in 1575–6 at Coventry, in 1576–7 at
-Stratford-on-Avon and Bath, and on 14 June 1577 at Southampton, where
-it consisted of ten men. On 19 January 1578 it was at Nottingham, in
-1577–8 at Coventry, in 1580–1 and 1581–2 at Stratford-on-Avon, in
-1581–2 at Abingdon, on 15 June 1582 at Ipswich, in the same year at
-Doncaster.
-
-Two incidents in successive years suggest that Worcester’s men were not
-always quite so amenable, as vagrants should have been, to municipal
-discipline. The first was at Norwich on 7 June 1583. Here there was a
-fear of plague, and the company were given 26_s._ 8_d._, on a promise
-not to play. In spite of this they played in their host’s house. The
-Corporation ordered ‘that their lord shall be certified of their
-contempt’, and that they should never again receive reward in Norwich,
-and should presently depart the town on pain of imprisonment. It was
-afterwards agreed, however, on submission and earnest entreaty, not to
-report the misdemeanour to the Earl of Worcester. The second occasion
-was in the following March in Leicester, and the entries in the
-Corporation archives are so interesting as to deserve reproduction in
-full.[631]
-
-[Sidenote: M^r Mayor
- M^r J. Tatam
- M^r Morton.]
-
- Tuesdaie the third daie of Marche, 1583, certen playors whoe
- said they were the seruants of the Quenes Maiesties Master
- of the Revells, who required lycence to play & for there
- aucthorytye showed forth an Indenture of Lycense from one M^r
- Edmonde Tylneye esquier M^r of her Maiesties Revells of the one
- parte, and George Haysell of Wisbiche in the Ile of Elye in the
- Countie of Cambridge, gentleman on the other parte.
-
- The which indenture is dated the vj^{th} daie of Februarye in
- the xxv^{th} yere of her Maiesties raign &c.
-
- In which Indenture there ys one article that all Justices,
- Maiores, Sherifs, Bayllyfs, Constables, and all other her
- officers, ministers & subiects whatsoeuer to be aydinge &
- assistinge vnto the said Edmund Tilneye, his Deputies &
- Assignes, attendinge & havinge due regard vnto suche parsons
- as shall disorderly intrude themselves into any the doings and
- actions before mencioned, not beinge reformed, qualifyed & bound
- to the orders prescribed by the said Edmund Tyllneye. These
- shalbee therefore not only to signifye & geve notice vnto all
- & euery her said Justices &c. that none of there owne pretensed
- aucthoritye intrude themselves & presume to showe forth any
- suche playes, enterludes, tragedies, comodies, or shewes in
- any places within this Realm, withoute the orderlye allowance
- thereof vnder the hand of the sayd Edmund.
-
- NOTA. No play is to bee played, but suche as is allowed by the
- sayd Edmund, & his hand at the latter end of the said booke they
- doe play.
-
- The forsed Haysell is nowe the chefe playor &c.
-
-
- Fridaye the 6 of Marche.
-
- Certen players came before M^r Mayor at the Hall there beinge
- present M^r John Tatam, M^r George Tatam, M^r Morton & M^r
- Worship: who sayed they were the Earle of Wosters men: who sayd
- the forsyd playors were not lawfully aucthorysed, & that they
- had taken from them there commyssion, but it is untrue, for they
- forgat there box at the Inne in Leicester, & so these men gat yt
- & they sed the syd Haysell was not here hymself and they sent
- the same to Grantom to the syd Haysell who dwellith there.
-
- William Earle of Worcester &c. hath by his wrytinge dated the 14
- of Januarye Anno 25^o Eliz. Reginae licensed his Seruants viz.
- Robert Browne, James Tunstall, Edward Allen, William Harryson,
- Thomas Cooke, Rychard Johnes, Edward Browne, Rychard Andrewes
- to playe & goe abrode, vsinge themselves orderly &c. (in theise
- words &c.) These are therefore to require all suche her Highnes
- offycers to whom these presents shall come, quietly & frendly
- within your severall presincts & corporacions to permytt &
- suffer them to passe with your furtherance vsinge & demeanynge
- themselves honestly & to geve them (the rather for my sake)
- suche intertaynement as other noble mens players haue (In Wytnes
- &c.)
-
- M^r Mayor
- M^r Jo. Heyrycke
- M^r Noryce
- M^r Ja. Clarke
- M^r George Tatam
- M^r Morton
- M^r Rob^t Heyrycke
- M^r Ellys
- M^r Newcome.
-
- Memorandum that M^r Mayor did geve the aforesaid playors an
- angell towards there dinner & wild them not to playe at this
- present: being Fryday the vj^{th} of Marche, for that the tyme
- was not conveynyent.
-
- The foresaid playors mett M^r Mayor in the strete nere M^r
- Newcomes housse, after the angell was geven abowte a ij howers,
- who then craived lycense ageyne to play at there inn, & he told
- them they shold not, then they went away & seyd they wold play,
- whether he wold or not, & in dispite of hym, with dyvers other
- evyll & contemptyous words: Witness here of M^r Newcome, M^r
- Wycam, & William Dethicke.
-
- More, these men, contrary to M^r Mayors comandment, went with
- their drum & trumppytts thorowe the Towne, in contempt of M^r
- Mayor, neyther wold come at his comandment, by his offycer, viz.
- Worship.
-
- William Pateson my lord Harbards man }
- Thomas Powlton my lord of Worcesters man } these ij
-
- were they which dyd so much abuse M^r Mayor in the aforesayd
- words.
-
- NOTA. These sayd playors have submytted them selves, & are sorye
- for there words past, & craved pardon, desyeringe his worship
- not to write to there Master agayne them, & so vpon there
- submyssyn, they are lycensed to play this night at there inn, &
- also they have promysed that vppon the stage, in the begynyng of
- there play, to shoe vnto the hearers that they are licensed to
- playe by M^r Mayor & with his good will & that they are sory for
- the words past.
-
-The latter part of this record is intelligible enough; evidently there
-was a repetition of the misrule at Norwich. But the earlier part, which
-refers to a different matter altogether, is distinctly puzzling. The
-‘theys’ in the first sentence of the Corporation minute of 6 March are
-complicated, and it has sometimes been supposed that there was really a
-company of Master of the Revels’ men, and that it was Worcester’s men
-who questioned the licence of these.[632] On the whole, I think that
-a different interpretation of the documents is the more natural one.
-No doubt Worcester’s men had found it necessary, as a result of the
-powers granted to Tilney as Master of the Revels by the patent of 24
-December 1581, to renew the authority under which they travelled. In
-addition to a fresh warrant from their lord licensing them to travel
-as his household servants, and dated 14 January 1583, they obtained
-on the following 6 February a further licence from Tilney, issued
-under the clause of his commission which appointed him to ‘order and
-reforme, auctorise and put downe’ all players in any part of England,
-whether they were ‘belonginge to any noble man’ or otherwise.[633]
-This licence, but not the other, they left at their inn in Leicester,
-while passing through on some previous occasion; and here it was found
-by some unlicensed players, who appropriated it, and either through
-misunderstanding or through fraud, imposed it upon the Corporation as
-an instrument constituting a Master of the Revels’ company. There are
-two difficulties in this theory. One is that George Haysell, to whom
-Tilney’s licence was issued, is not one of the actors named in the
-Earl of Worcester’s warrant. But there are other cases in which the
-constitution of a company in the eyes of its lord was not quite the
-same as its constitution from the point of view of business relations,
-and I should suppose that Haysell, who was evidently not himself
-acting at the time, was the financier of the enterprise, and gave the
-bonds which Tilney would probably require for the satisfaction of the
-covenants of his indenture of licence. The other difficulty is that
-Leicester is not the only place in which the presence of a Master of
-the Revels’ company is recorded. Such a company was at Ludlow on 7
-December 1583 and at Bath in 1583–4.[634] But, after all, this need
-mean no more than that the bogus company kept up their fraud for two or
-three months before they were exposed. If Tilney had really started a
-company of his own, it might have been expected to have a longer life.
-The establishment in 1583 of the Queen’s men makes it the less probable
-that he did so.
-
-The list of this provincial company, as it stood in January 1583, is
-interesting, because at least four of its members, Robert Browne,
-Richard Jones, James Tunstall, and above all Edward Alleyn, then only
-a lad of sixteen, were destined to take a considerable share in the
-stage history of the future. Edward Browne, too, was afterwards one of
-the Admiral’s men. Of the rest, William Harrison, Thomas Cooke, Richard
-Andrewes, as well as of George Haysell (cf. ch. xv) and of the two
-players who were not named in the warrant, Thomas Powlton and William
-Pateson, Lord Herbert’s man, nothing or practically nothing further is
-known.[635] It is possible that the escapades of the company at Norwich
-and Leicester came, after all, to Worcester’s ears and aroused his
-displeasure. Visits are recorded to Coventry and Stratford in 1583–4,
-to Maidstone in 1584–5, to York in March 1585, and thereafter no more.
-It is also possible that the company passed from Worcester’s service
-into that of Lord Howard, when the latter became Lord Admiral in 1585.
-If so, a conveyance by Richard Jones to Edward Alleyn on 3 January 1589
-of his share in a stock of apparel, play-books, and so forth, held
-jointly with Edward and John Alleyn and Robert Browne, must relate, not
-to a break up of Worcester’s men shortly before the death of the third
-earl, but to some internal change in the organization of the Admiral’s
-men.[636] In any case Mr. Fleay’s theory that Worcester’s men, other
-than Alleyn, became Pembroke’s in 1589 and only joined the Admiral’s
-in 1594 is quite gratuitous, as there is no evidence of the existence
-of Pembroke’s men before 1592.[637] Whether there was a Worcester’s
-company or not from 1585 to 1589, there was certainly one after the
-accession of the fourth earl. It is traceable at Coventry in 1589–90,
-at Newcastle in October 1590, at Leicester during the last three months
-of the same year, at Coventry and Faversham in 1590–1, at Leicester
-on 26 June 1591 and again in the last three months of the year, at
-Coventry and Shrewsbury in 1591–2, at Ipswich in 1592–3, twice at
-Leicester in 1593, both before and after Michaelmas, twice at Bath in
-1593–4, at Leicester before Michaelmas in 1595, at Ludlow on 3 December
-1595, at Bath in 1595–6, at Leicester on 1 August 1596, at Bristol in
-August 1598, at York in April 1599, and at Coventry on 3 January 1600
-and in 1600–1 and 1601–2.[638]
-
-By the end of 1601 the Earl of Worcester was holding the Mastership of
-the Horse and other important offices at Court, and may have thought it
-consonant with his dignity to have London players under his patronage.
-On 3 January 1602 his company was at Court. On 31 March the Privy
-Council, after attempting for some years to limit the number of London
-companies to two, made an order that Oxford’s and Worcester’s men,
-‘beinge ioyned by agrement togeather in on companie’, should be allowed
-to play at the Boar’s Head and nowhere else.[639] In the course of 1602
-_How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_ was published as played
-by Worcester’s men. By 17 August the company were in relations, under
-the style of ‘my lorde of Worsters players’, with Henslowe, who opened
-an account of advances made for their play-books and apparel, on the
-same lines as that which he kept during 1597–1603 with the Admiral’s
-men.[640] An early entry is of 9_s._ for a supper ‘at the Mermayd when
-we weare at owre a grement’. The account was continued until the spring
-of 1603, when Henslowe’s famous diary was disused. No theatre is named,
-but it is probable that, with or without leave from the Privy Council,
-the company moved to the Rose, which had been vacated by the Admiral’s
-men on the opening of the Fortune in 1600. Certainly this was so by
-May 1603, when an acquittance for an advance entered in the account
-refers to a play to be written for ‘the Earle of Worcesters players at
-the Rose’.[641] There is no complete list of the company in the diary.
-The names of those members incidentally mentioned, as authorizing
-payments or otherwise, are John Duke, Thomas Blackwood, William Kempe,
-John Thare, John Lowin, Thomas Heywood, Christopher Beeston, Robert
-Pallant, and a Cattanes whose first name is not preserved. The payees
-for the performance of 1601–2 were Kempe and Heywood. One Underell was
-in receipt of wages from the company, together with a tireman, who
-made purchases of stuffs for them. It is impossible to say which of
-these men had been with Worcester’s and which with Oxford’s before the
-amalgamation. Heywood, who was playwright as well as actor, had written
-for the Admiral’s from 1596 to 1599, and had bound himself to play in
-Henslowe’s house for two years from 25 March 1598. Pallant had been
-with Strange’s or the Admiral’s in 1590–1, and Duke, Kempe, and Beeston
-with the Chamberlain’s in 1598. Since then Kempe had travelled abroad,
-returning in September 1601. It is little more than a guess that some
-of these men may have played with Henslowe as Pembroke’s.[642] Several
-members of the company borrowed money from Henslowe, in some cases
-before their connexion with the Rose began. Duke had a loan as early as
-21 September 1600, and Kempe on 10 March 1602.[643] Blackwood and Lowin
-borrowed on 12 March 1603 to go into the country with the company.[644]
-This was, no doubt, when playing in London was suspended owing to the
-illness of Elizabeth. A loan for a similar purpose was made on the same
-day to Richard Perkins, and suggests that he too was already one of
-Worcester’s men. There is, indeed, an earlier note of 4 September 1602
-connecting him with one Dick Syferweste, whose fellows were then in
-the country, while Worcester’s were, of course, at the Rose. But this
-itself makes it clear that he was interested in a play of Heywood’s,
-which can hardly be other than that then in preparation at the Rose,
-and perhaps Syferwest was an unfortunate comrade in Oxford’s or
-Worcester’s, who had been left out at the reconstruction.[645]
-
-During the seven months of the account Worcester’s men bought twelve
-new plays. These were:
-
- _A Medicine for a Curst Wife_ (Dekker).
- _Albere Galles_ (Heywood and Smith).
- _Marshal Osric_ (Heywood and Smith).
- _The Three Brothers_ (Smith).[646]
- _1 Lady Jane_, or, _The Overthrow of Rebels_[647] (Chettle,
- Dekker, Heywood, Smith, and Webster).
- _Christmas Comes but Once a Year_ (Chettle, Dekker, Heywood, and
- Webster).
- _1 The Black Dog of Newgate_ (Day, Hathaway, Smith, and another).
- _The Blind Eats Many a Fly_ (Heywood).
- _The Unfortunate General_ (Day, Hathaway, and Smith).
- _2 The Black Dog of Newgate_ (Day, Hathaway, Smith, and another).
- _A Woman Killed with Kindness_ (Heywood).
- _The Italian Tragedy_ (Smith).
-
-As a rule the price was £6 a play; occasionally £1 or £2 more. Dekker
-had 10_s._ ‘over & above his price of’ _A Medicine for a Curst Wife_.
-This had originally been begun for the Admiral’s and was evidently
-transferred to Worcester’s by arrangement. After buying _2 Black Dog
-of Newgate_ for £7, the company apparently did not like it, and paid
-£2 more for ‘adycyones’. It is possible to verify from the purchase
-of properties the performance of nine of the twelve plays. These are
-_Albere Galles_ (September), _The Three Brothers_ (October), _Marshal
-Osric_ (November), _1 Lady Jane_ (November), _Christmas Comes but
-Once a Year_ (December), _1 Black Dog of Newgate_ (January), _The
-Unfortunate General_ (January), _2 Black Dog of Newgate_ (February),
-and _A Woman Killed with Kindness_ (March). The production of this last
-may, however, have been interfered with by Elizabeth’s death. Two plays
-of the series are extant, _A Woman Killed with Kindness_, printed in
-1607 and described in 1617 as a Queen’s play, and _1 Lady Jane_, which
-may be reasonably identified with _Sir Thomas Wyatt_, also printed in
-1607 as a Queen’s play, and by Dekker and Webster. Dr. Greg regards Mr.
-Fleay’s identification of _Albere Galles_ with _Nobody and Somebody_ as
-‘reasonable’; but it appears to rest on little, except the fact that
-the latter was also printed as a Queen’s play (S. R. 12 March 1606)
-and the conjecture that the title of the former might be a corruption
-of _Archigallo_. Payments were made in respect of a few contemplated
-plays, which apparently remained incomplete at the end of the season.
-These were _2 Lady Jane_ (Dekker), an unnamed tragedy by Chettle, an
-unnamed play by Middleton, and another unnamed play by Chettle and
-Heywood. The company also produced some plays of earlier date. _Sir
-John Oldcastle_ was presumably transferred to them from the Admiral’s
-men, for Dekker had £2 10_s._ in respect of new additions to it in
-August and September. Heywood also had £1 in September for additions
-to a play called _Cutting Dick_, as to the origin of which nothing is
-known; and properties were bought in October for _Byron_[648] and for
-_Absalom_. Possibly the latter is identical with _The Three Brothers_.
-Worcester’s men did not perform at Court in 1602–3, but they must have
-expected a summons, as on 1 January they bought head-tires of one
-Mrs. Calle ‘for the corte’. Amongst their tradesmen were also Goodman
-Freshwater, who supplied ‘a canvas sewt and skenes’, apparently for a
-stage dog, and John Willett, mercer, on whose arrest John Duke found
-himself in the Clink at the end of the season. Their expenditure was
-at a fairly high rate, amounting to a total of £234 11_s._ 6_d._ for
-the seven months. Unlike the Admiral’s men, they spent more on apparel
-and properties than on play-books. Some of their purchases were costly
-enough, ‘a grogren clocke, ij veluet gerkens, ij dubletes and ij hed
-tyres’ from Edward Alleyn for £20, ‘a manes gowne of branshed velluet
-& a dublett’ from Christopher Beeston for £6, and ‘iiij clothe clockes
-layd with coper lace’ from Robert Shaw, formerly of the Admiral’s, for
-£16. On this last transaction they had to allow Henslowe £1 as interest
-on his money. A ‘flage of sylke’, no doubt for the theatre roof, cost
-them £1 6_s._ 8_d._[649] In summing his account, Henslowe made various
-errors, whereby he robbed himself of £1 1_s._ 3_d._, and presented a
-claim to the company for £140 1_s._ It may be inferred that they had
-already repaid him £93 12_s._ 3_d._, but of this there is no record
-in the diary. He prepared an acknowledgement to be signed by all the
-members of the company, but the only signature actually attached is
-Blackwode’s.
-
-On 9 May 1603 Henslowe notes ‘Begininge to playe agayne by the Kynges
-licence & layd out sense for my lord of Worsters men as folowethe’;
-but the only entry is one of £2 paid in earnest to Chettle and Day for
-a play of _Shore’s Wife_. If playing was actually resumed, it was
-not long before the plague drove the companies out of London again,
-and there is nothing more of Worcester’s men in the diary. Two visits
-from them are recorded at Leicester in the course of 1603, and two at
-Coventry and one at Barnstaple, whence they departed without playing,
-during 1602–3. Early in the new reign the company was taken into the
-patronage of Queen Anne.[650] This change was probably effected by
-Christmas, and certainly by 19 February 1604, when John Duke obtained
-a warrant on account of plays performed before Prince Henry by ‘the
-Queenes Majesties players’ on the previous 2 and 13 January. The
-Queen’s men are named in the Privy Council letter permitting the
-resumption of playing on 9 April 1604, which indicates their house as
-the Curtain. A list of players is found amongst other ‘officers to
-the Queene’ receiving four and a half yards of red cloth apiece for
-the coronation procession of 15 March 1604.[651] The names given are
-‘Christopher Beeston, Robert Lee, John Duke, Robert Palante, Richard
-Purkins, Thomas Haward, James Houlte, Thomas Swetherton, Thomas Grene,
-and Robert Beeston’. Evidently several leading members had left the
-company. Kempe was probably dead.[652] Thare and Blackwood were on tour
-in Germany; Lowin seems to have joined the King’s men. Of Cattanes and
-Underell no more is known. The same ten names are found in a draft
-patent for a royal licence to the Queen’s men, of which the text
-follows:[653]
-
- Iames, by the grace of God kynge of England, Scotland, Fraunce
- and Irelande, defender of the faith &c: To all Iustices _of
- peace_, Maiors, Sherryfes, vicechancellours _of any our
- vniversities_, _Bailiffes_ [Constables], headboroughes, [and
- other our officers] _Constables_, _and to all other our
- Officers_, _mynisters_ and lov[e]inge subiectes _to whome it
- may appertaine_ Greeting. Knowe yee that wee of our speciall
- grace, certaine knowledge, and mere motion haue lycensed and
- awthorised, and by these presentes doe lycence and awthorise
- Thomas Greene, Christopher Beeston, Thomas Hawood, Richard
- Pyrkins, Robert Pallant, Iohn Duke, Thomas Swynerton, I[e]ames
- Ho[u]lt, Robert Beeston, & Robert Lee, servauntes vnto our
- deare_st_ [and welbeloved] wyfe _the_ Queene Anna, with the
- rest of there Associates, freely to vse and exercise the
- art and faculty of playinge Comedies, Tragedies, Histories,
- Enterludes, Morralls, Pastoralls, Stage plaies, and such other
- lyke as they haue already studied, or hereafter shall vse or
- stud[d]y, as well for the recreacion of our lovinge subiectes
- as for our solace and pleasure, when wee shall thinke good to
- see them, during our pleasure; And the said Comedies, Tragedies,
- Histories, Enterludes, Morralls, Pastoralls, Stage plaies, and
- such like, to shew and exercise publikly, when the infeccion
- of the plague shall decrease to the nomber of thirty weekly
- within _our Citie_ of London and the liberties _therof_, aswell
- within there now vsuall Howsen, called the Curtayne, and the
- Bores head, within our County of Middlesex, [or] _as in_ any
- other play howse not vsed by others, by the said _Thomas_ Greene
- elected, or by him hereafter to be builte, and also within any
- Towne Halls, or Mouthalls, or other convenyent places, within
- the liberties and freedomes of any Cittie, vniversitie, Towne,
- or Boroughe whatsoeuer, within our said Realmes and domynyons:
- Willing and Commaundinge yowe and euerie of yowe, as you tender
- our pleasure, not only to permytt and suffer them [herein] _to
- vse and exercise the said art of playinge_ without any your
- Lettes hinderaunces or molestacions, duringe our said pleasure,
- but also to be aydinge and assistinge vnto them, yf any wronge
- be to them offered, and to allow them such [former] curtesies,
- as hath _heretofore_ bene given vnto any men of theire qualitie:
- [And also what further favour, any of our subiectes shall shew
- to theise our deare and loveinge wyfes servauntes, for our sake,
- wee shall take kyndly at your handes. Yeouen at[ extra spaces
- ]the[ extra spaces ]daye of In the[ extra spaces ]yere of our
- Raygne of England: &c:]
-
- _Gyuen &c._
-
- [Endorsed] The Quenes Plaiers.
-
-This draft is undated. But it was prepared during a plague, and located
-the Queen’s men at the Boar’s Head; and as they may reasonably be
-supposed to have exchanged the Boar’s Head for the Red Bull (q.v.)
-before the plague of 1606 began, it may be conjecturally assigned to
-that of 1603–4. Probably it never passed the Great Seal, for if it had
-there would have been no necessity, so far as one can judge, for a
-later patent of 15 April 1609, which is on the rolls, and which closely
-follows the earlier draft in its terms, except that it omits the
-reference to the plague, names the Red Bull instead of the Boar’s Head
-as one of the company’s regular houses, and adds a saving clause for
-the rights of the Master of the Revels. Here is the text:[654]
-
-[Sidenote: De concessione licentie Thome Greene et aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Iustices, Mayors,
- Sheriffes, Baylieffes, Constables, head-borrowes and other our
- Officers and lovinge Subiectes Greetinge. Knowe yee that wee of
- our especiall grace certayne knowledge and meere mocion have
- lycenced and aucthorised and by these presentes doe lycence and
- aucthorize Thomas Greene, Christofer Beeston, Thomas Haywood,
- Richard Pirkyns, Richard Pallant, Thomas Swinnerton, Iohn Duke,
- Robert Lee, Iames Haulte, and Roberte Beeston, Servantes to
- our moste deerely beloved wiefe Queene Anne, and the reste of
- theire Associates, to vse and exercise the arte and faculty of
- playinge Comedies, Tragedies, historyes, Enterludes, Moralles,
- Pastoralles, Stageplayes and suche other like, as they have
- already studied or heareafter shall vse or studye, aswell
- for the recreacion of our loving Subiectes as for our solace
- and pleasure when wee shall thinke good to see them, during
- our pleasure. And the said Comedies, Tragedies, histories,
- Enterludes, Moralles, Pastoralles, Stageplayes and suche like
- to shewe and exercise publiquely and openly to theire beste
- commoditye, aswell within theire nowe vsuall houses called the
- Redd Bull in Clarkenwell and the Curtayne in Hallowell, as
- alsoe within anye Towne halles, Mouthalles and other convenient
- places within the libertye and freedome of any other Citty,
- vniuersitye, Towne or Boroughe whatsoever within our Realmes and
- Domynions. Willing and Commaundinge you and every of you, as you
- tender our pleasure, not only to permitt and suffer them herein
- without any your lettes hinderances or molestacions during our
- said pleasure, but alsoe to be aydinge [and] assistinge vnto
- them, yf anye wronge be to them offered, and to allowe them
- suche former curtesies as hath byn given to men of theire place
- and qualitye, and alsoe what favoure you shall shewe to them
- for our sake wee shall take kyndly at your handes. Prouided
- alwaies and our will and pleasure is that all aucthoritye,
- power, priuiledges, and profyttes whatsoeuer belonginge and
- properly appertayninge to Master of Revelles in respecte of his
- Office and everye Cause, Article or graunte contayned within
- the lettres Patentes or Commission, which have byn heretofore
- graunted or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our deere
- Sister or by our selues to our welbeloued Servant Edmond Tylney
- Master of the Office of our said Revelles or to Sir George Bucke
- knighte or to eyther of them in possession or revercion, shalbe
- remayne and abyde entyer and full in effecte, force, estate and
- vertue as ample sorte as if this our Commission had never byn
- made. In witnes wherof &c. Witnes our selfe at Westminster the
- fifteenth daye of Aprill.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-It will be observed that the documents quoted disclose no change in the
-composition of the Queen’s official servants between 1604 and 1609.
-But the question of _personnel_ is not really quite so simple as this,
-since the members of a company under a trade agreement were not always
-the same as those named in the authority under which it performed.
-Before discussing this complication, it will be simplest first to
-set out separately the notices of the Queen’s men, which have been
-preserved in London and in provincial records respectively.
-
-Queen’s men played at Court on 30 December 1605, in Heywood’s _How to
-Learn of a Woman to Woo_, which is not extant. They played also on 27
-December 1606. For both years their payee was, as in 1604, John Duke.
-During 1607 Dekker and Webster’s _Sir Thomas Wyatt_ and Day, Wilkins,
-and Rowley’s _Travels of Three English Brothers_ were printed with
-their name on the title-pages. The latter play, according to the entry
-of 29 June 1607 in the Stationers’ Register, was acted at the Curtain.
-But it is shown by a passage in _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_
-to have been also on the stage of the Red Bull. In this house Thomas
-Swinnerton, one of the men named in the patents, acquired an interest
-between 24 March 1605 and 23 March 1606, and all the evidence is in
-favour of a continuous sojourn of Queen’s men there until 1617. The
-first quarto of Heywood’s _A Woman Killed with Kindness_, also printed
-in 1607, does not bear their name, but it is on that of the ‘third
-edition’ of 1617. They are not named as playing at Court during the
-winter of 1607–8, but in the course of 1608 Heywood’s _Rape of Lucrece_
-was printed, as played by them at the Red Bull. They gave five plays at
-Court in the winter of 1608–9, one on 27 December 1609, three on 10 and
-one on 27 December 1610. Heywood’s _Golden Age_ was printed, as played
-by them at the Red Bull, in 1611. The Court records of 1611–12 are a
-little confused.[655] But they appear to have played Cooke’s _City
-Gallant_ on 27 December, his _Tu Quoque_, which is in fact the same
-play, on 2 February, to have joined with the King’s men in performances
-of Heywood’s _Silver Age_ and _Rape of Lucrece_ on 12 and 13 January,
-and to have played unnamed pieces on 21 and 23 January. From 1609
-to 1612 their payee was Thomas Greene. Webster’s _White Devil_ and
-Dekker’s _If It be not Good, the Devil is in It_, were printed as
-theirs in 1612, the former with a laudation of the acting of ‘my freind
-Maister Perkins’, the latter as played at the Red Bull. They did not
-play at Court during the winter of 1612–13, but did on 24 December
-1613 and 5 January 1614. _Tu Quoque_ was printed as theirs in 1614.
-In the winter of 1614–15 they gave three plays at Court. Heywood’s
-_Four Prentices of London_ was printed in 1615 as played by them at the
-Red Bull, and their name is also on _The Honest Lawyer_, registered
-on 14 August 1615 and printed in 1616. They gave four plays at Court
-during the winter of 1615–16. For all their Court plays from 1613–16
-Robert Lee was payee, but Ellis Worth replaces him for a Somerset
-House performance before Queen Anne on 17 December 1615. When they
-were called with other companies before the Privy Council on 29 March
-1615 to answer for playing in Lent, they were represented by Lee and
-Christopher Beeston. The records of the Middlesex justices contain a
-note of 4 October 1616 that Beeston and the rest of the players at the
-Red Bull were in arrears to the extent of £5 on an annual rate of £2
-agreed to by them for the repair of the highways.
-
-Provincial visits of Queen’s men are recorded in November 1605 at
-Dover; in 1605 at Leicester; in 1605–6 at Bath, Coventry, Saffron
-Walden, and Weymouth; on 25 July 1606 at Ipswich; on 4 September 1606
-at Ludlow; in 1606 at York; in 1606–7 at Bath (twice), Coventry,
-Exeter, and Ipswich; on 14 August 1607 at Oxford; on 12 September 1607
-at Belvoir (Earl of Rutland’s);[656] in 1607 at Barnstaple, Leicester,
-and Reading; in 1607–8 at Coventry, Oxford, Reading, and Shrewsbury;
-on 6 June and 26 September 1608 at Leicester;[657] in 1608–9 at
-Coventry,[658] Marlborough, and Shrewsbury; between 8 July and 9 August
-1609 at Dover; on 15 October 1609 at Norwich; in 1609 at Canterbury; in
-1609–10 at Shrewsbury and Stafford; about 23 March 1610 at Maidstone;
-on 2 November 1610 at Ipswich; on 31 December 1610 at Leicester; in
-1610–11 at Shrewsbury and Southampton; on 27 February 1611 (for a week)
-at Norwich; between 11 April and 9 May and between 29 August and 29
-September 1612 at Dover; on 14 June and 26 October 1612 at Leicester;
-in 1611–12 at Saffron Walden; in 1612–13 at Barnstaple, Coventry
-(perhaps twice), and Ipswich; on 18 February 1613 at Marlborough; on
-16 March 1613 at Leicester; between 13 April and 15 May 1613 at Dover;
-on 2 November 1613 at Marlborough; on 22 December 1613 at Leicester;
-in 1613–14 at Saffron Walden, Marlborough, Oxford, and Shrewsbury;
-on 27 April 1614 (for three days) at Norwich;[659] between 3 and
-29 September 1614 at Dover; in 1614–15 at Barnstaple and Doncaster
-(perhaps twice); on 15 April 1615 at Coventry; in April or May 1615 at
-Leicester; on 6 May 1615 at Norwich;[660] on 16 October 1615 and again
-later in 1615 and on 22 February 1616 at Leicester;[661] on 7 November
-1615 at Marlborough; in 1615–16 at Barnstaple, Dunwich (thrice),
-Southampton, and Weymouth; in January 1616 at Nottingham; between 20
-January and 17 February 1616 and between 11 May and 8 June at Dover; on
-17 February 1616 at Coventry; on 22 February 1616 at Leicester; between
-1 and 6 April (four days) and on 29 May 1616 at Norwich;[662] on 26
-October 1616 at Marlborough; and on 6 February 1617 and again later in
-1617 at Leicester.[663]
-
-There were thus tours in each year, which sometimes extended over
-periods during which the London theatres must have been open. The
-Leicester notices of 1608, 1615, and 1617 suggest that more than
-one company was at work, and the explanation certainly is that some
-of the players named in the patent, instead of joining the London
-organization, had recourse to making up companies of their own for
-provincial purposes. Of this there is further evidence. The Southampton
-archives contain a copy of the following warrant from Queen Anne
-herself, dated on 7 March 1606:[664]
-
- ‘Warrant from the Queenes Majestie of her Players. Anna Regina.
- Anne by the grace of God Queene of England, Scottland, Fraunce,
- and Ireland. To all Justices of the Peace, Maiors, Sheriffs,
- Bayliffes, and all other his Majestes Officers and loving
- subiectes to whom yt shall or may appertaine greetinge, Know
- yee that of our speciall grace and favour, Wee are well pleased
- to authorize under our hand and signett the bearers hereof our
- sworne servauntes Robert Lee, Martin Statier and Roger Barfield
- with theyr fellowes and associates being our Commedians vppon
- theyr humble Suite unto us for theyr better mainetenaunce, Yf
- att annie time they should have occasion to travell into anie
- parte of his Majestes Dominions to playe Tragedyes, historyes,
- commedies and pastoralls as well in anie about the Cittye of
- London, and in all other cittyes vniversities and townes at all
- time anie times (the time of divine seruice onlye excepted)
- Theise are therefore to will and requier you uppon the sight
- hereofe quiettlye and favourably with your best favours, to
- permitt and suffer them, to use theyr sayd qualitye within your
- Jurisdiccions without anie of your molestacions or troubles, and
- also to affourd them your Townehalls and all other such places
- as att anie time have been used by men of theyr qualitye, That
- they maye be in the better readiness for our seruise when they
- shalbe thereunto commaunded, Nott doubtinge butt that our sayd
- servauntes shall find the more favour for our sake in your best
- assistaunce, Wherein you shall doe unto us acceptable pleasure.
- Given att the Court of Whitehall, the seaventh daye of Marche
- 1605.’
-
-Of these three men, Lee, and Lee alone, appears in the London lists
-of 1603, 1604, and 1609. Of Barfield’s career nothing more is known.
-Martin Slater, whose name can be divined under that of Statier, had
-left the Admiral’s in 1597. He was probably in Scotland during 1599,
-and if so his patronage by Anne may be analogous to the patronage by
-James, which brought Laurence Fletcher’s name into the King’s men’s
-patent. In 1603 he was payee for Hertford’s men. Presumably the
-enterprise of 1606 did not last long, for in the spring of 1608 Slater
-became manager for the King’s Revels. His place in the provinces may
-have been taken by Thomas Swinnerton, who was leading a company of
-Queen’s men at Coventry in 1608–9, and whose departure from the London
-company is perhaps indicated by the fact that at about the same time
-he sold a share, which he had held in the house of the Red Bull.
-Swinnerton was travelling again in 1614–16 and using an exemplification
-of the patent of 1609. In 1616 he was accompanied by Robert Lee, who
-for two years before had been acting as payee for the London company.
-Lee came again with the exemplification to Norwich on 31 May 1617, and
-it was then noted to have been taken out on 7 January 1612. A few days
-later, on 4 June 1617, a copy was entered in the Norwich court books
-of a warrant by the Lord Chamberlain of 16 July 1616, condemning the
-use of such exemplifications, and specifying amongst others two taken
-out by Thomas Swinnerton and Martin Slater, ‘beinge two of the Queens
-Maiesties company of Playors hauing separated themselves from their
-said Company’.[665] Slater had, therefore, returned to the provincial
-field, and there were now two travelling companies of Queen’s men. I
-take it that in 1617 the Lord Chamberlain succeeded in suppressing
-them, and that the Queen’s men who continued to appear in the provinces
-up to Anne’s death on 2 March 1619 were the London company.[666] Lee
-joined the Queen’s Revels as reorganized under a licence of 31 October
-1617. Slater, about the same time, joined the Children of Bristol,
-for whom, with John Edmonds and Nathaniel Clay, he got letters of
-assistance in April 1618. In these all three are described as her
-Majesty’s servants. Swinnerton apparently succeeded in keeping on foot
-a company of his own, which visited Leicester in 1619.[667] The Bristol
-company was in fact under Anne’s patronage, but Lee and Swinnerton,
-no less than Slater and Edmonds, remained technically the Queen’s
-servants, and are included with the London men in a list of the players
-who received mourning at her funeral on 13 May 1619.[668] These were
-Robert Lee, Richard Perkins, Christopher Beeston, Robert Pallant,
-Thomas Heywood, James Holt, Thomas Swinnerton, Martin Slater, Ellis
-Wroth, John Comber, Thomas Basse, John Blaney, William Robinson, John
-Edmonds, Thomas Drewe, Gregory Sanderson, and John Garret.
-
-The list of seventeen names includes seven of the ten patentees of
-1609. I do not know what had become of John Duke and Robert Beeston.
-Thomas Greene had died in August 1612, having made on 25 July a will,
-amongst the witnesses to which were Christopher Beeston, Heywood, and
-Perkins. The disposal of his property led many years afterwards to a
-lawsuit, which gives valuable information as to both the _personnel_
-and the organization of the London company. After providing for his
-family and making some small legacies, including one to John Cumber,
-and 40_s._ to ‘my fellowes of the house of the Redd Bull, to buy gloves
-for them’, he left the residue to his widow and executrix, Susanna
-Greene, formerly wife of one Browne.[669] In June 1613 she took a
-third husband, James Baskervile. The following is her account in 1623
-of certain transactions with the company. Shortly before Greene’s
-death had died George Pulham, a ‘half sharer’ in the company, which
-is described as being in 1612 ‘the companie of the actors or players
-of the late queenes majestie Queene Anne, then vsuallie frequentinge
-and playinge att the signe of the Redd Bull in St. Johns Street, in
-Clerkenwell parishe, in the county of Middlesex’. His representatives
-received £40 from the company in respect of his half-share. This was
-under an agreement formerly made amongst the company ‘concerninge the
-part and share of euerie one of the sharers and half sharers of the
-said companie according to the rate and proporcion of their shares
-or half shares in that behalfe’. Under the same agreement Susanna
-Greene, whose husband was ‘one of the principall and cheif persons of
-the said companie, and a full adventurer, storer and sharer of in and
-amongst them’, claimed £80, together with £37 laid out by him before
-his death in ‘diuers necessarie prouisions’ for the company. In order
-to get satisfaction she had to appeal to Viscount Lisle, Chamberlain
-of the Queen’s Household, ‘who hadd a kind of gouernment and suruey
-ouer the said players’. It was arranged that Mrs. Greene should receive
-a half-share in the profits until the debt was paid. By the time,
-however, of her marriage with Baskervile, she had only received £6.
-In June 1615 negotiations took place between the Baskerviles and the
-company, who then included Worth, Perkins, and Christopher Hutchinson,
-_alias_ Beeston, by which the Baskerviles agreed to invest £57 10_s._
-in the enterprise and to accept in discharge of their claims a pension
-for their joint lives of 1_s._ 8_d._ a day ‘for euerye of sixe daies
-in the weeke wherin they should play’. The company defaulted, and
-in June 1616 a second settlement was made, whereby the Baskerviles
-invested another £38, a further pension of 2_s._ a day was established,
-and the life of Susan’s son, Francis Browne (or Baskervile), was
-substituted for her husband’s. The players were Christopher Beeston,
-Thomas Heywood, Ellis Worth, John Cumber, John Blaney, Francis Walpole,
-Robert Reynolds, William Robins, Thomas Drewe, and Emanuel Read.[670]
-Again they defaulted, and moreover fell into arrear for the wages of
-another of Susan Baskervile’s sons, William Browne, who played with
-them as a hired man. A third settlement, reassuring the pensions,
-and substituting William Browne for Francis, who was now dead, was
-made on 3 June 1617, when the company were ‘now comme, or shortlie to
-comme from the said Playhowse called the Redd Bull to the Playhowse
-in Drurie Lane called the Cockpitt’; and to this the parties, so
-far as the company were concerned, were Beeston, Heywood, Worth,
-Cumber, Walpole, Blaney, Robins, and Drewe. Apparently Reynolds and
-Read, and also Perkins and Thomas Basse, although their names were
-recited in the deed, refused to seal. Some further light is thrown
-on this by allegations of Worth, Cumber, and Blaney, in opposition
-to those of Mrs. Baskervile in 1623. The company of 1617 contained
-some members ‘new come into’ it, ‘which were of other companyes at
-the tyme of graunting the first annuity’. The terms of the agreement
-were carefully looked into, and were found to bind the company to
-procure the subscription of any future new members to its terms. This
-was inconsistent with a proviso of 1616 that the pensions should only
-last so long as four of those then signing should play together; and
-therefore, while some of the company signed and gave bonds by way of
-security on an oral promise by Mrs. Baskervile that this proviso should
-in fact hold good, others refused to do so. These were the wiser, for
-in 1623, when Worth, Cumber, and Blaney were the only three of the 1617
-signatories who still held together, Mrs. Baskervile sued them on their
-bonds, and although they applied to Chancery for equitable enforcement
-of the alleged oral promise, Chancery held that the agreement, being
-made between players, was ‘vnfitt to be releeued or countenaunced in a
-courte of equitie’. In some other respects the players’ account of the
-transactions differs from Mrs. Baskervile’s, and in particular they
-alleged that the Baskerviles had secured their interest by bribing
-Beeston, to whom ‘your oratours and the rest of thier fellowes at
-that tyme and long before and since did put the managing of thier
-whole businesses and affaires belonging vnto them ioyntly as they were
-players in trust’, so that she knew well that whatever he promised
-the rest ‘would allowe of the same’. This Mrs. Baskervile repudiates
-as regards the bribe, and does not wholly accept as regards Beeston’s
-position in the company, although she admits that both before and
-after her husband’s death they ‘did putt much affiance in the said
-Huttchinson alias Beeston, concerninge the managing of their affaires’.
-
-I am afraid that Beeston’s character does not come altogether
-unstained out of another suit brought by one John Smith in the Court
-of Requests during 1619 for a sum of £46 5_s._ 8_d._ in respect of
-‘tinsell stuffes and other stuffe’ delivered on Beeston’s order to
-Worth, Perkins, Cumber, and others at the Red Bull between 27 June
-1612 and 23 February 1617, since when they had ‘fallen at variance and
-strife amongst themselves and separated and devided themselves into
-other companies.’ He accuses these four men of conspiring to keep him
-out of payment. Worth, Perkins, and Cumber asserted that the liability
-was Beeston’s. The company had ‘required divers officers and that
-every of the said actors should take vpon them some place & charge’.
-Beeston was charged with the provision of furniture and apparel, which
-needed ‘a thriueing man & one that was of abilitie & meanes’. He was
-to ‘defaulke outt of the colleccions and gatheringes which were made
-continually when-soeuer any playe was acted a certen some of money as a
-comon stock.’ to pay for purchases out of this, and to account to the
-company for the balance. No one else was privy to his transactions. The
-arrangement lasted for seven or eight years, and they believe that he
-‘much enritched himself and rendered a false account for expenditure
-of £400. He is now conspiring with Smith and hoping for a chance to
-‘exclayme on’ them. If he incurred debt, he had certainly taken funds
-to meet it. From the beginning he had ‘a greater care for his owne
-privatt gaine’. Now he has ‘of late given over his coate & condicion &
-separated and devided himself’ from the company, carrying away all the
-furniture and apparel. Beeston says that he has long been ill. On Queen
-Anne’s death he left the company and joined Prince Charles’s men. The
-Queen’s had ten sharers, and sometimes one, sometimes another, provided
-the clothes. He denies liability. Several witnesses, including William
-Freshwater, merchant tailor and ‘a workman to the said company’, spoke
-to Beeston’s liability.[671] One John King says that the company
-allowed Beeston ‘one half of the profitt that came of the gallyryes’,
-and that they began to break up about three years ago. At a hearing on
-16 June 1620 Beeston got the case deferred on the ground that Emanuel
-Read, a material witness, was in Ireland until Michaelmas. Elizabeth,
-the wife of Richard Perkins, said that Read had been there for two or
-three years, was over at Easter, and was not expected again. Smith
-got in a blow at Beeston’s credit with an affidavit that he had said
-‘it was nothing for him to put in a false answere into the Court of
-Requestes, for that it was not punishable’. The result of the suit is
-unknown.
-
-We may perhaps reach the following conclusions as to the composition
-of the London company after the deaths in 1612 of Pulham, presumably
-a recent comer since 1609, and Greene. Their nucleus consisted of two
-of the patented men, Christopher Beeston and Heywood, who probably
-remained with them throughout. Of the other patentees, Swinnerton kept
-to the provinces. Lee had rejoined them from the provinces by 1613
-or 1614, and went back to the provinces about May 1616. Perkins was
-apparently not of their number in June 1616, but was in June 1617.
-Holt is not traceable; perhaps he also went to the provinces. Pallant
-joined the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1614 and had passed to Prince Charles’s
-by 1616. All these five men, however, appear with Beeston and Heywood
-as Anne’s servants at her funeral. Here too are Slater and Edmonds,
-then of the Bristol, and apparently never of the London company; also
-Worth, Cumber, Blaney, Drewe, and Robinson, presumably identical with
-Robins, all of whom had joined the London company by June 1616, Basse,
-formerly of the Lady Elizabeth’s, who joined it between June 1616
-and June 1617, and Gregory Sanderson and John Garret, who, if they
-belonged to the London company at all, must have joined it after June
-1617.[672] The list does not contain the names of two men who belonged
-to the company in 1616 and 1617. One was Emanuel Read, who joined it
-from the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613 or later; the other, Robert Reynolds,
-whose attachment to the company must have been rather loose, as he was
-travelling in Germany in July 1616 and again in 1618. Evidently, as the
-lawsuits suggest, the organization of the Queen’s men during its later
-years was rather unstable. Into its attempts to hold together after
-Anne’s death and the after-careers of its members, it is not necessary
-to go.
-
-In June 1617 the Queen’s were come, or shortly to come, from the Red
-Bull to the Cockpit. In fact they were at the Cockpit, then a new
-house, on 4 March 1617, when it was sacked by prentices in a Shrovetide
-riot.[673] But they may have returned to the Red Bull for a time, while
-the Cockpit was being repaired, as they did again after they lost it
-on the separation from Christopher Beeston, who seems to have been its
-owner, in 1619.
-
-
- xxii. THE DUKE OF LENNOX’S MEN
-
- Ludovic Stuart, s. of Esmé, 1st Duke of Lennox; cousin and
- until 1594 heir presumptive of James; _nat._ 29 Sept. 1574;
- succ. as 2nd Duke, 26 May 1583; Gentleman of Bedchamber, 1603;
- Earl of Richmond, 6 Oct. 1613; Lord Steward, Nov. 1615; Duke of
- Richmond, 17 Aug. 1623; o.s.p. 16 Feb. 1624.
-
-The first notice of Lennox’s men is on 13 October 1604, when he gave
-an open warrant of assistance in their behalf addressed to mayors,
-justices, and other local officers, some of whom had apparently refused
-the company permission to play (App. D, no. cxxxvii). On 16 March
-1605 Francis Henslowe gave his uncle Philip a bond of £60 to observe
-articles of an agreement he had entered into with John Garland and
-Abraham Savere ‘his ffellowes, servantes to the most noble Prince the
-duke of Lennox’; and on 1 March 1605 Savere had given Francis Henslowe
-a power of attorney to recover £40 on a forfeited bond from John
-Garland of ‘the ould forde’, securing delivery of a warrant made to
-Savere by Lennox (_Henslowe Papers_, 62). Some other traces point to
-a connexion between Savere and Francis Henslowe, which was ended by
-the latter’s death in the middle of 1606 (Henslowe, ii. 277), and an
-undated loan of £7 by Philip Henslowe to his nephew ‘to goyne with owld
-Garlland and Symcockes and Saverey when they played in the duckes nam
-at ther laste goinge owt’ (Henslowe, i. 160) makes it possible to add
-one more to the list of the company. It does not seem to have played in
-London, but is traceable at Canterbury in 1603–4, Barnstaple, Coventry,
-and Norwich in 1604–5, and Coventry again in 1607–8. Both Garland and
-Henslowe had been Queen Elizabeth’s men, and it is possible that,
-when these men were left stranded by her death in 1603, they found a
-new patron in Lennox. John Garland had joined the Duke of York’s men
-by 1610, and it has been suggested that this company may have been a
-continuation of Lennox’s.
-
-
- xxiii. THE DUKE OF YORK’S (PRINCE CHARLES’S) MEN
-
- _The Duke of York’s Men (1608–12); The Prince’s Men (1612–16)_
-
- Charles, 2nd s. of James I; _nat._ 19 Nov. 1600; Duke of Albany,
- 23 Dec. 1600; Duke of York, 16 Jan. 1605; Prince of Wales, 3
- Nov. 1616; afterwards (27 Mar. 1625) Charles I.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The documents bearing on the relations
- of the Duke of York’s men with Alleyn are printed by W. W. Greg
- in _Henslowe Papers_ (1907); the Bill and Answers in the equity
- suit of _Taylor v. Hemynges_ (1612) by C. W. Wallace in _Globe
- Theatre Apparel_ (p.p., 1909).]
-
-A company under the patronage of Prince Charles, then Duke of York,
-first makes its appearance during 1608, and in the provinces. A visit
-of ‘the younger princes’ men to Ipswich is recorded on 20 October.
-During 1608–9 the company was also at Bath, and it is at least possible
-that it was ‘the Princes players of the White Chapple London’ rewarded
-at Leicester in 1608. The Boar’s Head (q.v.) may have been roughly
-spoken of as in Whitechapel, and although there is no proof that the
-Duke of York’s men occupied it after the Queen’s moved to the Red Bull,
-there is nothing to connect them during the earlier years of their
-career with any of the better-known London houses. On 30 March 1610
-they received, like other London companies, a patent, of which the
-following are the terms:[674]
-
-[Sidenote: De licentia agendi Tragedias &c. pro Johanne Garland & aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Iustices, Mayors,
- Sheriffes, Baylies, Constables, hedboroughes and other our
- loveing subiectes and officers greetinge. Knowe ye that wee of
- our especyall grace, certen knowledge, and meere mocion haue
- lycensed and aucthorized, and by theis presentes doe lycence
- and authorise Iohn Garland, Willyam Rowley, Thomas Hobbes,
- Robert Dawes, Ioseph Taylor, Iohn Newton, and Gilbert Reason,
- alreadye sworne servauntes to our deere sonne the Duke of
- York and Rothesay, with the rest of their company, to vse and
- exercise the arte and quality of playing Comedyes, Tragedies,
- histories, Enterludes, Moralles, Pastoralles, Stagplayes, and
- such other like as they haue already studdied or hereafter
- shall studye or vse, aswell for the recreacion of our loveing
- subiectes, as for our solace and pleasure when wee shall thinke
- good to see them, and the said Enterludes or other to shewe
- and execise publiquely to their best aduantage and commoditie,
- aswell in and about our Cittye of London in such vsuall howses
- as themselues shall provide, as alsoe within anye Townehalles,
- Mootehalles, Guildhalles, Schoolehowses, or other convenient
- places within the lybertye and freedome of any other Cittye,
- vniversity, Towne, or Boroughe whatsoever within our Realmes and
- Domynions, willing and comaundinge you and everie of you, as
- you tender our pleasure, not onlye to permitt and suffer them
- herein without any your lettes, hindraunces, molestacions or
- disturbances during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be ayding
- and assisting vnto them, if any wronge be vnto them offered, and
- to allowe them such former curtesies as hath byne given to men
- of their place and quality, And alsoe what further favor you
- shall shewe them for our sake wee shall take yt kyndlye at your
- handes. Prouided alwaies and our will and pleasure is that all
- authority, power, priviledg, and proffitt whatsoever belonging
- and properly apperteyninge to the Master of our Revelles in
- respect of his Office and everie article and graunt contayned
- within the lettres patentes or Commission, which haue byne
- heretofore graunted or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our
- deere sister or by our selfe to our welbeloved servantes Edmond
- Tillney Master of the said Office of the said Revelles, or to
- Sir George Bucke knight, or to eyther of them, in possession or
- Revercion, shall remayne and abyde entire and in full force,
- estate and vertue and in as ample sort as if this our commission
- had never bene made. Witnes our selfe att Westminster the
- thirtith daye March.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-The only member of the Duke of York’s men, of whose previous history
-anything is known, is John Garland. He was of the Duke of Lennox’s men
-in 1605. Perhaps the whole company was taken over from the Duke of
-Lennox. Mr. Fleay says that the Duke of York’s men arose ‘immediately
-after the disappearance of the King’s Revels Children’,[675] and
-appears to suggest a continuity between the two companies; but he
-must have overlooked the fact that the Duke of York’s were already
-performing in the provinces, while the King’s Revels were in all
-probability still at Whitefriars.[676]
-
-Some reconstruction doubtless took place about the date of the issue
-of the patent, for the pleadings in the equity suit of _Taylor v.
-Hemynges_ in 1612 recites an agreement of 15 March 1610, which
-provided for the continuance of fellowship during three years and the
-forfeiture of the interest in a common stock of ‘apparrell goodes
-money and other thinges’ of any member, who left without the consent
-of the rest. It was made between Garland on the one side and Taylor,
-Rowley, Dawes, and Hobbes on the other, and these four gave Garland a
-bond of £200 as security. On 8 May the five bought some ‘olde clothes
-or apparrell which formerly weare players clothes or apparrell’ from
-John Heminges of the King’s men for £11, and gave a bond of £20 for
-payment. Apparently payment had not been made by Easter 1611, when
-Taylor ‘by the licence and leave of his said Master the Duke vpon some
-speciall reason ... did give over and leave to play in the company’.
-Under the agreement the apparel passed to his fellows, and according
-to Taylor they paid Heminges the £11 or otherwise satisfied him, and
-then ‘havinge conceaued some vndeserued displeasure’ against Taylor
-for leaving them, conspired with Heminges to defraud him of £20 on the
-bond. According to Heminges no payment was made, and he sued Taylor
-as ‘the best able to paye and discharge the same’. Taylor was arrested
-and in February 1612 brought his suit in equity to stay the common law
-proceedings. The result is unknown.
-
-The company frequently played at Court, but, as it would seem, only
-before the younger members of the royal family. Their first appearance
-was before Charles and Elizabeth on 9 February 1610. In 1610–11 they
-were at Saffron Walden. They came before Charles and Elizabeth on 12
-and 20 December 1610 and 15 January 1611, and before Henry, Charles,
-and Elizabeth on 12 and 28 January and 13 and 24 February 1612. On
-this last occasion they played William Rowley’s _Hymen’s Holiday,
-or Cupid’s Vagaries_. After Henry’s death, on 7 November 1612, they
-became entitled to the designation of the Prince’s players. In 1612–13
-they were at Barnstaple and Ipswich. On 2 and 10 March 1613 they gave
-the two parts of _The Knaves_, perhaps by Rowley, before Charles,
-Elizabeth, and the Palsgrave. In 1613–14 they were at Barnstaple,
-Dover, Saffron Walden, and Coventry. They were not at Court for the
-winter of 1613–14. In November 1614 they were at Oxford, Leicester,
-and Nottingham. At the Christmas of 1614–15 they gave six plays before
-Charles, and on 11 February they were at Youghal in Ireland. Ten days
-later R. A.’s _The Valiant Welshman_ was entered and in the course of
-the year published as theirs. Their leader seems to have been Rowley.
-He both wrote plays for them and acted as payee for all their court
-rewards from 1610 to 1614. In 1611 they lost Taylor and in 1614 Dawes
-to the Lady Elizabeth’s men; and these transferences seem to have led
-to a temporary amalgamation of the two companies, which Mr. Fleay
-and Dr. Greg place in 1614, but for which their distinct appearances
-at Court in the following winter suggest 1615 as the more likely
-date.[677] On 29 March 1615 William Rowley and John Newton were called
-with representatives of other companies before the Privy Council to
-answer for playing in Lent. No separate representation of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s is indicated by the list. In 1614–15 the Prince’s were
-at Norwich, Coventry, Winchester, and Barnstaple. In the winter of
-1615–16 they gave four plays before Prince Charles, and the payee was
-not Rowley, but Alexander Foster, formerly of the Lady Elizabeth’s.
-Rosseter’s patent of 3 June 1615 for a second Blackfriars theatre
-contemplates its use by the Prince’s men and the Lady Elizabeth’s, as
-well as by the Queen’s Revels, and Field’s _Amends for Ladies_ was
-actually played in the Blackfriars, probably in this house before it
-was suppressed, by the two first-named companies. After Henslowe’s
-death on 6 January 1616, the combination, whatever its nature, was
-probably broken up, and separate companies of Prince’s men and Lady
-Elizabeth’s men were again formed. But both of the original companies
-continued to be represented in one which remained at the Hope. This
-is shown by an agreement entered into with Alleyn and Meade on 20
-March 1616, and signed in the presence of Robert Daborne and others
-by William Rowley, Robert Pallant, Joseph Taylor, Robert Hamlen, John
-Newton, William Barksted, Thomas Hobbes, Antony Smith, William Penn,
-and Hugh Attwell.[678] This recites that the signatories and others had
-given bonds to Henslowe and Meade for the repayment of sums lent them
-by Henslowe, for a stock of apparel worth £400, and for the fulfilment
-of certain Articles of Agreement; and that at their entreaty Alleyn
-had agreed to accept £200 in discharge of their full liabilities. They
-covenant to pay the £200 by making over to Alleyn one-fourth of the
-daily takings of the whole galleries at the Hope or any house in which
-they may play, and to carry out the Articles with Alleyn and Meade by
-so playing. Alleyn and Meade agree to cancel the bonds when the £200
-is paid, except any which may relate to private debts of any of the
-men to Henslowe, and also to make over to them any apparel which they
-had received from Henslowe, Alleyn, or Meade. The rights of Alleyn and
-Meade against any bondsmen not taking part in the new agreement are
-to remain unaffected. That the signatories to this document used the
-name of Prince Charles’s men seems pretty clear from the reappearance
-of several of their names in two later lists of the Prince’s men, one
-in Rowley and Middleton’s _Mask of Heroes_ (1619), the other in the
-records of King James’s funeral on 20 May 1625.[679] This last contains
-also the name of Gilbert Reason, who is not one of the signatories of
-1616, but was in that year travelling the provinces with an irregularly
-obtained exemplification of the 1610 patent.[680] An undated letter
-from Pallant, Rowley, Taylor, Newton, Hamlen, Attwell, and Smith to
-Alleyn, which may belong to some time in 1616 or 1617, shows that, in
-spite of the easy terms which the company seem to have received by the
-agreement, the subsequent relations were not altogether smooth. They
-write to excuse their removal from the Bankside, where they had stood
-the intemperate weather, until ‘more intemperate Mr. Meade thrust vs
-over, taking the day from vs w^{ch} by course was ours’. They ask
-Alleyn to find them a house and in the meantime to lend them £40, on
-the security that ‘we haue to receiue from the court (w^{ch} after
-Shrouetide wee meane to pursue w^{th} best speede) a great summe of
-monie’, amounting to more than twice the loan desired.[681] It is to be
-presumed that the ‘course’ to which they refer was some distribution of
-days between playing and bear-baiting. In 1619 the company was joined
-by Christopher Beeston, formerly of the Queen’s, and his house of the
-Cockpit became available for their use.
-
-
- xxiv. THE LADY ELIZABETH’S MEN
-
- Elizabeth, e. d. of James I; _nat. c._ 19 Aug. 1596; m.
- Frederick V, Elector Palatine (Palsgrave), 14 Feb. 1613; Queen
- of Bohemia, 7 Nov. 1619; known as Queen of Hearts; _ob._ 13 Feb.
- 1662.
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Nearly all the material is to be found
- among the extracts from the Dulwich MSS. printed by W. W. Greg
- in _Henslowe Papers_ (1907) and summarized in Henslowe, ii. 137.]
-
-This company seems to have come into existence in 1611 under the
-following patent of 27 March:[682]
-
-[Sidenote: De licencia speciali pro Iohanne Townsend & Iosepho Moore &
-aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of god &c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
- Sheriffes, Bailiffes, Constables hedborroughes, and other our
- lovinge Subiectes and officers greetinge. Knowe ye that wee of
- our especiall grace, certayne knowledge, and meere mocon have
- licenced and authorised, and by these presente do licence and
- authorize Iohn Townsend and Joseph Moore, sworne servantes to
- our deere daughter the ladie Elizabeth, with the rest of theire
- Companie, to vse and exercise the Arte and qualitie of playinge
- Comedies, histories, Enterludes, Morralls, pastoralls, stage
- playes, and such other like as they haue alreadie studied or
- hereafter shall studie or vse, aswell for the recreacion of
- our lovinge Subiectes, as for our solace and pleasure when wee
- shall thinke good to see them, And the said enterludes or other
- to shewe and exercise publiquelie to their best commoditie
- in and about our Cittie of London in such vsuall howses as
- themselues shall prouide, And alsoe within anie Towne halles,
- mootehalles, Guyld-halles, Schoolehowses or other convenient
- places within the libertye and freedome of anie other Cittie,
- vniuersitie, Towne or Burroughe whatsoeuer within our Realmes
- and Domynions, willinge and comaundinge you and everie of you,
- as you tender our pleasure, not onelie to permitt and suffer
- them herein without any your lettes, hinderances, molestacions
- or disturbances during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be
- ayding and assistinge vnto them, if anie wronge be vnto them
- offred, And to allowe them such former curtesies as hath byne
- given to men of their place and qualitie, And alsoe what
- further fauour you shall shewe them for our sake wee shall
- take yt kindelie at your handes. Prouided alwayes and our will
- and pleasure is that all authoritie, power, priveledge, and
- profitt whatsoever belonginge or properlie apperteyning to the
- maister of the Revelles in respecte of his office and euerie
- Article and graunte conteyned within the letters Pattentes or
- Comission, which haue byne heretofore graunted or directed by
- the late queene Elizabeth our deere sister or by our selfe to
- our welbeloued Servantes Edwarde Tylney Maister of the saide
- Revells, or to Sir George Bucke knighte, or to eyther of them,
- in possession or reuercon, shall remayne and abide entire and
- in full force, effecte and vertue, and in as ample sorte as if
- this our Comission had neuer byne made In witnesse wherof &c.
- Witnesse our selfe at Westminster the seaven and Twentith daye
- of Aprill.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-The company is first traceable in the country, at Bath during 1610–11
-and at Ipswich on 28 May 1611. The names of Moore and Townsend render
-possible its identification with an unnamed company, which on 29 August
-1611 gave duplicate bonds of £500 to Henslowe for the observance of
-certain articles of agreement of the same date. Unfortunately the
-articles themselves are not preserved, but it is likely that they
-contained an arrangement for the housing and financing of the company
-by Henslowe.[683] The signatories to both bonds include John Townsend,
-Joseph Taylor, William Ecclestone, Thomas Hunt, John Rice, Robert
-Hamlen, Joseph Moore, William Carpenter, Thomas Basse, and Alexander
-Foster. To these one adds Giles Gary and William Barksted and the
-other Francis Waymus. The names recited in the bodies of the documents
-agree with the signatures, except that Gary appears in both. Several
-of these men now come into London theatrical history for the first
-time, but Gary is probably the Giles Cary who with Barksted played in
-_Epicoene_ for the Queen’s Revels in 1609, Taylor came from the Duke
-of York’s, and Rice from the King’s. One Hunt, whose Christian name is
-unknown, was with the Admiral’s in 1601. Alexander Foster received
-payment on behalf of the Lady Elizabeth’s men for three plays given
-at Court during the Christmas of 1611–12. The first was on 19 January
-1612 before Elizabeth and Henry; the second was _The Proud Maid’s
-Tragedy_, on 25 February before James; and the third was on 11 March,
-again before Elizabeth and Henry. In 1611–12 the company were at Dover
-and Coventry, and on 30 July 1612 at Leicester. On 20 October they
-played before Elizabeth and the Palsgrave, shortly after the latter’s
-arrival in England, in the Cockpit. This was perhaps the play paid for
-out of the private funds of Elizabeth, as the result of a wager with
-Mr. Edward Sackville.[684] During Christmas they played twice before
-Charles, Elizabeth, and the Palsgrave, showing Marston’s _The Dutch
-Courtesan_ on 25 February and _Raymond Duke of Lyons_ on 1 March. For
-1612–13 Joseph Taylor was payee.
-
-The names of Taylor and Ecclestone are found in another document in
-the Dulwich collection, which pretty clearly belongs to the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, and which shows that about the spring of 1613 their
-business relations with Henslowe entered upon a somewhat troubled
-phase. This is shown by internal evidence to have been written in the
-course of 1615. It is here reproduced:[685]
-
- Articles of [ ]uaunce against
- M[ ] Hinchlowe
-
- Imprimis in March 1612 vppon M^r. Hynchlowes Joyninge Companes
- with M^r. Rosseter the Companie borrowed 80^[ll] of one M^r.
- Griffin and the same was put into M^r. Hinchlowes debt which
- made itt sixteene score poundes; whoe [a]fter the receipt of the
- same or most parte thereof in March 1613 hee broke the saide
- Comp[any a]gaine and Ceazed all the stocke, vnder Culler to
- satisfie what remayned due to [him]; yet perswaded M^r. Griffyne
- afterwardes to arest the Companie for his 80^{ll}, whoe are
- still in daunger for the same; Soe nowe there was in equitie due
- to the Companie 80^{ll}:
-
- Item M^r. Hinchlowe having lent one Taylor 30^{ll} and 20^{ll}
- to one Baxter fellowes of the Companie Cunninglie put theire
- said privat debts into the generall accompt by which meanes hee
- is in Conscience to allowe them 50^{ll}:
-
- Item havinge the stock of Apparell in his handes to secure his
- debt he sould tenn poundes worth of ould apparrell out of the
- same without accomptinge or abatinge for the same; heare growes
- due to the Companie 10^{ll}:
-
- Also vppon the departure of one Eglestone a ffellowe of the
- Companie hee recovered of him 14^{ll} towardes his debt which is
- in Conscience likewise to bee allowed to the Companie 14^{ll}:
-
- In March 1613 hee makes vpp a Companie and buies apparrell of
- one Rosseter to the value of 63^{ll}, and valued the ould stocke
- that remayned in his handes at 63^{ll}, likewise they vppon his
- word acceptinge the same at that rate, which being prized by
- M^r. Daborne iustlie, betweene his partner Meade and him, Came
- but to 40^{ll}: soe heare growes due to the Companie 23^{ll}:
-
- Item hee agrees with the said Companie that they should enter
- bond to plaie with him for three yeares att such house and
- houses as hee shall appointe and to allowe him halfe galleries
- for the said house and houses, and the other halfe galleries
- towardes his debt of 126^{ll}, and other such moneys as hee
- should laie out for playe apparrell duringe the space of the
- said 3 yeares, agreeinge with them in Consideration theareof to
- seale each of them a bond of 200^{ll} to find them a Convenient
- house and houses, and to laie out such moneies as fower of the
- sharers should think fitt for theire vse in apparrell, which att
- the 3 yeares, being paid for, to be deliuered to the sharers;
- whoe accordinglie entered the said bondes; but M^r. Henchlowe
- and M^r. Mead deferred the same, an[d] in Conclusion vtterly
- denied to seale att all.
-
- Item M^r. Hinchlowe havinge promised in Consideracion of the
- Companies lying still one daie in forteene for his baytinge to
- give them 50^s, hee havinge denied to bee bound as aforesaid
- gave them onlie 40^s, and for that M^r. Feild would not Consent
- therevnto hee gave him soe much as his share out of 50^{ll}
- would have Come vnto; by which meanes hee is dulie indebted to
- the Companie x^{ll}:
-
- In June followinge the said agreement, hee brought in M^r.
- Pallant and short[l]ie after M^r. Dawes into the said Companie,
- promisinge one 12^s a weeke out of his part of the galleries,
- and the other 6^s a weeke out of his parte of the galleries;
- and because M^r. Feild was thought not to bee drawne therevnto,
- hee promissed him six shillinges weekelie alsoe; which in
- one moneth after vnwilling to beare soe greate a Charge, he
- Called the Companie together, and told them that this 24^s was
- to bee Charged vppon them, threatninge those which would not
- Consent therevnto to breake the Companie and make vpp a newe
- without the[m]. Whearevppon knowinge hee was not bound, the
- three-quarters sharers advauncinge them selves to whole shares
- Consented therevnto, by which meanes they are out of purse
- 30^{ll}, and his parte of the galleries bettred twise as much
- 30^{ll}:
-
- Item havinge 9 gatherers more then his due itt Comes to this
- yeare from the Companie 10^{ll}:
-
- Item the Companie paid for [Arra]s and other properties 40^{ll},
- which Mr. Henchlow deteyneth 40^{ll}:
-
- In Februarie last 1614 perceav[ing]e the Companie drewe out of
- his debt and Called vppon him for his accompts hee brooke the
- Companie againe, by withdrawinge the hired men from them, and
- selles theire stocke (in his hands) for 400^{ll}, givinge vnder
- his owne hand that hee had receaved towardes his debt 300^{ll}:
-
- Which with the iuste and Conscionable allowances before named
- made to the Companie, which Comes to ... 267^{ll}, makes
- 567^{ll}:
-
- Articles of oppression against
- M^r. Hinchlowe.
-
- Hee Chargeth the stocke with ... 600^{ll}: and odd, towardes
- which hee hath receaved as aforesaid ... 567^{ll} of vs; yet
- selles the stocke to strangers for fower hundred poundes, and
- makes vs no satisfacion.
-
- Hee hath taken all boundes of our hired men in his owne name,
- whose wages though wee have truly paid yet att his pleasure hee
- hath taken them a waye, and turned them over to others to the
- breaking of our Companie.
-
- For lendinge of vj^{ll} to p[ay] them theire wages, hee made vs
- enter bond to give him the profitt of a warraunt of tenn poundes
- due to vs att Court.
-
- Alsoe hee hath taken right gould and silver lace of divers
- garmentes to his owne vse without accompt to vs or abatement.
-
- Vppon everie breach of the Companie hee takes newe bondes for
- his stocke and our securitie for playinge with him; Soe that
- hee hath in his handes bondes of ours to the value of 5000^{ll}
- and his stocke to; which hee denies to deliuer and threatens to
- oppresse us with.
-
- Alsoe havinge apointed a man to the seeinge of his accomptes in
- byinge of Clothes (hee beinge to have vi^s a weeke) hee takes
- the meanes away and turnes the man out.
-
- The reason of his often breakinge with vs hee gave in these
- wordes ‘Should these fellowes Come out of my debt, I should have
- noe rule with them’.
-
- Alsoe wee have paid him for plaie bookes 200^{ll} or
- thereaboutes and yet hee denies to give vs the Coppies of any
- one of them.
-
- Also within 3 yeares hee hath broken and dissmembred five
- Companies.
-
-It is not quite possible to trace all the five breakings of companies
-referred to in the closing sentence; but the statement is sufficient
-to give a fairly clear outline of the history of the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men during the years which it covers, and, as it happens, there is a
-good deal of other evidence from which to supplement it. It appears
-that in March 1613 Henslowe joined companies with Rosseter; that is
-to say, that an amalgamation took place between the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men and the Children of the Queen’s Revels, who had been acting at the
-Whitefriars under the patent to Rosseter and others of 4 January 1610.
-One of these children was Robert Baxter, if he is the Baxter named
-in the Articles of Grievance as a fellow of the company with Taylor
-between March 1613 and March 1614.[686] During the same period it
-appears that William Ecclestone left the company. He afterwards joined
-the King’s men. But, before he went, he took a part in _The Honest
-Man’s Fortune_, which is stated in the _Dyce MS._ to have been played
-in 1613, while its ‘principal actors’ are named in the 1679 folio of
-Beaumont and Fletcher as ‘Nathan Field, Robert Benfield, Emanuel Read,
-Joseph Taylor, Will. Eglestone and Thomas Basse’. This particular
-combination seems to point clearly to the Lady Elizabeth’s men as the
-original producers of the play. A very similar cast is assigned in the
-same folio to _The Coxcomb_, namely, ‘Nathan Field, Joseph Taylor,
-Giles Gary, Emanuel Read, Richard Allen, Hugh Atawell, Robert Benfeild,
-and William Barcksted’; and I think that this also must belong to a
-performance by the Lady Elizabeth’s men about 1613. _The Coxcomb_ had
-certainly been played at Court by the Queen’s Revels in 1612, but
-it seems impossible that Taylor can then have been a member of that
-company.[687] The new blood brought in from Rosseter’s company will,
-then, have included Field, Attwell, Richard Allen, Benfield, Reade, and
-perhaps Robert Baxter, of whom the first three had played in Jonson’s
-_Epicoene_ for the Revels in 1609. When it is remembered that Cary and
-Barksted had been in the same cast, it will be realized that the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, as constituted in 1613, were very much the Queen’s
-Revels over again.
-
-I think there can be no doubt that the Lady Elizabeth’s men was
-the company principally referred to in the long series of letters
-from Robert Daborne to Henslowe, which runs from 17 April 1613 to
-31 July 1614.[688] Daborne had been one of the patentees for the
-Queen’s Revels in 1609, and some letters apparently belonging to the
-same series show Field as interested, either as writer or actor, in
-some of the plays which Henslowe was purchasing from Daborne, with
-a view to reselling them to this company. Further confirmation is
-to be obtained for this view from the signature of Hugh Attwell as
-witness to one of Henslowe’s advances to Daborne,[689] and from the
-mention of Benfield,[690] of Pallant who, as will be seen, joined the
-company in 1614,[691] and of _Eastward Ho!_ which their repertory
-had inherited from that of the Queen’s Revels.[692] That ‘Mr. Allin’
-was hearing Daborne’s plays with Henslowe in May 1613 need cause no
-difficulty.[693] It is true that Edward Alleyn is not known to have
-had any relations with the Lady Elizabeth’s men, but John Alleyn, a
-nephew of Edward, is amongst Henslowe’s witnesses about this time,[694]
-and Richard Allen, who may not have belonged to the same family, was
-himself one of the Lady Elizabeth’s men, and perhaps served as their
-literary adviser. The correspondence makes it possible to recover
-the names of a series of plays on which Daborne was engaged, either
-alone or in collaboration with others, during the period over which it
-extends, and all of which seem to have been primarily meant for the
-Lady Elizabeth’s men, although he occasionally professes, as an aid to
-his chaffering, to have an alternative market with the King’s men.[695]
-From April to June 1613 he was writing a tragedy of _Machiavel and the
-Devil_, and this is probably the ‘new play’, of which he suggests the
-performance on Wednesday in August, to follow one of _Eastward Ho!_ on
-the Monday.[696] For this Henslowe covenanted to pay him £20. In June
-he was also completing _The Arraignment of London_, of which he had
-given an act to Cyril Tourneur to write; and to this _The Bellman of
-London_, for which he and a colleague, perhaps again Tourneur, asked
-no more than £12 and ‘the overplus of the second day’ in August, was
-probably a sequel.[697] This may be the play which he had delivered to
-Henslowe about the beginning of December. About July he seems also to
-have been occupied upon a play in collaboration with Field, Fletcher,
-and Massinger. This is not named, and Mr. Fleay’s identification of it
-with _The Honest Man’s Fortune_ is rather hazardous.[698] In December
-he began _The Owl_, for which his price fell to £10; and on 11 March
-1614 he had finished this, and was beginning _The She Saint_ and asking
-‘but 12^l a play till they be playd.’ The correspondence has a gap
-between the middle of August and the middle of October 1613. Probably
-the company were on tour; they are found at Coventry, Shrewsbury, and
-Marlborough in 1612–13, Canterbury on 4 July 1613, Dover between 12
-July and 7 August, and Leicester on 13 October. In the spring they had
-been at Bristol and Norwich. On 12 December they repeated one of their
-plays of the preceding winter, Marston’s _The Dutch Courtesan_, before
-Charles, and on 25 January 1614 gave _Eastward Ho!_ which they had been
-playing in public during the summer, before James. Taylor was again
-their payee for this Christmas.
-
-The statement of grievances indicates another reconstruction of the
-company in March 1614. In this transaction, which apparently involved
-the buying out of Rosseter’s interest, Meade was in partnership with
-Henslowe, and Field was presumably in some position of authority on
-behalf of the players, as it is alleged that Henslowe bribed him, in
-order to obtain his assent to the modification of a covenant under
-which he was to make an allowance for a withdrawal of the theatre once
-a fortnight for baiting. The terms recited agree with those of an
-undated and mutilated agreement between Henslowe and Jacob Meade on one
-side and Field on behalf of an unnamed company of players on the other.
-The text of this follows:[699]
-
- Articles of agreement made, concluded, and agreed vppon,
- and which are on the parte and behalfe of Phillipp Henslowe
- Esquier and Jacob Meade Waterman to be perfourmed, touchinge
- & concerninge the Company of players which they haue lately
- raised, viz^t.
-
- Imprimis the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade doe for
- them, their executours and administratours, Covenante, promise,
- and graunt by theis presentes to and with Nathan Feilde gent.,
- That they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade or one
- of them shall and will duringe the space of Three yeares at
- all tymes (when noe restraynte of playinge shalbe) at their
- or some of their owne proper costes and charges fynde and
- provide a sufficient howse or howses for the saide Company
- to play in, And also shall and will at all tymes duringe the
- saide tearme disburse and lay out all suche somme & sommes of
- monny, as ffower or ffive Shareres of the saide Company chosen
- by the saide Phillipp and Jacob shall thinck fittinge, for
- the furnishinge of the said Company with playinge apparrell
- towardes the settinge out of their newe playes, And further
- that the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade shall and will
- at all tymes duringe the saide tearme, when the saide Company
- shall play in or neare the Cittie of London, furnish the saide
- Company of players, aswell with suche stock of apparrell & other
- properties as the said Phillipp Henslowe hath already bought, As
- also with suche other stock of apparrell as the saide Phillipp
- Henslowe and Jacob Meade shall hereafter provide and buy for
- the said Company duringe the saide tearme, And further shall
- and will at suche tyme and tymes duringe the saide tearme, as
- the saide Company of Players shall by meanes of any restraynte
- or sicknes goe into the Contrey, deliuer and furnish the saide
- Company with fitting apparrell out of both the saide stockes of
- apparrell. And further the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob
- Meade doe for them, their executours and administratours,
- convenante and graunt to and with the saide Nathan Feilde by
- theis presentes in manner and fourme followinge, that is to say,
- That they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade or one of
- them shall and will from tyme to tyme duringe the saide tearme
- disburse and lay out suche somme or sommes of monny as shalbe
- thought fittinge by ffower or ffive of the Shareres of the saide
- Company, to be chosen by the saide Phillipp & Jacob or one of
- them, to be paide for any play which they shall buy or condicion
- or agree for; Soe alwaies as the saide Company doe and shall
- truly repaye vnto the saide Phillipp and Jacob, their executores
- or assignes, all suche somme & sommes of monny, as they shall
- disburse for any play, vppon the second or third daie wheron the
- same play shalbe plaide by the saide Company, without fraude
- or longer delay; And further that the saide Phillipp Henslowe
- and Jacob Meade shall and will at all tymes, vppon request made
- by the Maior parte of the Sharers of the saide Company v[nder
- their] handes, remove and putt out of the saide Company any of
- the saide Company of playeres, if the saide Phillipp Henslowe
- and Jacob Meade shall fynde [the s]aide request to be iust and
- that ther be noe hope of conformety in the partie complayned
- of; And further that they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob
- Mea[de shall] and [will] at all tymes, vppon request made by
- the saide Company or the maior parte therof, pay vnto them all
- suche somes of monny as shall comme vnto their handes v[ppon [
- extra spaces ]of]any forfectures for rehearsalles or suche like
- paymentes; And also shall and will, vppon the request of the
- said Company or the maior parte of the[m], sue [ extra spaces ]
- ar[ extra spaces ] persons by whom any forfecture shalbe made
- as aforesaid, and after or vppon the recovery and receipte
- th[ero]f (their charges disbursed about the recovery [[ extra
- spaces ]b]einge first deducted and allowed) shall and will make
- satisfaccion of the remaynder therof vnto the said Company
- without fraude or guile.
-
-Mr. Fleay and Dr. Greg think that at the time of this reconstruction
-the company was further strengthened by the incorporation of the Duke
-of York’s, now the Prince’s, men.[700] This I doubt, as the Prince’s
-men continued to play at Court, as a company quite distinct from the
-Lady Elizabeth’s, during the winter of 1614–15. It is true that Robert
-Dawes, who had been one of the Duke of York’s in 1610, joined the Lady
-Elizabeth’s, but it was precisely one of the grievances that this man
-and Robert Pallant were introduced by Henslowe, by means of a financial
-adjustment unfavourable to the sharers, in June 1614. Pallant had
-passed through several companies, and is traceable with Queen Anne’s
-men in 1609. He was still technically a servant of the Queen at her
-death in 1619.[701] A letter from Daborne on 28 March 1614 shows that
-he was then expecting an answer to some proposal made to Henslowe,
-which the latter had neglected.[702] Articles between Robert Dawes and
-Henslowe and Meade are on record, and bear the date 7 April 1614.[703]
-The following is the text:
-
- Articles of Agreement,] made, concluded, and agreed uppon, and
- which are to be kept & performed by Robert Dawes of London,
- Gent. unto and with Phillipp Henslowe Esq^{re} and Jacob [Meade
- Waterman] in manner and forme followinge, that is to say
-
- Imprimis. The said Robert Dawes for him, his executors, and
- administrators doth covenante, promise, and graunt to and with
- the said Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors,
- administrators, and assynes, in manner and formme followinge,
- that is to saie, that he the said Robert Dawes shall and will
- plaie with such company, as the said Phillipp Henslowe and
- Jacob Meade shall appoynte, for and during the tyme and space
- of three yeares from the date hereof for and at the rate of one
- whole share, accordinge to the custome of players; and that he
- the said Robert Dawes shall and will at all tymes during the
- said terme duly attend all suche rehearsall, which shall the
- night before the rehearsall be given publickly out; and if that
- he the saide Robert Dawes shall at any tyme faile to come at
- the hower appoynted, then he shall and will pay to the said
- Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors or assignes,
- Twelve pence; and if he come not before the saide rehearsall
- is ended, then the said Robert Dawes is contented to pay Twoe
- shillings; and further that if the said Robert Dawes shall not
- every daie, whereon any play is or ought to be played, be ready
- apparrelled and ---- to begyn the play at the hower of three of
- the clock in the afternoone, unles by sixe of the same company
- he shall be lycenced to the contrary, that then he, the saide
- Robert Dawes, shall and will pay unto the said Phillipp and
- Jacob or their assignes Three [shillings]; and if that he, the
- saide Robert Dawes, happen to be overcome with drinck at the
- tyme when he [ought to] play, by the judgment of ffower of the
- said company, he shall and will pay Tenne shillings; and if he,
- [the said Robert Dawes], shall [faile to come] during any plaie,
- having noe lycence or just excuse of sicknes, he is contented
- to pay Twenty shillings; and further the said Robert Dawes,
- for him, his executors, and administrators, doth covenant and
- graunt to and with the said Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade,
- their executors, administrators, and asignes, by these presents,
- that it shall and may be lawfull unto and for the said Phillipp
- Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors or assignes, during
- the terme aforesaid, to receave and take back to their own
- proper use the part of him, the said Robert Dawes, of and in one
- moyetie or halfe part of all suche moneyes, as shal be receaved
- at the Galleries & tyring howse of such house or howses wherein
- he the saide Robert Dawes shall play, for and in consideration
- of the use of the same howse and howses; and likewis shall
- and may take and receave his other moyetie ...[ extra spaces
- ] the moneys receaved at the galleries and tiring howse dues,
- towards the pa[ying] to them, the saide Phillip Henslowe and
- Jacob Meade, of the some of one hundred twenty and fower pounds,
- being the value of the stock of apparell furnished by the saide
- company by the saide Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade ...[ extra
- spaces ] the one part of him the saide Robert Dawes or any other
- somes ...[ extra spaces ] to them for any apparell hereafter
- newly to be bought by the [said Phillip Henslowe and Jacob
- Meade, until the saide Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade] shall
- therby be fully satisfied, contented, and paid. And further
- the said Robert Dawes doth covenant, [promise, and graunt to
- and with the said Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade, that if
- he, the said Robert Dawes], shall at any time after the play
- is ended depart or goe out of the [howse] with any [of their]
- apparell on his body, or if the said Robert Dawes [shall carry
- away any propertie] belonging to the said company, or shal be
- consentinge [or privy to any other of the said company going
- out of the howse with any of their apparell on his or their
- bodies, he, the said] Robert Dawes, shall and will forfeit and
- pay unto the said Phillip and Jacob, or their administrators
- or assignes, the some of ffortie pounds of lawfull [money of
- England] ...[ extra spaces ] and the said Robert Dawes, for
- him, his executors, and administrators doth [covenant promise
- and graunt to with the said] Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade,
- their executors, and administrators [and assigns] [ extra spaces
- ] that it shall and may be lawfull to and for the said Phillip
- Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors, and assignes, to have
- and use the playhows so appoynted [for the said company [ extra
- spaces ] one day of] every fower daies, the said daie to be
- chosen by the said Phillip and [Jacob] [ extra spaces ] Monday
- in any week, on which day it shalbe lawful for the said Phillip
- [and Jacob, their administrators], and assignes, to bait their
- bears and bulls ther, and to use their accustomed sport and
- [games] [ extra spaces ] and take to their owne use all suche
- somes of money, as thereby shall arise and be receaved
-
- And the saide Robert Dawes, his executors, administrators, and
- assignes, [do hereby covenant, promise, and graunt to and with
- the saide Phillip and Jacob,] allowing to the saide company
- daye the some of ffortie shillings money of England ... [In
- testimony] for every such whereof, I the saide Robert Dawes haue
- hereunto sett my hand and seal this [sev]enth daie of April 1614
- in the twelfth yeare [of the reign of our sovereign lord &c.]
- Robert Dawes.
-
-It must be mainly matter of conjecture at what theatres the Lady
-Elizabeth’s had played from 1611 to 1614. Possibly they may have begun
-at the Swan. Middleton’s _A Chaste Maid in Cheapside_ was published as
-‘often acted at the Swan on the Bankeside by the Lady Elizabeth her
-Seruants’, and although this publication was not until 1630, it is
-rather tempting to identify the play with _The Proud Maid_ of 1611–12.
-Probably the association of the company with Henslowe led to a transfer
-to the Rose; and after the joining of forces with Rosseter in March
-1613, the Whitefriars must have been available for the combination.
-That there were alternatives open in 1613 is shown by two passages
-in Daborne’s letters.[704] On 5 June he says that the company were
-expecting Henslowe to conclude ‘about thear comming over or goinge
-to Oxford’, and by ‘comming over’ may most naturally be understood
-crossing the Thames. On 9 December he claims that a book he is upon
-will ‘make as good a play for your publique howse as ever was playd’,
-and the inference is that at the time Henslowe was interested in a
-‘private’ as well as in a ‘public’ house. Certainly the Watermen’s
-complaint in the spring of 1614 indicates that there were then no plays
-on Bankside, and both the Swan and the Rose must therefore have been
-deserted. But by the autumn the Lady Elizabeth’s men were in the Clink,
-occupying the newly built Hope on the site of the old Bear-garden; and
-that the use of this theatre was contemplated in the agreements of the
-previous spring is shown both by the presence of Meade, who is not
-known to have been interested in any other house, as a party, and by
-the reservation of one day in fourteen for the purpose of baiting.[705]
-It was at the Hope that William Fennor failed to appear to try his
-challenge with John Taylor on 7 October, and the Lady Elizabeth’s men
-were presumably the players--
-
- And such a company (I’ll boldly say)
- That better (nor the like) ne’er played a play--
-
-who came to the rescue and saved the occasion from fiasco. And it was
-at the Hope and by the Lady Elizabeth’s men, as the Induction and the
-title-page show, that Jonson’s _Bartholomew Fair_ was produced on 31
-October. There is a reference in the text of the play to Taylor’s
-adventure,[706] and a compliment to Field, which puts him on a level
-with Burbadge of the King’s men.[707] _Bartholomew Fair_ was presented
-on the very next day before James at Court. This performance, for which
-Field was payee on 11 June, was the only one by the company during the
-winter festivities of 1614–15. In February 1615 there was a breach
-between Henslowe and the company, as a result of which the Articles of
-Grievance were drawn up. According to the Articles Henslowe ‘brooke
-the companie’; but it is not quite clear what exactly took place. In
-some form the Lady Elizabeth’s men certainly continued to exist. They
-visited Nottingham in March 1615, and a letter from Lord Coke to the
-Mayor of Coventry shows that they also contemplated a visit to that
-town in the same month.[708] My impression is that they subsequently
-patched up another reconstruction with Henslowe, and that on this
-occasion the process did entail some kind of amalgamation with Prince
-Charles’s men. Field, however, probably now joined the King’s men. The
-Lady Elizabeth’s do not appear to have been separately represented
-when the Privy Council called the London companies before them for a
-breach of Lent on 29 March 1615. It is true that they may have been
-alone in not offending, but it is more probable that William Rowley
-and John Newton, who were summoned, answered for the amalgamation. The
-Prince’s men are recorded as playing at Court during the Christmas of
-1615–16 and the Lady Elizabeth’s men are not. Yet the payee for their
-four plays, of which the dates are not specified, was Alexander Foster,
-who had been a Lady Elizabeth’s man and not a Prince’s man. But it
-is probable that both this amalgamation and the earlier one between
-the Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels, although effective as a
-business operation from Henslowe’s point of view, did not amount to a
-complete merging of identities, such as would entail a surrender of
-one or other of the official patents. Certainly the Lady Elizabeth’s,
-the Prince’s and the Revels were in some sense distinct, and yet in
-the closest relationship in 1615. So much is clear from Rosseter’s
-patent of 3 June to build in the Blackfriars, which contemplated that
-all three companies would share in the use of the new house. That
-the joint user extended also to plays is suggested by the title-page
-of Field’s _Amends for Ladies_ (1618) which declares it to have been
-‘acted at the Blacke-Fryers, both by the Princes Seruants and the Lady
-Elizabeths’. Perhaps this indicates alternative rather than combined
-playing. Whatever the arrangement, it was probably altered again on or
-before Henslowe’s death on 6 January 1616.[709] A company containing
-many of the former Lady Elizabeth’s men remained at the Hope. But they
-went under Prince Charles’s patronage, and it is not until 1622, when
-we find them at Christopher Beeston’s house of the Cockpit or Phoenix,
-that we can be sure of the presence of Lady Elizabeth’s men in London
-once more.[710] But they had held together in the provinces. Possibly
-the nucleus of the provincial company had been formed of men left out
-by the Henslowe-Rosseter negotiations of 1613–14. They first appear
-at Norwich on 2 March 1614 under Nicholas Long, who in 1612 had been
-travelling with Queen’s Revels boys. They came again on 27 May 1615
-with an exemplification of the 1611 patent dated 31 May 1613, and again
-on 5 June 1616 under John Townsend, and again on 7 June 1617 under
-Henry Sebeck. In the same year Joseph Moore was acting as an agent of
-the Lord Chamberlain and Master of the Revels in clearing the provinces
-of irregularly licensed players, not improbably in the interests of
-the Lady Elizabeth’s themselves, whose original patent was now set
-free, through changes in London, for provincial use in place of a mere
-exemplification.[711] The company is also traceable at Leicester,
-Coventry, Nottingham, Marlborough, and elsewhere from 1614,[712] and on
-11 July 1617 Townsend and Moore received a warrant for £30 in respect
-of three plays given before James during his journey to Scotland.[713]
-On 20 March 1618 Townsend and Moore, with Alexander Foster and Francis
-Waymus, obtained a new licence under the royal signet.[714] This
-authorized them to play in London, and their actual return there may
-have been earlier than 1622.
-
-
-
-
- XIV
-
- INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES
-
-
- i. ITALIAN PLAYERS IN ENGLAND
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The wanderings of the Italian
- companies in Italy itself and in France are recounted in A.
- D’Ancona, _Origini del Teatro Italiano_ (ed. 2, 1891), and A.
- Baschet, _Les Comédiens italiens à la Cour de France_ (1882),
- but without much knowledge of the few English records. W.
- Smith, _Italian and Elizabethan Comedy_ (_M. P._ v. 555) and
- _The Commedia dell’ Arte_ (1912), deals more fully with these.
- The literary influence of Italian comedy is discussed by L. L.
- Schücking, _Die stofflichen Beziehungen der englischen Komödie
- zur italienischen bis Lilly_ (1901), and R. W. Bond, _Early
- Plays from the Italian_ (1911).]
-
-The England of Elizabeth and James was a lender rather than a borrower
-of players. No records have been disinterred of French actors in this
-country between 1495 and 1629;[715] and although there are a few of
-Italian actors, their visits seem to have been confined to a single
-brief period.[716] The head-quarters of Italian comedy during the
-middle of the sixteenth century was at the Court of Mantua, and when
-Lord Buckhurst went as ambassador to congratulate Charles IX of France
-on his wedding, it was by Louis Gonzaga, Duke of Nevers and brother
-of the Duke of Mantua, that he was entertained on 4 March 1571 ‘with
-a comedie of Italians that for the good mirth and handling thereof
-deserved singular comendacion’.[717] In the following year the Earl of
-Lincoln was at Paris from 8 to 22 June in order to conclude a treaty,
-and letters relate how he saw at the Louvre ‘an Italian playe, and
-dyvers vauters and leapers of dyvers sortes verie excellent’, and how
-later, when he visited the King at the Chateau de Madrid, ‘he had some
-pastyme showed him by Italian players, which I was at with hym’.[718]
-It may perhaps have been encouragement from one or both of these
-nobles, which led an Italian company not long afterwards to make its
-way across the Channel. The first notice of it is at Nottingham in
-September 1573, when a reward was ‘gevin to the Italyans for serteyne
-pastymes that they shewed before Maister Meare and his brethren’.[719]
-In 1574 the Revels Accounts include expenditure ‘for the Italyan
-players that ffollowed the progresse and made pastyme fyrst at Wynsor
-and afterwardes at Reading’. Elizabeth was at Windsor on 11 and 12
-July; on 15 July she removed to Reading and remained there to 22 July.
-At Windsor the Italians used ‘iij devells cotes and heades & one olde
-mannes fries cote’; at Reading, where they performed on 15 July, the
-provisions included staves, hooks, and lambskins for shepherds, arrows
-for nymphs, a scythe for Saturn, and ‘horstayles for the wylde mannes
-garment’. Professor Feuillerat appears to suggest that they may have
-been playing Tasso’s _Aminta_, produced at Ferrara on 31 July 1573.
-But there were other pastorals.[720] The Italians are probably the
-comedians commended to the Lord Mayor on 22 July, and in November
-Thomas Norton calls special attention to ‘the unchaste, shamelesse and
-unnaturall tomblinge of the Italian weomen’. How long this company
-remained in England is unknown. There was an Italian acrobat at the
-Kenilworth festivities on 14 July 1575, but the description suggests
-that he was a solitary performer.[721] The Treasurer of the Chamber
-paid ‘Alfruso Ferrabolle and the rest of the Italian players’ for
-a play at Court on 27 February 1576, to the consideration of which
-I shall return. In April 1577 there was an Italian play before the
-Council at Durham Place.[722] Finally, on 13 January 1578, the Privy
-Council addressed a letter to the Lord Mayor, requiring him to permit
-‘one Drousiano, an Italian, a commediante and his companye’, to play
-until the first week of the coming Lent. I take it that the company
-was also at Court, since the Chamber Accounts for 1577–8 include an
-item ‘for a mattres hoopes and boardes with tressells for the Italian
-Tumblers’. The company to which the visit of 1573–4 was due cannot be
-identified with any certainty. Presumably it came through France, and
-ought to have left signs there. There seem to have been three Italian
-companies in France during 1571. The first, in February, was that of
-Giovanni Tabarin. The second, that seen by Lord Buckhurst in Paris,
-was the famous Compagnia de’ Gelosi, of which one Signora Vittoria, of
-Ferrara, known on the stage as Fioretta, was the prima donna. This,
-however, had returned to Milan by the spring of 1572 and its subsequent
-movements hardly render a visit to England in 1573 plausible. A third
-company, that of Alberto Ganassa, a Zanni or clown from Bergamo,
-reached Paris in the autumn of 1571.[723] It was sent away by the
-Parlement on account of its high charges for admission, but returned
-in 1572 and played at the wedding of Henri of Navarre and Marguerite
-of Valois on 18 August. Nothing is heard of Ganassa in France after
-October 1572, but during the summer of 1574 he seems to have been in
-Madrid; so he also is not available for the English visit. It may
-very likely have been his company which the Earl of Lincoln saw. But
-it may also have been that led by Soldino of Florence and Anton Maria
-of Venice, which was performing ‘commedies et saults’ before Charles
-IX at Blois on 25 March 1572, and subsequently made its way to Paris.
-My authorities say nothing further about Soldino and Anton Maria, so
-we are at liberty to believe that Lincoln invited them to try their
-fortune across the sea.[724]
-
-The ‘Drousiano’ of 1578 offers less difficulty. He must have been
-Drusiano, son of Francisco Martinelli, of Mantua, who in after years
-won a considerable reputation, although less than that of his brother
-Tristano Martinelli, as Arlecchino in the _commedia dell’ arte_.[725]
-There is no other notice of him before 1580, when he subscribes himself
-as ‘marito di M^a Angelica’, who appears to have been one Angelica
-Alberghini, and the company with which he was associated in 1578 is not
-known.[726] But it may very well have been the Gelosi. This company
-paid in 1577 their second visit to France, upon the invitation of Henri
-III, and remained there at least until July. They seem to have been in
-Florence fairly early in 1578, but some or all of them may have found
-time for an English trip in the interval. Direct proof that Drusiano
-Martinelli ever belonged to the Gelosi is lacking. But they are the
-only Italian company known to have been in France in the summer of
-1577, and players are not likely to have passed from Italy to England
-without leaving some traces of their presence in France.[727]
-
-The professional Italian actors of the second half of the sixteenth
-century played both the popular _commedia dell’ arte_ and the literary
-_commedia erudita_, or _commedia sostenuta_. The former, with its more
-or less improvised dialogue upon scenarii, which revolved around the
-amorous and ridiculous adventures of the _zanni_, the _arlecchino_, the
-_dottore_, and other standing types, was probably best adapted to the
-methods of wandering mimes in an alien land.[728] The latter was common
-to professionals and amateurs. And I suspect that the Court play of 27
-February 1576, although it earned its reward from the Treasurer of the
-Chamber, was an amateur performance. The ‘Alfruso Ferrabolle’ of the
-account-book can hardly be other than a clerical perversion of the name
-of Alfonso Ferrabosco, the first of three generations of that name,
-father, son, and grandson, who contributed in turn to the gaiety of
-the English Court. The eldest Ferrabosco was certainly in this country
-by 1562 when he was granted an annuity of 100 marks. His service
-terminated after various interruptions in 1578.[729] He is doubtless
-the ‘Mr. Alphonse’ who took part in the preparation of a mask in June
-1572.[730] In connexion with the same mask, a reward was paid to one
-‘Petrucio’, while for a later mask of 11 January 1579 ‘Patruchius
-Ubaldinas’ was employed to translate speeches into Italian and write
-them out fair in tables.[731] This was Petruccio Ubaldini, another of
-Elizabeth’s Italian pensioners, who was both a literary man and an
-illuminator, and made his residence in England from 1562 to 1586.[732]
-It is quite possible that the performance of 1576 may be referred to in
-the following undated letter from Ubaldini to the Queen, in which he
-makes mention of Ferrabosco.[733] If so, it came off after all.
-
- Sacra Serenissima Maiesta,
-
- Perché à i giorni passati io haveva promesso à M. Claudio
- Cavallerizzo, et à M. Alfonso Ferrabosco, d’esser contento di
- recitare ad una piacevol Comedia Italiana; per compiacere alla
- Maiesta Vostra; et non si trovando di poi altri, che tre ò
- quattro, che fusser contenti d’accettar tal carico; ho voluto
- che l’Altezza Vostra conosca da me stesso il pronto animo,
- ch’ io ho per la mia parté di servirla, et di compiacerla in
- ogni attioné, che me sia comandata ò da lei, ò in suo nomé,
- non solamente comé servitore giurato, ch’io gli sono; ma comé
- desiderosissimo di far conoscere, che la divotioné, ch’io
- porto allé sue Reali qualità, supera ogn’ altro rispetto;
- desiderandogli io contentezza, et felicità non meno, che
- qualunqué altro suo servitore gli desideri: la cui bontà Dio ci
- prosperi.
-
- Di Vostra Sacra Serenissima Maiesta.
-
-Of Claudio Cavallerizzo I regret to say that I know nothing.
-
-A statement that Venetian actors were in England in 1608 rests upon a
-misreading of a record.[734]
-
-
- ii. ENGLISH PLAYERS IN SCOTLAND
-
-The interlude players of Henry VII, under John English, accompanied the
-Princess Margaret to Scotland for her wedding with James IV in 1503,
-and ‘did their devoir’ before the Court at Edinburgh.[735] It is the
-best part of a century before any similar adventure is recorded. In the
-interval came the Scottish reformation, which was no friend to courtly
-pageantry. Yet in Scotland, as elsewhere, Kirk discipline had to make
-some compromise with the drama. In 1574 the General Assembly, while
-utterly forbidding, not for the first time, ‘clerk playes, comedies or
-tragedies maid of ye cannonicall Scriptures’, went on to ordain ‘an
-article to be given in to sick as sitts upon ye policie yat for uther
-playes comedies tragedies and utheris profaine playes, as are not maid
-upon authentick pairtes of ye Scriptures, may be considerit before
-they be exponit publictlie and yat they be not played uppon ye Sabboth
-dayes’.[736] It was once more a royal wedding that led to a histrionic
-courtesy between England and Scotland. In the autumn of 1589 James VI
-was expecting the arrival of his bride Anne of Denmark, a sensuous
-and spectacle-loving lady, who had already had experience of English
-actors at her father’s Court in 1586.[737] And being then, two years
-after his mother’s execution, actively engaged in promoting friendly
-relations with Elizabeth, he sent a request through one Roger Ashton
-to Lord Scrope, the Warden of the English West Marches, ‘for to have
-her Majesties players for to repayer into Scotland to his grace’. In
-reply Scrope wrote from Carlisle on 20 September to William Ashby, the
-English ambassador at Edinburgh, begging him to notify the King, that
-he had sent a servant to them, ‘wheir they were in the furthest parte
-of Langkeshire, whervpon they made their returne heather to Carliell,
-wher they are, and have stayed for the space of ten dayes’.[738] After
-all, the Lapland witches and their winds delayed Anne’s crossing for
-some months, and James had himself to join her in Denmark. It is, I
-think, only a conjecture that the players whose ‘book’ was submitted on
-3 June 1589 for the licence of the Kirk Session at Perth, in accordance
-with the order of 1574, were Englishmen.[739] But certainly ‘Inglis
-comedianis’ were in Scotland in 1594, probably for the baptism of Henry
-Frederick on 30 August, and received from James the generous gift of
-£333 6_s._ 8_d._ out of ‘the composicioun of the escheit of ye laird
-of Kilcrewch and his complices’.[740] Probably Laurence Fletcher was
-at the head of this expedition, for on 22 March 1595 George Nicolson,
-the English agent at Edinburgh, wrote to Robert Bowes, treasurer
-of Berwick, that, ‘The King heard that Fletcher, the player, was
-hanged, and told him and Roger Aston so, in merry words, not believing
-it, saying very pleasantly that if it were true he would hang them
-also’.[741] In any case, Fletcher appears to have been the leader of
-a company whose peregrinations in Scotland a few years later, much
-favoured by James, were also much embarrassed by the critical relations
-which then existed between the Sovereign and the Kirk. It is only a
-conjecture that this was the company which was refused leave to play at
-St. Andrews on 1 October 1598.[742] But of greater troubles, which took
-place at Edinburgh a year later, we are very well informed. They are
-detailed from the Kirk point of view in the more or less contemporary
-chronicle of David Calderwood.[743]
-
- _The King Chargeth the Kirk of Edinburgh to Rescind an Act._
-
- Some English comedians came to this countrie in the moneth of
- October. After they had acted sindrie comedeis in presence of
- the King, they purchassed at last a warrant or precept to the
- bailliffes of Edinburgh, to gett them an hous within the toun.
- Upon Moonday, the 12^{th} of November, they gave warning by
- trumpets and drummes through the streets of Edinburgh, to all
- that pleased, to come to the Blacke Friers’ Wynd to see the
- acting of their comedeis. The ministers of Edinburgh, fearing
- the profanitie that was to ensue, speciallie the profanatioun
- of the Sabbath day, convocated the foure sessiouns of the Kirk.
- An act was made by commoun consent, that none resort to these
- profane comedeis, for eshewing offence of God, and of evill
- exemple to others; and an ordinance was made, that everie
- minister sould intimat this act in their owne severall pulpits.
- They had indeid committed manie abusses, speciallie upon the
- Sabboth, at night before. The King taketh the act in evill part,
- as made purposelie to crosse his warrant, and caused summoun
- the ministers and foure sessiouns, _super inquirendis_, before
- the Secreit Counsell, They sent doun some in commissioun to
- the King, and desired the mater might be tryed privatlie, and
- offered, if they had offended, to repair the offence at his
- owne sight; and alledged they had the warrant of the synod
- presentlie sitting in the toun. The King would have the mater to
- come in publict. When they went doun, none was called upon but
- M^r. Peter Hewat and Henrie Nisbit. After that they were heard,
- the sentence was givin out against all the rest unheard, and
- charge givin to the ministers and foure sessiouns to conveene,
- within three houres after, to rescind their former ordinance,
- and to the ministers, to intimat the contrarie of that which
- they intimated before. They craved to be heard. Loath was the
- King, yitt the counsell moved him to heare them. M^r. Johne
- Hall was appointed to be their mouth. ‘We are summouned, Sir,’
- said M^r. Johne, ‘and crave to understand to what end.’ ‘It is
- true’, said the King, ‘yee are summouned, and I have decerned
- alreadie.’ M^r. Johne made no reply. M^r. Robert Bruce said, ‘If
- it might stand with your good pleasure, we would know wherefore
- this hard sentence is past against us.’ ‘For contraveening of
- my warrant,’ said the King. ‘We have fulfilled your warrant,’
- said M^r. Robert, ‘for your warrant craved no more but an hous
- to them, which they have gottin.’ ‘To what end, I pray you,
- sought I an hous,’ said the King, ‘but onlie that the people
- might resort to their comedeis?’ ‘Your warrant beareth not that
- end,’ said M^r. Robert, ‘and we have good reasoun to stay them
- from their playes, even by your owne acts of parliament.’ The
- King answered, ‘Yee are not the interpreters of my lawes.’ ‘And
- farther, the warrant was intimated but to one or two,’ said
- M^r. Robert, and, therefore, desired the King to retreate the
- sentence. The King would alter nothing. ‘At the least, then,’
- said M^r. Robert, ‘lett the paine strike upon us, and exeeme
- our people.’ The King bade him make away. So, in departing,
- M^r. Robert turned, and said, ‘Sir, please you, nixt the regard
- we ow to God, we had a reverent respect to your Maiestie’s
- royall person, and person of your queene; for we heard that the
- comedians, in their playes, checked your royall person with
- secreit and indirect taunts and checkes; and there is not a man
- of honour in England would give such fellowes so much as their
- countenance’. So they departed.
-
- They were charged, at two houres, by sound of trumpet, the day
- following, at the publict Croce, about ten houres, to conveene
- themselves, and rescind the acts, or ellis to passe to the horne
- immediatly after. The foure sessiouns conveene in the East Kirk.
- They asked the ministers’ advice. The ministers willed them
- to advise with some advocats, seing the mater tuiched their
- estate so neere. M^r. William Oliphant and M^r. Johne Schairp,
- advocats, came to the foure sessiouns. The charge was read. The
- advocats gave their counsell to rescind the act, by reasoun the
- King’s charge did not allow slanderous and undecent comedeis;
- and farther, shewed unto them, that the sessiouns could doe
- nothing without their ministers, seing they were charged as
- weill as the sessiouns, and the mater could not passe in voting,
- but the moderator and they being present. They were called in,
- and after reasouning they came to voting. M^r. Robert Bruce
- being first asked, answered ‘His Majestie is not minded to allow
- anie slanderous or offensive comedeis; but so it is that their
- comedeis are slanderous and offensive; therefore, the king,
- in effect, ratifieth our act. The rest of the ministers voted
- after the same maner. The elders, partlie for feare of their
- estats, partlie upon informatioun of the advocats, voted to the
- rescinding of the act. It was voted nixt, whether the ministers
- sould intimat the rescinding of the act? The most part voted
- they sould. The ministers assured them they would not. Henrie
- Nisbit, Archibald Johnstoun, Alexander Lindsey, and some others,
- tooke upon them to purchasse an exemptioun to the ministers.
- They returned with this answere, that his Majestie was content
- the mater sould be passed over lightlie, but he would have some
- mentioun made of the annulling of the act. They refuse. Their
- commissioners went the second tyme to the king, and returned
- with this answere, ‘Lett them nather speeke good nor evill in
- that mater, but leave it as dead.’ The ministers conveened apart
- to consult. M^r. Robert Bruce said it behoved them ather to
- justifie the thing they had done, or ellis they could not goe to
- a pulpit. Some others said the like. Others said, Leave it to
- God, to doe as God would direct their hearts. So they dissolved.
- M^r. Robert, and others that were of his minde, justified it
- the day following, in some small measure, and yitt were not
- querrelled.
-
-Several other documents confirm this narrative. The Privy Council
-register contains an order of 8 November for an officer at arms to call
-upon the sessions by proclamation to rescind their resolution and a
-further proclamation of 10 November reciting the submission made by the
-sessions.[744] The Lord High Treasurer’s accounts contain payments to
-Walter Forsyth, the officer employed, as well as gifts to ‘ye Inglis
-comedianis’ of £43 6_s._ 8_d._ in October, of £40 in November ‘to by
-tymber for ye preparatioun of ane house to thair pastyme’, and of a
-further £333 6_s._ 8_d._ in December.[745] It is George Nicolson, in
-a letter of 12 November forwarding the proclamation of 8 November to
-Sir Robert Cecil, who identifies the players for us as ‘Fletcher and
-Mertyn with their company’.[746] The bounty of James, although it must
-be borne in mind that the sums were reckoned in pounds Scots, probably
-left them disinclined to quit Edinburgh in a hurry. Another gift of
-£400 reached them through Roger Ashton in 1601;[747] and on 9 October
-in the same year they visited Aberdeen with a letter of recommendation
-from the King, and with the style of his majesty’s servants, and the
-town council gave them £22 and spent £3 on their supper ‘that nicht
-thaye plaid to the towne’. Nay, more, another entry in the burgh
-register tells us that the players came in the train of ‘Sir Francis
-Hospital of Haulszie, Knycht, Frenschman’, and one of those ‘admittit
-burgesses’ with the foreign visitor was ‘Laurence Fletcher, comediane
-to his Majesty’.[748]
-
-Laurence Fletcher’s name stands first in the English patent of 1603 to
-the King’s men, and the inferences have been drawn that the company
-at Aberdeen was the Chamberlain’s men, that their visit was due to a
-proscription from London on account of their participation in the Essex
-‘innovation’, that Shakespeare was with them, and that he picked up
-local colour, to the extent of ‘a blasted heath’ for _Macbeth_.[749]
-To this it may be briefly replied that, as the Chamberlain’s men were
-at Court as usual in the winter of 1602, any absence from London,
-which their unlucky performance of _Richard II_ may have rendered
-discreet, can only have been of short duration; that the most plausible
-reading of the Scottish evidence is that Fletcher’s company were in
-the service of James as Court comedians from 1599 to 1601; and that
-there is nothing whatever to indicate that Fletcher ever belonged to
-the Chamberlain’s company at all. In fact, very little is known of
-him outside Scotland, although it is just possible that he may have
-been the object of two advances made by Henslowe to the Admiral’s men
-about October 1596, and described respectively as ‘lent vnto Martyne
-to feache Fleatcher’ and ‘lent the company to geue Fleatcher’.[750] If
-Fletcher was the King’s man in Scotland, it was not unnatural that he
-should retain that status when James came to England; and it is very
-doubtful whether the insertion of his name in the patent in any way
-entailed his being taken into business relations with his ‘fellows’.
-I strongly suspect that his companion at Edinburgh, Martin, was put
-into a precisely similar position amongst Queen Anne’s men, for who can
-Martin be but Martin Slater, who is often, as in the passage quoted
-above, called Martin _tout court_ in Henslowe’s _Diary_, and who
-certainly left the Admiral’s men in 1597?
-
-
- iii. ENGLISH PLAYERS ON THE CONTINENT
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The earliest comprehensive study
- of the foreign travels of English actors is that of A. Cohn,
- _Shakespeare in Germany in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
- Centuries_ (1865). Much material has been collected, mostly
- since Cohn wrote, in a number of local histories and special
- studies, of which the most important are: C. M. Plümicke,
- _Entwurf einer Theatergeschichte von Berlin_ (1781); D. C. von
- Rommel, _Geschichte von Hessen_ (1820–38); J. E. Schlager,
- _Über das alte Wiener Hoftheater_ in _Sitzungsberichte der
- phil.-hist. Classe der Kaiserlichen Akad. der Wissenschaften_,
- vi (1851), 147; M. Fürstenau, _Zur Geschichte der Musik und des
- Theaters am Hofe der Kurfürsten von Sachsen_ (1861); E. Mentzel,
- _Geschichte der Schauspielkunst in Frankfurt am Main_ (1882); O.
- Teuber, _Geschichte des Prager Theaters_ (1883); J. Meissner, in
- _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xix. 113 (Austria), and _Die englischen
- Comoedianten zur Zeit Shakespeares in Oesterreich_ (1884);
- K. Trautmann in _Archiv für Litteraturgeschichte_, xii. 319
- (Munich, Augsburg); xiii. 34 (Suabia), 315 (Ulm); xiv. 113
- (Nuremberg), 225 (Suabia); xv. 209 (Ulm, Stuttgart, Tübingen);
- in _Zeitschrift für Vergleichende Litteraturgeschichte_, vii
- (Rothenburg); and in _Jahrbuch für Münchener Geschichte_, iii.
- 259; J. Crüger in _Archiv für Litteraturgeschichte_, xv. 113
- (Strassburg); Duncker, _Landgraf Moritz von Hessen und die
- englischen Komödianten in Deutsche Rundschau_, xlviii (1886),
- 260; A. Cohn in _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 245 (Cologne); J.
- Bolte in _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xxiii. 99 (Denmark and Sweden),
- and _Das Danziger Theater im 16. und 17. Jahrhundert_ (1893);
- J. Wolter in _Zeitschrift des Bergischen Geschichtsvereins_,
- xxxii. 90 (Cologne); A. Wormstall in _Zeitschrift für
- vaterländische Geschichte und Altertumskunde Westfalens_, lvi
- (1898), 75 (Münster); G. Witkowzski in _Euphorion_, xv. 441
- (Leipzig). A collection of records from the earlier of these
- and from more scattered sources is in K. Goedeke, _Grundriss
- der deutschen Dichtung aus den Quellen_^2 (1886), ii. 524, and
- valuable summaries are given in W. Creizenach, _Schauspiele
- der englischen Komödianten_ (1889), and E. Herz, _Englische
- Schauspieler und englisches Schauspiel zur Zeit Shakespeares
- in Deutschland_ (1903). The excursus of F. G. Fleay in _Life
- and Work of Shakespeare_ (1886), 307, is misleading. Additional
- material, which has become available since Herz wrote, is
- recorded by C. F. Meyer in _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 196
- (Wolgast), and C. Grabau in _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xlv. 311
- (Leipzig). Useful special studies are by C. Harris, _The English
- Comedians in Germany before the Thirty Years’ War: the Financial
- Side_ (_Publ. of Modern Language Association_, xxii. 446), A.
- Dessoff, _Über englische, italienische und spanische Dramen
- in den Spielverzeichnissen deutscher Wandertruppen_ (1901,
- _Studien für vergleichende Litteraturgeschichte_, i), and on
- the problem of staging (cf. ch. xx) C. H. Kaulfuss-Diesch, _Die
- Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an der Wende des sechzehnten
- und siebzehnten Jahrhunderts_ (1905). A collection of plays and
- jigs, in German, but belonging to the repertory of an English
- company, appeared as _Engelische Comedien und Tragedien_
- (1620); some of the plays have been edited by J. Tittmann,
- _Die Schauspiele der englischen Komödianten in Deutschland_
- (1880), and the jigs by J. Bolte, _Die Singspiele der englischen
- Komödianten und ihrer Nachfolger in Deutschland, Holland und
- Scandinavien_ (1893). German plays written under English
- influences are to be found in J. Tittmann, _Die Schauspiele
- des Herzogs Heinrich Julius von Braunschweig_ (1880), and
- A. von Keller, _Jacob Ayrers Dramen_ (1865). Cohn prints,
- with translations, Ayrer’s _Sidea_ and _Phaenicia, Julio and
- Hyppolita_ and _Titus Andronicus_ from the 1620 volume, and
- early German versions of _Hamlet_ (_Der bestrafte Brudermord_)
- and _Romeo and Juliet_ from manuscripts. The literary records
- and remains of the English players are fully discussed by
- Creizenach and Herz, and their relation to Ayrer by W. Wodick,
- _J. Ayrers Dramen in ihrem Verhältniss zur einheimischen
- Literatur und zum Schauspiel der englischen Komödianten_ (1912).
-
- The material for the Netherlands, some of which was gathered by
- Cohn, may be studied in J. A. Worp, _Geschiedenis van het Drama
- en van het Tooneel in Nederland_ (1904–8), who also deals with
- the Dutch versions of English dramas. The contemporary stage
- conditions in France are best treated by E. Rigal, _Le Théâtre
- français avant la période classique_ (1901), and those in Spain
- by H. A. Rennert, _The Spanish Stage in the Time of Lope de
- Vega_ (1909), who uses the results of recent researches by C.
- Pérez Pastor, which have added much to the information furnished
- by C. Pellicer, _Tratado histórico sobre el origen y progresos
- de la Comedia y del Histrionismo en España_ (1804).]
-
-Thomas Heywood records, about 1608, that ‘the King of Denmarke, father
-to him that now reigneth, entertained into his service a company of
-English comedians, commended unto him by the honourable the Earl of
-Leicester’.[751] This King of Denmark was Frederick II (1559–88),
-father of Christian IV (1588–1648), and of Queen Anne of England.
-English ‘instrumentister’, Johann Krafftt, Johann Personn, Johann
-Kirck or Kirckmann, and Thomas Bull, were at the Danish Court as early
-as 1579–80, and in 1585 certain unnamed English played (_lechte_) in
-the courtyard of the town-hall at Elsinore, when the press of folk
-was such that the wall broke down. These may be the same men who
-played and vaulted at Leipzig on 19 July 1585, and are the earliest
-English players yet traced in Germany.[752] But the particular
-comedians referred to by Heywood were probably another company who
-had accompanied Leicester to Holland, when he took the command of the
-English forces in 1585, and had given a show, half dramatic, half
-acrobatic, of _The Forces of Hercules_ at Utrecht on 23 April 1586.
-Certainly Leicester had in his train one Will, a ‘jesting plaier’,
-who is now usually identified with William Kempe, and in August and
-September 1586 the Household Accounts of the Danish Court record the
-presence of ‘Wilhelm Kempe instrumentist’, and of his boy Daniell
-Jonns. It is not clear what were the precise relations between Kempe
-and five other ‘instrumentister och springere’, Thomas Stiwens,
-Jurgenn Brienn, Thomas Koning, Thomas Pape, and Robert Persj, who
-were at Court from 17 June to 18 September 1586, and for whom the
-same accounts record a payment to Thomas Stiuens of six thalers a
-month apiece, at the end of that period. If he had, as is probable,
-been their fellow up to that point, he did not accompany them in
-their further peregrinations.[753] These took them to the Court of
-Frederick’s nephew, Christian I, Elector of Saxony (1586–91), as a
-result of correspondence, still extant, between the sovereigns, in
-which the offer of salaries at the annual rate of 100 thalers overcame
-the reluctance of the Englishmen to face the perils of an unknown
-tongue. They started with an interpreter on 25 September, and shortly
-after their arrival at Waidenhain on 16 October received instructions
-from Christian to follow him with mourning clothes to Berlin, where
-he was then sojourning. Christian’s own capital was Dresden, and
-here they held a formal appointment in his service, under which they
-were bound to follow him in his travels, and to entertain him with
-performances after his banquets, and with music and ‘Springkunst’, and
-were entitled, beyond their pay, to board, livery, and travelling
-expenses, and a lodging allowance of forty thalers each. The Dresden
-archives give their names as Tomas Konigk, Tomas Stephan or Stephans,
-George Beyzandt, Tomas Papst, and Rupert Persten. Their departure from
-Court is recorded on 17 July 1587.[754] In all these notices music and
-acrobatic feats are to the fore, but that the men were actors there can
-be no doubt, for two of them, Thomas Pope and George Bryan, reappear
-amongst Strange’s men, and thereafter as fellows of Shakespeare in the
-Chamberlain’s company. Of Stevens, King, and Percy no more is known.
-Kempe was abroad again, in Italy and Germany, during 1601, and returned
-to England on 2 September. It is not certain whether he took a company
-with him, or went as a solitary morris dancer. But it is noteworthy
-that on the following 26 November an English company, under one Johann
-Kemp, reached Münster, after a tour which had taken them to Amsterdam,
-Cologne, Redberg, and Steinfurt. They played in English, and had a
-clown who pattered in German between the acts.[755]
-
-The man, however, who did most to acclimatize the English actors in
-Germany was Robert Browne, who paid several visits to the country,
-and spent considerable periods there between 1590 and 1620. With him
-he took relays of actors, some of whom split off into independent
-associations, and account for most, although not all, of the groups of
-‘Engländer’ who became familiar figures at the Frankfort spring and
-autumn fairs and even in out-of-the-way corners of northern Europe. Of
-some of these groups the wanderings can be traced in outline, although
-the frequent failure of the archives to record individual names is
-responsible for many _lacunae_, which the conjectural ingenuity of
-literary historians has done its best to fill. Many of these anonymous
-performances I must pass over in silence.
-
-Robert Browne first appears as one of Worcester’s men, with Edward
-Alleyn, in 1583, and in 1589 these two, probably as Admiral’s men,
-still held a common stock of apparel with John Alleyn and Richard
-Jones.[756] His career abroad begins with a visit to Leyden in October
-1590.[757] This was perhaps only tentative, for in February 1592 he
-was preparing to cross the seas again, and to this end obtained for
-himself, John Bradstreet, Thomas Sackville, and Richard Jones, the
-following passport to the States-General of the Netherlands from the
-Lord Admiral:
-
- Messieurs, comme les présents porteurs, Robert Browne, Jehan
- Bradstriet, Thomas Saxfield, Richard Jones, ont deliberé de
- faire ung voyage en Allemagne, avec intention de passer par le
- païs de Zelande, Hollande et Frise, et allantz en leur dict
- voyage d’exercer leurs qualitez en faict de musique, agilitez et
- joeux de commedies, tragedies et histoires, pour s’entretenir
- et fournir à leurs despenses en leur dict voyage. Cestes
- sont partant vous requerir monstrer et prester toute faveur
- en voz païs et jurisdictions, et leur octroyer en ma faveur
- vostre ample passeport soubz le seel des Estatz, afin que les
- Bourgmestres des villes estantz soubs voz jurisdictions ne
- les empeschent en passant d’exercer leurs dictes qualitez par
- tout. Enquoy faisant, je vous demeureray à tous obligé, et me
- treuverez très appareillé à me revencher de vostre courtoisie en
- plus grand cas. De ma chambre à la court d’Angleterre ce x^{me}
- jour de Febvrier 1591.
-
- Vostre tres affecsionné à vous fayre plaisir et sarvis,
- C. Howard.[758]
-
-Presumably the Lord Admiral gave this passport in his official
-capacity, as responsible for the high seas, and it is not necessary to
-infer that the travellers were in 1592 his servants.[759]
-
-There are not many clear notices of Browne and his company during
-this tour. They were at Arnhem, with a licence from Prince Maurice
-of Orange-Nassau, in 1592.[760] Thereafter they may have gone into
-residence at some Court, Wolfenbüttel or another. They can hardly have
-been the English ‘comoedianten und springer’ who came to Nyköping in
-Sweden for the wedding of Duke Karl of Sweden and Princess Christina
-of Holstein on 28 August 1592[761]; for it was only two days later
-that Browne approached the Frankfort magistrates for leave to play at
-the autumn fair, where they gave _Gammer Gurton’s Needle_ and some of
-Marlowe’s plays.[762] It was on this occasion that Fynes Moryson, the
-traveller, visited the fair and noted the great vogue of the English
-actors amongst the merchants.[763] Englishmen played at Cologne in
-October and November 1592,[764] and at Nuremberg in August 1593;[765]
-but in view of the Nyköping company it can hardly be assumed that these
-were Browne and his fellows, and indeed the leader at Nuremberg is
-called ‘Ruberto Gruen’, which may, but on the other hand may not, be a
-blunder for Browne’s name. The Cologne players are anonymous. At any
-rate ‘Robert Braun, Thomas Sachsweil, Johan Bradenstreit und consorten’
-were all at Frankfort in August 1593,[766] where they played scriptural
-dramas, including _Abraham and Lot_ and _The Destruction of Sodom and
-Gomorrha_. Thereafter the company seems to have broken up. Richard
-Jones certainly went home before 2 September 1594, when he bought a
-gown ‘of pechecoler in grayne’ from Henslowe.[767] He had doubtless
-already joined the Admiral’s men.
-
-Thomas Sackville and John Bradstreet probably went to Wolfenbüttel.
-This was the capital of Henry Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
-(1589–1613), himself the author of plays, mostly printed during 1593
-and 1594, in which an English influence is perceptible. The Duke
-married Elisabeth, daughter of Frederick II of Denmark, and his wedding
-at Copenhagen in February 1590 was attended by his brother-in-law,
-afterwards James I of England. It is possible that his earliest play,
-_Susanna_, was written either for this occasion or for the repetition
-of his wedding ceremony at Wolfenbüttel. In this piece the jester, a
-conventional personage, bears the name ‘Johan Clant’, in the later
-plays ‘Johan Bouset’; and in the _Ehebrecherin_ (1594) Bouset says,
-quite irrelevantly to his dramatic character, ‘Ich bin ein Englisch
-Mann’. Both names are in fact of English origin, from the words ‘clown’
-and ‘posset’ respectively. Evidently the Duke must in some way have
-been in touch with the English stage at a date even earlier than
-Browne’s second German visit in 1592. It is not, therefore, necessary
-to conjecture, as has been conjectured, that Wolfenbüttel was the first
-objective of this visit.[768] Unfortunately the Brunswick household
-accounts for 1590–1601 are missing, and with them all direct evidence
-of the first formation of his English company by the Duke has probably
-gone. The company existed by 1596, when the ‘furstelige comoedianten
-och springers’ of the Duke paid a month’s visit to Copenhagen for
-the coronation of his brother-in-law, Christian IV of Denmark, on
-29 August.[769] In the following year we find ‘Jan Bosett und seine
-Gesellen’ at Nuremberg, ‘Thomas Sackfeil und Consorten’ at Augsburg in
-June, ‘Johann Busset’ and Jakob Behel at Strassburg in July and August,
-and ‘Thomas Sackville, John Bouset genannt’, Johann Breitenstrasse
-and Jacob Biel at the Frankfort autumn fair.[770] The identity of
-this company with the Wolfenbüttel court comedians may perhaps be
-inferred from Sackville’s use of John Bouset as a stage name, and from
-a reference, in this same year 1597, to ‘Thomas Sackefiel, princely
-servant at Wolfenbüttel’. Another member of the company may have been
-Edward Wakefiel, with whom Sackville, also in 1597, had a brawl in
-a Brunswick tavern.[771] No more is heard of them until 1601, when
-John Bouset was expected to join his old friend Robert Browne for
-the Frankfort Easter fair.[772] The Brunswick household accounts are
-extant for 1602 and 1608, and from 1614 onwards. Thomas Sackville
-appears frequently. On 30 August 1602 he took a payment for the English
-comedians. Later references to him from 1 October 1602 to 1617 are
-mainly in connexion with purchases for the ducal wardrobe. It seems
-clear that, while remaining a ducal servant, and possibly even an
-actor, he went into business and prospered therein.[773] He is said to
-have been selling silk at Frankfort in 1604, and in 1608 Thomas Coryat,
-the Odcombian traveller and oddity, records:
-
- ‘The wealth that I sawe here was incredible. The goodliest
- shew of ware that I sawe in all Franckford, saving that of the
- Goldsmithes, was made by an Englishman one Thomas Sackfield a
- Dorsetshire man, once a servant of my father, who went out of
- England but in a meane estate, but after he had spent a few
- yeares at the Duke of Brunswicks Court, hee so inriched himselfe
- of late that his glittering shewe of ware in Franckford dit
- farre excell all the Dutchmen, French, Italians, or whomsoever
- else.’[774]
-
-John Bradstreet’s name appears in 1604 with that of Sackville in the
-album of Johannes Cellarius of Nuremberg. He died in 1618 and Sackville
-in 1628, leaving a library of theology and English literature.
-Edward Wakefield reappears in the Brunswick accounts for 1602, not
-specifically as a player. But certainly the playing company continued
-to exist. The accounts mention it in 1608, and Thomas Heywood notes
-its existence about the same date. There were English players at
-Wolfenbüttel in May 1615 and at Brunswick in 1611 and 1617, but no
-names are recorded, and it can hardly be assumed that these were the
-original ducal company. Henry Julius himself died in 1613.[775]
-
-Robert Browne’s own movements are uncertain after the break-up of his
-company in 1593. He is not traceable for a year or so either in Germany
-or in England, where his wife and all her children and household died
-of plague in Shoreditch about August 1593.[776] But sooner or later he
-found his way to Cassel. This was another of the literary courts of
-Germany, the capital of Maurice the Learned, Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel
-(1592–1627). Maurice himself wrote an ‘_Anglia_ Comoedia’ and other
-plays in Terentian Latin, which were performed by the pupils of the
-_Collegium Mauritianum_, but are unfortunately not preserved. He also
-composed music and, like the Duke of Brunswick, gave a welcome to John
-Dowland on one of his several foreign tours.[777] Possibly Dowland was
-one of the two lutenists who are recorded to have spent fifteen weeks
-at Cassel in 1594.[778] In the following year there were performances
-by players and acrobats at Maurice’s castle of Wilhelmsburg at
-Schmalkalden, and in the same year Maurice wrote to his agent at Prague
-to give assistance to his comedians in the event of their visiting
-that city.[779] To 1594 or 1595 may, therefore, be plausibly ascribed
-undated warrants by which Robert Browne and Philip Kiningsmann receive
-appointments from the Landgrave, undertaking to do him service with
-their company in vocal and instrumental music and in plays to be
-supplied either by Maurice or by themselves, and not to leave Cassel
-without his permission.[780] Certainly Browne was the Landgrave’s man
-by 16 April 1595, when a warrant was issued allowing the export of a
-consignment of bows and arrows which he had been sent over to bring
-from England to Cassel.[781] The ‘fürstlich hessische Diener und
-Comoetianten’ were at Nuremberg on 5 July 1596, and a company under
-Philip Konigsman were at Strassburg in the following August.[782]
-Festivities were now in preparation at Cassel for the christening of
-Maurice’s daughter, one of whose godmothers was Queen Elizabeth, on 24
-August 1596. Brown and one John Webster were on duty at Cassel during
-the visit of the Earl of Lincoln, who came from England to stand proxy
-for Elizabeth.[783] Payments to the English comedians and performances
-by them at Melsungen, Weissenstein, and Rothenburg, in the Landgrave’s
-territory, are recorded in the Cassel archives during 1597 and 1598.
-A proposed loan of them in 1597 to Landgrave Louis of Marburg seems
-to have fallen through, but in 1598 they left Cassel for the Court of
-the Palsgrave Frederic IV at Heidelberg, with a liberal _Abfertigung_
-or vail of 300 thalers and a travelling allowance of 20 thalers, which
-was entrusted to George Webster.[784] From Heidelberg they went to
-Frankfort towards the end of 1599, but were refused leave to play,
-owing to the prevalence of plague.[785] Robert Browne, Robert Kingman,
-and Robert Ledbetter were then of the company. Ledbetter must have
-recently joined them, as he is in the cast of _Frederick and Basilea_
-as played by the Admiral’s men in 1597. Frankfort having failed them,
-they fell back upon Strassburg, and here they seem to have remained
-until the spring of 1601.[786] Browne was their leader at their
-arrival, but he then seems to have left them and returned to England,
-where he came to Court as manager of the Earl of Derby’s men during
-the winters of 1599–1600 and 1600–1.[787] By Easter 1601, however, he
-had started on his fourth tour, and appeared once more at Frankfort,
-possibly in Kyd’s _Spanish Tragedy_. With him were Robert Kingmann and
-Robert Ledbetter, and they were expecting to be joined by ‘Johannen
-Buscheten und noch andere in unsere Companie gehörige Comödianten’. The
-old association of 1592 between Robert Browne and Thomas Sackville was,
-therefore, still in some sense alive.[788]
-
-Meanwhile, Maurice of Hesse had not been wholly without English
-actors, since Browne and his fellows left Cassel in 1598. It would
-seem that George Webster returned from Heidelberg, or perhaps from
-Strassburg, to his service. The ‘fürstlich-hessischen Komödianten und
-Musikanten’ were at Frankfort in March, at Nuremberg in April 1600,
-and at Frankfort again at Easter 1601. The names recorded are those of
-George Webster, John Hill or Hüll, Richard Machin, and at Nuremberg
-Bernhardt Sandt.[789] Upon his second visit to Frankfort Webster would
-have met his old leader, now become his rival, Robert Browne. The
-Hessian company were for a third time at Frankfort in the autumn of
-1601.[790] In the following year they left the Landgrave’s service,
-not altogether to the regret of some of his subjects, who resented a
-patronage of foreign arts at the cost of their pockets.[791] Webster
-and Machin, with whom was then one Ralph Reeve, were still using their
-former master’s name when they visited Frankfort at Easter 1603.[792]
-Thereafter they dropped it. Of Webster no more is heard. Machin is
-conjectured to have joined for a short time an English company in the
-service of Margrave Christian William, a younger son of the Elector
-Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg, which came to Frankfort for the
-Easter and autumn fairs of 1604.[793] The Margrave was administrator of
-the diocese of Magdeburg, and kept his Court at Halle. His company is
-traceable from 1604 to 1605, but I do not find any evidence of Machin’s
-connexion with it. In May 1605 he appeared at Strassburg, and there
-claimed as his credentials only his four years’ service with Maurice of
-Hesse.[794] Shortly before, he had been at the Frankfort Easter fair
-with Reeve, and the two returned to Frankfort in the autumn, and again
-at Easter 1606.[795]
-
-Robert Browne, for some years after the opening of his fourth tour at
-Frankfort in the spring of 1601, does not appear to have attached
-himself to any particular Court. He is found at Frankfort, with Robert
-Jones, in September 1602, at Augsburg in the following November and
-December, at Nuremberg in February 1603, and at Frankfort for the
-Easter fair of the same year.[796] With him were then, but it would
-seem only temporarily, Thomas Blackwood and John Thare, late of
-Worcester’s men, who had doubtless just come out from England, when
-Elizabeth’s illness and death closed the London theatres.[797] He is
-probably the ‘alte Komödiant’, whose identity seems to have been
-thought sufficiently described by that term at Frankfort in the autumn
-of 1604.[798] He returned to Frankfort on 26 May 1606, and was at
-Strassburg in the following June and July.[799] Here he was accompanied
-by John Green. On this or some other visit to Strassburg, the company
-probably lost Robert Kingman, who, like Thomas Sackville, found
-business more profitable than strolling. He became a freeman of
-Strassburg in 1618, and in that year was able to befriend his old
-‘fellow’ Browne, and in 1626 other actors on their visits to the
-city.[800] In the course of 1606 Browne seems to have entered the
-service of Maurice of Hesse, who in the previous year had built a
-permanent theatre, the _Ottonium_, at Cassel, and had now again an
-English company for the first time since 1602. This is to be inferred
-from an application for leave to play submitted to the Frankfort town
-council on 26 August 1606, and signed by ‘Robert Braun’, ‘Johann Grün’,
-and ‘Robert Ledbetter’ as ‘Fürstlich Hessische Comödianten’. Earlier
-in August the same men had been at Ulm.[801] They visited Nuremberg
-with a letter of recommendation from their lord in November, and then
-settled down at Cassel for the winter.[802] But their service did not
-last long. On 1 March 1607 a household officer wrote to the Landgrave
-that the English found their salaries inadequate, and after performing
-the comedy of _The King of England and Scotland_ had declared, either
-in jest or earnest, that it was their last play in Cassel.[803]
-Probably they were in earnest. Browne and Green went to Frankfort, for
-the last time as the Hessian comedians, on 17 March.[804] Browne’s
-name now disappears from German records for a decade. In 1610 he was a
-member of the Queen’s Revels syndicate in London, and on 11 April 1612
-he wrote a letter to Edward Alleyn from Clerkenwell.[805] But whether
-Browne left them or not, the company held together for a while longer.
-Green was at Danzig and Elbing in the course of 1607.[806] Thereafter
-it seems probable that he tried a bold flight, and penetrated to the
-heart of Catholic Germany in Austria. In November 1607 an English
-company was with the archducal court of Ferdinand and Maria Anna at
-Gräz in Styria. A performance by them of _The King of England and the
-Goldsmith’s Wife_ is recorded.[807] They followed Ferdinand to Passau,
-where they gave _The Prodigal Son_ and _The Jew_, and possibly also to
-the Reichstag held in January 1608 at Regensburg. By 6 February they
-were back at Gräz, and a letter from Ferdinand’s sister, the
-Archduchess Maria Magdalena, then just betrothed to the Grand Duke
-Cosimo II of Florence, gives a lively account of their performances and
-of the assistance which they rendered in the revels danced at
-Court.[808] Their repertory included _The Prodigal Son_, _A Proud Woman
-of Antwerp_, _Dr. Faustus_, _A Duke of Florence and a Nobleman’s
-Daughter_, _Nobody and Somebody_, _Fortunatus_, _The Jew_, _King Louis
-and King Frederick of Hungary_, _A King of Cyprus and a Duke of
-Venice_, _Dives and Lazarus_.[809] It is not absolutely certain that
-the company referred to in these notices was Green’s. No name is in
-fact mentioned. But the probability suggested by the resemblance of the
-above play-list to those of 1620 and 1626, with which Green was
-certainly connected, is confirmed by the existence of a German
-manuscript of _Nobody and Somebody_ with a dedication by Green to
-Ferdinand’s brother the Archduke Maximilian, who was certainly present
-at the Gräz performances, and by a letter which tells us that a company
-visiting Austria in 1617 was the same as that which had played at Gräz
-in the lifetime of the Archduchess Maria, who died in 1608.
-Unfortunately the identification of this company of 1617 with Green’s
-is itself a matter of high probability, rather than of absolute
-certainty.[810] The end of the visit to Gräz was marked by a duel in
-which one of the English actors, ‘the man with long red hair, who
-always played a little fiddle’, killed a Frenchman.[811] Green now,
-like Browne, drops for some years out of the German records.
-
-The Court functions at Cassel surrendered by Browne in 1607 were
-resumed by his predecessors, in whose leadership Reeve had now
-succeeded Machin; and the appearance of the Hessian company is recorded
-at Frankfort during both the fairs of 1608 and 1609, the Easter fair of
-1610, the autumn fair of 1612, and the Easter fair of 1613. A proposed
-appearance for the coronation of the Emperor Mathias in June 1612
-was prohibited, because the mourning for his predecessor Rudolph II
-was not yet over.[812] It is perhaps something of an assumption that
-the company was the same one throughout all these years. Reeve was
-in charge up to the autumn of 1609; after that no individual name is
-mentioned. The intervals between the fairs were presumably spent in the
-main at Cassel. In the summer of 1609 the company visited Stuttgart and
-Nuremberg and possibly other places, with a letter of recommendation
-from their lord.[813] In the autumn of the same year John Sigismund,
-Elector of Brandenburg (1608–19), who often entertained a company of
-his own, but appears to have been temporarily without one, wrote to
-Maurice to borrow them for the wedding of his brother at Berlin.[814]
-In April 1610 they may not improbably, though there is no evidence of
-the fact, have followed Maurice to the Diet at Prague.[815] In 1611
-they are said to have been at Darmstadt.[816] They certainly played at
-the wedding of the Margrave Joachim Ernest, uncle of the Elector of
-Brandenburg, at Anspach in October 1612, and later in the same month
-paid a visit to Nuremberg.[817] No more is heard of them, or of any
-other English actors in the service of Maurice of Hesse-Cassel, after
-1613.[818] Reeve was a member of Rosseter’s syndicate for the building
-of the Porter’s Hall theatre at Blackfriars in 1615, and with him were
-associated Philip Kingman and Robert Jones, the last notices of whom in
-Germany are as ‘fellows’ of Robert Browne in 1596 and 1602 respectively.
-
-The appearance of Blackwood and Thare, late of Worcester’s men, in
-company with Browne at the Frankfort Easter fair of 1603, has already
-been noted. The only further record of either of them is of Thare
-at Ulm and Augsburg in the following December.[819] But by a series
-of conjectures, to which I hesitate to subscribe, they have been
-identified with a company which came to Stuttgart in September 1603
-in the train of Lord Spencer and Sir William Dethick, ambassadors
-from England carrying the insignia of the Garter to Frederick Duke of
-Württemberg, and there gave a play of _Susanna_[820]; with a company
-which visited Nördlingen and other places in January 1604 under the
-leadership of one Eichelin, apparently a German, but with a repertory
-which included a _Romeo and Juliet_ and a _Pyramus and Thisbe_[821];
-with a company which held letters of recommendation from the Duke of
-Würtemberg at Nuremberg in February 1604;[822] and with a company which
-took a repertory closely resembling the Nördlingen one to Rothenburg in
-1604 and 1606.[823] This is all very ingenious guesswork.[824]
-
-All trace of John Green is lost for several years after 1608. An
-isolated notice at Utrecht in November 1613 suggests that he may
-have spent part of this interval in the Netherlands.[825] A year or
-two later he returned to Germany. He was at Danzig in July 1615 and
-again, with Robert Reinolds, late of Queen Anne’s men, in July 1616,
-having paid an intermediate visit to Copenhagen.[826] In 1617 he was
-at Prague for the coronation of the Archduke Ferdinand as King of
-Bohemia, and in July of the same year at Vienna.[827] The comparative
-infrequency with which English actors visited Austrian territory
-perhaps justifies the assumption that his is the company mentioned in
-a letter of recommendation sent by Ferdinand’s brother, the Archduke
-Charles, at Neiss to the Bishop of Olmütz on 18 March 1617, as having
-played at Gräz before his mother the Archduchess Maria, who died in
-1608, and having recently spent some months at the Court of Poland in
-Warsaw.[828] In 1618 Green’s old leader, the indefatigable veteran
-Robert Browne, came out with a new company on his fifth and last visit
-to the Continent. He is first noted at Nuremberg on 28 May.[829] My
-impression is that the two men joined forces. Green’s name does not
-appear in the records for a couple of years. But Reinolds, who had
-been with him at Danzig in 1616, was with Browne at Strassburg in
-June and July 1618.[830] Later in the year Browne was at the autumn
-fair at Frankfort.[831] There is no definite mention of him during
-the next twelve months, but it is not improbable that the combined
-company was that which visited Rostock in May and Danzig in July
-1619.[832] At any rate Browne appeared at Cologne in October;[833] and
-then went for the winter to Prague, where the Elector Palatine and the
-Lady Elizabeth of England, now King and Queen of Bohemia, had set up
-their Court.[834] They were but a winter King and Queen. In 1620 the
-Thirty Years’ War broke out, and Germany had other things to think
-of than English mumming. Browne was at Nuremberg in February and at
-Frankfort for the Easter fair.[835] That is the last we hear of him.
-But Green reached Cologne and Utrecht later in April, and was probably
-discreetly taking the company home.[836] In 1626 he came out again
-with Robert Reinolds, who made a reputation as a clown under the name
-of Pickleherring.[837] The details of this later tour lie beyond the
-scope of the present inquiry. Pickleherring is the clown-name also in a
-volume of _Engelische Comedien und Tragedien_, printed in 1620, which
-probably represents an attempt of Browne and Green to turn to profit
-with the printers their repertory of 1618–20, now rendered useless by
-their return to England.[838] The plays contained in this volume, in
-addition to two farces and five jigs, in most of which Pickleherring
-appears, are _Esther and Haman_, _The Prodigal Son_, _Fortunatus_,
-_A King’s Son of England and a King’s Daughter of Scotland_, _Nobody
-and Somebody_, _Sidonia and Theagenes_, _Julio and Hyppolita_, and
-_Titus Andronicus_.[839] The first five of these reappear in a list
-of plays forming the repertory of Green at Dresden during the visit
-of 1626 referred to above. If the titles can be trusted, two of the
-plays in this list had already been played by Browne at Frankfort and
-Cassel in 1601 and 1607, three by an unknown company, possibly that
-of Blackwood and Thare, at Nördlingen and Rothenburg in 1604 and
-1606, and eight by Green himself at Passau and Gräz in the winter of
-1607–8.[840] They number thirty in all, as follows: _Christabella_,
-_Romeo and Juliet_,[841] _Amphitryo_,[842] _The Duke of Florence_,[843]
-_The King of Spain and the Portuguese Viceroy_,[844] _Julius
-Caesar_, _Crysella_,[845] _The Duke of Ferrara_,[846] _Nobody and
-Somebody_,[847] _The Kings of Denmark and Sweden_,[848] _Hamlet_,[849]
-_Orlando Furioso_,[850] _The Kings of England and Scotland_,[851]
-_Hieronymo the Spanish Marshal_,[852] _Haman and Esther_,[853]
-_The Martyr Dorothea_,[854] _Doctor Faustus_,[855] _The King of
-Arragon_,[856] _Fortunatus_,[857] _Joseph the Jew of Venice_,[858]
-_The Clever Thief_,[859] _The Duke of Venice_,[860] _Barabbas Jew of
-Malta_, _The Dukes of Mantua and Verona_, _Old Proculus_, _Lear King
-of England_, _The Godfather_, _The Prodigal Son_,[861] _The Count of
-Angiers_, _The Rich Man_.[862]
-
-The lists of 1620 and 1626 do not bear out Fleay’s assumption that the
-repertories they represent were wholly made up of plays taken out by
-Browne in 1592.[863]
-
-Another member of Browne’s last expedition can perhaps be identified.
-With him in 1592 had been Richard Jones, who afterwards became one
-of the Admiral’s men in 1594 and left that company in 1602. He was
-again associated with Browne in Rosseter’s Queen’s Revels syndicate of
-1610. The following undated letter to Edward Alleyn is preserved at
-Dulwich:[864]
-
- M^r Allen, I commend my love and humble duty to you, geving you
- thankes for your great bounty bestoed vpon me in my sicknes,
- when I was in great want, God blese you for it, Sir, this it
- is, I am to go over beyond the seeas with M^r Browne and the
- company, but not by his meanes, for he is put to half a shaer,
- and to stay hear, for they ar all against his goinge. Now good
- Sir, as you have ever byne my worthie frend, so healp me nowe.
- I have a sut of clothes and a cloke at pane for three pound,
- and if it shall pleas you to lend me so much to release them I
- shalbe bound to pray for you so longe as I leve, for if I go
- over and have no clothes, I shall not be esteemed of, and by
- godes help the first mony that I gett I will send it over vnto
- you, for hear I get nothinge, some tymes I have a shillinge a
- day, and some tymes nothinge, so that I leve in great poverty
- hear, and so I humbly take my leave, prainge to god I and my
- wiffe for your health and mistris Allenes, which god continew,
- Your poor frend to command
- Richard Jones.
-
- [_Endorsed_] Receved of master Allen the [ extra spaces ] of
- February the somme of [ extra spaces ] [_and by Alleyn_] M^r
- Jones his letter wher on I lent hym 3^l.
-
-This has generally been dated 1592. But Alleyn’s first recorded
-marriage was in October of that year, and the reference to Browne as
-not going with the company has always been a puzzle. I suspect that
-it was written in or near 1615, and that Jones was one of the actors
-who started in advance of Browne under John Green. That he did travel
-about this time is shown by two other letters to Alleyn about a lease
-of the Leopard’s Head in Shoreditch held by his wife.[865] The first,
-from Jones himself, is not dated, but a mention of Henslowe shows that
-it was written before the latter’s death on 6 January 1616, or at
-least before Jones had heard of that event. The writer and his wife
-were then out of England. The second, from Harris Jones, was written
-from Danzig on 1 April 1620. Mrs. Jones was then expecting to join her
-husband, who was with ‘the prince’, whoever this may have been. If
-Jones had travelled with Browne’s men, he cut himself adrift from them
-on their return, for in 1622 he entered as a musician the service of
-Philip Julius, Duke of Wolgast in Pomerania (1592–1625), who had twice
-visited England, and whose presence at more than one London theatre
-is recorded in 1602.[866] Two petitions from Jones are in the Stettin
-archives.[867] On 30 August 1623 he asked permission, with his fellows
-Johan Kostrassen and Robert Dulandt (Dowland?), to return from Wolgast
-to England. Behind them they appear to have left Richard Farnaby, son
-of the better-known composer Giles Farnaby.[868] On 10 July 1624 Jones
-wrote to the Duke that his hopes of profitable employment under the
-Prince in England had been disappointed, and asked to be taken back
-into his service.
-
-All the groups of actors hitherto dealt with seem to have had their
-origin, more or less directly, in the untiring initiative of Robert
-Browne. There is, however, another tradition, almost as closely
-associated with the houses of Brandenburg and Saxony, as the former
-with those of Hesse-Cassel and Brunswick. Some give and take between
-Cassel and the Courts of some of the Brandenburg princes has from time
-to time been noted.[869] But Berlin, where the successive Electors of
-Brandenburg, Joachim Frederick (1598–1608) and John Sigismund (1608–9),
-had their capital, was during a long period of years the head-quarters
-from which an Englishman, John Spencer, undertook extensive travels,
-both in Protestant and in Catholic Germany. Of Spencer’s stage-career
-in London, if he ever had one, nothing is known. Possibly he betook
-himself to the Brandenburg Court during the English plague-year
-of 1603. At any rate, comedians holding a recommendation given by
-the Elector on 10 August 1604 and confirmed by the Stadtholder of
-the Netherlands, Maurice Prince of Orange Nassau, in the following
-December, were at Leyden in January and The Hague in May 1605.[870] It
-is reasonable to identify them with the company under John Spencer, who
-received a recommendation from the Electress Eleonora of Brandenburg to
-the Elector Christian II of Saxony (1591–1611) in the same year.[871]
-At Dresden they possibly remained for some time, for although there are
-several anonymous appearances, including the famous ones at Gräz in the
-winter of 1607–8, which can be conjecturally assigned to them,[872]
-they do not clearly emerge until April 1608, when a visit of the
-Electoral players of Saxony is recorded at Cologne.[873] Subsequently
-they waited upon Francis, Duke of Stettin and by him were recommended
-to the new Elector of Brandenburg, John Sigismund, who passed them on
-once more to the Elector of Saxony on 14 July 1609.[874] Being in need
-of comedians for his brother’s wedding in the same year, he applied,
-as has been noted, for a loan of those of Maurice of Hesse.[875]
-Dresden remained the head-quarters of Spencer’s men again during
-the next two years, but in 1611 they were back in John Sigismund’s
-service. Christian II of Saxony died in this year. In July and August
-they visited Danzig and Königsberg, and in October and November they
-attended the Elector to Ortelsburg and Königsberg for the ceremonies in
-connexion with the acknowledgement of him as heir to his father-in-law,
-Duke Albert Frederick of Prussia. On this occasion Spencer was at
-the head of not less than nineteen actors and sixteen musicians, and
-produced an elaborate Turkish ‘Triumph-comedy’.[876] In April 1613
-Spencer left Berlin on a tour which was to take him to Dresden once
-more.[877] The company were at Nuremberg in June, still using the
-name of the Elector of Brandenburg and playing _Philole and Mariana_,
-_Celinde and Sedea_, _The Fall of Troy_, _The Fall of Constantinople_,
-and _The Turk_.[878] In July and August they were at Augsburg, and in
-September they returned to Nuremberg, now describing themselves as
-the Elector of Saxony’s company.[879] This Elector was John George I
-(1611–56), the third of his house to entertain an English company. In
-October they played The _Fall of Constantinople_ at the Reichstag held
-by the Emperor Mathias at Regensburg. Spencer was their leader, but
-they no longer claimed any courtly status.[880] After an unsuccessful
-attempt to pay a third visit for the year to Nuremberg, they went
-to Rothenburg, and so to Heidelberg, whither the Elector Palatine
-Frederick V had just brought his English bride. Here they spent the
-winter, and left to attend the Frankfort fair of Easter 1614.[881] In
-May their service with the Elector of Brandenburg, although now none
-of the most recent, helped them to get a footing in Strassburg, where
-they stayed until July and again played _The Fall of Constantinople_,
-as well as a play of _Government_.[882] In August they were at
-Augsburg and possibly Ulm.[883] In October they projected a return
-visit to Strassburg, but were rejected, ‘so dies Jar hie lang genug
-super multorum opinionem gewessen’.[884] Possibly they fell back upon
-Stuttgart.[885] In February 1615 they were in Cologne, and here a queer
-thing happened. The whole company, with Spencer’s wife and children,
-was converted to Catholicism by the eloquence of a Franciscan friar.
-The event is recorded in the town archives and also in a manuscript
-Franciscan chronicle preserved in the British Museum:[886]
-
- ‘Twentie fowre stage players arrive out of Ingland at Collen:
- all Inglish except one Germanian and one Dutchman. All
- Protestants. Betwixt those and father Francis Nugent disputation
- was begunne and protracted for the space of 7 or eight dayes
- consecutively; all of them meeting at one place together. The
- chiefe among them was one N. Spencer, a proper sufficient
- man. In fine, all and each of them beeing clearlie convinced,
- they yielded to the truth; but felt themselves so drie and
- roughharted that they knew not how to pass from the bewitching
- Babylonian harlot to their true mother the Catholic church, that
- always pure and virginal spouse of the lamb.’
-
-It need hardly be said that in so Catholic a city as Cologne this
-singular act of grace gave the performances of the English comedians an
-extraordinary vogue. In June and July 1615 Spencer was at Strassburg,
-in company with one Christopher Apileutter, who may have been the
-Germanian or the Dutchman of the Cologne notice.[887] He attended the
-autumn fair at Frankfort, using an imperial patent, perhaps given him
-at Regensburg in 1613.[888] During the winter of 1615–16 he was again
-in Cologne, still profiting by his conversion.[889] This, however, had
-not made of him such a bigot, as to be unable to render acceptable
-duty in the Protestant courts where his earliest successes had been
-won. For a year his movements became obscure. But in August 1617 he
-was playing before the Elector of Saxony and the Emperor Matthias
-at Dresden.[890] And in the following year he once more entered the
-Brandenburg service. During the interval which had elapsed since
-1613, John Sigismund had entertained another company. Early in 1614 he
-engaged William, Abraham, and Jacob Pedel, Robert Arzschar, Behrendt
-Holzhew, and August Pflugbeil.[891] The names hardly sound English; but
-Jacob Pedel is probably the Jacob Behel or Biel who was travelling with
-Sackville in 1597, William Pedel appeared as an English pantomimist at
-Leyden in November 1608, and Arzschar, whose correct name was doubtless
-Archer, is also described as an Englishman at Frankfort in the autumn
-of 1608.[892] He was then in company with Heinrich Greum and Rudolph
-Beart. A Burchart Bierdt appeared as ‘Englischer Musicant’ at Cologne
-in December 1612.[893] Archer perhaps came from Nuremberg. He was at
-Frankfort again in the autumn of 1610, and at the Reichstag held by
-the Emperor Matthias at Regensburg in September 1613.[894] It must
-have been this new company under Archer which visited Wolfenbüttel in
-September 1614 and Danzig in 1615, styling themselves the Brandenburg
-comedians.[895] The only names given at Danzig are Johann Friedrich
-Virnius and Bartholomeus Freyerbott, and in fact the Pedels, Holzhew,
-and Pflugbeil left Berlin at Easter 1615. Archer himself remained
-with the Elector until May 1616. The field, then, was clear at Berlin
-for the enterprise of Spencer. On 17 March 1618 John Sigismund made
-a payment ‘to one Stockfisch’ for bringing the English comedians
-from Elbing. Further payments to the English are recorded in the
-following November, and in June 1619 for plays at Königsberg and
-Balge in Prussia, of which the Elector had become Duke on the death
-of his father-in-law Albert Frederick in the preceding August.[896]
-In July 1619 the Elector of Brandenburg’s comedians are heard of at
-Danzig.[897] On 23 December 1619 John Sigismund himself died, and
-in 1620 Hans Stockfisch addressed an appeal for certain arrears of
-salary to Count Adam von Schwartzenberg, an officer at the court of
-the new Elector George William (1619–40), in which he claimed to have
-enjoyed the Count’s protection for more than fifteen years. In reply
-George William describes the petitioner as ‘den Englischen Junkher
-Hans Stockfisch, wie er sich nennet’.[898] There can be little doubt
-that Hans Stockfisch was none other than John Spencer, for the period
-of fifteen years precisely takes us back to his first appearance as a
-Brandenburg comedian in 1605. His fish name corresponds to, and was
-perhaps motived by, that of Pickleherring adopted by Robert Reinolds
-of the chief rival English company about the same date. Both had their
-prototype in Sackville’s John Bouset.[899] The Elector George William
-was no friend to actors, and to Spencer, as to others, the Thirty
-Years’ War closed many doors. In February 1623 he came to Nuremberg
-with Sebastian Schadleutner, but was not allowed to play.[900] And that
-is the last that is heard of him.
-
-A few isolated records indicate the presence from time to time in
-northern Europe of players not yet mentioned, and not obviously
-connected either with the Browne or with the Spencer tradition. An
-English company under Peter de Prun of Brussels visited Nuremberg in
-April 1594. The name of the leader does not sound very English, and a
-company, not improbably the same, is described as ‘niederländische’ at
-Ulm in the following August. Heywood, however, speaks of an English
-company as in the pay of the Cardinal and Archduke Albert, Governor of
-the Spanish Netherlands, about 1608.[901] Maurice of Orange-Nassau,
-Stadtholder of the Dutch Netherlands (1584–1625), who gave a
-recommendation to Spencer in 1605, had also an English company of his
-own, which visited Frankfort at Easter 1611, and then claimed to be
-strange in Germany.[902] To Augsburg in June 1602 came Fabian Penton
-and his company;[903] to Leyden in September 1604 John Woods and his
-company,[904] and to Leipzig in April 1613 Hans Leberwurst with his
-boys.[905] Of none of these is anything further known, nor of William
-Alexander Blank, a Scottish dancer, who performed at Cologne in April
-1605.[906]
-
-Traces of English players in southern Europe are few and far between.
-That Kempe’s travels of 1601 took him to Italy has already been
-noted.[907] There were some English acrobats at Madrid in January
-1583.[908] On 25 May 1598 the Confrères de la Passion leased their
-theatre in Paris, the Hôtel de Bourgogne, to ‘Jehan Sehais comédien
-Anglois’, and on 4 June obtained judgement in the court of the
-Châtelet, ‘tant pour raison du susdit bail que pour le droit d’un écu
-par jour, jouant lesdits Anglais ailleurs qu’audit Hôtel’.[909] I do
-not know whether I am justified in finding under the French disguise of
-‘Jehan Sehais’ the name of one John Shaa or Shaw, conceivably related
-to Robert Shaw of the Admiral’s men, who witnessed an advance by
-Henslowe to Dekker on 24 November 1599.[910] In 1604 another English
-company was in France, and gave a performance on 18 September in the
-great hall at Fontainebleau, the effect of which upon the imagination
-of the future Louis XIV, then a child of four, is minutely described in
-the singular diary of his tutor and physician, Jean Héroard.[911]
-
- ‘Mené en la grande salle neuve ouïr une tragédie représentée par
- des Anglois; il les écoute avec froideur, gravité et patience
- jusques à ce qu’il fallut couper la tête à un des personnages.’
-
-On 28 September, Louis was playing at being an actor, and on 29
-September, says Héroard:
-
- ‘Il dit qu’il veut jouer la comédie; “Monsieur,” dis-je,
- “comment direz-vous?” Il repond, “Tiph, toph,” en grossissant sa
- voix. À six heures et demie, soupé; il va en sa chambre, se fait
- habiller pour masquer, et dit: “Allons voir maman, nous sommes
- des comédiens.”’
-
-Finally, on 3 October:
-
- ‘Il dit, “Habillons-nous en comédiens,” on lui met son tablier
- coiffé sur la tête; il se prend à parler, disant: “Tiph, toph,
- milord” et marchant à grands pas.’
-
-It has been suggested on rather inadequate grounds that the play seen
-by Louis may have been _2 Henry IV_. Possibly the princely imagination
-had merely been smitten by some comic rough and tumble.[912] But it is
-also conceivable that the theme may have been the execution of John
-Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester, at the restoration of Henry VI in 1470.[913]
-
-It would be rash to assume that these records of 1598 and 1604
-represent all the visits of English actors to France during the
-Elizabethan period; and it is not improbable that a search in the
-municipal archives of Picardy and Normandy, as thorough as that which
-has been carried out for Germany, might yield notable results. Some
-general evidence that tours in France did take place can be cited. John
-Green, dedicating his version of _Nobody and Somebody_ to the Archduke
-Maximilian about 1608, says that he had been in that country.[914] His,
-indeed, so far as dates go, might have been the company of 1604. And
-France, no less than Germany, is referred to as scoured by the English
-comedians about 1613.[915]
-
-
-
-
- XV
-
- ACTORS
-
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--I include a few managers who were not
- necessarily themselves actors. The earlier studies of stage
- biography were mainly concerned with the Chamberlain’s and
- King’s men in the list of ‘The Names of the Principall Actors
- in all these Playes’, prefixed to the Shakespearian F_{1} of
- 1623. The statements about them in [J. Roberts] _Answer to Mr.
- Pope’s Preface to Shakespeare_ (1729) are conjectural and not,
- as sometimes supposed, traditional. A good deal was collected
- from wills and registers by E. Malone (_Variorum_, iii. 182), G.
- Chalmers (ibid. iii. 464), and J. P. Collier, _Memoirs of the
- Principal Actors in the Plays of Shakespeare_ (1846, _Sh. Soc._
- revised edition in _H. E. D. P._ iii. 255), and is summarized
- by K. Elze, _William Shakespeare_ (tr. 1888), 246. New ground
- was broken by F. G. Fleay, _On the Actor Lists, 1578–1642_
- (_R. Hist. Soc. Trans._ ix. 44), and in the list in _Chronicle
- History of the London Stage_ (1890), 370. Here he criticizes
- Collier’s claim to have a list of 500 actors, as he cannot find
- ‘that any list at all was found among his papers’, and suggests
- that a forgery was planned. I am glad to have an opportunity for
- once of defending Collier, even if it is only against Fleay. The
- fifth report (1846) of the _Sh. Soc._ shows that ‘a volume of
- the original actors in plays by writers other than Shakespeare
- was in preparation, and _Bodl. MS._ 29445 contains a number of
- rough extracts made by Collier and P. Cunningham from London
- parochial registers, with a digest of these and other material,
- entitled ‘Old Actors. Collections for the Biography of, derived
- from Old Books & MSS. Alphabetically arranged’. I have used
- this manuscript and cite it as ‘Bodl.’ or ‘B.’. The information
- is mainly from the registers of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, St.
- Andrew’s Wardrobe, St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, St. Leonard’s,
- Shoreditch, St. Giles’, Cripplegate, and other churches. It
- appears to be reliable, except perhaps in one or two points.
- One would, of course, prefer to have the registers themselves
- in print, but with the exception of those of St. James’s,
- Clerkenwell (_Harl. Soc._), and A. W. C. Hallen’s _Registers of
- St. Botolph’s, Bishopsgate_, the published London Registers,
- as shown by A. M. Burke, _Key to the Ancient Parish Registers
- of England and Wales_ (1908), are precisely those of least
- theatrical interest. The Southwark registers in particular, and
- the other records of that parish, including the ‘token-books’
- or annual lists, street by street, of communicants, ought to
- be made available. Some notes from them are in W. Rendle,
- _Bankside_ (1877, Harrison, Part ii). Southwark marriages
- (1605–25) are in _Genealogist_ (n. s. vi-ix). In these records
- ‘man’ clearly means ‘player’. Extracts from other registers
- may be found in parochial histories and elsewhere. Some from
- St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, are in J. P. Malcolm, _Londinium
- Redivivum_ (1802–7), iii. 303, J. J. Baddeley, _St. Giles,
- Cripplegate_ (1888), and W. Hunter’s _Addl. MS._ 24589. C.
- C. Stopes, _Burbage_, 139, gives a full collection from St.
- Leonard’s, Shoreditch. An interesting list of actors and their
- addresses _c._ 1623 is in C. W. Wallace, _Gervase Markham,
- Dramatist_ (1910, _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 345), cited as ‘J’. The
- citations ‘H’ and ‘H. P’ are from Greg’s editions of Henslowe’s
- _Diary_ and _Henslowe Papers_.]
-
-ABYNGDON, HENRY. Master of Chapel, 1455–78.
-
-ADAMS, JOHN. Sussex’s, 1576; Queen’s, 1583, 1588. He possibly played
-the clown Adam in _A Looking Glass_ and Oberon in _James IV._. It would
-hardly be justifiable to conjecture that he lived to join Hunsdon’s and
-play Adam in _A. Y. L._
-
-ALDERSON, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1509–13.
-
-ALLEYN, EDWARD, was born on 1 September 1566 in the parish of St.
-Botolph, Bishopsgate.[916] His father was Edward Alleyn of Willen,
-Bucks, Innholder and porter to the Queen, who died in 1570; his mother,
-Margaret Townley, for whom he claimed a descent from the Townleys of
-Lancashire which modern genealogists hesitate to credit, re-married
-with one John Browne, a haberdasher, between whom and other Brownes who
-appear in theatrical annals no connexion can be proved. Edward Alleyn
-is said by Fuller in his _Worthies_ to have been ‘bred a stage player’.
-In formal deeds he is generally described as ‘yeoman’ or ‘gentleman’,
-and once, in 1595, as ‘musician’.[917] In January 1583 he was one of
-Worcester’s players; at some later date he joined the Admiral’s men,
-and had as ‘fellow’ his brother John, with whom during 1589–91 he was
-associated in purchases of apparel. On 22 October 1592 he married Joan
-Woodward, step-daughter of Philip Henslowe, with whom he appears ever
-after in the closest business relations. A Dulwich tradition that he
-was already a widower probably rests on a mention of ‘Mistris Allene’
-in an undated letter about a German tour by Richard Jones, which is
-commonly assigned to February 1592, but is more probably of later
-date.[918] Alleyn is specifically described as the Admiral’s servant
-in the Privy Council letter of assistance to Strange’s men (q.v.),
-with whom he travelled during the plague of 1593. Some of the letters
-passing between him and his wife and father-in-law during this tour
-are preserved at Dulwich, and are full of interesting domestic details
-about his white waistcoat and his orange tawny woollen stockings, the
-pasturing of his horse, his spinach bed, and the furnishing of his
-house.[919] His ‘tenants’ are mentioned and his ‘sister Phillipes
-& her husband’. He had by this time a high reputation as an actor,
-as witnessed by Nashe in his _Pierce Penilesse_ of 1592, where he
-classes him with Tarlton, Knell, and Bentley, and says, ‘Not Roscius
-nor Aesope, those admyred tragedians that haue liued euer since before
-Christ was borne, could euer performe more in action than famous Ned
-Allen’; and in his _Strange Newes_ of the same year, where he says of
-Edmund Spenser that ‘his very name (as that of Ned Allen on the common
-stage) was able to make an ill matter good’.[920] An undated letter at
-Dulwich, written to him by an admirer who signs himself W. P., offers
-a wager in which ‘Peele’s credit’ was also in some way concerned, and
-in which Alleyn was to have the choice of any one of Bentley’s or
-Knell’s plays, and promises that, even if he loses, ‘we must and will
-saie Ned Allen still’.[921] In 1594 _The Knack to know a Knave_ is
-ascribed, quite exceptionally, on its title-page, not to the servants
-of a particular lord, but to ‘Ed. Allen and his Companie’. From 1594 to
-1597 Alleyn was one of the Admiral’s men (q.v.) at the Rose. He then
-‘leafte playnge’, but resumed at the request of the Queen, although
-apparently without becoming a full sharer of the company, when the
-Fortune (q.v.), which he had built for them, was opened in the autumn
-of 1600. He became a servant of Prince Henry with the rest of his
-fellows in 1604, and at the coronation procession on 15 March appeared
-as the Genius of the City and delivered a ‘gratulatory speech’ to
-James ‘with excellent action and a well-tun’de, audible voyce’.[922]
-Further testimonies to his talent are rendered by John Weever;[923]
-by Ben Jonson, _Epigram_ lxxxix (1616), who equals him to Aesop and
-Roscius, and himself to Cicero, who praised them; by Heywood, who
-says, ‘Among so many dead let me not forget one yet alive, in his time
-the most worthy, famous Maister Edward Allen’;[924] and by Fuller,
-who says, ‘He was the Roscius of our age, so acting to the life that
-he made any part (especially a majestic one) to become him.’[925] Of
-his parts are recorded Faustus,[926] Tamburlaine, Barabas in _The
-Jew of Malta_,[927] and Cutlack in a play of that name revived by
-the Admiral’s men in 1594 and now lost,[928] while that of Orlando
-in Greene’s _Orlando Furioso_ is amongst the papers at Dulwich.[929]
-Heywood, writing about 1608, speaks of Alleyn’s playing in the past.
-He probably retired finally soon after the beginning of the new reign.
-In 1605 he valued his ‘share of aparell’ at £100; but his name is not
-in the patent to the Prince’s men of 30 April 1606, although as late
-as 1611 he still retained his personal rank as servant to the prince.
-It is difficult to give much credit to the legend that his withdrawal
-was due to remorse, or, as one version has it, to an apparition of
-the devil when he was playing Faustus.[930] Certainly he continued
-to hold an interest in the Fortune, and conceivably in the Red Bull
-(q.v.) also. And certainly remorse did not prevent him from continuing
-to exercise the functions of Master of the Game of Paris Garden, a
-post which he acquired jointly with Henslowe in 1604, having already
-been interested in the Bear-garden itself since 1594. At this after it
-became the Hope (q.v.) he was still about 1617 entertaining players.
-But the time of his retirement synchronizes with the first beginnings
-of his foundation of a school and hospital by the name of the College
-of God’s Gift at Dulwich. By 1605 he was a wealthy man, with income
-from substantial investments in leasehold property as well as the
-profits from his enterprises, and on 25 October he took the first step
-in the purchase of the manor of Dulwich, which was completed by 1614 at
-a total cost of nearly £10,000. Here about 1613 he made his residence,
-moving from Southwark, where he had been churchwarden of St. Saviour’s
-in 1610. In 1613 also he began the building of the college, which was
-opened in 1617. Alleyn himself acted as manager and was in a position
-to spend upon the college and his own household some £1,700 a year. The
-endowment of the college included, besides house property in London,
-the freehold of the Fortune. Henslowe had died in January 1616 and
-his widow in the following year, and his papers passed to Alleyn and
-remain at Dulwich. Here, too, is Alleyn’s own diary for 1617–22, and
-this and his correspondence show him as a friend of persons of honour,
-and the patron of writers and the members of his own former profession.
-Alleyn’s wife Joan died on 28 June 1623 and on the following 3 December
-he married Constance, daughter of John Donne, dean of St. Paul’s,
-settling on her £1,500. A letter of 23 July 1624 indicates that he
-was then desirous of obtaining ‘sum further dignetie’. He died on 25
-November 1626.
-
-ALLEYN, JOHN. Admiral’s, 1589–91. Edward Alleyn had an elder brother
-John, who was born in 1556–7, and is described as servant to Lord
-Sheffield and an Innholder in 1580, and as servant to the Lord
-Admiral in 1589. He died about May 1596, being then of St. Andrew’s,
-Holborn, and left a widow Margaret and son John. Presumably he was the
-Admiral’s player. But there was also an Allen family of St. Botolph’s,
-Bishopsgate, one of whom, John, was a player. Here a John was baptized
-on 17 October 1570, a Lowin, son of John, baptized on 15 December 1588,
-a Joan buried on 13 May 1593, and a John on 18 May 1593. On 26 July
-1596 is this curious baptismal entry: ‘Bennett, reputed daughter of
-J^{no} Allen, which J^{no} went with S^r Fr. Drake to the Indians in
-which time the child was got by a stage-player.’ Finally, on 18 October
-1597, ‘Jone uxor Joh^{is} Allen player was buried with a still born
-child’ (H. ii. 239; Bodl.)
-
-ALLEYN, RICHARD. Queen’s, (?) 1594; Admiral’s, 1597–1600. His daughters
-Anna and Elizabeth were baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 13
-May 1599 and 17 May 1601 respectively. Here he is traceable in the
-token-books during 1583–1601, and was buried on 18 November 1601,
-leaving a widow (Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi; H. ii. 239; Bodl.).
-
-ALLEYN (ALLEN), RICHARD. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613.
-
-ANDREWE, HENRY. Chapel, 1509.
-
-ANDREWES, RICHARD. Worcester’s, 1583.
-
-ANDROWES, GEORGE. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.
-
-APILEUTTER, CHRISTOPHER. Germany, 1615.
-
-ARCHER, RICHARD. _Vide_ ARKINSTALL.
-
-ARCHER? (ARZSCHAR, ERTZER), ROBERT. Germany, 1608–16.
-
-ARKINSTALL, JOHN. A common player of interludes under licence, with
-Richard Archer, Barker, and Anthony Ward as his fellows. He was at
-Hastings on 25 March 1603, and on 30 March laid an information of the
-proclamation of Lord Beauchamp as king by Lord Southampton (_Hist.
-MSS._ xii. 4. 126).
-
-ARMIN, ROBERT, is said to have been apprentice to a goldsmith in
-Lombard Street, and to have been encouraged as a ‘wag’ by Tarlton
-(_ob._ 1588), who prophesied that he should ‘enjoy my clownes sute
-after me’. He ‘used to’ Tarlton’s plays, and in time became himself a
-player ‘and at this houre performes the same, where, at the Globe on
-the Banks side men may see him’.[931] But his earliest reputation was
-as a writer. He wrote a preface to _A Brief Resolution of the Right
-Religion_ (1590) and probably other things now unknown, for he is
-referred to as a son of Elderton in Nashe’s _Foure Letters Confuted_
-of 1592 (_Works_, i. 280). R. A. wrote verses to Robert Tofte’s _Alba_
-(1598), and R. A. compiled _England’s Parnassus_ (1600); the latter
-is generally taken to be Robert Allot. The first dramatic company
-in which Armin can be traced is Lord Chandos’s men. In an epistle
-to Mary, widow of William Lord Chandos (1594–1602) prefixed to his
-kinsman Gilbert Dugdale’s _True Discourse of the Practises of Elizabeth
-Caldwell_, &c. (1604), he says, ‘Your good honor knowes Pinck’s poor
-heart, who in all my services to your late deceased kind lord, never
-savoured of flatterie or fixion.’ In his _Foole upon Foole, or Six
-Sortes of Sottes_ (1600) he tells an incident which took place at
-Pershore in Worcestershire, during a tour of ‘the Lord Shandoyes
-players’, at which he was himself present, not improbably playing the
-clown ‘Grumball’.[932] By 1599, however, he had probably joined the
-Chamberlain’s men, for in the first edition of _Foole upon Foole_ he
-describes himself as ‘Clonnico de Curtanio Snuffe’. In a later edition
-of 1605 this becomes ‘Clonnico del Mondo Snuffe’. Both issues are
-anonymous, but Armin put his name to an enlargement entitled _A Nest
-of Ninnies_ (1608).[933] ‘Clunnyco de Curtanio Snuffe’ is also on the
-title-page of _Quips upon Questions_ (1600), which must therefore be by
-Armin and not by J. Singer, whose autograph Collier (_Bibl. Cat._ ii.
-203) said that he found on a copy. This is a book of quatrains on stage
-‘themes’ (cf. ch. xviii). It was written, as a reference to 28 December
-as on a Friday shows, in 1599. The author serves a master at Hackney
-(A ij). Later editions of 1601 and 1602 are said to have been in the
-Harley collection, and there is a reprint by F. Ouvry (1875). His name
-is in the 1603 licence for the King’s men and in the Coronation list
-of 1604. In 1605 Augustine Phillips left him 20_s._ as his ‘fellow’.
-Collier’s statement that in the same year he and Kempe (q.v.) were in
-trouble for libelling aldermen cannot be verified. He is a King’s man
-on the title-page of his _Two Maids of Moreclacke_ (1609), produced
-by the King’s Revels, and on the title-page and in the S. R. entry on
-6 February 1609 of his _Phantasma, the Italian Tailor and his Boy_.
-This is a translation from Straparola and is dedicated to Lord and
-Lady Haddington. In it he claims to have been ‘writ down an ass in his
-time’ and refers to ‘his constableship’, from which it is inferred
-that he played Dogberry in _Much Ado about Nothing_. Fleay, _L. of S._
-300, finds a pun on ‘armine’ (= wretch) in _London Prodigal_ (_c._
-1603), v. i. 179, and suggests that Armin played Matthew Flowerdale.
-There is a clown Robin in _Miseries of Enforced Marriage_ (1607), and
-a clown Grumball in _If it be not Good_ (1610–12), but this was a
-play of Anne’s men. He is in the actor-list of Jonson’s _Alchemist_
-(1610). An epigram on ‘honest gamesome Robert Armin’ is in John Davies
-of Hereford’s _Scourge of Folly_ (S.R. 8 October 1610). He is not in
-the actor-list of Jonson’s _Catiline_ (1611), nor has any later notice
-of him been found. That Armin is the R. A. whose play _The Valiant
-Welshman_ was published in 1615 is only a conjecture. He is in the
-Folio list of actors in Shakespeare’s plays. It is possible that a
-woodcut on the title-page of the _Two Maids_ (q.v.) gives his portrait.
-
-ARTHUR, THOMAS. Interluders, 1528.
-
-ATTEWELL (OTTEWELL, OTWELL), GEORGE. Strange’s, 1591; Queen’s, (?)
-1595. ‘M^r Otwell’ lived in St. Saviour’s Close in 1599. He is perhaps
-more likely than the following to be the author or singer of ‘M^r
-Attowel’s Jigge: betweene Francis, a Gentleman; Richard, a farmer; and
-their wives’, printed in A. Clark, _Shirburn Ballads_, lxi (H. ii. 240;
-B. 147).
-
-ATTWELL (OTTEWELL), HUGH. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613;
-Charles’s, 1616–21; _ob._ 25 September 1621.
-
-AUGUSTEN (AGUSTEN), WILLIAM. A ‘player’, from whom Henslowe bought his
-‘boy’ Bristow in 1597 (H. ii. 240).
-
-AYNSWORTH, JOHN. A ‘player’ buried at St. Leonard’s 28 September 1581
-(B. 153).
-
-BAKER, HARRY. Performer of Vertumnus in _Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament_, 1567.
-
-BANASTER, GILBERT. Master of Chapel, 1478–83 (?).
-
-BARFIELD, ROGER. Anne’s, 1606. His d. Isabell was baptized at St.
-Giles’s on 2 January 1611, and his d. Susan buried there on 3 July 1614
-(B. 157).
-
-BARKER. _Vide_ ARKINSTALL.
-
-BARKSTED (BACKSTEAD), WILLIAM. King’s Revels (?), 1607; Revels, 1609;
-Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613; Charles’s, 1616; also a dramatist (cf.
-ch. xxiii) and a poet. His _Poems_, edited by A. B. Grosart as Part II
-of _Choice Rarities of Ancient English Poetry_ (1876), were _Myrrha_
-(1607), which has commendatory verses by his kinsman Robert Glover
-and I. W., Lewes Machin, and William Bagnall, and _Hiren_ (1611),
-which has sonnets to Henry Earl of Oxford, and Elizabeth Countess of
-Derby. On the title-page he describes himself as ‘one of the servants
-of his Maiesties Revels’. The surmise of Fleay, i. 29, that this was
-repeated from an earlier edition of _c._ 1607 now lost may receive some
-confirmation from the connexion of Machin with the King’s Revels; but
-it must also be remembered that the Whitefriars Revels’ company appears
-to be occasionally described as the King’s Revels in provincial records
-of _c._ 1611. A trivial anecdote of him is in J. Taylor, _Wit and
-Mirth_ (1629).
-
-BARNE, WILLIAM. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-BARRY, DAVID (LORD). Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.
-
-BARTLE (?). Alexander Bartle, son of ‘---- a player’, was baptized at
-St. Saviour’s on 27 February 1603 (B. 165).
-
-BARTON, ONESIPHORUS. A ‘player’, buried at St. Giles’s on 9 March 1608
-(B. 167).
-
-BASSE, THOMAS. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613; Anne’s, 1617–19.
-
-BAXTER, ROBERT. Chapel, 1601; Lady Elizabeth’s (?), 1613. Greg, _H. P._
-58, 87, however, thinks that the ‘Baxter’ of 1613, whose Christian name
-is not given, may be Barksted. Neither man is likely to have written
-the ‘Baxsters tragedy’ of 1602 (_H. P._ 58).
-
-BAYLYE, THOMAS. Shrewsbury’s (provincial), 1581. J. Hunter,
-_Hallamshire_ 80, and Murray, ii. 388, print from _College of Arms,
-Talbot MS._ G. f. 74, a Latin letter written by him to Thomas Bawdewin
-from Sheffield on 25 April 1581, in which he mentions a brother
-William, thanks him for a tragedy played by the company on St. George’s
-day, and begs him to procure ‘librum aliquem brevem, novum, iucundum,
-venustum, lepidum, hilarem, scurrosum, nebulosum, rabulosum, et
-omnimodis camificiis, latrociniis et lenociniis refertum ... qua in re
-dicunt quod Wilsonus quidam Leycestrii comitis servus (fidibus pollens)
-multum vult et potest facere’.
-
-BAYLYE. Paul’s chorister, >1582.
-
-BEART, RUDOLF. Germany, 1608.
-
-BEESTON, CHRISTOPHER, has been conjectured to be the ‘Kit’ who played
-a Lord and a Captain in _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ for Strange’s or the
-Admiral’s about 1590–1. The actor-list of _Every Man in his Humour_
-shows that he belonged to the Chamberlain’s men in 1598. He is not,
-however, named as a performer of Shakespeare’s plays in the Folio of
-1623. Probably he was at one time the hired man of Augustine Phillips
-who left him 30_s._ as his ‘servant’ in 1605. By 1602 he had passed
-to Worcester’s men, and with this company, afterwards Queen Anne’s,
-he remained until it was reconstituted on the Queen’s death in 1619,
-taking a prominent part in the management of the company, after the
-death of Thomas Greene in 1612. He seems to have built or acquired the
-Cockpit theatre, and to have successively housed there Queen Anne’s
-men (1617–19), Prince Charles’s men (1619–22), Lady Elizabeth’s men
-(1622–5), Queen Henrietta’s men (1625–37), and ‘the King’s and Queen’s
-young company’, also known as ‘Beeston’s boys’ (1637). By 1639 he
-had been succeeded as ‘Governor’ of this company by his son William
-Beeston, and was doubtless dead. The Cockpit had passed by June 1639
-to ‘Mrs. Elizabeth Beeston, alias Hutcheson’.[934] It appears from
-the lawsuit of 1623, in which Queen Anne’s men were concerned, that
-Christopher Beeston also bore the _alias_ of Hutcheson or Hutchinson.
-But if Elizabeth was his widow, she must have been a second wife, for
-the records of the Middlesex justices for 1615–17 record several true
-bills for recusancy as brought against a wife Jane. In these records
-Beeston, whose _alias_ is also given, is described as a gentleman or
-yeoman, and as ‘late of St. James-at-Clerkenwell’, or in one case ‘of
-Turmil streete’. In 1617 his house was burgled by Henry Baldwin and
-others.[935] The registers of St. James’s, Clerkenwell, record the
-baptism of a daughter Anne on 15 September 1611, and the burial of a
-servant on 1 July 1615.[936] But at an earlier date Beeston lived in
-St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, where his sons Augustine, Christopher, and
-Robert were baptized, and the first two buried between 16 November 1604
-and 15 July 1610. Robert also was buried there on 26 December 1615,
-but Christopher was then described in the register as of Clerkenwell.
-Possibly he afterwards returned to Shoreditch, as Collier states that
-his name is traceable in the register up to 1637.[937] His son William,
-also a suspected recusant, was living in Bishopsgate Without just
-before his death in 1682.[938] An earlier William Beeston, with whom
-Christopher may have had some connexion, is the ‘Maister Apis Lapis’
-and ‘Gentle M. William’, to whom Nashe addressed his _Strange Newes_
-(1592).[939]
-
-BEESTON, ROBERT. Anne’s, 1604, 1609.
-
-BEESTON. A player at Barnstaple in 1560–1 (Murray, ii. 198).
-
-BELT, T. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.
-
-BENFIELD, ROBERT, is first named in the actor-lists of Beaumont and
-Fletcher’s _The Coxcomb_ and _The Honest Man’s Fortune_, both of which
-probably represent performances by the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1613.
-Subsequently he joined the King’s men, but at what date is uncertain.
-It may have been upon the death on 16 December 1614 of William Ostler,
-whom he succeeded in the part of Antonio in Webster’s _Duchess of
-Malfi_. He is in the actor-list of _The Knight of Malta_ (1616–19) and
-in the patent of 1619. He seems to have been a member of the company to
-the end, as he signed the dedication of the Beaumont and Fletcher Folio
-in 1647. He is in the Folio list of actors in Shakespeare’s plays.
-Collier found some late records of his family (B. 181).
-
-BENTLEY, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583. He is named by Heywood as before his
-time, lauded by Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_ (1592) (_Works_, i. 215) with
-Tarlton, Alleyn, and Knell, coupled with Knell in the undated challenge
-to Alleyn (q.v.) to play one of their parts, and placed by Dekker in _A
-Knight’s Conjuring_ (1607) in the company of the poets, Watson, Kyd,
-and Achelow, ‘tho he had ben a player molded out of their pennes, yet
-because he had been their louer and register to the muse, inimitable
-Bentley’. He may be the John Bentley whose poems are mentioned by
-Ritson, _Bibliographia Poetica_ (1802), 129.
-
-BIERDT, BURCHARD. Germany, 1612.
-
-BILLINGESLY, JOHN. Payee for Westminster boys, 1572.
-
-BIRCH, GEORGE. Interluders, 1538–59.
-
-BIRCH, JOHN. Interluders, 1547–56.
-
-BIRD, _alias_ BORNE, WILLIAM. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s,
-1597; Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1622. Many personalia of
-his family and debts are recorded in Dulwich manuscripts and church
-registers (H. ii. 241; B. 204).
-
-‘BLACK DICK.’ Admiral’s, 1597.
-
-BLACKWOOD, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1602–3; Germany, 1603–6(?). The
-conjecture of Fleay, i. 290, that an earlier German tour is referred to
-in _How to Choose a Good Wife from a Bad_ (1602) is baseless (H. ii.
-244).
-
-BLANEY, JOHN. Revels, 1609; Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived near the Red Bull
-in St. John’s Street in 1623 (J. 347).
-
-BLANK, WILLIAM ALEXANDER. A Scottish dancer in Germany, 1605.
-
-BOONE, WILLIAM. A ‘player’ mentioned in books of St. Saviour’s, _c._
-1600 (Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi). Possibly an error for Borne.
-
-BORNE, WILLIAM. _Vide_ Birde.
-
-BOWER, RICHARD. Master of Chapel, 1545–61, and possibly author of
-_Apius and Virginia_ (1575); cf. ch. xxiv.
-
-BOWRINGE, GREGORY. Paul’s chorister, >1582.
-
-BRADSHAW, RICHARD. Edward, Lord Dudley’s (provincial), 1595. He
-was Gabriel Spencer’s ‘man’ in 1598, and concerned in financial
-transactions with Henslowe during 1598–1601. He may be the same Richard
-Bradshaw who had a provincial company, with a licence to which his
-title was dubious, in 1630–33 (H. ii. 245; Murray, ii. 42, 106, 163).
-
-BRADSTREET, JOHN. Germany, 1592–7, 1604. He _ob._ in 1618.
-
-BRETTEN, WILLIAM. Chapel, >1546.
-
-BRISTOW, JAMES. Augusten’s boy, 1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602 (H. ii. 245).
-
-BROMEHAM. Paul’s, >1582.
-
-BROWNE, EDWARD. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s, 1602. He was a witness
-for Henslowe in 1599 (H. ii. 246).
-
-BROWNE, JOHN. Interluders, 1551–63.
-
-BROWNE, JOHN. Revels (?), 1608.
-
-BROWNE, ROBERT. Worcester’s, 1583; Holland, 1590; Germany, 1592–3, 1594
-(?)-9; Derby’s, 1599–1601; Germany, 1601–7; Revels patentee, 1610;
-Germany, 1618–20. His wife and family died at Shoreditch in the plague
-of 1593, but a son Robert and daughter Elizabeth were baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 19 October 1595 and 2 December 1599. On 11 April 1612 he
-wrote to Alleyn from Clerkenwell (_H. P._, 37, 63; B. 229; Rendle,
-_Bankside_, xxvi).
-
-BROWNE, WILLIAM. Anne’s, _c._ 1616.
-
-BROWNE. It is not safe to identify the Browne whom Henslowe paid to
-‘feach’ for the Admiral’s in 1596 (H. i. 45), or the ‘old Browne’
-who, as well as Edward, played in _1 Tamar Cham_ for the Admiral’s in
-1602 (_H. P._ 148), or ‘Browne of the Boares head’ who, according to
-Alleyn’s wife on 21 Oct. 1603, ‘is dead & dyed very pore, he went not
-into the countrye at all’ (_H. P._ 59). The last may be the man whose
-widow married Thomas Greene (q.v.).
-
-BRYAN, GEORGE, was one of the English company which visited Helsingör
-in Denmark and Dresden in Germany during 1586–7. He is one of the three
-actors distinguished as ‘Mr.’ in the plot of Tarlton’s _The Seven
-Deadly Sins_ as played by Strange’s or the Admiral’s about 1590–1, and
-is named in the Privy Council warrant for the travelling of Strange’s
-in 1593. He was payee for the Chamberlain’s men on 21 December 1596,
-but is not in the _Every Man in his Humour_ actor-list of 1598 or
-traceable at any later date amongst the Chamberlain’s or King’s men.
-Probably he left to take up duty as an ordinary Groom of the Chamber,
-as he is found holding this post at Elizabeth’s funeral in 1603 and
-still held it (_Chamber Accounts_) in 1611–13. His son George was
-baptized at St. Andrew’s Wardrobe on 17 February 1600.[940] He is in
-the Folio list of actors in Shakespeare’s plays.
-
-BUCKE, PAUL. A ‘player’ whose d. Sara was buried on 23 July 1580 and
-his bastard son Paul buried on 23 July 1599 at St. Anne’s (B. 237). It
-is apparently his name which, for whatever reason, appears at the end
-of Wilson’s _Three Ladies of London_ (1584). ‘Paule Bucke’s praier for
-Sir Humfrey Gilberte’ was entered in S. R. on 17 July 1578.
-
-BUGBY, JOHN. Grammar Master of Chapel, 1401.
-
-BULL, JOHN. Chapel, 1572 (?)->1586.
-
-BULL, THOMAS. Denmark, 1579–80.
-
-BURBADGE, JAMES. The Shakespearo-centric tendencies of literary
-historians have led them to suggest a regional connexion between the
-dramatist and the family of his most famous interpreter.[941] There
-was a Warwickshire family of Burbadge, of whom John was bailiff of
-Stratford-on-Avon in 1555, and Malone was thus led (_Var._ iii. 187)
-to ‘suspect’ that James Burbadge was Shakespeare’s countryman. Collier
-(iii. 258) having learnt that the arms claimed by Cuthbert Burbadge at
-the London visitation of 1634, ‘crest, a boar’s head; and three boars’
-heads on a shield’ (_Harleian Soc._ xv), were those of a Hertfordshire
-family, attempted the explanation that the two families ‘were in some
-way related’. He committed himself deeply by publishing in 1835 (_New
-Facts_, 32; cf. Ingleby, 256) a forged letter from H. S. to Sir Thomas
-Egerton, containing the statement that Shakespeare and Richard Burbadge
-are ‘both of one countie, and indeede almost of one towne’. Burbadges
-are traceable in various parts of England, including Somerset,
-Oxfordshire, and Durham (Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 344; Stopes, 134,
-243), and the conjecture has about as much value as Malone’s derivation
-of the name (_Var._ iii. 182) from ‘Borough-bridge’, or Chalmers’s
-from ‘Boar’s badge’. Nor is any connexion known between James Burbadge
-and various other Burbadges--Robert, John, and Edward--who appear in
-contemporary documents (Collier, iii. 282; Stopes, 152), although A.
-Wood (_Fasti Oxon._ i. 303) makes himself responsible for the statement
-that one John Burbadge, of Lincoln College, was nearly related to the
-actor. The name is indifferently spelt Burbadge, Burbage, or Burbege by
-contemporaries, but usually Burbadge in family signatures (Wallace, 61,
-63 ‘James Burbage’, 252; Collier, iii. 294; _Malone Soc. Coll._ ii. 69,
-76). James sealed the Blackfriars indentures of 1596 with a griffin.
-
-James was about sixty on 16 February 1591 (Wallace, 61) and was
-therefore born in 1530–1. He was ‘by occupacion a joyner and reaping
-but a small lyving by the same, gave it over and became a commen
-player in playes’ (Wallace, 141). He was one of Leicester’s men in
-1572, 1574, and 1576, and apparently continued a ‘fellow’ of this or
-some other company for a year or two after he established the Theatre
-in 1576 (Wallace, 142). In this year he was a poor man, and of small
-credit, not worth above 100 marks (Wallace, 134, 141, 153), but he had
-enlisted the capital of John Brayne, whose sister Ellen he had married
-(Wallace, 40, 139). His business history thereafter is bound up with
-that of the Theatre (q.v.) and of the Blackfriars, which he planned,
-but probably never used, during the last years of his life. Cuthbert
-Burbadge says of him (_Blackfriars Sharers Papers_, 1635) that he ‘was
-the first builder of playhowses, and was himselfe in his younger yeeres
-a player’. He was described as ‘joyner’ in the lease of the Theatre
-site in 1576, but in later years usually as ‘yeoman’ or ‘gentleman’.
-Presumably he went to live in Shoreditch in 1576, as entries for his
-family then begin in the registers of St. Leonard’s (Stopes, 139). They
-testify to the baptism (17 March 1576) of a daughter Alice, mentioned
-as Alice Walker in the will of Nicholas Tooley (q.v.) in 1623, and the
-burial (18 August 1582) of a daughter Joan. Another daughter, Helen,
-was buried at St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, on 15 December 1595 (_Bodl._).
-Besides Alice and Helen he had in 1588 (Wallace, 39) two sons, Cuthbert
-and Richard, who would both have been born before 1576. James himself
-was buried at Shoreditch on 2 February 1597 and his widow on 8 May
-1613. The registers generally give the family residence as ‘Halliwell
-Street’, and the ‘Halliwell’ which appears in 1597 and 1601 is perhaps
-an accidental variant. But the lawsuits suggest that James had built
-himself a house in the old inner cloister yard of the priory, which lay
-a little north of Halliwell Street, if that is the same as Holywell
-Lane (Wallace, 232, 236). They also represent him as a man of violent
-temper and not over-honest, while an independent record (App. D, No.
-lxxiv) refers to him as ‘a stubburne fellow’. Before his death he seems
-to have made over his interest in the Blackfriars to his son Richard,
-while that in the Theatre had passed by redemption of a mortgage to
-Cuthbert (Wallace, 55, 73, 108, 145, 278).
-
-Cuthbert Burbadge, the elder son of James, was not an actor, although
-as holder of the leases of the Theatre and afterwards of the Globe
-(q.v.) he was concerned during the greater part of his life with
-theatrical management. On 16 February 1591 he was servant to Walter
-Cope, gentleman usher to Lord Burghley. He was then twenty-four, and
-must have been born in 1566–7. He was then probably living in the
-Strand (Stopes, 152), but the subsidy rolls for 1597 (Stopes, 195)
-show him as assessed at 10_s._ 8_d._ in Holywell Street, and the
-registers of St. Leonard’s have the records of his children, Walter
-(bapt. 22 June 1595), James (bur. 15 July 1597), and Elizabeth (bapt.
-30 December 1601). Of these only Elizabeth, the wife first of Amias
-Maxey and secondly of George Bingley, was alive in 1634 and her son
-Amias had been adopted by his grandfather. Cuthbert himself was buried
-at Shoreditch on 17 September 1636, and his widow Elizabeth, daughter
-of John Cox, on 1 October 1636 (Stopes, 134, 140). His friendship with
-members of the King’s company is commemorated by notices in the wills
-of William Sly (1608), Richard Cowley (1618), and Nicholas Tooley,
-who died in his house in 1623. Collier (iii. 285) identified him with
-Cuthbert Burby the stationer, but Burby was in fact the son of Edmund
-Burby of Beds., husbandman (Arber, ii. 127). Possibly, however, the
-families were related, since Burby’s name is given at least once in the
-Stationers’ Register (Arber, ii. 612) as ‘Burbidge’.
-
-BURBADGE, RICHARD, makes his first appearance, picturesquely enough,
-in the brawl at the Theatre which followed upon the Chancery Order
-of 13 November 1590, restoring a moiety of the profits of the house
-to the widow Brayne (cf. p. 392). John Alleyn deposed (Wallace, 101)
-that he ‘found the foresaid Ry. Burbage the yongest sone of the said
-James Burbage there, w^t a broome staff in his hand, of whom when
-this deponente asked what sturre was there, he answered in laughing
-phrase hew they come for a moytie. But quod he (holding vppe the said
-broomes staff) I haue, I think, deliuered him a moytie with this &
-sent them packing.’ Nicholas Bishop (Wallace, 98, 115), one of Mrs.
-Brayne’s agents, adds the confirmatory detail that ‘the said Ry.
-Burbage scornfully & disdainfullye playing with this deponentes nose,
-sayd, that yf he delt in the matter, he wold beate him also, and did
-chalendge the field of him at that tyme’. Very possibly Richard was
-then playing with the Admiral’s men at the Theatre. His exact age
-is unknown, but he was younger than Cuthbert, born in 1566–7, and
-as Cuthbert, long after, spoke of the ‘35 yeeres paines, cost, and
-labour’ out of which his brother ‘made meanes to leave his wife and
-children some estate’ in 1619 (_Sharers Papers_), it may perhaps be
-inferred that his histrionic career began as early as 1584. The ‘plot’
-of _The Dead Man’s Fortune_, wherein the doubtful direction (cf. p.
-125) ‘Burbage a messenger’ suggests that he played a minor part, may
-belong to a performance by the Admiral’s _c._ 1590. It is a little
-more difficult to suppose that at a date when the Queen’s men were
-still active the Admiral’s or Strange’s had already acquired Tarlton’s
-_Seven Deadly Sins_, in the ‘plot’ of which ‘R. Burbadg’ is cast for
-the important characters of Gorboduc and Terens. But perhaps it is even
-less probable that, after the breach of the Admiral’s with his father
-in 1591, he took part in the performances of the same play by the
-amalgamated Admiral’s and Strange’s men at the Rose in 1592. His name
-does not appear amongst those of the Strange’s men who were travelling
-in 1593. But when the amalgamation broke up, and the Chamberlain’s
-company was formed, with some of its elements as a nucleus, in 1594,
-he joined that company, and became a prominent member, often acting as
-its representative or payee, both before and after its metamorphosis
-into the King’s men, and to the end of his own life. His name is
-constant in its lists (cf. ch. xiii), and his personal relations with
-his fellows are reflected in the wills of Augustine Phillips in 1605,
-Shakespeare in 1616, and Nicholas Tooley, whose ‘master’ he had been,
-in 1623. It would appear that in the somewhat irregular disposition of
-James Burbadge’s theatrical interests the Blackfriars freehold fell
-primarily to Richard. The leases of 1608 were made by him as lessor
-to his brother and other members of the King’s men’s syndicate as
-lessees. This, however, was doubtless a mere family arrangement, for
-Cuthbert spoke of the Blackfriars in 1635 as ‘our inheritance’, and the
-two brothers shared in the supplementary transactions which rounded
-off the original purchase (cf. ch. xvii). At the Globe, on the other
-hand, Cuthbert and Richard held in common a moiety of the housekeepers’
-interest under the lease from Nicholas Brend (cf. ch. xvi). They
-continued to live as close neighbours in Halliwell Street, Shoreditch,
-where they shared the misfortune of having their houses burgled in
-1615 (Jeaffreson, ii. 108) and where the registers of St. Leonard’s
-(Stopes, 139) record Richard’s children: Richard (bur. 16 August
-1607), Julia or Juliet (bapt. 2 January 1603, bur. 12 September 1608),
-Frances (bapt. 16 September and bur. 19 September 1604), Anne (bapt. 8
-August 1607), Winifred (bapt. 10 October 1613, bur. 14 October 1616),
-a second Julia (bapt. 26 December 1614, bur. 15 August 1615), William
-(bapt. 6 November 1616), and a posthumous Sara (bapt. 5 August 1619,
-bur. 29 April 1625). ‘Richard Burbadge, player’ was himself buried on
-16 March 1619. He had died, not as Camden records in his _Annals_ on 9
-March, but on 13 March, after making the day before a nuncupative will
-(Collier, iii. 293), witnessed by his brother and by Nicholas Tooley
-and Richard Robinson of the King’s men, in which he left his wife
-Winifred sole executrix. She subsequently married Richard Robinson,
-and was still alive, as was Burbadge’s son William, in 1635 (_Sharers
-Papers_). According to the gossip of the day he left ‘better than £300
-land to his heirs’ (Collier, iii. 297).
-
-Burbadge had a high reputation as a player, both in life and after
-death. A note of 13 March 1602 by John Manningham (_Diary_, 39)
-records how his impersonation of Richard III touched the heart of
-a citizen’s wife, and how Shakespeare prevented him at a resultant
-assignation. John Davies of Hereford coupled him with Shakespeare
-in 1603 (_Microcosmos_) among players whom he loved ‘for painting,
-poesie’, and in 1609 (_Civile Warres of Death and Fortune_) amongst
-those whom Fortune ‘guerdond not, to their desarts’. He is introduced
-_in propria persona_ into _2 Return from Parnassus_ (1602) and into
-Marston’s induction to _The Malcontent_ (1604). Probably he is the
-‘one man’ of the London stage with whom the player in _Ratseis Ghost_
-(1605; cf. ch. xviii) is advised ‘to play Hamlet for a wager’. Jonson,
-in _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), v. iii, makes Cokes ask the master of
-the puppets, ‘which is your _Burbage_ now?... your best _Actor_. Your
-_Field_?’ He was apparently the model for the _Character of an Actor_
-in the _Characters_ of 1615 (App. C, No. lxi). And other evidences of
-his fame can be traced down to Restoration days in Richard Corbet’s
-_Iter Boreale_, in Sir Richard Baker’s _Chronicle_ and _Theatrum
-Redivivum_, and in Richard Flecknoe’s _Short Discourse of the English
-Stage_ and his _Euterpe Restored_ (cf. Collier, iii. 279; Stopes, 121;
-_Shakespeare’s Centurie of Prayse_, N.S.S., 128, 250).
-
-Shortly after Burbadge’s death, on 20 May 1619, the Earl of Pembroke
-wrote to Lord Doncaster in Germany of a great supper given the same
-night by the Duke of Lennox to the French ambassador, and adds that the
-company were now at the play, ‘which I being tender-harted could not
-endure to see so soone after the loss of my old acquaintance Burbadg’
-(E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ (1882), i. 103). Several epitaphs and
-elegies upon Burbadge are preserved. The shortest--‘Exit Burbadge’--was
-printed in Camden’s _Remaines_ (1674), 541. Another is by Middleton
-(Collier, iii. 280, 296). A third, which begins
-
- Some skillfull limner helpe mee, yf not soe,
- Some sad tragedian, to expresse my woe,
-
-has been the subject of much controversy (cf. Halliwell-Phillipps, ii.
-88; C. M. Ingleby, _The Elegy on Burbadge_, in _Shakespeare, the Man
-and the Book_, ii. 169). It exists in two versions, one of 86 lines,
-the other of 124 lines. Of the shorter version several undoubtedly
-genuine manuscripts are known, and it is probably only by accident that
-one of these omits ll. 2–5 of the following passage, which is given
-completely by all the rest:
-
- Hee’s gone & with him what a world are dead,
- Which he reuiud, to be reuiued soe.
- No more young Hamlett, ould Heironymoe.
- Kind Leer, the greued Moore, and more beside,
- That liued in him, haue now for ever dy’de.
- Oft haue I seene him leap into the graue,
- Suiting the person which he seem’d to haue
- Of a sadd louer with soe true an eye,
- That theer I would haue sworne, he meant to dye.
- Oft haue I seene him play this part in ieast,
- Soe liuely, that spectators, and the rest
- Of his sad crew, whilst he but seem’d to bleed,
- Amazed, thought euen then hee dyed in deed.
-
-In the longer version ll. 2–5 are not only omitted, but are replaced by
-an interpolation of many lines, detailing a number of parts, some of
-which belonged to other companies than the King’s, and are not likely
-to have been played by Burbadge. No manuscript of this version is
-forthcoming, and there can be little doubt that the interpolation is
-due to Collier, who referred to the version in his _New Particulars_
-(1836), 27, and published it in his _Memoirs of the Actors_ (1846),
-52, professedly from a manuscript in the possession of Richard Heber.
-Of the shorter version I can add to what has been recorded by others
-that in _Stowe MS._ 962, f. 62^v, I have found a copy of it, with the
-title ‘An Elegie on the death of the famous actor Rich: Burbage, who
-died 13 Martij A^o. 1618’, and an ascription to ‘Jo ffletcher’. Other
-copies also give the date of Burbadge’s death, or refer, as do the
-opening lines themselves, to the fact that he was skilled not only as
-an actor but as a limner. John Davies testifies to this in the verses
-of 1603 already cited. The accounts of the Earl of Rutland for the
-birthday tilt of 1613 contain the entry, ‘31 Martij, To M^r. Shakspeare
-in gold, about my Lordes impreso, 44^s. To Richard Burbage for paynting
-and makyng yt, in gold, 44^s’; and those for the tilt of 1616, ‘25
-Martij, 1616, paid given Richard Burbidg for my Lordes shelde and for
-the embleance, 4^{li} 18^s’ (_H. M. C. Rutland MSS._ iv. 494, 508). The
-gallery at Dulwich contains a picture presented by William Cartwright,
-which is described in his catalogue as ‘a womans head on a boord done
-by M^r. Burbige y^e actor’. The inveterate tendency of mankind to
-guess has led to suggestions that he may have painted the portrait of
-himself in the same gallery, the Chandos portrait of Shakespeare, or
-the original of the Droeshout print.
-
-One other record of Burbadge, apart from his company, may be noted. On
-31 May 1610 he was employed by the City, with his fellow James Rice,
-to deliver a speech to Prince Henry at a water-pageant on the Thames
-(cf. ch. iv). Presumably he represented Amphion, ‘a grave and judicious
-Prophet-like personage’, and Rice Corinea.
-
-BURGES, ROBERT. A ‘player’ buried at St. Bennet’s, Gracechurch, 14
-April 1559 (B. 251).
-
-CANDLER, JAMES. Leader of a company at Ipswich, 1569–70 (_Hist. MSS._
-ix. 1. 248).
-
-CARIE (GARY), GILES. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613.
-
-CARLETON, NICHOLAS. Paul’s, >1582.
-
-CARPENTER, WILLIAM. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611; Charles’s, 1619, 1625. He
-was apparently porter at the Marshalsea in 1623 (J. 347).
-
-CARTWRIGHT, WILLIAM. Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1598–1622 (H. ii. 247). He
-lived at the upper end of White Cross Street in 1623 (J. 347).
-
-CASTLE, THOMAS. A ‘player’, whose son Nicholas and daughter Hester were
-baptized at St. Giles’s on 9 October 1608 and 15 April 1610 (B. 262).
-
-CATTANES. Worcester’s, 1602 (H. ii. 248).
-
-CAVALLERIZZO, CLAUDIO. Italians, 1576 (?).
-
-CHAPPELL, JOHN. Chapel, 1600–1.
-
-CHESSON, THOMAS. Oxford’s (?), 1580.
-
-CLARK, SILL. Prince’s, 1603< >1641.
-
-CLARKE, ROBERT. A ‘player’ whose son Ezekiel was buried at St. Giles’s,
-7 November 1617 (B. 268).
-
-CLARKE, THOMAS. Leicester’s, 1572.
-
-CLAY, NATHANIEL. Anne’s, 1618; Chamber of Bristol, 1618.
-
-CLEMENT, WILLIAM. London player, 1550 (App. D, No. v).
-
-CLIFTON, THOMAS. Kidnapped for Chapel, 1600.
-
-COBORNE, EDWARD. A ‘player’ whose son John was baptized at St. Giles’s
-on 23 Nov. 1616. Of other family entries, 1613–25, some are for Edward
-Coborne ‘gentleman’ (_Bodl._). He may be identical with COLBRAND.
-
-COKE, RICHARD. Interluders, 1547–56.
-
-COLBRAND, EDWARD. Palsgrave’s, 1610–13.
-
-COLE. Paul’s, 1599.
-
-COLMAN, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1509.
-
-CONDELL, HENRY, has been conjectured to be the ‘Harry’ cast for Ferrex
-and a Lord in the ‘plot’ of _The Seven Deadly Sins_, as played by
-Strange’s or the Admiral’s about 1590–1. The first definite notice of
-him is in the cast of Jonson’s _Every Man in his Humour_, as played
-by the Chamberlain’s men in 1598. Thereafter he appears in all formal
-lists of the Chamberlain’s and King’s men, up to the Caroline patent
-of 1625, including the list in the First Folio of 1623, of which,
-with Heminges, he acted as editor. He is also in all the casts up to
-_The Humourous Lieutenant_ (_c._ 1619). About this date he presumably
-ceased to play; his part of the Cardinal in _The Duchess of Malfi_ had
-passed to Richard Robinson by 1623. The fact that he took this part
-somewhat discredits the conjecture of John Roberts (_Answer to Pope_,
-1729) that he was a comedian; nor can the statement of the same writer
-that he was a printer be verified. He is staged with other members of
-the company in Marston’s _Malcontent_ (1604), and appears as ‘Henry
-Condye’ in the verses on the burning of the Globe in 1613. He is
-assigned 26_s._ 8_d._ to buy a ring as Shakespeare’s ‘fellowe’ in his
-will of 1616, and appears also as a legatee in the will of Augustine
-Phillips in 1605, as trustee in that of Alexander Cooke in 1614, as
-executor and joint residuary legatee in that of Nicholas Tooley in
-1623, under which also his wife and his daughter Elizabeth receive
-legacies, and as executor in that of John Underwood in 1625. By 1599 he
-was married and apparently settled in St. Mary Aldermanbury, where he
-held various parochial offices during 1606–21, and the register records
-his children: Elizabeth (bapt. 27 February 1599, bur. 11 April 1599),
-Anne (bapt. 4 April 1601, bur. 16 July 1610), Richard (bapt. 18 April
-1602), Elizabeth (bapt. 14 April 1603, bur. 22 April 1603), Elizabeth
-(bapt. 26 October 1606), Mary (bapt. 30 January 1608, bur. from Hoxton
-at St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, 24 March 1608), Henry (bapt. 6 May 1610,
-bur. 4 March 1630), William (bapt. 26 May 1611), Edward (bapt. 22
-August 1614, bur. 23 August 1614).[942] Subsequently he had a ‘country
-house’ at Fulham, at which on 10 September 1625 a pamphlet written
-by certain players on their travels during the plague, as a reply to
-Dekker’s _A Rod for Run-awayes_, under the title of _The Run-awayes
-Answer_, was addressed to him, with an expression of gratitude for a
-‘free and noble farewell’ which he had given the writers. At Fulham,
-too, on 13 December 1627, he made his will, leaving to his widow
-Elizabeth, his sons Henry and William, and his daughter Elizabeth,
-wife of Herbert Finch, much household property at Aldermanbury and
-elsewhere in London, including ‘rents and profits’ by ‘leases and
-terms of years’ of ‘messuages houses and places’ in Blackfriars and on
-the Bankside, which were to pass for a time to William and ultimately
-to the widow.[943] Condell had not been an original sharer in the
-house of the Globe, but by 1612 had acquired an interest jointly with
-Heminges; of the Blackfriars house he was an original sharer in 1608.
-_The Sharers Papers_ of 1635 indicate that Mrs. Condell had held
-four-sixteenths of the Globe and one-eighth of the Blackfriars, but
-had transferred two-sixteenths of the Globe when Taylor and Lowin were
-admitted as sharers. A minor legacy in Condell’s will is to his old
-servant, Elizabeth Wheaton, of her ‘place or priviledge’ in the Globe
-and Blackfriars. Heminges and Cuthbert Burbadge are named as overseers.
-Condell was buried on 29 December 1627, and his widow on 3 October
-1635, both at St. Mary Aldermanbury.[944]
-
-COOKE, ALEXANDER, has been conjectured to be the ‘Sander’ who is cast
-in the ‘plot’ of _The Seven Deadly Sins_ as played by Strange’s or the
-Admiral’s about 1590–1, for the parts of Videna in _Envy_ and Progne
-in _Lechery_. But, as far as this goes, he might just as well be the
-‘San.’ who took the part of a player in _Taming of a Shrew_ (1594),
-ind. 1, which was a Pembroke’s play. Malone ‘presumes’, with some
-rashness, that he performed ‘all the principal female characters’ in
-Shakespeare’s plays.[945] It must be doubtful whether he was on the
-stage as early as 1592. He is traceable as a member of the King’s
-men in the casts of _Sejanus_ (1603), _Volpone_ (1605), _Alchemist_
-(1610), _Catiline_ (1611), and _The Captain_ (1612–13). The fact that
-in the first two of these his name occurs at the end of the lists has
-been somewhat hazardously accepted as an indication that he played
-women’s parts. He is also in the First Folio list of performers in
-Shakespeare’s plays. Augustine Phillips left him a legacy as his
-‘fellow’ in 1605.
-
-‘Mr. Cooke and his wife’ commend themselves to Alleyn in his wife’s
-letter of 21 October 1603.[946] The token-books of St. Saviour’s,
-Southwark, show an Alexander Cooke in Hill’s Rents during 1604, 1607,
-1609, and 1610; and the parish register, recording the baptism of
-Francis Cooke, son of Alexander, ‘a player’, on 27 October 1605, makes
-an identification possible. There were three more children, Rebecca
-(bapt. 11 October 1607), Alice (bapt. 3 November 1611), Alexander
-(bapt. 20 March 1614). This last was posthumous; the register records
-Alexander Cooke’s burial on 25 February 1614.[947] His will, dated
-3 January 1614, leaves £50 each to Francis, Rebecca, and the unborn
-child, and the residue to his wife.[948] He owned £50 ‘which is in the
-hand of my fellowes, as my share of the stock’. He appoints ‘my master
-Hemings’, to whom he had presumably been apprenticed, and Condell
-trustees for his children, and mentions brothers Ellis and John, of
-whom the latter is conjectured by Collier to be the author of Greene’s
-_Tu Quoque_.
-
-COOKE, EDWARD. Chapel, 1509.
-
-COOKE, LIONEL. Queen’s, 1583, 1588.
-
-COOKE, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1583.
-
-COOKE, WILLIAM. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.
-
-CORNISH, JOHN. Gentleman of Chapel, and pageant-master at wedding of
-Arthur in 1501.
-
-CORNISH, KIT. A ‘ghost-name’ in Chapel records.
-
-CORNISH, WILLIAM. Master of Song School, Westminster, 1479–80.
-
-CORNISH, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1509–23. Conceivably identical with
-the last, and in any case probably of the same family.
-
-COWLEY, RICHARD, was of Strange’s men in 1593. He had played minor
-parts with that company or the Admiral’s in _The Seven Deadly Sins_
-of 1590–1, and is mentioned in Alleyn’s correspondence as travelling
-with the company. He joined the Chamberlain’s men, probably on
-their formation in 1594, and was payee for the company in 1601. The
-stage-directions to the Quarto (1600) and Folio texts of _Much Ado
-about Nothing_, IV. ii, show that he played Verges. He is in the
-1603 and 1604 lists of the King’s men, and received a legacy from
-Augustine Phillips as his ‘fellow’ in 1605, but does not appear to
-have been a sharer in the houses of the Globe or Blackfriars. He is
-in the Folio list of performers in Shakespeare’s plays. He dwelt in
-Holywell, or for a short period in Alleyn’s Rents, both in the parish
-of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, whose register records his children,
-Robert (bapt. 8 March 1596, bur. (?) 20 March 1597), Cuthbert (bapt.
-8 May 1597), Richard (bapt. 29 April 1598, bur. 26 February 1603),
-Elizabeth (bapt. 2 February 1602), as well as the funeral of his wife
-Elizabeth on 28 September 1616, and his own on 12 March 1619.[949] His
-will, dated on 13 January 1618, appoints his daughter Elizabeth Birch
-executrix and is witnessed by Heminges, Cuthbert Burbadge, Shank, and
-Thomas Ravenscroft, perhaps the madrigalist.[950]
-
-CRANE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).
-
-CRANE, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1523–45.
-
-CROSSE, SAMUEL, is named amongst the performers of Shakespeare’s plays
-in the First Folio, but in no list of the Chamberlain’s or King’s men.
-Probably, therefore, he belongs to the very beginning of Shakespeare’s
-career, and is to be identified with the Crosse named by Heywood
-amongst famous actors of a generation before his time.[951]
-
-CUMBER, JOHN. Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived in Aldermanbury in 1623, and
-died in that year (J. 347; Fleay, 279).
-
-CURTEYS, JAMES. Chapel, 1509.
-
-CUTLER, JAMES. Chapel, > 1605.
-
-DABORNE, ROBERT. Revels patentee, 1610, and dramatist.
-
-DANIEL, JOHN. Chamber of Bristol patentee, 1615–17.
-
-DANIEL, SAMUEL. Allower of Revels’ plays, 1604, and dramatist.
-
-DARLOWE. Admiral’s, >1590.
-
-DAVIES, HUGH. Admiral’s (?), 1601 (H. ii. 255).
-
-DAWES, ROBERT. Duke of York’s, 1610; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1614.
-
-DAY, JOHN. Admiral’s (?), _c._ 1600. John, son of John Day, ‘player’,
-was baptized at St. Saviour’s, 3 June 1604 (B. 308; cf. ch. xxiii).
-
-DAY, THOMAS. Chapel, 1601, 1602.
-
-DOB. Admiral’s, 1598–1601.
-
-DOWNTON (DOWTON, DOUTON (?), DOWTEN, DOWGHTON, DENYGTEN, DOUBTON),
-THOMAS. Strange’s, 1593; Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1594–_c._
-1618. The St. Saviour’s registers record various family events,
-including the baptism of Christopher, son of Thomas Dowton ‘musycyon’
-on 27 December 1592 and that of Thomas Dowton ‘baseborne, the supposed
-son of Thomas Dowton, a player’, 25 May 1600. He apparently married a
-vintner’s widow on 15 February 1618, became a vintner, and was still
-alive on 18 August 1622 (B. 316; H. ii. 262, 265). Dr. Greg regards him
-as one of the Dutton family.
-
-DRAKE, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-DRAYTON, MICHAEL. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.
-
-DREWE, BARTHOLOMEW. A ‘player’, whose son George was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 12 November 1614 (B. 314).
-
-DREWE, THOMAS. Anne’s, 1616–19.
-
-DROM, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1601.
-
-DRUSIANO. _Vide_ MARTINELLI.
-
-DUKE, JOHN. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Chamberlain’s, 1598;
-Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–9. Four children were baptized at St.
-Leonard’s, where he lived in Holywell Street, from July 1604 to January
-1609 (H. ii. 265; Collier, _Actors_, xxxi).
-
-DULANDT (DOWLAND?), ROBERT. Musician in Germany, 1623.
-
-DUTTON, EDWARD. Admiral’s, 1597, with a boy ‘Dick’. Children of his
-were baptized at St. Saviour’s during 1600–2 (B. 326).
-
-DUTTON, JOHN. Warwick’s, 1575–6; Oxford’s, 1580; Queen’s, 1583,
-1588–91. Lincoln’s Inn paid him for musicians in 1567–8 (Walker, i.
-362). There are family records of a John Dutton at St. Botolph’s, who
-is called ‘player’ in the entry of a daughter Elizabeth’s baptism of 3
-July 1586 (B. 328).
-
-DUTTON, LAURENCE. Lane’s, 1571–2; Clinton’s, 1572–5; Warwick’s, 1575–6;
-Oxford’s, 1580; Queen’s, 1589–91. It is curious that a John and a
-Laurence Dutton also appear as Court Messengers. I find a payment on
-23 May 1578 to John for carrying letters to Antwerp (_Pipe Office,
-Chamber Declared Account_ 541, m. 211^v), and Laurence was paid for
-‘sondry jorneys’ in 1561–2 (ibid. m. 39) and was during 1576–82 one
-of the regular Messengers of the Chamber in attendance on the Privy
-Council (Dasent, ix. 223, x. 223, 228, xi. 437, xii. 23, xiii. 135,
-392, etc.). The ‘Edward’ Dutton of the last entry may be an error. In
-1592 the Council (xxii. 493) recommended John the son of Laurence who
-had ‘of long tyme served her Majestie’ as Messenger, for admission as
-a Queen’s Scholar at Westminster. But this Laurence can hardly have
-been the actor, for he was acting as Messenger on 20 May 1580, while
-the affray for which Laurence the actor had been committed to the
-Marshalsea on 13 April was still uninquired into. Somewhat earlier a
-Thomas Dutton was employed as a post between Edward VI’s Council and
-Thomas Gresham in Antwerp, and was Gresham’s agent in Hamburg, c. 1571
-(Burgon, _Gresham_, i. 109; ii. 421). It is easier again to conjecture
-than to prove a connexion between the actors and the house of Dutton,
-which had a hereditary jurisdiction over minstrelsy in Cheshire (cf.
-ch. ix), although in this the names John and Laurence both appear. It
-is perhaps an accident that two of the recorded visits of the Queen’s
-men to Lord Derby’s northern seats in 1588–90 synchronize with visits
-by a Mr. Dutton (Murray, ii. 296).
-
-ECCLESTONE, WILLIAM, appears as a King’s man in the casts of _The
-Alchemist_ (1610) and _Catiline_ (1611). Mr. Fleay’s statement that
-he joined the company from the Queen’s Revels in 1609 rests upon a
-confusion with Field.[952] In 1611 he became a member of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, but left them in 1613 after playing in _The Honest
-Man’s Fortune_ during that year. He returned to the King’s, and his
-name is found in the official lists of the company for 1619 and 1621
-and in most of the casts of their plays, from _Bonduca_ in 1613–14 to
-_The Spanish Curate_ in 1622, as well as in the First Folio list of
-performers in Shakespeare’s plays. Nicholas Tooley forgave him a debt
-in his will of 3 June 1623. As he is not in the Caroline patent of
-1625, he had probably died or retired by that date. He may be the W.
-E. who writes commendatory verses to _The Wild-goose Chase_ in 1652.
-If he is also the ‘William Eglestone’ whose marriage to Anne Jacob is
-recorded in the register of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 20 February
-1603, he lived to be an old man.[953]
-
-EDMONDS, JOHN. Globe lessee, 1612; Chamber of Bristol, 1618–19. The
-St. Saviour’s registers record the marriage of a John Edmonds to
-Margaret Goodyere on 22 February 1600 and the baptism of children of
-John Edmonds, ‘player’, from 6 January 1605 to 17 July 1615 (B. 334).
-Probably the two are not identical and the player is the John Edmans
-who seems to have married his fellow-legatee, Mary Clarke, of the will
-of Thomas Pope (q.v.) in 1604.
-
-EDWARDES, RICHARD. Master of Chapel, 1561–6, and dramatist.
-
-EICHELIN. Germany, 1604.
-
-ELDERTON, WILLIAM. One Elderton, dressed as a fool, played the part of
-one of the Lord of Misrule’s sons in George Ferrers’s Christmas revel
-of 1552–3 (Feuillerat, _Edw. and Mary_, 120; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_,
-i. 407). Conjecture may identify him with the Elderton who brought
-the Eton boys to Court on 6 January 1573 and the William Elderton who
-brought the Westminster boys on 1 January 1574, and with the rhyming
-William Elderton, some of whose ballads are preserved and reprinted in
-Collier, _Old Ballads from Early Printed Copies_ (1842, _Percy Soc._),
-25, 45; H. Huth, _Ancient Ballads and Broadsides_ (1867, _Philobiblon
-Soc._); and H. L. Collman, _Ballads and Broadsides_ (1912, _Roxburghe
-Club_); or recorded, with ballads against him, in the Stationers’
-Register (Arber, i. 179, 180, 181, 199, 384, 403, 439; ii. 338, 363,
-369, 388, 396, 399; cf. v. lxxvi), while his ‘ale-crammed nose’ and
-‘rymes lying a steepe in ale’ are subject for much humour among the
-pamphleteers (Lyly, iii. 398; Nashe, i. 197, 256, 280; iii. 123, 133,
-177, 354). Stowe (_Survey_, i. 272) makes him an attorney in the
-sheriff’s courts at the Guildhall about 1568, but he can hardly be the
-‘master Elderton’ who sat as a justice at the Guildhall in a coining
-case of 1562 (Machyn, 290). He appears to have been dead by 1592
-(Harvey, i. 163; Nashe, i. 280). A recent paper on Elderton by H. E.
-Rollins is in _S. P._ xvii (1920), 199.
-
-ENGLISH, JOHN. Interluders, 1494–1531.
-
-EVANS, HENRY. Blackfriars lessee, 1583, 1600–8; payee for Oxford’s,
-1584; manager of Chapel, 1600–3. He was a scrivener, and overseer to
-the will of Sebastian Westcott, Master of Paul’s, in 1582.
-
-EVANS, THOMAS. Blackfriars lessee, 1608.
-
-EVESEED, HENRY. Chapel, >1585.
-
-FARNABY, RICHARD. Musician in Germany, 1623.
-
-FARRANT, RICHARD. Master of Children of Windsor, 1564–80; Acting Master
-of Chapel and Blackfriars lessee, 1576–80.
-
-FERRABOSCO, ALFONSO. Italians, 1576, and Court musician (cf. ch. ii).
-
-FETHERSTON, WILLIAM. Of Danby, Yorks., unlicensed player, 1612 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 305).
-
-FIDGE, WILLIAM. H. R. Plomer (3 _Library_, ix. 252) cites from a
-Canterbury record of 1571, ‘William Fidge and Whetstone owe the said
-[Robert] Bettes [a painter] for their portions in buying of certen
-playebookes 35_s._ 4_d._’
-
-FIELD, NATHAN, was the son of John Field, preacher and castigator of
-the stage (cf. App. C, No. xxxi), and was baptized at St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, on 17 October 1587 (Collier, iii. 425). His name is
-always spelt Nathan in formal contemporary documents, although he
-was familiarly known as Nat or Nid. But he appears in many reputable
-modern works of learning as Nathaniel. This error perhaps originated
-with the compilers of the 1679 Folio of Beaumont and Fletcher, who in
-four out of the six actor-lists in which his name is found used the
-form Nathan and in two (_Loyal Subject_ and _Mad Lover_) Nathanael. It
-was certainly encouraged by a muddle of Collier, who finding in the
-Cripplegate registers that another son of John Field had been baptized
-Nathaniel on 13 June 1581, and not realizing that a cranky theological
-father might quite well use the names as distinct, thought it necessary
-to assume that this Nathaniel had died before 1587. As a matter of
-fact, he survived, was apprenticed to a stationer at Michaelmas 1596,
-took up his freedom on 3 June 1611, and between 1624 and 1627 published
-some books, including two sermons by a third brother, Theophilus Field,
-Bishop of Llandaff (McKerrow, _Dict._ 101). I need hardly linger over
-the suggestion that Nathan Field lived a double life as actor and
-bookseller. At this time of the apprenticeship he was not yet nine
-years old, and he was still a scholar of St. Paul’s Grammar School
-when, not earlier than 1600, he was impressed by Nathaniel Giles and
-his deputies to serve as one of the Children of the Chapel (_Clifton v.
-Robinson_ in Fleay, 128). His education was not entirely interrupted,
-for he fell into the hands of Ben Jonson, who told Drummond in
-1619 that ‘Nid Field was his schollar, and he had read to him the
-Satyres of Horace, and some Epigrames of Martiall’ (Laing, 11). Field
-remained a member of the Chapel and the Queen’s Revels throughout the
-vicissitudes of the company from 1600 to 1613. He is in the actor-lists
-of _Cynthia’s Revels_ (1600), _The Poetaster_ (1601), and _Epicoene_
-(1609), and presumably played Humfrey in _K. B. P._ (1607).[954] With
-his fellows he became absorbed into the Lady Elizabeth’s in March
-1613, contracted with Henslowe and Meade on behalf of this company
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 23), acted as their payee in 1615, and appears
-in the actor-lists of _The Coxcomb_, _The Honest Man’s Fortune_, and
-_Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), in the text of which Jonson compliments him
-(v. 3) as follows:
-
- _Cokes._ Which is your _Burbage_ now?
-
- _Lanterne._ What meane you by that, Sir?
-
- _Cokes._ Your best Actor. Your _Field_?
-
-He seems to have been suspected by the company of taking bribes from
-Henslowe to connive at transactions contrary to their interest
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 88). Certainly he was in financial straits and on
-more than one occasion appealed to Henslowe to secure his release from
-an arrest (_Henslowe Papers_, 66, 67). Perhaps it was as a result of
-this friction with his fellows that he abandoned their amalgamation
-with Prince Charles’s men in 1615. Instead he joined, at or about
-this date, the King’s men, and appears as one in the actor-lists of
-_The Loyal Subject_, _The Knight of Malta_, _The Queen of Corinth_,
-and _The Mad Lover_. It must, I think, have been by a slip that
-Cuthbert Burbadge, in the _Sharers Papers_ of 1635, spoke of him as
-joining the King’s with Ostler and Underwood in 1608 or 1609. It seems
-probable that Field brought with him to the King’s a share of the
-plays which had formed the repertory of the joint Lady Elizabeth’s
-and Queen’s Revels, including Chapman’s _Bussy D’Ambois_, in which a
-King’s prologue vaunts his success as Bussy. He did not stay with the
-company very long, for though he is in the patent of 27 March and the
-livery list of 19 May 1619, he is replaced by John Rice in the livery
-list of 7 April 1621. And as he does not appear and Rice does appear
-amongst the actors named in the stage-directions to _Sir John von
-Olden Barnevelt_ in August 1619, it is probable that he had left in
-the course of the summer (_M. L. R._ iv. 395). If so, his departure
-synchronizes with a scandal which attached itself to his name. His
-moral character was hardly becoming to the son of a preacher. More than
-one manuscript commonplace book (e. g. _Ashm. MS._ 47, f. 49, which
-appears from the spelling of the name to be a late copy) contains an
-epigram with some such heading as _On Nathaniell Feild suspected for
-too much familiarity with his M^{ris} Lady May_. And on 5 June 1619 Sir
-William Trumbull wrote from Brussels to Lord Hay (E. J. L. Scott in
-_Athenaeum_ (1882), i. 103) that he was told that the Earl of Argyll
-had paid for the nursing of a child, ‘which the world sayes is daughter
-to my lady and N. Feild the Player’. Lady Argyll was Anne, daughter of
-Sir William Cornwallis of Brome. Field’s later life is obscure. There
-is an unimportant jest about him in John Taylor’s _Wit and Mirth_
-(1629). He was married to a wife Anne, and had children baptized and
-buried at St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, during 1619–25. If another epigram,
-printed by Collier, iii. 437, can be trusted, he very properly suffered
-from jealousy. In relevant register entries the name is given as
-Nathan. The Blackfriars registers give children both of Nathan and of
-Nathaniel Field, and on 20 February 1633 occurs the burial of Nathaniel
-Field, whom, if the entry does not indicate that the confusion of
-persons had already begun, we are bound to take to be the bookseller.
-There is no reason why both brothers should not have resided in
-Blackfriars.
-
-Field was dramatist, as well as actor. In addition to the two plays
-published under his single name, he collaborated with Massinger in
-_The Fatal Dowry_, which was a King’s play and not likely, therefore,
-to fall outside the dates 1616–19. And as the Henslowe correspondence
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 65, 84) show him as collaborating also with
-Fletcher, Massinger, and Daborne for the Lady Elizabeth’s, he has been
-conjectured as a possible sharer in the authorship of several of the
-plays of the Beaumont and Fletcher series. He also, about the time of
-his joining the King’s, wrote a defence of the stage, in the form of a
-remonstrance to Mr. Sutton, a preacher of St. Mary Overies (App. C, No.
-lxiii). A portrait of Field is at Dulwich.
-
-FLETCHER, LAWRENCE. Scotland, 1595, 1599, 1601; Admiral’s (?), 1596;
-King’s, 1603. Although included as a King’s man in the royal patent,
-there is no reason to suppose that Fletcher ever joined the company
-acting at the Globe; the absence of his name from the actor-list in the
-Shakespeare F_{1} of 1623 is strong evidence that he did not. He lived
-in St. Saviour’s, where he had a homonym, a victualler, who survived
-him. One of the two is shown by the token-books as housed in Hunt’s
-Rents, Maid Lane, during 1605–7; probably this was the actor, who was
-buried on 12 September 1608. The description ‘Lawrence Fletcher, a man:
-in the church’ of the register is amplified in a fee-book to ‘Lawrence
-Fletcher, a player, the King’s servant, buried in the church, with an
-afternoon’s knell of the great bell, 20s.’ (Collier, _Memoirs of the
-Actors_^1, x; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvii).
-
-FLOWER. Admiral’s (?), _c._ 1600.
-
-FOSTER, ALEXANDER. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1618; Charles’s, 1616.
-
-FREYERBOTT, BARTHOLOMEUS. Germany, 1615.
-
-FRITH, MOLL. It appears to be suggested in the Epilogue to _The
-Roaring Girl_ (cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Dekker) that this lady was to
-appear in person on the Fortune stage, _c._ 1610.
-
-FROST, JOHN. Chapel, 1601.
-
-GARLAND, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588; Lennox’s, 1605; Duke of York’s,
-1610. He appears to have dwelt in 1605 at ‘the ould forde’ (H. ii. 267).
-
-GARLICK. In I. H., _This World’s Folly_ (1615), an actor of this name
-is apparently said to have personated himself on the Fortune stage,
-‘behung with chaynes of Garlicke’ (App. C, No. lix); cf. Dekker, _If
-This be not a Good Play_ (1610–12), sc. x (ed. Pearson, iii. 325),
-‘Fortune fauours no body but Garlicke, nor Garlike neither now, yet
-she has strong reason to loue it; for tho Garlicke made her smell
-abhominably in the nostrills of the gallants, yet she had smelt and
-stuncke worse but for garlike’; H. Parrot, _Laquei Ridiculosi_ (1613),
-Epig. 131, ‘_Greene’s Tu Quoque_ and those Garlicke Jigs’; in Tailor,
-_Hog Hath Lost his Pearl_ (1614, ed. Dodsley^4, p. 434), a jig will
-draw more whores ‘than e’er Garlic had’.
-
-GARRET, JOHN. Anne’s, 1619.
-
-GEDION. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-‘GERRY.’ King’s Revels, 1607.
-
-GEW. A blind player, referred to in _1 Ant. Mellida_ (1599), ind. 142,
-‘’t had been a right part for Proteus or Gew. Ho! blind Gew would ha’
-done ’t rarely, rarely’; E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), _Sat._ v,
-‘One that for ape tricks can put Gue to schoole’, and _Epig._ xi, ‘Gue,
-hang thy selfe for woe, since gentlemen Are now grown cunning in thy
-apishness’; Jonson, _Epig._ cxxix, ‘Thou dost out-zany Cokely, Pod;
-nay, Gue.’ Pod was a puppet-showman.
-
-GIBBS. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-GIBSON, RICHARD. Interluders, 1494–1508; afterwards Yeoman of the
-Revels.
-
-GILBURNE, SAMUEL, is recorded in the First Folio list of performers
-in Shakespeare’s plays. All that is known of him beyond this is that
-Augustine Phillips left him as his ‘late apprentice’ in his will of
-1605 the sum of 40_s._, various garments, and a bass viol. Collier’s
-inference that he could play on the viol is a fairly harmless example
-of biographical conjecture.[955] The identification of him with the
-‘b[oy?] Sam’ of the ‘plot’ of _The Dead Man’s Fortune_, a play probably
-belonging to the Admiral’s, and of a date not later than 1591, is more
-dangerous.[956]
-
-GILES, NATHANIEL. Master of Windsor Choir, 1595–1634; Master of Chapel,
-1597–1634.
-
-GILES, THOMAS. Master of Paul’s, 1585–1590 <; Instructor in Music to
-Henry, 1606, and Charles, 1613.
-
-GOODALE, BAPTISTE. ‘Ghost-name’ (?) in Queen’s list (1589) forged by
-Collier, _New Facts_, ii.
-
-GOODALE, THOMAS. Berkeley’s, 1581; Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Chamberlain’s
-(?) at date of _Sir Thomas More_ (cf. ch. xxiv). If he is the Thomas
-Goodale, mercer, who entered with John Alleyn and Robert Lee into a
-bond to Edward Alleyn on 18 May 1593 (H. ii. 295, from _Dulwich MS._
-iv. 29), he was not improbably connected with the Admiral’s >1590.
-
-GOUGHE or GOFFE, ROBERT, was probably the ‘R. Go.’ entered in the
-‘plot’ of _The Seven Deadly Sins_, as playing Aspasia in _Sloth_ for
-the Admiral’s or Strange’s men about 1590–1. Probably he belonged at
-an early date to the King’s men. He is a legatee in Thomas Pope’s will
-of 22 July 1603, and witnessed that of Augustine Phillips on 4 May
-1605, in which Phillips names a sister Elizabeth Goughe, doubtless the
-Elizabeth ---- recorded in the register of St. Saviour’s, Southwark,
-as marrying Robert Gough on 13 February 1603. The token-books of St.
-Saviour’s indicate Gough’s residence in Hill’s Rents during 1604,
-Samson’s Rents during 1605 and 1606, and Austin’s Rents in 1612–22; and
-the registers, which generally call him a ‘player’, record his children
-Elizabeth (bapt. 30 May 1605), Nicholas (bapt. 24 November 1608),
-Dorothy (bapt. 10 February 1611, bur. 12 January 1613), Alexander
-(bapt. 7 August 1614), and his own burial on 19 February 1624.[957]
-His son Alexander became in his turn a player. A stage-direction
-to l. 1723 of _The Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ (1611) shows that he
-played Memphonius. He also played Leidenberch in _Sir John von Olden
-Barnevelt_ in 1619, and appears in the official lists of the King’s
-men for 1619 and 1621 and in the First Folio list of performers in
-Shakespeare’s plays.
-
-GOUGHE, THOMAS. Lane’s, 1572.
-
-GRACE, FRANCIS. Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1610–22. He lived at George Alley,
-Golden Lane, in 1623 (J. 347).
-
-GRAUNGER, JOHN. Chapel, 1509.
-
-GREAVES, JOHN. Lane’s, 1572.
-
-GREEN, JOHN. Germany, 1608; France, >1608; Holland, 1613; Germany,
-1615–20, 1626. On his verses and portrait, 1608, cf. ch. xxiv, s.v.
-_Nobody and Somebody_. He may have been brother of the following.
-
-GREENE, THOMAS. Anne’s, 1604–12. In R. Braithwaite, _Remains after
-Death_ (1618) are four epigrams on him, one of which says that he ‘new
-come from sea, made but one face and dide’. A couplet on his death,
-signed W. R., is in Cooke’s _Greene’s Tu Quoque_. I. H., _World’s
-Folly_ (1615), mentions his performance of a baboon (cf. App. C, No.
-lix). He was of St. James’s, Clerkenwell, in 1612, when he made his
-will (Fleay, 192), naming his wife Susan, daughter Honor, sons-in-law
-(i.e. stepsons) Robert and William Browne, daughters-in-law Susanna,
-Elizabeth, and Anne Browne, brothers John and Jeffery Greene, and
-sister Elizabeth Barrett. A conjecture that he was of Stratford origin
-has no foundation (Lee, 54).
-
-GREUM, HENRY. Germany, 1608.
-
-GRIFFEN. Admiral’s, 1597.
-
-GRIGORIE, JACK. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-GRYMES, THOMAS. Chapel, 1600–1.
-
-GUNNELL, RICHARD. Palsgrave’s, 1613–22. Family notes appear in the
-registers of St. Giles’s, 1614–30 (B. 409).
-
-GYLLOME, FOKE. Player (?) to Alexander Houghton, 1581 (cf. ch. ix, p.
-280).
-
-GYRKE, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).
-
-HALLAWAIE, ‘the younger’. Paul’s, 1580.
-
-HAMLEN (HAMLETT), ROBERT. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611–13; Charles’s, 1616,
-1625.
-
-HAMMOND, JOHN. Interluders, 1494.
-
-HAMOND. Worcester’s, 1565.
-
-HARRISON, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose daughter Suzanna by wife Anne was
-baptized at St. Helen’s on 10 January 1602.
-
-HARRISON, WILLIAM. Worcester’s, 1583.
-
-HARVEY. Chamberlain’s, 1597.
-
-HAWKINS, ALEXANDER. Blackfriars lessee, 1601; Revels patentee, 1604.
-
-HAYNE, WILLIAM. Head Master of Merchant Taylors’, 1599–1625.
-
-HAYSELL, GEORGE. Worcester’s, 1583. For a possible notice of the same
-man, cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. _Misogonus_.
-
-HEARNE, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1597.
-
-HELLE, JOHN. Admiral’s, 1597.
-
-HEMINGES, JOHN, whose name is variously spelt, appearing, for example,
-as ‘Heminge’ in his signature to the dedication of the First Folio
-of Shakespeare’s plays, and as ‘Hemmings’ in the actor-list in the
-same volume, is known to have had a wife Rebecca, and may fairly be
-identified with the ‘John Hemminge, gent.’ of St. Mary Cornhill,
-who was married on 10 March 1588 to Rebecca Knell, widow, relict of
-William Knell, gent., late of St. Mary Aldermanbury. In the same parish
-William Knell had married Rebecca Edwards on 30 January 1586, and an
-older William Knell had been buried on 24 September 1578.[958] One
-of these was not improbably the early actor celebrated by Heywood.
-Malone found a family of Heming at Shottery, and conjectured that of
-this family John was born at some date earlier than the opening of
-the Stratford-on-Avon register in 1558.[959] But this is rendered
-improbable by a confirmation of arms in 1629 to ‘John Hemings of London
-Gent. of long tyme Servant to Queen Elizabeth of happie Memory, also to
-King James hir Royal Successor and to King Charles his Sonne’, in which
-he is described as ‘Sonne and Heire of George Hemings of Draytwiche
-in the Countye of Worcester Gent.’[960] There seems little reason to
-doubt that this John Hemings is the player. He very probably began his
-theatrical career with the Queen’s company, to which also Knell had
-belonged. By May 1593, however, he had joined Strange’s men, from whom
-he passed to the Chamberlain’s men, probably on the original formation
-in 1594. Of this company, afterwards the King’s men, he remained a
-member to the end of his career. He appears in all the official lists
-of the company up to 1629, and regularly acted as their payee for
-Court performances, generally with a colleague from 1596 to 1601, and
-thereafter alone. This and his prominence in the negotiations of the
-company and the lawsuits arising out of them, suggest that he acted as
-their business manager. As an actor he appears in all the casts up to
-_Catiline_ in 1611, but not thereafter; possibly he may have resigned
-acting, and devoted himself to business. The unreliable John Roberts,
-_Answer to Pope_ (1729), conjectures that he was a ‘tragedian’. Malone
-had seen a statement in some tract of which he had forgotten the title,
-that he was the original performer of Falstaff.[961] The lines on the
-burning of the Globe in 1613 thus describe him:
-
- Then with swolne eyes, like druncken Flemminges,
- Distressed stood old stuttering Heminges.
-
-He is ‘old Master Hemings’ in Jonson’s _Masque of Christmas_ (1616).
-He lent his ‘boy’ John Rice (q.v.) to the Merchant Taylors for their
-entertainment of James on 16 July 1607, and another ‘boy’ for Chapman’s
-mask of 1613. He is named as a legatee and overseer in the will of
-Augustine Phillips in 1605, and as executor in the event of the widow’s
-re-marriage; also as a trustee in the will of Alexander Cooke, who
-calls him his ‘master’, in 1614; as a witness in that of Richard
-Cowley in 1618; as a legatee in that of Shakespeare in 1616; and as
-a legatee and overseer in those of Underwood in 1624 and of Condell
-in 1627. He was appointed a trustee for Shakespeare’s Blackfriars
-property in 1613,[962] and acted with Condell as editor of the First
-Folio of the plays in 1623. This fact is probably the origin of the
-statement of Roberts that he was engaged with Condell in business as
-a printer. He filled various parochial posts from 1608 to 1619 in
-St. Mary’s, Aldermanbury, and the registers contain records of the
-following children: Alice (bapt. 10 November 1590, married John Atkins
-11 February 1612), Mary (bapt. 26 May 1592, bur. 9 August 1592), Judith
-(bapt. 29 August 1593), Thomasine (bapt. 15 January 1595), Joan (bapt.
-2 May 1596), John (bapt. 12 August 1599), Beavis (bapt. 24 May 1601),
-William (bapt. 3 October 1602), George (bapt. 12 Feb. 1604), Rebecca
-(bapt. 4 February 1605), Elizabeth (bapt. 6 March 1608), Mary (bapt. 21
-June 1611, bur. 23 July 1611).[963] In the same parish ‘John Heminge,
-player’ was himself buried on 12 October 1630, beside his wife Rebecca,
-who preceded him on 2 September 1619. He is registered as a ‘stranger’
-and was therefore probably residing elsewhere. In his will, made on
-9 October, he describes himself as ‘citizen and grocer of London’,
-appoints his son William executor and trustee for his unmarried and
-unadvanced children, and Cuthbert Burbadge and ‘Mr. Rice’, possibly the
-actor, overseers, and leaves legacies to his daughters Rebecca, wife of
-Captain William Smith, Margaret, wife of Mr. Thomas Sheppard, who is
-not mentioned in the register, Elizabeth, and Mrs. Merefield, and to
-his son-in-law Atkins ‘and his now wife’, and his grandchild Richard
-Atkins. He also leaves 10_s._ for a ring ‘unto every of my fellows
-and sharers, his majesties servants.[964] William Heminges went to
-Westminster and Christ Church, and became a playwright.[965] Unnamed
-in the will is Thomasine, who may have been dead, but certainly had
-quarrelled seriously with her father. She had married William Ostler of
-the King’s men in 1611 and her son Beaumont was baptized at St. Mary’s,
-Aldermanbury, on 18 May 1612. Ostler died intestate on 16 December
-1614 in possession of shares in the leases both of the Globe and the
-Blackfriars. These passed of right to Thomasine as his administratrix,
-and formed all the provision left for her maintenance and her husband’s
-debts. The leases, however, passed into the hands of Heminges, who
-retained them and asserted that Ostler had created a trust, of which
-Thomasine declared that she knew nothing. On 20 September 1615 she
-entered a bill in Chancery against her father, and subpœnaed him to
-appear during the coming Michaelmas term. On 26 September Heminges
-promised that if she would withdraw her suit, and would also ‘doe her
-dutie’ to him and to her mother Rebecca, he would satisfy her to the
-value of the shares. Thomasine states that on the same day kneeling and
-in tears she made her submission at her father’s house in Aldermanbury.
-She also stayed her suit, but Heminges, although called upon to fulfil
-his promise on 5 October, failed to do so, and on 9 October Thomasine
-brought a common law action against him for damages to the amount of
-£600, which she estimated to be the value of the shares.[966] The issue
-of the case is unknown, but it would seem probable from the _Sharers
-Papers_ of 1635 that Heminges succeeded in retaining the shares, and
-that at his death they passed to his son William. Professor Wallace
-states that in 1616 Thomasine Ostler was involved in another lawsuit
-with Walter Raleigh, son of Sir Walter, and obtained a verdict of £250
-against him for insult and slander. One way and another, Heminges seems
-to have acquired a considerable financial interest in the Globe and
-Blackfriars. He had an original seventh of a moiety of the Globe lease
-in 1599, and an original seventh of the Blackfriars lease in 1608. But
-as executor to Phillips (q.v.) and otherwise he had opportunities of
-adding to these holdings. The _Sharers Papers_ show that at his death
-he had four sixteenths of the Globe and probably two eighths of the
-Blackfriars; and these, or some of them, he had enjoyed ‘thirty yeeres
-without any molestacion, beeing the most of the sayd yeeres both player
-and houskeeper, and after hee gave over playing diverse yeeres’. In
-_Witter v. Heminges and Condell_ he is described as being in 1619 of
-‘greate lyveinge wealth and power’.[967] The play-house shares seem
-to have been the chief part of the property left by his will. They
-passed to William Heminges as his executor. He seems to have gradually
-disposed of them, first selling one share in the Globe by arrangement
-with the company to Taylor and Lowin, and later, by transactions which
-some of his fellows resented, one share in each house to John Shank
-during 1633 for £156, and the remaining shares also to John Shank
-during 1634, for £350. He was then in difficulties, and Shank disbursed
-additional small sums to him in prison. It was these sales to Shank
-which brought about the petition to the Lord Chamberlain recorded in
-the _Sharers Papers_.
-
-HENSLOWE, FRANCIS. Queen’s, 1594; Lennox’s, 1605. He was son of Richard
-and nephew of Philip Henslowe, and various entries in the diary and
-other Dulwich MSS. record his imprisonments, more than once on criminal
-charges, his employment during 1593–4 in his uncle’s pawnbroking, and
-his loans, one of which on 1 June 1595 was of £9 ‘to laye downe for his
-hallfe share with the company which he dothe playe with all’ (H. i. 6),
-conceivably, as Dr. Greg suggests, some company other than the Queen’s,
-in which he had already acquired a half share in 1594. He dwelt in
-the Clink in 1594, took a house called the Upper Ground on Bankside
-in 1597, and was of St. George’s, Southwark, in 1606, in which year,
-between 30 March and 6 October, both he and his wife died (H. ii. 277).
-
-HENSLOWE, PHILIP. Owner of Rose, Fortune, Hope, and perhaps lessee of
-Whitefriars; cf. ch. xi.
-
-HERIOT, HENRY. Interluders, 1547–52.
-
-HEYWOOD, JOHN. For his possible connexion with Paul’s, cf. ch. xii,
-s.v. Chapel.
-
-HEYWOOD, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1598; Worcester’s Anne’s, 1602–19, and
-dramatist.
-
-HINSTOCK, ROBERT. Interluders, 1538–51.
-
-HOBBES, THOMAS. Charles’s, 1610, 1616–25. He lived at the upper end of
-Shoreditch in 1623 (J. 348).
-
-HOLE, RICHARD. Interluders, 1526–30.
-
-HOLLAND, J. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.
-
-HOLT, JAMES. Anne’s, 1604–19.
-
-HOLT, JOHN. A ‘momer’, who helped the Westminster boys in 1561,
-probably identical with the Yeoman of the Revels of that name (cf. ch.
-iii), who helped them in 1564–5.
-
-HOLZHEW, BEHRENDT. Germany, 1614–15.
-
-HOVELL, WILLIAM. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615.
-
-HOWARD, THOMAS. A ‘player’ named in St. Saviour’s records _c._
-1600 (Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi).
-
-HUDSON, RICHARD. Weaver of Hutton Bushell, Yorks, unlicensed player,
-1612 (cf. ch. ix, p. 305).
-
-HÜLL, JOHN. Germany, 1600–1.
-
-HUNNIS, JOHN. A ‘ghost-name’ by an error for the following.
-
-HUNNIS, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1566–97, and dramatist.
-
-HUNT (HONTE), THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1599, 1602; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611 (H.
-ii. 285).
-
-HUNTLEY, DICK. Actor in _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_
-(_vide_ l. 14).
-
-HUSE, RICHARD. Paul’s chorister, >1582.
-
-IVY, NICHOLAS. Chapel, 1509.
-
-JEFFES, ANTHONY. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597;
-Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1597–>1613. Anthony, son of Richard Jeffes,
-baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 14 December 1578, may be the
-same who married Faith Jones there on 19 February 1601. Children of
-Anthony Jeffes ‘player’ are recorded in the registers of St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, from 11 June 1602 to 1 May 1609; in later entries from 30
-May 1610 to 30 October 1616, Anthony is called ‘brewer’ (H. ii. 286;
-_Bodl._).
-
-JEFFES, HUMPHREY. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597;
-Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1616<. He was buried at St.
-Giles’s, 21 August 1618. A daughter Mary was baptized at St. Saviour’s,
-25 January 1601 (H. ii. 287; Collier, _Actors_, xxx).
-
-JOHNSON, WILLIAM. Leicester’s, 1572–4; Queen’s, 1583, 1587–8. The
-baptismal entries at St. Giles’s include on 10 February 1587 ‘Comedia,
-baseborne daughter of Alice Bowker, and, as she saithe, the father’s
-name is William Johnson, one of the Queen’s plaiers’, and the burials
-on 3 March 1593 ‘Comedia, daughter of William Johnson, player’. Is
-he the William Johnson, vintner, who was trustee of Shakespeare’s
-Blackfriars property 1613–18 (Lee, 459, 493)?
-
-JONES, RICHARD. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s (?), >1589; Germany,
-1592–3; Admiral’s, 1594–6; Pembroke’s, 1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602;
-Revels patentee, 1610; Germany (?), 1615; Germany, 1620, 1622–4. His
-wife Harris inherited a lease of the Leopard’s Head in Shoreditch from
-her father in 1620. A Richard Jones is traceable in the Southwark
-token-books from 1588 to 1607 and may or may not be the same who
-married Anne Jube there on 14 February 1602 (H. ii. 288; _H. P._
-94; _Bodl._).
-
-JONES, ROBERT. Germany, 1602; Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615.
-
-JONNS, DANIEL. Denmark, 1586.
-
-JONSON, BENJAMIN. Pembroke’s (?), 1597; Chamberlain’s (?), _c._
-1598; and dramatist.
-
-JUBY, EDWARD. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1594–1618, Fortune
-lessee, 1618. An Edward Juby is traceable during 1598 to 1619 in the
-token-books of St. Saviour’s, Southwark. In the last year he is marked
-‘dead’, and his burial was registered on 20 November 1618. In 1610 and
-1614 he filled parish offices. He may fairly be identified with the
-‘player’ whose children occur in the registers from 3 June 1599 to 15
-September 1614. His widow Francis held his share of the Fortune lease
-in 1622 (H. ii. 290; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi; _Bodl._).
-
-JUBY, RICHARD. Admiral’s, 1602. His son Richard was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s, Southwark, on 1 May 1602 (_Bodl._).
-
-JUBY, WILLIAM (?). Admiral’s, 1599–1602 (H. ii. 290).
-
-JUGLER, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-KEMP, JOHN. Germany, 1601.
-
-KEMPE, WILLIAM, cannot be securely identified or connected with
-any one of various homonyms who have been traced in _D. N. B._ and
-elsewhere.[968] He probably emerges as one of Leicester’s men in the
-Low Countries during 1585–6 and thence made his way to Denmark. He
-was in London and had already won a comic reputation by 1590 when the
-dedication of _An Almond for a Parrat_ (Nashe, iii. 341), ‘To that
-most Comicall and conceited Caualeire Monsieur du Kempe, Jestmonger
-and Vice-gerent generall to the Ghost of Dicke Tarlton,’ tells how
-the anonymous author, possibly Nashe, had been asked by ‘that famous
-Francatrip’ Harlicken’ at Bergamo in the previous summer, whether
-he knew ‘any such Parabolano here in London as Signior Chiarlatano
-Kempino’ of whose ‘pleasance’ Harlicken had heard ‘report’. In _Four
-Letters Confuted_ (1592) Nashe says of an action of Harvey’s, ‘Will
-Kempe, I mistrust it will fall to thy lot for a merriment, one of these
-dayes’ (i. 287). An example of Kempe’s merriments is to be found in
-sc. xii of _A Knack to Know a Knave_ (1594) played by Strange’s men,
-to whom Kempe belonged by 1593. He was also famous for his jigs. Four
-of these are entered in the Stationers’ Register during 1591–5 (cf.
-ch. xviii) but are not preserved, and ‘Kemps jiggs’ is the heading to
-some music collected by John Dowland and preserved in _Camb. Univ.
-Libr. MS._ Dd. ii. 11 (cf. Halliwell, _MS. Rarities_, 8). Marston (iii.
-372), _Scourge of Villainy_ (1598), sat. xi. 30, ‘the orbs celestial
-Will dance Kempe’s jig,’ and E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), sat. v,
-‘Whores, bedles, bawdes, and sergeants filthily Chaunt Kemps Jigge,
-or the Burgonians tragedy,’ show his vogue. In 1594–5 he was one
-of the recently constituted Chamberlain’s men and the intrusion of
-his name into stage-directions to _R. J._ iv. 5. 102 (Q_{2}) and _M.
-Ado_, iv. 2, shows that he played Peter in the one play and Dogberry
-in the other. Oddly enough, one of his speeches (iv. 2. 4) in _M.
-Ado_ is assigned to ‘Andrew’, possibly a generic name for a clown or
-‘merry-Andrew’. He is in the actor-list of _Every Man in his Humour_
-(1598) but not in that of _Every Man out of his Humour_ (1599), and
-this fact, together with his sale of his share in the Globe soon after
-the lease of 21 February 1599 was signed, points to his leaving the
-company. ‘Would I had one of Kemps shooes to throw after you,’ says a
-speaker in _E. M. O._ IV. v (q.v.). This may be an allusion to some
-clownery by Kempe, perhaps in a performance with some other company
-at the Curtain in the autumn of 1599 after the Chamberlain’s left
-that house; or, less probably, to Kempe’s famous morris-dance for a
-wager from London to Norwich, at the end of which he hung his buskins
-in the Guildhall, for this began on 11 February 1600 and ended on 11
-March, the year being fixed by the mayoralty (1599–1600) of Roger Weld
-at Norwich. Another allusion to ‘Kemps morice’ is in _Jack Drum’s
-Entertainment_ (1600), i. 45. Dudley Carleton wrote to John Chamberlain
-on 13 October 1600 (_S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxxv. 93) that on his way from
-Witham to Englefield ‘we met a company of mad wenches, whereof M^{rs}.
-Mary Wroughton and young Stafford were ringleaders, who travelled
-from house to house, and to some places where they were little known,
-attended with a concert of musicians, as if they had undertaken the
-like adventure as Kemp did from London to Norwich’. Kempe’s own account
-of his adventure was entered in the Stationers’ Register as ‘Kemps
-morris to Norwiche’ on 22 April 1600 (Arber, iii. 160). In the Epistle
-to Anne Fitton, whom, possibly by confusion with her sister Mary,
-he describes as maid of honour to Elizabeth, he refers to unentered
-ballads on the subject, and when he says that ‘I haue daunst my selfe
-out of the world’ is not improbably jesting on his departure from the
-Globe. At the end he foreshadows crossing to Calais, which he no doubt
-did. A John Kemp, who was in charge of a touring company, which had
-been in Holland and reached Münster by November 1601, may have been a
-relative. But William Kempe had returned to England, after visiting
-Italy as well as Germany, on 2 September 1601, as is shown by the
-following interpolation in a diary of one William Smith of Abingdon, in
-_Sloane MS._ 414, f. 56 (wrongly cited by Halliwell, _Ludus Coventriae_
-410, as _Sloane MS._ 392, f. 401; cf. F. J. Furnivall in _N.S.S. Trans.
-1880–6_, 65):
-
- ‘Sep. 2. Kemp, mimus quidam, qui peregrinationem quandam in
- Germaniam et Italiam instituerat, post multos errores, et
- infortunia sua, reversus: multa refert de Anthonio Sherley,
- equite aurato, quem Romae (legatum Persicum agentem) convenerat.’
-
-Possibly Kempe rejoined the Chamberlain’s for a while. In _3 Parnassus_
-(? January 1602), iv. 3, he is introduced as a fellow of Burbadge and
-Shakespeare, and greeted with allusions to his ‘dancing the morrice
-ouer the Alpes’ and ‘the Emperour of Germany’. But on 10 March 1602
-he had a loan from Henslowe, and during the winter of 1602–3 he was
-certainly one of Worcester’s men. The dates do not lend support to the
-suggestion of Fleay, ii. 20, that he had already in 1599–1600 been at
-the Rose with Pembroke’s men. After the end of Elizabeth’s reign he
-is not traceable, and he is mentioned as dead in Heywood, _Apology_
-(_c._ 1608), and dead or retired in Dekker, _Gull’s Hornbook_ (1609),
-11, ‘Tarlton, Kemp, nor Singer, nor all the litter of fools that now
-come drawling behind them, never played the clown more naturally.’ A
-William Kempe is recorded in token-books of St. Saviour’s, Southwark,
-as living in Samson’s Rents in 1595, 1596, 1598, and 1599, in Langley’s
-New Rents in 1602, and later near the old play-house (Collier,
-iii. 351, and _Bodl._; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi). Collier, but not
-Rendle, gives the date ‘1605’ for the last entry, probably with a
-view to supporting his notice of Kempe, as playing with Armin at the
-Blackfriars (q.v.) in 1605, which is doubtless a fabrication. On the
-other hand, though the date is plausible, the notice of ‘Kempe a man’
-as buried at St. Saviour’s on 2 November 1603 (Rendle, xxvii) is not
-so worded as to be absolutely conclusive. The name was a common one,
-and Collier, _Actors_, xxxvi, gives notices of it from other parishes.
-In T. Weelkes, _Ayres on Phantasticke Sprites_ (1608), it is said of
-Kempe that ‘into France He took pains to skip it’. His visit to Venice
-and meeting with Sherley are dramatized in _Travels of Three English
-Brothers_ (1607) and apparently misdated after the _Englands Joy_ of
-November 1602. Finally, an epitaph upon him is in R. Braithwaite,
-_Remains after Death_ (1618), sig. F 8^v, which suggests that he died
-not long after his morris.
-
-KENDALL, THOMAS. Blackfriars manager, 1602; Revels patentee, 1604. He
-died in 1608.
-
-KENDALL, WILLIAM. Admiral’s, 1597–8; Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, >1614. His
-son John was baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 5 January 1615
-(_Bodl._).
-
-KEYSAR, ROBERT. Revels manager, 1606–10 (?); Blackfriars lessee,
-1606–8. To him was written the epistle to _K. B. P._
-
-KING, ARTHUR. Berkeley’s, 1581.
-
-KING, THOMAS. Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.
-
-KINGMAN (KINGSMAN), PHILIP. Germany, 1596; Porter’s Hall patentee,
-1615. ‘M^r Kyngman the elder’ was a witness for Henslowe on 16 April
-1599 (H. i. 205).
-
-KINGSMAN, ROBERT. Germany, 1599, 1601; afterwards a tradesman in
-Strassburg, 1606 (?), 1618, 1626.
-
-KIRCK (KIRCKMANN), JOHN. Denmark, 1579–80.
-
-KIRKHAM, EDWARD. Chapel manager, 1602; Revels patentee, 1604–6. He is
-probably the Yeoman of the Revels (cf. ch. iii).
-
-KITE, JOHN. Gentleman of Chapel, 1508; afterwards Abp. of Armagh.
-
-KNAGGES, RICHARD. Of Moorsham, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 305).
-
-KNELL, WILLIAM (?). Queen’s, >1588. A Rebecca, widow of William Knell,
-married John Heminges (q.v.), 10 March 1588. Heywood notes Knell as
-before his time. Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_ (1592, _Works_, i. 215),
-names him with Tarlton, Alleyn, and Bentley, and he is coupled with
-Bentley in the undated challenge to Alleyn (q.v.) to play one of their
-parts.
-
-KNIGHT, ROBERT. Paul’s chorister, >1582.
-
-KOSTRESSEN, JOHAN, musician. Germany, 1623.
-
-KRAFFT, JOHN. Denmark, 1579–80.
-
-LANEHAM, JOHN. Leicester’s, 1572–4; Queen’s, 1583, 1588–91. Heywood
-notes him as before his time. Was he related to Robert Laneham, Keeper
-of the Council Chamber door, who described the Kenilworth entertainment
-(cf. ch. xxiv) in 1575?
-
-LANMAN, HENRY. Owner of Curtain, 1581–92. Adams, 80, suggests,
-apparently from the similarity of the names, that he was a brother of
-John Laneham.
-
-LEBERWURST, HANS. Germany, 1613.
-
-LEDBETTER, ROBERT. Admiral’s, 1597; Germany, 1599, 1601, 1606.
-
-LEE, ROBERT. Admiral’s (?), >1591; Anne’s, 1604–19; Revels Company,
-1622. He had a business transaction with Edward and John Alleyn and
-Thomas Goodale (q.v.) in 1593. He lived in Clerkenwell Close in 1623
-(H. ii. 294; J. 347; Murray, i. 198).
-
-LEEKE, DAVID. Possibly an actor at Canterbury, c. 1571 (_3
-Library_, ix. 253).
-
-LEVESON, ROBERT. Oxford’s, 1580.
-
-LISTER, EDWARD. Weaver of Allerston, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612
-(cf. ch. ix, p. 305).
-
-LONG, NICHOLAS. Revels (provincial) manager, 1612, 1617; Lady
-Elizabeth’s, 1614–15. For his later career, cf. Murray, i. 192, 361;
-ii. 101. He was buried at St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, on 21 January 1622
-(_Bodl._).
-
-LOVEKYN, ARTHUR. Chapel, 1509–13.
-
-LOWIN, JOHN, was a member of Worcester’s company during their season of
-1602–3 with Henslowe at the Rose. On 12 March 1603 Henslowe lent him
-money to go into the country with the company, but during the course
-of the year he must have transferred his services to the King’s men,
-presumably as a hireling, since, although in the cast of _Sejanus_
-(1603) and the Induction to _Malcontent_ (1604) he is not in the
-official lists of 1603 and 1604. A portrait of him in the Ashmolean
-Museum at Oxford, has the inscription ‘1640, Aetat. 64’, and he may
-therefore be identified with the John, son of Richard Lowen, baptized
-at St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, on 9 December 1576. If so, his father
-seems to have been a carpenter, and he had a sister Susan and a brother
-William.[969] He remained through a long life with the King’s men,
-appearing in most of the casts, in the actor-list of the First Folio,
-and in the official lists from 1619 onwards. He played Bosola in _The
-Duchess of Malfi_. A pamphlet entitled _Conclusions upon Dances_ (1607)
-has a dedication to Lord Denny, dated 23 November 1606, and signed
-‘I. L. _Roscio_’. Collier claims to have found in a copy of this the
-note ‘By Jhon Lowin. Witnesseth Tho. D. 1610’.[970] A John Lowen
-married Joan Hall, widow, by licence, in St. Botolph’s, Bishopsgate,
-on 29 October 1607.[971] Shortly afterwards a John Lowin was paying a
-poor-rate of 2_d._ weekly in the liberty of the Clink. The Southwark
-token-books attest his residence ‘near the play-house’ and in other
-parts of the parish at various dates from 1601 to 1642.[972] He was
-overseer of Paris Garden in 1617–18.[973] But in 1623 he lived in
-Lambeth (J. 348). He is named as a legatee and overseer in the will
-of his ‘fellow’ John Underwood in 1624. It appears from the _Sharers
-Papers_ that he had no interest in the play-houses until after the
-death of Heminges in 1630, when he was admitted to purchase two
-sixteenths of the Globe and one eighth of the Blackfriars. From this
-time onwards he seems to have shared the business responsibilities of
-the company with Joseph Taylor. He was also prominent as an actor.[974]
-Wright enumerates amongst his parts Shakespeare’s Falstaff; but when
-Roberts adds Hamlet and Henry VIII, he is presumably guessing that
-Lowin was ‘fat and scant of breath’. He may have been the original
-Henry VIII, for Downes reports that Betterton was instructed in the
-part by Sir William Davenant, ‘who had it from old Mr. Lowen, that had
-his instructions from Mr. Shakespeare himself’.[975] Wright tells us
-that at the outbreak of civil war he was ‘superannuated’, and ‘in his
-latter days kept an inn (the Three Pigeons) at Brentford, where he dyed
-very old (for he was an actor of eminent note in the reign of King
-James the First), and his poverty was as great as his age’.[976] He
-signed with Taylor the dedication to Fletcher’s _The Wild-goose Chase_
-in 1652, the publication of which was an attempt to relieve their
-necessities. A ‘John Lewin’ who left a widow Martha, was buried at St.
-Martin’s-in-the-Fields on 18 March 1659, and a ‘John Lowen’ at St.
-Paul’s, Covent Garden, on 16 March 1669.[977] Probably a G. Lowin who
-played Barnaveldt’s daughter to Lowin’s Barnaveldt in 1619 was his son.
-
-LYLY, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1583; Oxford’s payee, 1584; and
-dramatist.
-
-MACHIN, RICHARD. Germany, 1600–3, 1605–6.
-
-MAGETT, STEPHEN. Admiral’s tireman, 1596, 1599 (?) (H. ii. 295).
-
-MARBECK, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-MARSHALL, CHARLES. Palsgrave’s (provincial), 1616.
-
-MARSTON, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1603–8, and dramatist.
-
-MARTINELLI (?), ANGELICA. Italians, >1598.
-
-MARTINELLI, DRUSIANO. Italians, 1578.
-
-MARTON, THOMAS. Chapel, 1602.
-
-MARTYN, WILLIAM. Payee for a company at Ipswich, 20 February 1572
-(Murray, ii. 290).
-
-MASON, JOHN. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.
-
-MASSEY (MASSYE), CHARLES. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–>1635
-(?); Fortune lessee, 1618–>1635; and dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii). He is
-probably the Charles Marcy or Mercy, variously described as ‘player’,
-‘gentleman’, and ‘yeoman’ in the registers of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate,
-from 30 December 1610 to 20 July 1625. He died before 6 December 1635,
-leaving a widow Elianor, and had a cousin Ned Collins (H. ii. 296;
-_Bodl._).
-
-MAXE, ROBERT. Chapel, 1509–>1513.
-
-MAY, EDWARD. Interluders, 1494–1503.
-
-MAY, NATHAN. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615. Possibly the name, as
-given in Murray, ii. 340, may be a mistake for Clay (q.v.).
-
-MAYLER, GEORGE. Interluders, 1525–40.
-
-MEADE, JACOB. Keeper of the Bears, by 1599, and partner with Henslowe
-in the Bear Garden and Hope. He was buried at St. Saviour’s on 9 July
-1624 (_Bodl._).
-
-MELYONEK, JOHN. Master of Chapel (?), 1483–5.
-
-MERYELL, HENRY. Chapel, 1509.
-
-MILS (MYLLES), TOBIAS. Queen’s, 1583. Heywood notes him as before his
-time. He was buried as ‘one of the Queenes Maiesties players’ at St.
-Olave’s, Southwark, on 11 July 1585, and his sons William and Toby were
-baptized on 3 January 1584 and 5 September 1585 (_Bodl._). Probably,
-therefore, ‘one Myles, one of my lord of Summersettes players’,
-whose testimony to the value of Bath waters for the gout is cited in
-a hydropathic treatise of 1557 (Collier, i. 139), was of an older
-generation. Somerset was beheaded on 22 January 1552. Robert Cecil had
-a Secretary Milles, whose son Tobias was buried at Chelsea on 9 April
-1599 (R. Davies, _Chelsea Old Church_, 296).
-
-MOON, PETER. Payee for a company of players at Ipswich, 1562 (Murray,
-ii. 287).
-
-MOORE, JOSEPH. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611; 1616–29. He lived at the Harrow
-in Barbican in 1623 (Murray, i. 252; J. 347).
-
-MOTTERAM, JOHN. Chapel, 1600–1.
-
-MUFFORD, JOHN. Beauchamp’s, 10 June 1590 (Murray, ii. 337).
-
-MULCASTER (MONCASTER), RICHARD. Head Master of Merchant Taylors,
-1561–86; of St. Paul’s Grammar School, 1596–1608.
-
-MUNDAY, ANTONY. A player before 1582, according to a contemporary
-pamphlet, possibly with Oxford’s, whose ‘servant’ he was in 1580, and
-dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii).
-
-NASION. Paul’s chorister, >1582.
-
-‘NED.’ Musician (?) in _Summer’s Last Will and Testament, prol._ 7.
-
-‘NED.’ Strange’s (?), 1590–1.
-
-NETHE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-NETHERSALL, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-NEWARK, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1493–1509.
-
-NEWMAN, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1581–3.
-
-NEWTON, JOHN. Charles’s, 1610, 1616, 1619, 1625.
-
-‘NICK.’ Admiral’s, 1601–3. See also TOOLEY.
-
-NILL, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose daughter Alice was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 13 August 1601 (_Bodl._).
-
-NORWOOD. Paul’s, 1599.
-
-NYCOWLLES, ROBERT. A ‘player’ who witnessed a loan to Francis Henslowe
-on 1 June 1595 (H. i. 6).
-
-OFFLEY, THOMAS. Paul’s, _c._ 1522.
-
-OSTLER, WILLIAM, began his career as a boy actor in the Chapel company.
-He took a part in Jonson’s _Poetaster_ in 1601. From the _Sharers
-Papers_ we learn that on growing up he was, like Field and Underwood,
-‘taken to strengthen the King’s service’.[978] He first appears amongst
-the King’s men in the cast of Jonson’s _The Alchemist_ in 1610, and
-played also in _Catiline_, _The Captain_, _The Duchess of Malfi_, in
-which he took the part of Antonio, _Valentinian_, and _Bonduca_. The
-following epigram in John Davies, _Scourge of Folly_ (_c._ 1611),
-attests his fame and his participation in some forgotten brawl:
-
- _To the Roscius of these Times, Mr. W. Ostler._
-
- Ostler, thou took’st a knock thou would’st have giv’n,
- Neere sent thee to thy latest home: but O!
- Where was thine action, when thy crown was riv’n,
- Sole King of Actors! then wast idle? No:
- Thou hadst it, for thou would’st bee doing? Thus
- Good actors deeds are oft most dangerous;
- But if thou plaist thy dying part as well
- As thy stage parts, thou hast no part in hell.
-
-Ostler married Thomasine, daughter of John Heminges, in 1611. His son
-Beaumont was baptized at St. Mary’s, Aldermanbury, on 18 May 1612.[979]
-He acquired shares in the Blackfriars on 20 May 1611, and the Globe on
-20 February 1612, and died on 16 December 1614, leaving his shares a
-subject for litigation between his widow and Heminges (q.v.).
-
-PAGE, OLIVER. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).
-
-PALLANT, ROBERT. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–19;
-Lady Elizabeth’s, 1614; Charles’s, 1616; King’s, 1619, unless, indeed,
-the R. Pallant who played the female part of Cariola in _Duchess of
-Malfi_ was of a younger generation. This is not unlikely, for while
-the St. Saviour’s registers record the burial of Robert Pallant, ‘a
-man,’ on 4 September 1619, the token-books give the name in 1621 as
-well as in 1612 and 1616. Ephraim and Hanburye, sons of Robert Pallant
-‘player’, were baptized there on 1 January 1611 and 3 July 1614
-respectively. There were others earlier. Pallant wrote commendatory
-verses for Heywood’s _Apology_ (1612), and is noted as visiting
-Henslowe on his death-bed on 6 January 1616 (H. ii. 20, 300; _Bodl._).
-
-PANT, THOMAS. Unlicensed player, 1607–10 (cf. ch. ix, p. 304).
-
-PARR, WILLIAM. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1602–20.
-
-PARROWE (PARLOWE), RICHARD. Interluders, 1538–45.
-
-PARSELEY, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-PARSONS, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1597, 1602 (H. ii. 301).
-
-PATESON, WILLIAM. Worcester’s, 1584.
-
-PAVY. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-PAVY, SALATHIEL (SALMON). Chapel, 1600–3. An epitaph on him is in
-Jonson’s _Epigrams_ (1616), cxx, which gives his age at death, after
-three years of playing, as 13. He was ‘apprentice to one Peerce’, when
-he was pressed for the Chapel. This is not likely to have been the
-Master of Paul’s, from whom it would have been rash to take a boy.
-
-PAYNE, ROBERT. Revels patentee, 1604.
-
-PEACOCKE, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-PEARCE (PIERS), EDWARD. Gentleman of Chapel, 1589; Master of Paul’s,
-1600.
-
-PEDEL, ABRAHAM. Germany, 1614–15; Palsgrave’s, 1623. He lived at George
-Alley in Golden Lane in 1623 (J. 348, 350).
-
-PEDEL (BEHEL, BIEL), JACOB. Germany, 1597, 1614–15.
-
-PEDEL, WILLIAM. Holland, 1608; Germany, 1614–15. Children of a William
-Peadle, variously described as ‘tumbler’ and ‘gentleman’, were baptized
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, in 1610, 1617, and 1629 (_Bodl._).
-
-PENN, WILLIAM. Revels, 1609; Charles’s, 1616, 1625. He lived at George
-Alley, Golden Lane, in 1623 and had children baptized and buried at St.
-Giles’s, Cripplegate, in 1636 (J. 347; _Bodl._).
-
-PENTON, FABIAN. Germany, 1602.
-
-PEPEREL, GILES. Possibly an actor in the _Bugbears_ of John Jeffere
-(cf. ch. xxiii).
-
-PERKIN, JOHN. Leicester’s, 1572–4. Is he the Parkins who assisted
-George Ferrers as Lord of Misrule in 1552–3 (Feuillerat, _Edw. and
-Mary_, 120)?
-
-PERKINS, RICHARD. Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–19; for his later history,
-cf. Murray, i. 198, 200, 266. He wrote commendatory verses for
-Heywood’s _Apology_ (1612), and Webster praises his acting in
-_The White Devil_ (1612) in a note at the end of the print. His
-portrait is at Dulwich. He lived at the upper end of St. John’s Street
-in 1623 (H. ii. 301; J. 347).
-
-PERRY, WILLIAM. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615; Queen’s Revels
-manager, 1617.
-
-PERSJ (PERSTEN), ROBERT (RUPERT). Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.
-
-PERSONN, JOHANN. Denmark, 1579–80.
-
-PERY, ROBERT. Chapel, 1529–31.
-
-PERY, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1530.
-
-‘PETER’ (?). King’s. At _Taming of the Shrew_, iv. 4. 68, F_{1} has the
-s.d. ‘Enter Peter’, apparently a servant of Tranio, who does not speak.
-
-PFLUGBEIL, AUGUST. Germany, 1614–15.
-
-PHILIP, ROBERT. Chapel, 1514.
-
-PHILLIPPE, ROBERT. A ‘momer’, buried at St. Leonard’s, on 9 April 1559
-(Collier, _Actors_, 79). He might be identical with the foregoing.
-
-PHILLIPS, AUGUSTINE, is included in the 1593 list of Strange’s men,
-and played for them or the Admiral’s in _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ about
-1590–1 as ‘Mr. Phillipps’. Probably he joined the Chamberlain’s men
-on their formation in 1594. He appears in the actor-lists of 1598 and
-1599, was one of the original Globe shareholders of 1599, and on 18
-February 1601 gave evidence as to the performance of _Richard II_ by
-the company before the Essex rising. He is also in the official lists
-of the King’s men in 1603 and 1604, in the actor-list of _Sejanus_ in
-1603, and in that of the First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays. ‘Phillips
-his gygg of the slyppers’ was entered in the Stationers’ Register on
-26 May 1595 (cf. p. 552). It has been conjectured that Phillips was a
-brother-in-law of Alleyn, to whom Henslowe wrote on 28 September 1593,
-‘Your sister Phillipes & her husband hath leced two or thre owt of ther
-howsse, yt they in good health & doth hartily comend them unto you.’ If
-so, his wife was probably Elizabeth Woodward. But it is also possible
-that the family in question was that of one Edward Phillipes, who was
-also in relations with Henslowe and Alleyn.[980] An Augustine Phillipps
-buried at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, in 1592, was probably a relative
-of the actor, whose children the register of the same parish records
-as Magdalen (bapt. 29 September 1594), Rebecca (bapt. 11 July 1596),
-and Austen or Augustine (bapt. 29 November 1601, bur. 1 July 1604). The
-father is designated _histrio_, ‘player,’ or ‘player of interludes’.
-The parish token-books show that he dwelt in Horseshoe Court during
-1593 and 1595, thereafter near the Swan in Paris Garden, in Montagu
-Close during 1601, in ‘Bradshaw’s Rents’ during 1602, and in Horseshoe
-Court again during 1604.[981] But by 4 May 1605, when he made his will,
-he was of Mortlake, Surrey, where he had a house and land of which
-he had lately purchased the lease.[982] Doubtless he had prospered.
-A note of heraldic irregularities delivered by William Smith, Rouge
-dragon, to the Earl of Northampton as commissioner for the Earl Marshal
-states that ‘Phillipps the player had graven in a gold ring the armes
-of S^r W^m Phillipp, Lord Bardolph, with the said L. Bardolph’s cote
-quartred, which I shewed to M^r. York at a small gravers shopp in
-Foster Lane’.[983] The will mentions Phillips’s wife, whose name was
-not Elizabeth but Anne, his daughters Magdalen, Rebecca, Anne, and
-Elizabeth, his mother Agnes Bennett, his brothers William and James
-Webb, his sister Margery Borne, and her sons Miles and Philipps, and
-his sister Elizabeth Gough. Elizabeth had been married at St. Saviour’s
-in 1603, to Robert Gough (q.v.) of the King’s men, who witnesses the
-will.[984] Margery Borne may have been the wife of William Borne
-_alias_ Bird (q.v.) of the Prince’s men. Presumably the Webbs were his
-brothers-in-law, in which case his wife was obviously not a Woodward.
-There are legacies of £5 to ‘the hyred men of the company which I am
-of’, of 30_s._ pieces to his ‘fellows’ William Shakespeare and Henry
-Condell, and his ‘servant’ Christopher Beeston, of 20_s._ pieces
-to his ‘fellows’ Laurence Fletcher, Robert Armin, Richard Cowley,
-Alexander Cook and Nicholas Tooley, of silver bowls to John Heminges,
-Richard Burbadge, and William Sly, and of £20 to Timothy Whithorne.
-Samuel Gilburne, ‘my late apprentice’ is to have 40_s._ and ‘my mouse
-colloured velvit hose and a white taffety dublet, a blacke taffety
-sute, my purple cloke, sword, and dagger, and my base viall’. James
-Sands ‘my apprentice’ is to have 40_s._ and ‘a citterne, a bandore and
-a lute’. The widow is appointed executrix, but if she re-marries she
-is to have ‘no parte or porcion of my goods or chattells’, and is to
-be replaced by the overseers of the will, Heminges, Richard Burbadge,
-Sly, and Whithorne. After proving the will on 13 May 1605, the widow
-did in fact re-marry, with John Witter, and it was proved again by John
-Heminges on 16 May 1607. His share in the Globe was subsequently the
-subject of litigation.[985] Heywood (_c._ 1608) praises his deserts
-with those of other dead actors.
-
-PICKERING, JAMES. Mason of Bowlby, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612 (cf.
-ch. ix, p. 305).
-
-PLUMMER, JOHN. Master of Chapel, 1444–55.
-
-POKELEY, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-POLE. Gate-keeper at Paul’s, 1582.
-
-POPE, THOMAS, was one of the English players, who visited Denmark and
-Germany in 1586 and 1587. He is in the 1593 list of Strange’s men and
-played as ‘Mr. Pope’ for them or the Admiral’s in _2 Deadly Sins_ about
-1590–1. He joined the Chamberlain’s men, probably on their foundation
-in 1594, was joint payee for them with Heminge from 1597–9, and appears
-in the actor-lists of 1598 and 1599. On 30 August 1598, William
-Bird borrowed 10_s._ of Henslowe, ‘to folowe the sewt agenst Thomas
-Poope’.[986] In 1600 he is mentioned, with Singer of the Admiral’s, by
-Samuel Rowlands in _The Letting of Humour’s Blood in the Head-Vein_,
-sat. iv:
-
- What meanes Singer then,
- And Pope, the clowne, to speak so boorish, when
- They counterfaite the clownes upon the Stage?
-
-He had an original fifth share of a moiety of the Globe, increased to a
-fourth on the retirement of Kempe. But he does not appear in the lists
-of the King’s men, and had therefore probably retired by 1603. On 22
-July of that year he made his will, which was proved on 13 February
-1604.[987] He leaves his interests in the Globe and Curtain to Mary
-Clark, _alias_ Wood, and Thomas Bromley, and legacies to Robert Gough
-and John Edmans. He mentions the house in Southwark, in which he
-dwelt, held with other tenements of the late Francis Langley; also his
-brothers John and William Pope, and his mother Agnes Webbe. This hardly
-justifies Collier in connecting him with the Webbes of Snitterfield,
-Shakespeare’s kin. Bazell Nicholl, scrivener, and John Wrench, are
-left executors. As in 1612 a sixth of the Globe was in the hands of
-Basil Nicoll and John and Mary Edmonds, it is probable that John
-Edmonds married Mary Clark. It appears from the Southwark token-books
-that one Pope lived in Blamer’s Rents during 1593, in Wrench’s Rents
-during 1595, and in Mr. Langley’s New Rents during 1596, 1598, 1600,
-and 1602.[988] Dr. Greg thinks that Thomas Pope, rather than a Morgan
-Pope who also had interests in Southwark, was the ‘Mr. Pope’ with whom
-Henslowe had an interview on 25 June 1603, ‘at the scryveners shope
-wher he lisse’, concerning the renewal of the lease of the Rose.[989]
-But Thomas Pope clearly lived in his own house. Collier (_Actors_,
-xxxvi) gives a marriage of a Thomas Pope and Elizabeth Baly at St.
-Botolph’s on 20 December 1584, but the indications of the will do not
-suggest a married man. William Smith complains that ‘Pope the player
-would have no other armes but the armes of Sir Thomas Pope, Chancelor
-of y^e Augmentations’.[990] Heywood mentions the ‘deserts’ of Pope in
-his _Apology_. He is included in the actor-list of the First Folio
-Shakespeare.
-
-POWLTON, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1584.
-
-PRICE, JOHN. Musician in Germany, 1609.
-
-PRICE (PRYOR?), RICHARD. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1600 (?), 1610,
-1613, 1622. He lived in White Cross Street in 1623, and records of his
-children are in the registers of St. Giles, Cripplegate, from 1620
-to 1627, where he is variously entered as ‘gentleman’, ‘yeoman’, and
-‘player’ (J. 348; _Bodl._).
-
-PROCTOR. Admiral’s, 1599.
-
-PRUN, PETER DE. Germany, 1594. He was of Brussels.
-
-PUDSEY, EDWARD. Germany, 1626. He was presumably the owner of the
-manuscript note-book from which extracts are given in R. Savage,
-_Stratford-upon-Avon Notebooks_ (1888), i; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Chapman,
-_Blind Beggar of Alexandria_.
-
-PULHAM, GEORGE. Anne’s, 1612.
-
-PYE, JOHN. A ‘momer’, whose son Samuel was baptized at St. Leonard’s,
-Shoreditch, on 28 May 1559 (_Bodl._).
-
-PYK (PIK, PYGE, PIGGE), JOHN. Strange’s, 1593; Admiral’s, 1597–9 (H.
-ii. 303).
-
-PYKMAN, PHILIP. Chapel, 1600–1.
-
-RADSTONE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-RASTALL, WILLIAM. Chapel manager, 1602. He died in 1608.
-
-RAWLYNS, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-READE, EMANUEL. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613; Anne’s, 1613 (?)-17.
-
-READING, WILLIAM. Interluders, 1559–63 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-REASON, GILBERT. Charles’s, 1610, 1616, 1625.
-
-REDFORD, JOHN. Master of Paul’s, _c._ 1540, and dramatist (cf.
-_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 454).
-
-REEVE, RALPH. Germany, 1603–9; Revels manager (provincial), 1611;
-Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615.
-
-REYNOLDS, ROBERT. Anne’s, 1616–17; Germany, 1616, 1618–20, 1626. He
-was known in Germany by the clown-name Pickleherring. He and his wife
-Jane were indicted for non-attendance at church in 1616 and 1617
-(Jeaffreson, ii. 120, 127).
-
-RICE, JOHN, was ‘boy’ to Heminges when he delivered a speech in
-Merchant Taylors’ hall on 16 July 1607, and must have been still
-with the King’s men when he took part as Corinea with Burbadge in
-the water-pageant of 31 May 1610. He became one of the original Lady
-Elizabeth’s men in 1611, and seems to have joined the King’s men again
-in 1619. The Southwark token-books indicate a John Rice as a resident
-in 1615, 1619, 1621, and 1623, with an ‘uxor’ in 1621, and another
-record names John Rice ‘of the Bankside’ amongst players in 1623.[991]
-He is not in the official list of May of that year, but played in _Sir
-John van Olden Barnavelt_ about August, and is in the official list of
-1621. He is traceable up to the list of 1625, but is not in that of
-1629. It is not improbable that he retired, and went into Orders, for
-Heminges, in his will of 1630, leaves 20_s._ to ‘John Rice, clerk, of
-St. Saviour’s in Southwark’, and also names ‘Mr. Rice’ as overseer.
-Rice is in the actor-list of the First Folio Shakespeare.
-
-‘ROBIN.’ Chapel, 1518.
-
-ROBINS (ROBINSON), WILLIAM. Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived on Clerkenwell
-Hill in 1623 (J. 348).
-
-ROBINSON, JAMES. Chapel manager, 1600.
-
-ROBINSON, RICHARD, first appears in the _Catiline_ actor-list of the
-King’s men in 1611, and as playing the Lady in a stage direction (l.
-1929) to _The Second Maiden’s Tragedy_ of the same year. In _The Devil
-is an Ass_ (1616), ii. 8. 64, Merecroft describes ‘Dicke Robinson’ as
-a lad, and as masquerading ‘drest like a lawyer’s wife’. I think it
-not impossible that he was a son of James Robinson, who was a member
-of the Children of the Chapel syndicate in 1600. If so, he may have
-been a Blackfriars boy. He played in _Bonduca_ (_c._ 1613), is in the
-1619 patent to the King’s men, and in the actor-list of the First Folio
-Shakespeare, and is traceable as a King’s man up to the Beaumont and
-Fletcher Folio of 1647. He may have married Richard Burbadge’s widow,
-who held shares in the Globe and Blackfriars as Mrs. Robinson in 1635.
-He owed Tooley £29 13_s._ when the latter made his will in 1623.
-According to Wright he was a comedian. The same author states that he
-took up arms for the King, and was killed by Major Harrison at the
-taking of Basing House, on 14 October 1645. A contemporary report of
-this event by Hugh Peters confirms the death of ‘Robinson, the player,
-who, a little before the storm, was known to be mocking and scorning
-the Parliament’. There were, however, other actors named Robinson, and
-probably this was one of them. If Richard had been killed in 1645, he
-could not have signed the dedication of the Beaumont and Fletcher plays
-in 1647. Moreover, the register of St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, records the
-burial of ‘Richard Robinson, a player’ on 23 March 1648.[992] He seems
-to have lived at the upper end of Shoreditch in 1623 (J. 347).
-
-ROBINSON, THOMAS. Germany, 1626.
-
-ROLL (ROE), JOHN. Interluders, 1530. He died in 1539.
-
-RONNER, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-ROSE. Henry’s, 1612, where his wife became (?) a gatherer (_H. P._
-63).
-
-ROSSETER, PHILIP. Whitefriars lessee, 1609–15; Revels patentee, 1610;
-Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615; Revels manager, 1617. He was one of the
-royal lutenists from Midsummer 1604 to Easter 1623, and published _A
-Booke of Ayres_ (1601) with Campion, who left him his property in 1620.
-He died on 5 May 1623 (_D. N. B._; _Chamber Accounts_).
-
-ROSSILL. Chamberlain’s, 1597.
-
-ROWLEY, SAMUEL. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1624 (?), and
-dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii; H. ii. 307).
-
-ROWLEY, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1602.
-
-ROWLEY, WILLIAM. Charles’s, 1610–19; King’s, 1623–5. But he remained
-technically a Prince’s man until the death of James in 1625 (Murray, i.
-162, 172, table).
-
-RUSSELL, JOHN. Gatherer for Palsgrave’s, _c._ 1617 (_H. P._
-28, 29, 85).
-
-RUTTER, WILLIAM. Interluders, 1503.
-
-SACKVILLE, THOMAS. Germany, 1592–3, 1597–1602. He used the clown-name
-Johannes Bouset, was a merchant in Frankfort, 1604–17, and died in 1628.
-
-‘SAM.’ Admiral’s, >1591.
-
-SANDERSON, GREGORY. Anne’s, 1617–19.
-
-SANDS, JAMES. King’s, 1605; Anne’s, _c._ 1617? He received legacies
-from Augustine Phillips (q.v.), to whom he was apprentice, in 1605 and
-from William Sly (q.v.) in 1608. A James Sands appears in the Southwark
-token-books in 1596, 1598, and 1612 (_Bodl._).
-
-SANDT, BERNHARDT. Germany, 1600–1.
-
-SAUNDERS, WILLIAM. Chapel, >1517.
-
-SAUSS, EVERHART. Netherlands, 1592.
-
-SAVAGE, JEROME. Warwick’s, 1575–9.
-
-SAVEREY, ABRAHAM. Lennox’s, 1605.
-
-SCHADLEUTNER, SEBASTIAN. Germany, 1623.
-
-SCARLETT, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose son Richard was baptized at St.
-Giles’s on 1 September, and buried on 19 September 1605 (_Bodl._).
-
-SCARLETT, RICHARD. A ‘player’, buried on 23 April 1609 at St. Giles’s,
-where his daughter Susan had been baptized on 11 February 1607 and his
-wife Marie buried on 12 February 1607. Several Scarletts were royal
-trumpeters--Edward, William, and William the younger in 1483, John in
-1509, Arthur in 1559–1603, John in 1677–9 (_Bodl._; _Chamber
-Accounts_; Lafontaine, 1, 3, 325, 341).
-
-SCOTT, JOHN. Interluders, 1503–28.
-
-SEBECK, HENRY. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1617.
-
-SEHAIS, JEHAN. France, 1598. Possibly the John Shaa, who witnessed
-an Admiral’s payment to Dekker, 24 November 1599 (H. i. 114). ‘John’
-appears for ‘Robert’ Shaw, probably by an error, in a play warrant of
-1600 as given in the P. C. Acts (cf. App. B).
-
-SHAKESPEARE, EDMOND. The burials at St. Saviour’s include, on 31
-December 1607, ‘Edmond Shakespeare, a player: in the church,’ which is
-expanded in a fee-book as ‘Edmund Shakespeare, a player, buried in the
-church, with a forenoone knell of the great bell, 20_s._ (Collier,
-_Actors_, xiv). Presumably this is the brother of William.
-
-SHAKESPEARE, EDWARD. The baptisms at St. Giles’s include, on 12 August
-1607, ‘Edward, sonne of Edward Schackspeere, Player: base borne’
-(Collier, _Actors_, xv; J. Hunter in _Addl. MS._ 24589, f.
-24).
-
-SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM. Strange’s, 1592; Pembroke’s (?), 1593; Sussex’s
-(?), 1594; Chamberlain’s-King’s, 1594–1616; and dramatist.
-
-SHAKSHAFTE, WILLIAM. Player (?) to Alexander Houghton, 1581 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 280).
-
-SHANBROOKE, JOHN. A ‘player’ buried on 17 Sept. 1618 at St. Giles’s,
-where his children appear in the registers from 10 June 1610 to 4 June
-1618 (_Bodl._).
-
-SHANK, JOHN, or SHANKS, for the name is variously spelt, describes
-himself to Lord Chamberlain Pembroke in the _Sharers Papers_ of 1635
-as ‘beeing an old man in this quality, who in his youth first served
-your noble father, and after that the late Queene Elizabeth, then King
-James, and now his royall Majestye’.[993] Presumably the Pembroke’s
-company in question was that of 1597–1600, and the Queen Elizabeth’s
-men the travelling company of the latter years of the reign. Shank’s
-account of his own career may be amplified from the records of his
-name in the 1610 list of Prince Henry’s men and in the patent issued
-to the same company when they became the Elector Palatine’s men in
-1613. He lived in Rochester Yard, Southwark, in 1605, but the register
-of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, shows him later in Golden Lane, and
-records several baptisms and burials of his children between 1610 and
-1629.[994] He had joined the King’s men between 1613 and 1619, as his
-name is in the patent of the latter year. It recurs in the official
-lists of the company up to 1629, but occasionally only in actor-lists
-up to 1631, including that of the First Folio Shakespeare. Amongst
-his ‘boyes’ or apprentices were Thomas Pollard, John Thompson, John
-Honiman, and Thomas Holcome. Thompson cost him £40; for other boys he
-had spent by 1635 as much as £200. After the death of John Heminges,
-Shank bought from his son William, surreptitiously, as his fellows
-averred, two shares in the Blackfriars and three in the Globe, for a
-total sum of £506. It was these transactions, which took place between
-1633 and 1635, that led to the petition of Benfield, Swanston, and
-Pollard to the Lord Chamberlain recorded in the _Sharers Papers_. As
-a result Shank was directed to transfer one share in each house to the
-petitioners. He, however, complained that he could not get satisfactory
-terms from them, and that they restrained him from the stage. The
-Cripplegate register records Shank’s burial on 27 January 1636.[995]
-James Wright calls him a ‘comedian’,[996] and the following verses,
-signed W. Turner, and quoted by Collier from Turner’s _Dish of Stuff,
-or a Gallimaufry_, may perhaps be taken as confirming this[997]:
-
- That’s the fat fool of the Curtain,
- And the lean fool of the Bull:
- Since Shancke did leave to sing his rhimes,
- He is counted but a gull:
- The players on the Bankside,
- The round Globe and the Swan,
- Will teach you idle tricks of love,
- But the Bull will play the man.
-
-The verses are dated 1662, but the theatres named indicate a much
-earlier date.
-
-SHAW (SHAA, autograph), ROBERT. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s,
-1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602. John, son of Robert Shaw, ‘player’, was
-baptized on 10 April 1603, at St. Saviour’s, and Robert Shaw, ‘a man’,
-buried on 12 September 1603 (H. ii. 309; _Bodl._).
-
-SHEALDEN. A ‘player’, who witnessed a loan for Henslowe on 24 August
-1594 (H. i. 76).
-
-SHEPARD. Paul’s door-keeper, 1582.
-
-SHEPPARD, WILLIAM. A ‘player’, whose son Robert by his wife Johane was
-baptized at St. Helen’s, 26 November 1602.
-
-SIBTHORPE, EDWARD. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.
-
-SIMPSON, CHRISTOPHER. Shoemaker of Egton, Yorks, recusant and
-unlicensed player in 1610–12 (cf. ch. ix, p. 305).
-
-SIMPSON, CUTHBERT. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616
-(_ibid._).
-
-SIMPSON, JOHN. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616 (_ibid._).
-
-SIMPSON, RICHARD. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616
-(_ibid._).
-
-SIMPSON, ROBERT. Shoemaker of Staythes, Yorks, recusant and unlicensed
-player, 1612, 1616 (_ibid._).
-
-SINCLER (SINKLO, SINCKLO), JOHN. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Pembroke’s (?),
-1592–3; Chamberlain’s, 1594 (?)-1604.
-
-SINGER, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588; Admiral’s, 1594–1603. He became an
-ordinary Groom of the Chamber in 1603. A John Singer in 1571 owed money
-to a Canterbury citizen, who had also debts from players (H. R. Plomer
-in _3 Library_, ix. 253). Children of John Singer, ‘player’, appear in
-the St. Saviour’s register from 1 August 1597 to 5 October 1609, and
-his name is in the token-books from 1596 to 1602 (_Bodl._). The _Quips
-upon Questions_ (1600) of Armin (q. v.) has been ascribed to Singer in
-error. Rowlands couples him as a clown with Pope (q. v.) in 1600, and
-Dekker, _Gull’s Horn Book_ (1609), says, ‘Tarlton, Kemp, nor Singer,
-nor all the litter of fooles that now come drawling behind them, never
-played the clowns more naturally than the arrantest sot of you all
-shall’. Heywood praised him as dead in the same year (H. ii. 310).
-
-SKINNER, RICHARD. Interluders, 1547–58.
-
-SLATER (SLAUGHTER), MARTIN. Admiral’s, 1594–7; Scotland, 1599;
-Hertford’s, 1603; Anne’s, 1606; King’s Revels manager, 1608; Chamber
-of Bristol, 1618–19. He is sometimes recorded by his Christian name
-only. He had a wife on 22 July 1604, and is described as a citizen and
-ironmonger in 1608. His name is in the Southwark token-books from 1595
-to 1602, and Martin Slawter, ‘a servant’, was buried there on 4 August
-1625 (H. ii. 310; _Bodl._).
-
-SLAUGHTER, WILLIAM. ‘Ghost-name’ evolved by Mr. Fleay for a supposed
-Queen’s man.
-
-SLEE (SLYE), JOHN. Queen Jane’s, >1537; Interluders, 1539–40.
-
-SLY, WILLIAM, was doubtless of Strange’s men or the Admiral’s about
-1590–1, when he played in _2 Seven Deadly Sins_. On 11 October 1594
-Henslowe sold him ‘a jewell of gowld seat with a whitte safer’ for
-8_s._ to be paid for at the rate of 1_s._ weekly.[998] But apparently
-he never paid more than 6_s._ 6_d._ An inventory of garments belonging
-to the Admiral’s men on 13 March 1598 includes ‘Perowes sewt, which
-W^m Sley were’.[999] Presumably this had come from Strange’s men,
-as Sly is never traceable as a member of the Admiral’s company.
-Probably he joined the Chamberlain’s men on their formation in 1594.
-He is in all the lists of this company from 1598 to 1605, and in the
-Induction to _The Malcontent_ (1604). He is also in the actor-list
-of the First Folio Shakespeare. The fact that ‘Christopher Sly, old
-Sly’s son of Burton Heath’ is the name given to the beggar in _The
-Taming of the Shrew_ (_c._ 1594), led Collier to suggest that he
-migrated from Warwickshire about the same time as Shakespeare. But the
-beggar in _A Shrew_ is already Sly, and the name occurs in various
-parts of London. The Southwark token-books show a William Sly in
-Norman’s Rents during 1588, in Horseshoe Court during 1593, and in
-Rose Alley during 1595 and 1596.[1000] In 1605 he was named as one of
-the overseers and residuary executors, with a legacy, in the will of
-Augustine Phillips. The register of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, records
-the baptism on 24 September and the burial on 4 October 1606 of John,
-base-born son of William Sly, player, by Margaret Chambers; and the
-register of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, records his own burial on 16
-August 1608, from Halliwell Street. His nuncupative will was made on 4
-August 1608. He left legacies to Cuthbert Burbadge, and James Sandes,
-and the rest of his property to Robert and Cecily Browne and their
-daughter Jane. Robert is to have his part of the Globe, and Cecily
-is appointed executrix. The will was witnessed by several illiterate
-women, and disputed by a relative named William Sly, but proved on
-24 August.[1001] He was not one of the original shareholders in the
-Globe, but was admitted to a share in 1605 or later. On 9 August 1608,
-between the date of his will and that of his death, he was granted a
-lease of a seventh share in the Blackfriars, and this his executrix
-afterwards surrendered to Richard Burbadge.[1002] Heywood names Sly
-(_c._ 1608) amongst other dead players, whose ‘deserts’ he commemorates.
-
-SMITH, ANTONY. Charles’s, 1616, 1625.
-
-SMITH, JOHN. Interluders, _c._ 1547–80. Is he the John Smith who
-assisted George Ferrers as Lord of Misrule in 1552–3 (Feuillerat,
-_Edw. and Mary_, 120)?
-
-SMITH, JOHN. Revels, 1609.
-
-SMYGHT, WILLIAM. A ‘player’ who witnessed a loan from Philip to Francis
-Henslowe on 1 June 1595 (H. i. 6; ii. 312).
-
-SOMERSET, GEORGE. Admiral’s, 1601–2. See also JOHN WILSON.
-
-SOUTHEY, THOMAS. Interluders, 1547–56.
-
-SOUTHYN, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-SPENCER, GABRIEL. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597; Admiral’s,
-1598. He was slain by Ben Jonson (cf. ch. xxiii) on 22 September 1598,
-and was buried on the next day but one at St. Leonard’s, where the
-register records him as from Hogge Lane (Collier, _Actors_, xxii). On
-3 December 1596 a coroner’s inquest found that he had himself slain
-James Feake with a rapier in the house of Richard East, barber, in St.
-Leonard’s (Jeaffreson, i. xlv, 234). Henslowe sometimes describes him
-merely as ‘Gabriel’, and under this name Heywood praises him (H. ii.
-312).
-
-SPENCER, JOHN. Germany, 1605–23. He was known by the clown-name of Hans
-Stockfisch.
-
-SQUIRE, LAWRENCE. Master of Chapel, 1486–93.
-
-STEVENS, THOMAS. Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.
-
-STOKEDALE, EDMUND. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-STRATFORD, WILLIAM. Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1610–23. He lived at the upper
-end of White Cross Street in 1623. His children appear in the St.
-Giles’s register in that year, and he was buried as a ‘player’ there on
-27 August 1625 (J. 348, 350; _Bodl._).
-
-STROWDEWIKE, EDMUND. Interluders, 1559–68.
-
-SUDBURY, THOMAS. Interluders, 1530.
-
-SUTTON, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).
-
-SWANSTON, ELIARD. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1622; King’s, 1624–42 (Murray, i.
-172, 255).
-
-SWINNERTON (SWETHERTON), THOMAS. Anne’s, 1604–19; for his later career
-cf. Murray, ii. 101, 105.
-
-SYFERWESTE, RICHARD. Worcester’s (?), 1602 (H. ii. 314).
-
-SYMCOCKES. Lennox’s, 1605.
-
-SYMONS, JOHN. A tumbler. Strange’s, 1583; Oxford’s, 1585; Strange’s,
-1586–8 (?); Queen’s, 1588 (?)-9.
-
-TAILOR, ROBERT. Admiral’s, 1601–2.
-
-TARBUCK, JOHN. Revels patentee, 1610.
-
-TARLTON, RICHARD, first appears in the ‘Q^d Richard Tarlton’ at the end
-of a ballad called _A very lamentable and wofull discours of the fierce
-fluds ... the 5. of October, 1570_ (Arber, i. 440).[1003] This is
-preserved (Halliwell, 126; Collier, _Old Ballads_, 78; H. L. Collman,
-_Ballads and Broadsides_, 265). The Stationers’ Registers also record
-in 1576 ‘a newe booke in Englishe verse intituled Tarltons Toyes’
-(Arber, ii. 306), in 1578 ‘Tarltons Tragical Treatises conteyninge
-sundrie discourses and pretie conceiptes bothe in prose and verse’
-(Arber, ii. 323), and in 1579 ‘Tarltons devise upon this unlooked for
-great snowe’ (Arber, ii. 346); but these are all lost. _Tarltons Jigge
-of a horse loade of Fooles_ (Halliwell, xx) should, if it is genuine,
-date from about 1579, as the jest at the Puritan fool ‘Goose son’ is
-obviously aimed at Stephen Gosson; but it reads to me like a fake,
-and Halliwell took it from a manuscript belonging to Collier, who had
-already quoted it in his tainted _New Facts_, 18. It is improbable
-that Richard is the ‘one Tarlton’ whose house in Paris Garden is
-included in a list of suspected papist resorts sent by Richard Frith
-to Alderman Martin at some date not earlier than 1585 (Wright, _Eliz._
-ii. 250). The first mention of him is by Gabriel Harvey (cf. p. 4)
-in 1579, when he had already acquired some reputation. He became an
-original member of the Queen’s men (q. v.) in 1583, and remained
-their principal comedian until his death in 1588. For this company he
-wrote _The Seven Deadly Sins_ (q. v.) in 1585. Music for some of his
-jigs is in existence (Halliwell, _Cambridge Manuscript Rarities_, 8)
-and his facility as a jester made him, until he pushed it too far, a
-_persona grata_ in Elizabeth’s presence. Bohun, 352, says that the
-Queen admitted ‘Tarleton, a famous comedian, and a pleasant talker,
-and other such like men, to divert her with stories of the town and
-the common jests or accidents, but so that they kept within the bounds
-of modesty and chastity’. He adds, ‘Tarleton, who was then the best
-comedian in England, had made a pleasant play, and when it was acting
-before the Queen, he pointed at Sir Walter Raleigh and said “See, the
-Knave commands the Queen”, for which he was corrected by a frown from
-the Queen; yet he had the confidence to add that he was of too much
-and too intolerable a power; and going on with the same liberty, he
-reflected on the overgreat power and riches of the Earl of Leicester,
-which was so universally applauded by all that were present, that she
-thought best to bear these reflections with a seeming unconcernedness.
-But yet she was so offended, that she forbad Tarleton and all her
-jesters from coming near her table, being inwardly displeased with this
-impudent and unseasonable liberty.’ An anecdote of Tarlton ‘playing
-the God Luz with a flitch of bacon at his back’, fighting the Queen’s
-little dog Perrico de Faldes with sword and long staff, and exchanging
-chaff with the Earl of Sussex (Halliwell, _Death-bed_, 30, from _S.
-P. Dom. Eliz._ ccxv, 89) might have some point if Luz was a take-off
-of Leicester. On 27 October 1587 Tarlton was allowed as a Master
-of Fence, and is described as an ‘ordenary grome off her majestes
-chamber’ (_Sloane MS._ 2530, f. 6). The same description recurs in
-his will, which was signed on 3 September 1588, the actual day of his
-burial at St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, from Halliwell Street. He left
-his property to his son Philip, as whose guardians he appointed his
-mother Katharine, then a widow, his friend Robert Adams, and his fellow
-of the Queen’s men, William Johnson. One of the witnesses, Charles
-Barnard, was his sister’s husband. This will was disputed by Katharine
-Tarlton, who brought a bill in Chancery, alleging that after signing it
-and making over property worth £700 to Adams, Tarlton repented, tried
-in vain to recall the will, and made another. A rejoinder by Adams
-accuses Katharine of acting under the influence of another son-in-law,
-Thomas Lee, a butcher, and describes how Adams was called to Tarlton’s
-death-bed in the house of one Emma Ball in Shoreditch, ‘of a very
-bad reputacion’. Some colour is given to his mother’s complaint by a
-death-bed petition from Tarlton to Walsingham, begging his protection
-for Philip, who was Sidney’s godson, against ‘a sly fellow, on Addames’
-(_S. P. Dom. Eliz._ ccxv. 90). There is no mention of Tarlton’s wife;
-the boy was six years old. Robert Adams was apparently a lawyer, and to
-be distinguished from John Adams of the Queen’s men, who is referred
-to as a fellow of Tarlton’s by the stage keeper in _Bartholomew Fair_
-(Induction 38), ‘I kept the Stage in Master _Tarletons_ time, I thanke
-my starres. Ho! and that man had liu’d to haue play’d in _Bartholmew
-Fayre_, you should ha’ seene him ha’ come in, and ha’ beene coozened i’
-the Cloath-quarter, so finely. And _Adams_, the Rogue, ha’ leap’d and
-caper’d vpon him, and ha’ dealt his vermine about, as though they had
-cost him nothing.’ After Tarlton’s death, several pamphlets, ascribed
-to him or otherwise exploiting his popularity, came to the press; in
-1588 ‘a ballad intituled Tarltons Farewell’ (Arber, ii. 500); in 1589
-‘a sorowfull newe sonnette, intituled Tarltons Recantacon uppon this
-theame gyven him by a gentleman at the Bel savage without Ludgate
-(nowe or ells never) beinge the laste theame he songe’ (Arber, ii.
-526); in 1589 ‘Tarltons repentance of his farewell to his frendes in
-his sicknes a little before his deathe’ (Arber, ii. 531); in 1590 ‘a
-pleasant dyttye dialogue wise betwene Tarltons ghost and Robyn Good
-Fellowe’ (Arber, ii. 559). These are lost, unless, indeed, _Tarltons
-Farewell_ is identical with ‘A pretie new ballad, entituled Willie
-and Peggie, to the tune of Tarlton’s Carroll’, printed in _Archiv._
-cxiv. 341, and A. Clark, _Shirburn Ballads_, 351, from _Rawl. Poet.
-MS._ 185, f. 10. This ends ‘qd. Richard Tarlton’, but it is in fact
-a lament over the death of Tarlton under the name of Willie, as is
-clearly shown by lines 23 ‘None would be wery to see him one stage’,
-41 ‘A groome of her chamber my Willie was made’, 55 ‘To singe them
-their themes he never denied’. These verses support the theory, based
-upon a contemporary note in a copy of Spenser (cf. _6 N. Q._ xi. 417;
-Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 394), that Tarlton is the ‘pleasant Willy’
-mourned as dead in the _Tears of the Muses_ (1591), 208, and if he is
-also the Yorick of _Hamlet_, v. 1. 201, he was sufficiently honoured.
-Another ballad in the same manuscript on the Armada (_Archiv._ cxiv.
-344; _Ballads from MS._ ii. 92) also claims to be to the tune of
-Tarlton’s ‘carroll’; the ‘Carroll’ itself is unknown. ‘_Tarltons Newes
-out of Purgatorie. Onelye such a jest as his Jigge, fit for Gentlemen
-to laugh at an houre, &c. Published by an old companion of his, Robin
-Goodfellow_’ (n.d., but entered in S. R. 26 June 1590; Arber, ii.
-553) is a volume of _novelle_, put into the mouth of Tarlton’s ghost.
-The writer describes him as ‘only superficially seene in learning,
-having no more but a bare insight into the Latin tung’, and physically
-as ‘one attired in russet, with a buttond cap on his head, a great
-bag by his side, and a strong bat in his hand’. Similarly, Henry
-Chettle, who put into his mouth a defence of plays forming a section
-of _Kind-hartes Dreame_ (1592; cf. App. C, No. xlix), knew him in a
-dream ‘by his sute of russet, his buttond cap, his taber, his standing
-on the toe, and other tricks’. _The Cobler of Caunterburie or an
-Invective against Tarltons Newes out of Purgatorie_ (1590) is also a
-volume of _novelle_, and has practically nothing about Tarlton. On
-the other hand, _Tarltons Jests_ at least claims to be biographical,
-although its material, like that of Peele’s _Jests_, largely consists
-of the flotsam and jetsam of all the jest-books. The earliest extant
-edition is of 1611. But it was transferred from one publisher to
-another in 1609 (Arber, iii. 402), the second of its three parts,
-which mentions the Globe (Halliwell, 23), was entered in S. R. on 4
-August 1600 (Arber, iii. 168), and probably therefore the first part
-was already in print in the sixteenth century. It speaks of Tarlton
-as a Queen’s man (Halliwell, 13, 27, 29, 30, 33), as playing at the
-Bull in Bishopsgate (13, 24), where he did both the clown and the
-judge in ‘Henry the Fifth’ (_The Famous Victories_) to Knell’s Harry,
-the Curtain (16), and the Bell in Gracechurch Street (24), as singing
-themes (16, 27, 28, 40), and as jesting in clown’s apparel in the royal
-presence or in the Great Chamber at Court (7, 8). It also tells us,
-for what the statements are worth, that his father lived at Ilford
-(40), that he had a wife Kate of light character (17, 19), that he
-kept the Saba tavern in Gracechurch Street, where he was scavenger of
-the ward (15, 21, 22), and an ordinary in Paternoster Row (21, 26),
-and that he had a squint (12) and a flat nose (28). A woodcut on the
-title-page confirms these peculiarities of feature, and represents a
-short, broad-faced, cunning-looking man, with curly hair, an elaborate
-moustache and a starved beard, wearing a cap, and a bag or moneybox
-slung at his side, and playing on a tabor and a pipe. This appears to
-be taken from a drawing by John Scottowe in an initial letter to some
-verses on Tarlton’s death in _Harl. MS._ 3885, f. 19. Nashe, _Pierce
-Penilesse_ (1592, _Works_, i. 188), gives us a hint of his stage
-methods in describing how at a provincial performance, as the Queen’s
-men ‘were now entring into their first merriment (as they call it) the
-people began exceedingly to laugh, when _Tarlton_ first peeped out his
-head’, and how a ‘cholericke wise Iustice’ laid his staff about their
-pates, ‘in that they, being but Farmers & poore countrey Hyndes, would
-presume to laugh at the Queenes men, and make no more account of her
-cloath in his presence’. According to Fuller (_Worthies_, iii. 139)
-Tarlton was born at Condover in Shropshire, and kept his father’s
-swine there, until a servant of the Earl of Leicester, struck with his
-witty replies, brought him to Court. On the other hand, in the _Three
-Lords and Three Ladies of London_ (1590), by his fellow Robert Wilson,
-Simplicity produces his picture, and says he was ‘a prentice in his
-youth of this honorable city: ... when he was yoong he was leaning to
-the trade ... waterbearing: I wis he hath tossed a tankard in Cornehil
-er now’ (sign. C^v). Halliwell (xxx) has collected a large number of
-allusions to Tarleton and his humours, lasting well into the middle
-of the seventeenth century. Taverns were named after him, and one is
-said to have still stood in Southwark in 1798. Much of the action of W.
-Percy’s _Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants_ (q. v.) takes place at the
-Tarlton Inn, Colchester, of which he is said to have been the ‘quondam
-controller and induperator’. Tarlton himself speaks the prologue to the
-play. George Wilson, _The Commendation of Cockes and Cock-fighting_
-(1607), records that on 4 May 1602 there fought at Norwich ‘a cocke
-called Tarleton, who was so intituled, because he alwayes came to the
-fight like a drummer, making a thundering noyse with his winges, which
-cocke fought many batels with mighty and fierce adversaries’.
-
-TAWYER, WILLIAM. At _M. N. D._ v. 1. 128, F_{1} has the s. d. ‘Tawyer
-with a Trumpet before them’. The St. Saviour’s burials give in June
-1625, ‘William Tawier, M^r Heminges man’.
-
-TAYLOR, JOHN. Choir Master at St. Mary’s, Woolnoth, 1557; at
-Westminster, 1561–7.
-
-TAYLOR, JOSEPH, is conjectured by Collier to be the Joseph Taylor
-who was baptized at St. Andrew’s by the Wardrobe in Blackfriars on 6
-February 1586, the Joseph Taylor who married Elizabeth Ingle, widow,
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 2 May 1610, and the Joseph Taylor who
-is shown by the Southwark token-books as dwelling in ‘M^r Langley’s
-new rents, near the play-house’ during 1607, in Austen’s Rents during
-1612 and 1615, as ‘gone’ in 1617, and as dwelling ‘near the play-house’
-in 1623 and 1629, ‘on the Bankside’ in 1631, and in Gravel Lane
-during 1633. ‘Joseph Taylor, player,’ is entered in the St. Saviour’s
-registers as the father of Elsabeth (bapt. 12 July 1612), Dixsye and
-Joseph (bapt. 21 July 1614), Jone (bapt. 11 January 1616), Robert
-(bapt. 1 June 1617), and Anne (bapt. 24 August 1623).[1004] On the
-other hand, a Joseph Taylor, not improbably a player, was living in
-Bishopsgate near the Spittle in 1623 (J. 347). He was a member of the
-Duke of York’s company in 1610, but left them without the consent of
-his fellows for the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1611, and thereby involved
-himself during the same year in a lawsuit with John Heminges.[1005]
-He is in the actor-lists of _The Honest Man’s Fortune_ (1613) and of
-_The Coxcomb_, as played by the Lady Elizabeth’s men about the same
-date, and is also named in the text of their _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614).
-There seems to have been some sort of amalgamation between the Duke
-of York’s, now Prince Charles’s, and the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1615,
-and when this terminated in the following year, Taylor became again
-a member of the Prince’s company. He was still with them between
-6 January and 2 February 1619, when he appeared as Dr. Almanac in
-Middleton and Rowley’s _Mask of Heroes_, but on 19 May 1619 he appears
-in a livery warrant issued for the King’s men. As he is not in their
-patent of the previous 27 March, it is to be supposed that he joined
-them to replace Burbadge, who had died on 13 March.[1006] The rest of
-his stage career was spent with the King’s men. He succeeded Burbadge
-in several of his characters, including Ferdinand in the _Duchess of
-Malfi_ and Hamlet, although the incidence of dates must cast some
-doubt upon the statement of Downes that he was instructed in the part
-‘by the Author M^r Shakespear’.[1007] Wright says that he played it
-‘incomparably well’, and praises him also as Iago in _Othello_, Truewit
-in _Epicoene_, and Face in _The Alchemist_.[1008] He is included in
-the First Folio list of performers in Shakespeare’s plays. In 1623
-Nicholas Tooley left him £10 to pay a debt for which Tooley had become
-his surety. With Lowin he seems to have assumed the leadership of the
-company in succession to Heminges and Condell, and after Heminges’s
-death in 1630 he was admitted to two shares in the ‘house’ of the
-Globe and one in that of the Blackfriars, which he still held in
-1635. About 1637 he petitioned for a waiter’s place in the Custom
-House of London,[1009] and on 11 November 1639 he obtained the post
-of Yeoman of the Revels, probably through the influence of Sir Henry
-Herbert, with whom he had been in frequent contact as representative
-of his company.[1010] After the closing of the theatres he joined his
-fellows of the King’s men in publishing the First Folio of Beaumont
-and Fletcher’s plays in 1647, and for his benefit and Lowin’s _The
-Wild-goose Chase_ was added in 1652. He died at Richmond and was there
-buried on 4 November 1652.[1011] The ascription to his brush of the
-‘Chandos’ portrait of Shakespeare is now discredited.
-
-THARE (THAYER), JOHN. Worcester’s, 1602–3; Germany, 1603–6 (?).
-
-TILBERY, JOHN. Chapel, 1405.
-
-TOMSONE, JOHN. A ‘player’ who borrowed 5_s._ from Henslowe on 22
-December 1598 (H. i. 40).
-
-TOOLEY, NICHOLAS, appears in the 1619 patent to the King’s men, but
-not in that of 1603. He probably joined the company about 1605, as he
-received a legacy under the will of Phillips on 4 May as his ‘fellow’.
-He is not in the actor-list of _Volpone_ in that year, but is in most
-of the later actor-lists from _The Alchemist_ (1610) to _The Spanish
-Curate_ (1622), and in that of the First Folio Shakespeare. In 1619 he
-witnessed Richard Burbadge’s will. He made his own will as Nicholas
-Tooley, Gentleman, on 3 June 1623. After legacies to charity, to the
-families of ‘my good friend Mr. Cuthbert Burbadge (in whose house I
-do now lodge)’, of ‘my late Mr. Richard Burbadge deceased’, and of ‘my
-good friend Mr. Henry Condell’, and to Joseph Taylor, and remissions
-of debt to John Underwood and William Ecclestone, but not to Richard
-Robinson, he ends by making Burbadge and Condell his executors and
-residuary legatees. By a codicil of the same date, signed as Nicholas
-Wilkinson _alias_ Tooley, he guards against any danger of invalidity
-due to his failure to use the name of Wilkinson.[1012] Presumably,
-therefore, Wilkinson, and not Tooley, was his original name. The name
-of Tooley was fairly common in London, and more than one Nicholas
-Wilkinson has been traced. He may have been the Nicholas, son of
-Charles Wilkinson, baptized at St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, on 3 February
-1575.[1013] There seems no reason to connect him with a Nicholas Tooley
-found on the Warwickshire muster-book in 1569.[1013] His reference to
-Richard Burbadge as his ‘master’ suggests that he was his apprentice.
-It is tempting, but arbitrary, to identify him with the ‘Nick’ who
-played with Strange’s men in _2 Seven Deadly Sins_ about 1592, or the
-‘Nycke’ who tumbled before Elizabeth for the Admiral’s in 1601 and
-is commended by Joan to Edward Alleyn on 21 October 1603.[1014] The
-register of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, records the burial of ‘Nicholas
-Tooley, gentleman, from the house of Cuthbert Burbidge, gentleman’, on
-5 June 1623.[1015]
-
-TOTTNELL, HARRY. A ‘player’ whose daughter Joan was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 20 March 1591 (_Bodl._).
-
-TOWNE, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588, 1594–7. Greg (H. ii. 315) rather
-arbitrarily suggests that Henslowe’s note of him as a witness to a loan
-to Francis Henslowe of the Queen’s on 8 May 1593 (H. i. 4) is by an
-error for Thomas (q. v.).
-
-TOWNE, THOMAS. Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1594–1610. His name is in a s. d. to
-_1 Honest Whore_ (1604). Alleyn’s papers record a widow Agnes. Towne’s
-name is in the Southwark token-books during 1600–7, and Thomas Towne ‘a
-man’ was buried on 9 August 1612. Towne’s will of 4 July 1612 names his
-wife, whom he calls Ann, and his brother John, of Dunwich in Suffolk
-(‘if he be still living’) and leaves £3 to his fellows Borne, Downton,
-Juby, Rowley, Massey, and Humphrey Jeffes, ‘to make them a supper when
-it shall please them to call for it’ (H. ii. 316; _Bodl._, citing will
-in P. C. C.).
-
-TOWNSEND, JOHN. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1616–32 (?); for his later
-career, cf. Murray, i. 252–60; ii. 8.
-
-TOY. The performer of Will Summer in _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_.
-
-TREVELL, WILLIAM. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, 1621.
-
-TRUSSELL, ALVERY. Chapel, 1600–1.
-
-TUNSTALL (DONSTALL, DONSTONE), JAMES. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s,
-1590–1, 1594–7. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), refers to him in
-conjunction with Alleyn (q. v.). The variation in his name is made
-more, rather than less, puzzling by the baptism at St. Botolph’s of
-Dunstone Tunstall on 20 August 1572 (H. ii. 261).
-
-UBALDINI, PETRUCCIO. Italians, 1576 (?).
-
-UNDERELL. Worcester’s, 1602. A Thomas Underell was a royal trumpeter in
-1609–24 (_Chamber Accounts_).
-
-UNDERWOOD, JOHN, was a Chapel boy in the year 1601, and continued at
-Blackfriars until, as the _Sharers Papers_ state, on growing up to
-be a man, he was taken to strengthen the King’s service. This was in
-1608 or a little later. He is not in the Queen’s Revels actor-list
-of _Epicoene_ (1609), and is in the King’s men’s actor-list of _The
-Alchemist_ (1610), and thereafter in the official lists and most of
-the actor-lists of the company, including that of the First Folio
-Shakespeare, up to 1624. Tooley in his will of 1623 forgave him a debt.
-His own will was made on 4 October 1624 and has a codicil appended
-on 10 October, doubtless from his oral directions, but after his
-death. He describes himself as ‘of the parish of Saint Bartholomew the
-Less, in London, gent.’, and leaves his shares in the Blackfriars,
-Globe, and Curtain to his executors, of whom Henry Condell is one, in
-trust for his five children, all under twenty-one--John, Elizabeth,
-Burbage, Thomas, and Isabel. The executors and his ‘fellowes’, Mr. John
-Heminges and John Lowin, who are appointed overseers, have 11s. each
-for rings.[1016] The baptism of his son John on 27 December 1610 is in
-the register of Saint Bartholomew the Less, West Smithfield.[1017] The
-trust was still unexpired at Condell’s death in 1627, and was handed on
-by him to his wife. The _Sharers Papers_ of 1635 show one share in the
-Blackfriars still in the hands of an Underwood; but apparently a third
-of it had been parted with about 1632 to Eliart Swanston.[1018]
-
-VINCENT. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.
-
-VIRNIUS, JOHANN FRIEDRICH. Germany, 1615.
-
-WAKEFIELD, EDWARD. Germany, 1597, 1602.
-
-WALPOLE, FRANCIS. Anne’s, 1616–17.
-
-WARD, ANTHONY. Vide ARKINSTALL.
-
-WAYMUS (WAMBUS), FRANCIS. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1617–24.
-
-WEBSTER, GEORGE. Germany, 1598, 1600–3.
-
-WEBSTER, JOHN. Germany, 1596. Is he identical with the dramatist?
-
-WESTCOTT, SEBASTIAN. Master of Paul’s, 1557–82. He is sometimes
-described by his Christian name alone.
-
-WHETSTONE, _c._ 1571. Cf. s.v. FIDGE. Plomer suggests that he might be
-George Whetstone (cf. ch. xxiii).
-
-WHITELOCKE, JAMES, afterwards Sir James. Merchant Taylors, 1575–86.
-
-WILDER, PHILIP VAN. Gentleman of the Privy Chamber and lutenist,
-commissioned to raise a royal company of young minstrels in 1550; cf.
-ch. xii, s.v. Chapel.
-
-‘WILL.’ Strange’s, 1590–1.
-
-‘WILL.’ Admiral’s, 1597.
-
-WILLIAMS, JOHN. Chapel, 1509.
-
-WILSON, JOHN. In _Much Ado_, ii. 3. 38, for the ‘Enter Balthaser with
-musicke’ of Q_{1}, F_{1} has ‘Enter ... Iacke Wilson’, who therefore,
-at some date before 1623, sang ‘Sigh no more, ladies!’ He is probably
-the son of Nicholas Wilson, ‘minstrel’, baptized at St. Bartholomew’s
-the Less on 24 April 1585. He had an elder brother Adam, and buried
-a wife Joan on 17 July 1624, and an unnamed son on 3 September 1624
-at St. Giles’s from the house of George Sommerset, musician (Collier,
-_Actors_, xviii). He seems to have become a city ‘wait’ about 1622 and
-to have still held his post in 1641, and has been confused (Collier in
-_Sh. Soc. Papers_, ii. 33; E. F. Rimbault, _Who was Jacke Wilson?_,
-1846) with another John Wilson, born in 1595, a royal lutenist and
-musician of distinction (cf. _D. N. B._). One or other of them was
-concerned with a performance of _M. N. D._ in the house of John
-Williams, Bishop of Lincoln, on 27 September 1631, which gave offence
-to the Puritans (Murray, ii. 148).
-
-WILSON, ROBERT, was one of Leicester’s men in 1572, 1574, and 1581. A
-reference in Gabriel Harvey’s correspondence of 1579 suggests that he
-was conspicuous amongst the actors of the day, and Lodge’s praise about
-the same date in the _Defence of Plays_ of his _Shorte and Sweete_,
-‘the practice of a good scholler,’ shows that he was also a playwright.
-This piece Lodge compares with Gosson’s _Catiline’s Conspiracies_, and
-it may have been on the same theme. Further evidence of his reputation
-is in the letter of 1581 from T. Baylye (q. v.). In 1583 he joined the
-Queen’s men, and is described by Howes in his account of the formation
-of that company as a ‘rare’ man ‘for a quicke, delicate, refined,
-extemporall witt’. He is not in the Queen’s list of 1588. This may
-not be quite complete; on the other hand he may by then have left the
-company. I see no solid foundation for the conjectures of Fleay, ii.
-279, that he was the player of _Greenes Groatsworth of Wit_ (cf. App.
-C, No. xlviii) who penned the _Moral of Man’s Wit_ and the _Dialogue of
-Dives_, that he wrote _Fair Em_, that he left the Queen’s for Strange’s
-in 1590 and thereby incurred Greene’s hostility, that he is the Roscius
-of Nashe’s _Menaphon_ epistle, that he died of the plague in 1593. It
-is extremely unlikely that he died in 1593, for in his _Palladis Tamia_
-of 1598, after lauding Tarlton as famous for ‘extemporall verse’, Meres
-continues, ‘And so is now our wittie Wilson, who for learning and
-extemporall witte in this facultie is without compare or compeere, as
-to his great and eternall commendations he manifested in his chalenge
-at the Swanne on the Banke side.’ The common use by Meres and Howes
-of the phrase ‘extemporall witte’ renders it almost impossible to
-suppose that they are not speaking of the same man. It is true that,
-in the _Apology for Actors_, Heywood, whose knowledge of the stage
-must have gone back at least to 1594, classes Wilson with the older
-generation of actors, whom he never saw, as being before his time, and
-I take it the explanation is that, at or before the virtual break-up
-of the Queen’s men in the plague of 1592–3, Wilson gave up acting, and
-devoted himself to writing, and occasional extemporizing on themes. He
-is generally supposed to be the R. W. of _The Three Ladies of London_
-(1584) and _The Three Lords of London_ (1590), and the ‘Robert Wilson,
-Gent.’ of _The Cobbler’s Prophecy_ (1594). The ‘Gent.’ is hardly an
-insuperable obstacle to identifying him with the ‘Robert Wilson, yoman
-(a player)’, who was buried at St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, on 20 November
-1600 (Collier, _Actors_, xviii). A Wilson is in the suspected Admiral’s
-cast of _c._ January 1600. But now comes the real difficulty. Meres,
-also in the _Palladis Tamia_ and without any indication that he has
-another man in mind, includes ‘Wilson’ in a group of ‘the best for
-comedy amongst vs’, which is composed of the principal writers for the
-Admiral’s in 1598, and amongst these writers, as shown by Henslowe’s
-papers, was a Robert Wilson, who collaborated in eleven plays during
-1598, and in three more during 1599 and 1600. He is last mentioned in
-a letter of 14 June 1600. This is generally taken to be a younger man
-than the Queen’s player, possibly a Robert Wilson who was baptized at
-St. Botolph’s, Bishopsgate, on 22 September 1579, and married Mary
-Eaton there on 24 June 1606, possibly the Robert Wilson (not described
-as ‘a player and the younger’ as Collier suggests in _Bodl._) whose
-son Robert was baptized at St. Leonard’s on 15 January 1601 (Stopes,
-_Burbage_, 141), possibly the Robert Wilson whose burial is recorded
-at St. Bartholomew’s the Less on 21 October 1610. On the whole, I am
-inclined to think that, in view of the character of Meres’ references,
-of the use of Catiline as a play-theme both about 1580 and in 1598 (cf.
-ch. xxiii), and of the sudden disappearance of Wilson from Henslowe’s
-diary in the year of the ‘player’s’ death, the balance of evidence is
-in favour of one playwright rather than two. The undefined share of
-the Admiral’s man in the extant _1 Sir John Oldcastle_ does not really
-afford a basis for stylistic comparison with the more old-fashioned
-manners of the 1584–94 plays. There is nothing to show that the
-Bishopsgate man had any connexion with the stage, still less that he
-was a son of the Queen’s player, as has been suggested.
-
-WINTER, RICHARD. Possibly an actor at Canterbury, _c._ 1571 (_3
-Library_, ix. 253).
-
-WODERAM, RICHARD. Oxford’s, 1586–7 (?).
-
-WOODFORD, THOMAS. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, 1621.
-
-WOODS, JOHN. Holland, 1604.
-
-WORTH, ELLIS. Anne’s, 1615–19; for his later career, cf. Murray, i.
-198, 218. He is described as ‘gentleman’ in the register of St. Giles’s
-at the baptism of his daughter Jane on 19 July 1613, and as ‘player’ at
-that of his son Elizeus on 12 March 1629 (_Bodl._).
-
-WYLKYNSON, JOHN. A London ‘coriour’, who maintained players in his
-house in 1549 (cf. App. D, No. ii).
-
-YOUNG, JOHN. Queen Jane’s, >1537; Interluders, 1539–53 (?). He seems to
-have been still alive in 1569–70.
-
-
-
-
- BOOK IV
-
- THE PLAY-HOUSES
-
- The world the stage, the prologue tears,
- The acts vain hope and varied fears:
- The scene shuts up with loss of breath,
- And leaves no epilogue but death.
- HENRY KING.
-
-
-
-
- XVI
-
- INTRODUCTION: THE PUBLIC THEATRES
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Some notes in the _Gentleman’s
- Magazine_ for 1813–16 by Eu. Hood [Joseph Haslewood] are
- reprinted in _The Gentleman’s Magazine Library_, xv (1904),
- 86, and in _Roxburghe Revels_ (ed. J. Maidment, 1837). J. P.
- Collier, _History of English Dramatic Poetry_, iii. 79, has
- _An Account of the Old Theatres of London_, and chronological
- sections on the subject are in F. G. Fleay, _A Chronicle History
- of the London Stage_ (1890). T. F. Ordish, _Early London
- Theatres_ (1894), covers the Shoreditch and Bankside theatres
- ‘in the Fields’ other than the Globe; a companion volume on
- the urban houses has never appeared. The Bankside houses are
- also dealt with by W. Rendle, _The Bankside, Southwark, and the
- Globe_ (1877), being Appendix I to F. J. Furnivall, _Harrison’s
- Description of England_, Part II (_N. Sh. Soc._), and in _Old
- Southwark and its People_ (1878) and _The Play-houses at
- Bankside in the Time of Shakespeare_ (_Walford’s Antiquarian_,
- 1885, vii. 207, 274; viii. 55). J. Q. Adams, _Shakespearean
- Play-houses_ (1917), is a comprehensive and valuable work,
- which reached me when this chapter was practically complete. I
- am glad to find that our results so generally agree. The chief
- London maps have been reproduced by the _London Topographical
- Society_ and on a smaller scale by G. E. Mitton, _Maps of Old
- London_ (1908). Some are also given as illustrations in G. P.
- Baker, _The Development of Shakespeare as a Dramatist_ (1907).
- They are classified by W. Martin, _A Study of Early Map-Views
- of London_ in _The Antiquary_, xlv (1909), 337, 406, and their
- evidence for the Bankside analysed by the same writer, with
- partial reproductions, in _The Site of the Globe Play-house of
- Shakespeare_ (1910, _Surrey Archaeological Collections_, xxiii.
- 149).
-
- The evidence of the maps as to the position of the theatres
- is obscured, partly by uncertainties as to the dates and
- authorships both of the engravings and of the surveys on which
- they were based, and partly by the pictorial character of the
- topography. They are not strict plans in two dimensions, such
- as modern cartographers produce, but either drawings in full
- perspective, or bird’s-eye views in diminished perspective.
- The imaginary standpoint is always on the south, and the
- pictorial aspect is emphasized in the foreground, with the
- result that, while the Bankside theatres, but not those north
- of the river, are generally indicated, this is rarely with a
- precision which renders it possible to locate them in relation
- to the thoroughfares amongst which they stand. This is more
- particularly the case since, while the general grouping of
- buildings, gardens, and trees appears, from a comparison of
- one view with another, to be faithfully given, it is probable
- that the details are often both conventionally represented and
- out of scale. The following classification is mainly borrowed
- from Dr. Martin: (_a_) Pre-Reformation representations of
- London throwing no light on the theatres; (_b_) _Wyngaerde_, a
- pictorial drawing (_c._ 1543–50) by A. Van der Wyngaerde (_L.
- T. Soc._ i; Mitton, i); (_c_) _Höfnagel_, a plan with little
- perspective by G. Höfnagel, from a survey of _c._ 1554–7 (cf.
- A. Marks in _Athenaeum_ for 31 March 1906), published (1572)
- with the title _Londinum Feracissimi Angliae Regni Metropolis_
- in G. Braun and F. Hohenburg, _Civitates Orbis Terrarum_ (L.
- T. Soc. ii; Mitton, iv); (_d_) _Agas_, an engraving with
- more perspective, but generally similar to that of Höfnagel
- and possibly from the same survey, but drawn after 1561, and
- assigned by G. Vertue, who reproduced it (1737), to Ralph Agas
- (L. T. Soc. xvii; Mitton, ii); (_e_) _Smith_, a coloured drawing
- by William Smith, possibly based on Höfnagel or Agas, in _B. M.
- Sloane MS._ 2596, reproduced in H. B. Wheatley and E. W. Ashbee,
- _W. Smith_, _The Particular Description of England, 1588_
- (1879), and in G. P. Baker, _The Development of Shakespeare
- as a Dramatist_ (1907), 18; (_f_) _Bankside Views_, small
- representations of the same general character as (_c_), (_d_),
- and (_e_), used as backgrounds to pictures and described by W.
- Martin in _Antiquary_, xlv. 408; (_g_) _Norden_, engravings
- in slight perspective of ‘London’ and ‘Westminster’ by P. Van
- den Keere in J. Norden, _Speculum Britanniae_ (1593), from
- survey of about the same date (L. T. Soc. vii; Mitton, v, vi;
- Furnivall, _Harrison’s Description of England_, Part I, with
- notes on p. lxxxix by H. B. Wheatley, reprinted by L. T. Soc.
- in _Record_, ii); (_h_) _Delaram Group_, perspective views as
- backgrounds to portrait (_c._ 1616) of James I by F. Delaram
- (1620), reproduced by W. Martin in _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii.
- 186, and other portraits probably based on some original of
- _c._ 1603; (_i_) _Hondius Group_, (i) drawing by P. D. Hondius
- (1610) in J. Speed, _Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain_
- (1611), as inset to map of Britain (_L. T. Record_, ii, with
- notes by T. F. Ordish; Baker, _f. p._), (ii) engraving on
- title-page of R. Baker, _Chronicle_ (1643), reproduced by Martin
- in _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii. 187, (iii) engraving on title-page
- of H. Holland, _Herwologia Anglica_ (1620), (iv) engraving of
- triumphal arch at coronation entry of James I by W. Kip in S.
- Harrison (cf. ch. xxiv), _The Arches of Triumph_ (1604), all
- perhaps based on the same original or survey; (_k_) _Visscher_,
- engraving in perspective by Nikolaus Janssen Visscher (1616),
- ‘Amstelodami, ex officina Judoci Hondii’, with mutilated text
- from Camden’s _Britannia_, reproduced from unique copy in Brit.
- Mus. (L. T. Soc. iv, with notes by T. F. Ordish in _L. T.
- Record_, vi; also W. Martin in _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii. 188,
- and in Ordish, _Shakespeare’s London_, _f. p._ and elsewhere);
- (_l_) _Merian Group_, (i) engraving in perspective by M. Merian
- in J. L. Gottfried, _Neuwe Archontologia Cosmica_ (1638), 290,
- reproduced by Martin, 191, and Adams, 256, and copied in (ii)
- _f. p._ to James Howell, _Londinopolis_ (1657), reproduced
- by Baker, 154, and (iii) R. Wilkinson, _Londina Illustrata_
- (1819); (_m_) _‘Ryther’ Group_, (i) engraving in very slight
- perspective from drawing unfinished as regards the Bankside in
- Crace Collection, No. 32, without date, imprint, or indication
- of authorship, reproduced by W. J. Loftie, _History of London_,
- ii. 282, C. L. Kingsford, _Chronicles of London_, (1905) _f.
- p._, and Baker, 36, 125, 135, and ascribed to Augustine Ryther
- in 1604, but probably of about 1636–45 (cf. _4 N. Q._ ix. 95; _6
- N. Q._ xii. 361, 393; _7 N. Q._ iii. 110; vi. 297; vii. 498) in
- view of (ii) another version in Crace Coll., No. 31, with the
- Bankside complete, bearing the imprint of ‘Cornelis Danckerts
- grauer of maps’ in Amsterdam (_c._ 1631–56), and possibly by
- Hollar, who worked for Danckerts, and was in England 1636–45,
- (iii) map by T. Porter (_c._ 1666), based on (i) with later
- additions (reproduced L. T. Soc. v); (_n_) _Hollar_, engraving
- in perspective by W. Hollar (in London 1635–43), published
- by Cornelius Danckerts in 1647 (L. T. Soc. xix; section by
- Martin in _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii. 194); (_o_) _Faithorne and
- Newcourt_, engraving in conventional perspective by William
- Faithorne from drawing by Richard Newcourt, published in
- 1658 (L. T. Soc. xviii; Mitton, vii). Of the various maps of
- post-conflagration London the most useful are that of Leeke and
- Hollar (_c._ 1666), of which a section is reproduced by Martin
- in _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii. 191, and those of John Ogilby and
- W. Morgan (1677, Mitton, viii), John Ogilby and W. Morgan (1682,
- L. T. Soc. xv), and John Rocque (1746, L. T. Soc. xxxiv, xxxv,
- xxxvii; Mitton, ix; section in Martin, _ut supra_, 197). Rendle,
- _Bankside_, has attempted to indicate the sites of the Bankside
- theatres upon a reconstructed map based on Rocque, and Martin in
- _Surrey A. Colls._ xxiii. 155, 202, gives parts of the Bankside
- area as it now stands from the Ordnance Survey map (1896) and a
- plan of the Anchor Brewery (1909).]
-
-
- A. INTRODUCTION
-
-The detailed notices, which will form the greater part of this chapter,
-may with advantage be prefaced with some general observations upon
-the historical sequence of the theatres and their distribution at
-different periods over the London area. The earlier Tudor London
-knew no theatre, in the sense of a building specially planned and
-maintained for public dramatic performances, although Yarmouth had
-its ‘game-house’ by 1538, and a _theatrum_ at Exeter was the scene
-of satirical farces far back in the fourteenth century. The miracle
-plays, not in London processional, were given in the open air, and
-probably on temporary scaffolds. Similar stages may sometimes have
-been used for the interludes, but these were ordinarily represented
-in the winter-time, and sought the kindly shelter of a hall.[1019] In
-the provision of specialized buildings, the drama appears to have been
-anticipated by the ruder sport of baiting. Höfnagel’s pre-Elizabethan
-map already shows on the Southwark side of the river the two rings,
-with open centres and roofed seats for spectators, which are repeated
-later on by Agas and by Smith. They stand in yards or gardens lined
-with dog-kennels. One is lettered ‘The Bowll bayting’, the other
-‘The beare bayting’. When the first Elizabethan theatres were built
-in 1576, it was the hall on the one hand, and the ring on the other,
-which determined the general structure of the two types of auditorium
-that came simultaneously into being.[1020] The ‘private’ house, roofed
-and lit, and with its seats arranged in tiers along three sides of a
-long room, and the ‘public’ house, generally circular, with covered
-stage and galleries, and a central yard or ‘pit’ open to the day,
-co-existed for more than half a century, and finally merged in the
-post-Restoration type of theatre which has come down to our own day.
-The distinction between ‘private’ and ‘public’ is an unessential one,
-depending probably upon some difference in the methods of paying for
-admission necessitated by the regulations of the City or the Privy
-Council.[1021] The performances in all the houses were public in the
-ordinary sense. There was, however, another important factor, besides
-the baiting ring, which greatly affected the structure of the open-air
-theatre. This was the inn-yard. Long before 1576, interludes had been
-given in public, as well as in the private halls of the great, and even
-the need for some kind of permanent, or quasi-permanent, installation
-had been felt. No doubt there were halls in London which could be
-hired. The keeper of the Carpenters’ Hall in Shoreditch was prosecuted
-towards the end of Henry VIII’s reign for procuring a Protestant
-interlude ‘to be openly played’.[1022] Fees for the letting of Trinity
-Hall for plays occur among the ‘casuall recepts’ of the churchwardens
-of St. Botolph without Aldersgate in 1566–7.[1023] A jest-book of
-1567 records a play at Northumberland Place.[1024] But an even more
-convenient hospitality was afforded by the great court-yards of the
-City inns, where there was sack and bottle-ale to hand, and, as the
-Puritans averred, chambers ready for deeds of darkness to be done, when
-the play was over.[1025] In these yards, approached by archways under
-the inn buildings from one or more streets, and surrounded by galleries
-with external staircases giving access to the upper floors, an audience
-could quickly gather, behold at their ease, and escape payment with
-difficulty. The actors could be accommodated with a tiring-room on the
-ground floor, and perform as on a natural stage between the pillars
-supporting the galleries. An upper gallery could be used to vary the
-scene. The first performances in London inns upon record were at the
-Saracen’s Head, Islington, and the Boar’s Head, Aldgate, both in
-1557.[1026] By the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign the use of them was
-normal. Plays ‘in hostels and taverns’ were specified for prohibition
-by the proclamation of April 1559, and the City regulations of 1574 are
-clearly aimed at the control of the ‘greate innes, havinge chambers
-and secrete places adjoyninge to their open stagies and gallyries’,
-and impose obligations for the sake of good order upon innkeepers
-and tavern-keepers in the forefront of those regarded as likely to
-harbour plays.[1027] It is not reading too much between the lines to
-suggest that the owners of particular houses specially laid themselves
-out to secure the attraction of public entertainments, entered into
-regular contracts with players, and probably even undertook structural
-alterations which in fact converted their yards into little less
-than permanent theatres.[1028] We have, indeed, the record of a
-trade dispute about the workmanship of play-scaffolds at the Red
-Lion in Stepney as far back as 1567. The Red Lion stood outside the
-jurisdiction of the City. Within it, and so far as we can judge, much
-more important in the history of the stage were the Bell and the Cross
-Keys, both in Gracechurch Street, the Bull in Bishopsgate Street,
-and the Bel Savage on Ludgate Hill. No one of these four is in fact
-mentioned by name as a play-house earlier than 1575, and although they
-must have been hard hit by the regulations of 1574, it is clear that
-they did not go altogether out of use, especially during the winter,
-when climatic conditions rendered the suburbs unattractive, for another
-twenty years. Stockwood, in 1578, speaks of six or eight ‘ordinarie
-places’ where plays were then performed.[1029] Nevertheless the action
-of the City, and the enterprise of James Burbadge, whose descendants
-claimed for him the honour of being ‘the first builder of playhowses’,
-led to a shifting of the dramatic focus. The Theatre and the Curtain,
-both built in or about 1576, stood in ‘the fields’ to the north of
-London proper, and were perhaps soon followed by Newington Butts on
-the south side of the river, beyond St. George’s Fields; while the
-Blackfriars, adapted in the same year (1576) by Richard Farrant to
-house the performances of children, occupied an old monastic building
-in the precinct of a ‘liberty’ which, although within the walls, was
-largely exempt from the jurisdiction of the Corporation. This became
-the home of the Children of the Chapel, while the Paul’s boys played
-in their own ‘song-school’, either the church of St. Gregory or some
-other building in the neighbourhood of St. Paul’s. How long this
-arrangement had existed, or whether any company of children had played
-in public at all before the date of Farrant’s experiment, we do not
-know. From 1576 onwards, it is the Theatre and the Curtain which have
-to bear the brunt of the Puritan attack, and the luxury of these, as
-compared with the primitive accommodation of the inn-yards, arouses
-a special indignation. ‘The sumptuous Theatre houses, a continual
-monument of Londons prodigalitie and folly’, wails Thomas White in
-1577. Stockwood in 1578 discommends ‘the gorgeous playing place erected
-in the fieldes’; and William Harrison, perhaps about the same time,
-finds it ‘an evident token of a wicked time when plaiers wexe so riche
-that they can build such houses’.[1030] Presently the theatres became
-notable amongst the sights which foreign travellers must see in London.
-Lupold von Wedel in 1584 says nothing of them, although he records the
-baiting and its rings.[1031] But they are noticed in the following year
-by Samuel Kiechel, a merchant of Ulm, who writes:[1032]
-
- ‘Comedies are given daily. It is particularly mirthful to
- behold, when the Queen’s comedians act, but annoying to a
- foreigner who does not know the language, that he understands
- nothing. There are some peculiar houses, which are so made as to
- have about three galleries over one another, inasmuch as a great
- number of people always enters to see such an entertainment. It
- may well be that they take as much as from 50 to 60 dollars [£10
- to £12] at once, especially when they act anything new, which
- has not been given before, and double prices are charged. This
- goes on nearly every day in the week; even though performances
- are forbidden on Friday and Saturday, it is not observed.’
-
-The Theatre and the London inns were still the chief playing-places,
-when at some date between 1576 and 1596 William Lambarde illustrated
-his account of the pilgrimages to Boxley, by explaining that those who
-visited the shrine did not get off scot-free--
-
- ‘no more than such as goe to Parisgardein, the Bell Sauage, or
- Theatre, to beholde Beare baiting, Enterludes, or Fence play,
- can account of any pleasant spectacle, unlesse they first pay
- one pennie at the gate, another at the entrie of the Scaffolde,
- and the thirde for a quiet standing.’[1033]
-
-Paris Garden was the generic name given to the successive places
-for bear-baiting which lay on the Surrey side of the river, not in
-Southwark proper, which was in the jurisdiction of the City, but in the
-Liberty of the Clink, which stretched in a westerly direction along
-the Bankside, or still farther to the west, in the Manor of Paris
-Garden itself. In Surrey, no less than in London, plays had established
-themselves at an early date. A performance was going on in Southwark,
-while the priests of St. Saviour’s sang _Dirige_ for Henry VIII’s
-soul in 1547.[1034] The Privy Council ordered the Surrey justices to
-suppress plays in the Borough and the adjoining places during 1578; and
-it seems probable that a regular play-house had been built south of
-the river at a date not much later than that of the Theatre itself. It
-stood far back behind Southwark, in the village of Newington, divided
-from the river by St. George’s Fields. The distance and the bad roads
-were against it; and it was not until the Rose was built in the Clink
-about 1587, that the Bankside became a serious rival to the ‘fields’
-in the north as the home of theatres. The Swan, in Paris Garden, was
-built in 1595. Newington is too far to the south to appear in the maps,
-but Norden’s map of 1593 shows two round buildings, standing between
-Bankside and an unnamed road, which may safely be identified with that
-called Maiden Lane. One is lettered ‘The Beare howse’, the other, more
-to the east and the south, ‘The play howse’; and this must clearly be
-the Rose.
-
-In 1596 the City appear to have at last obtained the assent of the
-Privy Council to the complete exclusion of plays from the area of
-their jurisdiction. This is probably the proceeding described, with
-no precise indication of date, in the following passage from Richard
-Rawlidge’s _A Monster Lately Found out and Discovered, or the
-Scourging of Tipplers_ (1628):[1035]
-
- ‘_London_ hath within the memory of man lost much of hir
- pristine lustre, ... by being ... filled with ... sinnes,
- which ... are ... maintained, in Play-houses, Ale-houses,
- Bawdy-houses, Dising-houses, ... All which houses, and traps
- for Gentlemen, and others, of such Receipt, were formerly taken
- notice of by many Citizens, and well disposed graue Gentlemen
- ... wherevpon some of the pious magistrates made humble suit
- to the late Queene Elizabeth of ever-liuing memorie, and her
- priuy Counsaile, and obteined leaue from her Majesty to thrust
- those Players out of the Citty and to pull downe the Dicing
- houses: which accordingly was affected, and the Play-houses in
- _Gracious street_, _Bishops-gate-street_, nigh _Paules_, that on
- _Ludgate_ hill, the _White-Friars_ were put down, and other lewd
- houses quite supprest within the Liberties, by the care of those
- religious senators, ... and surely had all their successors
- followed their worthy stepps, sinne would not at this day haue
- beene so powerfull, and raigning as it is.’
-
-The play-houses in Gracious or Gracechurch Street, Bishopsgate Street,
-and Ludgate Hill were presumably the Bell and the Cross Keys, the
-Bull, and the Bel Savage. By the house ‘nigh Paul’s’ Rawlidge possibly
-meant the choir song-school; but in fact there had been no plays by
-the Paul’s boys since 1590. If there was really a Whitefriars house
-at so early a date, this is the only notice preserved of it. It may
-be suspected that Rawlidge confused it with the Blackfriars, which
-James Burbadge was apparently prevented, upon representations by the
-City, from reopening in 1596. The claim of the City to exercise any
-control over the old religious precincts of the Blackfriars and the
-Whitefriars was a doubtful one; and although they ultimately secured
-jurisdiction, they were not able to prevent the so-called ‘private’
-theatres from establishing themselves in these ‘liberties’.[1036] With
-these exceptions, however, and possibly that of the Boar’s Head, which
-seems to have been used for a few years after 1602, but was more likely
-just outside the bars, 1596 probably saw the last of playing within the
-actual gates of the City.
-
-Londoners had now to look wholly to the suburbs for their dramatic
-entertainment. Prince Lewis of Anhalt-Cöthen found four theatres
-in 1596.[1037] These were doubtless the Theatre and the Curtain on
-the north and the Rose and the Swan on the south of the river. The
-Newington house was still used in 1594, but even before that had long
-been out of fashion. It was probably also about 1596 that John de
-Witt wrote his _Observations Londinenses_. He too mentioned the
-four theatres, together with the baiting house, and was particularly
-struck by the newest, and as he avers, the largest and fairest of
-them, the Swan, of the interior of which he attached a rough sketch to
-his manuscript. This manuscript is lost, but fortunately an extract
-survives, copied into a commonplace book by Arend van Buchell of
-Utrecht. The following is the complete text:[1038]
-
-
- EX OBSERVATIONIBUS LONDINENSIBUS JOHANNIS DE WITT.
-
- De phano D. Pauli. Huic Paulino phano adheret locus ab
- asservandis sacratioribus vestimentis Sacristi dictus, omnino
- observatione dignus, quippe quo DIANAE delubrum fuisse
- ferunt. Sacellum est rotundum, hemyphericum, concameratum,
- cuius structura Romanam antiquitatem referre videtur. Aiunt
- cum fundamenta templi iacerentur effossam ante huius aediculae
- fores innumeram cervinorum capitum copiam; inde colligi Dianae
- sacrificia (cui cervis litabatur) ibi olim peracta esse eique
- hanc aedem sacratam fuisse; in eodem phano sunt epitaphia et
- sepulcra varia praeter ea quae alio loco a me notata sunt,
- Guilelmi Herberti Penbrochiae comitis Walliae praesidis qui
- obijt A^o aetat. lxiii Christi vero 1569.
-
- Ibidem in aede Westmonasteriensi sunt monumenta cum suis
- elogiis: Guill. Thynne armigeri ex antiqua Bottevillorum
- familia, Joannis Thynne fratris qui obijt 14 Martii 1584, item
- Joannis Bourgh Duisburgi gubernatoris A^o 1596.
-
- Amphiteatra Londinij sunt iv visendae pulcritudinis quae a
- diversis intersigniis diuersa nomina sortiuntur: in iis varia
- quotidie scaena populo exhibetur. Horum duo excellentiora vltra
- Tamisim ad meridiam sita sunt, a suspensis signis ROSA et Cygnus
- nominata: Alia duo extra vrbem ad septentrionem sunt, viâ quâ
- itur per Episcopalem portam vulgariter Biscopgat nuncupatam.
- Est etiam quintum, sed dispari [vsu?] et structura, bestiarum
- concertationi destinatum, in quo multi vrsi, tauri, et stupendae
- magnitudinis canes, discretis caueis & septis aluntur, qui
- [_drawing occupies rest of page_] ad pugnam adseruantur,
- iocundissimum hominibus spectaculum praebentes. Theatrorum autem
- omnium prestantissimum est et amplissimum id cuius intersignium
- est cygnus (vulgo te theatre off te cijn [off te swan]),[1039]
- quippe quod tres mille homines in sedilibus admittat,
- constructum ex coaceruato lapide pyrritide (quorum ingens in
- Britannia copia est) ligneis suffultum columnis quae ob illitum
- marmoreum colorem, nasutissimos quoque fallere possent. Cuius
- quidem formam quod Romani operis vmbram videatur exprimere supra
- adpinxi.
-
- Narrabat idem se vidisse in Brittannia apud Abrahamum de
- lyndeley [?] mercatorem Alberti Dureri omnia opera cartacea
- elegantissima et absolutissima.
-
-The account of Paul Hentzner, who was in London from 31 August to
-8 September 1598, lays less stress upon the theatres than upon the
-baiting, and is not altogether consistent with that of de Witt as to
-the structure of the Swan, which was the nearest house to the moorings
-of the royal barge at the west end of Paris Garden.[1040] Hentzner
-writes:
-
- ‘Sunt porro Londini extra Urbem Theatra aliquot, in quibus
- Histriones Angli Comoedias & Tragoedias singulis fere diebus, in
- magna hominum frequentia agunt, quas variis etiam saltationibus,
- suavissima adhibita musica, magno cum populi applausu finire
- solent. Non longe ab uno horum theatrorum, quae omnia lignea
- sunt, ad Thamesim navis est regia, quae duo egregia habet
- conclavia, fenestris perlucidis, picturis & sculpturis eleganter
- exornata, in sicco & quidem sub tecto collocata, propterea, ut a
- pluviis & coeli injuria immunis sit.’
-
-Hentzner then describes the baiting.[1041] He concludes:
-
- ‘Utuntur in hisce spectaculis sicut & alibi, ubicunque locorum
- sint Angli, herba Nicotiana, quam Americano idiomate Tabacam
- nuncupant (Paetum alii dicunt) hoc modo frequentissime; Fistulae
- in hunc finem ex argilia factae, orificio posteriori, dictam
- herbam probe exiccatam, ita ut in pulverem facile redigi possit,
- immittunt, & igne admoto accendunt, unde fumus ab anteriori
- parte ore attrahitur, qui per nares rursum, tanquam per
- infurnibulum exit, & phlegma ac capitis defluxiones magna copia
- secum educit. Circumferuntur insuper in hisce theatris varii
- fructus venales, ut poma, pyra, nuces & pro ratione temporis,
- etiam vinum & cerevisia.’[1042]
-
-It is perhaps natural that foreign visitors should be more struck by
-the English theatres at a time when the English stage was serving as a
-model to northern Europe, than was the case with a native chronicler of
-grave and slightly Puritanic tendencies. John Stowe, when he published
-his _Survey of London_ in 1598, had nothing to say of the Bankside
-houses, and but little of those in Middlesex. After writing of the
-miracle plays, he says:
-
- ‘Of late time in place of those Stage playes, hath beene vsed
- Comedies, Tragedies, Enterludes, and Histories, both true and
- fayned: For the acting whereof certaine publike places as the
- Theater, the Curtine, &c., haue been erected’ [_in margin_,
- ‘Theater and Curten for Comedies & other shewes’].[1043]
-
-In another place, at the end of a description of Holywell, he adds:
-
- ‘And neare therevnto are builded two publique houses for the
- acting and shewe of Comedies, Tragedies, and Histories, for
- recreation. Whereof the one is called the Courtein, the other
- the Theatre: both standing on the South-west side towards the
- field.’[1044]
-
-Even these scanty references were pruned in the second edition of
-1603, after the Theatre had disappeared at the end of 1598 and the
-Chamberlain’s men had left the Curtain. And of the Globe, built
-during the earlier half of 1599, to which they migrated, Stowe takes
-no notice. The Globe, however, appears, although unnamed, together
-with two other theatres, of which one must be the Curtain, in the next
-foreign account, a very full one by Thomas Platter of Basle, who was
-in England from 18 September to 20 October 1599.[1045] I translate the
-passage, of which sufficient use has not been made by historians of the
-stage:
-
- ‘After dinner on the 21st of September, at about two o’clock,
- I went with my companions over the water, and in the strewn
- roof-house saw the tragedy of the first Emperor Julius with
- at least fifteen characters very well acted. At the end of
- the comedy they danced according to their custom with extreme
- elegance. Two in men’s clothes and two in women’s gave this
- performance, in wonderful combination with each other. On
- another occasion, I also saw after dinner a comedy, not far from
- our inn, in the suburb; if I remember right, in Bishopsgate.
- Here they represented various nations, with whom on each
- occasion an Englishman fought for his daughter, and overcame
- them all except the German, who won the daughter in fight. He
- then sat down with him, and gave him and his servant strong
- drink, so that they both got drunk, and the servant threw his
- shoe at his master’s head and they both fell asleep. Meanwhile
- the Englishman went into the tent, robbed the German of his
- gains, and thus he outwitted the German also. At the end they
- danced very elegantly both in English and in Irish fashion.
- And thus every day at two o’clock in the afternoon in the city
- of London two and sometimes three comedies are performed,
- at separate places, wherewith folk make merry together, and
- whichever does best gets the greatest audience. The places are
- so built, that they play on a raised platform, and every one
- can well see it all. There are, however, separate galleries and
- there one stands more comfortably and moreover can sit, but one
- pays more for it. Thus anyone who remains on the level standing
- pays only one English penny: but if he wants to sit, he is let
- in at a further door, and there he gives another penny. If he
- desires to sit on a cushion in the most comfortable place of
- all, where he not only sees everything well, but can also be
- seen, then he gives yet another English penny at another door.
- And in the pauses of the comedy food and drink are carried round
- amongst the people, and one can thus refresh himself at his own
- cost.
-
- ‘The comedians are most expensively and elegantly apparelled,
- since it is customary in England, when distinguished gentlemen
- or knights die, for nearly the finest of their clothes to be
- made over and given to their servants, and as it is not proper
- for them to wear such clothes but only to imitate them, they
- give them to the comedians to purchase for a small sum.
-
- ‘What they can thus produce daily by way of mirth in the
- comedies, every one knows well, who has happened to see them
- acting or playing.’
-
-Platter then describes the Cockpit and the baiting. He concludes:
-
- ‘With such and many other pastimes besides the English spend
- their time; in the comedies they learn what is going on in other
- lands, and this happens without alarm, husband and wife together
- in a familiar place, since for the most part the English do not
- much use to travel, but are content ever to learn of foreign
- matters at home, and ever to take their pastime.’
-
-A year later than Platter, another traveller thus describes a visit to
-the Bankside:[1046]
-
- ‘1600 die Lunae 3 Julii. Audivimus comoediam Anglicam; theatrum
- ad morem antiquorum Romanorum constructum ex lignis, ita
- formatum ut omnibus ex partibus spectatores commodatissime
- singula videre possint. In reditu transivimus pontem magnificis
- aedificiis ornatum e quibus uni adhuc affixa cernuntur capita
- quorundam comitum et nobilium, qui laesae Majestatis rei
- supplicio affecti sunt.’
-
-When Lewis of Anhalt and de Witt wrote, there were four theatres,
-exclusive of the City inn-yards, which were probably already closed.
-Platter found two, and sometimes three, performances being given daily.
-This agrees with the evidence available from other sources. After the
-scandal of _The Isle of Dogs_ in 1597, the Privy Council decreed
-a limitation of the London companies to two, the Chamberlain’s men and
-the Admiral’s. The former played at the Curtain until 1599, when they
-destroyed the Theatre and built the Globe. The latter played at the
-Rose until 1600, when they migrated to the newly built Fortune. But
-it is clear that the ordinance of the Privy Council was not strictly
-observed. An intruding company was playing in February 1598, either
-at the Theatre or the Swan. Platter’s three houses in 1599 included
-the Curtain, together presumably with the Globe and the Rose. When the
-Council sanctioned the opening of the Fortune in 1600, they understood
-that the Curtain was to be ‘either ruinated or applied to some other
-good use’, but it was still the scene of plays in 1601. Finally, in
-the spring of 1602 Elizabeth ordered the Council to tolerate a third
-company, that of the Earl of Worcester, Master of the Horse. This
-was then playing at the Boar’s Head, a short-lived house of which
-practically nothing is known; in the autumn it moved to the Rose. The
-Swan possibly went out of use, except for the occasional performances
-of acrobats and fencers, or of amateurs. On the other hand, Lord
-Hertford’s men were in London during the winter of 1602–3, in addition
-to the three privileged companies, and they must have practised
-somewhere.
-
-To the above must be added, for the closing years of Elizabeth’s
-reign, the ‘private’ houses; Paul’s reopened in the winter of 1599,
-the Blackfriars in that of 1600. Of these Platter knows nothing, but
-Duke Philip Julius of Stettin-Pomerania, in the autumn of 1602, in
-addition to performances at the Fortune and another theatre, saw also,
-doubtless at the Blackfriars, the _Kinder-comoedia_. The following
-is an extract from the diary of the visit kept by the duke’s secretary,
-Frederic Gerschow:[1047]
-
- ‘13 [September] On the thirteenth a comedy was played, of
- the taking of Stuhl-Weissenberg, firstly by the Turks, and
- thereafter back again by the Christians.
-
- 14. In the afternoon was played a tragicomedy of Samson and the
- half tribe of Benjamin.’[1048]
-
-On 16 September the duke and his retinue saw the baiting. On 18
-September they visited the Blackfriars, and Gerschow wrote an account
-of the organization of the Children of the Chapel and of the nature of
-their performances.[1049]
-
-The Globe and the Fortune continued in regular use, as the houses of
-the King’s men, and the Prince’s men respectively, during the new
-reign, and endured to the closing of the theatres in 1642. Each was
-destroyed by fire and rebuilt; the former in 1613, the latter in 1621.
-Queen Anne’s men at first used the Boar’s Head and the Curtain, but
-migrated from the Boar’s Head to the Red Bull, which had been built by
-1606. This became their principal house, and they cannot be shown to
-have used the Curtain after 1609. These were the only companies of men
-players in London during 1603–8, and the Globe, the Fortune, and the
-Red Bull are obviously the ‘three houses’ whose rivalry is referred to
-by Dekker in the following passage from his _Raven’s Almanack_ of
-1608:[1050]
-
- ‘Another ciuill warre doe I finde wil fal betweene players, who
- albeit at the beginning of this fatall yeare, they salute one
- another like sworne brothers, yet before the middle of it, shall
- they wish one anothers throate cut for two pence. The contention
- of the two houses, (the gods bee thanked) was appeased long
- agoe, but a deadly warre betweene the three houses will I feare
- burst out like thunder and lightning. For it is thought that
- Flag will be aduanced (as it were in mortall defiance against
- Flag), numbers of people will also bee mustred and fall to one
- side or other, the drums and trumpets must be sounded, partes
- will then (euen by the chiefest players) bee taken: words will
- passe to and fro: speeches cannot so bee put vp, handes will
- walke, an alarum be giuen, fortune must fauour some, or els they
- are neuer able to stand: the whole world must sticke to others,
- or else al the water in the theames wil not serue to carrie
- those away that will bee put to flight, and a third faction must
- fight like wilde Buls against Lyons, or else it will be in vaine
- to march vp into the field.’
-
-There were, however, more than three London companies about 1608. M.
-de la Boderie tells us how one fell into disgrace during that year,
-and how four others subscribed to buy off the consequent inhibition
-of plays.[1051] The reconciliation is simple. Dekker has in mind only
-the ‘public’ and not the ‘private’ houses. Of these Paul’s was closed
-in 1606; it was made worth its Master’s while not to reopen it. The
-Blackfriars was used by the successive boy companies, known generically
-as the Queen’s Revels, until 1608 or 1609, when it passed to the King’s
-men, who thereafter maintained it as a winter house, to supplement the
-Globe. The Queen’s Revels then moved to the Whitefriars, a private
-house built at some time before 1608, and occupied in that year by the
-ephemeral company of the King’s Revels.
-
-An increase in the number of adult companies now made fresh demands
-upon theatrical house-room. It is presumably the Duke of York’s men
-who were described at Leicester in 1608 as ‘the Princes players
-of the White Chapple, London’. The description suggests that they
-used the Boar’s Head, but if so, nothing more is heard of it, and
-it is conceivable that they soon succeeded to the Curtain. The Lady
-Elizabeth’s, who came into existence in 1611, are traceable at the
-Swan, which Henslowe may have taken over to succeed the Rose, disused,
-if not pulled down, by 1606. The following lines are in John Heath’s
-_Two Centuries of Epigrammes_ (1610), but may of course, especially as
-the Red Bull is not named, date back to the period when the Curtain
-was still in the hands of the Queen’s men:
-
- Momus would act the fooles part in a play,
- And cause he would be exquisite that way,
- Hies me to London, where no day can passe
- But that some play-house still his presence has;
- Now at the Globe with a judicious eye
- Into the Vice’s action doth he prie.
- Next to the Fortune, where it is a chaunce
- But he marks something worth his cognisance.
- Then to the Curtaine, where, as at the rest,
- He notes that action downe that likes him best.[1052]
-
-A foreign traveller again gives us help. The relation of the visit of
-Prince Lewis Frederick of Württemberg in 1610 merely records that he
-went to the Globe, and Justus Zingerling, who was in London at about
-the same date, has the briefest note of the existence of ‘theatra
-comoedorum et in quibus ursi et tauri cum canibus committuntur’.[1053]
-But the itinerary of Prince Otto of Hesse-Cassel in the following year
-is more expansive. The compiler writes:
-
- ‘In London there are seven theatres, where daily, except on
- Sundays, comedies are performed, whereof the most important is
- the Globe, which lies over the water. The theatre, where the
- children play, is on the hither side of the water; they play
- at three o’clock, but only from Michaelmas to Easter. Here it
- only costs half a shilling to enter, but for the other places
- at least half a crown. These play only with lights, and are the
- best company in London.’[1054]
-
-In addition to the Globe and the Whitefriars, the tale of seven
-theatres is probably made up by the Blackfriars, the Fortune, the Red
-Bull, the Curtain, and the Swan.
-
-Henslowe’s correspondence with Daborne shows that he still had a
-‘publique howse’, probably the Swan, in December 1613, and also that
-in June of that year his company was only just thinking of ‘comming
-over’ for a summer season, presumably from the Whitefriars, as he had
-recently carried out an amalgamation between the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men and the Queen’s Revels.[1055] In the following year occurred an
-episode which curiously emphasizes the constant shifting of the focus
-of theatrical interest during the whole of the period with which we
-are concerned. Originally stageland was in the heart of the City
-itself. With the building of the first theatres, it was transferred
-to the Fields of the northern suburbs. During the last decade of the
-sixteenth century the Fields in their turn gave way to the Bankside.
-The Rose, the Swan, and the Globe successively made their appearance,
-and the vestry of Southwark began to echo the earlier outcry of the
-City against the iniquities of players, until their mouths were stopped
-with tithes. But the transpontine period proved a brief one. Hardly was
-the Globe up, before Alleyn’s choice of a site for the Fortune set the
-fashion veering again, and opened up a new theatrical region in the
-western suburbs. This was convenient for the Court and the great houses
-along the Strand and for the lawyers in the Temple and at Westminster,
-as well as for the City proper, and its tradition has endured until
-quite recent years. The Red Bull and the Whitefriars followed in the
-same area. On the other hand, the Rose had vanished, and the King’s
-men, although they did not desert the Globe, acknowledged the change
-of venue by taking up their winter quarters in the Blackfriars hard
-by. One result was that men who had ridden to the Fields and been
-ferried to the Bankside, now walked or drove in their coaches to the
-theatre door. During the spring of 1614 things were probably at their
-worst. Both the Globe, after its fire, and the Hope were still in the
-builder’s hands, and if the Lady Elizabeth’s lingered again at the
-Whitefriars, there can have been no plays across the water at all.
-The watermen, who twenty years before had exercised the influence
-of their patron, the Lord Admiral, to induce the Privy Council to
-revoke an inhibition on the Bankside houses, sent up a bitter cry
-of protest. John Taylor, the ‘water-poet’, whom they chose as their
-spokesman, tells the story.[1056] A petition to the King was prepared,
-to the effect that no play-house might be permitted ‘in London or in
-Middlesex, within four miles of the City on that side of the Thames’,
-and with this Taylor pursued James to Theobalds, Newmarket, and
-Royston. It recited the service done by watermen in the navy during the
-Armada invasion of 1588 and in such expeditions as those of Essex in
-1596 and 1597. And it proceeded:
-
- ‘Afterwards the players began to play on the Bankside and to
- leave playing in London and Middlesex (for the most part),
- then there went such great concourse of people by water that
- the small number of watermen remaining at home were not able
- to carry them, by reason of the court, the terms, the players,
- and other employments, so that we were enforced and encouraged
- (hoping that this golden stirring would have lasted ever) to
- take and entertain men and boys.’
-
-It was calculated that the number of watermen and their dependants
-between Windsor and Gravesend had now by 1614 reached 40,000:
-
- ‘The cause of the greater half of which multitude hath been
- the players playing on the Bankside, for I have known three
- companies besides the bear-baiting, at once there; to wit, the
- Globe, the Rose, and the Swan. And it is an infallible truth
- that, had they never played there, it had been better for
- watermen by the one half of their living, for the company is
- increased more than half by their means of playing there in
- former times.’
-
-Foreign employment had now come to an end:
-
- ‘And the players have all (except the King’s men) left their
- usuall residency on the Bankside, and do play in Middlesex far
- remote from the Thames, so that every day in the week they do
- draw unto them three or four thousand people, that were used to
- spend their monies by water.’
-
-Such, Taylor assures us, was the effect of the petition. It was
-referred by James to ‘his commissioners for suits’, that is to say, the
-Court of Requests, composed of Sir Julius Caesar, Sir Thomas Parry, Sir
-Francis Bacon, Sir Henry Montagu, Sir Walter Cope, George Calvert, and
-Baron Sotherton. The King’s men exhibited a counter-petition, and the
-case came on for hearing.
-
- ‘Sir Francis Bacon very worthily said that so far as the public
- weal was to be regarded before pastimes, or a serviceable
- decaying multitude before a handful of particular men, or
- profit before pleasure, so far was our suit to be preferred
- before theirs.’
-
-The players appealed to the Earl of Somerset, who became Lord
-Chamberlain and in that capacity their official protector on 10 July
-1614, but he proved well affected towards the watermen. The hearing was
-adjourned and never resumed, owing to the death of Cope on 31 July,
-the promotion of Caesar to the Mastership of the Rolls on 1 October,
-and the consequent dissolution of the commission. Ill feeling broke
-out between Taylor and his fellows the watermen, who declared that
-he met the players at supper at the Cardinal’s Hat on Bankside, and
-took bribes of them to let the suit fall. Taylor, therefore, wrote his
-pamphlet to vindicate his position.[1057] The completion of the new
-Globe and the Hope during the progress of the dispute had probably
-eased matters temporarily for the watermen, but the growing tendency
-of things theatrical towards Middlesex was not permanently checked.
-Some of the minor companies used the Hope until 1617, and then left
-it to the bears again. The Globe survived, but will be found to have
-occupied during the Caroline period a distinctly secondary position
-to the Blackfriars in the economy of the King’s men. For this there
-was another reason besides the geographical superiority of Middlesex
-over Surrey. The acquisition of the Blackfriars, even though only for
-winter purposes, in 1608 was an acknowledgement of the advantages for
-adult companies of the ‘private’ or roofed type of theatre, hitherto
-used only by boys. Once these advantages were realized, the doom of
-the old ‘ring’ type, with its central opening, was written. Probably
-the Hope was the only new house constructed on these lines after 1608,
-and obviously the Hope required free ventilation to get rid of the
-stink of bears and dogs. In 1615 Philip Rosseter and others obtained
-sanction for the conversion of Porter’s Hall in the Blackfriars into
-a theatre. This was to be used by children as well as adults, and was
-probably roofed. It was pulled down again by what seems a somewhat
-arbitrary decision in 1617. About the same time, the roofed Cockpit in
-Drury Lane was converted into a theatre, under the name of the Phoenix,
-for the occupation of the Queen’s men, who migrated to it from the Red
-Bull. Whether or not the Fortune was given a roof at the rebuilding
-of 1623, or the Red Bull at somewhat the same time, is uncertain; but
-at any rate the Salisbury Court theatre, built near the Whitefriars
-in 1629, perhaps to replace the old Whitefriars theatre, was a roofed
-house.[1058] This was the last new theatre built before the civil
-wars. The Blackfriars, the Cockpit, and Salisbury Court were the most
-important of the Caroline stages, and in the post-Restoration houses,
-although these were on a larger scale than the ‘private’ houses of the
-past, the roofed model was invariably adopted.
-
-Soon after the completion of Salisbury Court, Edmund Howes, who had
-already edited the fourth edition of John Stowe’s _Annales_ in 1615,
-was again revising the text for the fifth edition of 1631, and took
-occasion to append to his account of the burnings of the Globe and the
-Fortune the following summary of theatrical enterprise since 1569:[1059]
-
- ‘In the yeere one thousand sixe hundred twenty nine, there was
- builded a new faire Play-house, neere the white Fryers. And this
- is the seauenteenth Stage, or common Play-house, which hath
- beene new made within the space of threescore yeeres within
- London and the Suburbs, _viz._
-
- ‘Fiue Innes, or common Osteryes turned to Play-houses,
- one _Cockpit_, S. _Paules_ singing Schoole, one in the
- _Black-fryers_, and one in the _White-fryers_, which was built
- last of all, in the yeare one thousand sixe hundred twenty
- nine, all the rest not named, were erected only for common
- Play-houses, besides the new built Beare garden, which was
- built as well for playes, and Fencers prizes, as Bull bayting;
- besides, one in former time at _Newington_ Buts; Before the
- space of threescore yeares aboue-sayd, I neither knew, heard,
- nor read, of any such Theaters, set Stages, or Play-houses, as
- haue beene purposely built within mans memory.’
-
-This passage serves as a fair summary of the detailed investigations
-set out in this chapter. Howes only allows one house to the Blackfriars
-and one to the Whitefriars, and must therefore be leaving out of
-account the abortive Porter’s Hall house, and treating Salisbury Court
-as a continuation of the earlier Whitefriars. The Hope and Newington
-Butts are afterthoughts, and make his seventeen into nineteen. We can
-identify his five inns as the Bull, the Bell, the Cross Keys, the
-Bel Savage, and probably the Red Lion, although this just antedates
-his period of sixty years; while his balance of eight unnamed common
-play-houses must be the Theatre, the Curtain, the Rose, the Swan, the
-Globe, the Fortune, the Boar’s Head, and the Red Bull.
-
-Prynne, in his _Histriomastix_ (1633), records six ‘divels chappels’ as
-then in use, and these are doubtless the six houses, the Blackfriars,
-Globe, Cockpit, Salisbury Court, Fortune, and Red Bull, which are also
-noted by the Restoration writers on the stage, John Downes and James
-Wright, as surviving up to the cataclysm of the civil wars.[1060]
-
-Somewhat more confused and vague in their datings are the reminiscences
-about 1660 of the Marquis of Newcastle in his letter of advice to
-Prince Charles, under the head of ‘Devertismentes for your Ma^{tie}
-People’:[1061]
-
- ‘Firste for London Paris Garden will holde good for the meaner
- People.
-
- ‘Then for severall Playe Houses as ther weare five att leaste In
- my Time,--
-
- ‘Black-Friers, the Cock-Pitt, Salsburye Courte, the Fortune,
- & the Redd Bull,--Ther weare the Boyes thatt played at
- Black-Friers, & Paules, & then the Kinges Players played att the
- Globe--which is nowe calde the Phenixe [!]--Some Played, att
- the Bores heade, & att the Curtin In the feildes & some att the
- Hope whiche Is the Beare Garden, and some at White Friers,--Butt
- five or Sixe Playe Houses Is enough for all sortes off Peoples
- divertion & pleasure In thatt kinde.’
-
-The marquis is the only one of the chroniclers who definitely records
-the Boar’s Head.
-
-A manuscript continuation of Stowe’s _Annales_, found in a copy
-of the 1631 edition, narrates the havoc wrought by Puritans and
-ground-landlords:[1062]
-
- ‘Play Houses. The Globe play house on the Banks side in
- Southwarke, was burnt downe to the ground, in the yeare 1612.
- And now built vp againe in the yeare 1613, at the great charge
- of King Iames, and many Noble men and others. And now pulled
- downe to the ground, by Sir Matthew Brand, On Munday the 15 of
- April 1644, to make tenements in the room of it.
-
- ‘The Blacke Friers players play-house in Blacke Friers, London,
- which had stood many yeares, was pulled downe to the ground on
- Munday the 6 day of August 1655, and tennements built in the
- rome.
-
- ‘The play house in Salsbury Court, in Fleetstreete, was pulled
- downe by a company of souldiers, set on by the sectuaries of
- these sad times, on Saturday the 24 day of March 1649.
-
- ‘The Phenix in Druery Lane, was pulled downe also this day,
- being Saterday the 24 day of March 1649, by the same souldiers.
-
- ‘The Fortune Play-house betweene White Crosse streete and
- Golding Lane was burnd downe to the ground in the yeare 1618.
- And built againe with brick worke on the outside in the yeare
- 1622. And now pulled downe on the inside by the souldiers this
- 1649.
-
- ‘The Hope, on the Banks side in Southwarke, commonly called
- the Beare Garden, a Play House for Stage Playes on Mundayes,
- Wedensdayes, Fridayes, and Saterdayes, and for the baiting of
- the Beares on Tuesdayes and Thursdayes, the stage being made
- to take vp and downe when they please. It was built in the
- year 1610, and now pulled downe to make tennementes, by Thomas
- Walker, a peticoate maker in Cannon Streete, on Tuesday the 25
- day of March 1656. Seuen of M^r. Godfries beares, by the command
- of Thomas Pride, then hie Sheriefe of Surry, were then shot to
- death, on Saterday the 9 day of February 1655, by a company of
- souldiers.’
-
-Downes and Wright do not mention the Hope, as they were not discussing
-baiting. On the other hand, the annalist says nothing of the fate of
-the Red Bull, which in fact appears to have escaped destruction, to
-have been occasionally used for ‘drolls’ during the Commonwealth, and
-to have served once more, with the Cockpit and Salisbury Court, the
-demolition of which was probably limited to the interior fittings,
-for the first entertainments of the Restoration. The building of Vere
-Street in 1660, Lincoln’s Inn Fields in 1661, and Drury Lane in 1663
-made them obsolete.[1063]
-
-These records leave ambiguous the fate of the Curtain and the Swan. The
-Curtain is traceable in occasional use up to about 1627, and is figured
-as a roundish building in the ‘Ryther’ maps, which are probably of a
-decade later.[1064] It cannot, therefore, have vanished long before
-the civil wars, and was the most long-lived of all the theatres. It
-may, of course, have been rebuilt, later than its original foundation
-in 1576, but as to this there is no evidence. The ‘Ryther’ maps also
-show the Fortune. No other maps give any of the theatres on the north
-of the river. Of the Bankside houses, the Swan is shown by a decagonal
-ground-plan, with the inscription ‘Old Play house’, in the Paris Garden
-Manor survey of 1627.[1065] And it is described as still existing side
-by side with the Globe and the Hope, but clearly also as derelict, in
-the following passage from _Holland’s Leaguer_ (1632):
-
- ‘Especially, and aboue all the rest, she was most taken with the
- report of three famous _Amphytheators_, which stood so neere
- scituated, that her eye might take view of them from the lowest
- _Turret_, one was the _Continent of the World_, because halfe
- the yeere a World of _Beauties_, and braue _Spirits_ resorted
- vnto it; the other was a building of excellent _Hope_, and
- though _wild beasts_ and _Gladiators_ did most possesse it, yet
- the Gallants that came to behold those combats, though they were
- of a mixt Society, yet were many Noble worthies amongst them;
- the last which stood, and as it were shak’d handes with this
- Fortresse, beeing in times past as famous as any of the other,
- was now fallen to decay, and like a dying _Swanne_, hanging
- downe her head, seemed to sing her owne dierge.’[1066]
-
-I turn now to the maps of the Bankside, which, had they been datable,
-and drawn with cartographical precision, ought not only to have
-furnished valuable evidence as to the duration of the theatres, but
-also to have indicated accurately the position of each amongst the
-streets and lanes of the district. Neither condition is, however,
-fulfilled. Even where the date of an engraving is known, the date of
-the survey on which it was based can, as a rule, be only approximately
-determined. And the constant intrusion of pictorial elements, which
-gives the maps the character of perspective views rather than of
-plans, is naturally emphasized on the Bankside, which has to serve as
-a foreground to the design. The main topographical features which have
-to be borne in mind are simple, and can easily be related to those
-in John Rocque’s map of 1746, as interpreted by Strype’s _Survey_ of
-1720, or in a modern Ordnance map. The whole region concerned lies
-roughly between the southern approaches to London and Blackfriars
-Bridges. It underwent a good deal of development during one period,
-especially in the area of the Clink, a liberty lying between Southwark
-on the east and another liberty of Paris Garden on the west, and
-affording a convenient suburban resort outside the jurisdiction of
-the City. Stowe’s account of the neighbourhood in 1598 is perhaps a
-little misleading. He describes no more than the Bankside proper, ‘a
-continuall building of tenements’ on the riverside, extending about
-half a mile west of London Bridge. Here he places, from west to east,
-the bear gardens, the former stews, the prison of the Clink, Winchester
-House, and the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark.[1067] This
-agrees pretty well with the maps of Agas (_c._ 1561) and Norden
-(1593), except that there was already a group of houses falling outside
-Stowe’s purview, which stood on the river near Paris Garden Stairs
-and practically continued the Bankside westwards. But there was also,
-which Stowe does not mention, a marshy _hinterland_ to the Bankside,
-of ponds and gardens, among which Agas, and still more Norden, show
-a good many scattered houses. By the end of the century there was a
-fairly definite north to south street known as Deadman’s Place, which
-debouched from the east end of the Bankside, and from which in its turn
-struck out one called Maid or Maiden Lane, which went in an irregular
-line westwards over the marshes, and was finally joined by two
-divergent ways, Love Lane and Gravel (afterwards Holland) Lane, to the
-Paris Garden group of houses. Thus was formed a rough parallelogram,
-half a mile long, and from 200 to 350 feet deep, within or near which
-all the theatrical sites are placed by the maps. In Norden’s map of
-1593, both the Bear House and the Play House, which must be the Rose,
-stand considerably to the west of Deadman’s Place. The Bear House is
-the most westerly of the two, and is about halfway between the Bankside
-houses on the north and Maid Lane on the south. The Rose is a good
-deal nearer Maid Lane. In the Delaram views (1603–20) there are three
-flagged, but unnamed, structures. One which stands well back from
-the river and, after allowing for the view-point, appears slightly
-the most easterly of the three, is cylindrical; the upper half is
-alone windowed, and has a smaller diameter than the lower half. It is
-placed amongst trees and meadows. There is nothing which obviously
-indicates Maid Lane.[1068] The two other buildings stand much nearer
-the river’s edge, amongst houses; they are angled, probably octagonal,
-and not cylindrical. The ‘Hondius’ views repeat the cylindrical
-building and the most westerly of the two angled buildings much in
-the same relative position; the intermediate one has disappeared. It
-seems obvious that the cylindrical building must be the Globe, and
-the other two the Bear Garden, afterwards the Hope, to the west, and
-the Rose, left out of the ‘Hondius’ group, because it disappeared in
-1605, in the centre. The Delaram and ‘Hondius’ views do not extend
-far enough west to include the Swan. It is shown by Visscher in 1616,
-and named. So are the Bear Garden and the Globe, both of which appear
-as angled buildings, octagonal or hexagonal, about equidistant from
-the Bankside houses, and north of Maid Lane, the angle of which next
-Deadman’s Place is shown.[1069] As the change from a cylindrical to an
-angled representation of the Globe coincides with the rebuilding of the
-house in 1614, we may perhaps infer that the structural form is not
-a mere cartographic convention.[1070] It is rather singular that in
-the Merian maps (_circa_ 1638) there are four houses again, including
-the Swan, well to the west. This, with two of the three houses in the
-eastern group, is named by the engraver. A third unnamed house stands
-between the Globe on the east and the Bear Garden on the west, which is
-approximately where the Rose used to stand. It is distinctly nearer the
-river than the other two, but all three are north of Maid Lane, from
-which the Bear Garden is slightly more remote than the Globe.[1071]
-If the Rose had actually a second term of existence, it was probably
-only a brief one.[1072] The fullest of the Ryther maps (_c._ 1636–45)
-has two angled buildings, one to the west, rather nearer to Bankside
-than to Maid Lane; the other to the east, and south of Maid Lane,
-standing in an angle between that and a track running from north-west
-to south-east. There are no names, but obviously the eastern house is
-the Globe, and the western the Hope, and indeed the dogs can be made
-out. The track joining Maid Lane may be Globe Alley. The Hollar view of
-1647 shows two cylindrical, not angled, buildings. One lettered ‘The
-Globe’ is on the extreme brink of the river; the other, to the east and
-south of it, is lettered ‘Beere bayting’. Faithorne and Newcourt, in
-1658, give no theatres proper, but only a ring marked ‘Beare garden’.
-Finally, Leeke and Hollar about 1666 give a single unnamed roundish
-theatre, south of Maid Lane. Presumably it is the Globe, but copied
-from a survey of earlier date, as the Globe had been pulled down for
-tenements in 1644.
-
-On the whole, the maps are disappointing guides. It seems more
-probable than has quite been recognized, that the singular two-storied
-structure shown by Hondius and Delaram really represents the earlier,
-the Shakespearian, Globe. And the representation of a fourth house by
-Merian, even if he did not know its name, gives support to the view
-that the Rose may have had some kind of existence at a later date than
-the Sewers records indicate. But as regards the alinement, the distance
-from the river, and the relation to Maid Lane, of the three houses in
-the Clink, it is clear that no consistent story is told. The general
-impression one gets is that the Hope stood farthest to the west, then
-the Rose, and then the Globe; and that the Rose stood nearest to the
-river, then the Hope, and then the Globe. Nor is this inconsistent with
-documentary evidence, which in particular indicates that the parcel of
-land, on which the latest of the Bear Gardens was built, was contiguous
-on the west to that known as ‘the little Rose’.[1073] Bear Garden and
-Rose Alley, running side by side from the Bankside into Maid Lane
-or Park Street, are traceable in eighteenth-century maps and in the
-modern Ordnance map.[1074] Did one judge by the maps alone, one would
-probably, in spite of the dissenting testimony of ‘Ryther’ and of Leeke
-and Hollar, come to the conclusion that the Globe stood to the north
-of Maid Lane. The balance of other evidence points unmistakably in the
-other direction.[1075]
-
-
- B. THE PUBLIC THEATRES
-
- i. The Red Lion Inn.
- ii. The Bull Inn.
- iii. The Bell Inn.
- iv. The Bel Savage Inn.
- v. The Cross Keys Inn.
- vi. The Theatre.
- vii. The Curtain.
- viii. Newington Butts.
- ix. The Rose.
- x. The Swan.
- xi. The Globe.
- xii. The Fortune.
- xiii. The Boar’s Head.
- xiv. The Red Bull.
- xv. The Hope.
- xvi. Porter’s Hall.
-
-
- i. THE RED LION INN
-
-The following record appears in the court books of the Carpenters’
-Company:[1076]
-
- Courte holden the xv^{th} daie of Julie 1567, Annoque Regni
- Reginae Eliz. nono by M^r William Ruddoke, M^r Richard More,
- Henrye Whreste & Richard Smarte wardeins, & M^r Bradshawe.
-
- Memorandum that at courte holden the daie & yeare abovesayd
- that, whear certaine varyaunce, discord & debate was betwene
- Wyllyam Sylvester carpenter on thone partie & John Brayne
- grocer on thother partie, yt is agreed, concluded & fullie
- determyned by the saide parties, by the assent & consent of them
- bothe, with the advise of the M^r & wardeins abovesayd that
- Willyam Buttermore, John Lyffe, Willyam Snellinge & Richard
- Kyrbye, Carpenters, shall with expedicon goe & peruse suche
- defaultes as are & by them shalbe found of in & aboute suche
- skaffoldes, as he the said Willyam hathe mad at the house called
- the Red Lyon in the parishe of Stebinyhuthe, & the said Willyam
- Sillvester shall repaire & amend the same with their advize
- substancyallie, as they shall thinke good. And that the said
- John Brayne, on Satterdaie next ensuenge the date above written,
- shall paye to the sayd Willyam Sylvester the some of eight
- poundes, tenne shillinges, lawfull money of England, & that
- after the playe, which is called the storye of Sampson, be once
- plaied at the place aforesaid the said John shall deliver to
- the said Willyam such bondes as are now in his custodie for the
- performaunce of the bargaine. In witnesse whereof both parties
- hereunto hathe sett their handes.
-
- by me John Brayne grocer.
- [Sylvester’s mark.]
-
-This is the only notice of the Red Lion playing-inn which has been
-preserved, but John Brayne, grocer, is doubtless the same who financed
-his brother-in-law, James Burbadge, in the far more important
-enterprise of the Theatre in 1576. Stebunheth or Stepney was a parish
-in Middlesex, lying to the east of the City, beyond Whitechapel, and,
-although near enough to be in a sense a suburb, was outside the civic
-jurisdiction.
-
-
- ii. THE BULL INN
-
-The first notice of the Bull is on 7 June 1575 when the playing of a
-‘prize’ there is recorded in the register of the School of Defence.
-It appears to have been the most popular of all localities for this
-purpose and there are fourteen similar notices of its use in the
-register, ending with one on 3 July 1590.[1077] Florio refers to it
-as a place for plays in 1578.[1078] Stephen Gosson in his _Schoole of
-Abuse_ (1579) exempts from his ordinary condemnation of plays _The Jew_
-and _Ptolemy_ ‘shown at the Bull’.[1079] On 1 July 1582 the Earl of
-Warwick asked permission from the Lord Mayor for his servant John David
-to play his provost prizes at ‘the Bull in Bishopsgatestrete or some
-other conuenient place to be assigned within the liberties of London’.
-This was refused, much to Warwick’s annoyance, on the ground that an
-inn was a place ‘somewhat to close for infection’, and David appointed
-to play ‘in an open place of the Leaden hall’.[1080] The Bull, with
-the Bell, was assigned by a civic order of 28 November 1583 to the
-Queen’s men for their first winter season. Tarlton and the Queen’s men
-are said in the _Jests_ to have played ‘oftentimes’ at ‘the Bull in
-Bishops-gate-street’, and here their play of _The Famous Victories of
-Henry the Fifth_, with Tarlton in the parts of the judge and the clown
-and Knell in that of Henry, was given.[1081] This must, of course, have
-been between 1583 and Tarlton’s death in 1588. In 1592 the translator
-of _The Spaniard’s Monarchie_ disclaims any ‘title fetched from the
-Bull within Bishopsgate, as a figge for a Spaniard’. I do not know
-whether any old play underlying the Admiral’s (q.v.) _Spanish Fig_ of
-1601–2 can be referred to. The house was still in use during 1594, for
-in April or May of that year Anthony Bacon settled in Bishopsgate, to
-the vexation of his mother, ‘on account of its neighbourhood to the
-Bull Inn, where plays and interludes were continually acted, and would,
-she imagined, corrupt his servants’.[1082] Richard Flecknoe mentions
-the Bull in Bishopsgate Street, with the Cross-Keys, as one of the inns
-turned into theatres at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, as
-was ‘at this day to be seen’ in 1664.[1083] The site was at No. 91 on
-the west of Bishopsgate Street, and is shown in Hatton’s map of 1708,
-and the Ordnance Survey maps of 1848–51 and 1875.
-
-
- iii. THE BELL INN
-
-This inn existed in 1560, for on 12 June of that year ‘the wyff of the
-Bell in Gracyous-strett’ was carted as a bawd and whore.[1084] Plays
-must have been used there in 1576–7, in the Revels Account for which
-year an item of 10_d._ is included ‘ffor the cariadge of the partes
-of y^e well counterfeit from the Bell in Gracious strete to St. Iohns
-to be performed for the play of Cutwell’.[1085] With the Bull, it was
-assigned to the Queen’s men by a civic order of 28 November 1583 for
-their first winter season. _Tarlton’s Jests_ also mention Tarlton and
-‘his fellowes’, probably the Queen’s men, as performing at the Bell
-‘by’ the Cross Keys which was also in Gracious Street, and this must
-have been before Tarlton’s death in 1588.[1086] Both houses may be
-included in Rawlidge’s reference to play-houses in Gracious street and
-elsewhere ‘put down’ by the City in Elizabeth’s time. I suppose that
-the site is that of Bell Yard at No. 12 on the west of Gracechurch
-Street.[1087]
-
-
- iv. THE BEL SAVAGE INN
-
-The Bel Savage is named as an early London play-house in the 1596
-edition of Lambarde’s _Perambulation of Kent_. This inn, of which the
-name is still preserved on Ludgate Hill, where it stood until 1873
-(Harben, 63), must be distinguished from another in Gracechurch Street
-once kept by Tarlton, which in his time was known as the Saba.[1088]
-The origin of the name is obscure; a deed of 1452 refers to an ‘inn
-... called Savages Inn, otherwise called the Bell on the Hoop, in the
-parishe of St. Bride in Fleet Street’ (_L. T. R._ ii. 71). Probably
-therefore the notion of the Belle Sauvage is a later perversion.
-Gascoigne, in the prologue to his _Glass of Government_ (1575),
-repudiates the ‘worthie jests’ and ‘vain delights’ of ‘Bellsavage
-fair’.[1089] Gosson, in 1579, excepts from his general condemnation
-of plays ‘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’.[1090] A play-house ‘on Ludgate Hill’ is
-included by Rawlidge in his list of those ‘put down’ in Elizabeth’s
-time. Probably the Queen’s men were acting at the Bel Savage in 1588,
-for after the death of Tarlton in that year was published ‘a sorowfull
-newe sonnette, intituled Tarltons Recantacion uppon this theame gyven
-him by a gentleman at the Belsavage without Ludgate (nowe or els
-never) beinge the laste theame he songe’.[1091] Prynne’s reference
-to _Dr. Faustus_ (q.v.) at the Bel Savage suggests that at some time
-the Admiral’s also played there. It was also occasionally used for
-the playing of ‘prizes’; the earliest recorded date in the Register
-of the School of Defence being in 1575–7 and the latest on 31 January
-1589.[1092]
-
-
- v. THE CROSS KEYS INN
-
-This inn may have been the play-house, or one of the play-houses,
-‘in Gracious Street’ said by Rawlidge to have been ‘put down’ under
-Elizabeth. The first notice of it dates from 23 June 1579, on which
-day James Burbadge was arrested at the suit of John Hynde for £5 1_s._
-1_d._, ‘as he came down Gracious Street towards the Cross Keys there
-to a play’. The house is described as the dwelling-house of Richard
-Ibotson, citizen and brewer of London.[1093] It was in use as a place
-of popular amusement during the life of Tarlton, who died in 1588,
-for one of the Jests relates how he came from the Bell, where he was
-playing to ‘the Crosse-Keyes in Gracious streete’ to see Banks’s
-performing horse there.[1094] A company can first be definitely
-located at it in 1589, on 5 November of which year Lord Strange’s men,
-as reported by Lord Mayor Hart to Burghley, disobeyed an admonition
-to forbear playing, and ‘went to the Crosse Keys and played that
-afternoon’. In 1594 Strange’s men were absorbed in Lord Hunsdon’s, and
-on 8 October 1594 Hunsdon wrote to the Lord Mayor to obtain toleration
-for ‘my nowe companie of players’ who had been accustomed ‘to plaie
-this winter time within the citye at the Crosse Kayes in Gracious
-street’.[1095] How long Shakespeare’s fellows continued to use the
-Cross Keys as a winter house is unknown; presumably it ceased to be
-available in 1596. The adaptation of the inn as a theatre was still
-visible at the Restoration, and is assigned by Richard Flecknoe to
-‘about the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign’. The site is shown in
-Ogilby and Morgan’s map of 1677 and the Ordnance Survey map of 1848–51:
-it is on the west of Gracechurch Street.
-
-
- vi. THE THEATRE
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Material is available in the records
- of four litigations: (a) _Peckham v. Allen_ (Wards and Liveries,
- 1589) as to the title to the site; (b) _Burbadge v. Ames et al._
- (Coram Rege, 1596–9) and _Earl of Rutland v. Allen and Burbadge_
- (Exchequer, 1599–1602) as to the title to a neighbouring
- plot; (c) _Burbadge v. Brayne_ (Chancery, 1588–95). _Brayne_
- (afterwards _Miles_) _v. Burbadge_ (Chancery, 1590–5), and
- _Miles v. Burbadge_ (Requests, 1597), as to the profits of the
- house; (d) _Allen v. Street_ (Coram Rege, 1600), _Burbadge v.
- Allen_ (Requests, 1600), _Allen v. Burbadge_ (Queen’s Bench,
- 1601–2), and _Allen v. Burbadge et al._ (Star Chamber, 1601–2),
- as to the removal of the fabric. A few documents from these,
- some of which he supposed to relate to the Blackfriars, were
- printed by Collier in _Memoirs of the Actors_ (1846 and _H. E.
- D. P._ iii. 257) and in _Original History of the Theatre in
- Shoreditch_ (1849, _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 63). A large number
- were used by Halliwell-Phillipps for his excursus on _The
- Theatre and Curtain_ (_Outlines_, i. 345), and in C. C. Stopes,
- _Burbage and Shakespeare’s Stage_ (1913), where abstracts of
- (a) and (b) may be consulted. The full texts of (c) and (d) are
- printed in C. W. Wallace, _The First London Theatre, Materials
- for a History_ (1913, _Nebraska University Studies_, xiii. 1).
- The exact locality of the site has been carefully investigated
- by W. W. Braines in _Holywell Priory and the Site of the
- Theatre, Shoreditch_ (1915, _Indication of Houses of Historical
- Interest in London_, xliii), and again in _The Site of the
- Theatre, Shoreditch_ (1917, _L. T. R._ xi. 1).]
-
-The following statement as to the beginnings of theatrical enterprise
-in London is made by Cuthbert Burbadge and his family in the so-called
-_Sharers Papers_ of 1635:[1096]
-
- ‘The father of us, Cutbert and Richard Burbage, was the first
- builder of playehowses, and was himselfe in his younger yeeres
- a player. The Theater hee built with many hundred poundes taken
- up at interest. The players that lived in those first times had
- onely the profitts arising from the dores, but now the players
- receave all the commings in at the dores to themselves and halfe
- the galleries from the houskepers. Hee built this house upon
- leased ground, by which meanes the landlord and hee had a great
- suite in law, and, by his death, the like troubles fell on us,
- his sonnes; wee then bethought us of altering from thence, and
- at like expence built the Globe.’
-
-The accuracy of this is fully borne out by the records of the various
-legal proceedings in connexion with the Theatre, which a painful
-investigation has exhumed, and the topographical indications furnished
-by the evidence in some of these have made it possible to locate with
-some precision the site of London’s first regular play-house.
-
-The Theatre stood in the Liberty of Halliwell or Holywell, part of the
-Middlesex parish of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, immediately outside
-the Bishopsgate entrance to the City.[1097] The name of the Liberty
-was derived from an ancient holy well, which has now disappeared, and
-its status from the fact that it had been the property of a priory of
-Benedictine nuns. The buildings of the priory lay between Shoreditch
-High Street, leading north from Bishopsgate, on the east and the open
-Finsbury fields on the west. Its southern gate was in a lane leading
-from the High Street to the Fields, then and still known as Holywell
-Lane or Street, on the south of which lay the Prioress’s pasture
-called the Curtain. Part of this south end of the liberty, lying on
-both sides of Holywell Lane, had been leased in 1537 and 1538 to the
-Earls of Rutland, who continued to hold it from the Crown after the
-dissolution in 1539, and obtained a renewed lease in 1584.[1098] The
-rest of the property, including the main conventual buildings, was
-sold in 1544 to one Henry Webb, whose daughter Susan and her husband
-Sir George Peckham sold it in 1555 to Christopher Bumsted, and he in
-the same year to Christopher Allen and his son Giles. The alienation
-of 1555 was challenged as illegal by Susan Peckham’s heirs in 1582,
-and ultimately, but not until about thirty years later, they appear
-to have made good their claim.[1099] In the meantime Giles Allen had
-leased a part of the property, which became the site of the Theatre,
-to James Burbadge on 13 April 1576.[1100] This was bounded to the
-north by the wall of Allen’s own garden, probably corresponding to the
-main cloister of the convent, on the east or south-east by the Earl
-of Rutland’s holding, and on the west by a ditch dividing it from the
-open Finsbury fields. Within the ditch and divided from it by a strip
-of void ground, was the old brick wall of the precinct. On the extreme
-south was a bit of void ground lying between an Oat Barn occupied by
-Rutland and another Great Barn included in the lease. The Oat Barn and
-the void ground were in fact debatable property claimed both by Allen
-and Rutland. North of the Great Barn, and immediately to the east of
-the precinct wall was more void and garden ground; farther to the east
-the ‘inner court yarde’ of the convent. This held tenements backing
-upon Allen’s garden to the north, and others, including a mill-house,
-backing on the garden ground to the west. In this yard was a well,
-probably the eponymous ‘Holywell’, which fed a horsepond by Rutland’s
-stable on the south-east, and then drained away through the debatable
-ground to the Finsbury ditch.[1101] Since Burbadge’s barn is known to
-have been shored up to the Theatre, it is evident that this must have
-been constructed in the void and garden ground between the tenements
-and the precinct wall, and as there was no right of way through
-Rutland’s holding from Holywell Lane, an entrance was made through
-the wall direct from Finsbury fields. The Theatre itself, indeed, was
-sometimes loosely spoken of as ‘in the fields’.[1102] Working from
-later title-deeds of the locality, Mr. Braines has successfully located
-the precise site of the building in the angle now formed by Curtain
-Road, which occupies the strip of void ground between the precinct wall
-and Finsbury ditch, and New Inn Yard, which occupies a strip of the
-‘debateable ground’ and a strip also of the site of the Great Barn.
-The site is now part of the premises of the Curtain Road Elementary
-School.[1103]
-
-Burbadge’s lease was for a term of twenty-one years from Lady Day 1576.
-He was to pay a fine of £20 and an annual rent of £14. He covenanted
-to spend £200 within the first ten years in improving the existing
-buildings, and in return Allen covenanted to make a new lease for
-twenty-one years at any time within the first ten years, and also to
-allow the tenant at any time within the term of either lease ‘to take
-down such building as should within the sayd tenne yeeres be erected
-on the sayd voyde growndes for a theater or playinge place’. It was
-also agreed that Allen and his wife and family ‘vpon lawfull request
-therfore made’ should be entitled ‘to enter or come into the premisses
-and their in some one of the vpper romes to have such convenient place
-to sett or stande to se such playes as shalbe ther played freely
-without any thinge therefore payeinge soe that the sayd Gyles hys wyfe
-and familie doe com and take ther places before they shalbe taken vpp
-by any others’. Burbadge, a joiner as well as a player, had probably
-the technical qualifications for his enterprise. But he was a man of
-small means, not worth above 100 marks, and had no credit.[1104] He
-found a partner in his brother-in-law, John Brayne, a well-to-do grocer
-of Bucklersbury, who had already been connected with a play-house
-speculation at the Red Lion inn. The association proved a calamitous
-one, and its history can only be traced through the dubious _ex parte_
-statements of later litigation. Burbadge, in an unfortunately mutilated
-document, appears to have alleged that Brayne acquired an interest by
-means of a promise, which he afterwards evaded, to leave it to his
-sister’s children.[1105] Robert Miles, of the George Inn, Whitechapel,
-a friend of Brayne, who supported and ultimately inherited the case
-of his widow, told a different story.[1106] He had heard Burbadge
-‘earnestlie insynuate’ Brayne to join in the transaction, as one which
-‘wold grow to ther contynual great profitt and commodytie’. Brayne was
-‘verye loth to deale in the matter’, and complained later to Miles
-that it was ‘his vtter vndoing’, and that he would never have touched
-it, but for the ‘swete and contynuall’ persuasions of Burbadge. His
-brother-in-law had assured him that the cost of erecting the play-house
-would not exceed £200, and after it had already cost £500, urged that
-‘it was no matter’, and that the profits ‘wold shortlie quyte the
-cost vnto them bothe’. Obviously Brayne was out for profits, and had
-to take his risks. But if the account of Miles is to be trusted, he
-had also definite grievances against his partner. Burbadge’s small
-contribution to the outlay was partly made in material, for which he
-overcharged at the rate of sixpence for a groat’s worth. When funds
-ran short, Brayne and his wife worked as labourers on the structure,
-while Burbadge, if he set his hand to a job, took the regular rate
-of wages for it. And there is some corroboration of a more serious
-charge of ‘indyrect dealing’, after the house was opened, about the
-‘collecting of the money for the gallories’.[1107] Miles alleged that
-during a space of two years Burbadge used a secret key made by one
-Braye, a smith in Shoreditch, to filch from ‘the commen box where the
-money gathered at the said playes was putt in’, thus cheating ‘his
-fellowes the players’ as well as Brayne. He would also ‘thrust some of
-the money devident betwene him and his said ffellowes in his bosome
-or other where about his bodye’. The Theatre was in use by 1 August
-1577, as it is mentioned by name in the Privy Council inhibition of
-that date.[1108] But it was opened before the work was completed, and
-the last stages were paid for out of the profits.[1109] Moreover,
-in addition to what Brayne and Burbadge could find, money had to
-be raised on mortgage, with the result that Brayne never got full
-security for his interest in the undertaking. He was not a party to
-the original lease, thinking that if a joint lease were entered into,
-the survivor would take all.[1110] When a draft assurance of a moiety
-of the profits to him was prepared on 9 August 1577, it could not be
-executed because the lease was at pawn, and ultimately, on 22 May
-1578, Burbadge gave him a bond of £400 to assure in due course.[1111]
-An assurance was, however, never made. The friction between the
-partners led to violent disputes. On one occasion, after high words
-in a scrivener’s shop, ‘Burbage did there strike him with his fist
-and so they went together by the eares in somuch that this deponent
-could herdly part them’.[1112] On 12 July 1578 they submitted their
-differences to arbitrators, who decided that, with the exception of
-10_s._ weekly for Brayne’s housekeeping and 8s. for Burbadge’s out of
-the profits of ‘such playes as should be playd there vpon Sundaies’,
-the first charge upon the rents and profits of the property should be
-the repayment of debts due upon the theatre. Thereafter Brayne should
-take them ‘till he shuld be answered suche somes of money which he had
-lade out for and vpon the same Theatre more then the said Burbage had
-done’. And when this claim too was discharged, the rents and profits
-should ‘go in devydent equallye betwene them’. Should it be necessary
-to raise money on mortgage, it should be a joint mortgage, and its
-redemption would then come in as the first claim on the rents and
-profits. Burbadge gave Brayne a further bond of £200 for the keeping
-of this award.[1113] On 26 September 1579 a mortgage was in fact
-entered into for a loan of £125 from John Hyde, grocer, to be repaid
-in a year. The amount, however, was not forthcoming, and although
-Hyde made an arrangement to take £5 a week out of the profits, he
-only got it for four or five weeks. In June 1582 he arrested Burbadge
-and got £20 out of him. Shortly afterwards he claimed forfeiture of
-the lease, and as Burbadge warned him that Brayne ‘wold catch what
-he cold’, appointed one of his own servants with Burbadge ‘to gather
-vp v^{li} wekely during the tyme of playes’. In this way he got back
-another £20 or £30. There was, however, still at least £30 outstanding
-when Brayne died in August 1586.[1114] His widow Margaret claimed a
-moiety of the interest under the lease as his heir. At first, we hear,
-Burbadge allowed her ‘half of the profittes of the gallaries’, but only
-so long as she could lay out money ‘to the necessary vse of the said
-playe howsse’, and when she had so spent £30, he said that he must
-take all the profits until the debts were paid, made her gather as a
-servant, and finally thrust her out altogether.[1115] Meanwhile Hyde
-was getting impatient for his money. He had promised Mrs. Brayne that,
-if he were satisfied, he would reassure the lease to her and Burbadge
-jointly, but not to either party separately. But now he said that he
-must convey it to whichever would pay him first, and being approached
-through Walter Cope, the master of Burbadge’s son Cuthbert, he did in
-fact, on some promise that Mrs. Brayne should not be wronged, take his
-£30 and make over the lease to Cuthbert Burbadge on 7 June 1589.[1116]
-Henceforward Cuthbert, and not his father, was the ostensible tenant
-of the property. This transaction stimulated Mrs. Brayne to assert her
-claims. About a year before the Burbadges had brought an action against
-her in Chancery, apparently in the hope of enforcing the alleged
-promise of Brayne to leave his interest to his sister’s children; and
-she now retorted with a counteraction against James and Cuthbert, in
-which she claimed to have an assignment of a moiety of the lease.[1117]
-Her chief witness was the Robert Miles on whose statements this
-narrative has already drawn. He was not of unimpeachable reputation.
-His long association with Brayne had ended in a quarrel. Brayne had
-‘charged Miles with his deathe, by certaine stripes geven him by
-Miles’. The widow had accused him before the coroner and procured his
-indictment as ‘a comon barreter’. Afterwards they had become friends,
-and he was now maintaining Mrs. Brayne in her suit.[1118] Much of his
-evidence, however, received corroboration from his son Ralph, from
-William Nicoll, a notary who had prepared the deeds connected with
-the partnership, and from Edward Collins, who had acquired Brayne’s
-grocery business in Bucklersbury. Burbadge, on the other hand, relied
-largely on one Henry Bett, who had had an opportunity of perusing Mrs.
-Brayne’s papers, and had then transferred his services to the other
-side. We cannot perhaps assume that all the evidence in the cross-suits
-is preserved. So far as what we have goes, there seems to have been
-no attempt on Burbadge’s part to defend himself against the charge of
-indirect dealing during the early years of partnership. Nor were the
-main facts as to the history of the lease much in dispute. The chief
-issue was as to Mrs. Brayne’s equitable claim to an interest in it,
-and this of course turned largely on the state of the account between
-Brayne and Burbadge at the death of the former. Miles asserted that
-the expenditure on the building of the Theatre in cash and credit had
-been practically all Brayne’s, that he had started as a rich man, but
-had had to sell his lease and stock in Bucklersbury and pawn his own
-wardrobe and his wife’s to get the work finished, that he was ruined,
-and that Mrs. Brayne was now ‘vtterlye vndone’ by the suit, and owed
-500 marks to her friends.[1119] On the other side it was claimed that
-Brayne’s wealth, variously reputed at from £500 to £1,000, had been
-exaggerated, that he was already involved when he took the Theatre in
-hand, and that his downfall was largely due to unfortunate investments
-outside the partnership, especially in a soap-making business carried
-on with Miles at the George, where in fact Burbadge had incurred losses
-in helping him.[1120] Bett, moreover, said that, while Brayne ‘would
-never plainlie declare’ what his profits on the Theatre had been, ‘yt
-seemed by his taulke, that he had gayned and receyved a grete deale of
-monye, more than he had disbursed’.[1121] The actual figures produced
-in the course of the case, which are sufficient to enable us to arrive
-at a fair estimate of the main position, do not quite bear out this
-suggestion. Towards the original outlay Burbadge seems to have found
-about £50; Brayne as much and £239 more, which he claimed as due to him
-from the partnership. In addition there were outside debts outstanding
-at the time of his death to the amount of at least £220. Something,
-moreover, had already been spent out of takings before 1586 in payments
-on Hyde’s mortgage. So that we may perhaps reasonably accept the total
-cost of the building as being somewhere about the 1,000 marks (£666) at
-which common repute estimated it.[1122] A certain amount of building
-material, worth perhaps 100 marks, was still in hand. All that Brayne
-could be shown to have received as against his considerable outlay was
-a sum of £135 1_s._, for which his receipt was produced. What Burbadge
-had received it is difficult to say. A comparison of various estimates
-suggests that after Brayne’s death it may have been between £100 and
-£200 a year.[1123] On the other hand, he had paid off the debt of
-£220 which Brayne had left outstanding. And throughout he had been
-responsible, without aid from Brayne, for certain outgoings independent
-of the structure of the Theatre, for which he was entitled to claim
-credit. He had paid £230 in rent and laid out at least £220 in putting
-the tenements in order, as well as at least £30 early in 1592 on the
-repair of the Theatre itself.[1124]
-
-The fortunes of the case in Chancery were various. In 1590 the
-Court seemed inclined to grant a sequestration of half the profits;
-but instead made an order that the arbitrament of 1578 should be
-observed.[1125] On the strength of this Mrs. Brayne and Miles came
-to the Theatre on more than one occasion, and claimed to appoint
-collectors, including one Nicholas Bishop, who was asked to stand
-‘at the door that goeth vppe to the gallaries of the said Theater to
-take and receyve for the vse of the said Margarett half the money that
-shuld be gyven to come vppe into the said gallaries at that door’. They
-were, however, refused access, and on 16 November 1590 there was a row
-royal, of which independent witness was borne by John Alleyn, of the
-Admiral’s men, who were then playing at the Theatre. James Burbadge,
-‘looking out at a wyndoe vpon them’, joined his wife in reviling them
-as a murdering knave and whore, and expressed his contempt for the
-order of Chancery; Cuthbert, who came home in the middle of the fray,
-backed him up; while Richard Burbadge, the youngest son, snatched up a
-broom-staff, and as he afterwards boasted, paid Robert Miles his moiety
-with a beating. He also threatened Nicholas Bishop, ‘scornfully and
-disdainfullye playing with this deponentes nose’. James said that at
-their next coming his sons should provide pistols charged with powder
-and hempseed to shoot them in the legs.[1126] Both Cuthbert and James
-were summoned on 28 November for contempt before the court, which
-instead of dealing with this charge proceeded to take the whole case
-into further consideration.[1127] This was something of a triumph for
-Burbadge, who continued to resist the order, and repeated with oaths
-that twenty contempts and as many injunctions would not force him to
-give up his property. This was heard by John Alleyn in the Theatre yard
-about May 1591, and about eight days later ‘in the Attyring housse or
-place where the players make them ready’, on the occasion of a dispute
-with the Admiral’s men about some of ‘the dyvydent money between him
-and them’ which he had detained, Burbadge was equally irreverent before
-Alleyn and James Tunstall about the Lord Admiral himself, saying ‘by
-a great othe, that he cared not for iij of the best lordes of them
-all’.[1128] Margaret Brayne died in 1593, leaving her estate to Miles,
-who thus became a principal in the suit.[1129] And on 28 May 1595 the
-court came to the decision that it could not entertain the case, until
-Miles had endeavoured to obtain relief at common law, by suing on the
-two bonds which Burbadge had given to Brayne in 1578.[1130] He does not
-seem to have thought it worth while to do this, probably because he
-saw very little chance of recovering money from James Burbadge, while
-Cuthbert, who now held the lease, was not a party to the bonds.[1131]
-
-It is the personality of Burbadge rather than the conduct of the
-Theatre that these details illumine. But we may gather that the
-building was constructed mainly of timber with some ironwork, that it
-had a tiring-house and galleries, one at least of which was divided
-into upper rooms, where spectators could sit as well as stand, and
-that money was taken by appointed gatherers, placed in locked boxes,
-and subsequently shared out amongst those entitled to it.[1132] From
-other sources it appears that 1_d._ was charged for admission to the
-building and 1_d._ or 2_d._ more for a place in the galleries.[1133]
-Apparently the players took the entrance fee and the owners of the
-house the whole or an agreed proportion of the gallery money. In the
-winter of 1585 an interesting arrangement was entered into between
-Burbadge and Brayne on the one hand and Henry Lanman, owner of the
-neighbouring Curtain, on the other, by which during a period of seven
-years the Curtain was taken ‘as an Esore’ to the Theatre, and the
-profits of both houses pooled and equally divided between the two
-parties. This arrangement was still operative in 1592.[1134] Kiechel
-tells us that the number of galleries was three, and De Witt that the
-shape was that of an ‘amphitheatrum’.[1135] It is impossible to trace
-with any certainty the successive occupation of the Theatre by various
-companies of players or to reconstruct the list of plays produced upon
-the boards. Its occupants were Burbadge’s ‘fellows’ at the time of his
-frauds of 1576–8, and may reasonably be identified with Leicester’s,
-of whom he was certainly one in 1574.[1136] Stephen Gosson tells us
-in 1579 that amongst plays then ‘vsually brought in to the Theater’,
-were _The Blacksmith’s Daughter_ and his own _Catiline’s Conspiracies_,
-and in 1582 assigns to the same house Lodge’s, if it was Lodge’s,
-_Play of Plays and Pastimes_ given on the last 23 February, the play
-of _The Fabii_ and possibly the history of _Caesar and Pompey_.[1137]
-Presumably _The Fabii_ is _The Four Sons of Fabius_, presented by
-Warwick’s men at Court on 1 January 1580. Warwick’s men had therefore
-probably replaced Leicester’s at the Theatre, and it was the same men,
-then in the service of the Earl of Oxford, who were concerned in a riot
-at the Theatre on 10 April 1580.[1138] In 1582 came the controversy
-between Edmund Peckham and Giles Allen about the freehold of the
-Theatre site, as a result of which Burbadge was ‘disturbed and trobled
-in his possession’, and ‘the players for sooke the said Theater to
-his great losse’.[1139] So there was probably another change at this
-time. And in 1583 there was a complete reshuffling of all the London
-companies on the formation of the Queen’s men. Professor Wallace, who
-is primarily considering that part of the evidence which he has himself
-discovered, says that the Queen’s did not act at the Theatre.[1140] But
-most certainly they did. It is true that, when an inhibition against
-the Theatre and Curtain was obtained on 14 June 1584, the owner of the
-Theatre, ‘a stubburne fellow’, described himself as Lord Hunsdon’s man.
-Nevertheless the only companies named as concerned are the Queen’s and
-Arundel’s, and Burbadge may not himself have been then acting.[1141]
-And as to the presence of the Queen’s in the Theatre at some date there
-is no doubt. Tarlton is not traceable in any other company than the
-Queen’s, and it was at the Theatre that Tarlton made jests of Richard
-Harvey’s _Astrological Discourse upon the Conjunction of Saturn and
-Jupiter_, published in 1583.[1142] The Queen’s certainly did not
-confine themselves to the Theatre; but that they were there again in
-1589 may be inferred from a mock testament of Martin Marprelate in
-_Martins Month’s Mind_, in which he is made to admit that he learned
-his twittle tattles ... at the Theater of Lanam and his fellows’. A
-marginal note in the same pamphlet indicates that it was at the Theatre
-that the ‘Maygame’ representing the ‘launcing and worming’ of Martin
-was staged, and there is other evidence that Laneham, then one of the
-Queen’s men, was one of the players who took a part in the ribald
-controversy.[1143] Gabriel Harvey’s scoff at Lyly as ‘the Foolemaster
-of the Theatre’ may perhaps indicate his authorship of plays for the
-house. In 1590–1 it is clear that the Admiral’s men, probably already
-associated with Strange’s, were at the Theatre, and their quarrel with
-Burbadge doubtless led them to cross the river and join Henslowe at
-the Rose. After the reconstitution of the companies in 1594, James
-Burbadge’s son Richard became a leading member of the Chamberlain’s
-men, and it is probable that, when this company left the Rose about the
-middle of June, it was to the Theatre that they went. Here _Hamlet_,
-which certainly belonged to them, was being acted in 1596.[1144] It
-must be added that the Theatre was not strictly reserved for the
-purposes of the legitimate drama. It was built for ‘activities’,
-amongst other things, according to Stowe, and prizes of the School of
-Defence were played at it between 1578 and 1585.[1145] On 22 February
-1582, there took place at the Theatre ‘a scurvie play set oot al by one
-virgin, which there proved a fyemarten without voice, so that we stayed
-not the matter’.[1146]
-
-It was a natural consequence of the success of Burbadge’s new departure
-that the Theatre and its immediate successor, the Curtain, had to bear
-the brunt of the Puritan denunciations of the stage. These incidentally
-bore witness to the costly elaborateness of the new accommodation
-provided for the players.[1147] Apart from the moral corruption upon
-which the Puritans laid most stress, there is some evidence that the
-position of the Theatre, with a great space of open ground before it,
-made it a natural focus for the disorderly elements of society. As
-early as 5 October 1577, just after the resumption of plays for the
-autumn, the Mayor and Recorder Fleetwood were listening to ‘a brabell
-betwene John Wotton and the Leuetenuntes sonne of the one parte, and
-certain ffreholders of Shordyche, for a matter at the Theater’. There
-was serious trouble in the course of 1584. Fleetwood wrote to Burghley
-how on 8 June, ‘very nere the Theatre or Curten, at the tyme of the
-playes, there laye a prentice sleping upon the grasse and one Challes
-_alias_ Grostock dyd turne upon the too upon the belly of the same
-prentice; whereupon the apprentice start up, and after wordes they
-fell to playne bloues’; and how on 10 June, ‘one Browne, a serving man
-in a blew coat, a shifting fellowe, having a perrelous witt of his
-owne, entending a spoile if he cold have browght it to passe, did at
-Theatre doore querell with certen poore boyes, handicraft prentises,
-and strooke some of theym; and lastlie he with his sword wondend and
-maymed one of the boyes upon the left hand; whereupon there assembled
-nere a ml. people’.[1148] Unscrupulous characters might find congenial
-companions in the throng. Somewhere in 1594 a diamond, which had gone
-astray from the loot of a Spanish vessel, was shown in Finsbury Fields
-by a mariner to certain goldsmiths, who said that they had met him
-by chance at a play in the Theatre at Shoreditch.[1149] But James
-Burbadge had obtained for himself a tactical advantage by building
-outside the jurisdiction of the City and within that, less organized
-or more easy-going, of the Middlesex magistrates. The Corporation were
-powerless, except in so far as, directly by persuasion, or indirectly
-by invoking the Privy Council, they could stir the county bench to
-action. They lost no opportunity, which brawls or plague afforded, of
-attempting this.[1150] An exceptionally troublous year was 1580. It
-began with an indictment of John Brayne and James Burbadge ‘yeomen’ of
-Shoreditch, at the Middlesex sessions, for bringing unlawful assemblies
-together on 21 February and other days ‘_ad audienda et spectanda
-quaedam colloquia sive interluda vocata_ playes or interludes’ by them
-and others ‘_exercitata et practicata_’ at the Theatre in Holywell,
-with the result of affrays and tumults leading to a breach of the
-peace.[1151] On 6 April was the great earthquake, which threw down
-chimneys in Shoreditch, and according to one account ‘shaked not only
-the scenical Theatre, but the great stage and theatre of the whole
-land’.[1152] Four days later was the riot between Lord Oxford’s men and
-the Inns of Court, and the two events gave the Lord Mayor an excellent
-opportunity of pointing out to the Council that the players of plays
-which were used at the Theatre were ‘a very superfluous sort of men’
-and of securing a suspension of performances until after Michaelmas.
-The riot of 8 June 1584 similarly led to the inhibition by the Council
-and Fleetwood already noticed, although it is clear that this was not
-so permanent as the City probably hoped, when the authority for ‘the
-suppressing and pulling downe of the Theatre and Curten’ reached them.
-Matters came to a crisis again in 1597 with the production of _The Isle
-of Dogs_ on the Bankside, and an appeal of the City on 28 July was
-answered on the same day by mandates of the Council, of which one was
-addressed to the Middlesex justices, and directed them to send for the
-owners of the Theatre and Curtain, and enjoin them to ‘plucke downe
-quite the stages, gallories and roomes that are made for people to
-stand in, and so to deface the same as they maie not be ymploied agayne
-to suche use’.[1153]
-
-It is unlikely that the Theatre was ever opened again. It is certain
-that the Chamberlain’s men had moved to the Curtain before the end of
-1597, and the abandonment of the old house is referred to unmistakably
-enough in a satire published in 1598.[1154] The explanation is to be
-found in the relations of the Burbadges to their ground landlord,
-Giles Allen. The following account is taken in the main from Cuthbert
-Burbadge’s allegations in litigation of 1600. On 1 November 1585,
-shortly before the termination of the first ten years of the lease,
-James Burbadge, as he was entitled to do, presented Allen with a draft
-of a new twenty-one years’ lease. This Allen evaded signing, apparently
-alleging that it was not in verbatim agreement with the old lease, and
-probably also that some of Burbadge’s covenants under the old lease
-had remained unfulfilled.[1155] By way of precaution, Burbadge thought
-it desirable to put on record in his account-book some evidence that
-he had spent the £200 in improving the tenements, upon which his right
-to remove the structure of the Theatre depended. He called in expert
-craftsmen, and took two ‘views’, one on 20 November 1585, another,
-after some further work had been done, on 18 July 1586. The first
-estimate was £220, the second £240. This last was later confirmed by
-a third view taken in connexion with the Brayne litigation in July
-1591.[1156] The money had been spent, partly on ordinary repairs,
-partly on converting the old barn into tenements, partly on putting up
-two new houses, one of which was for Burbadge’s own occupation.[1157]
-The matter of the new lease now slumbered until the expiration of the
-old one on 13 April 1597 drew near. In 1596 negotiations took place
-between landlord and tenant, and a compromise was mooted, by which
-the new lease was to be granted, but for an increased rent of £24
-instead of £14. Allen afterwards asserted and Cuthbert Burbadge denied
-that there was a proviso that after five years the building should be
-converted to some other use than that of a play-house.[1158] Cuthbert
-continued the negotiations after James Burbadge’s death in February
-1597, but they finally broke down, and for a year or so the tenancy
-was only on sufferance.[1159] Finally, in the autumn of 1598, when
-Cuthbert had agreed to demands which he thought extortionate, Allen
-refused to accept his brother Richard as security, and all hope of a
-settlement disappeared.[1160] Cuthbert now resolved to avail himself of
-the covenant of the expired lease, under which the tenant was entitled
-to pull down and remove the Theatre. This he began to do, in spite of
-a protest from Allen’s representative, on 28 December 1598, with the
-concurrence of his mother and brother, and the financial aid of one
-William Smith of Waltham Cross.[1161] The work was still in progress
-on 20 January 1599, when Burbadge’s agent, Peter Street, carpenter,
-entered the close with ten or twelve men, and carried the timber to the
-other side of the river for use in the erection of the Globe. For this
-act Allen brought an action of trespass against Street in the Queen’s
-Bench, alleging that he had trampled down grass in the close to the
-value of 40_s._, and claiming damages for £800 in all, of which £700
-represented his estimate of the value of the Theatre.[1162] Burbadge
-applied to the Court of Requests to stop the common law suit, alleging
-in effect that he was equitably entitled to act upon the covenant,
-even though the lease had expired, on account of the unreasonable
-refusal of Allen to grant the new lease when applied for, under the
-terms of the old one, in 1585.[1163] The issue really turned upon
-whether this refusal was reasonable. Allen said that James Burbadge had
-been a troublesome tenant, that he had converted the barn into eleven
-tenements, whose inhabitants became a nuisance to the parish by begging
-for their 20_s._ rents, that he had not repaired the building but only
-shored it up, that he had not spent the stipulated £200, and that £30
-rent was in arrear at the time of the application of 1585 and was
-still unpaid.[1164] Probably these last two were the only allegations
-to which the court attached importance. Allen claimed that he had no
-remedy against James Burbadge’s estate, for he had made deeds of gift
-to his sons of his property, and his widow and administratrix was
-without funds. Burbadge, however, produced evidence of the estimates
-of 1585 and 1586, and suggested that his father had a counter-claim
-against the rent in the expense to which he had been put in maintaining
-his possession at the time of Peckham’s claim to the freehold. On 18
-October 1600 the Court decided in his favour.[1165] Allen brought a
-Queen’s Bench action against him in 1601 for breach of agreement, and
-in 1601 complained to the Star Chamber of perjury on the part of the
-expert witnesses and other wrongs done him in the course of the earlier
-proceedings; but, although the conclusions of these suits are not on
-record, it is not likely that he succeeded in obtaining a favourable
-decision.[1166]
-
-
- vii. THE CURTAIN
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Some rather scanty material is
- brought together by T. E. Tomlins, _Origin of the Curtain
- Theatre and Mistakes regarding it_ in _Sh. Soc. Papers_,
- i. 29, and Halliwell-Phillipps, _The Theatre and Curtain_
- (_Outlines_, i. 345).]
-
-The Curtain is included with the Theatre in Stowe’s general description
-of Holywell as ‘standing on the South-west side towards the field’.
-That it was somewhat south of the Theatre is indicated by a reference
-to it in 1601 as in Moorfields, a name given to the open fields lying
-south of and adjacent to Finsbury Fields. But, although it stood in
-the parish of Shoreditch and the liberty of Holywell, it was not, like
-the Theatre, actually within the precinct of the dissolved priory.
-_Curtina_ is glossed by Ducange as ‘_minor curtis, seu rustica area,
-quae muris cingitur_’, and the description is sufficiently met by the
-piece of land lying outside the southern gate of the priory, and on
-the other side of Holywell Lane into which that gate opened.[1167]
-A priory lease to the Earl of Rutland of his town house in 1538
-described it as ‘_infra muros et portas eiusdem monasterii_’, and
-part of the holding consisted of stables and a hay-loft ‘_scituata
-et existentia extra portas eiusdem monasterii prope pasturam dictae
-Priorissae vocatam_ the Curtene’. Post-dissolution conveyances refer
-to a ‘house, tenement or lodge’ called the Curtain, and to a parcel of
-ground, enclosed with a wall on the west and north, called the Curtain
-close, which lay south of the Earl of Rutland’s house, and on which
-by 1581 stood various tenements, which were described as ‘sett, lyeng
-and being in Halliwell Lane’. The property in question formed part of
-the possessions of Sir Thomas Leigh of Hoxton at his death in 1543 and
-had formerly been conveyed to him by Lord Wriothesley. Through Leigh’s
-daughter Katharine it passed to her husband Lord Mountjoy. On 20
-February 1567 it was sold for £40 to Maurice Long and his son William,
-being then in the occupation of one Wilkingeson and Robert Manne. On
-23 August 1571 Maurice Long conveyed it for £200 to Sir William Allen,
-then Lord Mayor, possibly by way of mortgage in connexion with building
-speculations, since on 18 March 1581 it was in the hands of William
-Long, who then sold it to Thomas Herbert. There had evidently been an
-increase in the number of tenements on the site, and Thomas Wilkinson,
-Thomas Wilkins, Robert Medley, Richard Hicks, Henry Lanman, and Robert
-Manne are named as tenants.[1168] As Henry Lanman or Laneman had the
-profits of the theatre in 1585, there can be little doubt that it stood
-on part of the land dealt with in the conveyances. Halliwell-Phillipps
-thinks that it must have been situated ‘in or near the place which
-is marked as Curtain Court in Chassereau’s plan of Shoreditch,
-1745’,[1169] and is now known as Gloucester Street. If so, it was very
-near the boundary between Holywell and Moorfields, much along the line
-of which now runs Curtain Road. But it must be remembered that Curtain
-Court may also have taken its name from the ‘house, tenement or lodge’
-which already existed in 1567 and is mentioned as the Curtain House in
-the Shoreditch registers as late as 1639; and certainly in Ryther’s map
-(_c._ 1636–45) the theatre, though still bordering on Moorfields, is
-shown a good deal farther, both to the east and the south, than the
-point indicated by Halliwell-Phillipps.[1170]
-
-The Burbadges claimed that James was the first builder of play-houses,
-but the Curtain must have followed very soon after the Theatre. It is
-not mentioned by name with its predecessor in the Privy Council order
-of 1 August 1577, but is in Northbrooke’s treatise of the following
-December. Up to 1597 its history is little more than a pendant to that
-of the Theatre, with which it is generally coupled in the Puritan
-attacks and in the occasional interferences of authority. From 1585 to
-1592, indeed, it was used as an ‘easer’ to the Theatre, and the profits
-of the two houses were pooled under an arrangement between Henry Lanman
-and the Burbadges.[1171] The companies who occupied the Curtain can for
-the most part only be guessed at.[1172] At the time of the inhibition
-of 14 June 1584 it was probably occupied by Lord Arundel’s men. Tarlton
-appeared at it, but not necessarily after the formation of the Queen’s
-company.[1173] Prizes of the School of Defence were occasionally played
-at it from 1579 to 1583.[1174] Unlike the Theatre, the Curtain was
-certainly reopened after the inhibition of 1597. It is likely that the
-Chamberlain’s men repaired to it in October of that year, and remained
-at it until the Globe was ready in 1599. The same satirist, who tells
-us that the Theatre was closed in 1598, tells us that the Rose, which
-was continuously occupied by the Admiral’s men, and the Curtain were
-open;[1175] and a clue to the actors at it is given by Marston’s
-reference to ‘Curtain plaudities’ in the closest connexion with _Romeo
-and Juliet_.[1176] In 1600 Robert Armin, of the Chamberlain’s men,
-published his _Fool upon Fool_, in which he called himself ‘Clonnico de
-Curtanio Snuffe’. In the 1605 edition he changed the name to ‘Clonnico
-del Mondo Snuffe’. The direct connexion of the Chamberlain’s men with
-the Curtain probably ended on the opening of the Globe. But a share in
-it belonged to Thomas Pope, when he made his will on 22 July 1603, and
-another to John Underwood, when he made his on 4 October 1624. Both
-were of the Chamberlain’s men, although Underwood cannot have joined
-them until about 1608.
-
-The Curtain did not go entirely out of use when the Chamberlain’s left
-it. It must have been the theatre near Bishopsgate at which Thomas
-Platter saw a play in September or October 1599.[1177] It is possible
-that Kempe (q.v.) was then playing there. In March 1600 one William
-Hawkins, barber, of St. Giles’s without Cripplegate was charged at
-the Middlesex Sessions with taking a purse and £1 6_s._ 6_d._ at the
-Curtain, and Richard Fletcher, pewterer, of Norwich, was bound over to
-give evidence.[1178]
-
-On 22 June 1600, when the Privy Council gave authority for the opening
-of the Fortune, they were given to understand by the Master of the
-Revels that it would replace the Curtain, which was therefore to be
-‘ruinated or applied to some other good use’. This arrangement seems to
-suggest that the Curtain was in some way under the control of Alleyn
-or Henslowe. It was, however, departed from, and apparently with the
-tacit consent of the Council, as although they had occasion on 10
-May 1601 to instruct the Middlesex justices to suppress a libellous
-play produced at ‘the Curtaine in Moorefeilds’, they did not take,
-as they might have done, the point that no play ought to have been
-produced there at all. On 31 December they were again insisting on
-the limitation of the theatres in use to two; and on 31 March 1602
-they again departed from their own principles by licensing Oxford’s
-and Worcester’s men to play at the Boar’s Head. Henceforward three
-companies of men players were regularly tolerated, and when a draft
-licence was prepared for Worcester’s, or as they had then become
-Queen Anne’s, men early in the following year the Curtain and the
-Boar’s Head were named as ‘there now usuall howsen’. The Curtain is
-also specified for them in the Council’s warrant for the resumption
-of plays on 9 April 1604. About 1606 they also took into use the Red
-Bull, and thereafter but little is heard of the Curtain. The Queen’s
-men, however, played Day, Wilkins, and Rowley’s _The Travels of Three
-English Brothers_ there at some time before its entry on 29 June 1607.
-It was still theirs in April 1609, but may perhaps soon have passed to
-the Duke of York’s men. It is mentioned, with the Globe and Fortune, in
-Heath’s _Epigrams_ of 1610, and plays heard ‘at _Curtaine_, or at Bull’
-and ‘a Curtaine Iigge’ are objects of ridicule in Wither’s _Abuses
-Stript and Whipt_ of 1613.[1179] It was used by an amateur company for
-a performance of Wentworth Smith’s _Hector of Germany_ in 1615, and it
-is obscurely referred to in I. H.’s _This World’s Folly_ of the same
-year.[1180] Malone gathered from Sir Henry Herbert’s office-book that
-it was used by Prince Charles’s men in 1622, and soon thereafter only
-by prize-fighters. It was still in use in 1624, and still standing in
-1627.[1181]
-
-
- viii. NEWINGTON BUTTS
-
-A theatre, of which the history is very obscure, but which may have
-been built soon after the Theatre and Curtain, stood at Newington, a
-village one mile from London Bridge, divided from the Bankside by St.
-George’s Fields, and reachable by the road which continued Southwark
-High Street.[1182] Here there were butts for the practice of archery.
-Plays at Newington Butts, outside the City jurisdiction, are first
-mentioned in a Privy Council letter of 13 May 1580 to the Surrey
-justices. A similar letter of 11 May 1586 speaks more precisely of
-‘the theater or anie other places about Newington’. A third letter,
-undated, but probably belonging to 1591 or 1592, recites an order
-of the Council restraining Strange’s men from playing at the Rose,
-and enjoining them to play three days a week at Newington Butts, and
-rescinds it, ‘by reason of the tediousness of the way, and that of long
-time plays have not there been used on working days’.[1183] Possibly
-the theatre had come into Henslowe’s hands, for his diary records that
-it was at Newington that the combined companies of the Admiral’s and
-Chamberlain’s men began their first season after the plague of 1592–4,
-apparently playing there from 5 to 15 June 1594, and then going their
-separate ways to the Rose and the Theatre respectively. The theatre is
-mentioned in the list given by Howes in 1631.[1184] It is said to have
-been ‘only a memory’ by 1599.[1185] A bad pun is called a ‘Newington
-conceit’ in 1612.[1186]
-
-
- ix. THE ROSE
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--All the more important documents are
- printed or calendared from the _Dulwich MSS._ with a valuable
- commentary in Greg, _Henslowe’s Diary_ and _Henslowe Papers_,
- and in Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_ and _Henslowe’s Diary_.]
-
-The Rose owed its name to the fact that it stood in what had been, as
-recently as 1547–8, a rose garden.[1187] On 3 December 1552 Thomasyn,
-widow of Ralph Symonds, fishmonger, granted to trustees, for her own
-use during life and thereafter to the charitable uses of the parish of
-St. Mildred, Bread Street, her ‘messuage or tennement then called the
-little rose with twoe gardens’ formerly in St. Margaret’s and then in
-St. Saviour’s, Southwark. St. Mildred’s still has a plan of the estate,
-which extended to about three roods.[1188] A ‘tenement called the Rose’
-is referred to in a recital of a lease of Henry VIII’s reign as the
-eastern boundary of other tenements, by name the Barge, the Bell, and
-the Cock, which lay ‘vppon the banke called Stewes’ in St. Margaret’s,
-afterwards St. Saviour’s, parish, between the highway next the Thames
-on the north and Maiden Lane on the south.[1189] It is located by
-Mr. Rendle just to the east of the still existing Rose Alley. The
-site therefore lay in the Liberty of the Clink midway between those
-afterwards occupied by the Globe on the east and the Hope on the
-west. On 20 November 1574 the parish let the property for thirty-one
-years at £7 annually to William Griffin, vintner. Griffin assigned
-it on 11 December 1579 to Robert Withens, vintner, and Withens on 24
-March 1585 to Henslowe.[1190] There was as yet no theatre. The first
-mention of one as in contemplation is in an agreement of 10 January
-1587 between Henslowe and one John Cholmley, citizen and grocer of
-London, for partnership during the next eight years and three months,
-should both parties live so long, in a garden plot ninety-four feet
-square on the Bankside in the parish of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, and
-‘a playe howse now in framinge and shortly to be ereckted and sett vppe
-vpone the same’. Under this Henslowe undertook to have ‘the saide play
-house with all furniture thervnto belonginge’ set up ‘with as muche
-expedicion as maye be’ by John Grigges, carpenter, to pay all rents due
-on the premisses, and to repair the bridges and wharves belonging to
-them before the following Michaelmas. Cholmley undertook to bear his
-share of any further cost of maintaining the premises, and also to pay
-Henslowe the sum of £816 in quarterly instalments. In consideration of
-this, he was to take half of all such profits as ‘shall arysse grow be
-colectted gathered or become due for the saide parcell of grounde and
-playe howse when and after yt shalbe ereckted and sett vpe by reason of
-any playe or playes, that shalbe showen or played there or otherwysse
-howsoever’. The partners are jointly to appoint ‘players to vse
-exersyse & playe in the saide playe howse’, and collect sums themselves
-or by deputy of all persons coming to the performances ‘excepte yt
-please any of the saide partyes to suffer theire frendes to go in for
-nothinge’. Cholmley is also to have the sole right of selling food or
-drink on the premises and a small house already in his tenure on the
-south of the plot close to Maiden Lane, ‘to keepe victualinge in’ or
-for any other purpose, and with a right of ingress from Thames side by
-Rose Alley.[1191] The deed does not name the property, but it cannot
-be doubted that it refers to a part of the Little Rose. Presumably the
-theatre was to be built on a garden at the back of the holding, and the
-existing tenement on Bankside was not to be interfered with. Henslowe
-had ‘Rosse rentes’ of a residential character in 1602 or 1603.[1192]
-Norden’s map (1593) puts the Rose farther from the river than the Bear
-Garden. The Delaram and Merian drawings, on the other hand, put it
-very near the river, and these, although of less authority than Norden,
-are followed in Mr. Rendle’s plan. Probably Norden’s Bear Garden was
-an older one than that which afterwards became the Hope.[1193] The
-provision as to the wharfs and bridges seems to indicate an intention
-to open the Rose at Michaelmas 1587, and I see no reason to doubt
-that it was in fact ready for occupation by about that date. On 29
-October the Privy Council called the attention of the Surrey justices
-to complaints from Southwark of breaches of the rule against plays on
-Sunday, ‘especiallie within the Libertie of the Clincke and in the
-parish of St. Saviour’s in Southwarke’. There may, of course, have been
-plays at inns in the Clink, but it is more natural to take the protest
-as one against the newly opened Rose. No other regular theatre existed
-in the Clink at this time. That the Rose was built by 1588 appears from
-a record of the Sewer Commission for Surrey.[1194] It is not in Smith’s
-plan of 1588, but this may easily not have been quite up to date.
-
-The next that is heard of the Rose is probably in 1592.[1195] In March
-and April of that year Henslowe, who had recently taken his famous
-‘diary’ into use as a financial memorandum book, noted in it some
-building expenditure, and a little later set out ‘a note of suche
-carges as I haue layd owt a bowte my playe howsse in the yeare of our
-lord 1592’.[1196] Henslowe is not known to have owned Newington Butts,
-or any other theatre except the Rose, and it is reasonable to assume
-that this is what he meant by ‘my playe howsse’. The work probably
-began in or before January, as an entry halfway through the list is
-dated on 6 February. It entailed the purchase of a barge and a certain
-amount of breaking up and paling and wharfing. Henslowe appears to have
-done the work himself and not by contract. He bought a mast, turned
-balusters, boards and laths, in part from the carpenter Grigges who is
-named in the agreement with Cholmley, and in part from a ‘timber man’
-called Lee. He bought bolts, hinges, and nails from the ironmonger at
-the Fryingpan in Southwark and from one Brader. He bought lime, sand,
-chalk, and bricks. He paid wages to carpenters, workmen, and labourers,
-and employed painters and a thatcher. The exact nature and extent of
-the work are not specified, but it included the painting of the stage,
-the ceiling of ‘my lords rome’, and ‘the rome ouer the tyerhowsse’, and
-the ‘makeinge the penthowsse shed at the tyeringe howsse doore’. It has
-sometimes been supposed that the Rose never got built in 1587, and that
-these are the accounts, or part of them, for the original construction.
-This seems to me most unlikely. The total expense, with the exception
-of a small number of items lost by the mutilation of a page, only
-amounted to about £108. This could not cover more than repairs. On
-the other hand, these were clearly substantial repairs, and the fact
-that they were needed suggests that the building cannot have been a
-very new one. The lapse of five years since 1587 would, however, be
-consistent with the necessity for them. Almost simultaneously with the
-earliest dated entries in the building account, begins on 19 February
-1592 the record of performances by Lord Strange’s men, which continues
-to the following 22 June. If these were at the Rose, the paint on the
-stage can hardly have been dry in time for them, unless, as Dr. Greg
-suggests, the payments made in March and April were for work done a
-little earlier. That it was at the Rose that Strange’s men played
-seems indicated by the Privy Council order, reciting the restraint of
-this company ‘from playinge at the Rose on the Banckside’, which it
-is difficult to assign to any year but 1591 or 1592.[1197] It is a
-little curious that nothing more is heard of John Cholmley, and I think
-the natural inference is that he was dead and that the partnership
-had thereby, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, been
-automatically dissolved.[1198]
-
-The assumption, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that until
-he acquired a share in the Fortune Henslowe had no proprietary interest
-in any other theatre must explain the assignment to the Rose of all
-the playing recorded in the diary between 1592 and the autumn of 1600,
-with the exception of the few performances definitely stated to have
-been at Newington Butts. The further conjecture must, I think, be
-accepted that the season begun by the Admiral’s and Chamberlain’s men
-at Newington Butts in the summer of 1594 was transferred, so far as the
-Admiral’s men were concerned, to the Rose after 15 June. If so, the
-Rose housed Strange’s men again from 29 December 1592 to 1 February
-1593, Sussex’s from 26 December 1593 to 6 February 1594, the Queen’s
-and Sussex’s together from 1 to 9 April 1594, and the Admiral’s from
-14 to 16 May 1594, and then regularly from the following June until
-their transference to the Fortune in 1600. The only actual mentions
-of the theatre by name in the diary during this period are in the
-agreements of 1597 between Henslowe and the players Jones and Borne,
-in which Henslowe specifies ‘the Rosse’ as ‘my howsse’ in which they
-are to play. It was no doubt in use when Guilpin’s _Skialetheia_ (S.
-R. 8 September 1598) was written.[1199] In the Lenten interval of 1595
-Henslowe made ‘A nott of what I haue layd owt abowt my playhowsse ffor
-payntynge & doinge it abowt with ealme bordes & other repracyones’.
-The expenditure reached a total of £108 19_s._, which was much about
-the same as that of 1592, and was supplemented in the following June
-by a further £7 2_s._ for carpenters’ work, including ‘mackinge the
-throne in the heuenes’.[1200] The accounts of 1592 and 1595 suggest
-that the building was of wood and plaster on a brick foundation, and
-this is consistent with Hentzner’s statement of 1598. Part of it, at
-least, was thatched. If the maps can be trusted, it was octagonal. In
-1600 Henslowe had to find new occupants for the Rose. He records that
-Pembroke’s men began to play there on 28 October, but only enters two
-unprofitable performances. Possibly the Privy Council, who had decreed
-in the previous July a limitation of houses to one on each side of the
-river, interfered. But this limitation was certainly not permanent.
-There is a receipt for a play bought for Worcester’s men ‘at the Rose’,
-and they probably used the house during the term of their account with
-Henslowe between August 1602 and May 1603. Subsequently they moved
-to the Curtain and Boar’s Head. Henslowe’s lease of the site was due
-to expire at the end of 1605, and this explains to some extent the
-following entry in the diary:
-
- ‘The 25 of June 1603 I talked with M^r. Pope at the scryveners
- shope wher he lisse consernynge the tackynge of the leace a new
- of the littell Roosse & he showed me a wrytynge betwext the
- pareshe & hime seallfe which was to paye twenty pownd a yeare
- rent & to bestowe a hundred marckes vpon billdinge which I sayd
- I wold rather pulle downe the playehowse then I wold do so & he
- beade me do & sayd he gaue me leaue & wold beare me owt for yt
- wasse in him to do yt.’[1201]
-
-It is impossible to say whether ‘Mr. Pope’ was Thomas Pope of the
-King’s men at the neighbouring Globe, or Morgan Pope, who was formerly
-interested in the Bear House, or some other Pope; nor is it clear how
-he was in a position to authorize Henslowe to pull down the theatre.
-Dr. Greg draws the natural inference from the wording that he may have
-given his consent as a prospective lessee of the property.[1202] In
-any case the Rose was not pulled down until two or three years later.
-The Sewers records show that in January 1604 not Philip but Francis
-Henslowe was amerced 6_s._ 8_d._ for it, which may mean that Lennox’s
-men were playing there; that on 4 October 1605 Philip Henslowe was
-amerced, but return was made that it was ‘out of his hands’; that on
-14 February 1606 Edward Box, of Bread Street, London, was amerced for
-it; and that on 25 April 1606 Box was amerced for the site of ‘the late
-play-house in Maid lane’.[1203]
-
-There is no record of plays at the Rose after 1603.[1204] It is in
-the Delaram engravings, but not in any later views except those of
-the Merian group, where it appears, flagged but unnamed, on the river
-edge.[1205] Nor is it mentioned with the Hope, Globe, and Swan in
-_Holland’s Leaguer_ (1632). The explanation may perhaps be that the
-Merian engraver followed some out-of-date authority, such as Delaram,
-which had got the house farther north than Norden puts it, and as it
-had long ceased to exist, did not know its name. On the other hand,
-it is also just conceivable that for a short period the Rose, or some
-other building at the north end of the Rose site, had a renewed life
-as a place of public entertainment. Alleyn was paying ‘tithe dwe for
-the Rose’ in 1622.[1206] And Malone cites Herbert’s ‘office-book’ for a
-statement that after 1620 the Swan and the Rose were ‘used occasionally
-for the exhibition of prize-fighters’.[1207]
-
-
- x. THE SWAN
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--John de Witt’s description and plan
- are published in K. T. Gaedertz, _Zur Kenntnis der altenglischen
- Bühne_ (1888), and more exactly by H. B. Wheatley in _On a
- Contemporary Drawing of the Swan Theatre_, 1596 (_N. S. S.
- Trans. 1887–92_, 215). They are discussed by H. Logemann in
- _Anglia_, xix. 117, by W. Archer in _The Universal Review_
- for June 1888, by W. Rendle in _7 N. Q._ vi. 221, by J. Le G.
- Brereton, _De Witt at the Swan_ (1916, _Sh.-Homage_, 204), by
- myself in a paper on _The Stage of the Globe_ in _The Stratford
- Town Shakespeare_, x. 351, and in most recent treatises on
- Elizabethan staging; cf. chh. xviii, xx. Earlier material is
- collected by W. Rendle in _The Play-houses at Bankside in the
- Time of Shakespeare_ (_Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographer_,
- 1885, vii. 207). The facts as to Langley’s purchase and the
- pleadings and order in the suit of _Shawe et al. v. Langley_
- before the Court of Requests in 1597–8 (cited as _S. v. L._)
- are given by C. W. Wallace, _The Swan Theatre and the Earl of
- Pembroke’s Servants_ (1911, _E. S._ xliii. 340). T. S. Graves,
- _A Note on the Swan Theatre_ (_M. P._ ix. 431), discusses the
- light thrown on the internal arrangements of the Swan by the
- accounts of _England’s Joy_ in 1602.]
-
-The Swan stood in the Liberty and Manor of Paris Garden, at the western
-end of the Bankside. This manor, from which the royal ‘game’ of
-bear-baiting took its traditional appellation, had come into the hands
-of the Crown as part of the possessions of the dissolved monastery of
-Bermondsey. It was granted in 1578 to nominees of Henry, Lord Hunsdon,
-conveyed by them to the Cure family, and sold for £850 on 24 May 1589
-by Thomas Cure the younger to Francis Langley, a citizen and goldsmith
-of London. Langley, who was brother-in-law to Sir Anthony Ashley, one
-of the clerks to the Privy Council, held the office of Alnager and
-Searcher of Cloth, to which he had been appointed by the Corporation
-on the recommendation of the Privy Council and Sir Francis Walsingham
-in December 1582.[1208] The site of the theatre can be precisely
-identified from a plan of the manor dated in 1627, but based on a
-survey of 1 November 1624.[1209] It was in the north-east corner of the
-demesne, east of the manor-house, twenty-six poles due south of Paris
-Garden stairs, and immediately west of a lane leading to a house called
-Copt Hall. The outline shown is that of a double circle, or perhaps
-dodecahedron, divided into twelve compartments, with a small porch or
-tiring-house towards the road. The exact date of building is unknown.
-On 3 November 1594 the Lord Mayor wrote to Burghley that Langley
-‘intendeth to erect a niew stage or Theater (as they call it) for the
-exercising of playes vpon the Banck side’, and detailed the usual civic
-objections to the stage as arguments in favour of the suppression of
-the project.[1210] It is probable that Burghley refused to intervene
-and that Langley proceeded at once with the erection of the Swan, which
-may then have been ready for use in 1595. It is impossible, without
-the Swan, to make up the tale of four ‘spielhäuser’ seen by the Prince
-of Anhalt in 1596 (360). To 1596 again is assigned, although with
-probability rather than certainty, the visit of John de Witt, who
-not only names but also describes and delineates the Swan.[1211] In
-any case the Swan had already been in use by players before February
-1597, when Langley entered into an arrangement for its occupation by
-Lord Pembroke’s men.[1212] The terms of the lease provided that he
-should make the house ready and furnish apparel, which he alleged cost
-him £300, and should get his return for this expenditure out of the
-company’s moiety of the gallery takings, in addition of course to the
-other moiety which in accordance with theatrical custom went to him as
-rent.[1213] The enterprise was rudely interrupted by the production of
-_The Isle of Dogs_ at the Swan itself, and the restraint of 28 July
-1597 which was the result. The leading members of Pembroke’s company
-joined or rejoined the Admiral’s at the Rose, and became involved in
-litigation with Langley on account of their breach of covenant.[1214]
-For a time Langley succeeded in keeping a company together, and the
-Swan remained open.[1215] It was perhaps the intention of the Privy
-Council order of 19 February 1598, against an intrusive ‘third company’
-which was competing with the Chamberlain’s and the Admiral’s, to close
-it.[1216] If so, Langley may still for a time have found means of
-evasion, since on the following 1 May the vestry of St. Saviour’s
-were viewing new buildings of his, and at the same time negotiating
-with Henslowe and Meade for money for the poor ‘in regarde of theire
-playe-houses’.[1217] During the next few years, however, such notices
-as we get of the Swan, while showing that it was still in existence
-and available for occasional entertainments, carry no evidence of any
-use by a regular company. Francis Meres, in his _Palladis Tamia_ of
-1598, tells us that it was the scene of a challenge in ‘extemporall’
-versifying by Robert Wilson.[1218] It was one of the wooden theatres
-which were seen by Hentzner in the same year, and no doubt the one
-near which he describes the royal barge as lying.[1219] On 15 May
-1600 the Council sanctioned its use for feats of activity by Peter
-Bromvill.[1220] On 7 February 1602 it was occupied by fencers, and
-while two of these, by names Turner and Dun, were playing their prizes
-upon its stage, Dun was unfortunate enough to receive a mortal wound
-in the eye.[1221] On 6 November 1602 it was chosen by Richard Vennar
-for his impudent mystification of _England’s Joy_. The accounts of this
-transaction show that it was fitted with ‘hangings, curtains, chairs,
-and stools’, and capable of scenic effects, such as the appearance
-of a throne of blessed souls in heaven and of black and damned souls
-with fireworks from beneath the stage.[1222] Meanwhile Langley had
-died in 1601 and in January 1602 the Paris Garden estate was sold to
-Hugh Browker, a protonotary of the Court of Common Pleas, in whose
-family it remained to 1655.[1223] About 1611 it was once more taken
-into use for plays. _The Roaring Girl_ (1611), itself a Fortune play,
-has an allusion to a knight who ‘lost his purse at the last new play
-i’ the Swan’,[1224] and the accounts of the overseers of Paris Garden
-contain entries of receipts from ‘the play house’ or ‘the Swan’ in
-each April from 1611 to 1615.[1225] The last entry is of so small an
-amount that it probably only covered a fraction of a year, and I think
-the inference is that the Swan was disused on the opening of the Hope
-in 1614.[1226] If so, it had probably been taken over by Henslowe for
-the use of the Lady Elizabeth’s men, who came into existence in 1611,
-and whose _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_ was published in 1630 as ‘often
-acted at the Swan on the Bankeside’. The Hope itself was modelled
-structurally upon the Swan. Its measurements were the same, and it
-had similar partitions between the rooms and external staircases. Its
-heavens, however, were to be supported without the help of posts from
-the stage, since this had to be removable on days of bear-baiting.
-It is obviously illegitimate to infer from this specification that
-the stage of the Swan, which was not used for bear-baiting, was also
-removable. The accounts of the overseers show one more payment from
-the ‘players’ in 1621, which perhaps supports the statement contained
-in one of Malone’s notes from Sir Henry Herbert’s office-book, that
-after 1620 the Swan was ‘used occasionally for the exhibition of
-prize-fighters’.[1227] The theatre is marked ‘Old Play-house’ in the
-manor map of 1627. The last notice of it is in _Holland’s Leaguer_
-(1632) as a famous amphitheatre, which was ‘now fallen to decay, and
-like a dying swanne hanging downe her head seemed to sing her own
-dierge’.[1228]
-
-Many of the maps of the Bankside do not extend far enough west to
-take in the Swan. It is named and shown as an octagonal or decagonal
-building by Visscher (1616) and in maps of the Merian group (1638), but
-not by Hollar (1647).
-
-
- xi. THE GLOBE
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The devolution of the Globe shares
- can be traced in the documents of three lawsuits: (_a_) _Ostler
- v. Heminges_, in the Court of King’s Bench in 1616 (_Coram Rege
- Roll_ 1454, 13 Jac. I, Hilary Term, m. 692), described by C.
- W. Wallace in _The Times_ of 2 and 4 Oct. 1909, and in part
- privately printed by him in _Advance Sheets from Shakespeare,
- the Globe, and Blackfriars_ (1909), here cited as _O. v. H._;
- (_b_) _Witter v. Heminges and Condell_, in the Court of Requests
- (1619–20), described by C. W. Wallace in _The Century_ of Aug.
- 1910, and printed by him in _Nebraska University Studies_, x
- (1910), 261, here cited as _W. v. H._; and (_c_) the proceedings
- before the Lord Chamberlain in 1635 known as the _Sharers
- Papers_, and printed by Halliwell-Phillipps in _Outlines_, i.
- 312. Professor Wallace’s descriptive articles require some
- corrections from the texts of his documents. Much evidence
- bearing upon the site of the theatre was collected by W. Rendle
- in _The Bankside, Southwark, and the Globe Play-house_ (1877),
- printed by the N. S. S. as an appendix to Harrison, pt. ii
- (cited as Rendle, _Bankside_), in _Walford’s Antiquarian_,
- viii (1885), 209, and in _The Anchor Brewery_ (1888, _Inns of
- Old Southwark_, 56), by G. Hubbard in _Journal of the Royal
- Institute of British Architects_, 3rd series, xvii. 26, and
- _London and Middlesex Arch. Soc. Trans._ n. s. ii (1912), pt.
- iii, and most fully by W. Martin in _Surrey Archaeological
- Collections_, xxiii (1910), 149. Some additional facts, from
- records of the Sewers Commission for Kent and Surrey in the
- possession of the London County Council, and from deeds
- concerning the Brend estate, were published by Dr. Wallace in
- _The Times_ of 30 April and 1 May 1914, and led to discussion
- by Dr. Martin, Mr. Hubbard, and others in _11 N. Q._ x. 209,
- 290, 335; xi. 447; xii. 10, 50, 70, 121, 143, 161, 201, 224,
- 264, 289, 347, and by W. W. Braines in _The Site of the Globe
- Play-house_ (1921). A paper by the present writer on _The Stage
- of the Globe_ is in the _Stratford Town Shakespeare_, x. 351.]
-
-In the building of the Globe use was made of the materials of the old
-Theatre (q.v.) which, according to _Allen v. Burbadge_ (1602), the
-Burbadges, with Peter Street and others, pulled down on 28 December
-1598, carried ‘all the wood and timber therof unto the Banckside in
-the parishe of St. Marye Overyes, and there erected a newe playehowse
-with the sayd timber and woode’.[1229] An earlier account gives the
-date of the audacious proceeding as 20 January 1599. The formal lease
-of the new site from the freeholder, Nicholas Brend of West Molesey,
-was executed on 21 February 1599. No doubt Street, who had assisted
-in the transfer, was the builder and had finished his job when on 8
-January 1600 he contracted with Henslowe and Alleyn to put up the
-Fortune (q.v.) on the model, with certain modifications, of ‘the late
-erected plaiehowse on the Banck in the saide parishe of St. Saviours
-called the Globe’. This contract allowed twenty-eight weeks for the
-work. Probably the Globe took about the same time, for it is described
-as ‘de novo edificata’ in the inquisition on the property left by the
-lessor’s father, Thomas Brend, which is dated on 16 May 1599.[1230] It
-may not then have been quite finished, but it was doubtless ready for
-the occupation of the Chamberlain’s men by the beginning of the autumn
-season of 1599. One of the earliest plays there produced by them was
-Shakespeare’s _Julius Caesar_ which on 21 September Thomas Platter
-crossed the water to see ‘in dem streüwinen Dachhaus’.[1231] Whether
-the Globe or its predecessor the Curtain was the ‘wooden O’ of _Henry
-V_, 1, prol. 13, must be more doubtful, as the prologue to Act V of the
-same play contemplates the triumphant return of Essex from Ireland, and
-in fact Essex left England on 27 March and returned, not triumphant,
-on 28 September 1599.[1232] Jonson refers to ‘this faire-fild Globe’
-as the scene of his _Every Man Out of his Humour_, produced in the
-autumn of 1600.[1233] The Privy Council order of the previous 22 June,
-which enacts that there shall be one allowed house only ‘in Surrey in
-that place which is commonlie called the Banckside or there aboutes’,
-goes on to recite that the Chamberlain’s men had chosen the Globe to be
-that one. The allowance of the house ‘in Surrey called the Globe’ is
-confirmed by the Privy Council letter of 27 December 1601. The order
-of 9 April 1604 authorizes the opening after the plague of ‘the Globe
-scituate in Maiden Lane on the Banckside in the Countie of Surrey’.
-This order evidently contemplates that the King’s men will use the
-house, which was assigned to them by name as ‘theire nowe vsual howse
-called the Globe within our County of Surrey’ by the terms of the
-patent of 19 May 1603. The precedent is followed in the later patents
-of 1619 and 1625, and there is nothing to indicate that any other
-company than the Chamberlain’s or King’s men ever performed, even
-temporarily, at the theatre.
-
-The Globe was held by a syndicate, composed mainly of members of
-the company, on a leasehold tenure. The site, which had been garden
-ground, was described in the original lease with some minuteness as
-follows:[1234]
-
- ‘totam illam parcellam fundi nuper praeantea inclusam & factam
- in quatuor separalia gardina nuper in tenuris & occupacionibus
- Thomae Burt & Isbrand Morris diers & Lactantii Roper Salter
- civis Londoniae continentem in longitudine ab oriente vsque
- occidentem ducentos & viginti pedes assisae vel eo circiter
- iacentem & adiungentem viae sive venellae ibidem ex vno
- latere & abbuttantem super peciam terrae vocatam the Parke
- super boream & super gardinum tunc vel nuper in tenura siue
- occupacione cuiusdam Johannis Cornishe versus occidentem &
- super aliud gardinum tunc vel nuper in tenura sive occupacione
- cuiusdam Johannis Knowles versus orientem cum omnibus domibus
- aedificiis structuris vijs easiamentis commoditatibus &
- pertinentiis adinde spectantibus vel aliquo modo pertinentibus
- quae dicta praemissa sunt scituata iacentia & existentia infra
- parochiam sancti Salvatoris in Southwarke in Comitatu Surria
- aceciam totam illam parcellam terrae nuper praeantea inclusam
- & factam in tria separalia gardina vnde duo eorundem nuper in
- tenura sive occupacione cuiusdam Johannis Robertes carpenter
- ac aliud nuper in occupacione cuiusdam Thomas Ditcher civis &
- mercatoris scissoris Londoniae scituatam iacentem & existentem
- in parochia praedicta in praedicto comitatu Surria continentem
- in longitudine ab oriente ad occidentem per estimacionem centum
- quinquaginta & sex pedes assisae vel eo circiter & in latitudine
- a borea ad austrum centum pedes assisae per estimacionem vel eo
- circiter iacentem & adiungentem super alio latere viae sive
- venellae praedictae & abbuttantem super gardinum ibidem tunc vel
- nuper praeantea in occupacione Willelmi Sellers versus orientem
- & super vnum aliud gardinum ibidem tunc vel nuper praeantea
- in tenura Johannis Burgram sadler versus occidentem & super
- venellam ibidem vocatam Mayden lane versus austrum cum omnibus
- domibus aedificijs structuris vijs easiamentis commoditatibus &
- pertinentiis ultimis recitatis praemissis seu alicui parti vel
- parcellae inde spectantibus seu aliquo modo pertinentibus simul
- cum libero ingressu egressu & regressu & passagio ... per &
- trans praedictam viam sive venellam iacentem & existentem inter
- praemissa praedicta.’
-
-The lease was granted for a term of thirty-one years from Christmas
-1598 to Christmas 1629, and conveyed the property in two equal
-moieties, the one to Cuthbert and Richard Burbadge and the other to
-William Shakespeare, Augustine Phillips, Thomas Pope, John Heminges,
-and William Kempe.[1235] With the exception of Cuthbert Burbadge
-these were all members of the Chamberlain’s company. Each moiety was
-charged with a ground-rent of £7 5_s._ There is nothing to show how
-the funds for building were found. ‘Wee’, said the Burbadges in 1635,
-‘at like expence built the Globe, with more summes of money taken up
-at interest, which lay heavy on us many yeeres; and to ourselves wee
-joyned those deserveing men, Shakspere, Hemings, Condall, Philips, and
-others, partners in the profittes of that they call the House, but
-makeing the leases for twenty-one yeeres hath beene the destruction of
-ourselves and others, for they dyeing at the expiration of three or
-four yeeres of their lease, the subsequent yeeres became dissolved to
-strangers, as by marrying with their widdowes and the like by their
-children.’[1236] This is, however, not a strictly accurate account
-of what took place in 1599, for Condell was not one of the original
-‘housekeepers’, and the original lease was for thirty-one, not
-twenty-one, years. In any case, the Burbadges contributed the woodwork
-of the Theatre.
-
-Between the execution of the lease and the completion of the
-play-house, Shakespeare and his four fellows assigned their moiety to
-William Levison and Thomas Savage, who ‘reassigned to euerye of them
-seuerally a fift parte of the said moitie’, so that after the building
-each of the five had a ‘ioynt tenancie’ with the other four in a moiety
-of the ground and galleries, and was also ‘tenant in common’ during the
-term of the lease.[1237] Professor Wallace explains that ‘the purpose
-of a joint-tenancy was to prevent the breaking up and scattering of an
-estate into fractions by keeping the property always in the hands of
-the members, or the longest survivors, or survivor, of them all, thus
-not allowing it to descend to heirs’. The legal distinction is no doubt
-sound, but we shall find that, whatever the intention of the assignment
-and reassignment may have been, the Globe shares did in fact descend
-to heirs, and that a good deal of trouble and litigation was thereby
-caused.[1238]
-
-Shortly after the house was built Kempe, no doubt on his withdrawal
-from the company, assigned his interest to Shakespeare, Heminges, and
-Phillips, who by further assignments to and from one Thomas Cressey
-brought in Pope, with the result that each of the four now held a
-fourth part of the moiety.[1239] Pope died before 13 February 1604 and
-left his interest to Mary Clark, _alias_ Wood, and Thomas Bromley.
-Mary Clark must have married John Edmonds, another legatee under the
-will, for in 1612 an interest corresponding to Pope’s was held by
-John and Mary Edmonds and Basil Nicoll.[1240] Nicoll, who was Pope’s
-executor, was presumably acting as trustee for Thomas Bromley. Edmonds,
-though an actor, belonged not to the King’s men, but was a Queen’s
-man by 1618. One-eighth of the house, therefore, was alienated from
-the company in 1604. A further alienation, which proved particularly
-troublesome in its results, took place on the death of Phillips in May
-1605. The exact facts became a matter of legal dispute. But it appears
-that Phillips’ interest passed first to his widow Anne as executrix,
-and, when her marriage in the course of 1606 to the spendthrift John
-Witter became known, to Heminges, who succeeded her as executor under
-the terms of the will. In this capacity Heminges leased an interest
-to the Witters on 14 February 1611 for a term of eighteen years from
-Christmas 1610.[1241] This interest was not a fourth, but only a sixth
-of the moiety, since at some date between the death of Phillips and
-that of Sly on 16 August 1608 the moiety had been redivided to allow of
-the introduction of Henry Condell and William Sly into the syndicate
-of housekeepers.[1242] A similar transaction took place on 20 February
-1612, when Basil Nicoll and John and Mary Edmonds, then holding
-one-sixth of the moiety, Shakespeare and Witter, each also holding
-one-sixth, and Heminges and Condell, holding three-sixths, joined to
-convey one-seventh of the moiety to William Ostler.[1243] It must, I
-think, be assumed that Heminges and Condell had together purchased the
-share left by Sly to his son Robert.
-
-The acquisition of the Blackfriars by the King’s men in 1608 did not,
-at first at least, detract from the importance of the Globe as the
-leading London theatre. It is so accepted by foreign visitors in 1610
-and again in 1611.[1244]
-
-On 29 June 1613 the house was ‘casually burnt downe and consumed with
-fier’.[1245] The event was important enough to find a record in Howes’
-continuation of Stowe’s _Annales_:[1246]
-
- ‘Upon S. Peters day last, the play-house or Theater, called the
- Globe, upon the Banckside near London, by negligent discharging
- of a peal of ordinance, close to the south-side thereof, the
- thatch took fire, and the wind sodainly disperst the flame round
- about, and in a very short space the whole building was quite
- consumed, and no man hurt; the house being filled with people to
- behold the play, viz. of Henry the Eighth. And the next spring
- it was new builded in far fairer manner than before.’
-
-Many other contemporary accounts exist. Thus Thomas Lorkin wrote to Sir
-Thomas Puckering on 30 June:[1247]
-
- ‘No longer since than yesterday, while Burbage’s company were
- acting at the Globe the play of Henry VIII, and there shooting
- off certain chambers in way of triumph, the fire catched and
- fastened upon the thatch of the house, and there burned so
- furiously, as it consumed the whole house, all in less than two
- hours, the people having enough to do to save themselves.’
-
-On 2 July Sir Henry Wotton wrote to his nephew Sir Edmund Bacon:[1248]
-
- ‘Now, to let matters of state sleep, I will entertain you at
- the present with what has happened this week at the Bank’s
- side. The King’s players had a new play, called _All is True_,
- representing some principal pieces of the reign of Henry VIII,
- which was set forth with many extraordinary circumstances
- of pomp and majesty, even to the matting of the stage; the
- Knights of the Order with their Georges and garters, the Guards
- with their embroidered coats, and the like: sufficient in
- truth within a while to make greatness very familiar, if not
- ridiculous. Now, King Henry making a masque at the Cardinal
- Wolsey’s house, and certain chambers being shot off at his
- entry, some of the paper, or other stuff, wherewith one of them
- was stopped, did light on the thatch, where being thought at
- first but an idle smoke, and their eyes more attentive to the
- show, it kindled inwardly, and ran round like a train, consuming
- within less than an hour the whole house to the very grounds.
- This was the fatal period of that virtuous fabric, wherein
- yet nothing did perish but wood and straw, and a few forsaken
- cloaks; only one man had his breeches set on fire, that would
- perhaps have broiled him, if he had not by the benefit of a
- provident wit put it out with bottle ale.’
-
-On 8 July John Chamberlain wrote to Sir Ralph Winwood:[1249]
-
- ‘The burning of the Globe, or play-house, on the Bankside, on
- St. Peter’s day, cannot escape you; which fell out by a peal of
- chambers (that I know not upon what occasion were to be used in
- the play), the tamplin or stopple of one of them lighting in the
- thatch that covered the house, burn’d it down to the ground in
- less than two hours, with a dwelling-house adjoining, and it was
- a great marvaile and fair grace of God, that the people had so
- little harm, having but two narrow doors to get out.’
-
-Nor was poetic chronicles of the disaster lacking. On the day after the
-fire took place, two ballads about it were entered in the Stationers’
-Register.[1250] Neither is known in print, but the use of the word
-‘doleful’ suggests that one of them, of which the author was William
-Parrat, is probably identical with the following set of verses,
-preserved in manuscript:[1251]
-
- _A Sonnett upon the pittiful burneing of the Globe playhowse
- in London._
-
- Now sitt the downe, Melpomene,
- Wrapt in a sea-cole robe,
- And tell the dolefull tragedie,
- That late was playd at Globe;
- For noe man that can singe and saye
- [But ?] was scard on St. Peters daye.
- Oh sorrow, pittifull sorrow, and yett all this is true.
-
- All yow that please to understand,
- Come listen to my storye,
- To see Death with his rakeing brand
- Mongst such an auditorye;
- Regarding neither Cardinalls might,
- Nor yett the rugged face of Henry the Eight.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- This fearfull fire beganne above,
- A wonder strange and true,
- And to the stage-howse did remove,
- As round as taylors clewe;
- And burnt downe both beame and snagg,
- And did not spare the silken flagg.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- Out runne the knightes, out runne the lordes,
- And there was great adoe;
- Some lost their hattes, and some their swordes;
- Then out runne Burbidge too;
- The reprobates, though druncke on Munday,
- Prayd for the Foole and Henry Condye.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- The perrywigges and drumme-heades frye,
- Like to a butter firkin;
- A wofull burneing did betide
- To many a good buffe jerkin.
- Then with swolne eyes, like druncken Flemminges,
- Distressed stood old stuttering Heminges.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- No shower his raine did there downe force
- In all that Sunn-shine weather,
- To save that great renowned howse;
- Nor thou, O ale-howse, neither.
- Had itt begunne belowe, sans doubte,
- Their wives for feare had pissed itt out.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- Bee warned, yow stage-strutters all,
- Least yow againe be catched,
- And such a burneing doe befall,
- As to them whose howse was thatched;
- Forbeare your whoreing, breeding biles,
- And laye up that expence for tiles.
- Oh sorrow, &c.
-
- Goe drawe yow a petition,
- And doe yow not abhorr itt,
- And gett, with low submission,
- A licence to begg for itt
- In churches, sans churchwardens checkes,
- In Surrey and in Midlesex.
- Oh sorrow, pittifull sorrow, and yett all this is true.
-
-John Taylor, the water-poet, has his epigram on the theme:[1252]
-
- As gold is better that’s in fier try’d,
- So is the Bankside _Globe_, that late was burn’d;
- For where before it had a thatched hide,
- Now to a stately theator ’tis turn’d:
- Which is an emblem, that great things are won
- By those that dare through greatest dangers run.
-
-Ben Jonson, in his _Execration upon Vulcan_, writes as if he had been
-an eye-witness:[1253]
-
- Well fare the wise men yet, on the Bank side,
- My friends the watermen! they could provide
- Against thy fury, when to serve their needs,
- They made a Vulcan of a sheaf of reeds,
- Whom they durst handle in their holiday coats,
- And safely trust to dress, not burn their boats.
- But O those reeds! thy mere disdain of them
- Made thee beget that cruel stratagem,
- Which some are pleased to style but thy mad prank,
- Against the Globe, the glory of the Bank:
- Which, though it were the fort of the whole parish,
- Flanked with a ditch, and forced out of a marish,
- I saw with two poor chambers taken in,
- And razed; ere thought could urge this might have been!
- See the World’s ruins! nothing but the piles
- Left, and wit since to cover it with tiles.
- The Brethren they straight nosed it out for news,
- ’Twas verily some relict of the Stews;
- And this a sparkle of that fire let loose,
- That was raked up in the Winchestrian goose,
- Bred on the Bank in time of Popery,
- When Venus there maintained the mystery.
- But others fell with that conceit by the ears,
- And cried it was a threatning to the bears,
- And that accursed ground, the Paris-garden:
- ‘Nay,’ sighed a sister, ‘Venus’ nun, Kate Arden,
- Kindled the fire!’ But then, did one return,
- No fool would his own harvest spoil or burn!
- If that were so, thou rather wouldst advance
- The place that was thy wife’s inheritance.
- ‘Oh no,’ cried all, ‘Fortune, for being a whore,
- Scaped not his justice any jot the more:
- He burnt that idol of the Revels too.
- Nay, let Whitehall with revels have to do,
- Though but in dances, it shall know his power;
- There was a judgement shewn too in an hour.’
-
-The Puritans did in fact draw such morals as Jonson satirized. Prynne,
-for example, finds the hand of God in ‘the sudden feareful burning,
-even to the ground, both of the Globe and Fortune play-houses, no man
-perceiving how these fires came’.[1254]
-
-The Globe was at once rebuilt. It was open again by 30 June 1614,
-when John Chamberlain wrote to Alice Carleton that he had called
-upon her sister Williams, and found her ‘gone to the new Globe, to a
-play. Indeed’, he says, ‘I hear much speech of this new play-house,
-which is said to be the fairest that ever was in England, so that if
-I live but seven years longer, I may chance to take a journey to see
-it’.[1255] The manuscript continuator of Stowe, describing the end
-of the theatre, says that the rebuilding was ‘at the great charge
-of King Iames, and many Noble men and others’.[1256] The lawsuit
-documents contain no indication that any part of the burden fell upon
-any one but the ‘housekeepers’, who being bound under their lease to
-‘mainteyne and repaire’ the house, resolved to ‘reedifie the same’.
-The first estimate of cost seems to have been about £700 to £800, for
-a levy of ‘50^{li} or 60^{li}’ was called upon each seventh share
-of the moiety.[1257] Witter was unable to meet this demand, and as
-he was also behindhand with his share of the ground-rent and other
-payments, Heminges resumed possession of the seventh and gave half of
-it ‘gratis’ to Henry Condell. By this time it had been ascertained that
-the re-edifying would be ‘a verie greate charge’, and Heminges claims
-that the re-edifying of Witter’s ‘parte’ had in fact cost himself and
-Condell ‘about the somme of cxx^{li}’.[1258] This would mean a total
-cost of about £1,680.[1259] Heminges appears to have taken a sub-lease
-at 20_s._ a year from his partners of two small parcels of the land
-in 1615, and to have built on them a house, probably a taphouse, as a
-private enterprise.[1260]
-
-Ostler died in December 1614, and Heminges took possession of his
-interest and drew the profits until October 1615, when his daughter
-Thomasina, Ostler’s widow, brought an action against him for them, the
-result of which is unknown.[1261] Shakespeare died in April 1616, and
-his interest, if not previously alienated, would have passed under
-his will, with other ‘leases’ to John and Susanna Hall.[1262] At some
-time earlier than April 1619, probably when he joined the company
-about 1616, Field was admitted to be a housekeeper, and the moiety was
-then divided into eighths instead of sevenths.[1263] In April 1619
-Witter brought an action against Heminges and Condell in the Court of
-Requests, to recover the interest which he had forfeited at the time of
-the rebuilding. He estimated the present annual value of the seventh,
-which he had held, at £30 to £40, and in the course of the proceedings
-expressed his willingness either to pay a rent of £13 6_s._ 8_d._ for
-the half of that seventh which Heminges had not passed over to Condell,
-or, alternatively, to take the profits of the houses on the site, other
-than the theatre, and in return for those to become responsible for the
-whole of the ground-rents due under the principal leases. The defence
-consisted in a denial of Witter’s claim to benefit under the will of
-Augustine Phillips, and an assertion that, after Heminges had allowed
-him to draw considerable sums in respect of the share, he had deserted
-his wife, at whose death Heminges ‘out of charitie was at the charges
-of the buryeing of her’. The depositions of the witnesses, who included
-Thomas Woodford and one James Knasborough, are unfortunately missing.
-Ultimately Witter failed to proceed with his case, and on 29 November
-1620 the Court gave judgement for the defendants.
-
-In October 1624 died John Underwood and left a share in the Globe in
-trust for his children to Condell and others as his executors. It must
-be supposed that he had succeeded to Field’s eighth, when the latter
-left the King’s men in 1619. Condell himself died in December 1627
-and left his interest to his son William until he should have made
-£300 out of it, and thereafter to his widow. Heminges died in October
-1630, and his interest passed to his son William as his executor.
-During the last years of their lives Heminges and Condell, following
-out the policy of absorption which has already been illustrated,
-appear to have acquired in one way or another the whole of the shares
-formerly held by Shakespeare, by Basil Nicoll and John Edmonds as
-successors of Sly, and by Underwood. This fact emerges from the records
-known as the _Sharers Papers_, which start with a petition from
-Robert Benfield, Eliard Swanston, and Thomas Pollard, then important
-members of the King’s company, to the Lord Chamberlain in 1635, to
-be admitted to shares as ‘housekeepers’ in the profits of the Globe
-and the Blackfriars.[1264] The allegations show that the Globe had
-been ‘formerly’ divided into sixteen shares, of which eight were
-held by Cuthbert Burbadge and Richard Burbadge’s widow Winifred, now
-Mrs. Robinson, in her own right and that of her son William, four by
-Mrs. Condell, and four by William Heminges. Afterwards Joseph Taylor
-and John Lowin were allowed to acquire shares, and later still the
-remaining Heminges interest was ‘surreptitiously’ purchased by John
-Shank. At the date of the petition, therefore, the Burbadges held
-seven shares, Mrs. Condell two, Shank three, and Taylor and Lowin two
-each. The case furnishes valuable information as to the organization
-of the theatre, and as to the division of outgoing and profits between
-the housekeepers and the actors as such. It is pretty evident that
-by 1635 the Globe took a secondary place to the Blackfriars in the
-economy of the King’s men.[1265] Shank admitted that he had bought
-a two years’ term of one Globe share in 1633 and a one year’s term
-of two more in 1634, together with interests in the Blackfriars, and
-seems to have thought that the £506 which he gave was full value for
-the purchases.[1266] The Burbadges protested against being called upon
-to part with any part of their property to ‘men soe soone shott up’
-and not having the ‘antiquity and desert’, which had customarily been
-looked for in housekeepers. In support of their plea they recalled
-the early services of their father in the building of theatres and
-the claims of their family to profit by ‘the great desert of Richard
-Burbadge for his quality of playing’. They suggested that ‘makeing
-the leases for twenty-one yeeres’ to their fellows, whose widows or
-children subsequently alienated the profits from the company, had been
-their ‘destruction’. The Lord Chamberlain, however, directed that
-the Burbadges should transfer two shares and Shank one to the three
-petitioners, ‘at the usual and accustomed rates, and according to the
-proportion of the time and benefit they are to injoy’. This the order
-states, in the case of the Globe, as five years. Probably there is an
-error here. The terms bought by Shank were to expire in 1635, but at
-the time of the petition a suit was pending in the Court of Requests
-for the confirmation of a ‘lease paroll’ from Sir Matthew Brend for
-a further nine years from 25 March 1635. The original lease of 1599
-from Nicholas Brend was for thirty-one years and would have expired in
-1629. But on 26 October 1613, when the rebuilding of the theatre was
-in hand, a fresh lease extending the term to 1635 had been granted by
-Sir John Bodley as trustee for Nicholas’s son Matthew, who was then a
-minor. Not content with this, the syndicate had procured a promise of
-a further extension to 1644 from young Matthew himself, which he now
-repudiated.[1267] I think that Bodley must have taken the opportunity
-in 1613 to raise the ground-rent from £14 10_s._ to £20. A draft for a
-return of new and divided houses, made for the Earl Marshal in 1634,
-has the following entry:
-
- ‘The Globe play-house nere Maid lane built by the company of
- players, with the dwelling-house thereto adjoyninge, built with
- timber, about 20 yeares past, upon an old foundation, worth
- 14^{li} to 20^{li} per ann., and one house there adjoyning
- built about the same tyme with timber, in the possession of W^m
- Millet, gent., worth per ann. 4^{li} [_In margin_, Play-house &
- house, S^r Mathew Brend’s inheritance].’
-
-A corrected return of 1637 runs:
-
- ‘The Globe play-house nere Maide lane built by the Company
- of Players with timber about 20 yeares past uppon an old
- foundacion, worth 20^{li} per ann. beinge the inheritance of S^r
- Mathew Brand, K^{nt}.’[1268]
-
-The petitioners in the _Sharers Papers_ declare that up to Lady Day
-1635 the rent for the Globe and Blackfriars together was not above
-£65. The original rent of the Blackfriars was £40, but this also may
-have been put up on the expiration of the first lease in 1629. The
-Court of Requests finally confirmed the extension of the lease to
-1644, apparently at a still further increased rent of £55, as Shank
-states the combined rent of the two houses as £100. The Globe was
-‘pulled downe to the ground, by Sir Matthew Brand, on Munday the 15
-of April 1644, to make tenements in the room of it’; that is to say,
-immediately upon the expiration of the nine years’ term from Lady Day
-1635 contemplated in the _Sharers Papers_.[1269]
-
-The precise locality of the Globe has been matter of controversy.
-The various contemporary documents already quoted place it beyond
-doubt in Surrey, and ‘on the Bankside’, a term which must certainly
-be taken to cover, not merely the row of houses looking directly upon
-the river, but also the whole of the western part of Southwark lying
-behind and south of these. With somewhat greater minuteness, the
-parish of St. Mary Overies is specified in the lawsuit of _Allen v.
-Burbadge_, and the parish of St. Saviour’s in the Fortune contract.
-There is no inconsistency here. The two ancient parishes of St. Mary
-Magdalen and St. Margaret on the Hill were amalgamated under the name
-of St. Saviour’s at the Reformation.[1270] I do not know that the
-ancient boundaries are upon record. The Rose stood in what had been St.
-Margaret’s, and one would therefore expect to find the Globe nearer
-than the Rose to the old priory church of St. Mary’s. In the Privy
-Council order of 1604 the situation is described as ‘in Maiden lane’,
-and in the return to the Earl Marshal of 1637 as ‘nere Maide lane’.
-But, apart from the difference between ‘in’ and ‘nere’, Maiden Lane
-is a fairly long thoroughfare, and so far as these indications are
-concerned, the Globe may have been either to the north or the south of
-it. Local tradition, as elaborated by Southwark antiquaries, has been
-inclined to put it to the south, within the area occupied by what was
-formerly Thrale’s and is now Barclay and Perkins’s Anchor Brewery, of
-which Maiden Lane, now Park Street, forms the northern boundary. The
-main reason for this is the inclusion within the brewery of the course
-of a passage known as Globe Alley, which ran west from Deadman’s Place
-in a parallel line to Maiden Lane for about 360 feet and then turned
-northwards for another 100 feet until it debouched into the Lane. So
-far as measurements go, Globe Alley might be the _venella_ of the
-1599 lease. The name first appears in the St. Saviour’s token book
-for 1614, where it is applied to houses formerly described as Brand’s
-Rents, and from 1613 onwards as Sir John Bodley’s Rents.[1271] Land
-south of Maiden Lane certainly formed part of the Brend estate, and
-a plot of it conveyed by Sir Matthew Brend to one Hilary Memprise in
-1626 was bounded on the south by a sewer dividing it from the Bishop
-of Winchester’s park, and on the north by ‘the alley or way leading to
-the Gloabe Play-house commonly called Gloabe Alley’.[1272] A century
-later, property acquired for the brewery in 1732 is similarly described
-as ‘fronting a certain alley or passage called Globe Alley, in antient
-times leading from Deadman’s Place to the Globe Play-house’.[1273]
-
-It was certainly a belief in the Thrale family that the site of the
-theatre itself had passed into their hands. Mrs. Piozzi, Johnson’s
-friend, who married Henry Thrale in 1763, left the following
-autobiographical note of her residence in Southwark between that date
-and her husband’s death in 1781:
-
- ‘For a long time, then--or I thought it such--my fate was bound
- up with the old Globe Theatre, upon the Bankside, Southwark;
- the alley it had occupied having been purchased and thrown down
- by M^r Thrale to make an opening before the windows of our
- dwelling-house. When it lay desolate in a black heap of rubbish,
- my Mother, one day, in a joke, called it the Ruins of Palmyra;
- and after that they laid it down in a grass-plot. Palmyra was
- the name it went by, I suppose, among the clerks and servants of
- the brewhouse.... But there were really curious remains of the
- old Globe Play-house, which though hexagonal in form without,
- was round within.’[1274]
-
-Dr. Martin seems to think that the lady’s recollection was confused and
-that the garden called Palmyra stood on the east of Deadman’s Place
-opposite to Globe Alley. But, according to Concanen and Morgan it was
-‘on the opposite side of the street’ to the brewery.[1275] However
-this may be, there are other notices which show that, however complete
-the demolition of 1644, the theatre or part of it was still regarded
-by tradition as standing a hundred years later amongst the tenements
-by which it was replaced.[1276] In 1787 the brewery was purchased
-by Barclay and Perkins, and the conveyance recites amongst other
-property a plot of ground between Globe Alley and a common sewer, from
-which had been cleared in 1767 some ‘ruinous and decayed’ tenements
-formerly occupied in 1715 by John Knowles and others.[1277] This is
-probably the clearance referred to by Mrs. Piozzi. Under Acts of 1786
-and 1812 Globe Alley was closed, and it is now covered over within the
-brewery precinct. Horwood’s map of 1799 shows the eastern end already
-obliterated. The western end is called Globe Walk, and to the north of
-it is Globe Court, perhaps representing the space cleared in 1767.
-
-On the assumption that the theatre stood in Globe Alley, there has
-been divergence of opinion as to the precise part of the Alley in
-which it stood. Mr. Rendle fixed on a spot on the north side, about
-80 or 100 feet from the Deadman’s Place end.[1278] To this he was
-guided, partly by a further local tradition, according to which the
-site was occupied successively by a meeting-house and a windmill, and
-partly by an argument derived from the entries in the St. Saviour’s
-token-book for 1621.[1279] Here, under the heading ‘Sir John Bodley’s
-Rentes’ are recorded in succession about ten names. Then comes a new
-heading, differently written, ‘Gloab Alley’, then two more names, then
-in the margin of the page the word ‘Gloabe’. This Mr. Rendle took
-to mean that the Globe was about twelve houses from the east end of
-the alley. If this is an indication of the site of the Globe at all,
-which is a mere conjecture, I should myself draw the inference that it
-stood, not twelve, but two houses from the end of the alley, and that
-a part, if not the whole, of Bodley’s Rents was outside the alley. And
-why should the enumerator be supposed to have worked from the east,
-rather than from the north end of the alley? Dr. Martin, in fact,
-turns Mr. Rendle’s argument round in this way, and uses the token-book
-to support a theory which places the theatre south of Globe Alley,
-just at the angle where it turns to the north, and 360 feet, instead
-of Mr. Rendle’s 80 or 100 feet, west of Deadman’s Place.[1280] Here
-it appears to be located in a borough history of 1795;[1281] and is
-certainly located in more than one early nineteenth-century plan.[1282]
-Dr. Martin has attempted to obtain confirmation of this siting from an
-investigation of the brewery title-deeds. From 1727 onwards the history
-of the angle site is clear. In that year it was transferred, subject
-to a mortgage, by Timothy Cason and his wife Elizabeth, heiress of the
-Brend estate, to certain parishioners of St. Saviour’s. Upon it was
-built the parish workhouse referred to by Concanen and Morgan. This
-stood just at the outer south-west angle of Globe Alley, which Dr.
-Martin conceives to have been occupied by the theatre. In 1774 a new
-workhouse was built, and the site of the old one bought by the Thrales.
-It was conveyed with the rest of the brewery to Barclay and Perkins
-in 1787, and was then described as the ground ‘on which lately stood
-all that great shop or workhouse formerly used for a meeting-house’.
-Dr. Martin thinks that this forgotten meeting-house may have been
-confused in local tradition with that further to the east along Globe
-Alley.[1283] Dr. Martin suggests that the property transferred by
-the Casons in 1727 is to be identified with that described in a deed
-executed by the same persons in 1706, of which a copy is also to be
-found amongst the brewery title-deeds, as consisting of tenements built
-‘where the late play-house called the Globe stood and upon the ground
-thereunto belonging’. If this were so, he would of course have proved
-his point. The deed of 1706 seems to have been a family settlement
-covering various fragments of Brend property in Southwark, which had
-only just been brought together in the hands of Elizabeth Cason. The
-Globe site had been settled by Sir Matthew Brend in 1624 upon his
-wife Frances as a jointure. She died in 1673, and it then passed as
-a jointure to Judith, wife of Sir Matthew’s son Thomas and mother of
-Elizabeth, under a deed of 1655 in which the reference to ‘the late
-play-house called the Globe’, repeated in that of 1706, first occurs.
-Judith Brend had died in 1706.
-
-As a matter of fact, it is almost impossible to reconcile the Southwark
-tradition that the Globe stood on the south of Maiden Lane, either
-in Mr. Rendle’s or in Dr. Martin’s interpretation of it, with more
-than one bit of evidence which we owe to the research of Professor
-Wallace. The first of these is the lease of 1599 itself, as recited
-in the pleadings of _Ostler v. Heminges_. This states quite clearly
-that the leased plot abutted on a piece of land called the Park ‘super
-boream’ and on Maiden Lane ‘versus austrum’, and it is difficult to
-take very seriously either the Latinity which makes ‘versus austrum’
-mean that the leased plot was on the south, or the suggestion that the
-draughtsman was working carelessly from a plan which had the south
-instead of the north of the plot at the top of the sheet, and got
-the points of his compass wrong.[1284] I daresay that such things do
-sometimes happen in conveyancer’s offices, but it is hardly legitimate
-to call them in aid as a canon of interpretation. No doubt it is
-tempting to identify the piece of land called the Park with the Bishop
-of Winchester’s park, which lay at a reasonable distance to the south
-and not to the north of Maiden Lane, but after all this must once have
-extended nearly up to the Bankside, since Maiden Lane itself is known
-to have been cut out of it, and it is not at all improbable that some
-little strip of land retained the name.[1285] It can only have been
-a very little one. The lease describes the Globe site as consisting
-of two plots lying apparently on opposite sides of a way or alley
-(_venella_) by which access was obtainable to them. One of these, that
-next the Park, had been the gardens of Thomas Burt, Isbrand Morris,
-and Lactantius Roper. It was 220 feet in length and lay between the
-garden of John Knowles on the east and John Cornish on the west. The
-southern plot, bounded by Maiden Lane on the south, had similarly been
-the gardens of John Roberts and Thomas Ditcher. This was only 156 feet
-long and 100 feet deep, and lay between the gardens of William Sellers
-to the east and John Burgram to the west. Now the whole space between
-Maiden Lane and the Thames is only from 200 to 350 feet at various
-points, so that there could not have been room for much of a ‘park’
-between the Globe site and the Bankside houses.
-
-The evidence of the lease is confirmed in various ways by the records
-of presentments made by the Commissioners of Sewers for Kent and Surrey
-against negligent occupiers in this marshy neighbourhood. The most
-important entry is one of 14 February 1606:
-
- ‘It is ordered that Burbidge and Heminges and others, the owners
- of the Play-house called the Globe in Maid-Lane shall before the
- xx^{th} day of Aprill next pull vp and take cleane out of the
- Sewar the props or postes which stand vnder their bridge on the
- north side of Mayd-lane vpon paine to forfeit xx^s.’
-
-This is endorsed ‘done’, but another order of the same day requiring
-the same men to ‘well and sufficientlye pyle boorde and fill vp viij
-poles more or lesse of theire wharfe against theire said Play-house’
-needed a repetition on 25 April before it received attention.[1286]
-Earlier records, before the Globe came into existence, relate to some
-of the garden-holders named in the lease. A plot of John Bingham or
-Burgram abutted on a Maiden Lane sewer in 1596, and this is probably
-identical with the ‘common sewer leading from Sellors gardin to the
-beare garden’, which William Sellers and others were ordered to cleanse
-on 5 December 1595. Certainly the bear garden was to the north and
-not the south of Maiden Lane. There was also a sewer bordering upon
-the park, and on this Jasper Morris and Thomas Burt had encroached in
-1593.[1287]
-
-The old maps, as usual, do not give much help when it comes to a pinch,
-although the balance of their authority, for what it is worth, seems to
-me to be in favour of a northern site.[1288] Mr. Hubbard, calculating
-from Visscher’s map, would put the Globe on the site of the present
-Central Wharf, 15 feet south of the Bankside houses and 136 feet west
-of Bank End, and therefore not very near Maiden Lane at all.[1289] I do
-not think that he sufficiently recognizes the imperfections of the maps
-from a surveyor’s point of view. I doubt whether more is to be got out
-of them than that the Globe stood more to the east and probably more to
-the south than either the Hope or the Rose.[1290]
-
-The foregoing paragraphs show the state of the controversy when the
-body of this chapter was written. Since then Mr. Braines has taken
-up the investigation where it was left by Dr. Martin, with the help
-of the brewery title-deeds and many other documents bearing on the
-distribution of tenements in Maiden Lane and Globe Alley over more than
-a century. It now seems clear that, in view of the known history of
-properties north of Maiden Lane, there is no room for the Globe plot
-there, that this plot did pass from the Casons to the workhouse and
-ultimately the brewery, and that it did lie at Dr. Martin’s angle site,
-being indeed precisely located on the map by Concanen and Morgan’s
-description of 1795. We must therefore assume that the points of the
-compass were, as Dr. Martin conjectured, inverted in the lease of
-1599, east with west and north with south, and that the Globe company
-maintained a bridge over the sewer on the opposite side of Maiden Lane
-to the theatre, for the convenience of visitors coming down Horseshoe
-Alley from the river. The _venella_ of 1599 must have been a westward
-extension of Globe Alley, afterwards disused.
-
-Some notion of the structural character of the Globe may be gleaned
-from the builder’s contract for the Fortune in 1600.[1291] The Globe
-was then the last new thing in theatres, and in entering into his
-agreement for the Fortune with Peter Street, the builder of both
-houses, Henslowe was careful to specify that the Globe should be taken
-as the model, alike as regards the arrangement of the galleries and
-staircases, the contrivances and fashioning of the stage, and all
-other minor points not particularly indicated. The only alterations of
-design set out in the agreement were that the scantlings or standard
-measurements of the timber should be rather stouter than those of the
-Globe, and that the main posts of the stage and auditorium should
-be shaped square and carved with figures of satyrs. It is probable,
-however, that a more important difference is passed without notice.
-The Fortune was rectangular; the Globe was almost certainly round. The
-reference to a circular house in _Henry V_ and _A Warning for Fair
-Women_, both plays of about 1599, may indeed belong to the Curtain
-rather than the Globe, but there are similar references in _E. M.
-O._ (1599) and in _The Merry Devil of Edmonton_ (1608), which are
-certainly Globe plays, and there seems no reason to doubt that the
-Globe is represented by the cylindrical buildings, windowless below,
-windowed and of narrower diameter above, which are shown in the maps
-of the Hondius group and in the background of Delaram’s portrait of
-James I.[1292] A few details are furnished by the various narratives
-of the fire of 1613. The roof was thatched, whence arose the accident.
-The walls were of timber, for nothing was burnt but wood and straw.
-The building was ‘flanked with a ditch, and forced out of a marish’.
-It had a stage-house ‘round as taylors clewe’, and carried a silken
-flag. There were two narrow doors, and hard by stood an alehouse. The
-new Globe built after the fire was tiled for greater safety. In other
-respects there was probably no great change. The building is described
-in 1634 as of timber, upon an old foundation. The maps, if they can be
-trusted, figure it as polygonal, rather than strictly round. No doubt
-it was round inside; an ‘amphytheator’, it is called in _Holland’s
-Leaguer_. The _Sharers Papers_ of 1635 mention the tiring-house door,
-at which money was taken. James Wright tells us that it was a summer
-house, large and partly open to the weather, and that the acting was
-always by daylight. Malone conjectured that the name ‘Globe’ was taken
-from the sign, ‘which was a figure of Hercules supporting the Globe,
-under which was written _Totus mundus agit histrionem_’.[1293] I do not
-know where he got this information.
-
-
- xii. THE FORTUNE
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Most of the documents are at Dulwich,
- and are printed in full or in abstract by W. W. Greg in
- _Henslowe Papers_, and by J. P. Collier in _Alleyn Memoirs_
- and _Alleyn Papers_. The _Register_ of the Privy Council adds
- a few of importance. Valuable summaries of the history of the
- theatre are given by W. W. Greg, _Henslowe’s Diary_, ii. 56,
- and W. Young, _History of Dulwich College_ (1889), ii. 257.
- _The Catalogue of the Manuscripts and Muniments at Dulwich_
- (1881–1903) by G. F. Warner and F. B. Bickley is also useful.]
-
-The settlement of the Chamberlain’s men in 1599 at the Globe, hard by
-the Rose, on Bankside, probably led Henslowe and Alleyn to plan during
-the same year a countermove, by the transference of the Admiral’s
-men to a new theatrical locality in the rapidly growing districts on
-the north-west boundary of the City. The Rose, although not built
-fifteen years, was in decay, and the swamps of the Bankside had not,
-especially in bad weather, proved attractive to visitors. The new
-centre might be expected to serve in summer and winter alike, and,
-while in a place ‘remote and exempt’ from the City jurisdiction, would
-be convenient for the well-to-do population, which was establishing
-itself in the western suburbs, along the main roads of Holborn and the
-Strand. The Fortune on the north, and the Blackfriars, opened about
-the same time on the south, delimited a region which has remained
-almost to our own day the head-quarters of the stage. The actual site
-selected lay just outside Cripplegate between Golding or Golden Lane
-and Whitecross Street, in the county of Middlesex, the lordship or
-liberty of Finsbury, and the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate.
-The title-deeds at Dulwich make it possible to trace the history of
-the property or part of it back to the reign of Henry VIII, but for
-the present purpose it is sufficient to begin with 11 July 1584, the
-date of a lease by Daniel Gill, son of William Gill, gardener, to
-Patrick Brewe, goldsmith, of five tenements on the east side of Golding
-Lane and one on the west side of Whitecross Street at a rent of £12 a
-year. This lease Brewe assigned to Alleyn on 22 December 1599, for a
-sum of £240. Subsequently, in 1610, Alleyn bought up a reversionary
-lease for £100, and also, after troublesome negotiations with the
-numerous descendants of Daniel Gill, the freehold of the property for
-£340.[1294] This purchase, however, and probably also the original
-lease, included a good deal more than the actual plot on which the
-theatre was built. The deed of sale recites six tenements on the east
-of Golden Lane and six on the west of Whitecross Street. It is pretty
-clear, from the boundaries described, as compared with those in a
-temporary assignment by Alleyn of the lease, that the property dealt
-with in 1584 and in 1610 was the same, and it is natural to conclude
-that Alleyn had himself added to the number of tenements.[1295] This
-is confirmed by a note of Alleyn’s that, in addition to building the
-play-house, he spent £120 ‘for other priuat buildings of myn owne’. One
-such building adjoined the south side of the play-house in 1601.[1296]
-Alleyn’s note gives the cost of the play-house itself as £520, making
-up with the private buildings and the purchase of leasehold, reversion,
-and freehold, a total expenditure of £1,320.[1297] The contract for
-building the framework was taken by Peter Street, carpenter, at £440,
-which presumably left Alleyn £80 for the painting and other decorative
-work excluded from the contract. The following is the text of the
-contract, which is preserved at Dulwich:[1298]
-
- ‘This Indenture made the Eighte daie of Januarye 1599, and in
- the Twoe and Fortyth yeare of the Reigne of our sovereigne Ladie
- Elizabeth, by the grace of god Queene of Englande, Fraunce
- and Irelande, defender of the Faythe, &c. betwene Phillipp
- Henslowe and Edwarde Allen of the parishe of S^{te} Saviours
- in Southwark in the Countie of Surrey, gentlemen, on thone
- parte, and Peeter Streete, Cittizen and Carpenter of London,
- on thother parte witnesseth That whereas the saide Phillipp
- Henslowe & Edward Allen, the daie of the date hereof, haue
- bargayned, compounded & agreed with the saide Peter Streete
- ffor the erectinge, buildinge & settinge upp of a new howse
- and Stadge for a Plaiehouse in and vppon a certeine plott or
- parcell of grounde appoynted oute for that purpose, scytuate
- and beinge nere Goldinge lane in the parishe of S^{te} Giles
- withoute Cripplegate of London, to be by him the saide Peeter
- Streete or somme other sufficyent woorkmen of his provideinge
- and appoyntemente and att his propper costes & chardges, for
- the consideracion hereafter in theis presentes expressed, made,
- erected, builded and sett upp in manner & forme followinge (that
- is to saie); The frame of the saide howse to be sett square and
- to conteine ffowerscore foote of lawfull assize everye waie
- square withoutt and fiftie fiue foote of like assize square
- everye waie within, with a good suer and stronge foundacion
- of pyles, brick, lyme and sand bothe without & within, to be
- wroughte one foote of assize att the leiste aboue the grounde;
- And the saide fframe to conteine three Stories in heighth,
- the first or lower Storie to conteine Twelue foote of lawfull
- assize in heighth, the second Storie Eleaven foote of lawfull
- assize in heigth, and the third or vpper Storie to conteine
- Nyne foote of lawfull assize in height; All which Stories
- shall conteine Twelue foote and a halfe of lawfull assize in
- breadth througheoute, besides a juttey forwardes in either
- of the saide twoe vpper Stories of Tenne ynches of lawfull
- assize, with ffower convenient divisions for gentlemens roomes,
- and other sufficient and convenient divisions for Twoe pennie
- roomes, with necessarie seates to be placed and sett, aswell
- in those roomes as througheoute all the rest of the galleries
- of the saide howse, and with suchelike steares, conveyances &
- divisions withoute & within, as are made & contryved in and to
- the late erected Plaiehowse on the Banck in the saide parishe
- of S^{te} Saviours called the Globe; With a Stadge and Tyreinge
- howse to be made, erected & settupp within the saide fframe,
- with a shadowe or cover over the saide Stadge, which Stadge
- shalbe placed & sett, as alsoe the stearecases of the saide
- fframe, in suche sorte as is prefigured in a plott thereof
- drawen, and which Stadge shall conteine in length Fortie and
- Three foote of lawfull assize and in breadth to extende to the
- middle of the yarde of the saide howse; The same Stadge to be
- paled in belowe with good, stronge and sufficyent newe oken
- bourdes, and likewise the lower Storie of the saide fframe
- withinside, and the same lower storie to be alsoe laide over
- and fenced with stronge yron pykes; And the saide Stadge to
- be in all other proporcions contryved and fashioned like vnto
- the Stadge of the saide Plaie howse called the Globe; With
- convenient windowes and lightes glazed to the saide Tyreinge
- howse; And the saide fframe, Stadge and Stearecases to be
- covered with Tyle, and to haue a sufficient gutter of lead to
- carrie & convey the water frome the coveringe of the saide
- Stadge to fall backwardes; And also all the saide fframe and
- the Stairecases thereof to be sufficyently enclosed withoute
- with lathe, lyme & haire, and the gentlemens roomes and Twoe
- pennie roomes to be seeled with lathe, lyme & haire, and all
- the fflowers of the saide Galleries, Stories and Stadge to
- be bourded with good & sufficyent newe deale bourdes of the
- whole thicknes, wheare need shalbe; And the saide howse and
- other thinges beforemencioned to be made & doen to be in all
- other contrivitions, conveyances, fashions, thinge and thinges
- effected, finished and doen accordinge to the manner and
- fashion of the saide howse called the Globe, saveinge only that
- all the princypall and maine postes of the saide fframe and
- Stadge forwarde shalbe square and wroughte palasterwise, with
- carved proporcions called Satiers to be placed & sett on the
- topp of every of the same postes, and saveinge alsoe that the
- said Peeter Streete shall not be chardged with anie manner of
- pay[ntin]ge in or aboute the saide fframe howse or Stadge or
- anie parte thereof, nor rendringe the walls within, nor seeling
- anie more or other roomes then the gentlemens roomes, Twoe
- pennie roomes and Stadge before remembred. Nowe theiruppon the
- saide Peeter Streete dothe covenant, promise and graunte ffor
- himself, his executours and administratours, to and with the
- saide Phillipp Henslowe and Edward Allen and either of them,
- and thexecutours and administratours of them and either of
- them, by theis presentes in manner & forme followeinge (that
- is to saie); That he the saide Peeter Streete, his executours
- or assignes, shall & will att his or their owne propper costes
- & chardges well, woorkmanlike & substancyallie make, erect,
- sett upp and fully finishe in and by all thinges, accordinge
- to the true meaninge of theis presentes, with good, stronge
- and substancyall newe tymber and other necessarie stuff, all
- the saide fframe and other woorkes whatsoever in and vppon
- the saide plott or parcell of grounde (beinge not by anie
- aucthoretie restrayned, and haveinge ingres, egres & regres to
- doe the same) before the ffyue & twentith daie of Julie next
- commeinge after the date hereof; And shall alsoe at his or
- theire like costes and chardges provide and finde all manner
- of woorkmen, tymber, joystes, rafters, boordes, dores, boltes,
- hinges, brick, tyle, lathe, lyme, haire, sande, nailes, lade,
- iron, glasse, woorkmanshipp and other thinges whatsoever, which
- shalbe needefull, convenyent & necessarie for the saide fframe
- & woorkes & euerie parte thereof; And shall alsoe make all the
- saide fframe in every poynte for Scantlinges lardger and bigger
- in assize then the Scantlinges of the timber of the saide newe
- erected howse called the Globe; And alsoe that he the saide
- Peeter Streete shall furthwith, aswell by himself as by suche
- other and soemanie woorkmen as shalbe convenient & necessarie,
- enter into and vppon the saide buildinges and woorkes, and shall
- in reasonable manner proceede therein withoute anie wilfull
- detraccion vntill the same shalbe fully effected and finished.
- In consideracion of all which buildinges and of all stuff &
- woorkemanshipp thereto belonginge, the saide Phillipp Henslowe
- & Edward Allen and either of them, ffor themselues, theire, and
- either of theire executours & administratours, doe joynctlie
- & seuerallie covenante & graunte to & with the saide Peeter
- Streete, his executours & administratours by theis presentes,
- that they the saide Phillipp Henslowe & Edward Allen or one of
- them, or the executours administratours or assignes of them or
- one of them, shall & will well & truelie paie or cawse to be
- paide vnto the saide Peeter Streete, his executours or assignes,
- att the place aforesaid appoynted for the erectinge of the saide
- fframe, the full somme of Fower hundred & Fortie Poundes of
- lawfull money of Englande in manner & forme followeinge (that
- is to saie), att suche tyme and when as the Tymber-woork of
- the saide fframe shalbe rayzed & sett upp by the saide Peeter
- Streete his executours or assignes, or within seaven daies
- then next followeinge, Twoe hundred & Twentie poundes, and
- att suche time and when as the saide fframe & woorkes shalbe
- fullie effected & ffynished as is aforesaide, or within seaven
- daies then next followeinge, thother Twoe hundred and Twentie
- poundes, withoute fraude or coven. Prouided allwaies, and it
- is agreed betwene the saide parties, that whatsoever somme or
- sommes of money the saide Phillipp Henslowe & Edward Allen or
- either of them, or the executours or assignes of them or either
- of them, shall lend or deliver vnto the saide Peter Streete his
- executours or assignes, or anie other by his appoyntemente or
- consent, ffor or concerninge the saide woorkes or anie parte
- thereof or anie stuff thereto belonginge, before the raizeinge
- & settinge upp of the saide fframe, shalbe reputed, accepted,
- taken & accoumpted in parte of the firste paymente aforesaid
- of the saide some of Fower hundred & Fortie poundes, and all
- suche somme & sommes of money, as they or anie of them shall
- as aforesaid lend or deliver betwene the razeinge of the
- saide fframe & finishinge thereof and of all the rest of the
- saide woorkes, shalbe reputed, accepted, taken & accoumpted
- in parte of the laste pamente aforesaid of the same somme
- of Fower hundred & Fortie poundes, anie thinge abouesaid to
- the contrary notwithstandinge. In witnes whereof the parties
- abouesaid to theis presente Indentures Interchaungeably haue
- sett theire handes and seales. Yeoven the daie and yeare ffirste
- abouewritten.
-
- P S
-
- Sealed and deliuered by the saide Peter Streete in the presence
- of me William Harris Pub[lic] Scr[ivener] And me Frauncis Smyth
- appr[entice] to the said Scr[ivener]
-
- [_Endorsed_:] Peater Streat ffor The Building of the Fortune.
-
-The constant references in the terms of the contract to the model
-of the Globe, while bearing testimony to the stimulus which the
-building of the Globe had given to theatrical competition, leaves
-some uncertainty as to many details of planning, and it is matter
-for regret that the ‘plot’ of the stage and staircases furnished to
-the builder has not itself been preserved. We learn, however, that
-the house was a square one, 80 feet each way by outside and 55 feet
-by inside measurement; that the stage was 43 feet wide and projected
-into the middle of the yard; that the framework was of wood, on a
-foundation of brick and piles, and with an outer coating of plaster;
-that the framework and stage were boarded within and strengthened
-with iron pikes; that there were three galleries rising to a total
-height of 32 feet, and that sections of these were partitioned off and
-ceiled as ‘gentlemens rooms’, of which there were four, and ‘two-penny
-rooms’; that the tiring-house had glazed windows; that there was a
-‘shadowe or cover’ over the stage, and that this, with the galleries
-and staircases, were tiled and supplied with lead gutters to carry off
-the rain-water. Two divergences from the Globe model are specified:
-the timber work is to be stouter, and the principal posts of the frame
-work and stage are to be square and carved with satyrs. An ingenious
-attempt has been made by Mr. William Archer and Mr. W. H. Godfrey to
-reconstruct the plan of the theatre from these and other indications,
-with a liberal allowance of conjecture.[1299] It will be observed
-that Henslowe, as well as Alleyn, was a party to the contract; but
-it is pretty clear from Alleyn’s note already referred to that he
-found the money, and although Henslowe did in fact become his partner
-in the enterprise, this was under a lease of 4 April 1601, whereby
-he took over a moiety of the play-house and its profits for a term
-of twenty-four years from the previous 25 March at an annual rent
-of £8.[1300] This lease did not include Alleyn’s private tenements,
-but it did include some enclosed ‘growndes’ on the north and west of
-the house, and a passage 30 feet long by 14 feet wide running east
-from the south-west angle of the building ‘from one doore of the said
-house to an other’. It is, I think, to be inferred from this that the
-main approach to the earlier Fortune theatre was from the Golden Lane
-side. The contract with Street is dated on 8 January 1600 and provides
-for the completion of the work by the following 25 July, and for the
-payment of the price in two instalments, one when the framework was
-up and the other upon completion. In fact, however, the acquittances
-by Street and others, endorsed upon the Dulwich indenture, show that
-Henslowe acted as a kind of banker for the transaction, and made
-advances from time to time to Street, or to pay workmen or purchase
-materials, all of which were debited against the amounts payable under
-the contract. Work seems to have begun before 17 January. By 20 March
-Henslowe had paid £180 and by 4 May £240. It is therefore a little
-puzzling to find a payment ‘at the eand of the fowndations’ on 8 May.
-About £53 more was paid before 10 June, making nearly £300 in all by
-that date. The last entry is one of 4s. to Street ‘to pasify him’,
-which suggests that some dispute had taken place. Here the acquittances
-stop, but Henslowe’s _Diary_ indicates that he was frequently dining
-in company with Street from 13 June to August 8, and probably the work
-was completed about the latter date.[1301] Alleyn had had to face some
-opposition in carrying out his project. He began by arming himself with
-the authority of his ‘lord’, the Earl of Nottingham, who wrote in his
-favour to the Middlesex justices on 12 January 1600, explaining the
-reasons for leaving the Bankside and the general convenience of the new
-locality, and citing the Queen’s ‘special regarde of fauor’ towards
-the company as a reason why the justices should allow his servant to
-build ‘w^{th}out anie yo^r lett or molestation’. This action did not
-prove sufficient to avert a local protest. Lord Willoughby and others
-complained to the Council, who on 9 March wrote to the Middlesex
-justices informing them that the erection of a new play-house, ‘wherof
-ther are to manie allreadie not farr from that place’, would greatly
-displease the Queen, and commanding the project to be ‘staied’. Alleyn,
-however, was secure in the royal favour. He also, by offering a weekly
-contribution to the relief of the poor, succeeded in obtaining a
-certificate from the petty officials and other inhabitants of Finsbury
-of their consent to the toleration of the house; and on 8 April the
-Council wrote again to the justices, withdrawing their previous
-inhibition and laying special stress on Elizabeth’s desire that Alleyn
-personally should revive his services as a player, ‘wheareof, of late
-he hath made discontynuance’. The letter also referred to the fact
-that another house was pulled down instead of the Fortune, and a
-formal Privy Council order of 22 June, laying down that there shall
-in future be one house in Middlesex for the Admiral’s men, and one on
-the Bankside for the Chamberlain’s, makes it clear that the condemned
-theatre was the Curtain.[1302] Nevertheless, it is certain that neither
-the Curtain nor the Rose was in fact plucked down at this date.
-
-The Fortune was opened in the autumn of 1600 by the Admiral’s men,
-probably with Dekker’s _1 Fortune’s Tennis_, and its theatrical history
-is closely bound up with that of the same company, who occupied it
-continuously, as the Admiral’s to 1603, then as Prince Henry’s men
-to his death in 1612, and finally as the Palsgrave’s men. It is
-only necessary to deal here with matters that directly concern the
-building. That it became something of a centre of disturbance in the
-peaceful suburbs of the north-west is shown by various entries in the
-records of the Middlesex Bench. On 26 February 1611, two butchers,
-Ralph Brewyn and John Lynsey, were charged with abusing gentlemen
-there. On 1 October 1612, the justices regarded it as the resort
-of cutpurses, and were thereby led to suppress the jigs at the end
-of plays, which especially attracted such persons. In 1613 a true
-bill was found against Richard Bradley for stabbing Nicholas Bedney
-there on 5 June.[1303] The upkeep of the structure was expensive. A
-note in Alleyn’s hand of sums laid out upon the play-house during
-the seven years 1602–8 shows an average amount of about £120. Only
-£4 2_s._ was spent during 1603, for the greater part of which year
-the theatres were closed, but £232 1_s._ 8_d._ in 1604.[1304] No
-doubt wooden buildings, open to the weather, perished rapidly. It is
-not unreasonable to suppose that the relations between the company
-and their landlords were much what they had been at the Rose; that
-is to say that the latter took half the gallery receipts and bore
-repairs, while the former took the rest of the receipts and met all
-other outgoings. An unexecuted draft lease to Thomas Downton of 1608
-indicates that Alleyn and Henslowe then had it in mind to bind the
-company more closely to the theatre, by dividing a quarter of their
-interest amongst the eight members of the company.[1305] Possibly the
-plan was carried out. In asking a loan from Alleyn on a date apparently
-earlier than August 1613, Charles Massye, who was one of the eight, not
-only offers repayment out of his ‘gallery mony’ and ‘house mony’, but
-also the assignment of ‘that lyttell moete I have in the play housses’
-as a security.[1306] Certainly the company took over the house after
-Henslowe’s death on 6 January 1616. His share in the building passed
-to his widow, who contemplated a sale of it to Gregory Franklyn, Drew
-Stapley, and John Hamond.[1307] But the deed remained unexecuted at her
-death in 1617, and the whole property was now once more in Alleyn’s
-hands. On 31 October 1618 he leased it to the company for £200 a year,
-to be reduced to £120 at his death. With it went a taphouse occupied by
-Mark Brigham, the rent of a two-room tenement held by John Russell, and
-a strip of impaled ground 123 feet by 17 feet, lying next the passage
-on the south.[1308] This is perhaps the garden in which, according to
-John Chamberlain, the players, ‘not to be overcome with courtesy’,
-banqueted the Spanish ambassador when he visited the theatre on 16 July
-1621.[1309] John Russell is presumably the same whose appointment by
-Alleyn as a ‘gatherer’ lead to a protest from William Bird on behalf
-of the company.[1310] A few months after the ambassador’s visit, John
-Chamberlain records the destruction of the Fortune on 9 December
-1621:[1311]
-
- ‘On Sonday night here was a great fire at the Fortune in
- Golden-Lane, the fayrest play-house in this towne. It was quite
- burnt downe in two howres, & all their apparell & play-bookes
- lost, wherby those poore companions are quite undone.’
-
-Alleyn also notes the event in his diary.[1312] On 20 May 1622 he
-formed a syndicate, and leased to it the site at a rent of £128 6_s._,
-under an obligation to build a new theatre at a cost of £1,000.[1313]
-This, ‘a large round brick building’, was erected in the following
-year.[1314] The site conveyed covered a space of almost exactly 130
-feet square, and on it had stood, besides the buildings named in the
-lease of 1618, other tenements, in one of which William Bird himself
-lived. Mr. Lawrence has suggested that the new Fortune may have been a
-roofed-in house, but his evidence is hardly sufficient to outweigh the
-explicit statement of Wright that it ‘lay partly open to the weather,
-and there they always acted by daylight’.[1315] This can hardly refer
-only to the earlier building. The Fortune was dismantled in 1649 and
-‘totally demolished’ by 1662, and the façade still extant in 1819
-cannot therefore have belonged to it, although it may have belonged
-to a Restoration ‘nursery’ for young actors, possibly upon the same
-site.[1316] No acting seems to have taken place at the Fortune after
-1649.[1317]
-
-
- xiii. THE BOAR’S HEAD
-
-There appear to have been at least six city inns under this sign.[1318]
-The most famous was that on the south side of Great Eastcheap, in
-St. Michael’s, which seems to have been regarded in the middle of
-the sixteenth century as the traditional locality of the tavern
-scenes in _Henry IV_.[1319] This inn was in the occupation of Joan
-Broke, widow, in 1537, and in that of Thomas Wright, vintner, about
-1588.[1320] Another Boar’s Head stood ‘without’ Aldgate, in the
-extra-mural Portsoken ward, which lay between that gate and the bars
-with which the liberties of the City terminated at Hog Lane. Here,
-according to Stowe, there were ‘certaine faire Innes for receipt of
-trauellers repayring to the Citie’.[1321] At the Aldgate inn had
-been produced in 1557 a ‘lewd’ play called _The Sackful of Newes_,
-which provoked the interference of Mary’s Privy Council.[1322] But it
-seems to me exceedingly improbable that either this or the Eastcheap
-inn was converted into the play-house, of which we have brief and
-tantalizing records in the seventeenth century. Both were within the
-City jurisdiction, where the licensing of play-houses seems to have
-definitely terminated in 1596. It is true that a Privy Council letter
-of 31 March 1602, which directs that the combined company of Oxford’s
-and Worcester’s men shall be allowed to play at the Boar’s Head, is
-addressed to the Lord Mayor.[1323] But so are other letters of the
-same type, the object of which is to limit plays to a small number of
-houses outside the liberties, and to restrain them elsewhere over the
-whole area of the City and the suburbs.[1324] And when, a year or two
-later, Worcester’s men became Queen Anne’s, and a draft patent was
-drawn up to confirm their right to play in the Curtain and the Boar’s
-Head, both houses are described, not as in the City, but as ‘within
-our County of Middlesex’.[1325] Presumably Anne’s men left the Boar’s
-Head when the Red Bull became available for their use in 1606, and Mr.
-Adams has explained a mention, which had long puzzled me, of the Duke
-of York’s men as ‘the Prince’s Players of Whitechapel’ in 1608 by the
-suggestion that they succeeded to the vacant theatre.[1326] If this is
-so, I think it affords further evidence for the theory that the Boar’s
-Head, although it may have taken its name from the Aldgate inn, was
-not itself that inn, and probably not a converted inn at all, but lay
-just outside and not just inside the City bars. For, although part of
-the street between Aldgate and Whitechapel is sometimes called, as in
-Ogilby’s map of 1677 and Rocque’s of 1746, ‘Whitechapel Street’, yet
-Whitechapel proper lay outside the liberties, farther to the east
-along the Mile End Road.[1327] The only other contemporary record of
-the Boar’s Head is a letter to Edward Alleyn from his wife Joan on 21
-October 1603, in which she says, ‘All the companyes be come hoame &
-well for ought we knowe, but that Browne of the Boares head is dead
-& dyed very pore, he went not into the countrye at all’.[1328] This
-Browne cannot be identified, and it is perhaps idle to conjecture
-that he may have been related to Robert Browne, and that it may have
-been at the Boar’s Head that the latter played with Derby’s men in
-1599–1601. The Boar’s Head seems to have been generally forgotten by
-the Restoration, but is recalled by the Marquis of Newcastle _c._
-1660.[1329]
-
-
- xiv. THE RED BULL
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The records of the suit of _Woodford
- v. Holland_ (1613) were printed by J. Greenstreet in the
- _Athenaeum_ for 28 Nov. 1885 from _Court of Requests Books_,
- xxvi, ff. 780, 890, and cxxviii, and therefrom by Fleay, 194;
- and more fully with those of the later suit of 1619 (misdated
- 1620) by C. W. Wallace in _Nebraska University Studies_, ix. 291
- (cited as _W. v. H._). Collier, i. 374, mentions evidence on the
- same transactions as ‘in the Audit Office’, and misnames the
- complainant John Woodward.]
-
-Our chief knowledge of the early history of the Red Bull is derived
-from disputes before the Court of Requests in 1613 and 1619 between
-Thomas Woodford and Aaron Holland. It appears that Holland held a
-lease of the site, which was at the upper end of St. John Street in
-the parish of St. James, Clerkenwell, from Anne, widow and executrix
-of Christopher Bedingfield, and had there built a play-house. The
-indication of a Red Bull Yard in Ogilby and Morgan’s map of 1677 to
-the west of St. John Street, and just north of the angle which it
-forms with Clerkenwell Green, no doubt defines the locality with some
-precision.[1330] In _3 Jac. I_, that is, at some date between 24 March
-1605 and 23 March 1606, he assigned one-seventh of the house to Thomas
-Swynnerton, ‘with a gatherers place thereto belonging’. This Swynnerton
-transferred for £50 to Philip Stone.[1331] It was subject to a rent
-of £2 10_s._, and Holland gave Stone an indenture in February 1609,
-which was alleged not to constitute a proper lease. In 1612–13 Stone
-sold his seventh for £50 to Woodford, who took profits for a quarter,
-and then entrusted his interest to Holland, instructing his servant
-Anthony Payne to pay the rent. He alleged that Holland persuaded Payne
-to be behindhand with the rent, and withheld the profits, estimated
-at £30 a year. He therefore brought his action a little before May
-1613. The Court called upon Holland to show cause why he should not
-account for the arrears of profits, and for 1_s._ 6_d._ a week due
-to the gatherer’s place.[1332] Holland replied, and the issues were
-referred to the arbitration of counsel, including Woodford’s ‘demaund
-of the eighteenth penny and the eighteenth part of such moneys & other
-comodities as should be collected or receaued ... for the profittes of
-the galleries or other places in or belonging to the play howse’.[1333]
-Counsel made an arrangement, but did not agree in their reports of its
-terms, and the Court ordered Holland to give Woodford an indenture
-similar to that given to Stone.[1334] Holland got a writ of prohibition
-from the King’s Bench, always jealous of the jurisdiction of the Court
-of Requests, on 6 November 1613, and Woodford began a suit against
-Holland in Stone’s name for not making a proper indenture in 1609.
-This, he says, Stone conspired with Holland to withdraw. In 1619 he
-brought another action for his profits before the Court of Requests,
-in which Holland describes him as ‘Woodford, _alias_ Simball’, but the
-result is unknown.
-
-The Red Bull, then, was built not later and probably not much earlier
-than 1606, a little before the first recorded mention of it in the
-following passage from _The Knight of the Burning Pestle_, which was
-almost certainly produced in the winter of 1607:
-
- _‘Citizen._ Why so sir, go and fetch me him then, and let
- the Sophy of Persia come and christen him a childe.
-
- _‘Boy._ Beleeue me sir, that will not doe so well, ’tis
- stale, it has beene had before at the red Bull.’[1335]
-
-The allusion is to an incident in the last scene of Day, Rowley, and
-Wilkins’ _Travels of the Three Brothers_.[1336] This, according to the
-entry in the Stationers’ Register on 29 June 1607, was played at the
-Curtain, and according to its title-page of 1607 by the Queen’s men.
-But there is no reason why it should not also have been played at the
-Red Bull, since both houses are specified as occupied by the Queen’s
-men in their patent of 15 April 1609. In their earlier draft patent of
-about 1603–4, the Boar’s Head and Curtain are named, and in a Privy
-Council letter of 9 April 1604 the Curtain only. Presumably, therefore,
-the Red Bull was taken into use by the Queen’s men, of whom Swynnerton
-was one, as soon as it was built at some date between 1604 and 1606.
-The Red Bull is one of the three houses whose contention is predicted
-in Dekker’s _Raven’s Almanack_ of 1608, and Dekker refers to it again
-in his _Work for Armourers_, written during the plague of 1609, when
-the bear garden was open and the theatres closed. He says, ‘The pide
-_Bul_ heere keepes a tossing and a roaring, when the _Red Bull_ dares
-not stir’.[1337] Its existence caused trouble from time to time to the
-Middlesex justices. At the end of May 1610, William Tedcastle, yeoman,
-and John Fryne, Edward Brian, Edward Purfett, and Thomas Williams,
-felt-makers, were called upon to give recognisances to answer for a
-‘notable outrage at the play-house called the Red Bull’; and on 3
-March 1614 Alexander Fulsis was bailed out on a charge of picking
-Robert Sweet’s pocket of a purse and £3 at this theatre.[1338] Further
-references to it are to be found in Wither’s _Abuses Stript and Whipt_
-(1613), in Tomkis’s _Albumazar_ (1615), and in Gayton’s _Pleasant Notes
-on Don Quixot_ (1654).[1339]
-
-An entry in Alleyn’s _Diary_ for 1617 has been supposed to indicate
-that he had an interest in the Red Bull. To me it only suggests that he
-sold the actors there a play.[1340]
-
-The Queen’s men most likely occupied the Red Bull at least until 1617
-when, as shown by the lawsuit of 1623, they were on the point of moving
-to the Cockpit in Drury Lane. Plays of theirs were printed as acted
-there in 1608, 1611, 1612, and 1615. _Swetnam the Woman Hater Arraigned
-by Women_, printed in 1620, was also played there, before Anne’s
-death in 1619. In 1637 Thomas Heywood, formerly one of the Queen’s
-men, included in his _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_, a Prologue and
-Epilogue, to which he prefixed the note ‘A young witty lad playing the
-part of Richard the third: at the Red Bull: the Author because hee
-was interessed in the play to incourage him, wrot him this Prologue
-and Epilogue’.[1341] This was probably, and certainly if the play
-was Shakespeare’s, some quite exceptional performance. Similarly the
-‘companie of young men of this citie’, who are stated on the title-page
-of Wentworth Smith’s _Hector of Germany_ (1615) to have acted it at the
-Red Bull and Curtain, must be supposed to have used these theatres by
-some arrangement with the Queen’s men.
-
-The Red Bull afterwards passed to other companies, continued in use up
-to, and even occasionally during, the Commonwealth, and had a revived
-life after the Restoration to 1663.[1342] Before 1633, and probably
-before 1625, it had been re-edified and enlarged.[1343] Mr. Lawrence
-suggests that at this time it became a roofed house, which it seems
-certainly to have been after the Restoration.[1344] But it is difficult
-to get away from Wright’s explicit statement that it ‘lay partly open
-to the weather, and there they always acted by daylight’.[1345] Nor
-need the quite modern identification of it with the roofed interior
-depicted in _The Wits_ rest upon anything but an incidental reference
-to the house in the text of the pamphlet.[1346] Nothing is known as to
-the shape or galleries of the Red Bull.
-
-
- xv. THE HOPE
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The Dulwich papers relating to the
- connexion of Henslowe and Alleyn with the bear-baiting and the
- Hope are to be found with a commentary in Greg, _Henslowe’s
- Diary_ and _Henslowe Papers_. Valuable material on the Bankside
- localities is in W. Rendle, _The Bankside, Southwark, and the
- Globe_, 1877 (Appendix I to Furnivall, _Harrison’s Description
- of England_, Part II, with a reconstructed map of the Bankside
- and a 1627 plan of Paris Garden), _Old Southwark and its
- People_ (1878), _The Play-houses at Bankside in the Time of
- Shakespeare_ (1885, _Walford’s Antiquarian_, vii. 207, 274;
- viii. 55), _Paris Garden and Blackfriars_ (1887, _7 N. Q._ iii.
- 241, 343, 442). Some notes of Eu. Hood [Joseph Haslewood] in
- 1813 and A. J. K[empe] in 1833 are reprinted in _The Gentleman’s
- Magazine Library_, xv (1904), 74, 117. Other writings on Paris
- Garden are by W. H. Overall (1869) in _Proc. Soc. Antiq._ 2nd
- series, iv. 195, J. Meymott, _The Manor of Old Paris Garden_
- (1881), P. Norman, _The Accounts of the Overseers of the Poor
- of Paris Garden, Southwark, 1608–1671_ (1901) in _Surrey Arch.
- Colls._ xvi. 55. Since I wrote this chapter, C. L. Kingsford
- (1920, _Arch._ lxx. 155) has added valuable material.]
-
-It is convenient, in connexion with the Hope, to deal with the
-whole rather troublesome question of the Bankside Bear Gardens. The
-_ursarius_ or bearward was a recognized type of mediaeval _mimus_, and
-the rewards in which his welcome found expression are a recurring item
-in many a series of municipal or domestic accounts. Thus, to take one
-example only, the corporation of Shrewsbury entertained between 1483
-and 1542 the _ursinarii_, _ursuarii_, or _ursiatores_ of the King, the
-Dukes of Norfolk and Suffolk, the Marquises of Dorset and Exeter, the
-Earl of Derby, and the town of Norwich.[1347] On more than one occasion
-the payment is said to be _pro agitacione bestiarum suarum_. The phrase
-is perhaps not free from ambiguity. The dancing bear was, until quite
-recently, a familiar sight in provincial England, and I have seen one
-even on the sophisticated slopes of Notting Hill. And illuminations
-dating back as far as the tenth century bear evidence to the antiquity
-of his somewhat grotesque _tripudium_.[1348] But in the robust days
-of our forefathers there was an even more attractive way of agitating
-bears. The traditional victim of an English baiting was no doubt the
-bull. A Southwark map of 1542 shows a ‘Bolrynge’ in the middle of the
-High Street and a neighbouring alley still bore the name in 1561.[1349]
-The maps of Höfnagel (_c._ 1560) and Agas (_c._ 1570) show another
-ring, marked ‘The bolle bayting’ and with a very palpable bull inside
-it, upon the Bankside, not far from where the Hope must afterwards
-have stood.[1350] But the bear was also baited in London, at least
-from the twelfth century.[1351] Erasmus is often cited as declaring
-that in the reign of Henry VIII ‘herds’ of the animal were kept for
-the purpose. This is an error. Erasmus wrote of dancing bears; but I
-am afraid it must be assumed that the chief function of the bearward
-attached to the Tudor Royal Household was to provide exhibitions of the
-more brutal, noisy, and occasionally dangerous sport.[1352] A regular
-office is traceable back to 1484, when Richard III in the first year
-of his reign appointed his bearward John Browne to be ‘Maister, Guyder
-and Ruler of all our Beres and Apes’.[1353] It was still a part of
-the establishment of the Royal Household under Elizabeth. A patent
-of 2 June 1573 to Ralph Bowes describes it as ‘the room or office of
-Cheif Master Overseer and Ruler of all and singular our game pastymes
-and sportes, that is to saie of all and everie our beares bulles and
-mastyve dogges’, and names as Bowes’s predecessors Cuthbert Vaughan and
-Sir Richard Long.[1354] The grant was of the nature of a commission,
-authorizing the holder, personally or by deputy, to ‘take up’ or
-press animals for the royal service, and giving him the sole right of
-baiting the Queen’s bears, to the exclusion of any other officer or
-under officer appertaining to the bears, not specially licensed or
-appointed by him. The Master was presumably expected to make his profit
-out of the privileges granted, for the patent did not assign him any
-fee, such as the under officers, known as the Keepers of Bears and
-Mastiffs, enjoyed at the hands of the Treasurer of the Chamber.[1355]
-But he received a reward, similar to those given to players, of £5
-through the Treasurer on the Council’s warrant, when the baiting was
-shown before the Queen. These rewards are generally expressed as ‘for
-the Game of Paris Garden’ or ‘to the Master of her Majesty’s Game at
-Paris Garden’; and Bowes must have joined sons or other relatives
-with him as deputies, since Edward Bowes and Thomas Bowes were often
-payees instead of Ralph Bowes during his term of office.[1356] Towards
-the end of Bowes’s life it would seem that Henslowe and Alleyn, who
-had been baiting bears on the Bankside as licensees since 1594,
-were in negotiation to obtain the Mastership.[1357] Probably the
-first idea was to buy a surrender of the office from Bowes, since
-the Dulwich manuscripts contain an unexecuted draft of a patent to
-Henslowe, following the terms of that to Bowes himself and reciting
-such a surrender.[1358] I should suppose this negotiation to be that
-in connexion with which Henslowe spent £2 15_s._ 6_d._ during 1597
-upon visits to Sir Julius Caesar, Master of Requests, and other Court
-officials, and in a fee to the Clerk of the Signet. The expenditure
-is entered in the diary as incurred ‘a bowt the changinge of ower
-comysion’.[1359] But before a surrender was effected it would seem that
-Henslowe had had to turn his thoughts to a succession. In this he was
-disappointed. On 4 June 1598 he wrote to Alleyn that Bowes was very
-sick and expected to die, and that he much feared he should lose all.
-Neither Caesar nor the Lord Admiral had done anything for him, and
-although he had received help from Lady Edmondes and Mr. Langworth, he
-now learnt that the reversion of the Mastership was already promised
-by the Queen to one Mr. Dorrington, a pensioner.[1360] Bowes did in
-effect die very shortly after, and on 11 August 1598 John Dorrington
-received his patent for the Mastership.[1361] To this was joined the
-office of Keeper of the Bandogs and Mastiffs, with a fee of 10_d._ a
-day for exercising this office and keeping twenty mastiff bitches, and
-a further fee of 4_d._ for a deputy.[1362] It is not unlikely that John
-Dorrington was related to the Richard Darrington who had held this
-keepership with the same fees, amounting to £21 5_s._ 10_d._ a year,
-in 1571. Another keepership, that of the Bears, was held in 1599 by
-Jacob Meade, who was closely associated with Henslowe and Alleyn in the
-management of the Bear garden.[1363] Dorrington’s grant was confirmed
-by James I on 14 July 1603, and on 23 July he was knighted.[1364] About
-this time Henslowe and Alleyn, who were paying Dorrington £40 a year
-for licence to bait,[1365] must have contemplated fresh negotiations
-for a transfer of the patent, for the draft in the Dulwich manuscripts,
-originally drawn up about 1597, has been altered by Henslowe so as
-to adapt it to the new reign and to a surrender by Dorrington.[1366]
-But once again they were unsuccessful, for Dorrington died, and on 20
-July 1604 the Mastership was granted to one of the invading Scots,
-Sir William Stuart.[1367] From him, however, Henslowe and Alleyn did
-succeed in obtaining an assignment, and a draft patent as joint Masters
-and Keepers, with the fees of 10_d._ and 4_d._, is dated 24 November
-1604. They had, indeed, been rather in Stuart’s hands, for he had
-refused either to give them a licence or to take over their house and
-bears, and they had to pay for the surrender at what they considered
-the high rate of £450.[1368] This we learn from a petition of about
-1607, in which they appealed to the King for an increase in the daily
-fee by 2_s._ 8_d._, in view of their losses through restraints and
-the deaths of bears, and of their heavy expenses, amounting to £200
-a month, whereby their privilege, which was once worth £100 a year,
-could now not be let at all.[1369] It is doubtful whether they got any
-relief. They had a new patent on 24 November 1608;[1370] but about 1612
-they sent up another petition in very similar terms. A grant of £42
-10_s._ and 12_d._ a day had, indeed, been made them in March 1611 for
-keeping a lion and two white bears. But this was probably menagerie
-work and quite apart from the baiting. They continued as joint Masters
-until Henslowe’s death in 1616, when the whole office passed to Alleyn
-in survivorship.[1371]
-
-When baiting seemed desirable to the soul of the sovereign, the ‘game’
-was generally brought to the Court, wherever the Court might happen to
-be.[1372] The rewards of the Treasurer of the Chamber were most often
-for attendances in the Christmas holidays or at Whitsuntide. But the
-game might be called for at any time to add lustre to the entertainment
-of an ambassador or other distinguished visitor to Court. Thus on 25
-May 1559 French ambassadors dined with Elizabeth, ‘and after dener to
-bear and bull baytyng, and the Quens grace and the embassadurs stod in
-the galere lokyng of the pastym tyll vj at nyght’.[1373] Later French
-embassies of 1561, 1572, 1581, and 1599, and a Danish embassy of 1586
-were similarly honoured.[1374] The custom continued during the next
-reign. On 19 August 1604 there was a grand banquet at Whitehall for
-Juan Fernandez de Velasco, Constable of Castile, on the completion of
-peace between England and Spain, and thereafter a ball, and after the
-ball ‘all then took their places at the windows of the room which
-looked out upon a square, where a platform was raised, and a vast
-crowd had assembled to see the King’s bears fight with greyhounds.
-This afforded great amusement. Presently a bull, tied to the end of a
-rope, was fiercely baited by dogs.’[1375] James had introduced a new
-and dangerous element into the sport by using the lions which were
-kept in the Tower, and this also became the scene of baitings. On 5
-March 1607 the Treasurer of the Chamber paid Henslowe and Alleyn no
-less than £30, partly for attendances with the game at Greenwich during
-the visit of the King of Denmark and at Whitehall during that of the
-Prince de Joinville, and partly for baiting of the lions in the Tower
-on three several occasions.[1376] Stowe gives detailed descriptions
-of lion-baitings in 1604, 1605, 1609, and 1610, of which the first
-is interesting, because it was under the personal superintendence of
-Edward Alleyn, ‘now sworne the Princes man and Maister of the Beare
-Garden’.[1377]
-
-But the profit of the thing, from the point of view of the Master of
-the Game, was not so much in the attendances at Court, as in the public
-baitings, which he and those holding licences from him were privileged
-to give with the bears and dogs, ‘taken up’ by virtue of the commission
-or bought at their own expense, during such times as these were not
-required for the royal service. These public spectacles were held at
-what was known as the Bear Garden, under conditions much resembling
-those of a theatre. They played a considerable part in the life of
-London; literature is full of allusions to them; and they are described
-with more or less detail in the narratives of many travellers from
-abroad. An early account is that from the Spanish of a secretary to
-the Duke of Najera, who visited Henry VIII in 1544.[1378] He describes
-the bears as baited daily, with three or four dogs to each bear, in an
-enclosure where they were tied with ropes, and adds:
-
- ‘Into the same place they brought a pony with an ape fastened on
- its back, and to see the animal kicking amongst the dogs, with
- the screams of the ape, beholding the curs hanging from the ears
- and neck of the pony, is very laughable.’
-
-In 1559 the same French ambassadors, who saw the baiting at Whitehall,
-were taken on the following day to Paris Garden, and ‘ther was boyth
-bare and bull baytyng, and the capten with a c. of the gard to kepe
-rowme for them to see the baytyng’.[1379] The next notice of any
-value is that of Lupold von Wedel, who was at Southwark on 23 August
-1584.[1380]
-
- ‘There is a round building three stories high, in which are
- kept about a hundred large English dogs, with separate wooden
- kennels for each of them. These dogs were made to fight singly
- with three bears, the second bear being larger than the first
- and the third larger than the second. After this a horse was
- brought in and chased by the dogs, and at last a bull, who
- defended himself bravely. The next was that a number of men
- and women came forward from a separate compartment, dancing,
- conversing and fighting with each other: also a man who threw
- some white bread among the crowd, that scrambled for it. Right
- over the middle of the place a rose was fixed, this rose being
- set on fire by a rocket: suddenly lots of apples and pears fell
- out of it down upon the people standing below. Whilst the people
- were scrambling for the apples, some rockets were made to fall
- down upon them out of the rose, which caused a great fright but
- amused the spectators. After this, rockets and other fireworks
- came flying out of all corners, and that was the end of the
- play.’
-
-It is interesting to observe that the baiting proper was supplemented
-with fireworks and an entertainment, which must have been of the nature
-of a jig.[1381] The visit of Frederick, Duke of Württemberg, on 1
-September 1592, is also recorded by his secretary, who says:[1382]
-
- ‘His Highness was shown in London the English dogs, of which
- there were about 120, all kept in the same enclosure, but each
- in a separate kennel. In order to gratify his Highness, and at
- his desire, two bears and a bull were baited; at such times you
- can perceive the breed and mettle of the dogs, for although they
- receive serious injuries from the bears, are caught by the horns
- of the bull, and tossed into the air so as frequently to fall
- down again upon the horns, they do not give in, so that one is
- obliged to pull them back by their tails, and force open their
- jaws. Four dogs at once were set on the bull; they, however,
- could not gain any advantage over him, for he so artfully
- contrived to ward off their attacks that they could not well get
- at him; on the contrary, the bull served them very scurvily by
- striking and butting at them.’
-
-De Witt briefly notices the ‘amphitheatrum’ of the Bear Garden in 1596.
-He says:[1383]
-
- ‘Est etiam quintum sed dispari [vsu?] et structura, bestiarum
- concertationi destinatum, in quo multi vrsi, tauri, et stupendae
- magnitudinis canes discretis caueis et septis aluntur, qui
- ad pugnam adseruantur, iocundissimum hominibus spectaculum
- praebentes.’
-
-Hentzner, who visited London in the autumn of 1598, says:[1384]
-
- ‘Est et alius postea locus Theatri quoque formam habens,
- Ursorum & Taurorum venationibus destinatus, qui à postica parte
- alligati à magnis illis canibus & molossis Anglicis, quos lingua
- vernacula Docken appellant, mire exagitantur, ita tamen, ut
- saepe canes isti ab Ursis vel Tauris, dentibus arrepti, vel
- cornibus impetiti, de vita periclitari, aliquando etiam animam
- exhalare soleant, quibus sic vel sauciis vel lassis statim
- substituuntur alii recentes & magis alacres. Accedit aliquando
- in fine hujus spectaculi Ursi plane excaecati flagellatio, ubi
- quinque, vel sex, in circulo constituti, Ursum flagellis misere
- excipiunt, qui licet alligatus auffugere nequeat, alacriter
- tamen se defendit, circumstantes, & nimium appropinquantes, nisi
- recte & provide sibi caveant, prosternit, ac flagella e manibus
- cadentium eripit atque confringit.’
-
-To 1599 belongs the account of Thomas Platter of Basle:[1385]
-
- ‘The London bearbaitings usually take place every Sunday and
- Wednesday, across the water. The play house is built in circular
- form; above are a number of seated galleries; the ground space
- under the open sky is unoccupied. In the midst of this a great
- bear is fastened to a stake by a long rope. When we came down
- the stairs, we went behind the play house, and saw the English
- dogs, of which there were about 120 chained up, each in his
- separate kennel, in a yard.’
-
-Platter also describes the actual baiting of the bull and bear and
-of the blind bear, much as did his predecessors. On 7 September 1601
-the Duc de Biron was taken to the Bear Garden, as one of the sights
-of London, by no less a cicerone than Sir Walter Raleigh.[1386] A
-visit of 16 September 1602 is described in the diary of Philip Julius,
-Duke of Stettin in Pomerania.[1387] The vogue of the Bear Garden
-amongst foreigners evidently lasted into James’s reign, but the
-notices are briefer. Lewis Frederick of Württemberg, saw on 26 April
-1610 the baiting both of bears and bulls ‘and monkeys that ride on
-horseback’;[1388] and Justus Zingerling of Thuringia, who was in London
-about the same year, mentions the ‘_theatra comoedorum_, in which bears
-and bulls fight with dogs’.[1389] Even more summary is the reference
-in an itinerary of Prince Otto von Hesse-Cassel in 1611.[1390] But
-the extracts given sufficiently describe the nature of the sport, and
-show that bulls continued to be baited up to a late date, as well as
-bears, and that the serious business of the spectacle was diversified
-by regular humorous episodes, such as the monkey on horseback and the
-whipping of the blind bear. He, by the way, was called Harry Hunks,
-and is named by Sir John Davies in his _Epigrams_[1391] of _c._ 1594,
-in company with the Sackerson who gave rise to a boast on the part of
-Master Slender,[1392] and at a later date by Dekker[1393] and Henry
-Peacham.[1394] Two other famous bears were Ned Whiting and George
-Stone. Both are alluded to in Ben Jonson’s _Epicoene_ (1609),[1395]
-and the latter also in _The Puritan_ (1607).[1396] The death of the
-‘goodlye beare’ George Stone at a baiting before the King of Denmark
-in 1606 is lamented in the petition of Henslowe and Alleyn to the King
-for increased fees already described. One other interesting notice of
-the sport may be added from the Dulwich collection, and that is an
-advertisement or ‘bill’ of the entertainment, which runs as follows:
-
- ‘Tomorrowe beinge Thursdaie shalbe seen at the Beargardin on the
- banckside a greate mach plaid by the gamstirs of Essex who hath
- chalenged all comers what soeuer to plaie v dogges at the single
- beare for v pounds and also to wearie a bull dead at the stake
- and for your better content shall haue plasant sport with the
- horse and ape and whiping of the blind beare. Viuat Rex.’[1397]
-
-Where then was the Bear Garden? This is a point upon which the foreign
-visitors are not very explicit. From them we could infer little more
-than that it was transpontine. It has already been pointed out that
-in official documents, at any rate those of a less formal character
-than a patent under the great seal, the Mastership is described
-as the Mastership of the Game of, or at, Paris Garden. With this
-common parlance agrees.[1398] In the allusions of the pamphleteers
-and poets, from the middle of the sixteenth to the middle of the
-seventeenth century, Paris or Parish Garden is regularly the place of
-baiting.[1399] ‘The Beare-garden, commonly called Paris Garden’, says
-Stowe, speaking of 1583.[1400] At Paris Garden, or as it is sometimes
-corruptly spelt, ‘Pallas Garden’, Henslowe and Alleyn have their office
-as Masters[1401] in 1607, and near it Alleyn is living in 1609. Now
-the Liberty and Manor of Paris Garden is a quite well defined part of
-the Bankside. It lay at the extreme west end, bordering upon Lambeth
-Marsh, with the Clink upon its east. In it stood from about 1595 the
-most westerly of the theatres, the Swan.[1402] Historians of Southwark
-are fond of suggesting that it had been the abode of the bears from
-an almost immemorial antiquity, and follow a late edition of Blount’s
-seventeenth-century _Glossographia_ in connecting it with the _domus_
-of a certain Robert de Parys, near which the butchers of London were
-ordered to throw their garbage in 1393.[1403] I think the idea is that
-the garbage was found useful for feeding the bears. This theory I
-believe to be as much a myth as Taylor the water-poet’s derivation of
-the name from Paris, son of Priam. Parish, rather than Paris Garden,
-seems, in fact, to be the earlier form, although there is nothing in
-the history of the place that very particularly explains it.[1404]
-Many residents in London were of course ‘de Parys’ in the fourteenth
-century, and the _domus_ of the Robert in question, who lived some
-time after the first mention of ‘Parish’ Garden, was pretty clearly on
-the City and not the Surrey side of the river.[1405] It is, however,
-the case that before the Civil War the Butchers’ Company had been
-accustomed to send their offal by a beadle to ‘two barrow houses,
-conveniently placed on the river side, for the provision and feeding
-of the King’s Game of Bears’, and were directed to resume the practice
-after the Restoration; and possibly this is what misled Blount.[1406]
-Obviously, however, what the butchers did in the seventeenth century
-is no proof of what they did in the fourteenth. And, in fact, the
-ordinance of 1393 is explicit in its direction that the offal is
-ultimately to be, not devoured by bears, but cast into mid-stream.
-
-There is in fact nothing, so far as I know, to locate the royal Game on
-the Bankside at all until the middle of the sixteenth century, when it
-was already hard by the stews in the Liberty of the Clink, and still
-less, except the persistence of the name, to locate it definitely in
-the Liberty of Paris Garden.[1407] The notice which brings Paris Garden
-nearest is in Foxe’s _Book of Martyrs_, which contains an account of an
-adventure of one Ralph Morice, secretary to Cranmer, who was foolish
-enough to take a book of his master’s, containing criticisms of the
-Six Articles, in a wherry from Westminster Bridge to Paul’s Wharf. It
-chanced that Henry VIII ‘was then in his barge with a great number of
-barges and boats about him, then baiting of bears in the water, over
-against the Bank’. The waterman stopped to see the fun, and the bear
-broke loose, and climbed into the wherry, which upset. The dangerous
-book fell into the Thames and was picked up by the bearward, who was
-the Lady Elizabeth’s bearward and ‘an arrant Papist’. It was only
-through the good offices of Cromwell that Morice escaped serious
-trouble. This was about July 1539.[1408] Certainly it was the custom
-from an early date to moor the King’s barge off Paris Garden.[1409]
-The spot was marked later by the Old Barge Stairs, which stood at
-the west end of that part of the Bank lying in front of the Garden,
-just as Paris Garden Stairs stood at its east end. But the barge was
-not necessarily at its moorings when Henry was baiting from it. Mr.
-Ordish suggests that it was the common use of Paris Garden Stairs by
-visitors to the baiting, which led to the name being transferred to
-the Bear Garden itself, without any one troubling to inquire very
-minutely whether it stood a little to the east or a little to the
-west of the landing.[1410] On the whole, however, I regard it as
-reasonably probable that there was at one time a Bear Garden in the
-Liberty, which fixed the traditional name for the sport, even after it
-had been transferred farther along the Bank.[1411] It may, perhaps,
-be a slight confirmation of this view that the 1627 survey of Paris
-Garden shows a space, apparently laid out as a garden and arranged as a
-circle within a square, which may represent the site. It stands nearly
-opposite Paris Garden Stairs in a triangular bit of ground between
-Holland Street and the lane leading to Copt Hall. This seems to have
-been rather a desolate region in Elizabeth’s reign, at any rate when
-you got beyond the row of houses which lined the bank.[1412] If there
-was a Bear Garden there, it had clearly been abandoned some little time
-before 1546, as the Stews were then ‘the accustomed place’. Somewhat
-later, the maps of Höfnagel (_c._ 1560) and Agas (_c._ 1570) show, in
-addition to the Bull ring already mentioned, another ring marked ‘The
-Beare bayting’, standing immediately west of it, and like it in the
-Clink.[1413] The animals at the stake are discernible in the rings, and
-to the south of each stretches a yard with a pond in the middle and
-kennelled dogs along the sides. It is in the Clink, too, that Norden
-in 1593 shows ‘The Beare howse’, a little west and north of ‘The play
-howse’, which is the Rose. This evidence is consistent with what little
-is upon written record about the locality of the Bear Gardens. The most
-important document is a deposition of John Taylor, not the water-poet,
-in a suit of 1620:[1414]
-
- ‘He saith that he remembreth that the game of bear-bayting hath
- been kept in fower severall places (vizt.) at Mason Steares on
- the bankside; neere Maid-lane by the corner of the Pyke Garden;
- at the beare garden which was parcell of the possession of
- William Payne; and the place where they are now kept.’
-
-Taylor was then an old man of seventy-seven and his memory would easily
-go back to the time of the early maps. To his testimony may be added
-that of Stowe, who says in his _Survey of London_ (1598):[1415]
-
- ‘Now to returne to the West banke, there be two Beare gardens,
- the olde and new places, wherein be kept Beares, Buls and other
- beastes to be bayted. As also Mastiues in severall kenels,
- nourished to baite them. These Beares and other Beasts are there
- bayted in plottes of ground, scaffolded about for the Beholders
- to stand safe. Next on this banke was sometime the Bordello or
- stewes.’
-
-In his _Annales_ Stowe records the fall of ‘the old and under
-propped scaffolds round about the Beare-garden, commonly called
-Paris garden’, and the consequent death of eight persons, at 4 p.m.
-on Sunday, 13 January 1583. It was, he says, ‘a friendly warning to
-such as more delight themselves in the cruelty of beasts, than in the
-works of mercy, the fruits of a true professed faith, which ought to
-be the Sabbath day’s exercise’.[1416] Dr. Dee also noted the accident
-in his diary, and it was reported to Burghley on the next day by the
-Lord Mayor and on 19 January by Recorder Fleetwood.[1417] Both of
-these adopt the view expressed by Stowe that it must be regarded as
-divine punishment for the violation of the Sabbath, and Fleetwood
-refers to ‘a booke sett downe vpon the same matter’, which may be
-John Field’s _Godly Exhortation by Occasion of the late Judgment of
-God showed at Paris Garden_. The shrewd irony of Sir Thomas More,
-upon a similar event, when it was the church that fell, many years
-before at Beverley, found little echo in the mind of the Elizabethan
-Puritan.[1418] A further letter from the Lord Mayor to the Privy
-Council on 3 July 1583 states that by then the Paris Garden scaffolds
-were ‘new builded’.[1419]
-
-I find it very difficult to say which of the numerous bear gardens
-mentioned by Taylor and Stowe was in use at any given time. Mr. Rendle
-thought that Taylor’s first two, that at Mason Stairs and that at the
-corner of the Pike Garden, were the two shown as ‘The bolle bayting’
-and ‘The Bearebayting’ by Agas.[1420] If so, they are quite out of
-scale. This is likely, since they are drawn large enough to show the
-animals. They are shown east and west of each other. Rendle puts the
-Pike Garden due south of Mason Stairs, but it clearly extended more to
-the east in 1587. In any case both these earlier sites were farther
-to the west of the Clink than the Hope. Where then was the place on
-William Payne’s ground? Mr. Rendle, after a careful comparison of
-Rocque’s map of 1746 and other later maps, puts it at ‘the north
-courtelage in the lane known as the Bear Garden’ and the Hope at the
-south courtelage in the same lane.[1421] I take him to mean that the
-Bear Garden on Payne’s ground was that in use until 1613, and that the
-Hope was built a little to the south of it. The terms of the contract
-with Katherens, however, suggest that the same or practically the same
-site was used. Mr. Rendle adds that ‘William Payne’s place next the
-Thames can be traced back into the possession of John Allen, until it
-came down to Edward Alleyn, and was sold by him at a large profit to
-Henslowe; the same for which Morgan Pope in 1586 paid to the Vestry
-of St. Saviour’s “6_s._ 8_d._ by the year for tithes”.’[1422] This I
-cannot quite follow. There seem to have been two properties standing
-respectively next and next but one on the west to the ‘little Rose’.
-Next the Rose stood messuages called The Barge, Bell and Cock. They
-were leased by the Bishop of Winchester to William Payne in 1540. His
-widow Joan Payne assigned them to John White and John Malthouse on 1
-August 1582, and White’s moiety was assigned to Malthouse on 5 February
-1589.[1423] From him Henslowe bought the lease in 1593–4.[1424] The
-tenements upon it were in his hands as ‘Mr. Malthowes rentes’ in
-1603 and Alleyn was living in one of them.[1425] And the lease of
-the Barge, Bell and Cock passed to Alleyn and was assigned by his
-will towards the settlement of his second or third wife, Constance,
-daughter of Dean Donne.’[1426] To the west of this property in 1540
-was a tenement once held by the prioress of Stratford. This passed to
-the Crown, and then to Thomas and Isabella Keyes under a Crown lease
-which was in Henslowe’s hands by 1597. Some notes of deeds--leases,
-deputations, bonds--concerning the Bear Garden were left by Alleyn.
-Four of the deeds have since been found by Mr. Kingsford in the Record
-Office. It appears that, before Henslowe, both Pope and Burnaby had
-some of the Keyes land on a sub-lease, and that Burnaby probably had
-the Keyes lease itself. Payne carried on baiting in a ring just south
-of the Barge. The site was called Orchard Court in 1620, and stood
-north of the Hope. This agrees with the relation suggested by Mr.
-Rendle between the two courtelages’. The object of the suit of 1620
-was to determine whether the Hope also stood upon episcopal, or upon
-Crown land. Taylor’s testimony was ambiguous. But it follows that the
-transfer southwards must have been due to a tenant who held under
-both leases. It was suggested in 1620 that Pope rebuilt the scaffold
-standings round the ring as galleries with a larger circuit. This was
-doubtless after the ruin of 1583. Nothing is said of a change of site
-at this time. Moreover, both Pope and Burnaby seem to have used the
-site of the Hope and its bull-house as a dog-yard. Probably, therefore,
-the change was made by Henslowe and Alleyn. Alleyn left a record of
-‘what the Bear garden cost me for my owne part in December 1594’. He
-paid £200 to Burnaby, perhaps only for a joint interest with Henslowe
-or Jacob Meade, and £250 for the ‘patten’, that is, I suppose, the
-Mastership bought from Sir William Stuart in 1604. He held his interest
-for sixteen years and received £60 a year, and then sold it to ‘my
-father Hinchloe’ for £580 in February 1611.[1427] There must have been
-considerable outgoings on the structure during this period. Another
-memorandum in Alleyn’s hand shows an expenditure of £486 4_s._ 10_d._
-during 1602–5, and a further expenditure during 1606–8 of £360 ‘p^d.
-for ye building of the howses’.[1428] This last doubtless refers in
-part, not to the baiting ring itself, but to a tavern and office built
-on ‘the foreside of the messuage or tenemente called the Beare garden,
-next the river of Thames in the parish of St. Saviors’, for which there
-exists a contract of 2 June 1606 between Henslowe and Alleyn and Peter
-Street the carpenter.[1429] But this only cost £65, and it seems to
-me most likely that the Bear Garden was rebuilt on the southern site
-at the same time. Further light is thrown on the profits of the Bear
-Garden by a note in Henslowe’s diary that the receipts at it for the
-three days next after Christmas 1608 were £4, £6, and £3 14_s._, which
-may be compared with the average of £1 18_s._ 3_d._ received from the
-Fortune during the same three days.[1430] It may be added that Crowley
-notes the ‘bearwardes vaile’ somewhat ambiguously as ½_d._, 1_d._, or
-2_d._,[1431] and that Lambarde in 1596 includes Paris Garden with the
-Theatre and Bel Savage as a place where you must pay ‘one pennie at
-the gate, another at the entrie of the scaffolde, and the thirde for a
-quiet standinge’.[1432]
-
-Yet another building enterprise was undertaken in 1613, by which time
-an interest in the property had certainly been leased to Jacob Meade.
-On 29 August a contract was entered into between Henslowe and Meade and
-Gilbert Katherens, carpenter, for the pulling down of the Bear Garden
-and the erection before the following 30 November on or near the same
-site of a play-house on the model of the Swan, but with a movable
-stage, so as to enable the building to be used also for baitings. I
-reproduce the document here from Dr. Greg’s text:[1433]
-
- Articles, Covenauntes, grauntes, and agreementes, Concluded and
- agreed vppon this Nyne and Twenteithe daie of Auguste, Anno
- Domini 1613, Betwene Phillipe Henslowe of the parishe of S^t
- Saviour in Sowthworke within the countye of Surrey, Esquire,
- and Jacobe Maide of the parishe of S^t Olaves in Sowthworke
- aforesaide, waterman, of thone partie, And Gilbert Katherens of
- the saide parishe of S^t Saviour in Sowthworke, Carpenter, on
- thother partie, As followeth, That is to saie--
-
- Inprimis the saide Gilbert Katherens for him, his executours,
- administratours, and assignes, dothe convenaunt, promise, and
- graunt to and with the saide Phillipe Henslowe and Jacobe Maide
- and either of them, thexecutors, administratours, & assigns of
- them and either of them, by theise presentes in manner and forme
- following: That he the saied Gilbert Katherens, his executours,
- administratours, or assignes shall and will, at his or theire
- owne proper costes and charges, vppon or before the last daie of
- November next ensuinge the daie of the date of theise presentes
- above written, not onlie take downe or pull downe all that same
- place or house wherin Beares and Bulls haue been heretofore
- vsuallie bayted, and also one other house or staple wherin Bulls
- and horsses did vsuallie stande, sett, lyinge, and beinge vppon
- or neere the Banksyde in the saide parishe of S^t Saviour in
- Sowthworke, comonlie called or knowne by the name of the Beare
- garden, but shall also at his or theire owne proper costes and
- charges vppon or before the saide laste daie of November newly
- erect, builde, and sett vpp one other same place or Plaiehouse
- fitt & convenient in all thinges, bothe for players to playe
- in, and for the game of Beares and Bulls to be bayted in the
- same, and also a fitt and convenient Tyre house and a stage to
- be carryed or taken awaie, and to stande vppon tressells good,
- substanciall, and sufficient for the carryinge and bearinge of
- suche a stage; And shall new builde, erect, and sett vp againe
- the saide plaie house or game place neere or vppon the saide
- place, where the saide game place did heretofore stande; And to
- builde the same of suche large compasse, fforme, widenes, and
- height as the Plaie house called the Swan in the libertie of
- Parris garden in the saide parishe of S^t Saviour now is; And
- shall also builde two stearecasses without and adioyninge to the
- saide Playe house in suche convenient places, as shalbe moste
- fitt and convenient for the same to stande vppon, and of such
- largnes and height as the stearecasses of the saide playehouse
- called the Swan nowe are or bee; And shall also builde the
- Heavens all over the saide stage, to be borne or carryed without
- any postes or supporters to be fixed or sett vppon the saide
- stage, and all gutters of leade needfull for the carryage of
- all suche raine water as shall fall vppon the same; And shall
- also make two Boxes in the lowermost storie fitt and decent for
- gentlemen to sitt in; And shall make the particions betwne the
- Rommes as they are at the saide Plaie house called the Swan;
- And to make turned cullumes vppon and over the stage; And shall
- make the principalls and fore fronte of the saide Plaie house of
- good and sufficient oken tymber, and no furr tymber to be putt
- or vsed in the lower most, or midell stories, except the vpright
- postes on the backparte of the saide stories (all the byndinge
- joystes to be of oken tymber); The inner principall postes of
- the first storie to be twelve footes in height and tenn ynches
- square, the inner principall postes in the midell storie to be
- eight ynches square, the inner most postes in the vpper storie
- to be seaven ynches square; The prick postes in the first storie
- to be eight ynches square, in the seconde storie seaven ynches
- square, and in the vpper most storie six ynches square; Also
- the brest sommers in the lower moste storie to be nyne ynches
- depe, and seaven ynches in thicknes, and in the midell storie to
- be eight ynches depe and six ynches in thicknes; The byndinge
- jostes of the firste storie to be nyne and eight ynches in
- depthe and thicknes, and in the midell storie to be viij and
- vij ynches in depthe and thicknes. Item to make a good, sure,
- and sufficient foundacion of brickes for the saide Play house
- or game place, and to make it xiij^{teene} ynches at the leaste
- above the grounde. Item to new builde, erect, and sett vpp the
- saide Bull house and stable with good and sufficient scantlinge
- tymber, plankes, and bordes, and particions of that largnes and
- fittnes as shalbe sufficient to kepe and holde six bulls and
- three horsses or geldinges, with rackes and mangers to the same,
- and also a lofte or storie over the saide house as nowe it is.
- And shall also at his & theire owne proper costes and charges
- new tyle with Englishe tyles all the vpper rooffe of the saide
- Plaie house, game place, and Bull house or stable, and shall
- fynde and paie for at his like proper costes and charges for
- all the lyme, heare, sande, brickes, tyles, lathes, nayles,
- workemanshipe and all other thinges needfull and necessarie for
- the full finishinge of the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and
- stable; And the saide Plaiehouse or game place to be made in
- althinges and in suche forme and fashion, as the saide plaie
- house called the Swan (the scantling of the tymbers, tyles,
- and foundacion as ys aforesaide without fraude or coven). And
- the saide Phillipe Henslow and Jacobe Maide and either of
- them for them, thexecutors, administratours, and assignes of
- them and either of them, doe covenant and graunt to and with
- the saide Gilbert Katherens, his executours, administratours,
- and assignes in manner and forme followinge (That is to saie)
- That he the saide Gilbert or his assignes shall or maie haue,
- and take to his or theire vse and behoofe, not onlie all the
- tymber, benches, seates, slates, tyles, brickes, and all other
- thinges belonginge to the saide Game place & Bull house or
- stable, and also all suche olde tymber whiche the saide Phillipe
- Henslow hathe latelie bought, beinge of an old house in Thames
- street, London, whereof moste parte is now lyinge in the yarde
- or backsyde of the saide Beare-garden; And also to satisfie
- and paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens, his executors,
- administratours, or assignes for the doinge and finishinges of
- the workes and buildinges aforesaid the somme of Three Hundered
- and three score poundes of good and lawffull monie of England,
- in manner and forme followinge (That is to saie) In hande at
- thensealinge and delivery hereof, Three score pounds which
- the saide Gilbert acknowlegeth him selfe by theise presentes
- to haue receaued; And more over to paie every weeke weeklie,
- duringe the firste six weekes, vnto the saide Gilbert or his
- assignes, when he shall sett workemen to worke vppon or about
- the buildinge of the premisses the somme of Tenne poundes of
- lawffull monie of Englande to paie them there wages (yf theire
- wages dothe amount vnto somuche monie); And when the saide plaie
- house, Bull house, and stable are reared, then to make vpp the
- saide wages one hundered poundes of lawffull monie of England,
- and to be paide to the saide Gilbert or his assignes; And when
- the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and stable are Reared,
- tyled, walled, then to paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens
- or his assignes one other hundered poundes of lawffull monie
- of England; And when the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and
- stable are fullie finished, builded, and done in manner and
- forme aforesaide, then to paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens
- or his assignes one other hundred Poundes of lawffull monie of
- England in full satisfacion and payment of the saide somme of
- CCClx^{li}. And to all and singuler the covenantes, grauntes,
- articles, and agreementes above in theise presentes contayned,
- whiche on the parte and behalfe of the saide Gilbert Katherens,
- his executours, administratours, or assignes are ought to be
- observed, performed, fulfilled, and done, the saide Gilbert
- Katherens byndeth himselfe, his executours, administratours, and
- assignes vnto the saide Phillipe Henslowe and Jacob Maide and to
- either of them, thexecutours, administratours, and assignes of
- them or either of them, by theise presentes. In witnes whereof
- the saide Gilbert Katherens hath herevnto sett his hande and
- seale, the daie and yere firste above written
-
- The mark G K of Gilbert Katherens
-
- Sealed and Delivered in the presence of
- witnes Moyses Bowler
- Edwarde Griffin
-
-The execution of the contract must have been delayed, for the rebuilt
-Bear Garden is fairly to be identified with the Hope, of which no
-mention is made in the petition of the spring of 1614 described by
-Taylor in _The True Cause of the Watermen’s Suit_, although it had
-certainly come into use by the following autumn.[1434] Here was
-arranged for 7 October a trial of wit between this same Taylor and the
-shifty rhymer William Fennor.[1435] The latter failed to turn up, and
-Taylor, who, according to his own account, had advertised ‘this Bear
-Garden banquet of dainty conceits’ and collected a great audience, was
-left ‘in a greater puzzell then the blinde beare in the midst of all
-her whip-broth’. After acting part of what he had intended, he resigned
-the stage to the regular company:
-
- Then came the players, and they play’d an act,
- Which greatly from my action did detract,
- For ’tis not possible for any one
- To play against a company alone,
- And such a company (I’ll boldly say)
- That better (nor the like) e’r played a play.
-
-This company was no doubt the Lady Elizabeth’s, as reconstituted in
-the previous March under an agreement with Nathaniel Field on their
-behalf, of which a mutilated copy exists. To it Meade was a party, and
-there is nothing to establish a connexion between Meade and any other
-theatre than the Hope.[1436] Jonson names the Lady Elizabeth’s men as
-the actors of _Bartholomew Fair_, and in the Induction thereto, after
-a dialogue between the Stage-keeper, who is taunted with ‘gathering
-up the broken apples for the beares within’, and the Book-holder,
-a Scrivener reads ‘Articles of Agreement, indented, between the
-Spectators or Hearers, at the Hope on the Bankeside, in the County of
-Surrey on the one party; and the Author of Bartholmew Fayre in the
-said place, and County on the other party: the one and thirtieth day
-of Octob. 1614’. According to Jonson the locality was suitable for a
-play on Bartholomew Fair, for it was ‘as durty as _Smithfield_, and
-as stinking euery whit’.[1437] There were disputes between Henslowe
-and the company, partly arising out of an arrangement that they should
-‘lie still’ one day a fortnight for the baiting, and the combination
-broke up. Some of its members, apparently then Prince Charles’s men,
-are found after Henslowe’s death signing an agreement with Alleyn and
-Meade to play at the Hope, and to set aside a fourth of the gallery
-takings towards a sum of £200 to be accepted in discharge of their debt
-to Henslowe. Alleyn had of course resumed his part proprietorship of
-the house as executor and ultimate heir to Henslowe. Meade probably
-took actual charge of the theatre, and there is an undated letter from
-Prince Charles’s men to Alleyn, written possibly in 1617, in which
-they explain their removal from the Bankside as due to the intemperate
-action of his partner in taking from them the day which by course was
-theirs. I suppose that this dispute also was due to the competition
-of baiting with the plays. In 1619 some disputes between Alleyn and
-Meade had to be settled by arbitration, and from Alleyn’s memoranda in
-connexion with these it appears that Meade was his deputy under his
-patent as Master of the Game, and had also a lease from him of the
-house at £100 a year.[1438] The Hope is mentioned from time to time,
-chiefly as a place of baiting, up to the civil wars.[1439] It is one of
-the three Bankside theatres alluded to in _Holland’s Leaguer_ (1632),
-where it is described as ‘a building of excellent hope’ for players,
-wild beasts, and gladiators. Bear-baiting was suppressed by the House
-of Commons in 1642,[1440] and the house was dismantled in 1656. The
-manuscript continuation of Stowe’s _Annales_ describes its end and the
-slaughter of the bears, but gives the date of its erection erroneously
-as 1610 instead of 1613.[1441]
-
-After the Restoration the Bear Garden was restored, and a lane called
-Bear Gardens, running from Bankside to New Park Street, and a sign
-therein of The White Bear still mark its name.[1442] Its site is pretty
-well defined in the seventeenth-century maps as to the west of the
-Globe and, where that is shown, the Rose, and generally as a little
-nearer Maid Lane than the latter. This is consistent with a notice in
-the Sewers records for 5 December 1595 of a sewer which ran to the Bear
-Garden from a garden known to have lain a little farther east along
-Maid Lane than the Globe.[1443]
-
-The traditional day for baiting was Sunday. Crowley in 1550 describes
-it as taking place on ‘euerye Sondaye’.[1444] Naturally this did not
-pass without Puritan comment, to which point was given by the fall
-of Paris Garden on a Sunday in 1583.[1445] A general prohibition of
-shows on Sunday seems to have followed, from which it is not likely
-that bear-baiting was excepted. It may be inferred that Thursday
-was substituted, for a Privy Council order of 25 July 1591 called
-attention, not only to a neglect of the rule as to Sunday, but also
-to the fact that every day ‘the players do use to recite their plays
-to the great hurt and destruction of the game of bear-baiting and
-like pastimes, which are maintained for Her Majesty’s pleasure if
-occasion require’, and forbade plays both on Sunday and on Thursday,
-on which day ‘those other games usually have been always accustomed
-and practised’.[1446] Henslowe’s diary seems to show that up to 1597
-he kept the Sunday prohibition and disregarded the Thursday one,
-which is a little odd, as he was interested in the Bear Garden.
-But a proclamation of 7 May 1603 on the accession of James repeats
-the warning that there was neglect of the Sabbath, and renews the
-prohibition both for baiting and for plays.[1447] Henslowe and Alleyn
-in their petition of about 1607 for increased fees lay stress on this
-restraint as a main factor in their alleged loss.[1448] It seems from
-the notes of Stowe’s manuscript _continuator_ that during the first
-half of the seventeenth century Tuesday and Thursday became the regular
-baiting days.[1449] But the agreements made by Henslowe and Meade with
-the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1614 profess only to reserve one day in
-fourteen for this purpose, of which apparently notice was to be given
-on the previous Monday.[1450]
-
-
- xvi. PORTER’S HALL
-
-Authority was given for the erection of a new theatre by the following
-patent of 3 June 1615:[1451]
-
-[Sidenote: De concessione regard Phillippo Rosseter et aliis.]
-
- Iames by the grace of God &c. To all Maiors, Sheriffes,
- Iustices of peace, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes, and
- to all other our Officers, Ministers, and loving Subiectes,
- to whome these presentes shall come, greeting. Whereas wee by
- our letteres Patentes sealed with our great seale of England
- bearing date the ffourth day of Ianuary in the seaventh yeare
- of our Raigne of England Fraunce and Ireland and of Scotland
- the three and ffortieth for the consideracions in the same
- letteres patentes expressed did appoint and authorise Phillipp
- Rosseter and certaine others from tyme to tyme to provide,
- keepe, and bring vppe a convenient nomber of children, and them
- to practise and exercise in the quallitie of playing by the
- name of the children of the Revelles to the Queene, within the
- white ffryers in the Suburbs of our Cittie of London, or in any
- other convenient place where they the said Phillipp Rosseter
- and the rest of his partners should thinke fitting for that
- purpose, As in and by the said letteres patentes more at large
- appeareth, And whereas the said Phillipp Rosseter and the rest
- of his said partners have ever since trayned vppe and practised
- a convenient nomber of children of the Revelles for the purpose
- aforesaid in a Messuage or mansion house being parcell of
- the late dissolved Monastery called the white ffryers neere
- Fleetestreete in London, which the said Phillipp Rosseter did
- lately hold for terme of certaine yeres expired, And whereas the
- said Phillipp Rosseter, together with Phillipp Kingman, Robert
- Iones, and Raphe Reeve, to continue the said service for the
- keeping and bringing vppe of the children for the solace and
- pleasure of our said most deere wife, and the better to practise
- and exercise them in the quallitie of playing by the name of
- children of the Revelles to the Queene, have latelie taken in
- lease and farme divers buildinges, Cellers, sollars, chambers,
- and yardes for the building of a Play-house therevpon for the
- better practising and exercise of the said children of the
- Revelles, All which premisses are scituate and being within the
- Precinct of the Blacke ffryers neere Puddlewharfe in the Suburbs
- of London, called by the name of the lady Saunders house, or
- otherwise Porters hall, and now in the occupation of the said
- Robert Iones. Nowe knowe yee that wee of our especiall grace,
- certaine knowledge, and meere mocion have given and graunted,
- And by theise presentes for vs, our heires, and successors,
- doe give and graunte lycense and authoritie vnto the said
- Phillipp Rosseter, Phillipp Kingman, Robert Iones, and Raphe
- Reeve, at their proper costes and charges to erect, build, and
- sett vppe in and vppon the said premisses before mencioned one
- convenient Play-house for the said children of the Revelles,
- the same Play-house to be vsed by the Children of the Revelles
- for the tyme being of the Queenes Maiestie, and for the Princes
- Players, and for the ladie Elizabeths Players, soe tollerated or
- lawfully lycensed to play exercise and practise them therein,
- Any lawe, Statute, Act of Parliament, restraint, or other matter
- or thing whatsoever to the contrary notwithstanding. Willing and
- commaunding you and every of you our said Maiors, Sheriffes,
- Iustices of peace, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes and
- all other our officers and ministers for the tyme being, as
- yee tender our pleasure, to permitt and suffer them therein,
- without any your lettes, hinderance, molestacion, or disturbance
- whatsoever. In witnes whereof, &c. Witnes our selfe at
- Westminster the third day of Iune.
- per breve de priuato sigillo &c.
-
-The statements made in the patent as to the objects of the promoters
-can be confirmed from other sources. We know that the lease of the
-Whitefriars expired at the end of 1614, that there had been an
-amalgamation of the Queen’s Revels and the Lady Elizabeth’s men in
-1613, and that in all probability this arrangement was extended to
-bring in Prince Charles’s men during 1615. Unfortunately for Rosseter
-and his associates, the patent had hardly been granted before it was
-called in question. Presumably the inhabitants of the Blackfriars,
-who had already one theatre in their midst, thought that that one was
-enough. At any rate the Corporation approached the Privy Council, and
-alleged divers inconveniences, in particular the fact that the theatre,
-which was described as ‘in Puddle Wharfe’, would ‘adjoine so neere
-vnto’ the church of St. Anne’s as to disturb the congregation.[1452]
-The Council referred the patent to the Lord Chief Justice, Sir Edward
-Coke, no friend of players, or of the royal prerogative which expressed
-itself in patents; and when he found a technical flaw, in that the
-Blackfriars, having been brought within the City jurisdiction by the
-charter of 1608, was not strictly within ‘the suburbs’, ordered on
-26 September 1615 that the building, which had already been begun,
-should be discontinued. Nevertheless, the work must have gone so
-far as to permit of the production of plays, for the title-page of
-Field’s _Amends for Ladies_ (1618) testifies that it was acted ‘at the
-Blacke-Fryers both by the Princes Servants and the Lady Elizabeths’.
-Moreover, on 27 January 1617 the Privy Council wrote again to the Lord
-Mayor, enjoining him to see to the suppression of a play-house in the
-Blackfriars ‘neere vnto his Majestyes Wardrobe’, which is said to be
-‘allmost if not fully finished’.[1453]
-
-It does not appear possible to say exactly where in the Blackfriars’
-precinct the Porter’s Hall once occupied by Lady Saunders stood. It
-was certainly not the porter’s lodge at the north-west corner of the
-great cloister, for this was still in 1615, as it had been since 1554,
-part of the Cobham house. One Ninian Sawnders, a vintner, took a lease
-of the chancel of the old conventual church from Sir Thomas Cawarden
-in 1553, and this would have been close to St. Anne’s, which stood at
-the north-east corner of the great cloister. But Ninian died in 1553
-and never got knighted. On the other hand, the rooms on the south
-side of the great cloister, generally described as Lygon’s lodgings,
-had been in the tenure of one Nicholas Saunders shortly before their
-sale by Sir George More to John Freeman and others in 1609. Nicholas
-Saunders is said to have been knighted in 1603.[1454] These lodgings
-adjoined More’s own mansion house, and might at some time have served
-as a lodge for his porter.[1455] But I do not feel that they would very
-naturally be described either as ‘near’ or ‘in’ Puddle Wharf, or as
-‘near’ the Wardrobe. These indications suggest some building approached
-either from Puddle Wharf proper or from the hill, afterwards known as
-St. Andrew’s Hill, which ran up from it to the Wardrobe, outside the
-eastern wall of the Priory precinct. The Cawarden estate did not extend
-to this wall, and the Saunders family may quite well, in addition to
-Lygon’s lodgings, have had a house, either on the site of the old
-convent gardens, or higher up the hill on the Blackwell estate, near
-where Shakespeare’s house stood, and near also to St. Anne’s. Perhaps
-there had been a porter’s lodge on the east of the old prior’s house.
-
-
-
-
- XVII
-
- THE PRIVATE THEATRES
-
-
- i. THE BLACKFRIARS
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--Many documents bearing upon the
- history of the theatre are preserved at Loseley, and the most
- important are collected by Professor A. Feuillerat in vol. ii
- of the _Malone Society’s Collections_ (1913). A few had been
- already printed or described by A. J. Kempe in _The Loseley
- Manuscripts_ (1835), by J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps in _Outlines_,
- i. 299, by J. C. Jeaffreson in the 7th _Report of the Hist.
- MSS. Commission_ (1879), by Professor Feuillerat himself in
- _Shakespeare-Jahrbuch_, xlviii (1912), 81, and by C. W. Wallace,
- with extracts from others, in _The Evolution of the English
- Drama up to Shakespeare_ (1912, cited as Wallace, i). In the
- same book and in _The Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars_
- (1908, cited as Wallace, ii), Professor Wallace prints or
- extracts documents from other sources, chiefly lawsuits in
- the Court of Requests and elsewhere, which supplement those
- discovered by J. Greenstreet and printed in F. G. Fleay,
- _Chronicle History of the London Stage_ (1890). The references
- to the theatre in J. P. Collier, _History of English Dramatic
- Poetry_ (1837 and 1879), are seriously contaminated by
- forgeries. Some material for the general history of the precinct
- is furnished in the various editions of John Stowe, _Survey of
- London_ (1598, 1603, ed. Munday, 1618, ed. Strype, 1720, ed.
- Kingsford, 1908), in W. Dugdale, _Monasticon_ (1817–30), by M.
- Reddan in the _Victoria History of London_, i. 498, and in the
- _Athenaeum_ (1886), ii. 91. A. W. Clapham, _On the Topography
- of the Dominican Priory of London_ (_Archaeologia_, lxiii.
- 57), gives a valuable account of the history and church of
- the convent, but had not the advantage of knowing the Loseley
- documents, and completely distorts the plan of the domestic
- buildings and the theatre. An account by J. Q. Adams is in _S.
- P._ xiv (1917), 64. The status of the liberty is discussed by
- V. C. Gildersleeve, _Government Regulation of the Elizabethan
- Drama_, 143.]
-
-The Dominicans, also called the ‘preaching’ or ‘black’ friars, came
-to England in 1221. Their first house was in Holborn.[1456] In 1275
-they acquired a site on the sloping ground between St. Paul’s and the
-river, just to the east of Fleet ditch, and obtained leave to divert
-the walls of the City so as to furnish a north and north-west boundary
-to their precinct. Here grew up a very famous convent, the motherhouse
-of all the Dominican settlements in the country. It received favours
-from several sovereigns, notably from Edward I and his Queen Eleanor,
-who were regarded as its founders; and in return held its great
-buildings available for national purposes. In 1322–3 it furnished a
-depository for state records. It housed divers parliaments, at first
-in its church and later in a great chamber which will be of singular
-interest to us, and from as early as 1311 was often found a convenient
-meeting-place for the Privy Council. In 1522 it was the lodging of the
-Emperor Charles V, and a wooden bridge and gallery were carried over
-the Fleet, to facilitate communications with his train in Bridewell
-palace. In 1529 its parliament chamber was the scene of the legatine
-sittings which tried the case of divorce between the same Emperor’s
-niece Katharine and the conscience-stricken Henry VIII.[1457]
-
-By this time the friars had ceased to be a power in the land. Those
-of the convent had numbered seventy in 1315; there were no more than
-sixteen or seventeen in 1538.[1458] Parts of the buildings, now
-all too spacious, were let out as residences. It was, perhaps, the
-neighbourhood of the Wardrobe, whose Master had an official residence
-contiguous to the east wall of the precinct, which made the Blackfriars
-a favourite locality for those about the Court. A list of ‘them that
-hath lodgings within the Blak Freers’, which was drawn up in 1522,
-probably in connexion with the imperial visit, contains the names of
-Lord Zouch of Harringworth, Lord Cobham, Sir William Kingston, then
-carver and afterwards comptroller of the household, Sir Henry Wyatt,
-afterwards treasurer of the chamber, Sir William Parr, Sir Thomas
-Cheyne, afterwards warden of the Cinque ports and treasurer of the
-household, Jane, widow of Sir Richard Guildford, formerly master of
-the horse, and Christopher More, a clerk of the exchequer.[1459]
-It is to be feared that some of these tenants cast a covetous eye
-upon the fee-simple of their dwellings, and that it was not all zeal
-for church reform which made Lord Cobham, for example, write to Sir
-Thomas Wyatt, the poet and son of Sir Henry, on 7 October 1538, ‘No
-news, but I trust there shall not be a friar left in England before
-you return’.[1460] Cobham and his friends had not long to wait. The
-deed by which the friars surrendered their property into the hands
-of the King is dated 12 November 1538. The annual income, derived
-from the rented premises, was reckoned as £104 15_s._ 5_d._, but of
-course this in no way represents the capital value of the site and
-buildings.[1461] The partition of spoils, under the supervision of
-the Court of Augmentations, followed in due course. Cobham got his
-house, although not immediately, at nine years’ purchase; and between
-1540 and 1550 some sixteen other parcels of the estate, many of them
-very substantial, were similarly alienated.[1462] Finally, on 12 March
-1550, during the liberal distribution of crown lands for which the
-authority of Henry VIII was alleged by his executors in the Privy
-Council, a comprehensive grant was made of all that still remained
-unalienated in the precinct to Sir Thomas Cawarden, the Master of the
-Revels, whose office had for some years past been established within
-its walls. Apparently Cawarden paid nothing for it, but on the other
-hand the King owed him a good deal for moneys spent in the service of
-the Revels.[1463]
-
-The Blackfriars long remained an anomaly in the local government of
-London. Like all monastic establishments, the friars had maintained
-extensive privileges within their own precinct. Nightly their porter
-had shut their four gates upon the city. They had done their own
-paving. The Lord Mayor had claimed a jurisdiction, but if this was
-admitted, it was only in cases of felony. The ordinary functions of
-civil magistracy had been exercised, when called for, by Sir William
-Kingston and other important tenants.[1464] Naturally there had been
-friction from time to time with the Corporation, and on the surrender
-the latter, like the tenants, hoped that their opportunity was come.
-They addressed a petition to Henry, in which they expressed their
-gratification that he had ‘extirped and extinct the orders of Freers
-to the great exaltacion of Crystes doctryne and the abolucion of
-Antecriste theyr first founder and begynner’, and asked for a grant of
-the church and the whole precinct of the Blackfriars, together with
-those of the three other London friaries, to be used for the special
-benefit of non-parishioners and of those infected by pestilence.[1465]
-Henry, however, had not gone to the trouble of obtaining a surrender
-merely to inflate the powers and the revenues of a municipality. He
-is reported to have replied that ‘he was as well hable to keep the
-liberties as the Friers were’, and to have handed the keys to Sir
-John Portinari, one of his gentlemen pensioners, who dwelt in the
-precinct.[1466] The Blackfriars, therefore, continued to be an exempt
-place or ‘liberty’, an enclave within the walls of the City, but not
-part of it, and with a somewhat loose and ill-defined organization
-of its own. The inhabitants agreed together and appointed a porter
-and a scavenger. A constable was appointed for them by the justices
-of the verge.[1467] The precinct was constituted an ecclesiastical
-parish, known as St. Anne’s after a chapel which had once served its
-inhabitants; and was provided with a church.[1468] Petty offences
-were tried, and any exceptional affairs managed, as might have been
-done in a rural parish, by the justices, and it was to these that
-any administrative orders thought necessary by the Privy Council
-were ordinarily addressed.[1469] It perhaps goes without saying that
-the City were not content with a single rebuff. They attempted to
-interfere at the time of a riot in 1551, and were snubbed by the Privy
-Council.[1470] Under Mary they promoted legislation with a view to
-annexing the liberties, but without success.[1471] In 1562 a sheriff,
-who entered the liberty to enforce a proclamation, was shut in by the
-prompt action of the constable, and faced with an inhibition which
-one of the justices hurried to obtain from a privy councillor.[1472]
-The city remained persistent. In 1574 the Council had again to
-intervene.[1473] In 1578 a controversy arose as to the right of the
-City to dispose of the goods of felons and other escheats. It was
-referred to two chief justices, who made a report to the effect that,
-while the inhabitants of both the Blackfriars and the Whitefriars
-enjoyed certain immunities from civic levies and liabilities,
-nevertheless the soil of the precincts lay within the City, and the
-City was entitled to exercise jurisdiction therein. It may be doubted
-whether effect was given to this opinion.[1474]
-
-In 1587 the Council ordered another inquiry, in order to ascertain
-the precise nature of the Queen’s title in the Blackfriars.[1475]
-There had been a petition for redress of inconveniences from the
-inhabitants.[1476] About the same time the chief landowner, Sir William
-More, appears to have suggested that the liberty should be converted
-into a manor, and manorial rights conferred upon him.[1477] These are
-signs that residence in a liberty hard by a thronging population had
-disclosed a seamy side. Undesirable persons were bound to throng to a
-district where the Lord Mayor’s writ did not run. An open space, for
-example, filled with immemorial trees planted by the friars, had been
-ruined to house alleys for bowling and other unlawful games.[1478]
-Doubtless there were those who resented the fact that the attempt of
-the City to discourage interludes had been met by the establishment of
-a Blackfriars theatre in 1576, which lasted until 1584. It appears to
-have been a protest from the inhabitants which led the Privy Council
-to forbid the public theatre contemplated by James Burbage in 1596,
-although some years later they winked at the opening of the building
-as a private house. In 1596 the church fell down, and in appointing a
-commission to apportion the responsibility for repairs, the council
-also instructed them to consider the government of the liberty, ‘which
-being grown more populus than heretofore and without any certaine and
-knowen officer to keepe good orders there, needeth to be reformed in
-that behalfe’.[1479] The nature of the commission’s findings is not
-upon record, but that the ultimate solution lay in the incorporation
-of the liberty in the City could hardly be doubtful. As far back as
-1589 the Council had found it convenient to use the Lord Mayor as
-an agent for securing a proper contribution from the Blackfriars
-towards a levy. From 1597 onwards they showed an increased tendency to
-make similar use of an administrative machinery far more completely
-organized than that of the justices of the peace. In that year the Lord
-Mayor was instructed to make a collection in aid of the Blackfriars
-church repairs. In 1600 it again fell to him to assess the share of
-the liberty in a levy of men and money. In 1601 it is he who is called
-upon to suppress plays in Blackfriars during Lent.[1480] The final step
-was, however, deferred until 20 September 1608, when the new Jacobean
-charter formally extended the jurisdiction of the city to various
-liberties, including both the Blackfriars and the Whitefriars, with
-certain exemptions as regards assessments and the tenure of offices,
-but with none as regards responsibility for petty offences and the
-keeping of the peace.[1481]
-
-I have anticipated, in order to get the question of jurisdiction out
-of the way. I must now return to the topography. Sir Thomas Cawarden
-died on 29 August 1559. He had no son, and his executors, Lady Cawarden
-and Sir William More, personally took over the Blackfriars estate in
-survivorship, as part of the settlement of his affairs.[1482] Lady
-Cawarden’s death on 20 February 1560 left More sole owner. He retained
-the property until his own death in 1601, and the muniment room of his
-house at Loseley near Guildford contains innumerable documents relating
-to the business transactions in which it involved him, together with
-some of earlier date which he inherited from Cawarden. The researches
-of Professor Feuillerat in these archives render it possible to
-reconstruct with some minuteness the arrangement of the Blackfriars
-and its buildings at the time of the surrender, to trace many of the
-changes of the next half-century, and, as part of the process, to
-indicate pretty definitely the locality and nature of the structures
-which were turned to theatrical uses.
-
-The precinct covered a space of about five acres.[1483] In shape it was
-a rough parallelogram, wider at the north than at the south. The great
-gate was towards the east end of the north boundary. It was reached
-by a short entry on the south of Bowier Row, now Ludgate Hill, just
-east of Ludgate. This seems to have been called Gate Street. It is now
-the north end of Pilgrim Street.[1484] From here the boundary was the
-city wall, westwards for about 450 ft. to the Fleet ditch, and then
-southwards for about 800 ft. along the east side of the ditch. There
-were towers at intervals. One of these stood about 200 ft. down from
-the angle, and immediately south of this was the bridge over the Fleet
-towards Bridewell. The south and east boundaries were also walled.
-Between the south wall and the river ran Castle Lane, which was not
-within the precinct.[1485] A gate in the south wall gave access across
-the lane to the Blackfriars ‘bridge’ or ‘stairs’, a common landing
-place, originally built by the Prior of St. John’s, from whom, in some
-way not clear to me, the Friars held their estate.[1486] The south-east
-angle of the precinct was near Puddle Wharf, and from here the boundary
-ran up the west side of St. Andrew’s Hill to Carter Lane, bending out
-eastwards near the top, where the buildings of the Wardrobe joined it
-by an arch over the roadway, was then driven in sharply westwards by
-the end of Carter Lane, which was butt up against a turngate in the
-friars’ wall, and finally ran in an irregularly diagonal line from the
-junction of Creed and Carter Lanes north-west to the great gate again.
-Internally the precinct was unequally divided by an irregular highway
-which ran north and south, from the great gate to the Blackfriars
-stairs. This started out of Gate Street as High Street, and lower down
-became Water Lane.[1487] All the conventual buildings lay on the east
-of the highway. Here was the larger division of the precinct, measuring
-about 450 ft. from east to west. The western division, measuring about
-150 ft., contained only a few houses and gardens. Across it ran from
-Bridewell Bridge to Water Lane a strip of unoccupied land, containing
-nothing but a ruined gallery, probably part of the provision made
-for the accommodation of Charles V in 1522. One of Cawarden’s first
-acts, when he got his property, was to make a new road, with tenements
-and gardens to the south of it, along this strip. It became known as
-Bridewell Lane, and is represented by the present Union Street.[1488]
-It must have joined Water Lane just south of a little place or
-_parvis_ which lay in front of the west porch of the church and the
-adjoining entrance to the cloister. The _parvis_ contained one or
-two houses and shops, and formed part of the continuous thoroughfare
-from north to south, communicating by gateways with High Street and
-Water Lane.[1489] The conventual church itself divided the eastern
-portion of the precinct from west to east, extending not quite so
-far east as the present Friar Street. It was 220 ft. long and 66 ft.
-wide, and had two aisles and a chancel, which, as usual in conventual
-churches, was as long as the nave. There was a square porch tower over
-the west end. Over the junction of nave and chancel stood a belfry,
-visible in Wyngaerde’s drawing of _c._ 1543–50, and to the north of
-the chancel a chapel, probably the quasi-parochial chapel of St. Anne,
-and a vestry.[1490] Beyond these was the churchyard.[1491] This was
-300 ft. long by 90 ft. deep, and occupied about two-thirds of the
-space between the High Street on the west, the church on the south,
-and the north-eastern boundary of the precinct. A group of houses
-stood between it and the great gate towards Ludgate, and three others
-separated it from the High Street at the south west corner.[1492] One
-of these, built up against the church and the High Street gateway, was
-a recluse’s cell or Ankerhouse.[1493] Cawarden cut a new road across
-the churchyard, 20 ft. north of the site of the chancel and just north
-of the Ankerhouse and the High Street gate. This continued Carter Lane,
-the turngate at the end of which was converted into a gate practicable
-for carts, and with Bridewell Lane provided a thoroughfare across the
-Blackfriars from east to west in addition to that from north to south.
-That part of the existing Carter Lane, west of Creed Lane, which was
-formerly known as Shoemakers’ Row, doubtless represents Cawarden’s new
-way.[1494]
-
-On the south of the nave stood the great cloister, entered by a
-porter’s lodge in its north-west corner. It was 110 ft. square. Its
-eastern alley was probably in a line with a way across the church under
-the belfry to a door into the churchyard, and this line, preserved by
-Cawarden in order to provide access to the cloister from his new way,
-is represented by the existing Church Entry.[1495] The north side of
-the cloister was formed by the wall of the nave. Behind the other three
-sides were ranged the domestic buildings of the convent. On the east
-were the ample Prior’s lodging, which stretched back over the space
-south of the chancel, and farther to the south the Convent garden,
-covering an acre. Over part of this lodging and over the cloister alley
-itself was the east dorter of the friars, communicating direct with
-the church by a stairway.[1496] The east side of the cloister also
-contained the Chapter-house, which probably stood in the middle, and to
-the south of this a school-house.[1497] Behind the south-east corner
-were the provincial’s lodging, a store-house, the common jakes, and
-another garden, known as the hill garden.[1498] Another dorter stood
-over the south cloister alley and over some ground-floor buildings of
-uncertain use, which divided this alley from an inner cloister, flanked
-on the east by the library, and in part on the west by the infirmary,
-behind which were the bakehouse, brewhouse, and stables. The western
-end of the south alley of the main cloister formed a lavabo, and was
-apparently sunk to a lower level than the rest.[1499] Down the western
-side of both cloisters extended a continuous range of buildings, the
-details of which will require subsequent examination. These formed two
-main blocks. The northern, flanking the main cloister, contained the
-buttery and parts of the guest-house and porter’s lodge; the southern,
-flanking the inner cloister, was devoted to the refectory, the lower
-end of which, owing to the slope of the hill, seems to have stood over
-the infirmary. The irregular outline of Water Lane, jutting a good deal
-to the west after it emerged from the _parvis_ in front of the church
-porch, left a space of some 84 ft. at its widest between this range
-of buildings and the lane itself. The guest-house and porter’s lodge
-extended back into this space; it also held the convent kitchen and
-other subsidiary buildings.[1500]
-
-When Cawarden got his grant in 1550, a great deal of the property had
-already been disposed of.[1501] Except for the strip where he laid
-out Bridewell Lane and two small garden plots, nothing was left for
-him in the western division of the precinct. To the north the group
-of houses between the churchyard and the great gate had gone. To
-the south, Cobham had taken the rooms over the porter’s lodge, with
-a closet window looking into the church, and he and one Sir George
-Harper had divided the rest of the guest-house block--‘fayer great
-edifices’, says Cawarden--that lay behind.[1502] Sir Francis Bryan had
-taken the Prior’s lodging and the convent garden, and from him they
-had passed to the Bishop of Ely and then to one William Blackwell.
-Lady Kingston had taken the inner cloister, with part of the south
-dorter and the rooms beneath it, the library, the infirmary, the
-brewhouse, bakehouse, and stables. Others had taken the school-house,
-some more of the south dorter, the provincial’s lodging, the jakes,
-the store-house, and the hill garden, and these ultimately passed to
-Lady Grey. Sir Thomas Cheyne, the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, had
-taken some of the buildings west of the frater. Everything farther
-south, down towards the river, had also been alienated. What was left
-for Cawarden consisted mainly of the church itself and the churchyard,
-the ankerhouse, the great cloister, the chapter-house, the east dorter,
-the porter’s lodge and buttery block, with all the rooms over these
-except Cobham’s, the frater, the kitchen, and such buildings standing
-between the frater and Water Lane, as did not belong to Cheyne.[1503]
-Much trouble was caused to Cawarden’s successors by uncertainty as to
-the extent of Cheyne’s claim.[1504] No doubt the grant constituted
-Cawarden the chief landowner in the district, but he complained that
-hardly any of his property was ‘mansionable’, and even at the time of
-his death he had only brought the annual value up to £70.[1505] The
-survey taken for the purposes of the grant puts it at no more than
-£19. On the other hand, the value of the stone and timber and other
-material of the buildings is estimated in the same survey at £879
-3_s._ 4_d._, including an item of £709 11_s._ 0_d._ for lead alone.
-Evidently it was from the site-value and the judicious erection of new
-buildings and conversion of old ones, with the aid of this material,
-into ‘mansionable’ property, that Cawarden’s profit was to come. A
-convinced Protestant, he looked upon the church as a quarry. He pulled
-it down, with the exception of the south wall of the nave, which was
-to serve him as a garden wall, and the porch which he turned into a
-tenement. Other tenements were built on the site, and the rest of it,
-with so much of the churchyard as was not required for the new road,
-was let off. One of the tenants appears to have made tennis-courts on
-the site of the chancel. The demolition included St. Anne’s Chapel.
-This had been closed during Henry’s reign and used as a store-house
-for the Offices of Tents and Revels. For a while the inhabitants were
-allowed to worship in a room under an old gallery, presumably that
-which became the site of Bridewell Lane; but now this passed into
-Cawarden’s hands and he evicted them. When they plucked up heart, under
-Mary, to protest, he first offered them a site in the churchyard and
-a roof if they would be at the expense of building, and ultimately
-gave them an upper room, apparently at the north end of the east
-dorter. This fell down in 1597, and was rebuilt by the parishioners,
-who finally bought it, with a piece of the site of the old conventual
-church as a churchyard, from Sir George More in 1607–8.[1506] Cawarden
-effected an adjustment of boundaries on the east of the cloister with
-the Bishop of Ely.[1507] He then proceeded to build dwelling rooms
-along the south and east sides of the cloister.[1508] They must have
-been fairly shallow, for they left him a great square garden, but
-no doubt the recess of the chapter-house permitted increased depth
-towards the east. Under the west wing of the new building, adjoining
-the buttery, was a great vaulted room, 57 ft. by 25, which must, I
-think, have been the lavabo of the friars.[1509] East of this was a
-set of rooms capable of use as a separate dwelling, which came to be
-known as Lygon’s lodgings.[1510] The rest formed the capital mansion
-of the property, the ‘great house’, and was clearly intended for
-Cawarden’s own residence. It seems to have been sometimes let and
-sometimes occupied by Sir William More.[1511] The great garden must
-have been pleasant enough, with the north and west cloister alleys
-left standing, and a tinkling conduit in the west end, filled by a pipe
-from Clerkenwell.[1512]
-
-The important part of the Blackfriars, from the point of view of
-theatrical topography, is the range of buildings on the western side of
-the two cloisters, parallel to Water Lane. The two blocks constituting
-this range, or so much of them as passed to Cawarden, are referred to
-in the surveys of 1548 and 1550 as the ‘olde butterie’ and the ‘vpper
-ffrater’.[1513] From the details given in these surveys and in the
-leases and other documents preserved at Loseley, it is possible to form
-a very fair notion of their structure and uses. The chief rooms in
-both blocks were upon an upper floor. The northern block was 110 ft.
-in length from north to south and 36 ft. in width. The upper rooms,
-however, were only 26 ft. wide, as 10 ft. was taken up by a high stone
-gallery which ran along the west of the building, and was perhaps
-connected with the wooden gallery leading to the Fleet.[1514] These
-rooms were four in number. That to the north, 21 ft. long, belonged to
-Cobham, and had a closet window looking into the church upon the south
-wall of which, for 20 ft. of its width, the block abutted.[1515] Then
-came two central rooms, a large and a small one, measuring together 52
-ft. in length, and then a southern one, which with an entry measured
-47 ft.[1516] The surveys treat the three rooms which fell to Cawarden
-as a single ‘hall place’. All four rooms had probably formed part of
-the guest-house of the convent, and had lodged Charles V. The ground
-floor held low rooms pierced at intervals by entries and with cellars
-underneath them. The chief entry or gate-house was at the southern
-end and served Cawarden’s mansion house when that was built.[1517]
-North of this came the buttery proper and a pantry, occupying with a
-small entry connecting them 29 ft.;[1518] then another stepped entry
-into the cloister serving afterwards as Cawarden’s garden gate;[1519]
-then probably more rooms under the two central upper rooms; then a
-staircase to Cobham’s upper room;[1520] and finally rooms belonging to
-the porter’s lodge, which were 21 ft. in length. This lodge extended
-backwards towards Water Lane, and over and around it were other
-rooms of Cobham’s and yet others forming the house of Sir George
-Harper.[1521] Some or all of these had also probably been part of the
-guest-house. Together with a garden of Cobham’s, they occupied rather
-less than half the space between the northern block and Water Lane.
-South of them, and included in Cawarden’s grant, were the convent
-kitchen with a room over it, and the kitchen yard, forming a space 84
-ft. wide, and in length 74 ft. at the buttery end and 68 ft. at the
-lane end.
-
-The northern block, being 110 ft. long, extended right down to the
-southern line of the cloister, which was 110 ft. square. Here it
-abutted upon the southern block. This was 52 ft. wide. The length
-of the upper frater is given in the surveys as 107 ft., and in two
-of More’s leases as 110 ft.[1522] The latter figure is probably the
-right one.[1523] The north end of this block contained a ‘great
-stair’, which gave access both to the frater and to the guest-house,
-and was itself convenient of approach both from the gate-house entry
-and from the lavabo at the south-west angle of the cloister. Probably
-this end was built in the form of a tower, as there were rooms on
-and over the staircase and over the adjoining Duchy Chamber, and
-garrets over those.[1524] There was a garret also over the south end
-of the northern block.[1525] It is doubtful whether anything stood
-over the main portion of the southern block.[1526] This had a flat
-leaded roof, whereas the northern block, as its lead is not mentioned
-in the survey, probably had a gabled and tiled roof. Apart from the
-staircase tower, the upper floor of the southern block consisted of
-the ‘upper’ frater or refectory, a spacious apartment, which had been
-used for Parliaments and the legatine trial of Henry VIII’s divorce
-case, and was sometimes known as ‘the Parliament chamber’.[1527] The
-ground floor is a little more difficult. The survey of 1548 assigns to
-it a ‘blind’, that is, I suppose, a windowless, or at any rate dark,
-parlour, which came next the buttery block, and a hall, to which the
-parlour served as an entry.[1528] These are said to be ‘vnder the seide
-frater of the same lengethe and breddethe’. This might naturally be
-taken to mean that they were, together, of the same size as the frater
-above. In fact it must, I think, mean that they were of the same size
-as each other, for we know from another source that the south end of
-the frater was over a room not belonging to Cawarden at all but to
-Lady Kingston, and itself standing over the infirmary, which, owing
-to the fall of the ground, formed at that end a lower story of the
-block.[1529] The survey does not say what the sizes of the parlour and
-hall were, but a later document suggests that together they underlay
-over two-thirds of the frater and occupied a space of 74 ft. from north
-to south and 52 ft. from east to west.[1530] Under Cawarden’s part of
-the southern block were cellars. To the west lay what was known as the
-Duchy Chamber, probably from some official use in connexion with the
-Duchy of Lancaster. This was a two-story building, 50 ft. long by 16
-ft. wide, jutting out at right angles to the extreme north end of the
-frater. South of it was a house, apparently belonging to Sir Thomas
-Cheyne and occupied by Sir John Portinari, which touched the frater
-at one end, and at the other had a parlour, interposed between the
-end of the Duchy Chamber and Water Lane, and bounded on the north, as
-the Duchy Chamber itself must have been, by the kitchen yard. South
-of this again were a little chamber and a kitchen, with an entry from
-Water Lane, probably between Portinari’s parlour and another house
-belonging to Cheyne.[1531] The little chamber and kitchen were used
-in conjunction with the hall under the upper frater. This hall, which
-was paved and stood ‘handsome to’ the buttery, had also been a frater,
-serving as a breakfast room for the friars, and in the little chamber
-had lived their butler.[1532] Now it is noted in the surveys that Sir
-Thomas Cheyne had laid claim to the paved hall, the ‘blind’ parlour,
-the little chamber, and the kitchen, and it seems very doubtful whether
-they were covered by the specifications of Cawarden’s grant.[1533] He
-succeeded, however, in occupying them; and the inevitable lawsuit was
-left for his successor.
-
-Cawarden had had the buttery, frater, kitchen, and Duchy chamber
-on lease since 4 April 1548.[1534] Some of these, as well as other
-conventual buildings, he had occupied from a still earlier date in
-his capacity as Master of the Tents and Revels. For these offices the
-propinquity of the Wardrobe rendered the Blackfriars very convenient.
-Already in 1511 temporary use had been made of some room in the
-precinct to prepare a pageant in for a joust at Westminster.[1535]
-Before Cawarden became Master, the regular store-house of the Revels
-office had been at Warwick Inn.[1536] The transfer to Blackfriars
-was not completed until February 1547, but it perhaps began earlier,
-since the papers of the Court of Augmentations contain receipts by
-John Barnard, for sums spent by the King’s surveyor on ‘the reparayng
-and amendyng of the Blacke Fryers in London store howse for the seyd
-tentes and revelles’ during 1545.[1537] The Chapel of St. Anne had
-been requisitioned with other houses ‘to laye in tentes, maskes and
-revels’ before the end of Henry VIII’s reign.[1538] As to the exact
-location of the Tents there is some interesting, although conflicting,
-evidence. An order of the Augmentations in 1550 allowed Sir Thomas
-Cheyne £5 a year for the use of his great room by the Tents from
-25 March 1545 onwards.[1539] The room intended was undeniably the
-paved hall or breakfast room under the frater, but Sir William More
-maintained in 1572 that the payment by the Augmentations was an
-irregular one, and that the paved hall had never been used for the
-Revels and was never in fact Cheyne’s.[1540] Sir John Portinari gave
-evidence that for some time after the surrender of the convent it had
-remained empty, and that he had himself kept the keys until Cawarden
-took possession of it in 1550. Cawarden then invited him to a supper
-and a play in the hall.[1541] The Revels seem to have had the use of
-the upper frater or parliament chamber during Henry VIII’s reign.[1542]
-But the surveys of 1548 and 1550 locate them to the north of this, in
-the southernmost of the four halls of the old guest-house. The two
-central halls, together with the convent kitchen, had been tenanted as
-far back as 1539 by successive Lords Cobham, to whose house they were
-adjacent.[1543] In 1554, however, Cawarden sold the two rooms to George
-Lord Cobham, together with the porter’s lodge, which underlay his
-original holding, and received as part of his consideration a release
-from any claim which Cobham may have had to the kitchen yard and to
-the property granted to Cawarden on the west side of Water Lane.[1544]
-With the upper rooms transferred to Cobham went ‘appurtenances’, which
-probably included the corresponding ground-floor rooms, as these are
-not traceable in More’s possession and apparently formed part of the
-Cobham estate when that was disposed of in the next century.[1545]
-The porter’s lodge was all on the ground floor. It had a frontage of
-21 ft. on the cloister and ran back for 47 ft. towards Water Lane.
-At the time of Cawarden’s grant in 1550 it had been occupied by John
-Barnard, clerk comptroller of the Tents and Revels, but he had died in
-the same year.[1546] Naturally it was convenient for the officers of
-the Revels to live in the Blackfriars. John Holt, the yeoman, had a
-house to the north of the churchyard. Thomas Philipps, the clerk, had
-the ‘little chamber’ west of the frater. The paved hall served him as
-a wood store, and from time to time some of Cawarden’s servants lay
-there. About 1552 Cawarden moved Philipps to the Ankerhouse, and put
-into the little chamber the deputy clerk, Thomas Blagrave, who found
-it too small, and rented an adjoining chamber from Cheyne.[1547] The
-paved hall was then let, with other neighbouring rooms on more than
-one floor, to one Woodman, who kept an ordinary in the hall and did a
-good deal of damage to the property.[1548] Meanwhile, the Revels had
-apparently been moved from this first-floor hall where they lay in
-1550, for when this hall is recited as the south boundary of Cobham’s
-purchase in 1554, it is described as a house in the tenure of Sir John
-Cheke or his assigns.[1549] So long as the Tents and Revels continued
-to be housed in Crown property, the offices had of course nothing
-to pay for rent. But after 1550 Cawarden, as naturally, claimed an
-allowance for rent, and in 1555 he was permitted to charge six years’
-arrears from Michaelmas 1549 at the rate of £3 6_s._ 8_d._ a year each
-for the official residences of the comptroller, clerk, and yeoman, £6
-13_s._ 4_d._ for his own, £6 13_s._ 4_d._ for the office of the tents,
-and £6 13_s._ 4_d._ for the ‘store and woorke howses of the revelles’.
-In the accounts for 1555–9 similar charges recur annually, but the
-allowance for Cawarden’s own house is raised to £10 and that for the
-houses of the other officers to £5 each; and the £6 13_s._ 4_d._ for
-the Revels office is specified as being ‘for the rente of fyve greate
-roomes within the Blackefryers for the woorke and store howses of the
-Revelles’.[1550] About 1560 the store-house was certainly not the hall
-over the buttery, but the great vaulted room in the south-west corner
-of the cloister, which had been the lavabo of the friars.[1551] On the
-other hand, Sir John Cheke’s tenure of his house had ceased and the
-vacated rooms had become available for workhouses. This is evident
-from the terms of a lease of the same rooms to Sir Henry Neville,
-executed on 10 June 1560, just after the Revels had been removed to
-St. John’s.[1552] Cawarden had died on the previous 29 August, and the
-lease was one of the first dealings of William More with the property.
-The principal rooms leased were precisely four in number. They had
-been ‘lately called or knowen by the name of Mr. Chekes lodginge and
-sythence vsed by Sir Thomas Cawarden knight deceased for the office
-of the Quenes Maiesties Revelles’. They were bounded on the north by
-Lord Cobham’s house, on the east by the houses of More and of Sir
-Henry Jerningham, who was Lady Kingston’s son and heir, and on the
-west by another house of More’s in the occupation of Richard Frith,
-and by the way leading to More’s house and garden and a piece of void
-ground. Under them and leased with them were the buttery and pantry;
-and the lease also covered a cellar and a ‘greate rome in manner of a
-grete seller having a chimpney’ which I suppose to have been the late
-Revels store-house. The upstairs rooms were approximately 157 ft. long,
-27 ft. wide at the north end, and 22 ft. wide at the south end.[1553]
-The length agrees approximately with the sum of the lengths of the
-upper frater and of the hall over the buttery not included in Cobham’s
-purchase of 1554; and it was evidently from these that Neville’s
-holding was taken. But the head of the staircase must have interfered
-with his width in the middle, and it will be observed that, while he
-had the full width of the northern block, he had less than half the
-full width (52 ft.) of the frater. Evidently Cawarden had partitioned
-the frater to make it ‘mansionable’, and in particular had divided it
-into two tenements by a partition from north to south. Neville’s was
-the eastern division. The western division and the rooms at the top of
-the staircase tower were in the tenure of Richard Frith, who had taken
-a twenty-four years’ lease from Cawarden in April 1555 and had obtained
-a renewal from More on 24 December 1559. Here, in 1561, Frith kept a
-dancing-school.[1554] Neville’s lease also gave him a share in More’s
-water-supply, a strip of the void ground, formerly the convent kitchen
-yard, between the northern block and Water Lane, and a right of way
-to the buttery and pantry through the rest of that ground, which was
-reserved to More. Neville’s strip lay just south of Cobham’s garden
-wall. That reserved by More was partly taken up by ways to his garden
-and gate-house entries. In the space between these was erected in 1561
-a public conduit, which received the water-supply after it left More’s
-tap, and passed it on to the Earl of Pembroke’s house at Baynard’s
-Castle. Here also stood a tennis ground, tenanted with a cellar under
-the northern block by Frith.[1555] The gate-house entry, or at least
-the way to it, served Frith’s house, as well as More’s own. Near it
-were certain rooms, reserved for More’s use or that of his servant John
-Horley, which may have been constructed out of the ‘blind’ parlour.
-The great stairs in the tower between the two blocks were probably
-assigned to Frith. They were not included in Neville’s lease, and he
-was specifically debarred from any right of access through More’s
-house or garden except by More’s licence. It was probably contemplated
-that he would build stairs to the upper floor for himself, and this is
-perhaps why More exacted no fine on the execution of the lease.[1556]
-At any rate Neville did build stairs on the west of the house, placing
-them not in his own strip of yard but in More’s, with his water-cock in
-a little room at the stair foot. The pale of Frith’s tennis court was
-altered to allow of access between it and Neville’s stairs from More’s
-garden entry to his gate-house entry.[1557] In his own strip Neville
-built a kitchen and another set of stairs behind it which must have led
-into the extreme north end of his house, as the site of the kitchen
-underlay, not Neville’s own rooms, but those purchased by Cobham in
-1554. The rest of the strip served as a woodyard, and had a privy
-in it. Presumably the original convent kitchen acquired by Cawarden
-had been pulled down. Within the house Neville put up partitions,
-turning his four rooms into six, of which it may be inferred that
-two lay in the northern block and four in the southern, and adorning
-one of these latter with wainscoting most of the way round, and with
-a great round portal.[1558] About Lady Day 1568 More bought back
-the lease from Neville for £100, doubtless in consideration of the
-improvements.[1559] For a time it seems to have been occupied by the
-Silk Dyers Company.[1560] On 6 February 1571 it was let to William Lord
-Cobham, the terms of whose lease closely resemble those of Neville’s,
-but record the changes made during his predecessor’s tenancy.[1561]
-Cobham gave up the house in 1576, and on 27 August of that year Neville
-wrote to More to recommend a new applicant for the tenancy, his friend
-Richard Farrant. With it came an application from Farrant himself.
-Apparently his tenancy entailed the removal of an Italian, who may have
-been one of the silk dyers, and he desired to be allowed to take down
-one of the partitions. On 17 September he wrote to ask that a small
-room, 6 ft. by 4½ ft., occupied by More’s man Bradshaw might be added
-to his holding.[1562] His lease was executed on 20 December.[1563] It
-gives him all the rooms which Neville had had, with the exception of
-the former Revels store-house, which is now described as ‘that great
-rome nowe vsed for a wasshynge howse’; and it adds the little room
-specially asked for, which had been contrived by throwing together a
-privy and a coal-house. Richard Farrant was Master of the Children of
-Windsor Chapel, and deputy to William Hunnis as Master of the Children
-of the Chapel Royal, and his object in taking the house was to have a
-room in which the children could give public representations for profit
-of the plays which they were afterwards to perform at Court. He carried
-out his plan, and so the old frater of the friars, once the parliament
-chamber of the realm, became the first Blackfriars theatre.[1564]
-
-More, according to his own account, was not best pleased at the use
-made of his house. He complained that Farrant, after pretending that
-he only meant to teach the children in it, had made it a ‘continuall
-howse for plays’ to the offence of the precinct, and to fit it for
-the purpose had pulled down and defaced Neville’s partitions, spoiled
-the windows, and brought the house to great ruin. He had also sublet
-certain portions, and, as he was not entitled to do this under his
-lease without licence, More claimed the forfeiture of the lease. At
-this moment, on 30 November 1580, Farrant died, leaving the house to
-his widow Anne. For some months there were no plays in the theatre.
-Then Hunnis resolved to carry on Farrant’s enterprise himself, and on
-a recommendation from the Earl of Leicester More appears to have given
-at least a tacit consent to a sub-letting by Anne to Hunnis and one
-John Newman on 20 December 1581. They were to do repairs and pay her
-£6 13_s._ 4_d._ in rent more than the £14 due to More. An unfortunate
-slip of the scrivener’s pen cut Mrs. Farrant’s profit down to £6 6_s._
-8_d._ They also gave bonds of £100 each for the due fulfilment of
-their covenants, and according to Newman’s statement to More, paid
-£30 down. According to Mrs. Farrant they neglected their repairs and
-were extremely irregular with their rent, so that she was put to great
-shifts in order to satisfy Sir William More, disposing of a small
-reversion given her by the Queen, pawning her plate and jewels, selling
-a dozen of gold buttons here and a set of viols there, and borrowing of
-powerful friends such as Lord Cobham or Henry Sackford, the Master of
-the Tents. Meanwhile Hunnis and Newman disposed of their interest to
-one Henry Evans, a scrivener, and More, incensed at this, took definite
-steps in the spring of 1583 to recover his house by executing a fresh
-lease to one of his men, Thomas Smallpiece, and setting Smallpiece to
-sue for the ejectment of Evans. The latter tried to elude him by a
-further transfer of the sub-lease to the Earl of Oxford, who passed it
-on to John Lyly, the poet; and thus, says More, the title was ‘posted
-over from one to another from me’ contrary to the conditions of the
-original lease. Doubtless Hunnis, Lyly, and Evans were all working
-together under the Earl’s patronage, for a company under Oxford’s name
-was taken to Court by Lyly in the winter of 1583–4 and by Evans in the
-winter of 1584–5, and it seems pretty clear that in 1583–4, at any
-rate, it was in fact made up of boys from the Chapel and Paul’s.[1565]
-More, however, pursued his point, and about Easter 1584 recovered legal
-possession of his house. Some months before, Anne Farrant, in despair,
-had appealed to Sir Francis Walsingham, and had also brought actions at
-common law against Hunnis and Newman for the forfeiture of their bonds.
-They applied to the Court of Requests to take over the case, and there
-is no formal record of the outcome. But in January 1587 Mrs. Farrant
-was again complaining to the Privy Council, and Sir John Wolley was
-asked to bring about a settlement between her and More, who was his
-father-in-law.[1566]
-
-So ends the story of the first Blackfriars theatre. The premises which
-it had occupied came into the hands of Henry Lord Hunsdon, who was also
-about the same time tenant of More’s mansion house and garden.[1567]
-It would seem that Lord Oxford and Lyly had passed on to Hunsdon their
-sub-leases from the Farrants and that, even when he recovered legal
-possession from the court, More did not care to interfere with this
-arrangement. But there was evidently some friction. The sub-leases were
-due to expire in 1590 or 1591, and in April 1586 More refused to renew
-them. His excuse was that ‘The howses yow had of Lyllye I determyne
-that assone as theye bothe shall cum into my handes to kepe them to the
-onelye vse of me and mye chylderne’. In acknowledging this decision,
-Hunsdon complained that the pipe of water belonging to one of the
-houses had been diverted to serve that of Lord Cobham. In 1590 he made
-a fresh attempt to secure a renewal. More at first drafted a letter of
-consent, but then changed his mind and told Hunsdon that he needed the
-houses for his daughter Lady Wolley and for himself on his visits to
-London. Hunsdon had suffered annoyance because the tenant of the next
-house ‘having the vse of the leades, either by negligence or otherwise,
-suffereth the boyes to cutt upp the lead with knifes or to boore yt
-through with bodkyns wherby the rayne cometh throwghe’.[1568] This
-allusion, together with that to the pipe of water, makes it clear that
-Hunsdon’s houses included the rooms covered by Neville’s lease of 1560,
-in which the right of dancing-master Frith to use the leads over the
-southern block is expressly safeguarded. I think it is probable that
-the two houses are merely the southern and northern sections of the
-Farrant holding, separately sublet to Hunsdon. It is known that Farrant
-himself, while in occupation of the theatre, had let off certain rooms.
-More’s wish to retain the property for family reasons did not long
-outlast its immediate purpose of decently covering a refusal to the
-Lord Chamberlain. Frith’s tenancy also came to an end, and for some
-period between 1590 and 1596 the rooms formerly constituting the upper
-frater were reunited in the occupation of William de Laune, a doctor
-of physic. The rooms to the north of them, after his appointment as
-Chamberlain of the Exchequer on 23 November 1591, were used by More for
-the purposes of the Pipe Office.[1569] The buttery and pantry beneath
-were probably also relet in 1591.[1570]
-
-I must now turn to the history of the ‘paved hall’ and ‘blind parlour’
-under the upper frater and the little chamber and kitchen to the west
-of these, all of which, when Cawarden obtained possession in 1550,
-were under the shadow of a claim by Sir Thomas Cheyne. Blagrave’s
-occupation of the little chamber terminated when the Revels Office
-moved to St. John’s in 1560, and on 10 December 1564 More drafted a
-lease of it to one Laurence Bywater, who had in fact been in occupation
-since 1560.[1571] It is described as consisting of a hall, a chamber
-above, a little room below, a kitchen, a yard, ‘a long entrie coming
-in ouer the yard bourded and railed’, and a vault or cellar. The
-paved hall had been let by 1572 to William Joyner, who used it as a
-fencing-school. In this year Cheyne’s claim was renewed by one Henry
-Pole and his wife Margaret, who was the widow of Cheyne’s eldest son.
-The rooms chiefly in dispute were the paved hall and Bywater’s house,
-but the Poles seem also to have claimed rooms in the tenures of Richard
-Frith and Thomas Hale.[1572] It may be conjectured that these were the
-rooms constructed out of the blind parlour. On the other hand More
-made a counter-claim, probably not very serious, to Pole tenements in
-the occupation of Christopher Fenton, Thomas Austen, and John Lewes.
-Incidentally, it appears that Cawarden had not succeeded in removing
-all signs of papistry from the Blackfriars, for Bywater’s house is
-throughout described in the interrogatories taken as the little house
-having chalices and singing cakes painted in the window. The matter
-was referred to arbitration.[1573] Pole’s case rested entirely on the
-question of fact as to what the holding of Cheyne and his predecessors
-actually comprised in 1540, since the grant named no boundaries but
-merely gave Cheyne the houses and lands then in his own occupation and
-formerly in those of Jasper Fylole and of Thomas Ferebye and William
-Lylgrave. Pole produced some witnesses who declared that before the
-surrender by the friars one Purpointe had dwelt in Bywater’s house and
-kept a tavern in the fencing-school, and that subsequently Ferebye and
-Lylgrave had occupied these premises. They could not say that Cheyne
-himself had ever had possession of them, but Pole was able to cite the
-order of the Court of Augmentation in 1550 allowing Cheyne rent for his
-large room as a store-house for the tents. In More’s view this rent
-was paid under a misunderstanding, and he seems to have suggested
-that the only houses occupied by Cheyne and his predecessors were
-that afterwards occupied by Portinari and one ‘new built’ by Cheyne,
-in which apparently Lord Henry Seymour was living at the time of the
-suit. Moreover, he produced a number of witnesses, including Bywater,
-Blagrave, Thomas Hale, groom of the Tents, Portinari himself, and
-Elizabeth Baxter, widow of the former porter of the friars, who agreed
-in deposing that the friars had never let these rooms, which were
-essential as a breakfast room and a butler’s lodging to their daily
-life, and gave a perfectly consistent account of the various uses of
-them after the surrender by Cawarden, Woodman, Phillips, Blagrave, and
-Bywater, which have already been indicated in this narrative. It does
-not transpire that More confided to the arbitrators the suspicious
-references to Cheyne’s claim in the surveys of 1548 and 1550. However
-this may be, their decision was in his favour on the substantial issue.
-The Poles were required to acknowledge his right to Bywater’s house and
-the paved hall, as well as to the tenements of Frith and Hale. More, on
-the other hand, was to abandon his claim to the tenements of Fenton,
-Austen, and Lewes, and by way of compromise was to execute a lease of
-Bywater’s house to the Poles at a nominal rent for fifty years or the
-term of their lives. This he accordingly did. Nothing more is heard
-of any of the premises involved until July 1584, just after More had
-succeeded in putting an end to Lyly’s theatrical enterprise. By this
-date both Bywater and Joyner had gone, and their places had been taken
-by another fencing-master, an Italian, Rocco Bonetti by name.[1574]
-Bonetti had acquired from Margaret Pole, now a widow, her life-interest
-in the butler’s lodging. He had also taken over from Lyly two leases,
-one of the fencing-school, the other of a house, the property of
-More, immediately west of the butler’s lodging.[1575] The latter he
-had repaired at some cost. He had even been rash enough to put up
-additional buildings on More’s land. And he had not paid his workmen,
-to whom he owed £200. The butler’s lodging is described as being in
-great decay. But this also, or its site, he appears to have enlarged,
-at the expense of his neighbouring tenement on the west. He feared the
-expiration of his interests, and got his friends, of whom were Lord
-Willoughby, Sir John North, and Sir Walter Raleigh, to approach More
-for an extension of tenure. As regards the western house, More seems to
-have consented, after much reluctance in view of Bonetti’s indebted
-condition, to a lease for seven years in 1586.[1576] As regards the
-butler’s lodging, he was mainly interested in the reversion after Mrs.
-Pole’s death, and of this reversion he granted Bonetti a ten years’
-term by a lease of 20 March 1585.[1577] The holding is described in
-much the same terms as those used in Bywater’s lease of 1564. The
-measurements, however, are also given. The length from north to south
-was 25 ft. 2 in., and the width from east to west 22 ft. 6 in. But 4
-ft. 6 in. of the length and 2 ft. of the width were not covered by Mrs.
-Pole’s lease, and were taken, probably by an encroachment which the
-lease was intended to regularize, from More’s tenement to the west.
-For the sake of greater accuracy, the measurements and boundaries of
-this western tenement are given. It was 33 ft. from north to south and
-39 ft. 8 in. from east to west. It was bounded on the north by More’s
-yard, on the south and west by a house of Mrs. Pole’s, on the south by
-the way to Sir George Carey’s house, and on the east by More’s house in
-Bonetti’s tenure, that is to say the house which is the subject of the
-lease.[1578]
-
-Sir George Carey was the eldest son of Lord Hunsdon, and himself
-became Lord Hunsdon on 22 July 1596.[1579] He is not traceable in the
-Blackfriars before 1585, but continued to reside there until his death
-in 1603. The way to his house corresponds in position with the way to
-Lady Kingston’s house of the 1548 survey, and he had pretty clearly
-acquired some or all of her property, including the infirmary under
-the upper frater.[1580] The way must have followed a line from Water
-Lane, much the same as that of the present Printing House Lane. The
-fencing-school was accessible from it by a door next to Carey’s.[1581]
-Certain other data of the early surveys are a little difficult to
-reconcile with those of the later documents. The surveys indicate three
-parallel rows of buildings, of a comparatively insignificant character,
-extending over a space roughly 80 ft. square between the frater block
-and Water Lane. The north row consisted of the two-storied Duchy
-Chamber, a narrow building 50 ft. by 17 ft., and the parlour of Sir
-John Portinari’s house. These had a frontage on the kitchen yard.
-South of them came the rest of Portinari’s house, and south of this
-the little chamber, 26 ft. long by 10 ft. wide, the little kitchen, 23
-ft. long by 22 ft. wide, and an entry to the latter, 30 ft. long by
-17 ft. wide, which I suppose to have debouched upon Water Lane. The
-little chamber and kitchen had their frontage on the way leading to
-Lady Kingston’s. The house referred to as Cheyne’s in the 1550 survey
-is probably that occupied by Portinari. But Cheyne must also have had
-other property in the same neighbourhood, which the surveys do not
-mention. There was the house, probably that described as ‘new built’ in
-1572, which he occupied himself, and which afterwards passed to Lord
-Henry Seymour.[1582] And there were the three tenements which More
-claimed, but did not secure in 1572. These premises were leased as a
-whole by the Poles to Christopher Fenton on 31 May 1571, and appear to
-have been gradually cut up into smaller holdings. By 1610 there were
-four tenants and by 1614 five. They bounded More’s property, and must
-have lain in the angle of Water Lane and the way to Lady Kingston’s,
-just south of the entry to the little kitchen.[1583]
-
-The little chamber of 1548 is undoubtedly the butler’s lodging leased
-to Bywater in 1564 and to Bonetti in 1585, which was a subject of the
-lawsuit in 1572. But whereas it measured 26 ft. by 10 ft. in 1548, it
-measured 22 ft. 6 in. by 25 ft. 2 in. in 1585, and the enumeration of
-rooms in the two leases show that, although Bonetti may have built a
-small additional room upon a bit of land filched from More, there had
-been no substantial change since 1564. Further, while in 1548 it was
-bounded on the north by Portinari’s holding, it was reached in 1564 by
-a railed and boarded entry across its yard, and documents of 1596 and
-1601 make it clear that this entry terminated in a small porch opening
-on the kitchen yard.[1584] Similarly the little kitchen, 23 ft. by 22
-ft., of 1548 had been replaced in 1584 by a house 33 ft. by 39 ft. 8
-in., and of this also Portinari’s house had ceased to be the boundary,
-and a yard of More’s had been substituted. Finally, More’s successor,
-Sir George More, was in a position in 1603 to sell to one John Tice a
-strip of land bounded by Tice’s house on the south, Water Lane on the
-west, and the kitchen yard on the north and east, which must have been
-just about where Portinari’s parlour stood at the time of the 1548
-survey.[1585] I am now approaching the region of conjecture, but there
-is only one way of accounting for the facts. More must have acquired
-and pulled down Portinari’s house, and thus not only let light and
-air into the somewhat congested district west of the frater, but also
-left room for extensions in the rear of the little houses fronting on
-the way to Lady Kingston’s. The extension of the little chamber he had
-probably himself undertaken before 1564. It did not interfere with the
-chalices and singing cakes in the window, or prevent the house from
-being in decay in 1585. In 1572 it could be seen that the house had
-been covered with lead, but presumably was so no longer.[1586] The
-extension of the little kitchen seems to have been an enterprise of
-Bonetti, of which More reaped the profits. The rest of the space gained
-was utilized for the fencing-school kitchen, for a staircase behind the
-Duchy Chamber, and for certain yards, all of which were in existence in
-1596.[1587] It is just possible that More also pulled down the west end
-of the Duchy Chamber.
-
-By 1596 both the fencing-school and the butler’s lodging had passed
-from the occupation of Bonetti. One Thomas Bruskett had the former and
-one John Favour the latter. This is the year of James Burbadge’s great
-enterprise of the second Blackfriars theatre. Our first intimation of
-it is from Lord Hunsdon, in a letter to More of 9 January 1596.[1588]
-He has heard that More has parted with part of his house for a
-play-house, and makes an offer for ‘your other howse, which once I had
-also’. The deed of sale by More to James Burbadge is dated 4 February
-1596.[1589] The purchase money was £600. The rooms transferred are
-carefully described, but only a few of the measurements and boundaries
-are given. There were seven great upper rooms, ‘sometyme being one
-greate and entire room’, enclosed with great stone walls, and reached
-by a great pair of winding stairs from the great yard next the Pipe
-Office. Other stone stairs reached leads above. These rooms had been
-lately in the tenure of William de Laune, doctor of physic. Beneath
-them, or beneath an entry between them and the Pipe Office, lay a
-vault, of which Burbadge was to have the use only, by a ‘stoole and
-tonnell’ contrived in the thickness of his north wall.[1590] Under some
-part of De Laune’s seven rooms, and included in the sale, lay also
-rooms 52 ft. long and 37 ft. wide, known as the ‘midle romes’ or ‘midle
-stories’. These extended south to Sir George Carey’s house, and were
-reached from a lane leading thereto, by a door next to Carey’s gate.
-They had been in the tenure of Rocco Bonetti and were now in that of
-Thomas Bruskett, together with a kitchen adjoining, and two cellars
-reached by stairs from the kitchen, and lying under the north end of
-the middle rooms. Bruskett had one of these, and the other was occupied
-by John Favor, who dwelt in the house held for the term of her life by
-Mrs. Pole. This house did not go to Burbadge, but he had one of two
-small yards of which Favor had the other, between Mrs. Pole’s house and
-the cellars. This yard was occupied by Peter Johnson, and Burbadge also
-took four rooms tenanted by Johnson, and surrounded by his yard on the
-south, Mrs. Pole’s entry on the west, and the great yard next the Pipe
-Office on the north. Two of these were under De Laune’s late rooms. The
-other two were under rooms, to the west of the north end of De Laune’s,
-which were occupied by Charles Bradshaw, possibly the Bradshaw whose
-room was begged by Farrant in 1576. Bradshaw also occupied a little
-buttery, an entry and passage from the seven rooms, and a little room
-for wood and coals. This lay over the buttery, on the west side of a
-staircase leading to two rooms or lofts, one of which was over the east
-and north of Bradshaw’s rooms and the other over the entry between the
-seven rooms and the Pipe Office. These were in the occupation of Edward
-Merry, who also had a room or garret over them reached by a further
-staircase. A staircase also led from Peter Johnson’s yard to Bradshaw’s
-rooms. Both Bradshaw’s and Merry’s rooms were included in Burbadge’s
-purchase, which was completed by a small yard and privy on the north
-side of Pipe Office yard, east of Water Lane, south of Cobham’s house,
-and west of a house of More’s also occupied by Cobham. Burbadge was
-also to have the right of depositing coal and other goods for a
-reasonable time in the old kitchen yard, now called ‘the greate yarde
-next the Pipe Office’, provided he did not interfere with access to the
-Pipe Office itself, or to More’s garden or other parts of his premises.
-The description seems complicated, as one reads the deed, but I think
-that the disposition of the rooms is fairly intelligible.[1591] The
-seven upper rooms, once a single great room, can only represent the
-whole of the old parliament chamber or upper frater, formerly divided
-into two distinct holdings. This, as we know, abutted across the
-staircase upon the hall in the northern block which had formed part of
-Farrant’s holding and which More had converted into the Pipe Office
-in 1591.[1592] The middle rooms, together with the two easternmost of
-Johnson’s rooms, must together represent the space of the paved hall
-and blind parlour. There is no reason to suppose that Burbadge bought
-from More, or that More ever possessed, anything beyond this space
-on the ground floor of the frater block; and if the hall and parlour
-were, as I have suggested, of equal size, the total space passing to
-Burbadge on this floor was 74 ft. from north to south and 52 ft. from
-east to west. The rest of the floor had been Lady Kingston’s and passed
-to Sir George Carey.[1593] Johnson’s other two rooms and Bradshaw’s
-rooms above them, lying to the west of the north end of the seven great
-rooms, must be the two floors of the Duchy Chamber. The yards behind
-them were rendered possible by the clearance of Portinari’s house.
-Bradshaw’s two smaller rooms were on the staircase tower, and Merry’s
-rooms and garret were partly at the top of this staircase and partly
-above the Duchy Chamber.
-
- DIAGRAMS OF BLACKFRIARS
-
- 1596
-
- [Illustration: A. LOWER STORY]
-
- [Illustration: B. UPPER STORY]
-
-The property purchased by Burbadge was extended at various dates after
-his death in February 1597 by his sons Cuthbert and Richard. On 26 June
-1601 they bought for £95 from Sir George More the reversion of the
-butler’s lodging, subject to the life-interest of Mrs. Pole and to the
-ten years’ lease after her death, which had in the interval since 1585
-passed from Rocco Bonetti to Thomas Bruskett.[1594] On 30 May 1610 they
-purchased two-thirds of the interests of the heirs of Mrs. Pole and of
-a mortgagee in the houses formerly held by Christopher Fenton, and on
-7 July 1614 also purchased the remaining interest. These houses cost
-them in all £170.[1595] If, as is not unlikely, they also purchased
-at some time the house which in 1585 stood on the site of the little
-kitchen of 1548, and the bit of land sold to John Tice in 1603, the
-whole of the plot between the frater on the east, Water Lane on the
-west, the kitchen yard on the north, and the way to Lord Hunsdon’s
-house on the south, will have passed into their hands. There is no
-indication that they ever acquired any part of Lord Hunsdon’s house.
-This was apparently occupied by the French ambassador in 1623, when
-one of its upper rooms, used as a chapel, fell, and many persons were
-killed. Camden in his notes for Jacobean annals confused this room with
-the theatre.[1596] About 1629 the King’s printers, Robert Barker and
-John Bill, secured Hunsdon House for their press, and it remained the
-King’s printing house until the Great Fire.[1597] On 19 December 1612
-the Burbadges obtained from the Cobham estate a piece of land for the
-enlargement of the yard near the Pipe Office, which was serving twenty
-years later to turn coaches in.[1598]
-
-To make an end for the present of topography, the fortunes of the
-property to the north of the Burbadge purchases may be briefly traced.
-Sir William More died in 1601 and his son and successor, Sir George,
-had no need for a Pipe Office. The rooms were therefore leased, with
-others, on 23 April 1601 to Sir Jerome Bowes at a rent of £14 6_s._
-8_d._ ‘and certein glasses’.[1599] I think that the other rooms
-included the old lavatory of the friars, once a Revels store-house and
-thereafter a wash-house for More’s mansion, and that it was in this
-room that Bowes established the glass-house which became an important
-industry of the Blackfriars.[1600] On 19 June 1609 Sir George More sold
-this property, subject to Bowes’s lease, together with the mansion
-house, the great garden and all that remained to him within the great
-cloister, to a syndicate, whose members in 1611 divided the purchase
-amongst themselves.[1601] The former Pipe Office, now called the
-gate-house, with its yard, part of the glass-house, and a strip of the
-garden 23 ft. 10 in. wide passed to William Banister. Banister’s son
-Thomas sold them in 1616 to Gideon De Laune and De Laune in 1617 to
-Jacob Hardratt. Then Hardratt rebuilt the property and in 1619 sold
-back to De Laune a tenement which extended 43 ft. from north to south,
-and 24 ft. westwards from ‘the great gate near the play-house’ to the
-tenement occupied by a widow Basil. It had a small garden on the east,
-lying south of another garden belonging to De Laune.[1602] The length
-of 43 ft. exceeds by 6 ft., the width of an entry, that of the Pipe
-Office rooms, the site of which De Laune’s tenement no doubt occupied.
-
-The big sale of 1609 did not include the kitchen and kitchen stairs
-built by Sir Henry Neville about 1560, or the wood yard which enclosed
-them. A bit of this yard had been included in Burbadge’s purchase of
-1596. The rest of the property, with the water supply, had been bought
-on 11 March 1601, by Henry Lord Cobham, whose house it underlay.[1603]
-It had in fact been held by his father as far back as 1596.[1604] In
-1603 Cobham was attainted. His Blackfriars property was forfeited to
-the Crown, but regranted to his widow, Lady Kildare, and for some
-years remained in the hands of trustees for her and her daughter Lady
-Howard.[1605] In 1612 an additional bit of the wood yard was sold,
-as already stated, to the Burbadges. Finally, in 1632 the estate was
-conveyed to the Company of Apothecaries, in whose hands it has since
-remained.[1606] They must also have acquired the house of Gideon De
-Laune, who was one of their founders, and therefore their present
-premises, in their extent of 116 ft. from north to south, exactly
-replace the ‘northern block’ of buildings which stood to the west of
-the main Blackfriars cloister, when Sir Thomas Cawarden took possession
-of it in 1550.
-
-James Burbadge was not destined to see the success of his adventure.
-After all, he was prevented from establishing his theatre in 1596.
-Play-houses had just been suppressed in the City, and a number of the
-more important inhabitants of the Blackfriars disliked the idea of one
-being opened in their select residential precinct, where no common
-play-house had yet been seen. Farrant’s theatre, nominally intended
-for the private practice of the Chapel boys, was presumably regarded
-as not falling within the category of common play-houses. A petition
-was sent to the Privy Council, amongst the signatories to which were
-Burbadge’s neighbour, Sir George Carey, now Lord Hunsdon, Elizabeth
-Lady Russell, who lived a little farther up Water Lane, and Richard
-Field, the printer of Shakespeare’s poems.[1607] The extant copy of
-the petition is not dated, but later references assign it to November
-1596, and inform us that as a result the Privy Council forbade the use
-of the house.[1608] On James Burbadge’s death in February 1597 the
-Blackfriars property passed to his son Richard.[1609] It is not known
-what use he made of it before 1600, but in that year the resumption
-of plays by the Chapel children under Nathaniel Giles gave him an
-opportunity of following Farrant’s example, and letting the theatre for
-what were practically public performances ‘vnder the name of a private
-howse’.[1610] With Giles were associated one James Robinson and Henry
-Evans, who had already been concerned in the enterprise of John Lyly
-and the Earl of Oxford; and it was to Evans that, on 2 September 1600,
-Burbadge leased ‘the great hall or roome, with the roomes over the
-same, scituate within the precinct of the black Friours’, for a term
-of twenty-one years from Michaelmas 1600, at a rent of £40,[1611] while
-Evans and his son-in-law Alexander Hawkins gave a joint bond in £400
-as collateral security for due payment. Evans set up a company, which
-under various names, and throughout shifting financial managements,
-maintained a substantial continuity of existence, and occupied the
-Blackfriars for a period of eight years. Its fortunes are dealt with
-in detail elsewhere.[1612] Only those points directly bearing upon
-the theatre as such need now be noted. In October 1601, when Evans
-was negotiating a partnership with Edward Kirkham, William Rastall,
-and Thomas Kendall, he apparently undertook to transfer his lease to
-Hawkins in trust to reassign a moiety of the interest under it to
-these partners.[1613] No reassignment, however, was in fact made.
-Evans carried out some repairs in December 1603, and trouble arose
-with his partners because he severed the school-house and chamber over
-the same from the great hall and used them as private apartments to
-dine and sup in.[1614] When the playing companies were hard hit by the
-plague of 1603–4, Evans began to treat with Burbadge for a surrender
-of the lease.[1615] This came to nothing at the time, but in August
-1608, when the Revels company was in disgrace for playing Chapman’s
-_Byron_ and Kirkham had declared a desire to make an end of the
-speculation, the suggestion was revived, and the surrender, probably
-with the assent of Hawkins, actually took place.[1616] As part of his
-consideration, Evans, through a nominee, was admitted by Burbadge into
-a new syndicate, of which the other members were Burbadge himself and
-his brother Cuthbert, and some of the leading players of the King’s
-company, by whom it was intended that the Blackfriars should now be
-used.[1617] The King’s men probably entered upon their occupation of
-the theatre in the autumn of 1609, and thereafter used it alternatively
-with the Globe, as their winter house, up to the end of their career
-in 1642.[1618] The new syndicate consisted of seven partners, who may
-be called ‘housekeepers’, in accordance with the terminology found in
-use in 1635, in order to distinguish them from the ‘sharers’ in the
-acting profits of the company.[1619] On 9 August 1608 Richard Burbadge
-executed six leases, each conveying a seventh part of the play-house
-for a term of twenty-one years from the previous midsummer, and
-entailing the payment of a seventh part of the rent of £40. The six
-lessees were his brother Cuthbert, John Heminges, William Shakespeare,
-Henry Condell, William Sly, and Thomas Evans. The remaining interest
-he no doubt retained himself. Sly, however, died five days later, and
-his share was surrendered by his executrix, and divided amongst the
-other partners. On 25 August 1611 it was transferred to William Ostler.
-After his death on 16 December 1614 it should have passed to his widow,
-Thomasina, but her father John Heminges retained it, and in 1629 she
-estimated that he had thus defrauded her of profits at the rate of £20
-a year.[1620] At some date later than 1611 John Underwood must have
-been admitted to a share, for he owned one at his death in 1624. The
-original leases terminated in 1629. Probably new ones were then entered
-into, for by 1633 we find that the rent had been increased to £50, and
-in 1635 that the interest of the housekeepers had still four years to
-run, and that it was divided not into seven, but into eight parts.
-Cuthbert Burbadge and the widows of Richard Burbadge and Henry Condell
-still represented the original holders. Two parts had been bought in
-1633 and 1634 from Heminges’s son by John Shank. One part was still
-held in the name of Underwood, but a third of it was apparently in
-the hands of Eillart Swanston. John Lowin and Joseph Taylor had each
-a part. As a result of the dispute the Lord Chamberlain ordered a new
-partition under which Shank resigned one share to be divided between
-Swanston, Thomas Pollard, and Robert Benfield.[1621]
-
-The occupation of the Blackfriars by the King’s men was not wholly
-peaceful. The beginning of their tenure almost exactly coincided with
-the grant of the new charter by which the jurisdiction of the City was
-extended to the precinct.[1622] It was not, however, until 1619 that
-an attempt was made to invoke this jurisdiction against them. In that
-year the officials of the precinct and the church of St. Anne’s, backed
-up by a few of the inhabitants, sent a petition to the Corporation,
-in which they recited the inconveniences due to a play-house in their
-midst, recalled the action taken by the Privy Council in 1596, as well
-as the Star Chamber order of 1600 limiting the London play-houses to
-two, and begged that conformity to the wishes of the Council might be
-enforced. The Corporation made an order for the suppression of the
-Blackfriars on 21 January 1619.[1623] It clearly remained inoperative,
-but explains why the King’s men thought it desirable to obtain a fresh
-patent, dated on 27 March 1619, in which their right to play at ‘their
-private house scituate in the precinctes of the Blackfriers’, as well
-as at the Globe, was explicitly stated.[1624] They had to face another
-attack in 1631. Their opponents on this occasion approached Laud, then
-Bishop of London.[1625] After some delay Laud seems to have brought the
-matter before the Privy Council. The idea was mooted of buying the
-players out and on 9 October 1633 a commission of Middlesex justices
-was appointed to report as to the value of their interests.[1626] These
-were estimated by the players at £21,990, and by the commissioners at
-£2,900. The only offer towards a compensation fund was one of £100 from
-the parish of St. Anne’s.[1627] Evidently the proposal was allowed to
-drop. On 20 November 1633, the Privy Council made an order forbidding
-coaches to stand in Ludgate or St. Paul’s Churchyard while the
-performances were going on, but even this regulation was practically
-cancelled by an amending order made at a meeting presided over by the
-King in person on 29 December.[1628]
-
-It is rather disappointing that the numerous documents bearing upon
-the occupation of the Blackfriars between 1600 and 1608 should throw
-so little light upon the way in which James Burbadge adapted his
-purchase ‘with great charge and troble’ to the purposes of a theatre.
-The lease of 1600 did not cover the whole of the property, but only a
-‘great hall or roome, with the roomes over the same’. Presumably this
-was the case also with the leases of 1608, since the rent was the same
-as in 1600. The rest of the premises, with those purchased later by
-the younger Burbadges, may be represented by the four tenements valued
-at £75 a year in 1633, and the ‘piece of void ground to turn coaches’
-valued at £6 was doubtless the fragment of the old kitchen yard north
-of the approach. The Kirkham lawsuits tell us that one or two rooms
-were reserved for the residence of Evans in 1602 and that during the
-early part of 1604 ‘a certen rome, called the Scholehouse, and a certen
-chamber over the same’ had been ‘seuered from the said great hall, and
-made fitt by’ Evans ‘at his owne proper cost and chardges, to dyne and
-supp in’.[1629] Professor Wallace has a number of additional lawsuits,
-still unpublished.[1630] But the extracts from these given by him in
-1908 add only a few details to those formerly known. They seem to
-amount to this. The hall was 66 ft. from north to south and 46 ft. from
-east to west. It was paved, and had a stage, galleries, and seats of
-which a schedule was attached to the lease. The stage was at one end
-of the hall. The school-house was at the north end of the hall.[1631]
-At this end also must have been the entrance, as one of the petitions
-of 1619 locates it near the way used from part of the precinct in
-going to church.[1632] It was doubtless by the gate-house entry to
-the cloister, just beyond where the coaches turned. Unfortunately one
-is left quite in doubt upon the critical question as to which of the
-rooms known to us from earlier records were used for the theatre. It
-might have been the upper frater with the partitions removed; it might
-have been constructed out of the paved hall and blind parlour beneath,
-which appear to be represented by the ‘midle romes’ and two of the
-rooms in the occupation of Peter Johnson enumerated in the conveyance
-to Burbadge. _A priori_ one would have thought the upper frater the
-most likely. It may very well have been paved, like the hall beneath
-it, and a chamber which had held parliaments and a legatine trial
-could amply suffice to hold a theatre. On this supposition the rooms
-‘above’ the hall which were conveyed by the lease of 1600, and one of
-which Evans converted into a dining-room can only have been the room
-over the staircase and the garret over that. These, indeed, may have
-extended over the north end of the frater proper, although in the main
-that building appears, down to the time when Burbadge bought it, to
-have had nothing over it but leads.[1633] There is a serious difficulty
-in the way of the alternative theory, which would identify the theatre
-with the ‘midle romes’ on the ground floor. This is that these would
-most likely only be low rooms, vaulted to carry the heavy floor of the
-parliament chamber above. On the whole, the balance of probability
-appears to be strongly in favour of the upper frater.
-
-Professor Wallace’s account of the matter is categorical. ‘The south
-section’, he says, ‘underwent a thorough transformation. The two
-stories were converted into the auditorium called “the great Hall or
-Room”.... The roof was changed, and rooms, probably of the usual dormer
-sort, were built above the Great Hall.’[1634] I do not know whether
-there is any evidence for this theory, which disregards a good many
-structural difficulties, in those parts of his recently discovered
-documents which Professor Wallace has not published; there is certainly
-none in those which he has. If not, I do not think we must assume
-that Burbadge undertook expensive building operations, when he had
-all the facilities for planning an admirable auditorium without them.
-Professor Wallace seems to have been led into his conjecture by an
-assumed necessity for providing space for three tiers of galleries.
-There is no such necessity, and in fact no evidence for more than one
-tier, although I dare say that the upper frater taken by itself was
-high enough for two. Professor Wallace cites a reference to ‘porticibus
-_anglice_ galleryes’, and points out that ‘galleryes’ is a plural.
-This is so, but the ‘galleryes’ were not necessarily superimposed; if
-one ran along the east side of the hall and the other along the west,
-they would still constitute a plural. Professor Wallace takes the step
-from his plural to three with the aid of Cockledemoy’s address to ‘my
-very fine Heliconian gallants, and you, my worshipful friends in the
-middle region’.[1635] Obviously the ‘middle region’ is not bound to be
-the middle one of three galleries; it may just as well be the space
-between the stage and the galleries.
-
-It is beyond the scope of this inquiry to trace the detailed fortunes
-of the Blackfriars during its later years. By Caroline times it took
-place of the Globe as the principal and most profitable house of
-the King’s men.[1636] In 1653, when like the rest of the theatres
-it was closed, Richard Flecknoe recalled its origin and wrote its
-epitaph.[1637] It was pulled down on 6 August 1655.[1638] This site
-was used for tenements, which in course of time were replaced by _The
-Times_ office which now occupies the site.[1639]
-
-
- ii. THE WHITEFRIARS
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The relevant dissertations are
- P. Cunningham, _The Whitefriars, the Salisbury Court, and
- the Duke’s Theatres_ (1849, _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 89), J.
- Greenstreet, _The Whitefriars Theatre in the Time of Shakspere_
- (1888, _N. S. S. Trans._ 269), with text of the Bill and Answer
- in the Chancery suit of _Androwes v. Slater_ (1609), and A. W.
- Clapham, _The Topography of the Carmelite Priory of London_
- (1910, _Brit. Arch. Assoc. Journal_, n. s. xvi. 15), with
- seventeenth-century plan of the precinct, reproduced by Adams,
- 312.]
-
-The only suggestion of a sixteenth-century play-house in the
-Whitefriars is to be found in the statement of Richard Rawlidge in 1628
-that one was suppressed there at a date under Elizabeth which he does
-not specify, but which may most plausibly be put at 1596 (cf. p. 359).
-It is not improbable that Rawlidge wrote ‘Whitefriars’ when he should
-have written ‘Blackfriars’, but Malone (_Var._ iii. 46, 52) accepted
-the statement and assigned the suppression to 1580. I do not suppose
-that Collier had any other basis than this for the ‘more then 30
-yeares’ of the following description which he alleged to be an extract
-from ‘an original survey of some part of the precinct, made in March
-1616’ in his possession, and printed in his _New Facts_ (1835), 44:
-
- ‘The Theater is situate near vnto the Bishopps House, and was
- in former times a hall or refectorie belonging to the dissolved
- Monastery. It hath beene vsed as a place for the presentation
- of playes and enterludes for more then 30 yeares, last by the
- Children of her Majestie. It hath little or no furniture for a
- play-house, saving an old tottered curten, some decayed benches,
- and a few worne out properties and peeces of Arras for hangings
- to the stage and tire house. The raine hath made its way in and
- if it bee not repaired, it must soone be plucked downe or it
- will fall.’
-
-The earliest record, therefore, on which reliance can be placed is
-the lawsuit of _Androwes v. Slater_ in 1609,[1640] which recites
-the lease by Robert Lord Buckhurst to Michael Drayton and Thomas
-Woodford for six years eight months and twenty days from March 1608 of
-‘a messuage or mansion howse parcell of the late dissolved monastery
-called the Whitefriars, in Fleete streete, in the subvrbs of London’,
-while the articles of agreement between the sharers of the King’s
-Revels syndicate (cf. ch. xii), of the same date, assign lodgings in
-the house to Martin Slater, and add
-
- ‘The roomes of which howse are thirteene in number, three belowe
- and tenne above, that is to saie, the greate hall, the kitchin
- by the yard, and a cellar, with all the roomes from the east
- ende of the howse to the Master of the revells’ office, as the
- same are now severed and devided.’[1641]
-
-The precinct of the former priory of the Carmelites or White Friars lay
-between Fleet Street and the river, to the east of Serjeants’ Inn and
-to the west of Water Lane, which divided it from Salisbury Court, the
-old inn of the bishops of Salisbury, which had passed to the Sackvilles
-in the sixteenth century, and ultimately became known as Dorset House
-(Stowe, _Survey_, ii. 45). The precinct was a liberty, and its history,
-from the point of view of local government, had been closely analogous
-to that of the Blackfriars. Like the Blackfriars, it came under
-complete civic control in this very year of 1608 (cf. p. 480). The
-Whitefriars mansion itself the Sackvilles probably acquired from the
-family of Thomas Lord De La Warr, to whom a grant of priory property
-was made in 1544 (Dugdale, vi. 1572).
-
-From the King’s Revels the Whitefriars passed to the occupation of
-the Queen’s Revels (cf. ch. xii) in 1609, and continued in their use
-both before and after their amalgamation with the Lady Elizabeth’s in
-March 1613. It is named on the title-pages of _Woman a Weathercock_
-(1612) and _The Insatiate Countess_ (1613), and a reference in the
-prologue to ‘daughters of Whitefriars’ shows that it was also the
-locality of _Epicoene_ (1609). In February 1613 it was ‘taken up’
-by some London apprentices for an invitation performance of Robert
-Tailor’s _The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl_ (q.v.). From March 1613 the
-amalgamated companies had Bankside theatres available, first the Swan
-and afterwards the Hope, but it is clear from the Watermen’s petition
-(cf. p. 370) that, at any rate before the Hope was built, they mainly
-used the Whitefriars. Daborne in a letter to Henslowe of 5 June 1613
-speaks of the company ‘comming over’, presumably from the Whitefriars
-to Bankside, and on 9 Dec. 1613 suggests that a play of his would be
-suitable for Henslowe’s ‘publique howse’, from which it may perhaps be
-inferred that Henslowe had also an interest in a ‘private’ house at the
-time (_Henslowe Papers_, 72, 79). Apparently conversion into a public
-theatre was then contemplated, for on 13 July 1613 the Master of the
-Revels received a fee of £20 ‘for a license to erect a new play-house
-in the White-friers, &c.’ (_Var._ iii. 52). But this scheme was stopped
-by the Privy Council.[1642] On 3 June 1615 Rosseter and others obtained
-their patent for the Porter’s Hall theatre in Blackfriars (cf. p.
-472), which contemplated its use by the Revels, the Prince’s, and the
-Lady Elizabeth’s, and incidentally recited that the Revels Children
-had been trained and exercised in the Whitefriars ‘ever since’ 1610.
-The amalgamation was dissolved in the spring of 1616, and the Lady
-Elizabeth’s and the Revels probably disappeared from London. If,
-therefore, the Whitefriars continued in use, it was probably by Prince
-Charles’s men, who would have been left homeless by the demolition
-of Porter’s Hall early in 1617. That it did continue in use and that
-a renewed lease was still held by some of the parties interested in
-the house in 1608 is indicated by the suit of _Trevell v. Woodford_
-before the Court of Requests in 1642, from which it appears, according
-to Peter Cunningham, that Sir Anthony Ashley, the then landlord of
-the house, entered the theatre in 1621, and turned out the players,
-on the pretence that half a year’s rent was due to him. In 1629 the
-Whitefriars was replaced by the Salisbury Court theatre, built on the
-site of an old barn just on the other side of Water Lane.
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
-
- THE STRUCTURE AND CONDUCT OF THEATRES
-
- [_Bibliographical Note._--The only Restoration treatises which
- throw any light on the pre-Restoration theatre are R. Flecknoe,
- _A Short Discourse of the English Stage_ (1664), and J. Wright,
- _Historia Histrionica_ (1699), extracts from which are in
- Appendix I.
-
- Archaeological material was brought together by E. Malone in
- _Variorum_ iii. 51, and J. P. Collier in _H. E. D. P._
- iii. 140.
-
- Modern investigation may be said to begin with the discovery of
- the Swan drawing in 1888. The principal dissertations up to 1916
- are:
-
- K. T. Gaedertz, _Zur Kenntnis der altenglischen Bühne_ (1888);
- H. B. Wheatley, _On a contemporary Drawing of the interior of
- the Swan Theatre_, 1596 (1888, _N. S. S. Trans. 1887–92_, 215);
- W. Archer, _A Sixteenth-Century Play-house_ (1888, _Universal
- Review_), _The Stage of Shakespeare_ (10 Aug. 1907, _Tribune_),
- _The Fortune Theatre_, 1600 (12 Oct. 1907, _Tribune_, repr.
- _Jahrbuch_, xliv. 159), _The Swan Drawing_ (11 Jan. 1908,
- _Tribune_), _The Elizabethan Stage_ (1908, _Quarterly Review_,
- ccviii. 442), _The Play-house_ (1916, _Shakespeare’s England_,
- ii. 283); R. Genée, _Ueber die scenischen Formen Shakespeare’s
- in ihrem Verhältnisse zur Bühne seiner Zeit_ (1891, _Jahrbuch_,
- xxvi. 131); E. Kilian, _Die scenischen Formen Shakespeares
- in ihrer Beziehung zu der Aufführung seiner Dramen auf der
- modernen Bühne_ (1893, _Jahrbuch_, xxviii. 90), _Shakespeare
- auf der modernen Bühne_ (1900, _Jahrbuch_, xxxvi. 228); H.
- Logeman, _Johannes de Witt’s Visit to the Swan Theatre_ (1897,
- _Anglia_, xix. 117); C. Grabau, _Zur englischen Bühne um
- 1600_ (1902, _Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 232); W. J. Lawrence, _Some
- Characteristics of the Elizabethan-Stuart Stage_ (1902, _E.
- S._ xxxii. 36), _The Elizabethan Play-house_ (1912, 1913),
- _Night Performances in the Elizabethan Theatres_ (1915, _E.
- S._ xlviii. 213), _New Light on the Elizabethan Theatre_ (May
- 1916, _Fortnightly Review_), _A Forgotten Play-house Custom of
- Shakespeare’s Day_ (1916, _Book of Homage_, 207), _Horses on
- the Elizabethan Stage_ (_T. L. S._ 5 June 1919), _He’s for a
- Jig or ---- _ (_T. L. S._ 3 July 1919); K. Mantzius, _History
- of Theatrical Art_ (1903–9); E. E. Hale, _The Influence of
- Theatrical Conditions on Shakespeare_ (1904, _M. P._ i. 171);
- E. Koeppel, _Die unkritische Behandlung dramaturgischer Angaben
- in den Shakespeare-Ausgaben_ (1904, _E. S._ xxxiv. 1); W. Bang,
- _Zur Bühne Shakespeares_ (1904, _Jahrbuch_, xl. 223); W. Keller,
- _Nochmals zur Bühne Shakespeares_ (1904, _Jahrbuch_, xl. 225);
- A. H. Tolman, _Shakespeare’s Stage and Modern Adaptations_
- (1904, _Views about Hamlet_, 115), _Alternation in the Staging
- of Shakespeare’s Plays_ (1909, _M. P._ vi. 517); C. Brodmeier,
- _Die Shakespeare-Bühne nach den alten Bühnenanweisungen_ (1904);
- R. Prölss, _Von den ältesten Drucken der Dramen Shakespeares_
- (1905); P. Monkemeyer, _Prolegomena zu einer Darstellung der
- englischen Volksbühne_ (1905); G. P. Baker, _Hamlet on an
- Elizabethan Stage_ (1905, _Jahrbuch_, xli. 296), _Elizabethan
- Stage Theories_ (3 Nov. 1905, _The Times Literary Supplement_);
- C. H. Kaulfuss-Diesch, _Die Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an
- der Wende des 16 und 17 Jahrhunderts_ (1905); G. F. Reynolds,
- _Some Principles of Elizabethan Staging_ (1905, _M. P._ i. 581,
- ii. 69), _Trees on the Stage of Shakespeare_ (1907, _M. P._ v.
- 153), _What we know of the Elizabethan Stage_ (1911, _M. P._ ix.
- 47), _William Percy and his Plays_ (1914, _M. P._ xii. 109);
- J. Corbin, _Shakespeare and the Plastic Stage_ (1906, _Atlantic
- Monthly_, xcvii. 369), _Shakespeare his Own Stage Manager_
- (1911, _Century_, lxxxiii. 260); R. Bridges, _On the Influence
- of the Audience_ (1907, _Stratford Town Shakespeare_, x. 321);
- E. K. Chambers, _On the Stage of the Globe_ (1907, _Stratford
- Town Shakespeare_, x. 351); C. C. Stopes, _Elizabethan Stage
- Scenery_ (June 1907, _Fortnightly Review_); R. Wegener, _Die
- Bühneneinrichtung des Shakespeareschen Theaters_ (1907); W.
- H. Godfrey, _An Elizabethan Play-house_ (1908, _Architectural
- Review_, xxiii. 239; cf. xxxi. 53); C. W. Wallace, _The
- Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars_ (1908); F. Schelling,
- _The Elizabethan Play-house_ (1908, _Proc. of Philadelphia
- Num. and Antiq. Soc._); A. A. Helmholtz-Phelan, _The Staging
- of Court Dramas before 1595_ (1909, _M. L. A._ xxiv. 185); V.
- E. Albright, _The Shaksperian Stage_ (1909), _Percy’s Plays as
- Proof of the Elizabethan Stage_ (1913, _M. P._ xi. 237); A.
- R. Skemp, _Some Characteristics of the English Stage before
- the Restoration_ (1909, _Jahrbuch_, xlv. 101); W. Creizenach,
- _Bühnenwasen und Schauspielkunst_ (1909, _Gesch. des neueren
- Dramas_, iv. 401); B. Neuendorff, _Die englische Volksbühne im
- Zeitalter Shakespeares nach den Bühnenanweisungen_ (1910); H.
- H. Child, _The Elizabethan Theatre_ (1910, _C. H._ vi. 241); H.
- Conrad, _Bemerkungen zu Lawrence’ Title and Locality Boards_
- (1910, _Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 106); C. R. Baskervill, _The Custom
- of Sitting on the Elizabethan Stage_ (1911, _M. P._ viii.
- 581); J. Q. Adams, _The Four Pictorial Representations of the
- Elizabethan Stage_ (April 1911, _J. G. P._); F. A. Foster,
- _Dumb Show in Elizabethan Drama before 1620_ (1911, _E. S._
- xliv. 8); A. Forestier, _The Fortune Theatre Reconstructed_ (12
- Aug. 1911, _Illustrated London News_); M. B. Evans, _An Early
- Type of Stage_ (1912, _M. P._ ix. 421); T. S. Graves, _A Note
- on the Swan Theatre_ (1912, _M. P._ ix. 431), _Night Scenes in
- the Elizabethan Theatres_ (1913, _E. S._ xlvii. 63), _The Court
- and the London Theaters during the Reign of Elizabeth_ (1913),
- _The Origin of the Custom of Sitting upon the Stage_ (1914, _J.
- E. G. P._ xiii. 104), _The Act Time in Elizabethan Theatres_
- (1915, _Univ. of Carolina, Studies in Philology_, xii. 3), _The
- Ass as Actor_ (1916, _S. Atlantic Quarterly_, xv. 175); G. H.
- Cowling, _Music on the Shakespearian Stage_ (1913); H. Bell,
- _Contributions to the History of the English Play-house_ (1913,
- _Architectural Record_, 262, 359); W. G. Keith, _The Designs
- for the first Movable Scenery on the English Stage_ (1914,
- _Burlington Magazine_, xxv. 29, 85); W. Poel, _Shakespeare in
- the Theatre_ (1915), _Some Notes on Shakespeare’s Stage and
- Plays_ (1916); J. Le G. Brereton, _De Witt at the Swan_ (1916,
- _Book of Homage_, 204); A. H. Thorndike, _Shakespeare’s Theater_
- (1916); T. H. Dickinson, _Some Principles of Shakespeare
- Staging_ (1916, _Wisconsin Shakespeare Studies_, 125). More
- recent papers are noted in the _Bulletin_ of the English
- Association. R. C. Rhodes’ _The Stagery of Shakespeare_ (1922)
- deserves consideration.
-
- It remains to give some account of the iconographical material
- available. Of four representations of the interiors of
- play-houses, the only one of early date (_c._ 1596) is (_a_)
- Arend van Buchell’s copy of a drawing by Johannes de Witt of
- the Swan, published in 1888 by Gaedertz and in more accurate
- facsimile by Wheatley (_vide supra_). The other three are
- Caroline. (_b_) A small engraving in a compartment of the
- title-page of W. Alabaster, _Roxana_ (1632), may be taken as
- representing a type of academic stage, as the play was at
- Trinity, Cambridge, _c._ 1592. (_c_) A very similar engraving
- in the title-page of N. Richards, _Messallina_ (1640), if it
- represents a specific stage at all, is less likely to represent
- the second Fortune, as suggested by Skemp in his edition of
- the play, or the Red Bull, as suggested by Albright, 45,
- than Salisbury Court, where it is clear from Murray, i. 279,
- that most of the career of the Revels company, by whom it
- was produced, was spent. (_d_) An engraved frontispiece to
- Francis Kirkman’s editions (1672, 1673) of _The Wits, or Sport
- upon Sport_ (originally published by Marsh, 1662) has been
- shown by Albright, 40, to have been erroneously regarded as a
- representation of the Red Bull, to which there is an incidental
- reference in the preface to Part II, and must be taken to show
- the type of stage on which the ‘drolls’ contained in the book
- were given ‘when the publique Theatres were shut up’.
-
- A Court interlude, with performers and spectators, might be
- supposed to be represented in (_e_) a woodcut prefixed to
- Wilson’s _Three Lords and Three Ladies of London_ (1590), but
- the subject is not that of the play, and the cut is shown by A.
- W. Pollard (_English Miracle Plays_, ed. 6, 1914) to be taken
- from S. Batman, _The Travayled Pylgrime_ (1569), and ultimately
- from a fifteenth-century illustration to O. de la Marche’s
- _Chevalier Délibéré_.
-
- Of the exteriors of theatres there are (_f_) a small engraving
- of _Theatrum_ in a compartment of the title-page of Jonson’s
- _Works_ (1616), which may be merely a bit of classical
- archaeology, but appears to have the characteristic Elizabethan
- hut, and (_g_) a series of representations, or perhaps only
- cartographical symbols, in the various maps detailed in the
- bibliographical note to ch. xvi. Doubtfully authentic is (_h_) a
- façade of the Blackfriars, reproduced by Baker, 78, from a print
- in the collection of Mr. Henry Gardiner, with a note (44) that
- the owner and various antiquarians ‘believe it genuine’; and
- almost certainly misnamed (_i_) a façade engraved as a relic of
- the second Fortune in R. Wilkinson, _Londina Illustrata_ (1819),
- ii. 141, and elsewhere, which is plausibly assigned by W. J.
- Lawrence, _Restoration Stage Nurseries_, in _Archiv_ (1914),
- 301, to a post-Restoration training-school for young actors.
-
- A small ground-plan (_k_) of the Swan appears upon a manor map
- of Paris Garden in 1627, reproduced by W. Rendle in Harrison,
- ii, App. I.
-
- A rough engraving (_l_) on the title-page of _Cornucopia,
- Pasquils Nightcap_ (1612) shows a section of the orchestra of a
- classical play-house as seen from the stage, and throws no light
- on contemporary conditions; and (_m_) the design by Inigo Jones
- described in ch. vii is of uncertain date, and intended for the
- private Cockpit theatre at Whitehall.
-
- I know of no representation of an English provincial stage,
- and unfortunately E. Mentzel, who describes (_Gesch. der
- Schauspielkunst in Frankfurt am Main_, 38) a woodcut of a
- play, with signboards, by English actors, probably at Frankfort,
- Nuremberg, or Cassel, in 1597, does not reproduce it. Some
- notion of the improvised stages used by travelling companies for
- out-of-door performances may be obtained from the continental
- engravings reproduced by Bapst, 153, by Rigal in _Petit de
- Julleville_, iii. 264, 296, and by M. B. Evans, _An Early
- Type of Stage_ (_M. P._ ix. 421).
-
- An engraving of the Restoration stage of the Theatre Royal,
- Drury Lane (built 1663), from _Ariane, ou Le Mariage de
- Bacchus_ (1674), and another of the same house as altered in
- 1696, from _Unhappy Kindness_ (1697), are reproduced by
- Lawrence, i. 169; ii. 140. Of the five engravings of the Duke’s
- Theatre, Dorset Garden (built 1671), in E. Settle, _Empress
- of Morocco_ (1673), one is reproduced by Albright, 47, and
- another by Lawrence, ii. 160, and Thorndike, 110.
-
- Graphic attempts to reconstruct the plan and elevation of a
- typical Elizabethan stage will be found in the dissertations
- cited above of Brodmeier, Wegener, Archer, Godfrey, Albright,
- Corbin (1911, by G. Varian and J. Hambridge), and Forestier, and
- in the picture reproduced in W. N. Hills, _The Shakespearian
- Stage_ (1919).
-
- Various revivals have also been carried out on Elizabethan
- stages, with more or less of archaeological purism, notably
- in London (W. Poel, _Shakespeare in the Theatre_), Paris
- (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxxv. 383), Harvard (G. P. Baker in
- _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xli. 296), and Munich (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlii.
- 327).]
-
-A history of the theatres would not be complete without some account of
-their general structure and economy in the disposition of auditorium
-and stage. I propose to begin with the more assured or less important
-points, as a clearing of the way for the difficult and controverted
-problems of scenic setting, on some of which I am afraid that no very
-secure conclusion can be reached.
-
- [Illustration]
-
-It is necessary, in the forefront, to appreciate the distinction
-between the ‘common’ or ‘public’ play-houses and the ‘private’ houses,
-which, so far as our period is concerned, were Paul’s, the Blackfriars,
-and the Whitefriars. This distinction is in its origin somewhat a
-technical one, for there is no reason to suppose that in the private
-houses the performances were private, in the sense that access to them
-could not be obtained, on payment, by members of the general public.
-Probably it is to be explained in relation to the Elizabethan system
-of State control of theatres, and represents an attempt to evade the
-limitations on the location and the number of play-houses which had
-been established through the action, first of the civic authorities
-and later of the Privy Council itself. This view receives support from
-the allegations made during the campaign for the suppression of the
-Blackfriars in 1619 that the owner ‘doth vnder the name of a private
-howse (respectinge indeed private comoditie only) convert the said
-howse to a publique play-house’.[1643]
-
-It can hardly be supposed, however, that Burbadge could have hoodwinked
-the Privy Council merely by calling the Blackfriars a ‘private’
-house, without finding any other means of differentiating it from
-the ‘public’ houses, and it is quite possible that the technical
-distinction, for which modern analogies could be found, consisted in
-the fact that admission was paid for in advance and no money taken
-at the doors.[1644] Mr. Lawrence has very appropriately quoted in
-this connexion the Common Council regulations of 1574, in which
-an exception is made for performances ‘withowte publique or comen
-collection of money of the auditorie, or behoulders theareof’; and
-though I do not suggest that the extension of this principle to
-Paul’s or the Blackfriars fell within the intention of the order,
-the evasion may have been allowed, within the gates of Paul’s or in
-a liberty, and for a well-conducted house attended by a well-to-do
-audience, to hold.[1645] If so, it is probable that Paul’s from the
-beginning and the earlier Blackfriars were in effect private houses.
-But the actual terminology does not emerge before the revival of the
-boy companies in 1599 and 1600. For some years past the title-pages
-of plays had vaunted them as ‘publikely acted’.[1646] A corresponding
-‘priuately acted’ appears for Blackfriars in Jonson’s _Cynthia’s
-Revels_ (1601) and _Poetaster_ (1602), and for Paul’s in Middleton’s
-_Blurt Master Constable_ (1602), while the antithesis is complete in
-Dekker’s _Satiromastix_ (1602), which was presented ‘publikely’ by
-the Chamberlain’s and ‘priuately’ by Paul’s. Somewhat later we find
-Field’s _Woman a Weathercock_ (1612) acted ‘priuately’, and Chapman’s
-_Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois_ (1613) ‘at the priuate Play-house’ in the
-Whitefriars.[1647] But by this time the distinction may be taken for
-granted as well established in general use.[1648]
-
-From the point of view, however, of stage arrangements, the technical
-_differentia_ of a private house is less important than certain
-subsidiary characteristics.[1649] The private houses were all in
-closed buildings, were occupied by boys, and charged higher prices
-than the ordinary theatres. These facts entailed variations of
-structure and method, which will require attention at more than one
-point. They naturally became less fundamental, but did not entirely
-disappear, after the transfer of the Blackfriars to the King’s men
-in 1609, and probably passed still further into the background after
-the introduction of roofed public houses in the Caroline age.[1650]
-The title-pages generally describe the Blackfriars, the Cockpit, and
-Salisbury Court as ‘private’ houses right up to the closing of the
-theatres, but the term, in so far as it connotes anything different
-from ‘public’, seems to have lost what little meaning it ever had.[1651]
-
-De Witt, about 1596, describes the Theatre, Curtain, Rose, and Swan
-as ‘amphiteatra’, and Hentzner in 1598 adds that they were all
-‘lignea’.[1652] The Globe and the Hope were built later on the same
-structural model. The Fortune was also of wood, but square. Of the
-shape and material of the Red Bull we know nothing. Prologues and
-epilogues often refer to the internal appearance of the auditorium as
-presenting a ‘round’, ‘ring’, ‘circuit’, ‘circumference’, or ‘O’.[1653]
-If we can rely upon the draughtsmanship of the London maps, the
-external outline was rather that of a polygon. This evidence must not
-be pressed too far, for there is probably an element of cartographic
-symbolism to be reckoned with. The same house may appear in one map as
-a hexagon, in another as an octagon or decagon, and the late Hollar
-group differs from its predecessors in using a completely circular
-form. But there is confirmation in the Paris Garden manor map of
-1627, which shows the ground-plan of the Swan decagonal, and in the
-statement of Mrs. Thrale that the ruins of the Globe still visible in
-the eighteenth century were hexagonal without and round within. This
-was of course the later Globe built in 1613, and there is some reason
-for thinking that the earlier Globe may have been of rather different
-design. The verses on the fire by which it was destroyed speak of the
-stage-house ‘as round as taylers clewe’, and the early Hondius map,
-while it shows the Rose as polygonal, shows the Globe as circular,
-with the upper half of less diameter than the lower. This construction
-reappears in the Delaram drawings, and is so peculiar that the
-representation may well be realistic. There was an obvious precedent
-for the amphitheatrical form in the bear and bull rings which preceded
-the public theatres, and I do not know that we need go back with Ordish
-to a tradition of round mediaeval play-places, Cornish or English,
-or to the remains of Roman occupation. A ring is the natural form in
-which the maximum number of spectators can press about an object of
-interest.[1654]
-
-There is nothing to show that, for the main fabric, any material but
-timber was used, until the Fortune was rebuilt of brick in 1623. Timber
-is provided for in the contracts for the earlier Fortune and the Hope,
-and these were modelled on the Globe and Swan. Oak was to be mainly
-used for the Hope; no fir in the lower or middle stories. Burbadge’s
-lawsuits show that timber was the chief object of his expenditure on
-the Theatre, although some ironwork was also employed, presumably to
-tie the woodwork together. The dismantled fabric of the Theatre was
-used for the Globe. Henslowe used a good deal of timber for the repairs
-of the Rose in 1592–3, and did the house ‘about with ealme bordes’ in
-1595. There was also some brickwork, and the Fortune and Hope were
-to have brick foundations, a foot above the ground. The Fortune was
-to be covered with lath, lime, and hair without. Henslowe also used
-plaster, and I do not see anything inconsistent with a substantially
-wooden structure in De Witt’s statement that the Swan was ‘constructum
-ex coaceruato lapide pyrritide ... ligneis suffultum columnis’. This
-has been regarded as an error which prejudices the reliability of De
-Witt’s observations, but the description is too precise to be disproved
-by Hentzner’s generalized ‘lignea’, and after all the strength of the
-building was naturally in the columns, and the flints and mortar--a
-common form of walling in the chalk districts of England--may well have
-filled up the interstices between these. De Witt adds that the columns
-might deceive the shrewdest ‘ob illitum marmoreum colorem’.[1655]
-
-De Witt has also been criticized for giving the seating capacity of
-the Swan as 3,000. I dare say this is merely the exaggerated round
-estimate of a casual visitor, but Wheatley calculates from the drawing
-that the galleries might hold 2,000, and it would not be surprising
-if our rude forefathers sat a bit closer than we care to do. Moryson
-speaks even more largely of theatres ‘more remarkable for the number,
-and the capacity, than for the building’, and ‘capable of many
-thousands’, while no less than 2,000 got into Trinity College hall for
-the academic plays of 1615.[1656] The frame of the Fortune was 80 ft.
-square without and 55 ft. square within. This allows a depth of 12½ ft.
-for the galleries, and Corbin calculates a seating capacity, allowing
-18 in. for a seat and 18 in. square for a standing man, of 2,138 or
-2,558 at a pinch.[1657] We do not know that the Swan was not larger
-than the Fortune, and have therefore no right to assume that De Witt
-was seriously out. Wright tells us that the Globe, Fortune, and Red
-Bull were ‘large’ houses; he is comparing them with the private houses
-of Caroline days.[1658] The allusion in _Old Fortunatus_ to the ‘small
-circumference’ of the Rose perhaps hardly indicates that it was below
-the average size.
-
-The Swan drawing is our one contemporary picture of the interior of
-a public play-house, and it is a dangerous business to explain away
-its evidence by an assumption of inaccurate observation on the part
-of De Witt, merely because that evidence conflicts with subjective
-interpretations of stage-directions, arrived at in the course of
-the pursuit of a ‘typical’ stage. Still less can it be discredited
-on the ground that it was merely made by Van Buchell on ‘hearsay
-evidence’ from the instructions of De Witt.[1659] It is a copy, like
-the accompanying description on the same piece of paper, of De Witt’s
-original, which De Witt says he drew (‘adpinxi’) in order to bring
-out an analogy which had struck him between the English and the Roman
-theatres. It was for this reason also, no doubt, that he marked certain
-features of the structure on the drawing with the names of what he
-thought to be their classical prototypes. I do not, of course, suggest
-that the drawing has the authority of a photographic record. De Witt is
-more likely to have made it as an afterthought in his inn than during
-the actual performance, and he may well have omitted or misrepresented
-features. Certainly he can hardly have seen the trumpeter sounding
-when the action had already begun. And the draughtsmanship is bad, and
-may have been made worse by the copyist.[1660] The upper part is done,
-with an attempt at perspective, as he may have seen it from a point
-in the middle, or perhaps the upper, gallery somewhat to the right
-of the centre; the lower part as from full face, so that the pillars
-stand equidistant from the edges of the stage, as they would not have
-appeared to him in perspective. His doors and the compartments of his
-stage gallery are of uneven sizes.[1661] But, with all its faults,
-the drawing is the inevitable basis of any comprehensive account of
-the main structural features of a play-house, and I propose, leaving
-aside for the present the question of the possible hangings which it
-does not show, to take its parts one by one and illustrate them from
-other sources, and in particular from Henslowe’s contracts for the
-construction of the Fortune in 1600 and the Hope in 1614.[1662]
-
-The outline of the building is round, or slightly ovoid.[1663] The
-floor, which shows no traces of seating, is marked ‘planities siue
-arena’. This is the space ordinarily known as the ‘yard’, a name which
-it may fairly be taken to have inherited from the inn-yards, surrounded
-by galleries and open overhead, in which, in the days before the
-building of the Theatre in 1576, more or less permanent play-houses
-had grown up.[1664] Spectators in the yard always stood, and the more
-unstable psychology of a standing, as compared with a seated, crowd
-must always be taken into account in estimating the temperament of an
-Elizabethan audience. These are the ‘groundlings’, and the poets take
-their revenge for occasional scenes of turbulence in open or covert
-sneers at their ‘understanding’.[1665]
-
-Well into the yard, leaving space for the groundlings on three sides of
-it, projects a quadrangular stage, which is marked ‘proscaenium’.[1666]
-The breadth is perhaps rather greater than the depth.[1667] This was
-certainly the case at the Fortune, where the stage was 43 ft. wide,
-and extended ‘to the middle of the yarde’, a distance of 27½ ft. The
-level of the stage may be some 3 or 4 ft. above the ground. Two solid
-trestles forming part of its supports are visible, but at the Fortune
-it was paled in with oak, and in view of the common use of the space
-below the stage to facilitate apparitions and other episodes requiring
-traps, this was probably the normal arrangement.[1668] It has been
-thought that the stage of the Swan, like that of the Hope, which was
-in many respects modelled upon it, may have been removable. But this
-is hardly consistent with the heavy pillars which, in this respect
-certainly unlike the Hope, it carries. Moreover, the Hope had to be
-available for bear-baiting, which entailed an open arena, and there
-is no evidence, and very little likelihood, that baiting ever took
-place at the Swan. Like other theatres, it sometimes accommodated
-gymnasts and fencers, but these would use the stage.[1669] There are
-no rails round the stage, such as we may infer the existence of at
-the Globe.[1670] The only scenic apparatus visible is a large bench,
-on which a lady sits, while another stands behind her in an attitude
-of surprise, at the rapid approach from an outer corner of the stage
-of a man in an affected attitude, with a hat on his head and a long
-staff in his hand. You might take him for Malvolio cross-gartered, were
-there any chance that _Twelfth Night_ could have been written when
-the drawing was made, or produced at the Swan.[1671] Probably he is
-a returning traveller or a messenger bringing news. The floor of the
-stage is apparently bare. Sometimes rushes were laid down, at any rate
-for interior scenes.[1672] The Globe produced _Henry VIII_ in 1613
-‘with many extraordinary circumstances of pomp and majesty, even to the
-matting of the stage’.
-
-Circling the yard and raised above it are three tiers of galleries,
-each containing three rows of seats. Beneath the first gallery De Witt
-wrote ‘orchestra’, above its seats ‘sedilia’, and between the middle
-and upper galleries ‘porticus’. In the classical theatre ‘porticus’ was
-the name for a covered gallery, and the classical analogy also makes
-it clear that by ‘orchestra’ De Witt meant to indicate the position
-occupied by the spectators of highest rank, corresponding to the seats
-of Roman senators, to which the name of the obsolete dancing place
-immediately in front of them had been transferred. It was not until the
-Restoration that the orchestra was allocated to the music.[1673] The
-fronts of the galleries are supported by a number of turned posts. In
-the Fortune all the chief supports, presumably both in the auditorium
-and on the stage, were to be square and made ‘palasterwise, with carved
-proporcions called Satiers’. Internal painting was contemplated, but
-was not covered by the contract. Other references to painted theatres
-suggest that the Elizabethan builders were not content with bare
-scaffolds, but aimed at a decorative effect.[1674] Three seems to have
-been the regular number of galleries. Kiechel bears witness to it for
-the Theatre and Curtain in 1585; and there were three at the Fortune
-and at the Hope. The lowest gallery at the Fortune was 12 ft. high,
-the next 11 ft., and the uppermost 9 ft., and each of the two latter
-jutted out 10 in. beyond that below. This gives a total height of 32
-ft., about three-fifths of the interior width of the house. The maps,
-therefore, make the buildings rather disproportionately high. The
-uppermost gallery has a roof, marked ‘tectum’. This in the earlier
-Globe was of thatch, which caused the fire of 1613, and left the
-unlucky King’s men with little but ‘wit to cover it with tiles’. I
-think the Rose was also thatched; but the Fortune and Hope were tiled.
-In view of the jetties, such a roof would give some protection to those
-in the galleries, but the groundlings had none. Both the drawing and
-the maps confirm the statement of Wright that the Globe, Fortune, and
-Red Bull were ‘partly open to the weather’, and this was doubtless also
-the case with their predecessors.[1675]
-
-De Witt does not indicate any internal gallery partitions, but the
-Swan had these by 1614, for they were to be the model for ‘two boxes
-in the lowermost storie fitt and decent for gentlemen to sitt in’,
-which were to be constructed at the Hope. Similarly the Fortune was
-to have ‘ffower convenient divisions for gentlemens roomes, and other
-sufficient and convenient divisions for twoe pennie roomes, with
-necessarie seates’. These were to be ceiled with lath and plaster. An
-earlier example of the technical use of the term ‘room’ for a division
-of the auditorium occurs in the draft Theatre lease of 1585, which
-gave the landlord a right to sit or stand in ‘some one of the upper
-romes’, if the places were not already taken up. If the clause, like
-the rest of the draft, merely reproduced the covenants of the 1576
-lease, the term was of long standing. Probably the divisions were of
-varying sizes. There would not have been much point in cutting up the
-space available for ‘two-pennie roomes’ into very small sections, but
-there were also ‘priuate roomes’, which are perhaps the same as the
-‘gentlemens roomes’ of the contracts.[1676] If so, these were probably
-to the right and left of the stage in the lowest gallery. But the whole
-question of seating and prices is rather difficult, and it is further
-complicated by obscurely discerned changes of fashion, which involved
-the adoption of the very inconvenient custom of sitting on the stage,
-and the consequent abandonment by the gentry of what was called the
-lord’s room. Prices also, no doubt, tended to grow, at any rate for
-the better seats; the ‘popular’ prices always remained low.[1677] I do
-not know whether the professional actors ever contented themselves,
-after their establishment in London, with merely sending round the
-hat, or, in mediaeval phrase, making a ‘gatheryng’.[1678] Fixed prices
-must certainly have been the rule by the time of Kiechel’s visit in
-1585, for he tells us that, on the occasion of a new play, double
-prices were charged. This practice helps to explain the fluctuating
-receipts in Henslowe’s diary, and was still in force in the seventeenth
-century.[1679] Spenser and his friends could have their laugh at a
-play for 1_d._ or 2_d._ in 1579, and ten years later Martin Marprelate
-could be seen for 2_d._ at the Theatre and 4_d._ at Paul’s.[1680]
-Higher prices are already characteristic of the private houses. In
-1596 Lambarde informs us of a regular scale, apparently applicable to
-all public entertainments. None, he says, who ‘goe to Paris Gardein,
-the Bell Savage or Theatre, to beholde beare baiting, enterludes or
-fence play, can account of any pleasant spectacle unlesse they first
-pay one pennie at the gate, another at the entrie of the scaffolde
-and the thirde for a quiet standing’. Platter, in 1599, reports the
-same scale and adds a distinction, not made by Lambarde, between
-standings and seats. You paid 1_d._ to stand on the level, 1_d._ at
-an inner door to sit, and 1_d._ at a third door for one of the best
-places with a cushion.[1681] The two-penny galleries or rooms long
-continued to be the resort of the ordinary playgoer, if he was not
-satisfied to stand in the yard for a penny.[1682] He sat close, and
-the insolent poets and pamphleteers classed him with the groundlings
-as a ‘stinkard’.[1683] His domain certainly included the top gallery,
-but about the other galleries I am not sure. There are some puzzling
-allusions to penny galleries and rooms, but probably, these are not
-distinct from the ‘two-penny’ ones, and the explanation is to be found
-in the practice of paying the twopence in two instalments, one on
-entrance, the other at the gallery door.[1684] It did not long remain
-possible to get one of the best seats for the 3_d._ quoted by Platter,
-even if there was not already in his time a higher charge for ‘the
-priuate roomes of greater price’.[1685] There were both sixpenny
-and twelve-penny rooms by 1604.[1686] These may have been the same
-private rooms at varying prices, according as the play was old or
-new. I take it that you only got a single seat, even in a ‘private’
-room, for your 6_d._ or 12_d._, and not the whole room. Overbury or
-another gives 12_d._ as the price of the ‘best room’ as late as about
-1614, but in the same year the ordinary scale of charges was greatly
-exceeded throughout the house on the production of _Bartholomew Fair_
-at the Hope, where a speaker in the induction says, ‘it shall be
-lawful to judge his six-penny-worth, his twelve-penny-worth, so to his
-eighteen-pence, two shillings, half a crown, to the value of his place,
-provided always his place get not above his wit’. This must have been
-a quite exceptional occasion, not merely a new play, but a new play at
-a new house. Similarly, when Richard Vennar brought the gulls to his
-swindle of _England’s Joy_ in 1602, ‘the price at cumming in was two
-shillings or eighteen-pence at least’.
-
-A special compartment in one of the galleries was not the only
-privilege offered to the more fashionable playgoer. He might, at one
-time or another, sit ‘over the stage’ and on the stage. De Witt’s
-drawing shows, at the back of the stage, a raised gallery divided into
-six small boxes, in each of which one or two spectators appear to be
-placed.[1687] It is reasonable to suppose that these are sitting ‘over
-the stage’.[1688] And some or all of those ‘over the stage’ again,
-appear to have sat in ‘the lords room’ or ‘rooms’.[1689] Of such a
-room we first hear in 1592, when Henslowe, repairing the Rose, paid
-10_s._ ‘for sellynge of the Rome ouer the tyerhowsse’ and 13_s._ ‘for
-sellinges my lords Rome’. The entry rather suggests that this was
-not so much a room for ‘lords’, as a room primarily reserved for the
-particular ‘lord’, under whose patronage the actors played; but however
-this may be, it was probably available by courtesy for other persons of
-distinction. The practice of sitting on the stage itself first emerges
-about 1596.[1690] It was general by the seventeenth century, and was
-apparently most encouraged at the Blackfriars, where it perhaps lent
-itself best to the structural character of the building.[1691] It was
-known at Paul’s, but was inconvenient on so small a stage.[1692] And,
-as it certainly originated at the public houses, so it maintained
-itself there, in spite of the grumbles of the ordinary spectators,
-with whose view of the action the throng of feathered and restless
-gallants necessarily interfered.[1693] It may have been profitable to
-the actors as sharers, but as actors they resented the restriction
-of the space available for their movements which it entailed.[1694]
-The prologue to Jonson’s _The Devil is an Ass_ of 1616 contains a
-vigorous protest.[1695] But the gallant liked to be seen as well as to
-see, and liked to slip in and out of the tiring-house and hob-nob with
-the players. It was not until Caroline times that the custom became
-intolerable.[1696] On the stage stools were provided for those who
-did not care to sit on the rushes, and for these they paid at least
-sixpence and sometimes a shilling.[1697] One result of the introduction
-of sitting on the stage appears to have been that the lord’s room
-lost its attractiveness and consequently its status. It fell into the
-background, and became the haunt of a rather disreputable class of
-playgoer. The lords were now to be found either on the stage itself,
-or in the private rooms of the lower gallery. Presumably the ‘grate’
-to which the courtier of Sir John Davies’ epigram relegated himself,
-was in the lord’s room, perhaps fitted with a casement for scenic
-purposes.[1698] The change is chronicled by Dekker in the passage of
-_The Gull’s Horn Book_, in which the gull is instructed how to behave
-himself in a play-house. He must by all means advance himself up to the
-throne of the stage.
-
- ‘I meane not into the Lords roome (which is now but the
- Stages Suburbs): no, those boxes, by the iniquity of custome,
- conspiracy of waiting-women and Gentlemen-Ushers, that there
- sweat together, and the couetousnes of Sharers, are contemptibly
- thrust into the reare, and much new Satten is there dambd, by
- being smothred to death in darknesse.’
-
-I return to the guidance of De Witt. The boarding between the yard
-and the lower gallery, which in the Fortune was overlaid with iron
-pikes, presumably to prevent the groundlings from climbing over, shows
-two apertures, to right and left of the stage, one of which is marked
-‘ingressus’. From these steps lead to the lower gallery itself, and
-we may infer the presence of a passage to staircases behind, by which
-the upper galleries were reached. The contracts show that the Fortune,
-like the Globe, and the Hope, like the Swan, were to have external
-staircases.[1699] Perhaps this accounts for the greater diameter of the
-lower part of the Globe in the London maps. Of external doors there
-were only two at the Globe, which caused trouble at the time of the
-fire, and two also at the Fortune, when Alleyn leased a share of it
-to Henslowe in 1601. One of these would in each case have been a door
-to the tiring-house, giving access to the stage and the lord’s room,
-while the other served the body of the theatre.[1700] Those bound for
-the galleries paid their pennies at the theatre door, passed through
-the yard to the ‘ingressus’, and made additional payments there and
-in the ‘rooms’, according to the places selected.[1701] The custom
-explains itself by the arrangement between the sharers of companies
-and the housekeepers of theatres, which gave the latter a proportion
-of gallery takings in lieu of rent. ‘Gatherers’, appointed by the
-persons interested, collected the money, and although this was put
-into a locked box, whence the modern term ‘box-office’, there were
-abundant opportunities for fraud. At need, the gatherers could serve as
-supernumeraries on the stage.[1702]
-
-At the back of the stage, and forming a chord to an arc of the circular
-structure of the play-house, runs a straight wall, pierced by two
-pairs of folding doors, on which De Witt has written ‘mimorum aedes’.
-Above it is the gallery or lord’s room already described. This wall
-is the ‘scene’, in the primary sense; it is also the front of the
-‘tire-house’, or in modern phrase ‘green-room’, a necessary adjunct
-of every theatre. The Theatre depositions of 1592 speak of this as
-‘the attyring housse or place where the players make them readye’.
-The drawing indicates nothing in the way of hangings over either wall
-or doors, but in some theatres these certainly existed. Thus Peacham,
-in his _Thalia’s Banquet_ (1620) referring to much earlier days,
-tells us that
-
- Tarlton when his head was onely seene,
- The Tire-house doore and Tapistrie betweene,
- Set all the multitude in such a laughter,
- They could not hold for scarce an hour after.[1703]
-
-The front of the tiring-house is the ‘scene’ in the Renaissance
-sense, and its characteristics will be of great concern in later
-chapters.[1704] The Fortune tire-house was to be within the frame of
-the theatre, and would not, therefore, unless it projected on to the
-stage, have more depth than about 12 ft. Mr. Brereton, in a careful
-analysis of the drawing, suggests that the Swan tire-house may not have
-extended the full width of the stage, but may have left room to come
-and go on either side of its front.[1705] If so, some projection is not
-improbable, but one cannot rely much upon the hazardous interpretation
-of bad draughtsmanship. The ground-plan of the Swan seems to show an
-annexe at one point, and of course additional depth could easily be
-obtained in this way. Moreover, there were at least three stories
-available. The spectators in the lord’s room would not take up the
-whole depth on the level of the middle gallery, and there must have
-been a corresponding space on that of the top gallery. Henslowe ceiled
-‘the rome ouer the tyerhowsse’ in 1592, and an inventory of the
-Admiral’s men in 1598 includes effects ‘leaft above in the tier-house
-in the cheast’. No doubt a fair amount of accommodation was needed. The
-tire-house was not merely a dressing-room and a store-house. Here came
-the author, to rail at the murdering of his lines, and the gallants
-to gossip and patronize the players.[1706] Here were the book-holder,
-who prompted the speeches, surveyed the entrances and exits, and saw
-to the readiness of the properties;[1707] the tireman, who fitted the
-dresses and the beards, furnished stools, and in the private theatres
-took charge of the lights;[1708] the stage-keeper;[1709] the grooms
-and ‘necessary attendants’, waiting to draw curtains, to thrust out
-beds, and to carry benches and banquets on and off.[1710] Here, too,
-was the head-quarters of the music, although in the public theatres the
-music was largely incidental, and was often played on, or above, or
-even below the stage, as might seem most appropriate to any particular
-action.[1711] Music between the acts was not unknown, but we learn
-from the induction to the _Malcontent_ that it was ‘not received’ by
-the audience at the Globe in 1604.[1712] There was also, of course, the
-final ‘jig’.[1713] For an overture, the public theatres seem to have
-employed nothing beyond three soundings of a trumpet, the last of which
-was the signal for the prologue to begin.[1714] Probably the musical
-element tended to increase. A special music-room perhaps existed
-already at the Swan in 1611, and, if so, may have been, as it was in
-the later theatres, in the upper part of the tire-house.[1715]
-
-The Fortune tire-house was to have ‘convenient windowes and lightes
-glazed’. Some of these may have looked into the auditorium, and have
-been used for scenic purposes. But the maps show external windows here
-and there in the walls, and these would be necessary to light both the
-tire-house and the galleries. We have a picture of Burbadge leaning
-out of an upper window to greet with abuse the disturbers of his peace
-at the Theatre in 1590. The yard and the stage itself were, of course,
-lit, in the absence of a roof, from above. Performances were ordinarily
-by daylight; before the end of the sixteenth century the time for
-beginning had been fixed at 2 o’clock.[1716] The stage-directions point
-to a frequent enough use of lamps and tapers, but always to give the
-illusion of scenic darkness. Plays, however, lasted at least two hours,
-sometimes half an hour or even an hour longer, and there was the jig to
-follow.[1717] It must therefore be doubtful whether, in the depth of
-winter, daylight could have served quite to the end. Webster complains
-that the ill-success of _The White Devil_ was due to its being
-given ‘in so dull a time of winter, and presented in so open and black
-a theatre’. Perhaps the shorter plays were chosen for the shorter days,
-or the jig was omitted. But it is also possible that some primitive
-illumination, in the form of cressets, or baskets of tarred and flaring
-rope, was introduced.[1718]
-
-The actors themselves were not wholly without protection from the
-elements. De Witt depicts two heavy classical columns, which stand
-on square bases rather farther back than the middle of the stage and
-a little way from each side of it. These support a pent-house roof,
-which starts from the level of the eaves of the ‘tectum’ over the
-top gallery, and descends in a steep slope to a level opposite to
-the middle of the second gallery, where it slightly projects beyond
-the supporting columns. Behind and above it rises a kind of hut,
-conspicuous above the ‘tectum’ and forming a superstructure to the
-tire-house. Its front has less width than that of the tire-house, and
-its side is shown in clumsy perspective, which is apparently followed
-round by the pent-house below it. The pent-house is the only thing
-in the drawing, that can represent the ‘shadow’ or ‘heavens’, which
-several allusions point to as a regular feature in the public theatres,
-and which certainly existed at the Rose, the Fortune--and therefore
-presumably the Globe--and the Hope.[1719] But it must be admitted that
-this sharply sloping roof, coming down low and considerably impeding
-the vision of the spectators at any rate in the top gallery, does not
-agree very well with the notion of a heavens dominating the stage,
-elaborately decorated, and serving for the display of spectacular
-effects, which were surely meant to be visible to all. It is possible
-that De Witt’s halting draughtsmanship has failed him in the attempt
-to tackle the architectural perspective from a difficult angle in an
-upper gallery. My impression is that, by giving too much height to the
-bottom gallery, he has got the two other galleries out of line with
-the stories of the tire-house to which they correspond, and that the
-lower gallery should really be on the level of the stage, the middle
-gallery on that of the gallery ‘over the stage’, and the top gallery
-on that of the rather obscure story above. If so, the front of this
-story would have been visible, and may have contained some aperture
-of which account has not yet been taken in formulating theories of
-staging.[1720] And I think that the columns were really higher and the
-roof flatter than De Witt has drawn them. It is perhaps less easy to
-suggest that the columns stood farther forward than De Witt has placed
-them, but the roof may well have projected farther over them. They are
-solid enough to bear a much greater weight than the drawing indicates.
-However these things may have been at the Swan--I am not blind to
-the dangers of attempting to convert what De Witt has shown into
-something which he has not shown--one may, perhaps, infer that more
-extensive roofing than the pent-house of the drawing would afford was
-contemplated by the Fortune contract, which provides for ‘a shadowe or
-cover over the saide stadge’, and the Hope contract, which is even more
-precise in its specification of ‘the Heavens all over the saide stage’.
-In both cases there were to be gutters to carry away rain-water. The
-heavens at the Hope were ‘to be borne or carryed without any postes
-or supporters to be fixed or sett uppon the saide stage’, and it has
-been thought that other theatres of later date than the Swan may also
-have dispensed with posts. But there is little ground for this theory,
-other than the obvious obstruction which the posts would offer to
-vision.[1721] Howes seems to refer to the arrangement at the Hope as
-an innovation, and it can hardly be unrelated to the special need for
-a removable stage at that house. On the other hand the posts may very
-likely have been slighter than De Witt has shown them. At the Fortune
-they were, like other ‘princypall and maine postes’, square and carved
-‘palasterwise’ with satyrs. The posts are worked into the action of
-several plays, and Kempe tells us that pickpockets were pilloried by
-being tied to them.[1722]
-
-The hut has two windows in front, and a door in the visible side. It
-has been suggested that it may really have stood rather more forward
-than De Witt indicates, jutting out from the tire-house so as to be
-directly over a part of the heavens.[1723] An analogous superstructure
-is observable in most of the map-representations of theatres. That
-of the later Globe in Visscher’s map of 1616 seems to have two bays,
-one behind another, instead of the one bay of the Swan drawing, and
-would have required more space. The ‘Theatrum’ of Jonson’s 1616 Folio
-has an =L=-shaped superstructure. The object of a jut forward would
-be to facilitate the descents and ascents from and to the heavens,
-which formed popular features in many plays, and which must have been
-contrived by some kind of machinery from above.[1724] From the roof of
-this hut floats a flag, with the figure of a swan upon it, and at the
-door stands a man, apparently blowing a trumpet, from which depends a
-smaller flag also bearing a swan. There is abundant evidence that the
-play-houses flew flags when they were open for performances, and took
-them down when Lent or a plague rendered playing impossible.[1725]
-The trumpeter is no doubt giving one of the three ‘soundings’ which
-preluded the appearance of the prologue in his traditional long black
-velvet cloak.[1726] Nor did the flag and the trumpet exhaust the
-resources of the Elizabethan art of advertisement. The _vexillatores_
-of the miracle-play would perhaps have been out of keeping with
-London conditions.[1727] But it was customary to announce after the
-epilogue of each performance what the next was to be.[1728] And public
-notification was given by means of play-bills, of which we hear from
-as early a date as 1564, and which were set up on posts in conspicuous
-places up and down the city and probably also at the play-house
-doors.[1729] Copies seem also to have been available for circulation
-from hand to hand.[1730] On 30 October 1587 John Charlwood entered in
-the Stationers’ Register a licence for ‘the onely ympryntinge of all
-manner of billes for players’. This passed from him to James Roberts,
-and was transferred by Roberts to William Jaggard on 29 October
-1615.[1731] No theatrical bill of the Elizabethan or Jacobean period is
-preserved, although a manuscript bill for the Bear Garden is amongst
-Alleyn’s papers at Dulwich.[1732] Four late seventeenth-century bills
-are at Claydon; they are brief announcements, which give the names of
-the plays, but not those of the authors or actors.[1733] There is no
-evidence of anything corresponding to the modern programme, with its
-cast and synopsis of scenes.[1734] The audience gathered early, as
-there were few, if any, reserved seats.[1735] The period of waiting
-was spent in consuming fruit or sweatmeats and liquid refreshment, and
-in expressing impatience if the actors failed to make an appearance in
-good time.[1736] Tobacco was freely used, especially by the gallants
-on the stage.[1737] Books were also hawked up and down, and a game
-of cards might beguile the tedium of waiting.[1738] The galleries
-were full of light women, who found them a profitable haunt, but
-whose presence did not altogether prevent that of ladies of position,
-probably in the private rooms, and possibly masked.[1739]
-
-If the audience liked a play, the actors expected a _Plaudite_ of
-hand-clapping; if otherwise, they took their chance of hissing
-and ‘mewing’, or of a pointed withdrawal of spectators from the
-stage.[1740] The device of a _claque_ was not unknown.[1741] The
-applause was often invited in the closing speech or in a formal
-epilogue, on the same lines as the prologue, which it seems to have
-replaced in favour about the end of the sixteenth century.[1742]
-This might also lead up to or perhaps represent the prayer for the
-sovereign, of which there are traces up to a late date, and which
-was analogous to the modern use of ‘God Save the King’.[1743] The
-accompanying prayer for the ‘lord’ of the players, on the other hand,
-cannot be shown to have been adopted into the public theatres.[1744]
-Finally, the epilogue might indicate a coming dance.[1745] Of this a
-little more needs to be said. The players have amongst other elements
-in their ancestry the mediaeval mimes, and they inherit the familiar
-mimic tradition of multifarious entertainment. The ‘legitimate’ drama
-was not as yet on its pedestal. The companies of the ’eighties and even
-the early ’nineties were composed of men ready at need to eke out their
-plays by musical performances and even the ‘activities’ of acrobats.
-This is perhaps most obvious in the continental companies, which had
-to face the obstacles to a complete intelligence between stage and
-audience introduced at the tower of Babel. Such a cosmopolitan mingling
-of drama and ‘activities’ as we may suppose _The Labours of Hercules_
-to have been was a valuable resource.[1746] But at home also we find
-Strange’s and the Admiral’s men showing their ‘activities’ at court,
-and Symons the acrobat becoming a leader amongst the Queen’s, and
-even so late as 1601 Henslowe fitting out the Admiral’s boy Nick to
-tumble in the presence of royalty. The country tours of the Queen’s
-were for some time accompanied by a Turkish rope dancer.[1747] In
-the theatres themselves Italian players made their success and their
-scandal, with the help of tumbling women.[1748] Whether English players
-did the same we do not know. But we do know that the dance by way of
-afterpiece was a regular and enduring custom.[1749] It was known as
-the jig.[1750] At first, perhaps, nothing more than such dancing, with
-the help of a variety of foreign costumes, as was also an element in
-the early masks, it developed into a farcical dialogue, with a musical
-and Terpsichorean accompaniment, for which popular tunes, such as
-_Fading_, were utilized.[1751] This transformation was perhaps due to
-the initiative of Tarlton, to whom several jigs are attributed.[1752]
-But he was followed by Kempe and others, and in the last decade of
-the sixteenth century the jig may be inferred from the Stationers’
-Register to have become almost a literary type.[1753] Nashe in 1596
-threatens Gabriel Harvey with an interlude, and ‘a Jigge at the latter
-end in English Hexameters of _O neighbour Gabriell, and his wooing of
-Kate Cotton_’.[1754] In 1597 Henslowe bought two jigs from two young
-men for the Admiral’s at a cost of 6_s._ 8_d._[1755] In 1598 ‘Kemps
-Jigge’ was being sung in the streets.[1756] The Middlesex justices
-made a special order against the lewd jigs, songs, and dances at the
-Fortune in 1612.[1757] Unfortunately few jigs have survived except from
-a late date or in German adaptations.[1758] Two or three, however,
-appear amongst collections of ballads to which they are cognate in
-metrical form, notably one ascribed to ‘M^r Attowel’, whom we should,
-I think, identify with the sixteenth-century George, rather than the
-seventeenth-century Hugh, of that name.[1759] Another, _Rowland’s
-Godson_, seems to be the surviving member of a well-known cycle.[1760]
-
-Nor was the jig the only form of afterpiece which had its savour in
-an Elizabethan play-house. Tarlton again, and after Tarlton Wilson,
-won reputation in the handling of ‘themes’, which appear to have been
-improvisations in verse, strung together on some motive supplied by
-a member of the audience.[1761] It has been suggested that complete
-plays were also sometimes given by the method of improvised dialogue
-on a concerted plot which was followed in the Italian _commedie
-dell’ arte_.[1762] This must remain very doubtful. The Italian
-practice and the stock characters, pantaloon, zany, and harlequin, of
-the _commedie dell’ arte_ were certainly known in England; but we
-have the clear evidence of _The Case is Altered_ that by 1597 at
-any rate they had not been naturalized.[1763] If improvisation went
-beyond the gagging of a clown, it was probably only in some exceptional
-experiment or _tour de force_.[1764] As exceptional also we may
-regard Vennar’s spectacular _Englands Joy_ of 1602 and the wager
-plays, in which actors or even amateurs challenged each other to
-compete in rendering some ‘part’ of traditional repute.[1765] One would
-like to know more about the play, apparently a monologue, ‘set out al
-by one virgin’, at the Theatre in 1583.[1766]
-
-Many of the characteristics of the public theatres naturally repeated
-themselves at the Blackfriars, the Whitefriars, and Paul’s. The
-distinctive features of these, as already indicated, arose from the
-structure of the buildings, from the higher prices charged, and in the
-beginning at least from the employment of singing boys as actors. Some
-assimilation of ‘public’ and ‘private’ methods was bound to follow
-upon the acquisition of the Blackfriars by men actors in 1609, but the
-period during which this was the principal house of the King’s company
-lies outside the scope of this survey.
-
-The exact location of Paul’s is obscure, but we know that its
-auditorium was round and its stage small.[1767] Whitefriars and both
-the earlier and the later Blackfriars were in rooms which had formed
-part of mediaeval conventual buildings, rectangular, roofed, and more
-analogous to courtly halls than to popular rings. No room at Farrant’s
-disposal would have given him a stage of a greater width than 27 ft.
-Burbadge’s theatre was 66 ft. from north to south, and 46 ft. from
-east to west. It was on the second story of his purchase that he could
-have best constructed it. The stage, which stood on a paved floor, was
-probably towards the south end, and as the whole space available was
-something like 100 ft. long by 52 wide, we may guess that partitions
-had been put up to screen off a tiring-house behind it and a passage
-by which the tiring-house could be reached.[1768] The entrance would
-be at the north end, where a great flight of stairs led up from a
-yard large enough for coaches to turn in. There were galleries, but
-not necessarily three distinct tiers of galleries, as in the public
-theatres, for which, indeed, there would hardly have been height
-enough.[1769] And there was a ‘middle region’ in which the spectators
-sat, instead of standing as they did in the public ‘yards’.[1770] This,
-which was a feature also of the later private houses, came to be known
-as the ‘pit’, but as the derivation of this term is from ‘cockpit’,
-it may not be of earlier origin than the building of the Cockpit or
-Phoenix theatre in Drury Lane about 1617.[1771] A roofed theatre would
-not require a specially constructed ‘heavens’, as descents could
-be worked through the ceiling from a room above. There is no clear
-evidence for a lord’s room at any of the private houses.[1772] But
-there were ‘boxes’, at any rate at the Whitefriars.[1773] Evidence
-for seats on the stage has already been furnished. There is much to
-suggest that the audience was a more select one than that of the public
-theatres.[1774] Elizabeth cannot be shown to have ever attended the
-Blackfriars, but Anne certainly did.[1775] And the price of the seats,
-which ranged from 6_d._ to 2_s._ 6_d._, was of itself sufficient
-to keep out persons of the ‘groundling’ or ‘stinkard’ type.[1776]
-Performances did not necessarily take place every day, and they could
-begin rather later and go on rather longer than those out of doors,
-since they were not dependent on daylight.[1777] Windows were certainly
-used, for we hear of them being clapped down to give the illusion of
-night scenes.[1778] But candles and torches supplied an artificial
-lighting.[1779] As both the Paul’s boys and those of the Chapel
-were primarily choristers, it is not surprising that music played a
-considerable part in the entertainment provided. Musical interludes
-were given between the acts, and Gerschow records a preliminary concert
-of an hour in length before the play began at the Blackfriars in
-1602.[1780] Sometimes also a boy came forward and danced between the
-acts.[1781] At Paul’s there was at the back of the stage a ‘musick
-tree’, which apparently rose out of a ‘canopie’ and bore a ‘musick
-house’ on either side of it.[1782]
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[1] E. J. L. Scott, _Letter Book of Gabriel Harvey_ (Camden Soc.), 67.
-
-[2] Cf. App. D, No. lxxviii.
-
-[3] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[4] G. Dugdale, _Time Triumphant_ (1604), sig. B, ‘Nay, see the beauty
-of our all kinde soveraigne! not onely to the indifferent of worth,
-and the worthy of honor, did he freely deale about thiese causes, but
-to the meane gave grace, as taking to him the late Lord Chamberlaines
-servants, now the Kings acters; the Queene taking to her the Earle
-of Worsters servants, that are now her acters; and the Prince, their
-sonne, Henry, Prince of Wales full of hope, tooke to him the Earle of
-Nottingham his servants, who are now his acters.’
-
-[5] Cf. ch. xvi, introd., and App. C, No. lviii.
-
-[6] Flecknoe (App. I) perhaps exaggerates the share of moral sentiment
-in bringing to an end the formal connexion of the choirs with plays
-(cf. p. 52).
-
-[7] De la Boderie, in 1608 (cf. vol. i, p. 327), speaks of five
-companies in London. These would be the King’s, Queen’s, Prince’s,
-Revels, and King’s Revels.
-
-[8] _Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 216, from statutes collected in the
-decanate of Ralph of Baldock (1294–1304), ‘Cantoris officium est ...
-pueros introducendos in chorum et ad cantum intitulatos examinare ...
-Magistrum Scolae Cantus in ecclesia Sancti Gregorii, salva Decano et
-Capitulo ipsius collacione, preficere’; Dugdale, _St. Paul’s_ (1818),
-347, from fifteenth-or early sixteenth-century manuscript of statutes,
-‘Magistrum Scholae Cantus constituit Cantor. Ad eum pertinet eos qui
-canere nequeunt instruere, pueros diligenter docere, eis non solum
-magistrum Cantus, sed etiam bonorum morum esse.’
-
-[9] _Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 215, from statutes collected in decanate
-of Ralph de Diceto (1181–99), ‘Cotidie pascat ... duos pueros
-elemosinarios ... et secum ad Ecclesiam media nocte panem et cervisiam
-pro iunioribus chorum frequentantibus defer[r]i faciat, et quolibet
-quarterio semel vel bis post matutinas iunioribus gentaculum unum in
-domo sua faciat’. A thirteenth-century statute required the _pueri
-de elemosinaria_ to sit humbly upon the ground when feeding in the
-house of a canon. Cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 355, for Diceto’s statute
-about the Boy Bishop, with its mention of the return of the boys ‘ad
-Elemosinariam’, and the reforming statute of 1263.
-
-[10] _Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 220.
-
-[11] Ibid. 217, 220 (_c._ 1263; _c._ 1310) ‘Elemosinarius ...
-habeat insuper continuo secum octo pueros ad Ecclesiae ministerium
-ydoneos, quos per seipsum vel alium magistrum in spectantibus ad
-ministerium ecclesiae et litteratura ac bonis moribus diligenter faciat
-informari.... Quociens vero dicti pueri ad scolas vel spaciatum ire
-debent....’; Dugdale, 349 [Elemosinarius] ‘octo pueros bonae indolis et
-honestae parentelae habeat; quos alat et educat in morum disciplina;
-videat etiam instruantur in cantu et literatura, ut in omnibus apti ad
-ministerium Dei in Choro esse possent’.
-
-[12] There was a bequest to the almoner to maintain boys, apparently at
-the University, after they had changed their voices, as early as 1315
-(_Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 219–22).
-
-[13] Hennessy, 61; W. S. Simpson, _Charter and Statutes of the College
-of Minor Canons in St. Paul’s Cathedral_ (_Archaeologia_, xliii. 165;
-cf. _Trans. of London and Midd. Arch. Soc._ (1st series), iv. 231).
-The statutes of _c._ 1521 note a dispensation of that year for Thomas
-Hikeman ‘peticanon and amner’ and for ‘all and euery peticanon which
-shalbe Amneur hear-after’ to bring a stranger to meals.
-
-[14] Stowe, _Survey_, ii. 19; cf. the Hollar engraving in Baker, 95.
-
-[15] Stowe, i. 327; _Archaeologia_, xliii. 171. By c. 14 of the
-statutes the college gates were shut at meals.
-
-[16] Leach, _Journal of Education_ (1909), 506, cites the _Registrum
-Elemosinariae_ (ed. M. Hacket from _Harl. MS._ 1080), ‘If the almoner
-does not keep a clerk to teach the choristers grammar, the schoolmaster
-of St. Paul’s claims 5_s._ a year for teaching them, though he ought
-to demand nothing for them, because he keeps the school for them, as
-the Treasurer of St. Paul’s once alleged before the Dean and Chapter
-is to be found in ancient deeds’. Mr. Leach adds, ‘It is to be feared
-the Treasurer invented or misrepresented the ancient deed’. William de
-Tolleshunt, almoner, appears from his will of 1329 in the same register
-to have taught his boys himself (_Archaeologia_, lxii. 1. 220), ‘Item
-lego pueris ecclesiae quos ego educavi senioribus in Elemosinaria
-existentibus cuilibet xij^d et iunioribus cuilibet vj^d’. He also left
-his grammar books ‘et omnes quaternos sermonum de Festo Sanctorum
-Innocencium, quos tempore meo solebant Episcopi Puerorum pronuntiare,
-ad remanendum in Elemosinaria praedicta imperpetuum, ad usum fructum
-puerorum in eadem degencium’. His logic and physic books are to be lent
-out ‘pueris aptis ad scolatizandum, cum ab elemosinaria recesserint’.
-
-[17] _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 356. The sermon written by Erasmus is
-headed _Concio ... pronunciata ... in nova schola Iohannis Coleti_,
-but Erasmus may not have known the exact procedure at St. Paul’s. The
-earlier sermon printed by Wynkyn de Worde has ‘whyche often times I
-radde whan I was Querester, in the Marteloge of Poulis’.
-
-[18] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 380.
-
-[19] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 196, 215, 219. Wallace, i. 88, points out
-that the performers of the _Menaechmi_ before Wolsey in 1527 were not
-the Paul’s boys, but the Cardinal’s gentlemen.
-
-[20] _Chamber Accounts_ (1545).
-
-[21] Nichols, _Eliz._ i. xxxv, ‘By Sebastian, scolemaister of Powles, a
-boke of ditties, written’.
-
-[22] _Household Accounts of Princess Elizabeth, 1551–2_ (_Camden Misc._
-ii), 37, ‘Paid in rewarde to the Kinges Maiesties drommer and phipher,
-the xiij^{th} of Februarye, xx^s; M^r. Heywoodde, xxx^s; and to
-Sebastian, towardes the charge of the children with the carriage of the
-plaiers garmentes iiij^{li}, xix^s. In thole as by warraunte appereth,
-vij^{li}, ix^s’.
-
-[23] F. Madden, _Expenses of Lady Mary_, 62 (March 1538), ‘Item geuen
-to Heywood playeng an enterlude with his children bifore my lades
-grace, xl^s’.
-
-[24] Wallace, i. 77, goes against the evidence when he asserts that
-Heywood wrote for the Chapel. Why he asserts that Heywood ‘had grown
-up in the Chapel under Cornish’, to whom, by the way, he wantonly
-transfers the authorship of _The Four P. P._, _The Pardoner and the
-Frere_, and _Johan Johan_, I do not know. There is nothing to show that
-Heywood was a Chapel boy, and the absence of his name from the Chapel
-list of 1509 (cf. p. 27), when he would have been about twelve, may be
-taken as disposing of the notion. He is first discoverable at Court in
-December 1514, for which month he received wages at the rate of viij^d
-a day in some undefined capacity (_Chamber Account_ in _Addl. MS._
-21481, f. 178), which was shared by one John Mason, who was a Yeoman
-of the Crown by March 1516 (Brewer, ii. 475). By 1520 Heywood himself
-was a Yeoman of the Crown (Brewer, iii. 1. 499), and during 1519–21 the
-_Chamber Accounts_ show him as also a ‘singer’ at £5 a quarter. Later
-he became player of the virginals, and has 50_s._ a quarter as such
-in the _Accounts_ for 1529–31, 1538–41, and 1547–9. He was Sewer of
-the Chamber at the funeral of Edward in 1553. It occurs to me as just
-possible that Heywood’s ‘children’ may have been neither the Chapel nor
-the Paul’s boys, but the boys taken up by Philip Van Wilder for the
-musical establishment of the Household; cf. p. 31. But I think it is
-more likely that Heywood wrote for the Paul’s boys throughout, as he
-almost certainly did in 1559. There is another hint of his connexion
-with them in the fact that at the coronation of Mary in 1553 he sat
-under a vine against the grammar school and made speeches (Holinshed
-(1808), iv. 6). A. W. Reed (1917, _3 Library_, viii. 247) adds facts,
-and thinks the Yeoman was distinct.
-
-[25] _Addl. MS._ 15233; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 454. Thomas Tusser,
-in the _Autobiography_ printed with the 1573 edition of his _Points of
-Good Husbandry_, is the authority for placing Redford at Paul’s:
-
- But mark the chance, myself to ’vance,
- By friendship’s lot, to Paul’s I got.
- So found I grace a certain space
- Still to remain
- With Redford there, the like nowhere
- For cunning such and virtue much
- By whom some part of musicke art
- So did I gain.
-
-From Paul’s Tusser passed to Eton, before he matriculated at Cambridge
-in 1543. In other manuscripts compositions by Redford and Thomas
-Mulliner are associated, and one of these, _Addl. MS._ 30513, is
-inscribed ‘Sum liber Thomae Mullineri, Johanne Heywoode teste’.
-Stafford Smith, on what authority is unknown, stated (cf. _D. N. B._)
-that Mulliner was Master of St. Paul’s School. If so, he may have
-come between Redford and Westcott. On 3 March 1564 he was admitted as
-organist in Corpus Christi College, Oxford (Fowler, _Hist. of C.C.C._
-426).
-
-[26] Feuillerat, _E. and M._ 145; Wallace, i. 84. The mention of ‘xij
-cottes for the boyes in Heywoodes play’ does not justify the assumption
-that the players were the Chapel. The ten established boys of the St.
-Paul’s choir could be supplemented by probationers or the grammar
-school.
-
-[27] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 196.
-
-[28] Machyn, 206. ‘M^r Philip’ was organist of Paul’s in 1557 (Nichols,
-_Illustrations_, iii). Fleay, 57, guesses that the play was _Nice
-Wanton_, which is not likely, if Heywood had a hand in it.
-
-[29] Hennessy, 61.
-
-[30] Flood cites a Vatican record of 1561 from _Catholic Record Soc._
-i. 21, ‘Sebastianus, qui organa pulsabat apud D. Paulum Londini,
-cum vellet eiici, tamen tum ita charus Elizabethae fuit, ut nihil
-schismatice agens locum suum in ea ecclesia retineat’; also Grindal’s
-letter of 1563 to Dudley in Strype, _Grindal_ (ed. 1821), 113.
-Hillebrand adds from _Libri Vicarii Generalis_ (_Huick 1561–74_),
-iii, f. 77, that in July 1563 Westcott failed to appear before the
-Consistory Court and was excommunicated as ‘contumacem’, and from St.
-Paul’s records (_A. Box 77_, 2059) that on 8 Nov. 1564 he gave a bond
-to conform or resign by the following Easter. Gee, 230, gives a list
-of deprived clergy from N. Sanders, _De Visibili Monarchia_ (1571),
-688, which includes among _Magistri Musices_ ‘Sebastianus in Cathedrali
-ecclesia Londinensi’.
-
-[31] Fleay, 15, 60, has some inaccuracies in these dates, and
-conjectures that among the early Paul’s plays were a revival of Udall’s
-_Ralph Roister Doister_ and Ulpian Fulwell’s _Like Will to Like_, and
-that these contained satire of Richard Edwards and the Chapel.
-
-[32] Dasent, ix. 56.
-
-[33] Hillebrand from _Repertory_, xix, f. 18, ‘For asmoche as this
-Court ys enformed that one Sebastian that wyll not communicate with the
-Church of England kepe the playes and resorte of the people to great
-gaine and peryll of the coruptinge of the Chyldren wyth papistrie And
-therefore master Morten ys appoynted to goe to the Deane of Powles and
-to gyve him notyce of that dysorder, and to praye him to gyve suche
-remeadye therein, within his iurysdyccion, as he shall see meete, for
-Christian Relygion and good order’.
-
-[34] Dasent, x. 127. _Cath. Record Soc._ i. 70 gives the date of
-Westcott’s committal ‘for papistry’ from _S. P. D. Eliz._ cxl. 40, as
-21 Dec. 1577, and that of release as 19 March 1578. According to _S. P.
-D. Eliz._ cxviii. 73, Westcott was Master of the Children in 1577 and
-valued at £100 in goods.
-
-[35] Gosson, _P. C._ 188.
-
-[36] Flood (_Mus. Ant._ iv. 187) gives an abstract of his will, dated
-on 3 April and proved on 14 April 1582. He describes himself as
-almoner of St. Paul’s, dwelling in the almonry and born at Chimley in
-Devonshire; appoints Henry Evans overseer and Justinian Kyd executor,
-and leaves legacies to relatives (apparently he had no children or
-wife), to members of the Redford family, to ‘Gyles Clothier’, to
-the ten choristers, to ‘sometimes children of the said almenerey’,
-by name Bromeham, Richard Huse, Robert Knight, Nicholas Carleton,
-Baylye, Nasion, and Gregory Bowringe, to ‘Shepard that keepeth the
-door at playes’, and to Pole ‘the keper of the gate’. Wallace, i. 171,
-cites the will from _P. C. C._ 14 and 31, Tirwhite, giving the date
-of confirmation as 3 July 1582. One name may be added to Westcott’s
-list of boys from a Court Minute of Christ’s Hospital on 5 March
-1580 (_Musical Times_, 1 Jan. 1907), ‘M^r. Sebastian, of Paulls, is
-appointed to have Hallawaie the younger out of this House to be one of
-the singing children of the Cathedral Church of Paulls in this Citie’.
-
-[37] Gosson (1582) speaks of the plays as ‘at Paules’; and Rawlidge
-(1628) mentions a house ‘nigh Pauls’ as one of those pulled down by
-the City, apparently in 1596 (cf. ch. xvi). The Paul’s boys, however,
-can hardly have been playing for some years before that date. Howes
-(1629) definitely specifies the singing school (cf. ch. xvi). On
-the other hand, Flecknoe, a late authority and in a passage dealing
-(inaccurately) with Jacobean rather than Elizabethan conditions,
-assigns the plays to ‘behinde the Convocation-house in Paul’s’ (App.
-I). This is expanded by Malone (_Variorum_, iii. 46) into ‘in S^t.
-Paul’s school-room, behind the Convocation-house’, and Baker, 45,
-suggests that they used a small yard or cloister before the doors
-of the Convocation House and shut off by a high wall from the main
-churchyard (cf. Hollar’s prints in Baker, 95, 115). But I doubt if
-Flecknoe had anything in mind except St. Gregory’s, which stood just
-west of the Convocation House. The hall of the College of Minor Canons
-is perhaps also a possibility; but neither this nor the church is
-likely to have afforded a circular auditorium (cf. ch. xviii). Can they
-have used the Convocation House itself?
-
-[38] McDonnell, 27, argues for the participation of the grammar school
-in the plays. Obviously the phrase ‘children of Paul’s’, ordinarily
-used of the playing-boys, proves nothing one way or the other. That the
-plays were mainly an affair of the choir is a fair inference from the
-fact that they were presented at Court by the song-school masters. But
-there is no reason to doubt that the mediaeval give and take between
-the two schools continued through the sixteenth century. Hunter,
-_Chorus Vatum_, v. 542, quotes a manuscript life of Sir Thomas Offley,
-‘This Thomas Offley became a good grammarian under Mr. [William]
-Lillie and understood the Latin tongue perfectly; and because he had
-a sweet voice he was put to learn prick-song among the choristers of
-St. Paul’s, for that learned Mr. Lillie knew full well that knowledge
-in music was a help and a furtherance to all arts’. On the other hand,
-Dean Nowell (Churton, _Life of A. Nowell_, 190) instructed Thomas Giles
-in 1584 to teach the choristers catechism, writing, and music, and then
-to ‘suffer them to resort to Paul’s School that they may learn the
-principles of Grammar’. Some seventeenth-century performances by the
-grammar school, after the regular Paul’s plays ceased, are upon record.
-
-[39] Cf. _infra_ (Chapel, Oxford’s); ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[40] R. Churton, _Life of Alexander Nowell_, 190, from _Reg. Nowell_,
-ii, f. 189; Nichols, _Eliz._ ii. 432; Collier, i. 258; Hazlitt, 33;
-Wallace, ii. 67, from original warrant under the Signet in _Sloane MS._
-2035^b, f. 73:
- ‘By the Queene,
- Elizabeth.
-
-‘Whereas we haue authorysed our servaunte Thomas Gyles M^r. of the
-children of the Cathedrall Churche of S^t. Pauls within our Cittie of
-London to take vpp suche apte and meete Children as are most fitt to be
-instructed and framed in the arte and science of musicke and singinge
-as may be had and founde out within anie place of this our Realme of
-England or Wales, to be by his education and bringinge vp made meete
-and hable to serve vs in that behalf when our pleasure is to call for
-them. Wee therefore by the tenour of these presentes will and require
-you that ye permitt and suffer from henceforthe our saide servaunte
-Thomas Gyles and his deputie or deputies and every of them to take vp
-in anye Cathedral or Collegiate Churche or Churches and in everye other
-place or places of this our Realme of England and Wales, suche Childe
-and Children as he or they or anye of them shall finde and like of and
-the same Childe and Children by vertue hereof for the vse and service
-afouresaide, with them or anye of them to bringe awaye, withoute anye
-your lettes contradiccions staye or interruptions to the contrarie
-Charginge and commaundinge you and everie of you to be aydinge helpinge
-and assisting vnto the aboue named Thomas Gyles and his deputie and
-deputies in and aboute the due execucion of the premisses for the more
-spedie effectuall & bettar accomplisshing thereof from tyme to tyme
-as you and everie of you doe tendar our will and pleasure and will
-aunswere for doinge the contrarye at your perilles. Youen vnder our
-Signet at our Manour of Grenewich the 26^{th} Day of Aprill in the
-27^{th} yere of our reign.
-
-To all and singuler Deanes, Provostes, Maisters and Wardens of
-Collegies and all Ecclesiasticall persons and mynisters and to all
-other our officers mynisters and subiectes to whome in this case it
-shall apperteyne and to everye of them greetinge.’
-
-No other commission for the Paul’s choir is extant, but their rights
-are reserved in the commission for Windsor (q.v.) of 8 March 1560.
-
-[41] Harvey, _Advertisement for Pap-Hatchet_ (_Works_, ii. 212). Lyly
-was still Oxford’s man but writing for Paul’s, _c._ Aug. 1585 (_M. L.
-R._ xv. 82.).
-
-[42] Cf. ch. ix and App. C, No. xl, especially _Pappe with an Hatchet_
-(Oct. 1589).
-
-[43] _Have With You to Saffron Walden_ (_Works_, iii. 46). I do not
-think the reference to a twelvemonth’s silence, due to envy, in the
-prologue to Nashe’s _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_ (_c._ Oct. 1592)
-affords any justification for ascribing that play to the Paul’s boys.
-Murray, i. 330; ii. 284, records a payment at Gloucester in 1590–1
-‘to the children of powles’. I am sceptical about this, especially as
-I observe in the next year a payment for a breakfast to the Queen’s
-men ‘at M^r. Powelles’. Murray’s only other municipal record for the
-company, at Hedon, Yorkshire, on some quite unknown date, ‘Item, payd
-to the ---- pawll plaiers’ (ii. 286), is even less satisfactory. But if
-the boys did travel on their suppression, they may well have gone to
-Croydon.
-
-[44] Rimbault, 4. Giles must have resigned, if he was the Thomas Giles
-who, on 18 April 1606, was paid 100 marks a year as instructor to Henry
-in music (Devon, 35). He was instructor to Charles in 1613 (Reyher, 78)
-and figures in masks (cf. ch. vi). Fellowes, 184, 190, has two songs
-set by Pearce, one from _Blurt Master Constable_.
-
-[45] _1 A. and M._ IV. i. 30, ‘Enter Andrugio, Lucio, Cole, and
-Norwood’. Bullen thinks that the two boys played the parts named, but
-the action requires at least one page, who sings.
-
-[46] Wallace, ii. 153, says he has evidence of playing at Paul’s in
-1598, but he does not give it. It is perhaps rash to assume that Pearce
-originated the revival, as there is no proof that he came to Paul’s
-before 1600.
-
-[47] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[48] V. i. 102.
-
-[49] Collier, iii. 181. On the light thrown on the Paul’s stage by
-these plays, cf. ch. xxi. It is conceivable that some of them may have
-been originally written before 1590 (cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Percy).
-
-[50] Cf. ch. xxiv.
-
-[51] Cf. _infra_ (Queen’s Revels).
-
-[52] Nichols, _James_, iv. 1073, from _The King of Denmark’s Welcome_
-(1606), ‘the Youthes of Paules, commonlye cald the Children of Paules,
-plaide before the two Kings, a playe called _Abuses_: containing both a
-Comedie and a Tragedie, at which the Kinges seemed to take delight and
-be much pleased’. The play is lost. Fleay, ii. 80, has no justification
-for identifying it with _The Insatiate Countess_. _Wily Beguiled_ (ch.
-xxiv) might be a Paul’s play.
-
-[53] C. W. Wallace, _Nebraska University Studies_ (1910), x. 355; cf.
-_infra_ (Queen’s Revels), ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[54] _Constitutio Domus Regis_ (_c._ 1135) in Hearne, _Liber Niger
-Scaccarii_, i. 342, ‘Capellani, custos capellae et reliquiarum.
-Corridium duorum hominum, et quatuor servientes capellae unusquisque
-duplicem cibum, et duo summarii capellae unusquisque 1^d in die et
-1^d ad ferrandum in mense’; cf. _R. O. Ld. Steward’s Misc._ 298
-(1279); Tout, 278, 311 (1318); _H. O._ 3, 10 (1344–8); _Life Records
-of Chaucer_ (Chaucer Soc.), iv. 171 (1369); Nicolas, _P. C._ vi. 223
-(1454).
-
-[55] _H. O._ 10. In 1318 he was ‘chief chapellain’.
-
-[56] J. H. Wylie, _Henry IV_, iv. 208, from _Household Accounts_, ‘John
-Bugby our chaplain retained 3 years ago pur apprendre et enformer
-les enfants de notre chapelle en la science de gramaire at 100/-p.
-a. nothing yet paid, £15 due’. A grant to John Tilbery, a boy of the
-King’s chapel, was made on 12 Nov. 1405 (_C. P. R._, _Hen. IV_, iii.
-96).
-
-[57] Wallace, i. 12, 21, from _P. R._ The commission of 1420 was to
-John Pyamour ‘uni clericorum Capellae hospicii nostri’; another of 1440
-was to John Croucher, Dean. When regular Masters were instituted, the
-commissions seem to have been made direct to them.
-
-[58] Wallace, i. 14, quotes laudatory accounts of the singing of the
-chapel by two members of the suite of Leo von Ro[vz]mital, a Bohemian
-who visited the English Court in 1466.
-
-[59] _H. O._ 49. There is nothing about plays, but ‘Memorandum,
-that the King hathe a songe before hym in his hall or chambre uppon
-All-hallowen day at the latter graces, by some of these clerkes and
-children of chappel in remembrance of Christmasse; and soe of men and
-children in Christmasse thorowoute. But after the songe on All-hallowen
-day is done, the Steward and Thesaurere of houshold shall be warned
-where it liketh the King to kepe his Christmasse’.
-
-[60] At the coronation of James in 1603 (Rimbault, 127) there were
-a Sub-dean, 7 Ministers, the Master of the Children, an Organist,
-22 ordinary Gentlemen, and a Clerk of the Check; also a Sergeant, 2
-Yeomen, and a Groom of the Vestry. This agrees with the Elizabethan fee
-lists, which give the total number of Gentlemen as 32. The coronation
-list does not name Epistolers; but it is clear from the notices of
-appointments in Rimbault, 1, that a Gospeller and Epistoler were
-appointed, as next in succession to the Gentlemen’s places, although it
-does not appear that they were necessarily ex-Children. There were also
-Extraordinary Gentlemen (Rimbault, 31).
-
-[61] Cf. ch. ii.
-
-[62] _H. O._ 160. The hall and chapel are to be kept ‘at all times
-when his Highnesse shall lye in his castle of Windsor, his mannors of
-Bewlye, Richmond, Hampton Court, Greenwich, Eltham, or Woodstock’; but
-‘in rideing journeys and progresses’, only the Master of the Children,
-six men, six children, and some officers of the vestry are to attend.
-In the seventeenth century ‘all removinge weekes’ were amongst the
-‘auntient tymes of lyberty and playinge weekes’ (Rimbault, 73). But the
-practice may have varied. Stopes, 252, gives a Stable warrant of 1554
-for a wagon ‘for the necessarie conveying and cariage of the Children
-of our Chapel and their man from place to place, at such seasons, as
-they by our commandment shall remove to serve where wee shall appointe
-them’.
-
-[63] A chapel of St. Stephen existed in 1205. It was rebuilt and made
-a free collegiate chapel in 1348, and dissolved in 1547, and the
-building assigned as a chamber for the House of Commons (J. T. Smith,
-_Antiquities of Westminster_, 72; _V. H. London_, i. 566). It may have
-originated as a domestic chapel, but seems to be quite distinct from
-the Household Chapel by the sixteenth century. Thus its St. Nicholas
-Bishop had an old annual reward of £1 from the Exchequer (Devon,
-_Issues of Exchequer_, 222; R. Henry, _Hist. of Great Britain_^3, xii.
-459; Brewer, iv. 869), while the Household boys got their reward of
-£6 12_s._ 4_d._ from the Treasurer of the Chamber. Wallace, i. 22,
-notes that the Masters of the Children ‘all lived’ at Greenwich, which
-suggests that this was the Tudor head-quarters of the Chapel.
-
-[64] Wallace, i. 22, 23, 26, 61, from patents of Masters; _Fee List_
-(_passim_).
-
-[65] R. Henry, _Hist. of Great Britain_^3, xii. 457; Brewer, ii. 873;
-iii. 364; iv. 868; _Fee Lists_ (_passim_); Wallace, i. 21, 23, 24, 26,
-33, 61, from patents and _Exchequer of Receipt, Auditor’s Privy Seal
-Books_. The Elizabethan fee for a Gentleman was only £30 (cf. p. 41, n.
-3), but it was increased again to £40 by James in 1604 (Rimbault, 61).
-
-[66] _H. O._ 169, 212. The _Chamber Accounts_ for Aug. 1520 include
-a special payment to the Master for the diets of the boys when they
-accompanied the King to Calais, at 2_d._ a day each.
-
-[67] The allowance was 6_d._ in 1575 (Collier, i. 175; Nagel, 29; from
-_Harl. MS._ 589, f. 220), but Hunnis’s petition of 1583 (cf. p. 37)
-implies that this rate was customary before Elizabeth’s reign.
-
-[68] _Chamber Accounts_ (_passim_); cf. p. 24, n. 6. For the feast of
-the Boy Bishop on St. Nicholas Day, cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 336, 359,
-369.
-
-[69] Stopes, 15, ‘40 surplices for the gentlemen and 16 for the
-children of the Chapel’ (Wardrobe warrant of 7 Oct. 1533); ‘for 10
-children of the Kings Chapell, for gownes of Tawney Chamblett lined
-with black satin of Bruges, and Milan bonnettes for the said children,
-as in the same boke of apparel is declared xliii^{li}. iii^s. iiii^d.
-For two children of the Kings Chapell, for 2 gownes of Black Chamblett,
-lined with black satin of Bruges 2 cotes of yellow saten of Bruges
-lined with Coton, and 2 Millan bonnettes, and for making and lining
-of said gownes and cotes as in the said boke at large it duly apperes
-x^{li} xviii^s ... Item for twenty gentlemen of the King’s chapel, for
-20 gownes of Black Damask for the said gentlemen, cxxvii^{li}. x^s.’
-(_Queen’s Remembrancia, Wardrobe Expenses_, _Hen. VIII_, 52/10 A).
-
-[70] _Chamber Accounts_ (_passim_). From 1510 to 1513 Robert Fairfax
-had 2s. a week for the diet of William Alderson and Arthur Lovekyn,
-the King’s scholars, and £2 13_s._ 4_d._ for their teaching. In 1513
-William Max, late a Child of the Chapel, had 40_s._ In 1514 Cornish was
-finding and apparelling Robert Philip and another Child of the Chapel,
-for £1 13_s._ 4_d._ a quarter, and in 1517 finding and teaching William
-Saunders, late Child of the Chapel, for the same sum, with 2_d._ a week
-for board ‘when the king keepeth no household’. In 1529–30 Crane had
-3_d._ a day wages and 20_d._ a week board wages for Robert Pery, and
-in 1530 also for William Pery. In 1531 Robert Pery was paid direct.
-Cunningham, xx, gives a late seventeenth-century example of a similar
-arrangement. In 1546 a royal letter was written for the appointment
-of William Bretten, late a Chapel boy, to be singing-man at Lichfield
-(Brewer, xxi. 1. 142). Some of the above names appear in a list of
-Chapel Children, William Colman, William Maxe, William Alderson, Henry
-Meryell, John Williams, John Graunger, Arthur Lovekyn, Henry Andrewe,
-Nicholas Ivy, Edward Cooke, and James Curteys, receiving liveries
-at the funeral of Henry VII in 1509 (Lafontaine, 3, from _Ld. Ch.
-Records_, 550, f. 131). Some amusing correspondence of 1518 relates to
-a boy Robin, whom Henry VIII wished to transfer from Wolsey’s chapel
-to his own. It was stipulated that Cornish should treat him honestly,
-‘otherwise than he doth his own’, and later Cornish wrote praising the
-clean singing and descant of the recruit (Brewer, ii. 1246–50).
-
-[71] J. M. Manly in _C. H._ vi. 279; C. Johnson, _John Plummer_ (1921,
-_Antiquaries Journal_, i. 52); Wallace, i. 21, from patents and
-Exchequer payments. Wallace does not include Melyonek although (ii. 62)
-he gives the following commission, already printed by Collier, i. 41,
-and Rimbault, vii, from _Harl. MS._ 433, f. 189:
-
-‘Mellenek, Ric. etc. To all and every our subgiettes aswele spirituell
-as temporell thise our lettres hering or seeing greeting, We let you
-wite that for the confidence & trust that we haue in our trusty and
-welbeloued seruant John Melyonek oon of ye gentilmen of our Chapell and
-knowing also his expert habilitie and connyng in ye science of Musique
-haue licenced him and by thise presentes licence and geue him auctorite
-that within all places in this our realme aswele Cathedral churges
-coliges chappells houses of relegion and al oyer franchised & exempt
-places as elliswhere our colege roial at Wyndesor reserued & except may
-take and sease for vs and in our name al suche singing men & childre
-being expart in the said science of Musique as he can finde and think
-sufficient and able to do vs seruice. Wherfor &c. Yeuen &c. at Nottingham
-the xvj^{th} day of September A^o secundo [1484].’
-
-Banaster did not die until 1487, but I think Melyonek must have
-replaced him, perhaps without a patent, under Richard III.]
-
-[72] Cf. _D. N. B._ Songs by Banaster and Newark are in _Addl. MS._
-5465 (Chambers and Sidgwick, _Early English Lyrics_, 299).
-
-[73] Collier, i. 46; cf. Wallace, i. 12. I am not sure that Collier
-meant 1485.
-
-[74] Reyher, 504, from _Harl. MS._ 69, f. 34^v. Wallace, i. 13; ii. 69,
-citing the same MS., misdates ‘1490’, and says that eight children took
-part. Four singing children who had appeared in another disguising a
-day or two before were probably also from the Chapel.
-
-[75] _Chamber Accounts_ in Wallace, i. 28, 38; Bernard Andrew, _Annales
-Hen. VII_ (Gairdner, _Memorials of Hen. VII_), 104; Halle, i. 25;
-Professor Wallace seems to think that the annual Christmas rewards
-paid by the Treasurer of the Chamber to the Gentlemen, which went on
-to the end of the reign, were for plays. But these were of £13 6_s._
-8_d._, whereas the reward for a play was £6 13_s._ 4_d._ They were
-paid on Twelfth Night, and are sometimes said to be for ‘payne taking’
-during Christmas. In 1510 they had an extra £6 13_s._ 4_d._ for praying
-for the Queen’s good deliverance. The ‘payne taking’ was no doubt as
-singers. An order of Henry VII’s time (_H. O._ 121) for the wassail
-on Twelfth Night has, ‘Item, the chappell to stand on the one side
-of the hall, and when the steward cometh in at the hall doore with
-the wassell, he must crie three tymes, Wassell, wassell, wassell; and
-then the chappell to answere with a good songe’. The Gentlemen also
-had 40_s._ annually from the Treasurer of the Chamber ‘to drink with
-their bucks’ given them for a summer feast, which was still held in the
-seventeenth century (Rimbault, 122).
-
-[76] Stopes, _Shakespeare’s Environment_, 238; Feuillerat, _Ed. and
-Mary_, 149, 289. Professor Feuillerat says that one of the documents
-relating to the play refers to the ‘Children of the Chapel’, and doubts
-whether there is a real distinction between the ‘Gentlemen’ and the
-‘Children’ as actors.
-
-[77] Feuillerat, _Ed. and Mary_, 3, 255. The conjecture is supported by
-the fact that garments belonging to the Revels were in possession of
-two Gentlemen of the Chapel in April 1547 (ibid., 12, 13).
-
-[78] _Chamber Accounts_ in Wallace, i. 38, 65, 70; Brewer, xiv. 2.
-284; Kempe, 69; Collier, i. 78; Feuillerat, _Ed. and Mary_, 266, 288.
-The ‘iiij Children y^t played afore y^e king’ on 14 Jan. 1508 were not
-necessarily of the Chapel.
-
-[79] Cf. ch. viii and _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 192, 215.
-
-[80] Wallace, i. 33. No patent is cited, but the privy seal for the
-payment to Cornish of the Exchequer annuity was dated 1 April 1510, and
-he was shortly afterwards paid for the Christmas and Easter quarters.
-Newark had died in Nov. 1509. It is therefore a little puzzling to find
-in a list of Exchequer fees payable during the year ended Michaelmas
-1508 (R. Henry, _Hist. of Great Britain_^3, xii. 457) the item
-‘Willelmo Cornysshe magistro puerorum capellae regis pro excubitione
-eorundem puerorum 26^{li}. 13^s. 4^d.’ Probably the list was prepared
-retrospectively in Henry VIII’s reign (cf. the analogous list in
-Brewer, ii. 873), and the name rather than the date is an error.
-
-[81] The data are: (a) _Exchequer Payments_ (Wallace, i. 34), Mich.
-1493, ‘Willelmo Cornysshe de Rege’, 100_s._; (b) _T. C. Accounts_,
-‘to one Cornysshe for a prophecy in rewarde’, 13_s._ 4_d._ (12 Nov.
-1493); ‘to Cornishe of the Kings Chapell’, 26_s._ 8_d._ (1 Sept. 1496);
-‘to Cornysshe for 3 pagents’ (26 Oct. 1501); ‘m^r kyte Cornisshe and
-other of the Chapell y^t played affore ye king at Richemounte’, £6
-13_s._ 4_d._ (25 Dec. 1508); (c) _Household Book of Q. Elizabeth_,
-25 Dec. 1502, ‘to Cornisshe for setting of a Carrall vpon Cristmas
-Day in reward’, 13_s._ 4_d._; (d) John Cornysh in list of Gent. of
-Chapel 23 Feb. 1504, and William Cornysh in similar lists _c._ 1509
-and 22 Feb. 1511 (Lafontaine, 2, from _Ld. Ch. Records_); (e) Songs
-by ‘W. Cornishe, jun.’ in _Addl. MS._ 5465, by ‘John Cornish’ in
-_Addl. MS._ 5665, by ‘W. Cornish’ in _Addl. MS._ 31922 (_Early English
-Lyrics_, 299); (f) _A Treatise betweene Trouthe and Enformacon_, by
-‘William Cornysshe otherwise called Nyssewhete Chapelman with ...
-Henry the VII^{th} his raigne the xix^{th} yere the moneth of July’
-[1504], doubtless the satirical ballad on Empson referred to by Stowe,
-_Annales_, 816 (_B. M. Royal MS._ 18, D. 11). I think they yield an
-older William and a John Cornish, of whom one, probably John, arranged
-the three pageants at Arthur’s wedding, and a William ‘jun.’ who
-must have joined the Chapel in 1503 or 1504 and became Master of the
-Children. The older William may be identical with the Westminster
-(q.v.) choir-master of 1479–80. A Christopher or ‘Kit’ Cornish,
-referred to by Stopes, 17, and elsewhere, had no existence. This is a
-ghost-name, due to the juxtaposition of ‘kyte’, i.e. Sir John Kite,
-afterwards Archbishop of Armagh, and ‘Cornisshe’ in the 1508 record
-above.
-
-[82] Cf. ch. v and _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 400.
-
-[83] The _T. C. Accounts_ show a reward of £200 to Cornish on 30 Nov.
-1516, of which the occasion is not specified, and a payment of £18
-2_s._ 11½_d._ for ‘ij pagentes’ on 6 July 1517. With these possible
-exceptions, no expenditure on the disguisings or the interludes which
-formed part of them as distinct from the independent interludes by
-the Children, for which Cornish received £6 13_s._ 4_d._ each, seems
-to have passed through these accounts. Any remuneration received by
-Cornish or his fellows or children for their personal services probably
-passed through the _Revels Accounts_.
-
-[84] Wallace, i. 16, 50. He light-heartedly accuses my friend Mr.
-Pollard, me, and others of perpetuating an old mis-ascription on the
-strength of Bale, ‘generally without consulting the _Scriptores_’, in
-the first edition of which (1548) Bale says that Rastell ‘reliquit’,
-and in the second that he ‘edidit’ _The Four Elements_. This Professor
-Wallace regards as revision by Bale of an incorrect assertion that
-Rastell was the author into an assertion that he was the publisher.
-But Bale elsewhere uses ‘edidit’ to indicate authorship, as Professor
-Wallace might have learnt from the notice of Heywood which he quotes on
-p. 80. As to _The Four P. P._ there are three early editions by three
-different publishers, and they all assign it to Heywood.
-
-[85] Wallace, i. 61, 69; ii. 63, from patents and Exchequer payments.
-The Elizabethan patent is in Rymer, xv. 517.
-
-[86] Rimbault, viii, quoting only the words ‘in anie churches or
-chappells within England to take to the King’s use, such and so many
-singing children and choristers, as he or his deputy should think
-good’. Stopes, 12, gives _Lansd. MS._ 171, and _Stowe MS._ 371, f.
-31^v, as references, but the commission is not in either of them.
-
-[87] Matthew Welder appears as a lute and viol at Court in 1516 and
-1517. Peter Welder was appointed in 1519 and is traceable to 1559, as
-a lute, viol, or flute. Henry van Wilder was a ‘musician’, 1553–8.
-Philip Welder or van Wilder himself is first noted as a ‘minstrel’ in
-1526. Later he was a lute up to 1554. In 1547 he was also ‘of the Privy
-Chamber’ and keeper of the King’s musical instruments (Nagel, 6, 13,
-15, 16, 18, 22, 24, 27; Lafontaine, 8, 9, 12; Brewer, i, cxi). He died
-24 Jan. 1554, leaving a son, Henry, probably the one noted above (Fry,
-_London Inquisitions_, i. 117). The _Chamber Accounts_ for 1538–41 show
-an allowance to him of £70 ‘for six singing children’ (Stopes, 12).
-Several references to ‘Philippe and his fellows yong mynstrels’ and
-to ‘the children that be in the keeping of Philip and Edmund Harmon’
-appear in Green Cloth documents from 30 June 1538 to 1544 (_H. O._ 166,
-172, 191, 208; _Genealogist_, xxx. 23). Edmund Harmon was one of the
-royal Barbers. Finally, livery lists of 1547 show nine singing men and
-children under ‘M^r. Phelips’ (Lafontaine, 7). An earlier company of
-‘the King’s young minstrels’ than this of 1538–50 seems to have been
-lodged at court _c._ 1526 (Brewer, iv. 1. 865), and there were ‘troyes
-autres nos ioesnes ministralx’ as far back as 1369 (_Life Records of
-Chaucer_, iv. 174). Elizabethan fee lists continue to make provision
-for ‘six children for singing’, but there is no indication that the
-posts were filled up.
-
-[88] Wallace, ii. 63, from docquet in _B. M. Royal MS._ 18, C. xxiv, f.
-232. By an obvious error, the name is written by the clerk as ‘Gowre’.
-
-[89] Wallace, i. 77.
-
-[90] Cf. p. 12.
-
-[91] It is possible that the Treasurer of the Chamber did not pay all
-the rewards for plays during the earlier years of the reign; but the
-suggestion of Wallace, i. 108, that, if we had the _Books of Queen’s
-Payments_, more information might be available, seems to show a failure
-to realize the identity of the Tudor _Books of King’s Payments_ with
-the _T. of C. Accounts_. There might, however, be rewards in a book
-subsidiary to the _Privy Purse Accounts_. I do not think that much can
-be made of the recital of ‘playes’ as well as ‘maskes’ in the preamble
-of the _Revels Accounts_ for 1558–9, during which the T. of C. paid no
-rewards, since this may be merely ‘common form’.
-
-[92] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 34; cf. Appendix A. Naturally no ‘reward’
-would be paid in such circumstances. Fleay, 16, 32, 60, conjectures
-that the play was _Misogonus_.
-
-[93] Strype, _Survey of London_ (App. i. 92), gives the date from
-Bower’s tombstone at Greenwich, and as his death is recited in
-Edwardes’ patent (Stopes, _Hunnis_, 146) and his will of 18 June 1561
-was proved on 25 Aug. 1561 (Wallace, i. 106), it is clear that the
-entry of Rimbault, 1, ‘1563. Rich. Bower died, M^r of the children, A^o
-5^{to}’, must be an error.
-
-[94] Wallace, _Blackfriars_, 65, from Privy Seal in P. R. O. The patent
-dated 10 Jan. 1562 is on _Patent Rolls, 4 Eliz._ p. 6, m. 14 _dorso_.
-
-[95] This is recorded in a Revels document, and seems a clear case of a
-play given by the Chapel and not paid for by the T. of C.
-
-[96] Cf. ch. vii, p. 223.
-
-[97] Rimbault, 2. On Hunnis, cf. ch. xxiii.
-
-[98] Stopes, 295, translates the patent of appointment from _Auditors
-Patent Books_, ix, f. 144^v; the Privy Seal is in _Privy Seals_,
-Series iii, 1175. Stopes also prints the patent and Wallace, ii. 66,
-the Signet Bill (misdescribing it as a Privy Seal) for the commission;
-it is enrolled on _Patent Rolls, 9 Eliz._ p. 10, m. 16 _dorso_. It is
-varied from the model of 1562 by the inclusion of power to the Master
-to take up lodging for the children in transit, and to fix ‘reasonable
-prises’ for carriage and necessaries at his discretion.
-
-[99] Hazlitt-Warton, iv. 217, citing f. xii of the pamphlet. I know
-of no copy. One is catalogued among Bishop Tanner’s books in the
-Bodleian, but Stopes, 226, ‘went to Oxford on purpose to see it, but
-found that it had utterly vanished’. Macray, _Annals of the Bodleian_,
-211, thinks that it may have been destroyed when Tanner’s books fell
-into a river during their transit from Norwich to Oxford in Dec. 1731.
-The pamphlet is also cited for an example of the use of the term ‘spur
-money’ (Bumpus, 29, with date ‘1598’). F. T. Hibgame (_10 N. Q._ i.
-458) describes a collection of pamphlets seen by him in New York under
-the general title of _The Sad Decay of Discipline in our Schools_
-(1830), which included _Some Account of the Stripping and Whipping of
-the Children of the Chapel_, containing a ‘realistic account of the
-treatment of the boys at one of the royal chapels’, of which he thought
-the author might be George Colman.
-
-[100] Cf. ch. vii.
-
-[101] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 244, ‘Holly, Ivye, firr poles & Mosse for the
-Rock ... Hornes iij, Collers iij, Leashes iij & dogghookes iij with
-Bawdrickes for the hornes in Hvnnyes playe’.
-
-[102] _Variorum_, iii. 439.
-
-[103] Cf. ch. xxiii (Gascoigne).
-
-[104] W. Creizenach (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, liv. 73) points out that the
-source must have been Livy, xxvi. 50.
-
-[105] Cf. _infra_ (Windsor).
-
-[106] Rimbault, 2.
-
-[107] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars). The bare fact of this early use of
-the Blackfriars has, of course, long been known from the reference to
-comedies at the Blackfriars in Gosson, _P. C._ 188 (App. C, No. xxx),
-and the prologues to Lyly’s _Campaspe_ and _Sapho and Phao_. Fleay,
-36, 39, 40, guessed that the early Blackfriars performances were at an
-inn, and by the Paul’s boys, and that the euphuistic prose plays at the
-Bel Savage mentioned by Gosson, _S. A._ 39 (App. C, No. xxii), in 1579
-were early Chapel versions of Lyly’s above-named plays. But there is no
-evidence that either of the boy companies ever used an inn.
-
-[108] Cf. p. 38.
-
-[109] Cf. ch. vii, p. 223.
-
-[110] Rimbault, 3. The Blackfriars correspondence shows that the date
-1581 given in Rimbault, 56, is wrong. A warrant of 1582 for a lease in
-reversion to his widow Anne is in _Hatfield MSS._ ii. 539.
-
-[111] App. C, No. xlv.
-
-[112] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[113] Wallace, i. 156; Stopes, _Hunnis_, 252; from _S. P. D. Eliz._
-clxiii. 88.
-
-[114] Cf. p. 50, which suggests that the boys occasionally ate in hall
-at festival times.
-
-[115] The _Chamber Accounts_ show no renewal of the payments.
-
-[116] Cf. ch. xxiii (Hunnis).
-
-[117] Cf. ch. xiii (Oxford’s), ch. xxiii (Lyly).
-
-[118] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 470. _Sapho and Phao_ might, however, have
-been the unnamed Chapel play of Shrove Tuesday (27 Feb.) 1582.
-
-[119] Perhaps Lyly was still associated with him. F. S. Boas (_M. L.
-R._ vi. 92) records payments in connexion with a visit by Leicester to
-Christ Church, Oxford, to Mr. Lyly and his man for the loan of apparel,
-as well as one of £5 to one Tipslowe ‘for the Revels’ (January 1585).
-
-[120] Cf. _supra_ (Paul’s).
-
-[121] I have no means of dating ‘The order of the show to be done at
-the Turret, entring into the parke at Grenewich, the musick being
-within the turrett’, which is preserved in _Egerton MS._ 2877, f. 182,
-as ‘acted before Q. Elizabeth’. A speech of forty lines beginning ‘He
-Jove himselfe, that guides the golden spheare’, was delivered by ‘one
-of the biggest children of her Ma^{tes} Chappell’ as Goodwill, and was
-followed by a song beginning ‘Ye Helicon muses’.
-
-[122] Rimbault, 4. A note of Anthony Wood’s (cf. _D. N. B._) suggests
-that Bull joined the Chapel about 1572.
-
-[123] Ashmole, _Antiquities of Berks_ (ed. 1723), iii. 172, from
-tombstone at St. George’s, Windsor. The inscription gives him 49 years
-as Master at Windsor, in error for 39. A second stone described as also
-his by Ashmole is clearly his wife’s.
-
-[124] Wallace, ii. 59, prints both from the Privy Seals of 2 and 3 July
-in the R. O. The appointment is enrolled in _Patent Rolls, 39 Eliz._ p.
-12, and the commission in _Patent Rolls, 39 Eliz._ p. 9, m. 7 _dorso_.
-The appointment is for life, the commission not so specified, and
-therefore during pleasure only.
-
-[125] The operative words of the appointment are ‘pro nobis heredibus
-et successoribus nostris damus et concedimus dilecto seruienti nostro
-Nathanieli Giles officium Magistri puerorum Capellae nostrae Regiae
-... habendum ... durante vita sua naturali Damus etiam ... praefato
-Nathanieli Giles vada siue feoda quadraginta librarum sterling
-percipienda annuatim ... pro eruditione duodecem puerorum eiusdem
-Capellae nostrae ac pro eorum conveniente exhibitione vestiturae et
-lectuarii ... vnacum omnibus et omnimodis aliis vadis feodis proficubus
-iurisdiccionibus aucthoritate priuilegiis commoditatibus regardis et
-aduantagiis quibuscunque eodem officio quoquo modo debitis ... ac ...
-praedicto Nathanieli Giles locum siue officium illud vnius generosorum
-nostrorum dictae Capellae nostrae Regiae ... vnacum feodo seu annuali
-redditu triginta librarum ...’
-
-[126] _E. v. K._ 211; _K. v. P._ 224, 230, 233 (misdated 44 Eliz.
-for 42 Eliz.), 239. These are only short recitals in the lawsuits.
-Apparently the fragmentary descriptions of the theatre in Wallace, ii.
-39, 40, 41, 43, 49, are from a fuller Latin text of the terms of the
-lease, possibly recited in a common-law suit, which he has not printed
-in full.
-
-[127] _K. v. P._ 230, 234.
-
-[128] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.
-
-[129] Fleay, 124, 153; Wallace, ii. 56; cf. _M. L. R._ iv. 156. An
-initial date for the enterprise in 1600 fits in exactly with the seven
-years during which there had been plays at the house where _K. B. P._
-was produced and the ten years’ training of Keysar’s company up to 1610
-(cf. p. 57).
-
-[130] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[131] Fleay, 127. Burn, 152, notes from _Bodl. Tanner MS._ 300 that
-among the misdemeanours punished in the Star Chamber was ‘Taking up a
-gentleman’s son to be a stage player’.
-
-[132] Wallace, ii. 84, gives the endorsed date omitted by Greenstreet
-and Fleay, as ‘Marti decimo quinto Decembris Anno xliiij Elizabeth
-Regine’; the date set down for trial is indicated as ‘p Octab Hillar’.
-This agrees with the time indication of the offence in the complaint
-itself as ‘about one yere last past, and since your maiesties last free
-and generall pardon’. The pardon referred to must be that of 1597–8
-(_39 Eliz._ c. 28; cf. _R. O. Statutes_, iv. 952). There was another
-passed by the Parliament of 1601 (_43 Eliz._ c. 19; cf. _Statutes_,
-iv. 1010) for all offences prior to 7 Aug. 1601, but presumably this
-was not yet law when the complaint was drawn. The Parliament sat to 19
-December. Clifton, however, was only just in time.
-
-[133] _K. v. P._ 248. The date is recited as ‘in or about the three
-and ffortieth yeare’ of Elizabeth, i.e. 1600–1, which is not exact.
-The reference can hardly be to any other than the Clifton affair. No
-Chancery documents in the case, other than the complaint, are known.
-It may be presumed that censure fell on Giles and Robinson, as well
-as Evans, but they were not concerned in _K. v. P._ Evans, of course,
-was technically acting as deputy to Giles under his commission, and
-Wallace, ii. 71, is not justified in citing the case as evidence that
-‘These powers to Giles were supplemented by official concessions to
-Henry Evans that enabled him to rent the Blackfriars theatre and train
-the Queen’s Children of the Chapel there, with remunerative privileges’.
-
-[134] _K. v. P._ 224, 230, 236, 242, 244, 248, 250.
-
-[135] _E. v. K._ 211, 216; _K. v. P._ 237, 240, 245. These are
-recitals. Wallace, ii. 91, says that he has found two copies of the
-original bond, but the text he prints adds nothing to _K. v. P._ 240.
-Clearly he is wrong in describing it as ‘containing the Articles
-of Agreement’. That was a much more detailed document, which Evans
-unfortunately thought so ‘long and tedious’ that he did not insert
-it at large in his Answer in _K. v. P._ It was doubtless analogous
-to the King’s Revels Articles of 1608 (cf. _infra_). It provided for
-the rights of the partners to the use of rooms (_E. v. K._ 211) and
-presumably for the division of profits (_K. v. P._ 237).
-
-[136] _K. v. P._ 244. Wallace, ii. 102, adds the actual terms of the
-bond. He takes Evans’s explanation to mean that hitherto Evans had
-maintained the boys and the plays out of official funds supplied
-through Kirkham as Yeoman of the Revels, but that now Evans’s name was
-to be kept out of the business, and disbursements made by his partners,
-who were to pay him 8_s._ a week as a kind of steward. I cannot
-suppose that Kirkham had been the channel of any official subvention,
-and, on the whole, think it probable that the second ‘compl^t’ in the
-extract from the pleading is an error for ‘def^t’. This leaves it not
-wholly clear why Evans should allege his relief from great weekly
-disbursements as a reason for receiving 8_s._ a week; but if we had
-the Articles of Agreement, the point would probably be clear. Possibly
-Evans had in the past made the equivalent of a weekly sum of 8_s._ out
-of board-wages passed on to him by Giles.
-
-[137] Wallace, ii. 88.
-
-[138] _E. v. K._ 213, 217, 220.
-
-[139] G. von Bülow and W. Powell in _R. H. S. Trans._ vi. 26; Wallace,
-ii. 105; with translations.
-
-[140] Wallace, ii. 126, summarizes his theory; cf. my review in _M. L.
-R._ v. 224.
-
-[141] Wallace, ii. 99.
-
-[142] _E. v. K._ 217; _K. v. P._ 224, 227, 229, 231, 236, 248.
-
-[143] Wallace, ii. 73.
-
-[144] Wallace, ii. 75, shows that the Blackfriars repertory would
-require twenty or twenty-five actors.
-
-[145] Gawdy, 117.
-
-[146] Wallace, ii. 95. Dudley Carleton wrote to John Chamberlain on
-29 Dec. 1601 (_S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxxxii. 48), ‘The Q: dined this day
-priuatly at my L^d Chamberlains; I came euen now from the blackfriers
-where I saw her at the play with all her candidae auditrices’; cf. _M.
-L. R._ ii. 12.
-
-[147] _K. v. P._ 235.
-
-[148] Wallace, ii. 89, says that Evans paid £11 0_s._ 2_d._ for repairs
-on 8 Dec. 1603.
-
-[149] _M. S. C._ i. 267, from _Patent Roll, 1 Jac. I_, pt. 8. Collier,
-i. 340, and Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 40, print the signet bill, the former
-dating it 30 Jan. and the latter 31 Jan., and misdescribe it as a privy
-seal. Collier, _N. F._ 48, printed a forged letter from Daniel to Sir
-T. Egerton (cf. Ingleby, 244, 247) intended to suggest that Drayton,
-and perhaps also Shakespeare, had coveted his post.
-
-[150] Wallace, ii. 80, mentions a case of the employment of a boy at
-the Blackfriars during James’s reign under a contract with his mother.
-
-[151] _M. S. C._ i. 359. On 7 Oct. 1605 the Wardrobe provided holland
-for shirts for the 12 children and ‘for James Cutler, a Chappell boy
-gone off’ (Lafontaine, 46, from _L. C._ 804).
-
-[152] Rimbault, 60; Stowe, _Annales_ (ed. Howes), 1037. An order of
-17 July 1604 (_H. O._ 301) continued the allowance of an increase of
-meat at festival times which the children had presumably enjoyed under
-Elizabeth.
-
-[153] Middleton, _Father Hubbard’s Tales_ (_Works_, viii. 64, 77). A
-reference in the same book to an ant as ‘this small actor in less than
-decimo sexto’ recalls the jest in the Induction to the _Malcontent_ at
-the boys who played _Jeronimo_ ‘in decimo sexto’.
-
-[154] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[155] _K. v. B._ 340.
-
-[156] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. plays named.
-
-[157] Kirkham and Kendall were still associated in Aug. 1605, when
-apparel and properties were obtained from them for the plays at
-James’s visit to Oxford (_M. S. C._ i. 247). There was a performance
-at the Blackfriars as late as 16 June 1605 (Wallace, ii. 125), a date
-connected with a dispute in settlement of which Kirkham’s bond of £50
-to Evans was exchanged for a new one to Hawkins (_K. v. P._ 244).
-
-[158] Cf. _M. L. R._ iv. 159. The t.p. of _Sophonisba_ only specifies
-performance ‘at the Blackfriars’; those of _The Fleir_ and _The Isle of
-Gulls_ ‘by the Children of the Revels at the Blackfriars’. Probably the
-‘Children of the Revels’ of the t.p. of Day’s _Law Tricks_ (1608) is
-also the Blackfriars company. No theatre is named, but the play is too
-early for the King’s Revels, who, moreover, do not seem to be described
-on other t.ps. as ‘Children of the Revels’ pure and simple. I take it
-that these t.p. descriptions follow the designations of the companies
-in use when the plays were last on the stage before publication, rather
-than those in use at the times of first production.
-
-[159] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[160] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Day.
-
-[161] Keysar was certainly associated with Kendall by the Christmas of
-1606–7, when they supplied apparel and properties for the Westminster
-plays; cf. Murray, ii. 169.
-
-[162] _K. v. P._ 249.
-
-[163] _M. S. C._ i. 362, from _P. R. O., Patent Roll, 4 James I_, p.
-18, _dorso_. Collier, i. 446, long ago noted the existence of a similar
-clause in a Caroline commission to Giles of 1626. It was probably the
-choristers who assisted in a quasi-dramatic performance on 16 July
-1607, when James dined with the Merchant Taylors, and Giles received
-the freedom of the company in reward; cf. ch. iv.
-
-[164] Cf. App. I.
-
-[165] _E. v. K._ 221; _K. v. P._ 246. ‘The Children of the Revells’
-who appeared at Leicester on 21 Aug. 1608 (Kelly, 248) might have been
-these boys, but might also have been the King’s Revels, if the King’s
-Revels were still in existence under that name, which is very doubtful.
-
-[166] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Chapman.
-
-[167] _S. P. D. Jac. I_, xxxi. 73. The mine was no doubt the silver
-mine discovered at Hilderston near Linlithgow in 1607, and worked as a
-royal enterprise with little success; cf. R. W. Cochran-Patrick, _Early
-Records relating to Mining in Scotland_ (1878), xxxvii. 116.
-
-[168] Cf. ch. xxiii.
-
-[169] _K. v. B._ 342.
-
-[170] _E. v. K._ 222; _K. v. P._ 225, 231, 235, 246.
-
-[171] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[172] _K. v. P._ 225, 249.
-
-[173] _E. v. K._ 221; _K. v. P._ 245. In the earlier suit Evans says
-that the royal prohibition was ‘vpon some misdemeanors committed in or
-about the plaies there, and specially vpon the defendants [Kirkham’s]
-acts and doings thereabout’. Unless Kirkham was more directly concerned
-in the management during 1608 than appears probable, Evans must be
-reflecting upon the whole series of misdemeanours since 1604.
-
-[174] On 9 May John Browne, ‘one of the playe boyes’, was buried at St.
-Anne’s.
-
-[175] _K. v. B._ 347, gives the date of surrender in 1610 as ‘about the
-tenth of August last past’. Probably a year’s sub-tenancy under the
-King’s men explains the discrepancy with the ‘about August in the sixt
-year of his Majesties raigne’ of _K. v. P._ 235, and the confirmatory
-date of the King’s men’s leases.
-
-[176] Cf. ch. _supra_ (Paul’s). _K. v. B._ 355 tells us that Rosseter
-was in partnership with Keysar.
-
-[177] _M. S. C._ i. 271, from _P. R., 7 Jac. I_, p. 13. Ingleby, 254,
-gave the material part in discussing a forged draft by Collier (_N. F._
-41), in which the names of the patentees are given as ‘Robert Daiborne,
-William Shakespeare, Nathaniel Field and Edward Kirkham’. A genuine
-note of the patent is in Sir Thomas Egerton’s note-book (_N. F._ 40).
-Ingleby adds that the signet office records (cf. Phillimore, 103) show
-that the warrant was obtained in Dec. 1609 by the influence of Monson.
-He was Anne’s household Chancellor and to him Rosseter and Campion
-dedicated their _Book of Airs_ (1601) and Campion his _Third Book of
-Airs_ (1617).
-
-[178] _K. v. B._ 343.
-
-[179] _K. v. B._ 343, 350.
-
-[180] Evans, Mrs. Evans, Field, Underwood, Ostler, Baxstead, Rosseter,
-Marston, and Mrs. Hawkins were to be examined for the King’s men.
-
-[181] _E. v. K._ 213. I presume that some of these are amongst the
-‘twelve additional suits’ which Wallace, ii. 36, claims to have found.
-
-[182] _E. v. K._ 218. In _K. v. P._ 225, he put the total annual
-profits during 1608–12 at £160.
-
-[183] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317; cf. _Hist. Hist._ 416 (App. I),
-‘Some of the chapel boys, when they grew men, became actors at the
-Blackfriars; such were Nathan Field and John Underwood’.
-
-[184] The _Chamber Accounts_ record no payment to the company (cf. App.
-B, introd.).
-
-[185] Cf. ch. xvi.
-
-[186] Murray, i. 361.
-
-[187] E. Ashmole, _Institution of the Garter_ (1672), 127; R. R.
-Tighe and J. E. Davis, _Annals of Windsor_, i. 426, 477; _Report of
-Cathedrals Commission_ (1854), App. 467; _V. H. Berks_, ii. 106; _H. M.
-C. Various MSS._ vii. 10.
-
-[188] Tighe-Davis, ii. 45, from Stowe’s account ‘of the Castell of
-Wyndsore’ (_Harl. MS._ 367, f. 13).
-
-[189] Nichols, i. 81, and Collier, i. 170, print a copy in _Ashm. MS._
-1113, f. 252, from the Elizabethan commission preserved at Windsor, as
-follows:
-
-‘Elizabeth R.
-
-Whereas our castle of Windsor hath of old been well furnished with
-singing men and children, We, willing it should not be of less
-reputation in our days, but rather augmented and increased, declare,
-that no singing men or boys be taken out of the said chapel by virtue
-of any commission, not even for our household chapel: and we give power
-to the bearer of this to take any singing men and boys from any chapel,
-our own household and St. Paul’s only excepted. Given at Westminster,
-this 8^{th} of March in the second year of our reign.’
-
-A further copy from _Ashm. MS._ 1113 is in _Addl. MS._ 4847, f. 117.
-Copies or notes of the three earlier commissions are in this MS. and in
-_Ashm. MS._ 1124. In _Ashm. MS._ 1132, f. 169, is a letter of 18 April
-1599 from the Chapter to Sir R. Cecil defending their conduct in taking
-a singing man from Westminster.
-
-[190] Gee, 230, in a list of deprived clergy from N. Sanders, _De
-Visibili Monarchia_ (1571), 688, ‘_Magistri Musices_ ... Prestonus in
-oppido Vindelisoriensi’. Can this Preston be the playwright (cf. ch.
-xxiii)?
-
-[191] Rimbault, 1; Stopes, _Shakespeare’s Environment_, 243.
-
-[192] _Ashm. MS._ 1132, f. 165^a.
-
-[193] Rimbault, 2.
-
-[194] _M. L. R._ (1906), ii. 6.
-
-[195] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[196] Cf. App. B.
-
-[197] Rimbault, 3; _H. M. C., Hatfield MSS._ ii. 539.
-
-[198] Rimbault, 182; _Musical Antiquary_, i. 30; _10 N. Q._ v. 341.
-A Christ Church, Oxford, MS., dated 1581, assigns to Farrant (cf.
-ch. xxiii) a possibly dramatic lament of Panthea for the death of
-Abradates, beginning ‘Ah, ah, alas ye salt sea Gods’. This is assigned
-to Robert Parsons by _Addl. MSS._ 17786–91, which assign to Farrant a
-song which may come from a play in which Altages is a character. The
-writer in the _Musical Antiquary_ thinks that a lament for Guichardo
-(not from either of the known Gismund texts) in the _Ch. Ch. MS._ is
-much in Farrant’s style.
-
-[199] Ashmole, _Antiquities of Berks_ (ed. 1723), iii. 172; cf. p. 41.
-
-[200] _Ashm. MS._ 1125, f. 41^v.
-
-[201] Cf. ch. xiii (Chamberlain’s).
-
-[202] Presumably, however, the ‘Gerry’ buried out of the Whitefriars
-play-house (q.v.) on 29 Sept. 1607 was of the company.
-
-[203] Phillimore, 140; cf. App. A.
-
-[204] _S. P. D. Jac. I_, lxxxi. 12.
-
-[205] _M. S. C._ i. 279, from _P. R. 13 Jac. I_, pt. 20.
-
-[206] _Variorum_, iii. 426; Collier, i. 394; Hazlitt,_ E. D. S._ 49;
-from _S. P. D. Jac. I_, xcvii. 140.
-
-[207] Collier, i. 396, not, as he says, from the _P. C. Register_, but
-from _S. P. D. Jac. I_, xcvii. 140.
-
-[208] Clode, ii. 269; Nicholl, _Ironmongers_, 84; cf. ch. iv.
-
-[209] Warton, iii. 313; Stowe, _Survey_, ed. Strype, v. 231.
-
-[210] E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ (1903), i. 220, from _S. P. D.
-Eliz._ xxxvi. 22; Murray, ii. 168.
-
-[211] _Observer._ Other payments in this or another year were for ‘a
-haddocke occupied in the plaie’, ‘a thondre barrell’, ‘drawing the
-tytle of the comedee’.
-
-[212] E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ (1896), i. 95; (1903) ii. 220;
-Murray, ii. 168; _Observer_.
-
-[213] Heywood-Wright, 632; Hazlitt-Warton, iii. 308.
-
-[214] Collins, 215 (1566), ‘M^r Scholemaster towards his charges about
-the playes laste Christmas, 20/-’; Maxwell-Lyte,^4 154 (1566–7) ‘To
-M^r Scholemaster for his charge setting furthe ij playes 19^o Martii,
-iii^l, xiij^s, viij^d’, (1568–9) ‘For ij dossen of links at iij^d the
-linke for the childrens showes at Christmass, vj^s’, (1572–3) ‘For vj
-poundes of candles at the playes in the Halle, ix^d’.
-
-[215] J. W. Hales in _Englische Studien_, xviii. 408 (cf. _Mediaeval
-Stage_, ii. 452), made the date of 1553–4 seem plausible, but his
-conjecture that the play was written for the Westminster boys
-is disposed of by A. F. Leach, who gives Udall’s appointment to
-Westminster from the Chapter Act Book as 16 Dec. 1555 (_Encycl. Brit._
-s.v. Udall). It might be a Court play of 1553–4, but the parody of the
-_Requiem_ would have been an indiscretion on Udall’s part at that date.
-
-[216] G. C. Moore Smith (_M. L. R._ viii. 368) has an ingenious
-identification of him with the Wrenock of Spenser’s _Shepheards
-Kalendar_, xii. 41.
-
-[217] Clode, _Hist. of Merchant Taylors Company_, i. 235, from Master’s
-_Accounts_. Before they opened their own school the Company had plays
-by the Westminster boys (q.v.).
-
-[218] Clode, i. 234.
-
-[219] The subject may have been Perseus and Andromeda, as the Revels
-prepared a picture of Andromeda this year. If so, it was probably the
-same play as that of 23 Feb. 1574.
-
-[220] Whitelocke, _Liber Famelicus_ (Camden Soc.), 12.
-
-[221] Clode, i. 264, 280, 390.
-
-[222] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 186, 256.
-
-[223] The documents in W. Campbell, _Materials for a History of the
-Reign of Henry VII_, are full for the period 1485–90. There is nothing
-of King’s players, but certain ‘stuffures’ paid for by a warrant of 25
-Nov. 1485 (Campbell, i. 178) included goods delivered to John English,
-apparently a royal tailor or valet, ‘servant unto my said sovereign’.
-
-[224] Collier, i. 44, from a book of Exchequer payments, beginning
-Michaelmas 1493, in the Chapter-house (probably _Misc. Books of the
-Treasury of the Receipt of the Exchequer_, 131), ‘xvij Die Maij
-[1494] John Englissh, Edwardo Maye, Rico Gibbeson, & John Hammond,
-Lusoribus Regis, alias, in lingua Anglicana, _les_ pleyars of the
-kyngs enterluds, de feodis suis V mrc. ꝓ Ann: le home, per lre Regis
-de privato Sigillo dormant de termino Michaelis alt: pte rec: denar:
-separatim ꝓ manus proprias, x mrc.’. The payment was continued
-half-yearly. Collier adds that Mr. Ouvry owned an original receipt
-signed by May and English for the salaries of the same four men. It is
-now _Egerton MS._ 2623 (3), f. 1, and appears to be a slip cut from
-some Exchequer record. F. Devon, _Issues of the Exchequer_, 516, gives
-similar payments for Michaelmas 1494 and Michaelmas 1503; it is in
-the latter that the names of William Rutter and John Scott appear. An
-Exchequer declaration of 1505–6 in _Lansd. MS._ 156, f. 135, has ‘To
-Richard Gibson, and other the kings plaiers, for their annuity for one
-yere, £13 6_s._ 8_d._’. Henry, _History of Britain_, xii. 456, gives
-from an Exchequer annuity list of 1507–8, ‘Ricardo Gybson et aliis
-lusoribus dom. reg. £13 6_s._ 8_d._’.
-
-[225] Collier, i. 49, quotes: (a) _Account_ of Robert Fowler (1501–2),
-‘Oct. 26 [1501], Itm to John Englishe for his pagent, £6 13_s._ 4_d._
-... Jan. 1 [1502] Itm, to the Kinges players, over 40^s paid by Thomas
-Trollop, 20^s’; (b) _Household Book of Henry VII_ (1492–1505, more
-correctly from _Addl. MS._ 7099 in Bentley, _Excerpta Historica_, 85),
-‘Jan. 6 [1494] To the Kings Pleyers for a rewarde, £2 13_s._ 4_d._ ...
-Jan. 7 [1502] To John Englishe the Pleyer, 10_s._’; (c) _The Kings Boke
-of Payments_ (1506–9, apparently _Misc. Books of the Treasury of the
-Receipt of the Exchequer_, 214), ‘Jan. 7 [1509] To the kings players in
-rewarde, £2’. Both (b) and (c) are _Chamber Accounts_.
-
-[226] Leland, _Collectanea_ (ed. Hearne), iv. 265.
-
-[227] _Lansd. MS._ 171, cited by Collier, i. 72, is in fact an
-Elizabethan document, but a list of fees and annuities (1516) in
-Brewer, ii. 874 has, amongst those granted by Henry VII, ‘John
-Englisshe and other players £13 6_s._ 8_d._’, and amongst those
-recently granted, ‘John Englisshe and other players, in addition to the
-old annuity, £13 6_s._ 8_d._’.
-
-[228] Collier, i. 97, 115, gives an Exchequer payment of 1525–6, ‘Rico
-Hole et Georgio Mayler, et aliis lusoribus Dom. Regis, de foedis suis
-inter se ad x marcos per ann. sibi debit: pro festo Michaelis, anno
-xvij Regis nunc Henrici VIII recept. denar. per manus proprias, per
-litt. curr. 66_s._ 8_d._’, and was informed by Mr. Devon of a similar
-payment of £3 6_s._ 8_d._ in 1530, in which John Roll, Richard Hole,
-and Thomas Sudbury are named. A household list of _c._ 1526 (Brewer,
-iv. 869) gives as on yearly wages ‘Ric. Hole and other players, £6
-13_s._ 4_d._’. One later than March 1544 (Collier, i. 133) gives 8
-players at £3 6_s._ 8_d._ each.
-
-[229] _Chamber Accounts_ (Brewer, v. 303; xiii. 2. 524; xiv. 2. 303;
-xvi. 178, 698; xvii. 474; xx. 2. 515; Nicolas, xxviii; Collier, i. 79,
-96, 113, 116, 117; _Trevelyan Papers_, i. 149, 157, 170, 177, 195, 203)
-give John English (1521–31) at half-yearly ‘fee’ or ‘wages’ of £3 6_s._
-8_d._, John Slye or Slee (1539–40) at £1 13_s._ 4_d._ half-yearly,
-and Richard Parrowe or Parlowe (1540–5, appointed Christmas 1538),
-George Birch (1538–45), Robert Hinstock (1538–45), and George Maylour
-(1538–40), at 16_s._ 8_d._ or 11_s._ 1_d._ quarterly.
-
-[230] _Chamber Accounts_ (Brewer, ii. 1441; iii. 1533, &c.; Nicolas,
-xxviii; Collier, i. 76, 116). The reward for 1509–10 was £2 13_s._
-4_d._; during 1510–13, £3 6_s._ 8_d._; during 1513–21, £3 6_s._ 8_d._
-to the ‘players’ and ‘£4’ to the ‘olde players’; and during 1529–41, £6
-13_s._ 4_d._
-
-[231] Collier, i. 69, from a ‘paper, folded up in the roll [of the
-_Revels Account_ for 1513–14] and in a different handwriting’,
-‘Inglyshe, and the oothers of the Kynges pleyers, after pleyed an
-Interluyt, whiche was wryten by Mayster Midwell, but yt was so long yt
-was not lykyd: yt was of the fyndyng of Troth, who was caryed away by
-ygnoraunce and ypocresy. The foolys part was the best, but the kyng
-departyd before the end to hys chambre.’ According to Collier, the
-paper is signed by William Cornish and also contains a description of a
-Chapel interlude. But Brewer, who calendars the _Revels Account_ fully,
-does not notice it, and according to A. W. Reed in T. L. S. (3 April
-1919) it cannot be traced at the R. O.
-
-[232] Cf. ch. iii; _Tudor Revels_, 6.
-
-[233] Brewer, ii. 1493. In 1546–7 they had 5_s._ for the loan of
-garments to the Revels (Kempe, 71).
-
-[234] _Grey Friars Chronicle_ (C. S.), 34, ‘Also this same yere John
-Scotte, that was one of the kynges playeres, was put in Newgate for
-rebukynge of the shreffes, and was there a sennet, and at the last was
-ledde betwene two of the offecers from Newgate thorrow London and soe
-to Newgat agayne, and then was delyveryd home to hys howse; but he toke
-such a thowte that he dyde, for he went in hys shurte’.
-
-[235] John Slye and John Yonge, mercer, had been players to Queen Jane
-before her death in 1537, and were concerned about 1538 in a Chancery
-suit about a horse hired ‘to beare there playing garmentes’ (Stopes,
-_Shakespeare’s Environment_, 235). Perhaps this explains the annuity of
-£1 10_s._ 5_d._ (1_d._ a day) which Young drew from the Chamber during
-1540–2. But he obtained a patent as King’s player, with an annual fee
-of £3 6_s._ 8_d._, on the death of Roo in 1539 (Brewer, xiv. 1. 423),
-and an ‘annuity’ of £3 6_s._ 8_d._ on the death of Sudbury in 1546
-(Brewer, xxi. 2. 156). Collier, i. 134, cites a description of him in a
-fee list amongst the _Fairfax MSS._ as ‘Maker of Interludes, Comedies,
-and Playes’.
-
-[236] Cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 183.
-
-[237] G. H. Overend in _N. S. S. Trans._ (1877–9), 425.
-
-[238] Collier, i. 93; Madden, _Privy Purse Expenses of the Princess
-Mary_, 104, 140; _Rutland MSS._ iv. 270; Brewer, iv. 340.
-
-[239] Cf. Murray, _passim_, and _Mediaeval Stage_, App. E.
-
-[240] _Royal MS._ 7, C. xvi, f. 97 (cited Collier, i. 137). The names
-are in a list of servants ‘nuely in ordinary of the Chamber’, and some
-illegible names of players are in an accompanying list of ‘Offycers in
-ordynary of the Chamber of the late Kynges Majestie now discharged’.
-
-[241] _Lord Chamberlain’s Records_, _Misc._ v. 127, f. 23 (also with
-the error ‘E. and P.’ in Sullivan, 249), ‘three broade yerdes of redd
-wollen clothe for a liuery coate of suche prices as the yeomen officers
-of oure howseholde are accustomed to haue and iij^s and iiij^d vnto
-euery of them for the Enbrauderinge of theire saide coates withe the
-lettres E and R on the backe and on the breste’.
-
-[242] _Chamber Accounts_ in _Trevelyan Papers_, i. 195–205; ii. 17–31,
-and Collier, i. 136, 138, 148.
-
-[243] _S. P. D. Edw. VI_, xiv.
-
-[244] _Stowe MS._ 571, f. 27^v; _Harl. MS._ 240, f. 13.
-
-[245] Feuillerat, _Edw. and Mary_, 89, 90, 97, 98, 119; cf. _Mediaeval
-Stage_, i. 406, where I think I was in error in taking John Smith as a
-name assumed by Will Somers.
-
-[246] _Hist. MSS._ iii. 230, from book of annuities at Penshurst.
-
-[247] Feuillerat, _Edw. and Mary_, 31, 39, 57, 86.
-
-[248] Collier, i. 149. The reference to Ferrers’ ‘divine’ and
-‘astronomer’ (cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 407) fixes the date.
-
-[249] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 201, from _Lansd. MS._ 824, f. 24.
-
-[250] Fee-list in collection of Soc. of Antiquaries, cited by Collier,
-i. 161.
-
-[251] _Chamber Accounts_ in Collier, i. 161; _Declared Accounts (Pipe
-Office)_, 541, m. 2^v.
-
-[252] Reading was a London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v). The Chamber
-Accounts for the first few years of Elizabeth show an annuity to a
-George Birch under a warrant of 7 Jan. 1560.
-
-[253] Eight players of interludes at £3 6_s._ 8_d._ each are in the
-fee-lists (cf. vol. i, p. 29), _Stowe MS._ 571, f. 148 (_c._ 1575–80),
-_Sloane MS._ 3194, f. 38 (1585), _Stowe MS._ 571, f. 168 (_c._
-1587–90), _Lansd. MS._ 171, f. 250 (_c._ 1587–91), _S. P. D. Eliz._
-ccxxi, f. 16 (_c._ 1588–93), _H. O._ 256 (_c._ 1598), and with the
-error of £3 6_s._ in _Hargreave MS._ 215, f. 21^v (_c._ 1592–5), _Lord
-Chamberlain’s Records_, v. 33, f. 19^v (1593), _Stowe MS._ 572, f. 35^v
-(_c._ 1592–6), _Harl. MS._ 2078, f. 18^v (_c._ 1592–6). The inaccurate
-_Cott. MS. Titus_, B. iii, f. 176 (_c._ 1585–93) gives two ‘Plaiers
-on Interludes’ at £3 6_s._ The normal entry recurs in the Jacobean
-_Lansd. MS._ 272, f. 27 (1614) and _Stowe MS._ 575, f. 24 (1616), but
-a group of the early part of the reign (_Addl. MS._ 35848, f. 19;
-_Addl. MS._ 38008, f. 58^v; _Soc. Antiq. MSS._ 74, 75) have ‘Plaiers
-on the In lute’ or ‘on in Lutes’, at £3 6_s._ 8_d._ or £3 6_s._, which
-looks like an attempt to rationalize the _Cotton MS._ entry. And
-_Stowe MS._ 574, f. 16^v, has ‘Players on Lute’ at £3 6_s._ 8_d._,
-which some one has corrected by inserting the normal entry. All this
-suggests that many copyists of fee-lists in the seventeenth century
-confused the post of interlude player with that of a lute player, and
-the former was therefore probably obsolete, and its fee no longer paid
-to the royal players of the day (cf. ch. x). I cannot agree with E.
-Law, _Shakespeare a Groom, of the Chamber_, 26, 64, that the interlude
-players survived under James as ‘mummers, who, perhaps, sang in a sort
-of recitative at masques and anti-masques’.
-
-[254] _Chamber Declared Accounts_ (_Pipe Office_), 541, _passim_, 542,
-m. 3; Collier, i. 236; Cunningham, xxvii. I do not know how long John
-Young continued to draw his Exchequer ‘annuity’, but presumably he had
-retired on it.
-
-[255] Fleay, 43, says, ‘There was no specific company called the
-Queen’s players till 1583; it was a generic title applied to any
-company who prepared plays for the Queen’s amusement. In 1561 the
-players probably were the Earl of Leicester’s servants.’ I need
-hardly say that I do not accept this, which would not explain the
-disappearance of the ‘Queen’s’ from provincial records between 1573 and
-1583. For another use of the same improvised theory by Mr. Fleay, cf.
-App. D, No. lxxv.
-
-[256] Murray, i. 19, adds records from other towns, and A. Clark (10
-_N. Q._ xi. 41) for Saffron Walden.
-
-[257] App. D, No. xi.
-
-[258] Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 280, ‘To my L. of Leyester’s men for a
-reward, 2_s._ 6_d._’. Fleay, 18, says that the amount is too small to
-favour the supposition that these were players. But Elizabeth was at
-Saffron Walden at the time, and a present was made to the Master of the
-Revels of a podd of oysters costing no more than 3_s._ 6_d._ Probably
-Saffron Walden was an economical place, or the payment was only for
-some speech.
-
-[259] Murray, i. 41.
-
-[260] Printed in _M. S. C._ i. 348, from _MS._ F. 10 (213) in the
-Marquis of Bath’s collection at Longleat; also in _3 N. Q._ xi. 350.
-The letter is undated but followed _Procl._ 663, on which cf. ch. viii
-and App. D, No. xix.
-
-[261] _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 406; Kempe, 47. The garments provided for
-Ferrers by the Revels included fools’ coats for ‘Children, John Smyth,
-Ayer apparent ... Seame 2, Parkins 3, Elderton 4’.
-
-[262] App. D, No. xviii.
-
-[263] Cf. ch. ix. The patent is printed from the Patent Roll in _M. S.
-C._ i. 262; also from a copy of the entry on the Patent Roll preserved
-amongst Rymer’s papers in _Sloane MS._ 4625 by Steevens, _Shakespeare_
-(1773), ii. 156, and therefrom in _Variorum_, iii. 47. This text omits
-the words ‘oure Citie of London and liberties of the same as also
-within’. Collier, i. 203, and Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 25, printed the
-Signet Bill, erroneously describing it as the Privy Seal, from the
-State Paper Office. This has the omitted words, and Collier correctly
-explains the omission in Steevens’s text as due to an inaccurate
-copyist, pointing in proof to the words ‘in oure _said_ Citye of
-London’. This did not, however, prevent Fleay, 45, from asserting
-that in the Patent ‘an alteration had been made from the Privy Seal’,
-on the ground that its terms ‘infringed on the powers of the City
-authorities’. Such an alteration not merely did not take place, but
-would have been a diplomatic impossibility, as the Patent Roll was made
-up, not from the Letters Patent, but from the Privy Seals on which
-these were based.
-
-[264] Probably they occupied the Theatre, at any rate in summer, until
-1583. A letter of Gabriel Harvey’s in the summer of 1579 mentions
-‘Lycesters’, the ‘Theater’, and ‘Wylson’, but in no very definite
-connexion with each other (cf. p. 4). The Privy Council letter of 23
-Dec. 1579, for their toleration at the Blackfriars, printed by Collier,
-_New Facts_, 9, is a forgery (cf. ch. xvii).
-
-[265] I should think the ‘Myngs’ of Murray, ii. 214, and Collier,
-_Northbrooke_, viii, more likely to be palaeographically accurate than
-the ‘Myngo’ of J. Latimer in _9 N. Q._ xi. 444 and his _Sixteenth
-Century Bristol_. But a song of ‘Monsieur Mingo’ exists in a setting by
-Orlando de Lassus (cf. _E. H. R._ xxxiii. 83), and is quoted in _2 Hen.
-IV_, v. iii. 78, and _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_, 968.
-
-[266] Cf. App. D, No. xl.
-
-[267] Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Baylye.
-
-[268] Murray, i. 41, gives additional provincial records for 1576–82.
-
-[269] Stowe, _Annales_, 717, from a description by William Segar.
-
-[270] The show itself was perhaps of Italian origin, for on 17 June
-1572 the Earl of Lincoln was entertained at Paris by the Duke of Anjou
-(2 Ellis, iii. 12, from _Cott. MS. Vesp._ F. vi, f. 93) with ‘an
-Italian comedie, which eandid, vaulting with notable supersaltes and
-through hoopes, and last of all the Antiques, of carying of men one
-uppon an other which som men call _labores Herculis_’.
-
-[271] J. Bruce from _Harl. MS._ 287, f. 1, in _Who was Will, my Lord of
-Leicester’s jesting player?_ (_Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 88). Bruce thinks
-that ‘Will’ might be Johnson, Kempe, or Sly, but not Shakespeare,
-whose ‘earliest works bear upon them the stamp of a mind far too
-contemplative and refined’ for Sidney to call him ‘knave’ and ‘jesting
-player’. I do not subscribe to the reasoning. W. J. Thoms, _Three
-Notelets on Shakespeare_, 120, upholds the Shakespeare theory, and
-attempts to support it by evidence of military knowledge in the plays.
-
-[272] Wright, _Eliz._ ii. 268, from _Cott. MS. Galba_ C. viii; cf. _M.
-L. R._ iv. 88.
-
-[273] Fleay, 82; but cf. Lee, 36, and pp. 124, 272. The thing is
-complicated by the influence of Malone’s suggestion (_Variorum_, ii.
-166) that Shakespeare might have left Stratford with Leicester’s men
-on a visit to the town. This assumes its most fantastic form in the
-suggestion of Lee^1, 33, that Shakespeare was already in London, but
-‘Shakespeare’s friends may have called the attention of the strolling
-players to the homeless youth, rumours of whose search for employment
-about the London theatres had doubtless reached Stratford’.
-
-[274] At Exeter they are called the Lord Steward’s, certainly not the
-Marquis of Winchester’s, as Murray, ii. 95, suggests, for he was never
-Steward of Elizabeth’s household.
-
-[275] _Norfolk Archaeology_, xiii. 11.
-
-[276] J. M. Cowper, in _1 R. Hist. Soc. Trans._ i. 218, records a
-performance by ‘my Lord of Leicester’s men’ at Faversham in 1589–90;
-but I think this must be an error.
-
-[277] J. D. Walker, _The Black Books of Lincoln’s Inn_, i. 374, gives
-the name as ‘Lord Roche’, but this is probably a mistake. Viscount
-Roche of Fermoy in Ireland is not likely to have had players in London.
-
-[278] J. de Perott (_Rev. Germ._ Feb. 1914) suggests that _Portio and
-Demorantes_ may be the Lamorat and Porcia of the French version (1548)
-of _Amadis de Grecia_ (1542), viii. 56.
-
-[279] Murray, i. 307, and A. Clark (_10 N. Q._ xii. 41) add records for
-1573–83.
-
-[280] Murray, i. 307, has additional provincial records for 1585–91.
-
-[281] I do not agree with Fleay, _Sh._ 18, 184, that Sussex’s were
-satirized in _A Midsummer-Night’s Dream_; cf. _infra_, s.v. Hertford’s.
-
-[282] Dasent, xxiv. 209.
-
-[283] Cf. App. C, No. lvii.
-
-[284] Dasent, viii. 71, dating the warrant on 29 Feb.
-
-[285] _Ancaster MSS._ (_Hist. MSS._) 466.
-
-[286] _Hist. MSS._ ix. 1. 156. The payment is given as to the Earl of
-‘Waffyts’ men.
-
-[287] Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 531.
-
-[288] Wright and Halliwell, _Reliquiae Antiquae_, ii. 122, from _Harl.
-MS._ 7392, f. 97; cf. _M. L. R._ ii. 5.
-
-[289] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 222.
-
-[290] Cf. ch. viii.
-
-[291] Ellis, i. 3, 32; Cooper, ii. 379; from _S. P. D. Eliz._ cxxxix.
-26. The Privy Council letter of 30 Oct. 1575 (_M. S. C._ i. 195)
-forbids ‘open shewes’ and ‘assemblies in open places of multitudes of
-people’ within five miles of Cambridge.
-
-[292] Murray, i. 348. I add Maldon (1581).
-
-[293] Murray, i. 348. I add Stratford (1583–4). Dr. Boas kindly informs
-me that the Oxford City Accounts for 1584–5 have a payment to Oxford’s
-‘musytions’.
-
-[294] Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).
-
-[295] The payment was made to Richard Woderam, but he is more likely to
-have been an agent of the Corporation than a member of the company.
-
-[296] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 186, 256. The 1469 entry has been since
-published by A. Clark in _10 N. Q._ vii. 181, ‘Et solut. lusoribus
-domini comitis Essex ludentibus coram burgensibus infra burgum hoc
-anno, v_s_.’
-
-[297] _Variorum_, ii. 150. The ‘lord Cartleyes players’ recorded by B.
-S. Penley, _The Bath Stage_, 12, in 1580–1, 1582–3, and 1583–4 were
-perhaps Lord Berkeley’s. Murray, ii. 27, adds other provincial notices.
-
-[298] This did not prevent Chalmers from giving the date 1581 and being
-set right by Malone (_Variorum_, iii. 442). Collier, i. 247, gives
-1583, but misdates Tilney’s commission of 1581, and takes it for the
-instrument constituting the company.
-
-[299] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 359.
-
-[300] Nicolas, _Hatton_, 271.
-
-[301] Stowe, _Annales_ (1615), 697, (1631), 698.
-
-[302] Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 79, citing _Addl. MS._ 5750, f. 113.
-
-[303] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[304] Halliwell, _Affray at Norwich in 1583 in which Queen Elizabeth’s
-Players were involved_ (1864), and in _Illustrations of the Life of
-Shakespeare_, 118.
-
-[305] Murray, i. 20, and A. Clark in _10 N. Q._ xii. 41 (Saffron
-Walden) give other provincial records throughout. An Ipswich one for
-1581–2 must be misplaced.
-
-[306] Cf. App. D, No. lxxv.
-
-[307] Fleay, 83.
-
-[308] _Variorum_, ii. 166.
-
-[309] _M. S. C._ i. 354. from _P. R. O. Lay Subsidies, Household_,
-69/97.
-
-[310] Fleay, 34.
-
-[311] The illustration of Mr. Fleay’s methods of constructing stage
-history is delightful. In _The True Tragedie of Richard the Third_,
-a Queen’s play, the murderers of the princes in the Tower are Will
-Slawter or Sluter, ‘yet the most part calles him blacke Will’ (Hazlitt,
-_Sh. L._ v. 95), and Jack Denten or Douton. On this Mr. Fleay (ii.
-316) comments, ‘One of the actors in it, Sc. 11, is called Will
-Slaughter, “yet the most part calls him Black Will”, _i.e._ the Black
-Will of _Arden of Faversham_, q.v., which had no doubt been acted by
-the same man. Another actor is called Jack Donton (Dutton) or Denten,
-an accommodation of the Dighton of history to the actor’s real name.’
-Obviously there is no need to suppose that the characters in _The True
-Tragedie_ bore the names of their actors. John Dutton is not very
-likely to have taken a part of four speeches, and Will Slawter is
-evidently added to the John Dighton of Holinshed, to give Edward V the
-‘irony’ of a pun upon ‘slaughter’. As for _Arden of Faversham_, it is
-not known to have been a Queen’s play at all, and its ‘Black Will’ is
-taken from Holinshed. Having gone so far, I do not know why Mr. Fleay
-stopped short of identifying Black Will’s colleague ‘Shakebag’ with
-the name of an actor. Of course, Mr. Fleay’s blundering conjectures
-must be distinguished from the deliberate fabrications of Collier,
-who published in his _New Facts_, 11, from a forged document amongst
-the _Bridgewater MSS._, a certificate to the Privy Council under the
-date ‘Nov. 1589’, from ‘her Ma^{ts} poore playeres James Burbidge
-Richard Burbidge John Laneham Thomas Greene Robert Wilson John Taylor
-Anth. Wadeson Thomas Pope George Peele Augustine Phillippes Nicholas
-Towley William Shakespeare William Kempe William Johnson Baptiste
-Goodale and Robert Armyn being all of them sharers in the blacke Fryers
-playehouse’. On this cf. ch. xvii, and Ingleby, 249.
-
-[312] Tarlton, 12, 13, 27, 29, 30, 31, 33, 37, ‘while the queenes
-players lay in Worcester’, ‘when the queenes players were restrained
-in summer, they travelled downe to S. James his fair at Bristow’, ‘in
-the country where the queenes plaiers were accepted into a gentlemans
-house’, ‘at Salisbury, Tarlton and his fellowes were to play before the
-maior and his brethren’, ‘the queenes players travelling into the west
-country to play, and lodging in a little village some ten miles from
-Bristow’.
-
-[313] Tarlton, 16, ‘one in mockage threw him in this theame, he playing
-then at the Curtaine’.
-
-[314] Tarlton, 24, ‘Tarlton then, with his fellowes, playing at the Bel
-by ... the Crosse-keyes in Gracious streete’.
-
-[315] Tarlton, 13, ‘at the Bull in Bishops-gate-street, where the
-queenes players oftentimes played’. It was here (Tarlton, 24) that
-Tarlton and Knell played _The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth_.
-
-[316] Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_ (_Works_, i. 197; cf. i. 308).
-
-[317] Arber, ii. 526, ‘A sorowfull newe sonnette intituled Tarltons
-Recantacon uppon this theame gyven him by a gentleman at the Bel savage
-without Ludgate (nowe or ells never) beinge the laste theame he songe’.
-The tract is not extant.
-
-[318] App. C, No. lvii. He names Knell, Bentley, Mills, Wilson, and
-Laneham.
-
-[319] Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Alleyn, and ch. xviii.
-
-[320] E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ for 21 Jan. 1882.
-
-[321] Cf. ch. xviii.
-
-[322] Murray, ii. 398 (Southampton), ‘the Queenes maiesties & the
-Earle of Sussex players, xxx^s’; 240 (Coventry), ‘the Quenes players
-& the Erle of Sussex players, xv^s’; 284 (Gloucester), ‘the Queenes
-and the Earle of Sussex players, xxx^s’. At Faversham (Murray, ii.
-274) separate payments of 1590–1 for the Queen’s (20_s._) and Essex’s
-(10_s._) are followed by ‘to the Queen’s Players and to the Earl of
-Essex’s Players’ (20_s._). It is conceivable that in this last entry
-‘Essex’s’ may be a slip for ‘Sussex’s’.
-
-[323] App. D, No. lxxxv.
-
-[324] Nashe, _Works_, iii. 244.
-
-[325] _M. S. C._ i. 190, from _Lansd. MSS._ 71, 75. The letters are
-both dated 18 Sept. 1592, and that to Burghley contained copies of the
-charters of Henry III and Elizabeth, of a Privy Council letter of 30
-Oct. 1575 (cf. Dasent, ix. 39) forbidding shows within five miles of
-the University, and of the warrant of the Vice-Chancellor and other
-justices to the constables of Chesterton, dated 1 Sept. 1592.
-
-[326] University Letter of 17 July 1593 in _M. S. C._ i. 200, from
-_Lansd. MS._ 75; Privy Council Act of 29 July 1593 in Dasent, xxiv. 427.
-
-[327] _M. S. C._ i. 198, from _Lansd. MS._ 71.
-
-[328] Henslowe, i. 4. The date in the diary is ‘8 of Maye 1593’, but
-I am prepared to accept Dr. Greg’s view (ii. 80) that as Francis was
-pawnbroking for his uncle all through 1593, this must be an error of
-Henslowe’s for ‘1594’. He seems to have actually left London on 18 May
-1594.
-
-[329] Henslowe, i. 6.
-
-[330] W. H. Stevenson, _Nottingham Records_, iv. 244.
-
-[331] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 186, 251.
-
-[332] _Sh. Homage_, 154.
-
-[333] Fleay, _Shakespeare_, 184.
-
-[334] Collier, i. 259.
-
-[335] Murray, i. 294. I add Maldon (1564–5). There is no proof that
-‘Beeston and his fellowes’ at Barnstaple in 1560–1 were Strange’s.
-
-[336] The Revels account for 1587–9 (Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 390) includes
-‘a paire of fflanell hose for Symmons the Tumbler’, which is not in the
-separate account for 1587–8 (Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 380).
-
-[337] App. D, No. lxxxii. The forged list of Queen’s men (q.v.) in 1589
-is sometimes, by a further error, whose I do not know, assigned to
-Strange’s.
-
-[338] I had better give the complicated and in some cases uncertain
-notices in full; the unspecified references are to Murray: Cambridge
-(1591–2), ‘my Lord Stranges plaiers’ (Cooper, ii. 518), and so also
-(ii. 229, 284) Canterbury (13 July 1592) and Gloucester (1591–2); Bath
-(1591–10 June 1592), ‘my Lord Admiralls players’ ... ‘my L. Stranges
-plaiers’ (ii. 202); Aldeburgh (1591–2), ‘my Lord Admirals players’
-(Stopes, _Hunnis_, 314); Shrewsbury (30 Sept. 1591–29 Sept. 1592), ‘my
-L. Admeralls players’ ... ‘my l. Stranges and my l. Admyralls players’
-(ii. 392, s. a. 1592–3, but the entries for the two years seem to be
-transposed; _vide infra_); Coventry (10 Dec. 1591–29 Nov. 1592), ‘the
-Lord Strange players’ (ii. 240); Leicester (19 Dec. 1592), ‘the Lorde
-Admiralls Playars’ (ii. 305); Shrewsbury (30 Sept. 1592–29 Sept. 1593),
-‘The iii of Feb: 1592. Bestowed vppon the players of my Lorde Admyrall’
-... ‘my L. Darbyes men being players’ (ii. 392, s. a. 1591–2, but the
-detailed date and the name Derby make an error palpable); Bath (11
-June 1592–10 Sept. 1593), ‘my L. Stranges plaiers’ (ii. 203); Coventry
-(30 Nov. 1592–26 Nov. 1593), ‘the Lo Admiralls players’ (ii. 240);
-York (April 1593), ‘the Lord Admerall & Lord Mordens players’ (ii.
-412); Newcastle (May 1593), ‘my Lord Admiralls plaiers, and my Lord
-Morleis plaiers being all in one companye’ (G. B. Richardson, _Extracts
-from Municipal Accounts of N._); Southampton (1592–3), ‘my L. Morleys
-players and the Earle of Darbyes’ (ii. 398, ‘_c._ 18 May’, but Strange
-became Derby on 25 Sept.); Leicester (Oct.–Dec. 1593), ‘the Erle of
-Darbyes playors’ (ii. 306); Coventry (2 Dec. 1593), ‘the Lo: of Darbyes
-players’ (ii. 240); Bath (11 Sept. 1593–1594), ‘the L. Admiralls, the
-L. Norris players’ (ii. 203); Ipswich (7 March 1594), ‘vnto therlle of
-Darbys players and to the Lorde Admirals players, the ij amongste’ (ii.
-293, s. a. 1591–2, but on 7 March 1592 Strange was not yet Derby, and
-his men were playing for Henslowe).
-
-[339] App. D, No. xcii.
-
-[340] Henslowe, i. 13. The account is headed, ‘Jn the name of god Amen
-1591 beginge the 19 of febreary my lord stranges mene a ffoloweth 1591’.
-
-[341] Cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. _1 Jeronimo_. Some marginal notes of sums of
-money are not clearly intelligible, but may represent sums advanced by
-Henslowe for the company.
-
-[342] Henslowe, i. 15.
-
-[343] Dasent, xxiv. 212.
-
-[344] Cf. W. W. Greg in Henslowe, ii. 70.
-
-[345] _Dulwich MSS._ i. 9–15 (_Henslowe Papers_, 34); cf. Henslowe, i.
-3.
-
-[346] Their patron was Edward Parker, Lord Morley (Murray, ii. 54). I
-suspect the Morden of the York entry and the Norris of the Bath entry
-of being both transcriber’s errors for Morley. No players of Lord
-Norris are on record, and those of Lord Mordaunt (Murray, ii. 90) only
-recur in 1585–6 and 1602.
-
-[347] Text in _Henslowe Papers_, 130; on the nature of a ‘plott’, cf.
-App. N.
-
-[348] The following rather hazardous identifications have been
-attempted by Greg (_loc. cit._) and Fleay, 84: ‘Harry’ = Henry Condell
-(Fleay, Greg); ‘Kit’ = Christopher Beeston (Fleay, Greg); ‘Saunder’ =
-Alexander Cooke (Fleay, Greg); ‘Nick’ = Nicholas Tooley (Fleay, Greg);
-‘Ro.’ or ‘R. Go.’ = Robert Gough (Fleay, Greg); ‘Ned’ = Edward Alleyn
-or Edmund Shakespeare (Fleay); ‘Will’ = William Tawyer (Fleay), William
-Tawler (Greg). The object is, of course, to establish the connexion
-between Strange’s and the Chamberlain’s men. Both writers assign two of
-the unallocated parts to Heminges and Shakespeare.
-
-[349] For speculation as to Shakespeare’s early career, cf. s.v.
-Pembroke’s.
-
-[350] Text in _Henslowe Papers_, 155.
-
-[351] George Fanner to H. Galdelli and G. Tusinga in _S. P. Dom. Eliz._
-cclxxi. 34, 35. I do not accept Mr. James Greenstreet’s theory that W.
-Stanley was the real W. Shakespeare.
-
-[352] _Hatfield MSS._ xiii. 609.
-
-[353] Murray, i. 295.
-
-[354] Taylor, _Penniless Pilgrimage_ (ed. Hindley), 67.
-
-[355] _Dulwich MS._ i. 14, in _Henslowe Papers_, 40.
-
-[356] _Outlines_, i. 122; ii. 329.
-
-[357] Fleay, 136, ‘Pembroke’s men continued to act at the Curtain from
-1589 to 1597’ is guesswork.
-
-[358] Henslowe, i. 131; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Fulwell.
-
-[359] Cf. _infra_ (Chamberlain’s). Shank (cf. ch. xv) was once in
-Pembroke’s.
-
-[360] The Council Register assigns this performance to the
-Chamberlain’s; cf. App. B.
-
-[361] Fleay, _Sh._ 286, supposed Howard to be both Admiral and
-Chamberlain at this date, but this view was refuted by
-Halliwell-Phillipps in the _Athenaeum_ for 24 April 1886, and resigned
-by Fleay, 31; cf. Greg, ii. 81.
-
-[362] I. H. Jeayes, _Letters of Philip Gawdy_ (Roxburghe Club), 23.
-
-[363] Stopes, _Hunnis_, 322, names payees in error.
-
-[364] Henslowe, ii. 83.
-
-[365] _Henslowe Papers_, 31.
-
-[366] _Alleyn Papers_, 11, 12; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 32.
-
-[367] _Alleyn Papers_, 1, 5.
-
-[368] Ibid. 54.
-
-[369] Henslowe, ii. 127.
-
-[370] Henslowe, i. 17.
-
-[371] Ibid. 198.
-
-[372] Ibid. 17.
-
-[373] Cf. the petitions assigned to 1592 (App. D, No. xcii).
-
-[374] They may represent n[ew] e[nterlude], or merely ne[w].
-
-[375] Fleay, 140; Henslowe, ii. 84.
-
-[376] Henslowe, ii. 324.
-
-[377] Ibid. ii. 133.
-
-[378] Ibid. i. 126.
-
-[379] Ibid. i. 44.
-
-[380] Henslowe, i. 51; cf. Dr. Greg’s explanation in ii. 129 and my
-criticism in _M. L. R._ iv. 409. Wallace (_E. S._ xliii. 361) has a
-third explanation, that the figures represent the sharers’ takings.
-But (_a_) these would not all pass through Henslowe’s hands, (_b_) the
-amounts are often less than half the galleries, and (_c_) the columns
-are blank for some days of playing.
-
-[381] I include _Belin Dun_, produced just before the separation of
-the Admiral’s and the Chamberlain’s, in the fifty-five; but I do not
-follow Dr. Greg in taking the sign ‘j’, which Henslowe attaches to
-_Tamburlaine_ (30 Aug. 1594) and _Long Meg of Westminster_ (14 Feb.
-1595) as equivalent to ‘ne’. Were it so, these would furnish two, and
-the only two, examples of a second new production in a single week.
-Probably ‘j’ indicates in both instances the _First Part_ of a two-part
-play. This view is confirmed by Henslowe’s note on 10 March 1595, ‘17
-p[laies] frome hence lycensed’; cf. my criticism in _M. L. R._ iv. 408.
-
-[382] Variously entered as ‘olimpo’, ‘seleo & olempo’, ‘olempeo &
-hengenyo’, &c.; but apparently only one play is meant.
-
-[383] _Alexander and Lodowick_ is actually entered for a second time as
-‘ne’ on 11 Feb. 1597, but I have assumed this to be a mistake.
-
-[384] It has been chiefly played by Fleay and Dr. Greg. The relations
-suggested are between _1 Caesar and Pompey_ and Chapman’s play of the
-same name, _Disguises_ and Chapman’s _May-day_, _Godfrey of Bulloigne_
-and Heywood’s _Four Prentices of London_, _Olympo_, _1, 2 Hercules_,
-and _Troy_ and Heywood’s _Golden_, _Silver_, _Brazen_, and _Iron Ages_
-respectively. _Five Plays in One_ and some of Heywood’s _Dialogues
-and Dramas_, _The Wonder of a Woman_ and a supposed early version by
-Heywood of W. Rowley’s _A New Wonder, or, A Woman Never Vexed_, _The
-Venetian Comedy_ and both the German _Josephus Jude von Venedig_ and
-Dekker’s lost _Jew of Venice_, _Diocletian_ and Dekker’s _The Virgin
-Martyr_, _A Set at Maw_ and Dekker’s _Match Me in London_, _The Mack_
-and Dekker’s _The Wonder of a Kingdom_, _Vortigern_ and Middleton’s
-_The Mayor of Quinborough_, _Uther Pendragon_ and W. Rowley’s _Birth of
-Merlin_, _Philipo and Hippolito_ and both Massinger’s lost _Philenzo
-and Hypollita_ and the German _Julio und Hyppolita_. Full details will
-be found in Henslowe, ii. 165 sqq.
-
-[385] Henslowe, i. 44, 128.
-
-[386] Possibly identical with _Mahomet_, if that was Peele’s play. Dr.
-Greg’s identification with _The Love of an English Lady_ strikes me as
-rather arbitrary.
-
-[387] I assume that ‘valy a for’ entered on 4 Jan. 1595 is the same
-play. Conceivably it might be _Vallingford_, i. e. _Fair Em_, an old
-Strange’s play.
-
-[388] An allusion in Field’s _Amends for Ladies_, ii. 1, shows that
-_Long Meg_ still held the Fortune stage about 1611.
-
-[389] Possibly identical with _Longshanks_.
-
-[390] The relations suggested are between _The Love of a Grecian Lady_
-and the German _Tugend-und Liebesstreit_, _The French Doctor_ and both
-Dekker’s _Jew of Venice_ and the German _Josephus Jude von Venedig_,
-_The Siege of London_ and Heywood’s _1 Edward IV_, _The Welshman_ and
-R. A.’s _The Valiant Welshman_, _Time’s Triumph and Fortune’s_ and
-Heywood’s _Timon_. For details cf. Henslowe, ii. 165 _sqq._
-
-[391] This was on Whit-Tuesday 1596, and I rather suspect a mis-entry
-of _iij_^s for _iij_^{li}, the exact amount taken for the plays of the
-Monday and Wednesday in the same week.
-
-[392] Henslowe, i. 5.
-
-[393] Ibid. 44.
-
-[394] Ibid. 31, 45.
-
-[395] Henslowe, i. 29, 31, 43, 44, 199–201.
-
-[396] I see no reason to agree with Dr. Greg in identifying ‘Black
-Dick’ with Jones, who would naturally have the ‘Mr.’; and the
-suggestions that ‘Dick’ might be Dick Juby and that ‘Will’ might be
-Will Barnes or Will Parr are mere guesses based on the occurrence of
-these names in other ‘plots’. ‘Will’ might just as well be Will Kendall.
-
-[397] Henslowe, i. 45.
-
-[398] Henslowe’s entry is (i. 54), ‘Martin Slather went for the company
-of my lord admeralles men the 18 of July 1597’. I think that ‘for’ must
-be meant for ‘from’. Elsewhere (i. 66) Henslowe writes ‘for’ for ‘from’.
-
-[399] Henslowe, i. 47, 200.
-
-[400] Ibid. 201–4; _Egerton MS._ 2623, f. 19 (a fragment from the
-Diary).
-
-[401] Henslowe, ii. 89, 101.
-
-[402] Henslowe, i. 105, 131, 134.
-
-[403] Ibid. 40.
-
-[404] Ibid. 199–201.
-
-[405] App. D, No. cxii.
-
-[406] Henslowe, i. 54; _E. S._ xliii. 351.
-
-[407] Henslowe, i. 68–70.
-
-[408] Ibid. 82.
-
-[409] Ibid. ii. 91; cf. p. 200.
-
-[410] Henslowe, i. 69, 73; Wallace in _E. S._ xliii. 382.
-
-[411] Cf. p. 173.
-
-[412] Henslowe, i. 81, 122.
-
-[413] Ibid. 64, 67.
-
-[414] Ibid. 63, 79.
-
-[415] Henslowe, i. 72, ‘Lent W^m Borne to folowe the sewt agenste
-Thomas Poope’; cf. i. 26, 38, 47–8, 56, 63–9, 71–8, 80, 201, 205; and
-s.v. Pembroke’s.
-
-[416] Henslowe, i. 84.
-
-[417] During 1599–1602 Henslowe sometimes enters advances as made to
-the company through ‘W^m’ Juby, and in two cases corrects the entry
-by substituting ‘Edward’. As there is no other evidence for a William
-Juby as an actor, not to speak of a sharer, either Henslowe must have
-persistently mistaken the name, or William must have been a relative of
-Edward, acting as his agent (cf. Henslowe, ii. 290).
-
-[418] _Henslowe Papers_, 48.
-
-[419] Henslowe, i. 26.
-
-[420] _Henslowe Papers_, 113.
-
-[421] Henslowe, i. 122.
-
-[422] Ibid. 122.
-
-[423] Ibid. 66, 68, 91, 108.
-
-[424] Ibid. 85.
-
-[425] Henslowe, i. 72.
-
-[426] Ibid. 63, 104.
-
-[427] Ibid. 118.
-
-[428] I find ‘Lorde Haywards’ men at Leicester during Oct.–Dec. 1599,
-‘Lord Howardes’ at Bristol in 1599–1600, ‘Lord Heywardes’ at Bath in
-the same year, ‘Lord Howards’ at Coventry on 28 Dec. 1599, and ‘Lord
-Haywards’ in 1602–3. This must have been another company. The Admiral’s
-were playing in London at the time of the Leicester and the earlier
-Coventry visits, and Lord Howard of Effingham became Earl of Nottingham
-on 22 Oct. 1596. They were at Canterbury in 1599–1600.
-
-[429] Henslowe, i. 120.
-
-[430] _Henslowe Papers_, 49; Henslowe, i. 113.
-
-[431] _Henslowe Papers_, 55; Henslowe, i. 122.
-
-[432] _Henslowe Papers_, 56; Henslowe, i. 135, 147.
-
-[433] _Henslowe Papers_, 56; Henslowe, i. 135.
-
-[434] _Henslowe Papers_, 56–8.
-
-[435] Henslowe, ii. 125.
-
-[436] Henslowe, i. 84–107.
-
-[437] Ibid. 103.
-
-[438] Henslowe, i. 83, 101, 119.
-
-[439] Ibid. ii. 124.
-
-[440] _Henslowe Papers_, 113, from Malone (1790), i. 2. 300; the
-manuscript is now lost. The various sections of the document are
-headed: (_a_) ‘The booke of the Inventary of the goods of my lord
-Admeralles men, tacken the 10 of Marche in the yeare 1598’; (_b_) ‘The
-Enventary of the Clownes sewtes and Hermetes Swetes, with dievers
-others sewtes, as followeth, 1598, the 10 of March’; (_c_) ‘The
-Enventary of all the aparell for my Lord Admiralles men, tacken the 10
-of Marche 1598--Leaft above in the tier-house in the cheast’; (_d_)
-‘The Enventary tacken of all the properties for my Lord Admeralles men,
-the 10 of Marche 1598’; (_e_) ‘The Enventorey of all the aparell of the
-Lord Admeralles men, taken the 13^{th} of Marche 1598, as followeth’;
-(_f_) ‘A Note of all suche bookes as belong to the Stocke, and such as
-I have bought since the 3^d of Marche 1598’; (_g_) ‘A Note of all suche
-goodes as I have bought for the Companey of my Lord Admirals men, sence
-the 3 of Aprell, 1598, as followeth’. A comparison of the book-list
-with the diary payments makes it clear that ‘1598’ is 1597/8 and not
-1598/9. The last book entered was bought in Aug. 1598. An undated
-inventory of Alleyn’s private theatrical wardrobe is in _Henslowe
-Papers_, 52.
-
-[441] It should be borne in mind that these lists are based in part
-upon a rather conjectural interpretation of evidence. Full details, for
-which I have not space, will be found in Henslowe, ii. 186 _sqq._ I
-have annotated a few points of interest.
-
-[442] So called in the book-inventory; in the diary it is _Triplicity
-of Cuckolds_.
-
-[443] The first name appears in the inventory, the second in the diary.
-
-[444] Only £4 was paid ‘to by a boocke’, which is low for a new play
-and high for an old one. Possibly Porter was in debt to the company.
-
-[445] Once described as ‘other wisse called worsse feared then hurte’,
-whence Dr. Greg infers that the 1598–9 play of that name was a second
-part of it.
-
-[446] So in the book-inventory; in the account it is only called _The
-Cobler_.
-
-[447] Possibly _Strange Flattery_, but the manuscript is lost.
-
-[448] They had to buy _Mahomet_, _The Wise Man of West Chester_,
-_Longshanks_, and _Vortigern_ from Alleyn in 1601 and 1602.
-
-[449] ‘the Mores lymes’, ‘iiij Turckes hedes’, ‘j Mores cotte’.
-
-[450] ‘iiij genesareys gownes’, ‘owld Mahemetes head’.
-
-[451] ‘Tamberlyne brydell’, ‘Tamberlynes cotte, with coper lace’,
-‘Tamberlanes breches of crymson vellvet’.
-
-[452] ‘j cauderm for the Jewe’.
-
-[453] ‘j tree of gowlden apelles’.
-
-[454] ‘j whell and frame in the Sege of London’.
-
-[455] ‘Belendon stable’.
-
-[456] ‘Tasso picter’, ‘Tasoes robe’.
-
-[457] ‘senetores gowne’ and ‘capes’.
-
-[458] ‘Kents woden leage’.
-
-[459] ‘j mawe gowne of calleco for the quene’.
-
-[460] ‘j sewtte for Nepton’, ‘Nepun forcke & garland’.
-
-[461] ‘Harey the fyftes dublet’ and ‘vellet gowne’, ‘j payer of hosse
-for the Dowlfyn’.
-
-[462] ‘j longe-shanckes sewte’.
-
-[463] ‘j great horse with his leages’.
-
-[464] ‘Vartemar sewtte’, ‘Valteger robe of rich tafitie’, ‘j payer of
-hosse & a gercken for Valteger’, ‘ij Danes sewtes, and ij payer of
-Danes hosse’.
-
-[465] ‘j tome of Guido’, ‘j cloth clocke of russete with coper lace,
-called Guydoes clocke’.
-
-[466] ‘Merlen gowne, and cape’.
-
-[467] ‘my lord Caffes gercken & his hoose’.
-
-[468] These include ‘Argosse head’, ‘Andersones sewte’, ‘Will Sommers
-sewtte’, ‘ij Orlates sewtes’, ‘Cathemer sewte’, ‘j Whittcomes dublett
-poke’, ‘Nabesathe sewte’, ‘j Hell mought’, ‘the cloth of the Sone &
-Mone’, ‘Tantelouse tre’, ‘Eves bodeyes’. Probably ‘Perowes sewte which
-W^m Sley were’ dated back to the days of Strange’s men. After 3 April
-1598 Henslowe bought, _inter alia_, ‘a gown for Nembia’ and ‘a robe for
-to goo invisibell’.
-
-[469] It looks as if the book-inventory were not exhaustive; perhaps it
-only includes books more or less in current use.
-
-[470] There is a self-contradictory entry, ‘to paye vnto M^r Willson
-Monday & Deckers ... iiij^{ll} v^s in this maner Willson xxx^s
-Cheattell xxx^s Mondy xxv^s’.
-
-[471] Regarded by Dr. Greg as _2 Hannibal and Hermes_.
-
-[472] I agree with Dr. Greg that this, for which Chapman had £4 in
-1598–9, is probably identical with _The Isle of a Woman_, for which he
-had had earnests of £4 or £4 10_s._ in 1597–8.
-
-[473] I think the play licensed as _Brute Grenshallde_ in March 1599
-was a second part written by Chettle to an old _1 Brute_ by Day, which
-would not need re-licensing.
-
-[474] I do not see with what to identify the play licensed under this
-name in March 1599 except the unnamed ‘playe boocke’ and ‘tragedie’,
-for which Chapman had something under £9 in the previous Oct. and Jan.
-
-[475] The title _War without Blows and Love without Strife_ in one
-entry is probably an error.
-
-[476] I agree with Dr. Greg that the entries point to two plays by
-Chettle and Dekker rather than one. They are probably incomplete owing
-to the hiatus in the manuscript.
-
-[477] Dr. Greg makes two plays of this, but the entry ‘his boocke
-called the world rones a whelles & now all foolles but the foolle’
-seems unambiguous, and the total payments of £8 10_s._ are not too high
-for a play by Chapman.
-
-[478] No importance can be attached to Mr. Fleay’s childish
-identifications of _War without Blows and Love without Suit_, _Joan
-as Good as my Lady_, and _The Four Kings_ with _The Thracian Wonder_,
-Heywood’s _A Maidenhead well Lost_, and _Sir Clyomon and Sir Clamydes_
-respectively.
-
-[479] So called in Drayton’s autograph receipt, but Henslowe calls it
-_William Longbeard_.
-
-[480] Henslowe, i. 72, 78.
-
-[481] Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Alleyn.
-
-[482] The only entry is of 15 July ‘to bye a boocke’, but the hiatus in
-the manuscript probably conceals earlier payments.
-
-[483] Here also the hiatus has only left an entry of £2 ‘in full
-payment’ on 1 Aug. Dr. Greg, however, would identify _Bear a Brain_ and
-_The Gentle Craft_.
-
-[484] The entries are as follows: 2 Sept., ‘Thomas Deckers Bengemen
-Johnson Hary Chettell & other Jentellman in earneste of a playe calle
-Robart the second kinge of Scottes tragedie’; 15 Sept., ‘in earneste
-of a boocke called the Scottes tragedi vnto Thomas Dickers & Harey
-Chettell’; 16 Sept., ‘Hary Chettell ... in earneste of a boocke called
-the Scottes tragedie’; 27 Sept., ‘Bengemen Johnsone in earneste of a
-boocke called the Scottes tragedie’; 28 Sept., ‘vnto M^r Maxton the new
-poete in earneste of a boocke called [blank]’. Dr. Greg resists the
-fairly reasonable identification of ‘M^r Maxton the new poete’ with the
-‘other Jentellman’. All the payments are called earnests, but the total
-is £6 10_s._ and therefore the play probably existed.
-
-[485] ‘Lent vnto me W Birde the 9 of Februarye to paye for a new booke
-to Will Boyle cald Jugurth xxx^s which if you dislike Ile repaye it
-back.’ The price is the lowest ever entered for a ‘new’ book. Mr.
-Fleay’s suggestion that Will Bird, who already had one alias in Will
-Borne, was also himself Will Boyle, is one of those irresponsible
-guesses by which he has done so much to make hay of theatrical history.
-
-[486] Both parts were entered on the Stationers’ Register, but no copy
-of _2 Sir John Oldcastle_ is known.
-
-[487] _Bodl. Ashm. MS._ 236, f. 77^v (_c._ 1600), has Forman’s note of
-the ‘plai of Cox of Cullinton and his 3 sons, Henry Peter and Jhon’.
-
-[488] _Henslowe Papers_, 49.
-
-[489] This was taken up again in 1601, but still not finished. Dr.
-Greg, however, thinks that it is identical with Day’s Italian tragedy,
-and forms half of _Two Lamentable Tragedies_ (1601), and that Chettle’s
-work in 1601 may have been the effecting of the combination with
-_Thomas Merry_.
-
-[490] Dr. Greg, following Mr. Fleay, identifies this with Dekker’s
-_Whore of Babylon_, and as Time is a character in this play, cites the
-purchase of ‘a Robe for tyme’ in April 1600 as a proof that it was then
-performed. Time, however, might also have been a character in _The
-Seven Wise Masters_.
-
-[491] Possibly finished later and identical with the pseudo-Marlowesque
-_Lust’s Dominion_.
-
-[492] The payment-entry is cancelled. The play may have been finished
-for another company, and be identical with the extant _Grim, the
-Collier of Croydon_, or, _The Devil and his Dame_.
-
-[493] Possibly the basis of Bird and Rowley’s _Judas_ of 1601.
-
-[494] It seems to me a little arbitrary of Dr. Greg to assume that the
-10_s._ entered as an earnest for this was really a bonus on _1 The
-Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green_.
-
-[495] _Henslowe Papers_, 51. I do not think that Dr. Greg recognizes
-the full significance of this when he suggests (Henslowe, ii. 94) that
-Alleyn was back on the stage by 1598; cf. my criticism in _M. L. R._
-iv. 410. Dr. Greg relies mainly on the appearance of his name in the
-plot of _The Battle of Alcazar_, which, he says, ‘almost certainly
-belongs to 1598’. But I can find no reason why it should not belong to
-1600–2; cf. p. 175.
-
-[496] Henslowe, i. 56.
-
-[497] Ibid. 162.
-
-[498] Ibid. 141.
-
-[499] Ibid. 144, 165, 174.
-
-[500] Ibid. 134, 136, 140, 147.
-
-[501] Dr. Greg puts it in 1598, on the assumption that Alleyn returned
-to the stage in that year. It might conceivably belong to 1597, between
-18 Dec., when Bristow was bought, and 29 Dec., by which day Alleyn had
-left. It cannot be later than Feb. 1602, by which month Jones and Shaw
-had left. The prefix ‘M^r’ allotted to Charles and Sam is in favour
-of a date after their agreements on 16 Nov. 1598. Dr. Greg’s argument
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 138) that Kendall’s agreement expired 7 Dec. 1599
-is not convincing, as there was nothing in it to prevent him from
-staying on, and the satire of the play in Jonson’s _Poetaster_ of 1601,
-to which he refers, obviously tells in favour of a date nearer to 1601
-than 1598.
-
-[502] Henslowe, i. 38.
-
-[503] Ibid. 131, 134.
-
-[504] Ibid. 164.
-
-[505] Ibid. 205.
-
-[506] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[507] The entry is ‘Thomas Deckers for his boocke called the fortewn
-tenes’. Collier read ‘forteion tenes’ and interpreted _Fortunatus_. Mr.
-Fleay furnished the alternatives of _Fortune’s Tennis_ and _Hortenzo’s
-Tennis_. I should add that Dr. Greg assigns the ‘plot’ to this play.
-
-[508] Dr. Greg thinks that this may be the same as Haughton’s _The
-English Fugitives_ of the previous April. If so, it was probably
-finished, as the payments amount to £6.
-
-[509] As the account of advances is continuous, I have drawn the line
-between 1600–1 and 1601–2 at the beginning of Aug. 1601.
-
-[510] _The Life_ became _2 Cardinal Wolsey_, as _The Rising_, although
-written later, was historically _1 Cardinal Wolsey_. The entries are
-complicated. It is just possible that the playwrights were working
-on an old play, for the property-inventories of 1598 include an
-unexplained ‘Will Sommers sewtte’ (cf. p. 168). A ‘W^m Someres cotte’
-was, however, bought for _The Rising_ on 27 May 1602.
-
-[511] Possibly based on Haughton’s unfinished play of 1600.
-
-[512] A note preserved at Dulwich (_Henslowe Papers_, 58) indicates
-that licensing fees were in arrear on 4 Aug. 1602 for ‘baxsters
-tragedy, Tobias Comedy, Jepha Judg of Israel & the Cardinall, Loue
-parts frendshipp’. But of course Warner’s identification of ‘baxsters
-tragedy’ with _The Bristol Tragedy_ is conjectural.
-
-[513] There is no _1 Tom Dough_, unless this was an intended sequel to
-_The Six Yeomen of the West_.
-
-[514] Already begun by Chettle in 1599.
-
-[515] This may be identical with _1 The Six Clothiers_, which is not
-called by Henslowe a ‘first part’, if, as is possible, that was a
-sequel to _The Six Yeomen of the West_.
-
-[516] Possibly finished later as Dekker and Rowley’s _The Noble
-Spanish Soldier_. But it may have been an old play re-written, for C.
-R. Baskervill (_M. P._ xiv. 16) quotes from the preface to H. O.’s
-translation of Vasco Figueiro’s _Spaniard’s Monarchie_ (1592), ‘albeit
-it hath no title fetched from the Bull within Bishopsgate, as a figge
-for a Spaniard’.
-
-[517] I suppose this was unfinished. The only entry is on 22 June 1602,
-‘vnto Bengemy Johnsone ... in earneste of a boocke called Richard
-Crockbacke & for new adicyons for Jeronymo the some of x^{ll}’. Jonson
-had already had £2 on 25 Sept. 1601 ‘vpon his writtinge of his adicians
-in Geronymo’. Unless _Richard Crookback_ was nearly complete, his
-prices must have risen a good deal.
-
-[518] Possibly finished later as _Hoffman_ (1631).
-
-[519] The £4 paid was cancelled and then reinstated, but the book was
-evidently transferred to Worcester’s men (cf. p. 227).
-
-[520] Cf. p. 168.
-
-[521] Cf. vol. i, p. 323. _The Massacre_ was printed (N.D.) as an
-Admiral’s play.
-
-[522] The conjectural rendering of Henslowe’s ‘ponesciones pillet’
-finds support from the presence of garments for ‘Caffes’ or Caiaphas in
-the inventory of 1598; cf. p. 168.
-
-[523] A payment to ‘John Daye & his felowe poetes’ implies at least
-three collaborators.
-
-[524] For _Samson_ cf. p. 367.
-
-[525] All four entries merely show the payments as made to ‘Antony the
-poyete’.
-
-[526] Finished later and extant; probably identical with the _Danish
-Tragedy_ of 1601–2.
-
-[527] I suppose that it was the play which Chettle ‘layd vnto pane’ to
-Mr. Bromfield, and which had to be redeemed for £1 (Henslowe, i. 174).
-
-[528] The more so as I do not think that Dr. Greg’s survey in Henslowe.
-ii. 135, is accurate.
-
-[529] Henslowe made the total £167 7_s._ 7_d._, but evidently the error
-was detected, as only £166 17_s._ 7_d._ was carried forward.
-
-[530] Henslowe, ii. 133. Apparently Henslowe reverted to the plan of
-deducting three-quarters only, at the beginning of 1599–1600, but only
-for a fortnight, as the receipts from 20 Oct. are headed, ‘Heare I
-begane to receue the gallereys agayne which they receued begynynge at
-Myhellmas wecke being the 6 of October 1599’.
-
-[531] I have disregarded an error of 15_s._ made by Henslowe.
-
-[532] Henslowe, i. 85, 145.
-
-[533] Ibid. ii. 33.
-
-[534] Henslowe, i. 29, 47, 81, 96, 97, 118, 124, 136, 138, 144, 146,
-148, 152, 153, 166, 172, &c.
-
-[535] The exact date is uncertain, as they do not appear to have had a
-patent until 1606; but it must lie between their visit to Leicester as
-the Admiral’s on 18 Aug. 1603 and the making out of a warrant to them
-as the Prince’s men on 19 Feb. 1604 for their Christmas plays.
-
-[536] _N. Sh. Soc. Trans._ (_1877–9_), 17*, from _Lord Chamberlain’s
-Books_, 58^a.
-
-[537] Cf. ch. xvi (Hope).
-
-[538] On the legend that he had developed moral scruples about the
-stage, cf. s.v. Marlowe, _Dr. Faustus_.
-
-[539] _Henslowe Papers_, 18.
-
-[540] _Dulwich MS._ iii. 15.
-
-[541] _Henslowe Papers_, 13; cf. ch. xvi, s.v. _Fortune_.
-
-[542] _Henslowe Papers_, 63.
-
-[543] Ibid. 85.
-
-[544] _M. S. C._ i. 268, from _P. R. 4 Jac. I_, pt. 19; also printed by
-T. E. Tomlins, and dated in error 1607, in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 42.
-
-[545] Birch, _Life of Henry_, 455; Greg, _Gentleman’s Magazine_, ccc.
-67, from _Harl. MS._ 252, f. 5, dated 1610.
-
-[546] Henslowe, i. 175.
-
-[547] Ibid. 214.
-
-[548] There may be an allusion to this play in H. Parrot, _Laquei
-Ridiculosi, Springes for Woodcocks_ (1613), ii. 162:
-
- ’Tis said that _Whittington_ was rais’d of nought,
- And by a cat hath divers wonders wrought:
- But _Fortune_ (not his cat) makes it appear,
- He may dispend a thousand marks a year.
-
-Dr. Greg (_Henslowe_, ii. 65) has dispersed Collier’s myth of one
-Whittington ‘perhaps a sleeping partner in the speculation of the
-Fortune’.
-
-[549] Most of the play-dates of 1605–12 are in Apps. A and B.
-
-[550] _A. for L._ II. i. In III. iv a drawer says, ‘all the gentlewomen
-[from Bess Turnup’s] went to see a play at the Fortune, and are not
-come in yet, and she believes they sup with the players’.
-
-[551] Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Garlick.
-
-[552] Nichols, _James_, ii. 495.
-
-[553] _M. S. C._ i. 275, from _P. R. 10 Jac. I_, pt. 25; also from
-signet bill in Collier, i. 366, and Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 44. Greg
-(_Henslowe_, ii. 263) notes copies in _Addl. MS._ 24502, f. 60^v, and
-_Lincoln’s Inn MS._ clviii.
-
-[554] _Henslowe Papers_, 106.
-
-[555] Ibid. 64.
-
-[556] _Fennor’s Defence, or I am Your First Man_ (Taylor’s _Works_,
-1630, ed. _Spenser Soc._ 314). The 1659 print of the _Blind Beggar
-of Bethnal Green_ has at l. 2177, ‘Enter ... Captain Westford, Sill
-Clark’. The title-page professes to give the play as acted by the
-Prince’s men, but whether Clark was an actor of 1603–12 or not must
-remain doubtful.
-
-[557] Henslowe, i. 17; cf. p. 140.
-
-[558] Cf. App. D, No. ci. It is not ‘my newe companie’, as it is
-sometimes misprinted. But I do not think that either term can be
-interpreted as showing that the company had or had not a corporate
-existence before it came under Hunsdon’s patronage. The use which the
-company ‘have byn accustomed’ to make of the inn is only related to
-‘this winter time’.
-
-[559] The dates here assigned to Shakespeare’s plays are mainly based
-on the conclusions of my article on Shakespeare in the _Encyclopaedia
-Britannica_.
-
-[560] Cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. _Gesta Grayorum_ and _M. L. R._ ii. 11.
-
-[561] Cf. my paper on _The Occasion of A Midsummer-Night’s Dream_ in
-_Shakespeare Homage_, 154, and App. A.
-
-[562] I have recently found confirmation of the date for _Rich. II_ in
-a letter from Sir Edward Hoby inviting Sir R. Cecil to his house in
-Canon Row on 9 Dec. 1595, ‘where, as late as shall please you, a gate
-for your supper shall be open, and K. Richard present himself to your
-view’ (_Hatfield MSS._ v. 487).
-
-[563] T. Lodge, _Wits Miserie_ (S. R. 5 May 1596), 56, ‘the Visard of
-y^e ghost which cried so miserably at y^e Theator, like an oister wife,
-Hamlet, revenge’.
-
-[564] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars). There is a slight doubt as to the
-authenticity of the text of the petition, which the inclusion of
-Lord Hunsdon’s name can only emphasize. But the fact of the petition
-and its result are vouched for by a City document of later date. The
-counter-petition of the players published by Collier, i. 288, in which
-they are misdescribed as the Lord Chamberlain’s men, is a forgery.
-The names given are those of Pope, Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips,
-Shakespeare, Kempe, Sly, and Tooley. There is nothing to connect Tooley
-with the company before 1605.
-
-[565] Cf. App. D, No. cvi.
-
-[566] For the distinction between ‘bad’ and ‘good’ quartos, cf. ch.
-xxii.
-
-[567] R. James (c. 1625), in the dedication to his manuscript _Legend
-of Sir John Oldcastle_ (quoted by Ingleby, _Shakespeare’s Centurie
-of Praise_, 165), says, ‘offence beinge worthily taken by Personages
-descended from his title’.
-
-[568] Raleigh wrote to R. Cecil on 6 July 1597 that Essex was
-‘wonderful merry at your conceit of Richard II’ (Edwardes, ii. 169);
-for the later history of the play, _vide infra_.
-
-[569] Cf. ch. xvi (Curtain).
-
-[570] App. C, No. lii.
-
-[571] Aubrey, ii. 12. The same writer is obviously confused when he
-says, on the authority of Sir Edward Shirburn, that Jonson ‘killed M^r
-Marlow the poet, on Bunhill, comeing from the Green-Curtain play-house’.
-
-[572] Cf. ch. x. There is no reason to suppose that the Richard Hoope,
-W^m Blackwage, Rafe Raye, and W^m Ferney, to whom Henslowe lent money
-as ‘my lord chamberlenes men’ in 1595 (Henslowe, i. 5, 6), were actors.
-In fact Raye was a ‘man’ of Hunsdon’s before the company was in
-existence at all (Henslowe, ii. 305).
-
-[573] The order of the Shakespearian actors named in the 1623 Folio,
-and the omission of the names of Duke and Beeston, rather suggests that
-these two were hired men, and that there were ten original sharers,
-Shakespeare, Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips, Kempe, Pope, Bryan, Condell,
-Sly, and Cowley.
-
-[574] App. C. No. xlviii.
-
-[575] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[576] Henslowe, i. 72.
-
-[577] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[578] Malone, _Variorum_, ii. 166; Fleay, _L. and W._ 8.
-
-[579] _Hen. V_, epil. 12.
-
-[580] That the _Famous Victories_ was reprinted in 1617 as a King’s
-men’s play proves nothing. It was to pass as _Henry V_; obviously the
-King’s men never acted it, _Henry V_ being in existence.
-
-[581] Henslowe, i. 72, 101.
-
-[582] For further details, cf. ch. xvi (Globe).
-
-[583] Cf. ch. xvi, introd.
-
-[584] Fleay, 138; cf. Murray, ii. 125; Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 108. A
-loan of 21 Sept. 1600 by Henslowe (i. 132) to Duke is only slight
-evidence, and the fact that Anne’s men chose to revive the already
-printed _Edward II_, once a Pembroke’s play, even slighter.
-
-[585] Cf. ch. xv.
-
-[586] Cf. ch. vii.
-
-[587] Cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[588] _S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxxviii. 72, 78, 85. Accounts consistent
-with this are given in depositions of Sir W. Constable and Sir Gilly
-Meyrick (ibid.), Camden, _Annales_, 867, Cobbett, _State Trials_, i.
-1445, and Bacon, _A Declaration of the Practices and Treasons attempted
-and committed by Robert late Earl of Essex and his Complices_ (1601;
-_Works_, ix. 289).
-
-[589] Fleay, 123, 136; cf. _M. L. R._ ii. 12.
-
-[590] Cf. ch. xiv (Scotland).
-
-[591] For the texts cf. ch. xi.
-
-[592] W. H. Griffin in _Academy_ for 25 April 1896, suggests that the
-‘innovation’ of 1604 was the same as the ‘noveltie’ of 1603, i.e.
-the setting up of child actors. But I am afraid that this leaves
-‘inhibition’ without a meaning.
-
-[593] Nichols, _Eliz._ iii. 552, prints, perhaps from a manuscript of
-Lord De La Warr’s (_Hist. MSS._ iv. 300), a note by W. Lambarde of a
-conversation with the Queen on 4 Aug. 1601, ‘Her Majestie fell upon the
-reign of King Richard II, saying, I am Richard II, know ye not that?
-_W. L._ Such a wicked imagination was determined and attempted by a
-most unkind Gent. the most adorned creature that ever your Majestie
-made. _Her Majestie._ He that will forget God, will also forget his
-benefactors; this tragedy was played 40^{tie} times in open streets and
-houses’. The performances here referred to must have been in 1596–7,
-not 1601.
-
-[594] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[595] J. Manningham, _Diary_, 18.
-
-[596] Cf. App. A.
-
-[597] Collier, _New Particulars_, 57, and _Egerton Papers_, 343, ‘6
-August 1602 Rewardes ... x^{li} to Burbidges players for Othello’; cf.
-Ingleby, 262.
-
-[598] Wallace, ii, 108; cf. p. 367.
-
-[599] Cf. ch. xv (Kempe).
-
-[600] Cf. ch. ii.
-
-[601] G. Dugdale, _Time Triumphant_ (1604), sig. B.
-
-[602] Printed in _M. S. C._ i. 264, from _P. R. 1 Jac. I_, _pars 2_,
-_membr. 4_; also in Rymer, xvi. 505, and Halliwell, _Illustr. 83_.
-Halliwell also prints the practically identical texts of the Privy
-Signet Bill, dated 17 May, and the Privy Seal, dated 18 May. The former
-is also in Collier, i. 334, Hazlitt, 38, and Halliwell-Phillipps, ii.
-82.
-
-[603] Cf. ch. xiv (Scotland).
-
-[604] Except in one of Collier’s Blackfriars forgeries; cf. ch. xvi.
-
-[605] W. Cory (_Letters and Journals_, 168) was told on a visit to
-Wilton in 1865 that a letter existed there, naming Shakespeare as
-present and the play as _As You Like It_; but the letter cannot now be
-found.
-
-[606] Marston, _Malcontent_, Ind. 82.
-
-[607] Bullen, _Middleton_, viii. 36, ‘Give him leaue to see the Merry
-Deuil of Edmonton or A Woman Killed with Kindness’.
-
-[608] _N. S. S. Trans._ (1877–9), 15*, from _Lord Chamberlain’s
-Records_, vol. 58^a, now ix. 4 (5); cf. Law (_ut infra_), 10. Collier,
-_Memoirs of Alleyn_, 68, printed a list headed ‘Ks Company’ from the
-margin of the copy of the Privy Council order of 9 April 1604 at
-Dulwich. This is a forgery. To the nine genuine names Collier added
-those of Hostler and Day. The former joined the company some years
-later, the latter never; cf. Ingleby, 269.
-
-[609] App. B; cf. E. Law, _Shakespeare as a Groom of the Chamber_
-(1910), and the Spanish narrative in _Colección de Documentos inéditos
-para la historia de España_, lxxi. 467.
-
-[610] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[611] For the exact dates and the difficult critical questions raised
-by the records, cf. App. B.
-
-[612] Cf. App. B.
-
-[613] Clode, _Early Hist. of Merchant Taylors_, i. 290, ‘To M^r
-Hemmyngs for his direccion of his boy that made the speech to his
-Maiestie 40^s, and 6^s given to John Rise the speaker’; cf. ch. iv.
-
-[614] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[615] App. C, No. lvii.
-
-[616] Cf. ch. xii (Queen’s Revels).
-
-[617] Fleay, 173, and Murray, i. 152, are wrong in saying that there
-were no Court plays this year; cf. _M. L. R._ iv. 154.
-
-[618] Rye, 61, from narrative of tour of Lewis Frederick, Duke of
-Württemberg, ‘Lundi, 30 [Apr.] S. E. alla au Globe, lieu ordinaire
-où l’on joue les Commedies, y fut representé l’histoire du More de
-Venise’. Forman’s accounts of _Macbeth_ from _Bodl. Ashm. MS._ 208,
-f. 207, and of _Cymbeline_ from the preceding leaf, but undated, are
-printed in _N. S. S. Trans._ (1875–6), 417.
-
-[619] Fleay, 190, says that Ecclestone came from the Queen’s Revels. I
-think he must have confused him with Field.
-
-[620] Perhaps his place between Ostler and Underwood in the actor-list
-of the 1623 Folio gives some confirmation to the statement of the
-Burbadges; cf. p. 219.
-
-[621] Cf. ch. iv.
-
-[622] _N. S. S. Trans._ (1875–6), 415, from Simon Forman’s notes in
-_Bodl. Ashm. MS._ 208, f. 200.
-
-[623] For the precise dates and their difficulties, cf. App. B.
-
-[624] Clode, _Early Hist. of the Merchant Taylors_, i. 334.
-
-[625] Text in _M. S. C._ i. 280, from Signet Bill in _Exchequer,
-Treasury of Receipt, Privy Seals, 17 Jac. I_, Bundle ix, No. 2; also in
-Collier, i. 400, and Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 50.
-
-[626] Tawyer, a ‘man’ of Heminges’s, played in some revival of _M. N.
-D._ before 1623, but not necessarily before 1619 (cf. ch. xv).
-
-[627] _M. L. R._ iv. 395.
-
-[628] Downes, 21, 24. Nevertheless, Taylor did not join the King’s men
-until three years after Shakespeare’s death.
-
-[629] Murray, i. 56, adds 1563–83 records.
-
-[630] G. Le B. Smith, _Haddon Hall_, 121.
-
-[631] Kelly, 211, from _Leicester Hall Papers_, i, ff. 38, 42; _Hist.
-MSS._ viii. 1, 431. The latter part of the record, from the Earl’s
-licence onwards, was given by Halliwell in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 145,
-but with the date 1586, due to a misprint of ‘28^o Eliz.’ for ‘25^o
-Eliz.’ in the licence. This has misled Fleay, 86, and other writers.
-Maas, 49, and M. Bateson, _Records of Leicester_, iii. 198, introduce
-fresh errors of their own.
-
-[632] Gildersleeve, 53.
-
-[633] Cf. ch. ix and App. D, No. lvi.
-
-[634] Halliwell-Phillipps, _Notices of Players Acting at Ludlow_; B. S.
-Penley, _The Bath Stage_, 12, from account for year ending 16 June 1584.
-
-[635] Lord Herbert was, of course, Worcester’s son; not, as Dr. Greg
-(Henslowe, ii. 104) seems to think, one of the Pembroke family.
-
-[636] _Henslowe Papers_, 31; cf. _supra_ (Admiral’s).
-
-[637] Fleay, 87.
-
-[638] Murray, i. 58, adds 1589–94 records.
-
-[639] App. D, No. cxxx.
-
-[640] Henslowe, i. 179. As Henslowe paid 7_s._ ‘for my Lo^r Worsters
-mens warant for playinge at the cort vnto the clarke of the cownselles
-for geatynge the cownselles handes to yt’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 108), and
-the only warrant to these men was dated 28 Feb. 1602, the connexion
-with Henslowe probably began while they were still at the Boar’s Head.
-
-[641] Henslowe, i. 160, 190.
-
-[642] Cf. _supra_ (Chamberlain’s).
-
-[643] Henslowe, i. 132, 163.
-
-[644] Ibid. 177.
-
-[645] Ibid. 178, ‘Lent vnto Richard Perckens the 4 of September 1602 to
-buy thinges for Thomas Hewode play & to lend vnto Dick Syferweste to
-ride downe to his felowes’. This is, of course, a private loan, and not
-in the company’s account.
-
-[646] Called in the earlier entries _The Two Brothers_.
-
-[647] The two names do not occur together, but almost certainly
-indicate the same play.
-
-[648] Spelt ‘Burone’ and ‘Berowne’ in the entries.
-
-[649] Henslowe, i. 180, 183, 185, 186, 187, 190.
-
-[650] Cf. p. 7. A further notice of the transfer is given by Thomas
-Heywood, Γυναικεῖον _or General History of Women_ (1624), who says that
-he was one of Worcester’s men, who at James’s accession ‘bestowed me
-upon the excellent princesse Queen Anne’.
-
-[651] _N. S. S. Trans._ (_1877–9_), 16*, from _Lord Chamberlain’s
-Books_, 58^a. In August the company served as grooms of the chamber
-(App. B).
-
-[652] In assigning Kempe to the Queen’s Revels in 1605, Dr. Greg
-(Henslowe, ii. 108) has been tripped up by one of Collier’s forgeries;
-cf. my review in _M. L. R._ iv. 408.
-
-[653] Printed in _M. S. C._ i. 265, from _S. P. D. Jac. I_, ii. 100;
-also by Collier, i. 336, and Halliwell-Phillipps, _Illustrations_, 106.
-It is a rough draft full of deletions, marked by square brackets, and
-of additions, printed in italics, in the text. The theory of Fleay,
-191, that the document is a forgery is disposed of by Greg, _Henslowe’s
-Diary_, ii. 107.
-
-[654] Printed in _M. S. C._ i. 270, from _P. R. 7 Jac. I_, pt. 39; also
-from _P. R._, but misdescribed as a Privy Seal, by T. E. Tomlins in
-_Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 45. The Signet Bill is indexed under April 1609
-in Phillimore, 104.
-
-[655] Cf. App. B.
-
-[656] _Rutland MSS._ iv. 461. They stayed two days, and gave four
-performances.
-
-[657] Kelly, 248, ‘Item the vj^{th} of June given to the Queenes
-Players xl^s.... Item the xxj^{th} of Auguste given to the Children of
-the Revells xx^s. Item the xxvj^{th} of September given to one other
-Companye of the Queenes playors xx^s.’
-
-[658] Murray, ii. 245, ‘paid to the Queenes players to Thomas Swinerton
-xl^s’.
-
-[659] Murray, ii. 340, from Mayor’s Court Books (18 April 1614),
-‘Swynnerton one of the Quenes players in the name of himselfe & the
-rest of his company desyred leaue to play in the cytty accordinge to
-his Maiesties Lettres patents shewed forth. And M^r Maior & Court moved
-them to play onely on Wednesday, Thursday & Fryday in Easter weke.’
-
-[660] Murray, ibid. (6 May 1615), ‘Thomas Swynnerton produced this day
-Letters Patents dated the x^{th} [? xv^{th}] of Aprill Anno Septimo
-Jacobi whereby hee & others are authorised to play as the Quenes men,
-vidz. Thomas Grene, Christofer Breston [? Beeston], Thomas Haywood,
-Richard Pyrkyns, Rob^t. Pallant, Tho. Swynnerton, John Duke, Robt. Lee,
-James Hoult, & Robt. Breston [? Beeston].’
-
-[661] Kelly, 252, ‘Item given to the Queenes Maiesties Highnes Playors
-xl^s.... Item the xvj^{th} daye of October Given to the Queenes Playors
-xl^s. Item given to one other Companye of the Queenes Playors xxx^s.’
-
-[662] Murray, ii. 340 (30 March 1616), ‘A Patent was this day brought
-into the Court by Thomas Swynerton made to Thomas Grene ... & Robert
-Beeston Servants to Quene Anne & the rest of their associats bearing
-Teste xv^o Aprilis Anno Septimo Jacobi. But the said Swynerton
-confesseth that hee himselfe & Robert Lee only are here to play the
-rest are absent....’; (29 May 1616), ‘Thomas Swynerton came this day
-into the Court & affirmed himselfe to be one of the players to the
-Quenes Maiestie & bringinge with him no patent desyred to haue leaue
-to play here ... the same company had liberty to play here at Easter
-last....’ Leave was refused on this occasion.
-
-[663] Kelly, 253, ‘Item the sixt of Februarye given to the Queenes
-Playors. Item given to one other Companye of the Queenes Playors’.
-
-[664] _Hist. MSS._ xi. 3. 26.
-
-[665] App. D, No. clviii; cf. Murray, ii. 343.
-
-[666] Murray, i. 204.
-
-[667] Kelly, 254.
-
-[668] Collier, i. 397, from a manuscript at Bridgewater House.
-
-[669] Fleay, 192, guesses that her first husband was Robert Browne of
-the 1583 Worcester’s company. As Queen Anne’s men played at the Boar’s
-Head, he is very likely to have been the ‘Browne of the Boares head’
-who ‘dyed very pore’ in the plague of 1603 (_Henslowe Papers_, 59).
-
-[670] Murray, i. 193, appears to date this list _c._ 1612, and the
-allegation in the Bill (Fleay, 275) that the pensions were paid for
-five years supports this. But it cannot be earlier than 1613 as Read
-was still with the Lady Elizabeth’s in that year. Nor does it include
-Lee, who was payee for the Queen’s in 1614–16. It clearly belongs to
-the 1616 settlement.
-
-[671] ‘Goodman Freshwater’ was furnishing stuffs to Worcester’s men in
-1602–3 (Henslowe, i. 179, 187).
-
-[672] Sanderson may be the ‘Sands’ who played with ‘Ellis’ [Worth] in
-Daborne’s _Poor Man’s Comfort_ (q.v.), about 1617. Or James Sands,
-formerly a boy with the King’s men, may have come to the Queen’s.
-
-[673] Adams, 351.
-
-[674] _M. S. C._ i. 272, from _P. R. 8 Jac. I_, p. 8; also printed by
-T. E. Tomlins in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, iv. 47.
-
-[675] Fleay, 188.
-
-[676] Murray, i. 239, confuses the Duke’s with Lord Aubigny’s men.
-
-[677] A letter, probably originally from Dulwich, but now _Egerton
-MS._ 2623, f. 25 (printed in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 18, and _Henslowe
-Papers_, 126), is signed by William Rowley, as well as by Taylor and
-Pallant, and must therefore be later than this amalgamation, and not,
-as Dr. Greg suggests, from the Lady Elizabeth’s _c._ 1613. It confirms
-a purchase of clothes from Henslowe for £55.
-
-[678] Text in Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 127; abstract in _Henslowe
-Papers_, 90.
-
-[679] _N. S. S. Trans. 1877–9_, 19*; cf. Fleay, 265. Collier, i. 406,
-has an elegy by William Rowley on Hugh Attwell, servant to Prince
-Charles, who died 25 Sept. 1621.
-
-[680] App. D, No. clviii.
-
-[681] _Henslowe Papers_, 93.
-
-[682] _M. S. C._ i. 274, from _P. R. 9 Jac. I_, p. 20.
-
-[683] _Henslowe Papers_, 18, 111.
-
-[684] Cf. App. B.
-
-[685] _Henslowe Papers_, 86, from _Dulwich MS._ i. 106; also printed in
-_Variorum_, xxi. 416, and Collier, _Alleyn Papers_, 78.
-
-[686] Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 58, 87, thinks that the ‘Baxter’ of the
-Grievances was William Barksted or Backstede. It may be so.
-
-[687] Thorndike, 66, thinks that the list belongs to an earlier
-production by the Queen’s Revels before 30 March 1610, when Taylor
-joined the Duke of York’s. But there is no evidence that he was ever in
-the Queen’s Revels.
-
-[688] _Henslowe Papers_, 65, 125; A. E. H. Swaen, _Robert Daborne’s
-Plays_ (_Anglia_, xx. 153). The account in Fleay, i. 75, is full of
-inaccuracies. The documents now form separate articles of _Dulwich MS._
-1. All, unless otherwise specified below, are letters or undertakings
-from Daborne to Henslowe. Most of them are dated, and I think that the
-following ordering, due to Dr. Greg, is reasonable: (i) Art. 70, 17
-Apr. 1613; (ii) Art. 71, 17 Apr. 1613; (iii) Art. 72, 25 Apr. 1613;
-(iv) Art. 73, 3 May 1613; (v) Art. 74, 8 May 1613; (vi) Art. 75, 16 May
-1613; (vii) Art. 77, 19 May 1613; (viii) Art. 78, 5 June 1613; (ix)
-Art. 79, 10 June 1613; (xi) Art. 80, 18 June 1613; (xii) Art. 81, 25
-June 1613; (xiii)? Art. 100, Field to Henslowe, N.D.; (xiv)? Art. 69,
-Field to Henslowe, N.D.; (xv)? Art. 68, Field, Daborne, and Massinger
-to Henslowe, N.D.; (xvi) Art. 82, 16 July 1613; (xvii) Art. 83, 30 July
-1613; (xviii)? Art. 76, N.D.; (xix)? Art. 99, Daborne to Edward Griffin
-(Henslowe’s scrivener), N.D.; (xx). Art. 84, 23 Aug. 1613; (xxi) Art.
-85, 14 Oct. 1613; (xxii) Art. 86, 29 Oct. 1613; (xxiii) Art. 87, 5
-Nov. 1613; (xxiv) Art. 88, 13 Nov. 1613; (xxv) Art. 89, 13 Nov. 1613;
-(xxvi). Art. 90, 27 Nov. 1613; (xxvii) Art. 91, 9 Dec. 1613; (xxviii)
-Art. 92, 10 Dec. 1613; (xxix) Art. 93, 24 Dec. 1613; (xxx)? Art. 95,
-N.D.; (xxxi) Art. 94, 31 Dec. 1613; (xxxii) Art. 96, 11 Mar. 1614;
-(xxxiii) Art. 97, 28 Mar. 1614; (xxxiv), Art. 98, 31 July 1614.
-
-[689] _Henslowe Papers_, 68.
-
-[690] _Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 16; _Henslowe Papers_, 125, from _Egerton
-MS._ 2623, f. 24. This document cannot be dated, but it has probably
-been detached from the Dulwich series.
-
-[691] _Henslowe Papers_, 82.
-
-[692] Ibid. 71. I should suppose this, rather than, with Dr. Greg,
-_Bartholomew Fair_, to be the ‘Johnsons play’ contemplated on 13 Nov.
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 78), but others of Jonson’s plays may also have
-been revived.
-
-[693] Ibid. 69, 70.
-
-[694] Ibid. 71, 103, 111.
-
-[695] Ibid. 76, 77, 78.
-
-[696] Ibid. 71.
-
-[697] Dr. Greg (_Henslowe Papers_, 75) makes them the same play,
-founded on Dekker’s tracts, _The Bellman of London_ (1608) and
-_Lanthorn and Candlelight, or the Bellman’s Second Night-walk_ (1609),
-but _The Arraignment_ seems to have been too nearly finished on 5 June
-for this identification (_Henslowe Papers_, 72).
-
-[698] Still more so the ascription (Fleay, i. 81) of _The Faithful
-Friends_ to Daborne and the Lady Elizabeth’s men.
-
-[699] _Henslowe Papers_, 23; also in Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 118.
-A few additional lines, much mutilated, appear to have provided for the
-allocation of half the daily takings of the galleries to the discharge
-of a debt of £124 due to Henslowe and Meade and of any further
-disbursements by them. This agrees with the Dawes articles _infra_, but
-the Articles of Grievance refer to a debt of £126.
-
-[700] Fleay, 187; Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 87, _Henslowe’s Diary_, ii.
-138.
-
-[701] Cf. p. 240.
-
-[702] _Henslowe Papers_, 82.
-
-[703] Ibid. 123, from _Variorum_, xxi. 413; also in Collier, _Alleyn
-Papers_, 75. The original, formerly at Dulwich, is now missing.
-
-[704] _Henslowe Papers_, 72, 79.
-
-[705] I agree with Dr. Greg that the ‘fower’ in Dawes’s articles is
-probably a mistake for ‘fourteen’.
-
-[706] _Bartholomew Fair_, v. 3, ‘I thinke, one Taylor, would goe neere
-to beat all this company, with a hand bound behinde him’.
-
-[707] Ibid. _Cokes._ Which is your Burbage now?
-
- _Lanterne._ What meane you by that, Sir?
-
- _Cokes._ Your best Actor. Your Field?
-
-[708] Murray, ii. 254. This, however, was probably Long’s company; v.
-_infra_.
-
-[709] Robert Pallant, one of the company, is noted (Henslowe, ii. 20)
-as visiting Henslowe on his death-bed.
-
-[710] _Variorum_, iii. 59.
-
-[711] App. D, No. clviii.
-
-[712] Murray, i. 263; ii. 4. I add Belvoir on 1 March 1614.
-
-[713] Cunningham, xliv.
-
-[714] Murray, ii. 344.
-
-[715] Lawrence, i. 128 (_Early French Players in England_). One can
-hardly, I suppose, assume that the Turkish acrobat of 1589–90 (cf. ch.
-xviii) was a real Turk.
-
-[716] J. A. Lester, _Italian Players in Scotland_ (_M. L. N._ xxiii.
-240), traces _histriones_, whom he unjustifiably assumes to be actors,
-and _tubicines_ in 1514–61.
-
-[717] _S. P. F._ (1569–71), 413.
-
-[718] Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 302.
-
-[719] Murray, ii. 374.
-
-[720] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 225, 227, 458.
-
-[721] Furnivall, _Robert Laneham’s Letter_, 18.
-
-[722] Cf. App. B.
-
-[723] Smith, 148, makes him then head of the Gelosi, but the
-authorities she cites do not bear her out.
-
-[724] Baschet, 18, 25, 34, 43; D’Ancona, ii. 455, 457, 459; Rennert,
-28, 479.
-
-[725] R. B. M^cKerrow (_Nashe_, iv. 462) suggests that Tristano may
-have been ‘that famous Francatrip Harlicken’ represented in the
-dedication of _An Almond for a Parrat_ (1590) as asking questions at
-Venice about Kempe. But Francatrippa seems to have been the stage name
-of Gabriello Panzanini da Bologna of the Gelosi (D’Ancona, ii. 469,
-511).
-
-[726] Is this ‘the nimble, tumbling Angelica’ of Marston’s _Scourge
-of Villainy_ (1598), xi. 101? If so, a later visit may be suspected.
-Drusiano Martinelli was comedian to the Duke of Mantua, to whose son
-Angelica had been mistress, in 1595 (D’Ancona, ii. 518).
-
-[727] Baschet, 72, 82, 90, 194, 199; D’Ancona, ii. 464, 479, 504, 518,
-523, 526; Smith, 147. The main body of the Gelosi passed about this
-time under the leadership of Flaminio Scala, fifty of whose _scenarii_
-are printed in _Il Teatro delle Fauole rappresentatiue_ (1611).
-
-[728] Cf. ch. xviii as to traces of improvised comedy in England.
-
-[729] G. E. P. Arkwright, _Notes on the Ferrabosco Family (Musical
-Antiquary_, iii. 221; iv. 42); G. Livi, _The Ferrabosco Family_ (ibid.
-iv. 121). I may add that he was evidently the Bolognese groom of the
-chamber, favoured by the Queen as a musician, who dropped a hint for a
-Venetian embassy in 1575 (_V. P._ vii. 524). He left an illegitimate
-son, Alfonso, in England, who also was a Court musician by 1603, and
-was succeeded in turn by sons, Alfonso and Henry, in 1627 (Lafontaine,
-45, 63).
-
-[730] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 159, 160.
-
-[731] Ibid. 160, 301.
-
-[732] Cunningham, 221; cf. _D. N. B._; _M. L. N._ xxii. 2, 129, 201.
-
-[733] _Magdalene College, Cambridge, Pepys MS._ ii. 663 (cf. _Hist.
-MSS. Comm. Report_, 190). The letter is endorsed, ‘To Q. Elizabeth:
-Ubaldino an Italian Musitian I suppose’.
-
-[734] Cf. my letter in _T.L.S._ for 12 May 1921.
-
-[735] Cf. ch. xiii (Interluders); _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 187.
-
-[736] _Variorum_, iii. 461; cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 202.
-
-[737] Cf. p. 272.
-
-[738] E. J. L. Scott in _Athenaeum_ for 21 Jan. 1882. I am sorry to say
-that Mr. Scott suggests that Shakespeare was of the company.
-
-[739] J. Scott, _An Account of Perth_, in Sir J. Sinclair, _Statistical
-Account of Scotland_, xviii (1796), 522.
-
-[740] J. C. Dibdin, _Annals of the Edinburgh Stage_ (1888), 20, from
-_Accounts_ of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland. _A True Accompt
-of the Baptism of Prince Henry Frederick_, printed in 1594 (_Somers
-Tracts_, ii. 171), records plays amongst other festivities, but does
-not say that English actors took part.
-
-[741] _Scottish Papers_, ii. 676. I suppose that this document is
-the authority on which P. F. Tytler, _Hist. of Scotland_, ix. 302,
-describing the events of 1599, says of Fletcher, ‘He had been there
-before, in 1594; and on his return to England, had suffered some
-persecution from his popularity with James’.
-
-[742] D. H. Fleming, _St. Andrews Kirk Session Register_, ii. 870, ‘Ane
-Jnglishman haveing desyrit libertie of the session to mak ane publik
-play in this citie, it was voted and concludit that he suld nocht be
-permitted to do the samin’.
-
-[743] Calderwood, _Historie of the Kirk of Scotland_ (Wodrow Soc.), v.
-765.
-
-[744] _Acts of the Privy Council of Scotland_, vi. 39, 41. Calderwood
-seems to have put the whole business a week too late.
-
-[745] Dibdin, 22.
-
-[746] Lee, 83, from _S. P. D. Scotland_ (R. O.), lxv. 64; cf. summary
-in _Scottish Papers_, ii. 777, ‘Performances of English players,
-Fletcher, Martin, and their company, by the King’s permission;
-enactment of the [Fower] Sessions, and preaching of the ministers
-against them. The bellows blowers say that they are sent by England to
-sow dissension between the King and the Kirk’.
-
-[747] Dibdin, 24.
-
-[748] J. Stuart, _Extracts from the Council Register of the Burgh of
-Aberdeen_ (_Spalding Club_), ii. xxi, xxii, 222.
-
-[749] Fleay, 136; cf. Furness, _Macbeth_, 407. Fleay goes so far as to
-‘hazard the guess’ that the ‘speciall letter’ of recommendation from
-James produced at Aberdeen was ‘the identical letter that James wrote
-to Shakespeare with his own hand’, as recorded by Oldys.
-
-[750] Henslowe, i. 45
-
-[751] App. C, No. lvii.
-
-[752] _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlv. 311, ‘5 Thaler den englischen Spielleuten,
-so ufm Rathaus ihr Spiel mit Springen und allerlei Kurzweil getrieben’.
-
-[753] The inevitable attempt to show that Shakespeare ‘must’ have been
-of the party was made by J. Stefansson, _Shakespeare at Elsinore_,
-in _Contemporary Review_, lxix. 20, and disposed of by H. Logeman,
-_Shakespeare te Helsingör_ in _Mélanges Paul Fredericy_ (1904); cf.
-_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xii. 241.
-
-[754] Fürstenau, 69; Cohn, xxiii; Bolte, _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxiii. 99.
-Herz, 5, endeavours to show traces of a visit to Danzig by this company.
-
-[755] M. Röchell, _Chronik_, in J. Janssen, _Gesch. des Bisthums
-Münster_ (1852), iii. 174; Cohn, cxxxiv (misdated 1599);
-_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxxvi. 274.
-
-[756] _Henslowe Papers_, 31. Greg, _Henslowe_, ii. 8, disposes of the
-confusion between Robert Browne and Alleyn’s step-father, John Browne.
-
-[757] Cohn, xxxi. There seems nothing to connect the Andreas Röthsch
-who appeared at Leipzig in July 1591 with Browne, or even to justify
-the conjecture (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlv. 311) that he was English.
-
-[758] L. Ph. C. van den Bergh, _’s Gravenhaagsche Bijzonderheden_
-(1857), 51 from Hague Archives; Cohn, xxviii. A letter from R. Jones to
-Alleyn (_Henslowe Papers_, 33), often assigned to this date, seems to
-me probably to belong to 1615: cf. p. 287.
-
-[759] Another Admiral’s passport is printed in Rye, 47.
-
-[760] G. van Hasselt, _Arnhemsche Oudheden_, i (1803), 244, naming
-Robert Bruyn, Johan Bradsdret, Thomas Saxwiell, Richardus Jonas, and
-Everhart Sauss.
-
-[761] Bolte in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxxiii. 104.
-
-[762] Mentzel, 23.
-
-[763] Cf. vol. i, p. 343.
-
-[764] _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 247.
-
-[765] _Archiv_, xiv. 116.
-
-[766] Mentzel, 25.
-
-[767] Henslowe, i. 29.
-
-[768] Cohn, xxxiii, xxxviii; Goedeke, ii. 519; Herz, 8. A conventional
-clown, variously called ‘Jahn Clam’, ‘Jahn Posset’, ‘Jahn der
-Engelländische Narr’, &c., also appears in plays, from 1596 onwards, by
-Jacob Ayrer of Nuremberg, who has other debts, including the ‘jig’, to
-the English players (Cohn, lxi; Goedeke, ii. 545).
-
-[769] _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxiii. 103.
-
-[770] _Archiv_, xii. 320; xiii. 316; xiv. 118; xv. 115; Mentzel, 26,
-37. Herz, 34, points out that about this date the Duke of Brunswick’s
-_Ehebrecherin_ and _Vincentius Ladislaus_ were played in Frankfort,
-probably by these men. They are referred to at length by Marx Mangoldt,
-_Markschiffs-Nachen_ (1597), in a passage beginning:
-
- Da war nun weiter mein Intent,
- Zu sehen das Englische Spiel,
- Dauon ich hab gehört so viel.
- Wie der Narr drinnen, Jan genennt,
- Mit Bossen wer so excellent.
-
-Herz, 34, also assigns to the company anonymous appearances at Ulm,
-Munich, and Tübingen in 1597 (_Archiv_, xii. 319; xiii. 316; xv. 212).
-
-[771] Cohn, xxxiv.
-
-[772] Cf. p. 279.
-
-[773] Cohn, xxxiv.
-
-[774] Herz, 37; T. Coryat, _Crudities_, ii. 291. Cf. also _Ein Discurss
-von der Frankfurter Messe_ (1615):
-
- Der Narr macht lachen, doch ich weht,
- --Da ist keiner so gut wie Jahn begeht--
- Vor dieser Zeitt wol hat gethan,
- Jetzt ist er ein reicher Handelsmann.
-
-[775] Cohn, xxxiv; _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xl. 342.
-
-[776] _Henslowe Papers_, 37.
-
-[777] Cohn, xviii, lvii; Goedeke, ii. 522; Duncker, _Landgrave Moritz
-von Hessen und die Englischen Komödianten_ in _Deutsche Rundschau_,
-xlviii. 260.
-
-[778] _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xiv. 361.
-
-[779] Cohn, lviii; Herz, 13.
-
-[780] Könnecke in _Z. f. vergleichende Litteralurgeschichte_, N. F. i.
-85.
-
-[781] _Hatfield MSS._ v. 174. Browne was also the agent for a similar
-transaction licensed on 11 July 1597 (_S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxiv).
-
-[782] _Archiv_, xiv. 117; xv. 114.
-
-[783] Rommel, vi. 390, from Cassel archives, ‘Robert Brown und John
-Wobster begleiteten ihn’. The payment therefore on behalf of the
-Admiral’s men about Oct. 1596 ‘to feache Browne’ (Henslowe, i. 45) is
-not very likely to refer to Robert.
-
-[784] Cohn, lviii; Duncker, 265.
-
-[785] Mentzel, 41.
-
-[786] _Archiv_, xv. 115. Herz, 17, assigns to them, conjecturally,
-performances by ‘Englishmen’ at Memmingen, Cologne, Munich, Ulm, and
-Stuttgart during 1600. But the wording of the Strassburg documents
-suggests a continuous stay.
-
-[787] On 21 Oct. 1603 Joan Alleyn wrote to Edward Alleyn (_Henslowe
-Papers_, 59), ‘All the companyes be come hoame & well for ought we
-knowe, but that Browne of the Boares head is dead & dyed very pore,
-he went not into the countrye at all’. Obviously this is not Robert
-Browne, who lived many years longer. But it may have been a relative,
-as Lord Derby’s men are very likely to have preceded Worcester’s at the
-Boar’s Head. There was at least one other actor of the name, Edward
-Browne, and possibly more (cf. ch. xv).
-
-[788] Mentzel, 46.
-
-[789] Mentzel, 45, 48; _Archiv_, xiv. 119. A performance at Dresden in
-Oct. 1600, assigned to them by Herz, 38, is anonymous.
-
-[790] Mentzel, 48.
-
-[791] Duncker, 267, from chronicle of Wilhelm Buch, ‘Anno 1602 hat er
-die Engländer alle mit einander von sich gejagt und des springens und
-tanzens müde geworden’.
-
-[792] Mentzel, 50.
-
-[793] Mentzel, 51; Bolte, _Das Danziger Theater_, 34.
-
-[794] _Archiv_, xv. 117.
-
-[795] Mentzel, 52.
-
-[796] Mentzel, 50; _Archiv_, xiv. 122.
-
-[797] The Frankfort archives call them ‘Thomas Blackreude’ and
-‘Johannes Fheer’, which has prevented their identity with Worcester’s
-men from being noticed.
-
-[798] Mentzel, 51.
-
-[799] Mentzel, 53; _Archiv_, xv. 117. Herz, 18, assigns to Browne
-anonymous appearances by Englishmen at Strassburg in June 1601, Ulm in
-Nov. 1602, Nördlingen in May 1605, and Ulm in May and June 1605. At
-Nördlingen a play from the prophet Jonah, possibly Greene and Lodge’s
-_Looking Glass for London and England_, was given.
-
-[800] _Archiv_, xv. 120. Coryat, ii. 183, saw him at Strassburg in 1608.
-
-[801] Mentzel, 53; Meissner in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 125; _Archiv_,
-xiii. 320; Duncker, 268. The _Ottonium_ was named after Maurice’s son
-Otto, the friend of Prince Henry Frederick, who paid a visit to England
-in 1611 (Rye, 141).
-
-[802] _Archiv_, xiv. 124.
-
-[803] Cohn, lviii; R. P. Wülcker in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xiv. 360.
-
-[804] Mentzel, 53.
-
-[805] _Henslowe Papers_, 63.
-
-[806] Bolte, 35.
-
-[807] This might be Heywood’s _King Edward IV_.
-
-[808] F. von Hurter, _Gesch. Kaiser Ferdinands II_, v. 395.
-
-[809] _The Proud Woman of Antwerp_ might be the lost piece by Day and
-Haughton.
-
-[810] Meissner, 74, and in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 128; cf. pp. 284–6.
-The text of _Nobody and Somebody_ is printed from a manuscript at Rein
-by F. Bischoff in _Mittheilungen des hist. Vereins für Steiermark_,
-xlvii. 127. I think it is just possible that the companies of 1608
-and 1617 may have been Spencer’s. There seem to have been _Saxoni_,
-as well as _Angli_, playing. These do not seem to have constituted a
-distinct company, and are perhaps more likely to have been with Spencer
-than with Green. Spencer, as well as Green, was in relations with the
-imperial court in 1617; cf. p. 290. But I think that the evidence of
-the Rein manuscript is fairly decisive in favour of Green.
-
-[811] This may have been Green himself. A drawing of a red-haired
-actor, in the traditional get-up of Nobody, is on the Rein manuscript.
-
-[812] Mentzel, 54, 55, 56, 58.
-
-[813] _Archiv_, xiv. 125; xv. 215. Herz, 41, ascribes to them anonymous
-appearances at Ulm, Nördlingen, and Augsburg. John Price, afterwards
-well known as a musician at Dresden and Stuttgart, is said to be
-recorded at Stuttgart in 1609 (Cohn, cxxxviii), and may have been with
-the Hessian company.
-
-[814] Cohn, lix; Duncker, 272.
-
-[815] Meissner, 46; Duncker, 272. Herz, 41, ascribes to them anonymous
-appearances at the wedding of the Margrave John George, brother of
-the Elector of Brandenburg, and the Princess Christina of Saxony at
-Jägerndorf in July, and at Nuremberg and Ulm in November.
-
-[816] Cohn, lix, without reference. Herz, 41, adds an anonymous
-performance of _The Merchant of Venice_ at the Court of Margrave
-Christian of Brandenburg at Halle.
-
-[817] _Archiv_, xiv. 126.
-
-[818] Duncker, 273.
-
-[819] _Archiv_, xiii. 319. If this is the company which, according
-to Alvensleben, _Allgemeine Theaterchronik_ (1832), No. 158, played
-_Daniel_, _The Chaste Susanna_, and _The Two Judges in Israel_ at Ulm
-in 1602, the identification with the company found at Nördlingen and
-Rothenburg is assisted.
-
-[820] Cohn, lxxvii, from Erhard Cellius, _Eques Auratus
-Anglo-Wirtembergicus_ (1605); cf. Rye, cvii.
-
-[821] _Archiv_, xi. 625; xiii. 70. They also played _Daniel in the
-Lions’ Den_, _Susanna_ (? by Henry Julius of Brunswick or another
-version), _The Prodigal Son_, _A Disobedient Merchant’s Son_ (? _The
-London Prodigal_), _Charles Duke of Burgundy_, _Annabella a Duke’s
-Daughter of Ferrara_ (? Marston’s _Parasitaster_), _Botzarius an
-Ancient Roman_, and _Vincentius Ladislaus_ (? by Henry Julius of
-Brunswick). Three of these plays (_Romeo and Juliet_, _The Prodigal
-Son_, and _Annabella_) are in the repertories of John Green; cf. p. 285.
-
-[822] _Archiv_, xiv. 122.
-
-[823] _Zeitschrift für vergleichende Litteraturgeschichte_, N. F.
-vii. 61. They played in 1604 _Daniel in the Lions’ Den_, _Melone
-of Dalmatia_, _Lewis King of Spain_, _Celinde and Sedea_, _Pyramus
-and Thisbe_, _Annabella a Duke’s Daughter of Montferrat_; and in
-1606 _Charles Duke of Burgundy_, _Susanna_, _The Prodigal Son_,
-_A Disobedient Merchant’s Son_, _An Ancient Roman_, _Vincentius
-Ladislaus_. The Nördlingen and Rothenburg companies must be the same.
-_Celinde and Sedea_, however, is found in a repertory, not of Green,
-but of Spencer; cf. p. 289.
-
-[824] Herz, 42, 65.
-
-[825] A. van Sorgen, _De Tooneelspeelkunst in Utrecht_.
-
-[826] Bolte, 41, 47. Herz, 27, conjectures that these may have been the
-English players at Wolfenbüttel in May 1615; cf. p. 277.
-
-[827] Schlager, 168; Meissner in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 139.
-
-[828] Cohn, xciii; cf. p. 282 as to the inference that Green was at
-Gräz in 1607–8.
-
-[829] _Archiv_, xiv. 129.
-
-[830] _Archiv_, xv. 120.
-
-[831] Mentzel, 60.
-
-[832] Bolte, 51.
-
-[833] Herz, 22, from Wolter, 97.
-
-[834] Mentzel, 61; Meissner, 65.
-
-[835] _Archiv_, xiv. 130; Mentzel, 61.
-
-[836] Herz, 30, from Wolter, 97; A. van Sorgen, _De Tooneelspeelkunst
-in Utrecht_.
-
-[837] Herz, 30.
-
-[838] Goedeke, ii. 543, could find no copy of _Musarum Aoniarum tertia
-Erato_ (Hamburg, 1611), the title-page of which claims ‘etlichen
-Englischen Comedien’ as a source.
-
-[839] The last two plays have some kind of relation to Shakespeare’s
-_Two Gentlemen of Verona_ and _Titus Andronicus_. _Sidonia and
-Theagenes_ is a prose version of Gabriel Rollenhagen’s _Amantes
-Amentes_ (1609). A supplement to the 1620 collection, with six other
-plays and two jigs, appeared as _Liebeskampff oder Ander Theil der
-Englischen Comödien und Tragödien_ (1630), but none of these are
-traceable before the Thirty Years’ War.
-
-[840] Cf. pp. 279, 281, 283. The Dresden list is in Cohn, cxv.
-
-[841] Played at Nördlingen in 1604. Cohn, 309, prints a German version
-from a Vienna manuscript.
-
-[842] Possibly Heywood’s _The Silver Age_.
-
-[843] Green played at Gräz in 1608 ‘Von ein Herzog von Florenz der sich
-in eines Edelmann’s Tochter verliebt hat’. This seems too early for
-Massinger’s _Great Duke of Florence_, but suggests the same story.
-
-[844] Possibly _1 Jeronimo_.
-
-[845] Possibly Dekker’s _Patient Grissel_.
-
-[846] Played at Nördlingen and Rothenburg in 1604. Bolte, 177, prints
-from a Danzig manuscript a later German version based on Marston’s
-_Parasitaster_.
-
-[847] Played by Green at Gräz in 1608, in a version extant in a Rein
-manuscript; a later one is in the 1620 collection. Cf. p. 282.
-
-[848] Possibly _Clyomon and Clamydes_.
-
-[849] Cohn, 236, prints a German version from a late copy.
-
-[850] Possibly Robert Greene’s play.
-
-[851] Played by Browne at Cassel in 1607; a text is in the 1620
-collection.
-
-[852] Probably Kyd’s _Spanish Tragedy_, played by Browne at Frankfort
-in 1601.
-
-[853] Printed in the 1620 collection.
-
-[854] Probably Dekker’s _Virgin Martyr_.
-
-[855] Played by Green at Gräz in 1608.
-
-[856] Possibly Robert Greene’s _Alphonsus_, _King of Arragon_ or
-_Mucedorus_.
-
-[857] Played by Green at Gräz in 1608. A version, related to Dekker’s
-_Old Fortunatus_, is in the 1620 collection.
-
-[858] Played by an anonymous company at Halle in 1611; cf. p. 283. _The
-Jew_, played by Green at Passau and Gräz in 1607–8, might be either
-this play or _The Jew of Malta_. Dekker wrote a _Jew of Venice_, now
-lost; but a German version, printed by Meissner, 131, from a Vienna
-manuscript, is in part based on _The Merchant of Venice_.
-
-[859] Could this be _The Winter’s Tale_?
-
-[860] Green played _The King of Cyprus and Duke of Venice_ at Gräz in
-1608.
-
-[861] Played at Nördlingen in 1604 and Rothenburg in 1606 and by Green
-at Passau and Gräz in 1607–8. A version is in the 1620 collection.
-
-[862] Green played _Dives and Lazarus_ at Gräz in 1608.
-
-[863] Fleay, _Sh._ 307.
-
-[864] _Henslowe Papers_, 33.
-
-[865] Ibid. 94.
-
-[866] Cf. ch. xvi, introd.
-
-[867] C. F. Meyer in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxxviii. 208.
-
-[868] _D. N. B._ s.v. Giles Farnaby.
-
-[869] Cf. pp. 279, 283.
-
-[870] Cohn, lxxviii.
-
-[871] Fürstenau, i. 76.
-
-[872] Cf. p. 282. Herz, 44, identifies them with ‘English’ at The
-Hague (June 1606), Cologne (Feb. 1607), The Hague (April), Ulm (May),
-Nördlingen (June), and Munich (July).
-
-[873] Wolter, 93.
-
-[874] L. Schneider, _Geschichte der Oper in Berlin_, Beilage, lxx. 25;
-Fürstenau, i. 77.
-
-[875] Cf. p. 283.
-
-[876] Cohn, lxxxiv.
-
-[877] Ibid. lxxxvii.
-
-[878] _Archiv_, xiv. 128. _Philole and Mariana_ may be Lewis Machin’s
-_The Dumb Knight_, and _The Turk_ Mason’s play of that name. _Celinde
-and Sedea_ had formed part of a repertory at Rothenburg in 1604
-apparently related to those of Green; cf. p. 284. Spencer is not
-recorded to have played any other piece found in Green’s repertories.
-
-[879] _Archiv_, xii. 320; xiv. 128.
-
-[880] Schlager, 168; Elze in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xiv. 362; Meissner, 53,
-and in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 120.
-
-[881] _Archiv_, xiv. 129; _Zeitschrift für vergl. Litt._ vii. 64;
-Mentzel, 58.
-
-[882] _Archiv_, xv. 118.
-
-[883] Ibid. xii. 320; xiii. 322.
-
-[884] Ibid. xv. 119.
-
-[885] Ibid. xv. 215; cf. Herz, 48.
-
-[886] Wolter, 96; Cohn in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 260; Cohn, xci, from
-_Harl. MS._ 3888, _The Evangelic Fruict of the Seraphicall Franciscan
-Order_.
-
-[887] _Archiv_, xv. 119.
-
-[888] Mentzel, 59.
-
-[889] Cohn in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 261; Wolter, 96.
-
-[890] Meissner, 59, and in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 122.
-
-[891] Cohn, lxxxviii.
-
-[892] Ibid. lxxxiii; Mentzel, 54.
-
-[893] Cohn in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 257; Wolter, 95.
-
-[894] _Archiv_, xiv. 124; Mentzel, 54; Schlager, 168; Herz, 53.
-
-[895] Cohn, xxxv; Bolte, 41.
-
-[896] Cohn, xcii.
-
-[897] Bolte, 51.
-
-[898] Cohn, xcii; Meissner, 38, and in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xix. 122.
-
-[899] Cf. pp. 275, 285.
-
-[900] _Archiv_, xiv. 131.
-
-[901] Ibid., xiii. 316; xiv. 116; Heywood, 60.
-
-[902] Mentzel, 55. H. Chardon, _La Troupe du Roman comique_, 32,
-notices Maurice of Nassau’s company at Nantes in 1618 and Paris in
-1625, but does not say that they were English.
-
-[903] _Archiv_, xiii. 317; xiv. 121.
-
-[904] Cohn, lxxvii.
-
-[905] _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlv. 311.
-
-[906] Cohn in _Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxi. 253.
-
-[907] Cf. p. 273.
-
-[908] Pellicer, i. 80, citing the records of the Madrid hospital,
-‘en 11 de Enero de 1583 voltearon unos ingleses en el Corral de la
-Pacheca’. The original record is probably lost, as it is not with
-those of 1579–82, 1590, and 1601–2 published from the _Archivo de la
-Diputacion provincial de Madrid_ by C. Pérez Pastor in the _Bulletin
-Hispanique_ (1906) and reprinted by Rennert, 345.
-
-[909] E. Soulié, _Recherches sur Molière_, 153; cf. Rigal, 46;
-Jusserand, _Shakespeare in France_, 51.
-
-[910] Henslowe, i. 114.
-
-[911] Soulié et de Barthélemy, _Journal de Jean Héroard_, i. 88, 91, 92.
-
-[912] H. C. Coote in _Intermédiaire des Chercheurs et Curieux_, ii.
-105; cf. _5 N. Q._ ix. 42. The idea was that ‘Tiph, toph’ represented
-a reminiscence of _2 Henry IV_, II. i. 205, ‘This is the right fencing
-grace, my lord; tap for tap, and so part fair’. The phrase ‘tiff toff’
-occurs in brackets in a speech of Crapula while he beats Mendacio in
-_Lingua_ (Dodsley,^4 ix. 434). Collier explains it as hiccups; Fleay,
-ii. 261, on the authority of P. A. Daniel, as an Italian term for the
-thwack of stage blows.
-
-[913] E. Fournier, _Chansons de Gaultier Garguille_, lix, and
-_L’Espagne et ses Comédiens en France au xvii^e Siècle_ (_Revue
-des Provinces_, iv. 496), cites H. Ternaux in _Revue Françoise et
-Étrangère_, i. 78, for statements that the head of the English at
-Fontainebleau was Ganassa, who in Spain had had a mixed company of
-English, Italians, and Spanish, and on 11 Jan. 1583 had a share in the
-receipts of a troupe of English _volteadores_. I have not been able to
-see the work of M. Ternaux, who does not inspire confidence by calling
-Ganassa Juan instead of Alberto. There seems to be nothing to connect
-Ganassa with the _volteadores_ of 1583, except the fact that the Corral
-de la Pacheca where they played was leased to him for nine or ten years
-in 1574 (Rennert, 29), and they may therefore have paid him rent.
-His troupe in 1581–2, as given by Rennert, 479, consisted entirely
-of Italians, with two Spanish musicians. He is said to have been in
-Spain in 1603 (Pellicer, i. 57, 72; Rennert, 30), but there is nothing
-to show that, if so, he went on to France. But Héroard tells us that
-there was a Spanish rope-dancer at Fontainebleau in 1604, and a very
-obscure passage in his diary suggests that this Spaniard was really
-an Irishman. Irish marauders (_voleurs_) were then giving trouble in
-Paris, which led Louis to say ‘Ce voleur qui voloit sur la corde étoit
-Irlandois?’ and Héroard comments, ‘Il étoit vrai; il accommoda le mot
-de voleur à l’autre signification, il l’avoit vu voler à Fontainebleau’
-(_Journal_, i. 90, 126).
-
-[914] F. Bischoff in _Mittheilungen des hist. Vereins für Steiermark_,
-xlvii. 127; cf. p. 282.
-
-[915] De Bry, _India Orientalis_ (1613), xii. 137, ‘Angli ludiones per
-Germaniam et Galliam vagantur’.
-
-[916] Alleyn’s life is more fully dealt with than is here possible
-in G. F. Warner and F. Bickley, _Catalogue of Dulwich MSS._ (1881,
-1903); G. F. Warner in _D. N. B._ (1885); W. Young, _History of Dulwich
-College_ (1889); W. W. Greg, _Henslowe Papers_ (1907), _Henslowe’s
-Diary_, vol. ii (1908). An earlier treatment of the material is that
-by J. P. Collier, _Memoirs of Edward Alleyn_ (1841), _Alleyn Papers_
-(1843). On an account by G. Steevens in _Theatrical Review_ (1763) with
-a forged letter from Peele to Marlowe, cf. Lee, 646.
-
-[917] _Dulwich Muniments_, 106.
-
-[918] Cf. ch. xiv.
-
-[919] _Henslowe Papers_, 34, from _Dulwich MSS._, i. 9–15; Edward to
-Joan Alleyn, 2 May 1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn, 5 July 1593; Edward
-to Joan Alleyn, 1 August 1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn, _c._ August
-1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn, 14 August 1593; Henslowe to Edward
-Alleyn, 28 September 1593; John Pyk (Alleyn’s ‘boy’) to Joan Alleyn,
-_c._ 1593. Later letters of 4 June and 26 September 1598 from Henslowe
-to Edward Alleyn and of 21 October 1603 from Joan to Edward Alleyn are
-in _Henslowe Papers_, 47, 59, 97.
-
-[920] _Works_, i. 215, 296.
-
-[921] _Henslowe Papers_, 32. The verses on the same theme in Collier,
-_Memoirs_, 13, are forged.
-
-[922] Dekker, _Plays_, i. 280.
-
-[923] _Epigrammes_ (1599), iv. 23:
-
- _In Ed: Allen._
-
- _Rome_ had her _Roscius_ and her Theater,
- Her _Terence_, _Plautus_,_Ennius_ and _Me_[n]_ander_,
- The first to _Allen_, _Phoebus_ did transfer
- The next, _Thames_ Swans receiu’d fore he coulde land her,
- Of both more worthy we by _Phoebus_ doome,
- Then t’ _Allen Roscius_ yeeld, to _London Rome_.
-
-[924] Heywood, _Apology_, 43.
-
-[925] Fuller, _Worthies_ (ed. 1840), ii. 385.
-
-[926] S. Rowland, _Knave of Clubs_ (1609), 29:
-
- The gull gets on a surplis
- With a crosse upon his breast,
- Like Allen playing Faustus,
- In that manner he was drest.
-
-[927] Heywood, _Epistle_ to _The Jew of Malta_ (1633), ‘the part of the
-Jew presented by so vnimitable an Actor as M^r Allin’; and _Prologue_,
-
- And He, then by the best of Actors [_in margin_ ‘Allin’] play’d:
- ... in Tamberlaine,
- This Jew, with others many, th’ other wan
- The Attribute of peerelesse, being a man
- Whom we may ranke with (doing no one wrong)
- Proteus for shapes, and Roscius for a tongue,
- So could he speake, so vary.
-
-[928] E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), _Epig._ xliii,
-
- _Clodius_ me thinks lookes passing big of late,
- With _Dunston’s_ browes, and _Allens Cutlacks_ gate.
-
-[929] _Henslowe Papers_, 155.
-
-[930] For this myth, cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Marlowe.
-
-[931] Tarlton, 22, ‘How Tarlton made Armin his adopted sonne, to
-succeed him’. The earliest extant edition of _Tarlton’s Jests_ is that
-of 1611, but the Second Part, here quoted, was entered in _S. R._ on 4
-Aug. 1600.
-
-[932] Extract in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 321; the unique copy of this
-edition is described in his _Calendar of Shakespeare Rarities_ (1887),
-145.
-
-[933] Reprinted in the Shakespeare Society’s _Fools and Jesters_ (1842).
-
-[934] _Variorum_, iii. 159, 241, 242; _M. S. C._ i. 345.
-
-[935] Jeaffreson, ii. 107, 110, 114, 120, 128, 220.
-
-[936] Harleian Soc. _Registers_, ix. 62; xvii. 131.
-
-[937] Collier, _Actors_, xxxi.
-
-[938] _M. S. C._ i. 344.
-
-[939] McKerrow, _Nashe_, i. 255.
-
-[940] Collier, iii. 364.
-
-[941] The biographical material collected by C. C. Stopes, _Burbage and
-Shakespeare’s Stage_ (1913), is supplemented by the lawsuit records
-in C. W. Wallace, _The First London Theatre, Materials for a History_
-(1913, _Nebraska University Studies_, xiii. 1).
-
-[942] _Variorum_, iii. 199, 476; Collier, iii. 367; P. C. Carter,
-_Hist. of St. Mary Aldermanbury_, 9, 11, 21, 58, 86, 87.
-
-[943] _Variorum_, iii. 200, from P. C. C.; Collier, iii. 376.
-
-[944] Collier, iii. 376, 380.
-
-[945] _Varioram_, iii. 211.
-
-[946] _Henslowe Papers_, 61.
-
-[947] Collier, iii. 406; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[948] _Variorum_, iii. 482, from P. C. C.; Collier, iii. 409.
-
-[949] Collier, iii. 389.
-
-[950] H. R. Plomer in _10 N. Q._ vi. 368, from _London Archdeaconry
-Wills_, vi, f. 22.
-
-[951] Heywood, _Apology_, 43.
-
-[952] Fleay, 190; cf. _The Sharers Papers_.
-
-[953] Collier, iii. 457; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[954] _K. B. P._ i. 104, ‘Were you neuer none of Mr. Monkesters
-schollars?’
-
-[955] Collier, iii. 411.
-
-[956] Fleay, 85; Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 133.
-
-[957] Collier, iii. 473; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvii.
-
-[958] _Variorum_, iii. 472; Chester, _London Marriage Licenses_.
-
-[959] _Variorum_, iii. 187.
-
-[960] Ibid. 188.
-
-[961] Ibid. 187.
-
-[962] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 31.
-
-[963] _Variorum_, iii. 198, 475; Collier, iii. 308; P. C. Carter, _St.
-Mary, Aldermanbury_, 11, 58, 86, 87. Malone misread Beavis as Beatrice.
-An earlier John (1598) and a Swynnerton (1613) died as infants.
-
-[964] _Variorum_, iii. 191.
-
-[965] _D. N. B._ s.v.; Wood, _Athenae_, iii. 277.
-
-[966] _O. v. H._ 16; cf. C. W. Wallace, in _The Times_ for 2 and 4 Oct.
-1909.
-
-[967] _N. U. S._ x. 311.
-
-[968] _Kemps Nine Daies Wonder. Performed in a Daunce from London to
-Norwich_ (1600) is reprinted with a biography by A. Dyce (1840, _Camden
-Soc._) and in Arber, _English Garner_^2, ii (_Social England_), 139,
-and E. Goldsmid, _Collectanea Adamantea_, ii (1884). Dissertations are
-J. Bruce, _Who was ‘Will, my Lord of Leycester’s Jesting Player’?_
-(1844, _Sh. Soc. Papers_, i. 88); B. Nicholson, _Kemp and the Play
-of Hamlet_ (_N. S. S. Trans. 1880–6_, 57); _Will Kemp_ (1887,
-_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xxii. 255).
-
-[969] Collier, iii. 391.
-
-[970] Ibid. 395.
-
-[971] Ibid. 396.
-
-[972] Ibid. 397; _Bodl._; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[973] Norman, 91.
-
-[974] For further details of his later career, cf. Collier and _D. N.
-B._
-
-[975] Downes, 24.
-
-[976] Wright, 10.
-
-[977] _Variorum_, iii. 211; Collier, iii. 403.
-
-[978] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.
-
-[979] Collier, iii. 423.
-
-[980] Henslowe, ii. 302; _Henslowe Papers_, 36, 41.
-
-[981] Collier, iii. 322, 325; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxv.
-
-[982] _Variorum_, iii. 470.
-
-[983] S. Lee in _Nineteenth Century_ for May 1906, quoting a manuscript
-by Smith in private hands, with the title _A Brief Discourse of y^e
-causes of Discord amongst y^e Officers of arms and of the great abuses
-and absurdities comitted by painters to the great prejudice and
-hindrance of the same office_. Northampton did not get his title until
-1604.
-
-[984] Collier, iii. 323.
-
-[985] _N. U. S._ x. 308, 312; cf. ch. xvi (Globe).
-
-[986] Henslowe, i. 72.
-
-[987] _Variorum_, iii. 506; Collier, iii. 363.
-
-[988] Collier, iii. 358; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[989] Henslowe, i. 178; ii. 303.
-
-[990] Cf. s.v. Phillips.
-
-[991] Collier, iii. 488; J. 348; _Bodl._
-
-[992] _Variorum_, iii. 514; P. Cunningham in _Sh. Soc. Papers_, ii. 11;
-Collier, iii. 478.
-
-[993] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 314.
-
-[994] Collier, iii. 482; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[995] Collier, iii. 483.
-
-[996] App. I (ii).
-
-[997] Collier, iii. 481.
-
-[998] Henslowe, i. 29.
-
-[999] _Henslowe Papers_, 120.
-
-[1000] Collier, iii. 381.
-
-[1001] _Variorum_, iii. 477; Collier, iii. 385.
-
-[1002] _N. U. S._ x. 317; _O. v. H._ 32.
-
-[1003] J. O. Halliwell, _Tarlton’s Jests ... With ... some Account of
-the Life of Tarlton_ (1844, _Sh. Soc._; the Jests are reprinted with a
-few additions in Hazlitt, _Jest-Books_, ii. 189) and _Papers respecting
-Disputes which arose from Incidents at the Death-bed of Richard
-Tarlton, the Actor_ (1866).
-
-[1004] Collier, iii. 460; Rendle, _Bankside_, xxvi.
-
-[1005] C. W. Wallace, _Globe Theatre Apparel_ (1909).
-
-[1006] _M. L. Review_, iv. 395, from _Hist. MSS._ iv. 299.
-
-[1007] Downes, 21.
-
-[1008] Wright, _Hist. Hist._ 405.
-
-[1009] _S. P. D._ 1637–8, p. 99.
-
-[1010] Cunningham, l.; _Variorum_, iii. 238.
-
-[1011] Cunningham, l.; Wright, _Hist. Hist._ 411.
-
-[1012] _Variorum_, iii. 484, from _P. C. C._
-
-[1013] Collier, iii. 447.
-
-[1014] Henslowe, i. 152; _Henslowe Papers_, 61.
-
-[1015] Collier, iii. 451.
-
-[1016] _Variorum_, iii. 214.
-
-[1017] Collier, iii. 443.
-
-[1018] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 313.
-
-[1019] _Mediaeval Stage_, i. 383; ii. 184, 190, 380. It is, of course,
-doubtful whether the ‘theatrum nostrae civitatis’ at Exeter was
-permanent.
-
-[1020] Ordish, 12, attempts to affiliate the ring type of baiting-place
-and theatre to Roman amphitheatres, Cornish ‘rounds’, and other
-circular places used for mediaeval entertainments. But a ring is so
-obviously the form in which the maximum number of spectators can see an
-object of interest, that too much stress must not be laid upon it as an
-evidence of folk ‘tradition’.
-
-[1021] Cf. ch. xviii.
-
-[1022] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 221.
-
-[1023] G. Fothergill in _10 N. Q._ vi. 287, from _Guildhall MS._ 1454,
-roll 70, ‘And wyth 22^s 2^d for money by them receyved for the hyer of
-Tryntie Halle for playes, the warmanthe [ward-moot] inquest and other
-assemblyes within the time of this accompt’.
-
-[1024] Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Vennar.
-
-[1025] Several galleried inns are illustrated in W. Rendle and P.
-Norman, _The Inns of Old Southwark_ (1888), and by Ordish, 119
-(Tabard), Baker, 200 (Four Swans), Adams, 4 (White Hart). Probably,
-however, none of these are pre-Restoration. The only ones still extant
-are the George in Southwark and a much later one in Theobalds Road (_V.
-H. Surrey_, iv. 128).
-
-[1026] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 190, 223.
-
-[1027] Cf. ch. ix.
-
-[1028] Flecknoe tells us _c._ 1664 (App. I) that the actors, ‘about the
-beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign ... set up Theaters, first in the
-City (as in the Inn-yards of the Cross-Keyes, and Bull in Grace and
-Bishops-Gate Street at this day is to be seen)’.
-
-[1029] Cf. App. C, No. xvii.
-
-[1030] App. C, Nos. xv, xvii; App. D, No. xxii.
-
-[1031] Cf. s.v. Hope.
-
-[1032] K. D. Hassler, _Die Reisen des Samuel Kiechel_ (1866) 29,
-‘Werden auch täglichen commedien gehalten, sonderlichen ist lustig zu
-zusehen, wann der Königen comedianten agiren, aber einem frembden,
-der düe sprach nicht kan, verdrüslich, das ers nicht verstöth; es hat
-öttliche sonderbare heüser, wölche dozu gemacht sein, das ettwann drey
-genng ob ein ander sein, derowegen stöts ein grosse menge volckhs dohin
-kompt, solcher kurzweil zuzusehen. Es begibt sich wol, das süe uf
-einmal 50 in 60 dalr ufhöben; sonderlichen wann süe was neyes agiren,
-so zuvor nicht gehalten worden, mues mann doppelt gelt gebenn, und
-wehrt solchs vast alle tag durch düe wochen, onangesehen es freytag wüe
-auch samstags zu halten verbotten, würt es doch nicht gehalten.’ Cf.
-Rye, 87. Kiechel appears to have been in London from 12 Sept. to about
-29 Oct. and from 14 to 17 Nov. 1585.
-
-[1033] Lambarde, _Perambulation of Kent_ (1596), 233. The passage is
-not in the first edition of 1576.
-
-[1034] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 222; cf. ch. xiii (Oxford’s).
-
-[1035] P. 2. Malone, in _Variorum_, iii. 46, refers the event to a date
-soon after 1580; but there is no justification for this in the text.
-
-[1036] Cf. p. 477.
-
-[1037] Rye, 216, from _Itinerarium_ in Beckmann, _Accessions Historiae
-Anhaltinae_ (1716), 165:
-
- ‘Hier besieht man vier spielhäuser,
- Darinnen man fürstelt die Fürsten, Könge, Keyser,
- In rechter lebens gröss, in schöner kleider pracht,
- Es wird der thaten auch, wie sie geschehn, gedacht.’
-
-[1038] Text by H. B. Wheatley, _On a Contemporary Drawing of the
-Interior of the Swan Theatre, 1596_ (_N. S. S. Trans. 1887–92_, 215),
-from _Utrecht Univ. Library MS. Var._ 355, ff. 131^v, 132, with
-facsimile reproduction of drawing. The passage was first made known
-by K. T. Gaedertz, _Zur Kenntniss der altenglischen Bühne_ (1888).
-The reproduction of the drawing published by Gaedertz and further
-reproduced from him in many modern books is not an exact facsimile;
-the only material difference is that the engraver has made the figure
-at the door of the loft rather more obviously a man than it is in the
-original. Letters of the early part of the seventeenth century from
-de Witt to Buchell, who was his fellow-student at Leyden in 1583, are
-also in the Utrecht Library (Gaedertz, 57). The last sentence of the
-passage appears from ‘narrabat’ to be a report by Buchell either of
-something not directly copied by him or of de Witt’s conversation; but
-the rest is pretty clearly from ‘ea quae alio loco a me notata sunt’ a
-verbatim extract from a manuscript of de Witt’s own. If so, ‘adpinxi’
-further shows that the eye-witness of de Witt and not the imagination
-of Buchell is the source of the drawing. Gaedertz, 63, indeed suggests
-that the drawing is an original given by de Witt to Buchell, but as
-Wheatley, 219, points out, this is impossible, as the paper is the same
-as that used in the rest of the volume. There remains the question of
-date. De Witt is traceable at Amsterdam in Nov. 1594, at Utrecht in
-the winters of 1595 and 1596, and in 1599, and at Amsterdam again in
-March 1604 (Gaedertz, 58). His visit to London obviously falls between
-Nov. 1594, when the Swan was still only an intention, and Dec. 1598,
-when the Theatre was pulled down. Gaedertz, 55, puts it in the summer
-of 1596, largely because Shakespeare, whom he thinks de Witt would
-certainly have mentioned if he had met him, may have been in Stratford
-about that time. This is hopeless. Nor does the further suggestion of
-Gaedertz that a lameness from which de Witt was suffering in Dec. 1596
-was due to his travels carry much conviction. But he is not likely,
-before that year, to have appended the words ‘A^o. 1596’ to his notice
-of Sir John Burgh’s tomb. If this is intended to be the date, not of
-his visit, but of the tomb, it is an error. Camden, _Reges ... in
-Ecclesia ... West-monasterii sepulti_ (1600), gives the final words
-of the inscription as ‘G. B. A. M. P. anno Dom. 1595’, and although
-the tomb itself has disappeared since 1868 and some modern guides date
-it 1594 or 1598, Camden is confirmed by J. C[rull], _Antiquities of
-Westminster_ (1711), 198. Burgh’s death, also given on the monument,
-was 7 March ‘1594’. On the whole 1596 is the most probable date for
-de Witt’s visit. Arend van Buchell was himself a traveller, and his
-_Diarium_ has been edited (1907) by G. Brom and L. A. van Langeraad.
-But he did not visit England.
-
-[1039] The emendation is due to Wallace (_E. S._ xliii. 356). Adams,
-168, suggests that ‘cijn’ is Flemish for ‘swan’, but the dictionary
-gives ‘zwaen’, which is perhaps what de Witt wrote.
-
-[1040] Cf. plan of the manor in Rendle, _Bankside_, i.
-
-[1041] Cf. p. 456.
-
-[1042] Hentzner, 196.
-
-[1043] _Survey_ (ed. Kingsford), i. 93. In 1603 the words ‘as the
-Theater, the Curtine, &c.’ are omitted from the body of the passage.
-
-[1044] _Survey_, ii. 73. This passage was omitted altogether in 1603.
-The early draft in _Harl. MS._ 538 (Kingsford, ii. 369) runs, ‘Neare
-adjoyning are builded two houses for the shewe of Activities, Comedies,
-tragedies and histories, for recreation. The one of them is named the
-Curtayn in Holy Well, the other the Theatre.’
-
-[1045] G. Binz in _Anglia_, xxii. 456 (from Platter’s narrative written
-in 1604–5 of his travels in 1595–1600, now in the Basle University
-Library): ‘Den 21 Septembris nach dem Imbissessen, etwan umb zwey
-vhren, bin ich mitt meiner geselschaft [:v]ber dz wasser gefahren,
-haben in dem streüwinen Dachhaus die Tragedy vom ersten Keyser Julio
-Caesare mitt ohngefahr 15 personen sehen gar artlich agieren; zu
-endt der Comedien dantzeten sie ihrem gebrauch nach gar [:v]berausz
-zierlich, ye zwen in mannes vndt 2 in weiber kleideren angethan,
-wunderbahrlich mitt einanderen.
-
-Auf ein andere Zeitt hab ich nicht weit von unserem wirdtshaus in
-der Vorstadt, meines behaltens an der Bischofsgeet, auch nach essens
-ein Comoedien gesehen, da presentierten sie allerhandt nationen, mit
-welchen yeder zeit ein Engellender vmb ein tochter kempfete, vndt
-vberwandt er sie alle, aussgenommen den teütschen, der gewan die
-tochter mitt kempfen, satzet sich neben sie, trank ihme deszwegen
-mit seinem diener ein starken rausch, also dasz sie beyde beweinet
-wurden, vndt warfe der diener seinem Herren den schu an kopf, vnndt
-entschliefen beyde. Hiezwischen stige der engellender in die Zelten,
-vnndt entfuhret dem teütschen sein gewin, also [:v]berlistet er
-den teütschen auch. Zu endt dantzeten sie auch auf Englisch vnndt
-Irlendisch gar zierlich vnndt werden also alle tag vmb 2 vhren nach
-mittag in der stadt London zwo biszweilen auch drey Comedien an
-vnderscheidenen örteren gehalten, damitt einer den anderen lustig
-mache, dann welche sich am besten verhalten, die haben auch zum meisten
-Zuhörer. Die örter sindt dergestalt erbauwen, dasz sie auf einer
-erhöchten brüge spilen, vnndt yederman alles woll sehen kan. Yedoch
-sindt vnderscheidene gäng vnndt ständt da man lustiger vnndt basz
-sitzet, bezahlet auch deszwegen mehr. Dann welcher vnden gleich stehn
-beleibt, bezahlt nur 1 Englischen pfenning, so er aber sitzen will,
-lasset man ihn noch zu einer thür hinein, da gibt er noch 1^d, begeret
-er aber am lustigesten ort auf kissen ze sitzen, da er nicht allein
-alles woll sihet, sondern auch gesehen kan werden, so gibt er bey einer
-anderen thüren noch 1 Englischen pfenning. Vnndt tragt man in wehrender
-Comedy zu essen vndt zu trinken vnder den Leüten herumb, mag einer vmb
-sein gelt sich also auch erlaben.
-
-Die Comedienspiler sindt beim allerköstlichsten vnndt zierlichsten
-bekleidet, dann der brauch in Engellandt, dasz wann fürnemme herren
-oder Ritter absterben, sie ihren dieneren vast die schönesten kleider
-verehren vndt vergaben, welche, weil es ihnen nicht gezimpt, solche
-kleider nicht tragen, sondern nachmahlen, den Comoedienspileren vmb ein
-ringen pfenning ze kaufen geben.
-
-Was für zeit sie also in dem Comoedien lustig alle tag können
-zubringen, weisset yeglicher woll, der sie etwan hatt sehen agieren
-oder spilen....
-
-... Midt solchen vndt viel anderen kurtzweilen mehr vertreiben die
-Engellender ihr zeit, erfahren in den Comedien, wasz sich in anderen
-Landen zutraget, vndt gehendt ohne scheüchen, mann vndt weibs personen
-an gemelte ort, weil mehrtheils Engellender nicht pflegen viel ze
-reysen, sondern sich vergnügen zehausz frembde sachen ze erfahren vnndt
-ihre kurtzweil ze nemmen.’
-
-[1046] C. A. Mills in _The Times_ (11 April 1914) from the travels of
-‘a foreign nobleman, to be published by J. A. F. Orbaan from a _Vatican
-MS._’. Mills says that the visit was to the Globe, but the passage
-quoted does not exclude the Rose or Swan.
-
-[1047] G. von Bülow in _2 R. Hist. Soc. Trans._ (1892), vi. 6, 10, from
-MS. _penes_ Count von der Osten of Plathe, Pomerania; cf. Wallace,
-_Blackfriars_, 105, who identifies the _Samson_ play, rightly, with
-that of the Admiral’s men at the Fortune (cf. p. 180), and that at
-the Blackfriars, wrongly I think, with Chapman’s _The Widow’s Tears_.
-He assumes that the theatre visited on 13 Sept, was the Globe, but it
-might have been the Rose.
-
-[1048] ‘13. Den 13 ward eine comedia agirt, wie Stuhl-Weissenburg
-erstlich von den Türken, hernacher von den Christen wiederum erobert....
-
-14. Auf den Nachmittag ward eine tragica comoedia von Samsone und dem
-halben Stamm Benjamin agirt. Als wir zu dem Theatro gingen ...’.
-
-[1049] Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).
-
-[1050] Grosart, _Dekker_, iv. 210 (S. R. July 1608, printed 1609). The
-‘two houses’ are, of course, those of York and Lancaster. Note the
-final puns.
-
-[1051] Cf. ch. x. Fynes Moryson says in his _Itinerary_, iii. 2. 2
-(_c._ 1605–17), ‘The Theaters at London in England for Stage-plaies
-are more remarkeable for the number, and for the capacity, than for
-the building,’ and in the continuation (_c._ 1609–26, C. Hughes,
-_Shakespeare’s Europe_, 476), ‘The Citty of London alone hath foure or
-fiue Companyes of players with their peculiar Theaters capable of many
-thousands, wherein they all play euery day in the weeke but Sunday....
-As there be, in my opinion, more Playes in London than in all the
-partes of the worlde I haue seene, so doe these players or Comedians
-excell all other in the worlde.’
-
-[1052] _Epigram 39._ Both Curtain and Swan are named by W. Turner in
-_Turners Dish of Stuffe, or a Gallimaufry_ (1662), but this cannot be
-dated; cf. ch. xv (Shank):
-
- That’s the fat fool of the Curtain,
- And the lean fool of the Bull:
- Since Shancke did leave to sing his rhimes,
- He is counted but a gull:
- The players on the Bankside,
- The round Globe and the Swan,
- Will teach you idle tricks of love,
- But the Bull will play the man.
-
-[1053] Jodocus Sincerus, _Itineris Anglici brevissima delineatio_ in
-_Itinerarium Galliae_ (1617), 370; cf. Rye, 131, who gives the first
-edition as 1616.
-
-[1054] K. Feyerabend in _E. S._ xiv. 440, from manuscript in Cassel
-Library (cf. Rye, 143), ‘Zu Londen sind 7 theatra, da tägliche, die
-sonntäge ausgenommen, comoedien gehalten werden, unter welchen die
-vornehmste der glbs [_sic_, for _globus_], so über dem wasser liegt.
-Das theatrum, da die kinder spielen, ist auf diesseit des wassers,
-spielen um 3 uhr, aber nur von michaelis bis auf ostern; hier kostet
-der eingang einen halben schilling nur, da an andern orten wohl eine
-halbe kron. Diese [nämlich der Globus, _Ed._, but surely in error]
-spielen nur bei lichtern und is die beste Cumpani in London.’ The
-baiting is also mentioned; cf. p. 457.
-
-[1055] _Henslowe Papers_, 72, 79.
-
-[1056] Taylor, _The True Cause of the Watermen’s Suit concerning
-Players,_ _and the reasons that their Playing on London side is their
-extreame hindrances. With a Relation how farre that suit was proceeded
-in, and the occasions that it was not effected_, reprinted by Hindley,
-ii, No. 15, from Taylor’s _Works_ (1630), probably originally printed
-in 1614.
-
-[1057] It cites Caesar’s promotion and describes the agitation by the
-watermen as taking place in ‘January last, 1613’, i. e. 161¾. Probably
-it was written in the winter of 1614, and touched up before 1630, since
-it refers to Bacon and Somerset as ‘then’ Attorney-General and Lord
-Chamberlain respectively. Bacon’s term of office was from 27 Oct. 1613
-to 7 March 1617, Somerset’s from 10 July 1614 to 2 Nov. 1615.
-
-[1058] There is, I suppose, no reason why Randolph’s _Muses Looking
-Glass_, 1. i. 55, should not have been written before Salisbury Court
-was built. Herein a ‘brother’ is said to pray--
-
- That the Globe,
- Wherein (quoth he) reigns a whole world of vice,
- Had been consum’d: the Phoenix burnt to ashes:
- The Fortune whipp’d for a blind whore: Blackfriars,
- He wonders how it ’scaped demolishing
- I’ th’ time of reformation: lastly, he wish’d
- The Bull might cross the Thames to the Bear Garden,
- And there be soundly baited.
-
-[1059] Stowe, _Annales_ (1631), 1004. In the extract in Harrison, ii.
-49*, the period covered is given in error as 1553–1613.
-
-[1060] Cf. App. I.
-
-[1061] S. A. Strong, _Catalogue of Letters at Welbeck_, 226.
-
-[1062] Harrison, iv. 212, from _Phillipps MS._ 11613, f. 16, _penes_ J.
-F. P. Fenwick, of Thirlestane House, Cheltenham, written about 1656–8.
-The writer is not quite accurate in some of his earlier dates.
-
-[1063] Ward, iii. 280; Lawrence, ii. 138.
-
-[1064] Baker, 135, gives an enlarged reproduction under the name of the
-Theatre; but that is an obvious mistake.
-
-[1065] Rendle, _Bankside_, 1.
-
-[1066] [Nicholas Goodman?] _Hollands Leaguer or an historical Discourse
-of the Life and Actions of Dona Britanica Hollandia the Arch-Mistris
-of the wicked women of Evtopia_ (1632), sig. F 2; cf. C. W. Wallace in
-_Engl. Stud._ xliii. 392.
-
-[1067] Stowe, _Survey_, ii. 52.
-
-[1068] I cannot agree with Dr. Martin (_Surrey Arch. Colls._ xxiii.
-186), who sees, both in the Delaram and the ‘Hondius’ engravings, an
-east to west highway running north of the cylindrical building, which
-he takes for Maid Lane.
-
-[1069] The somewhat wanton suggestion of Dr. Martin (loc. cit. 188)
-that the engraver mistook the Rose for the Globe is sufficiently
-refuted by the fact that the Rose was extinct or at least long disused.
-
-[1070] I do not know on what ground Adams, 458, says that Visscher’s
-view was drawn several years before it was printed, ‘and represents the
-city as it was in or before 1613’.
-
-[1071] Martin, loc. cit. 192, again suggests that the houses are
-misnamed. He thinks that the Rose has been called the Globe in error
-and the Globe the Bear Garden, and that the unnamed house is the Globe.
-I cannot follow him in thinking that Merian represents the western
-house of the group as south of Maid Lane; all three are clearly to the
-north.
-
-[1072] Adams, 458, thinks that Merian worked upon Visscher, ‘with
-additions from some other earlier view not yet identified’. If so, this
-might perhaps go back to 1605.
-
-[1073] Cf. p. 463.
-
-[1074] Rendle, _Bankside_, xxx.
-
-[1075] Cf. p. 433.
-
-[1076] B. Marsh, _Records of the Worshipful Company of Carpenters_,
-iii. 95. I have to thank Mr. Marsh for this reference.
-
-[1077] _Sloane MS._ 2530, f. 11 _et passim_.
-
-[1078] App. C, No. xviii.
-
-[1079] Gosson, _Schoole of Abuse_, 40. The date renders very hazardous
-the identifications of _Ptolemy_ with the _Telomo_ shown at Court by
-Leicester’s men on 10 Feb. 1583, and of _The Jew_ with R. W.’s _Three
-Ladies of London_ (1584), which leads Fleay, 36, 40, to infer that
-Leicester’s men played at the Bull from 1560 to 1576.
-
-[1080] App. D, Nos. lx-lxii.
-
-[1081] Tarlton, 13, 24.
-
-[1082] Birch, _Elizabeth_, i. 173, from _Lambeth MS._; Spedding, viii.
-314.
-
-[1083] Cf. App. I.
-
-[1084] Machyn, 238.
-
-[1085] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 277. The play may have only been rehearsed,
-so that the identification of it by Fleay, 36, with _The Irish Knight_
-shown at Court by Warwick’s men on 18 Feb. 1577 is untenable, and with
-it vanishes all ground for the assignment of the inn by Fleay, 40, to
-Rich’s men in 1568–70, Lane’s in 1571–3, Warwick’s in 1575–80, and
-Hunsdon’s in 1582–3.
-
-[1086] Tarlton, 24.
-
-[1087] Harben, 65.
-
-[1088] Tarlton, 21. Apparently the Queen of Sheba, and not Pocahontas,
-was the original _Belle Sauvage_.
-
-[1089] App. C, No. xiv.
-
-[1090] App. C, No. xxii. The description reads like a compliment to
-Lyly, but does not justify the inference of Fleay, 39, that the Chapel
-boys played at the Bel Savage from 1559 to 1582.
-
-[1091] Arber, ii. 526.
-
-[1092] _Sloane MS._ 2530, ff. 7, 10, 11, 14; cf. the quotation from G.
-Silver, _Paradoxe of Defence_ (1599), in Adams, 13.
-
-[1093] Wallace, _N. U. S._ xiii. 82, 89.
-
-[1094] Tarlton, 23.
-
-[1095] App. D, No. ci. Fleay, 89, has no other material than these
-notices and an unjustifiable assumption of identity between the two
-companies for assigning the house to Leicester’s (1586–8) and Strange’s
-(1589–91).
-
-[1096] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317; cf. p. 425.
-
-[1097] Stowe, _Survey_ (ed. Kingsford, ii. 262, 369), ends his account
-of Holywell in the 1598 edition, ‘And neare therevnto are builded two
-publique houses for the acting and shewe of Comedies, Tragedies, and
-Histories, for recreation. Whereof the one is called the Courtein,
-the other the Theatre: both standing on the South-west side towards
-the field’. This is omitted from the 1603 edition, probably not so
-much, as has been suggested, because Stowe shared the Puritan dislike
-of the stage, as because in 1603 the Theatre was gone and the Curtain
-little used. Stowe’s draft (_c._ 1598) in _Harl. MS._ 538 runs, ‘Neare
-adjoyning are builded two houses for the shewe of Activities, Comedies,
-tragedies and histories, for recreation. The one of them is named the
-Curtayn in Holy Well, the other the Theatre.’ No contemporary map shows
-the Theatre, although that of Agas (_c._ 1561) gives a good idea of the
-Halliwell district before it was built. The representation from the
-seventeenth-century ‘Ryther’ map, given as the Theatre by Baker, 135,
-is presumably the Curtain.
-
-[1098] Braines (1915), 4; Stopes, 185.
-
-[1099] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 345; Braines (1915), 5, 21.
-
-[1100] Latin translations of parts of the lease are recited in
-pleadings of 1600 and 1602 (Wallace, 166, 268), and the description of
-parcels agrees with that in the draft lease of 1585, similarly recited
-in 1600 (Wallace, 169); cf. Braines (1915), 8.
-
-[1101] The position of the well in Chassereau’s _Survey of Shoreditch_
-(1745) seems to me to bear out this identification, although, as
-Braines (1915), 4, points out, we do not know Chassereau’s authority.
-Under Burbadge’s lease all Giles Allen’s tenants in Holywell were to
-have access to the well. Stowe, _Survey_, i. 15, describes the holy
-well as ‘much decayed and marred with filthinesse purposely laide
-there, for the heighthening of the ground for garden plots’. It is
-clearly distinct from Dame Agnes a Cleere’s well, which was outside
-Holywell, towards the north (Stowe, _Survey_, i. 16; ii. 273; Stopes,
-192).
-
-[1102] _Tarlton’s News out of Purgatory_ (S. R. 26 June 1590), in
-_Tarlton_, 54, 105, ‘I would needs to the Theatre to a play, where
-when I came, I founde such concourse of unrulye people, that I thought
-it better solitary to walk in the fields, then to intermeddle myselfe
-amongst such a great presse. Feeding mine humour with this fancie,
-I stept by dame Anne of Cleeres well, and went by the backside of
-Hogsdon, where, finding the sun to be hotte, and seeing a faire tree
-that had a coole shade, I sat me downe to take the aire, where after I
-had rested me a while, I fell asleepe.... And with that I waked, and
-saw such concourse of people through the fields that I knew the play
-was doon.’
-
-[1103] Braines (1915), 27. Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 351, put the site
-on the present Deane’s Mews, but this is too far south, and does not
-allow for the interposition of Rutland’s holding between Holywell Lane
-and Allen’s. The shoring up of the barn to the Theatre is testified to
-in Wallace, 227, 231, 243. The exact site therefore cannot have been
-far east of the Curtain Road, which apparently occupies the strip of
-void land held by Burbadge between the old priory wall and the ditch
-bordering Finsbury fields.
-
-[1104] Wallace, 134, 141, 153.
-
-[1105] Ibid. 39.
-
-[1106] Ibid. 139.
-
-[1107] Wallace, 142 (Miles), 152 (Nicoll).
-
-[1108] App. D, No. xxxiv.
-
-[1109] Wallace, 135.
-
-[1110] Ibid. 140.
-
-[1111] Ibid. 151 (Nicoll).
-
-[1112] Ibid. 152 (Nicoll).
-
-[1113] Wallace, 73 (Bett), 102, 119 (Ralph Miles), 137 (Collins), 143
-(Robert Miles), 152 (Nicoll), 157.
-
-[1114] Ibid. 53, 107, 111 (Hyde), 73 (Bett), 143 (Robert Miles), 103,
-120 (Ralph Miles). Brayne’s will was proved 10 Aug. 1586 (Wallace, 14).
-
-[1115] Ibid. 104 (Ralph Miles), 146 (Robert Miles).
-
-[1116] Ibid. 16, 55, 108 (Hyde), 73 (Bett), 145 (Miles).
-
-[1117] Ibid. 46.
-
-[1118] Wallace, 86 (Bett), 115 (Bishop), 122 (Ralph Miles).
-
-[1119] Ibid. 109 (Hyde), 134 (Griggs), 137 (Collins), 106 (Ralph
-Miles), 139, 148 (Robert Miles).
-
-[1120] Ibid. 83 (Bett), 88 (Gascoigne), 90 (James).
-
-[1121] Ibid. 87 (Bett).
-
-[1122] Griggs (Wallace, 134) puts Brayne’s expenditure at 1,000 marks
-and Burbadge’s at under £100; Collins (Wallace, 137) agrees as to
-Brayne’s and puts Burbadge’s at about £50; Miles (ibid. 141) says
-Brayne spent £600 or £700 in cash or credit and Burbadge about £50 in
-cash and material; Lanman (ibid. 148) had heard that the building cost
-1,000 marks; Giles Allen (ibid. 164) valued it at £700 in 1599.
-
-[1123] Robert Miles put Burbadge’s total profits from tenements and
-play-house in eight or nine years before 1592 at 2,000 marks, but in
-1600 he only put the aggregate profits of James and Cuthbert from the
-play-house by itself at 1,000 marks (Wallace, 147, 263). Giles Allen
-(ibid. 198) put them at £2,000. Ralph Miles in 1592 had heard that
-Burbadge had received £700 or £800 in rents and profits since Brayne’s
-death in 1586 (ibid. 106). John Alleyn, a more disinterested witness,
-confirms this estimate, putting the figure at £100 or 200 marks a year
-for the five years before 1592 (ibid. 102).
-
-[1124] Wallace, 76 (Ellam), 77 (Hudson).
-
-[1125] Ibid. 47.
-
-[1126] Wallace, 59 (C. Burbadge), 62 (J. Burbadge), 97, 114 (Bishop),
-100, 126 (Alleyn), 105, 121 (Ralph Miles).
-
-[1127] Ibid. 49, 66.
-
-[1128] Ibid. 101, 127 (Alleyn). The two depositions are not quite
-consistent as to dates. From that of 6 Feb. 1592, one would infer that
-the dispute between Burbadge and the Admiral’s was at the time of
-the contempt of 16 Nov. 1590. The second, of 6 May 1592, apparently
-corrects the first, by giving the date of the insult to the Lord
-Admiral as ‘about a yere past’. The point is of importance, as bearing
-upon the length of the stay of the Admiral’s and Strange’s (cf. ch.
-xiii) at the Theatre. No doubt Mrs. Brayne, who came ‘dyvers tymes’ to
-the Theatre, continued her applications after laying her affidavit of
-contempt.
-
-[1129] Wallace, 153.
-
-[1130] Wallace, 156.
-
-[1131] Ibid. 161, 263. Miles still held Burbadge’s bonds in 1600.
-
-[1132] Ibid. 137, ‘iron worke which the said Braynes bestowed vppon the
-same Theater’.
-
-[1133] Cf. ch. xviii.
-
-[1134] Wallace, 62 (Burbadge), 88 (Bett), 125 (Alleyn), 149 (Lanman).
-
-[1135] Cf. pp. 358, 362. This evidence outweighs the rather slight
-grounds on which T. S. Graves, _The Shape of the First London Theatre_
-(_South Atlantic Quarterly_, xiii. 280), conjectures that it may have
-been rectangular.
-
-[1136] G. Harvey, _Letter Book_, 67, suggests in 1579 that he may be
-asked by Leicester’s, Warwick’s, Vaux’s or Rich’s men, or ‘sum other
-freshe starteup comedanties’ for ‘sum malt conceivid comedye fitt for
-the Theater, or sum other paintid stage’ (cf. p. 4). It is a pity he
-was not more precise.
-
-[1137] Cf. App. C, Nos. xxii, xxx. Fleay, 40, 88, 145, identifies _The
-Play of Plays_ in which Delight was a character with the _Delight_
-shown at Court by Leicester’s on 26 Dec. 1580, and _Caesar and Pompey_,
-which Gosson does not quite clearly assign to the Theatre at all,
-with the _Pompey_ shown by Paul’s on 6 Jan. 1581; and conjectures
-successive occupations by Leicester’s (1576–83), Paul’s (1582), Queen’s
-and Hunsdon’s (1584), Queen’s and Oxford’s (1585), Queen’s (1586–93),
-Chamberlain’s (1594–7). He was unlucky in omitting the Admiral’s from
-his guesses.
-
-[1138] Cf. App. D, Nos. xliii, xliv.
-
-[1139] Wallace, 201 (Cuthbert Burbadge), 239 (Smith), 240 (May), 242
-(Tilt).
-
-[1140] Ibid. 11.
-
-[1141] Cf. App. D, No. lxxiv.
-
-[1142] Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_ (_Works_, i. 197). Harington,
-_Metamorphosis of Ajax_ (1596), speaks of a vulgar word ‘admitted
-into the Theater with great applause by the mouth of Mayster Tarlton,
-the excellent comedian’. It was near the Theatre that the writer of
-_Tarltons Newes of Purgatorie_ (Tarlton, 54) had his dream of the dead
-actor.
-
-[1143] Cf. App. C, No. xl.
-
-[1144] Lodge, _Wits Miserie_ (1596), ‘pale as the visard of the ghost
-which cried so miserably at the Theator, like an oister wife, Hamlet,
-revenge’. In T. M., _Black Book_ (1604), is a mention of ‘one of my
-divells in D^r Faustus, when the olde Theatre crackt and frighted the
-audience’. This was presumably before 1592, as _Dr. Faustus_ seems to
-have been continuously in Henslowe’s hands from the beginning of that
-year. Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 363, quotes an allusion of Barnaby Rich
-in 1606 (_Faultes Faults, and Nothing Else but Faultes_, 7) to ‘Gravets
-part at the Theatre’, but this must not be pressed as a reference to
-the long-destroyed house.
-
-[1145] _Sloane MS._ 2530, ff. 6, 11, 12, 46; cf. App. D, Nos. lxii,
-lxviii.
-
-[1146] Cf. ch. xi, p. 371.
-
-[1147] T. W., _Sermon at Paul’s Cross_ (3 Nov. 1577), ‘Beholde the
-sumptuous Theatre houses’; Northbrooke (S. R. 2 Dec. 1577), 85,
-‘places ... builded for such Playes and Enterludes, as the Theatre and
-Curtaine is’; Stockwood, _Sermon at Paul’s Cross_ (24 Aug. 1578), ‘the
-Theatre, the Curtayne, and other places of Playes in the Citie ...
-the gorgeous Playing place erected in the fieldes ... as they please
-to have it called, a Theatre’; _News from the North_ (1579), ‘the
-Theaters, Curtines ... and such places where the time is so shamefully
-mispent’; T. Twyne, _Physic for Fortune_ (1579), i. xxx, 42, ‘the
-Curteine or Theater; which two places are well knowen to be enimies
-to good manners: for looke who goeth thyther evyl, returneth worse’;
-Stubbes (S. R. 1 March 1583), i. 144, ‘flockyng and runnyng to Theaters
-and Curtens ... Venus pallaces’; Field (1583), ‘the distruction bothe
-of bodye and soule that many are brought unto by frequenting the
-Theater, the Curtin and such like’; Rankins (1587), f. 4, ‘the Theater
-and Curtine may aptlie be termed for their abhomination, the chappell
-_adulterinum_’; Harrison, _Chronologie_ (1588), i. liv, ‘It is an
-evident token of a wicked time when plaiers wexe so riche that they can
-build suche houses’.
-
-[1148] App. D, Nos. XXXV, lxxiv. It appears to have been thought a
-good example to frequenters of the Theatre that the locality should
-occasionally be used for a public execution. Stowe, _Annales_ (1615),
-749, 750, records the hanging of W. Gunter, a priest from beyond the
-seas, ‘at the Theater’ on 28 Aug. 1588, and of W. Hartley, another
-priest, ‘nigh the Theator,’ on 1 Oct. 1588; cf. Halliwell-Phillipps,
-i. 351, from _True Report of the Inditement of Weldon, Hartley, and
-Sutton, who Suffred for High Treason_ (1588).
-
-[1149] Sir A. Ashley to Sir R. Cecil (_Hatfield MSS._ vii. 504).
-
-[1150] Cf. ch. ix. In addition to the occasions described above,
-the Theatre and Curtain are particularly referred to in the City’s
-complaint to Walsingham on 3 May 1583, and in the Council’s inhibitions
-of 29 Oct. 1587, where the ‘Liberty’ of Holywell is clearly pointed at
-in the allusion to ‘places priviledged’, and 23 June 1592 (App. D, Nos.
-lxix, lxxx, xc).
-
-[1151] App. D, No. xlii. The County records also contain entries of a
-recognisance by ‘James Burbage of Shorditch gent.’, Henry Bett, and
-[Cuthbert] Burbage in the Strond, yeoman’, on 6 April 1592, for the
-former’s appearance at the next Middlesex sessions, and a similar
-recognisance of ‘James Burbage of Hallywell, yeoman’, on 11 Sept. 1593
-(Jeaffreson, i. 205, 217); but there is nothing to show the nature of
-the proceedings.
-
-[1152] Cf. App. C, No. xxv.
-
-[1153] App. D, No. cx.
-
-[1154] E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_, sat. v:
-
- ‘but see yonder,
- One, like the unfrequented Theater,
- Walkes in darke silence and vast solitude’.
-
-[1155] Wallace, 169, 183, 191, 214, 218.
-
-[1156] Ibid. 72, 76, 226.
-
-[1157] Ibid. 232, 235.
-
-[1158] Wallace, 195, 203, 212, 216, 220, 238. Robert Miles took
-occasion of the negotiations to renew his old claim by petitioning
-in the Court of Requests for an interest in the new lease. The
-proceedings, so far as preserved, are inconclusive (ibid. 158).
-Meanwhile Cuthbert Burbadge was co-operating with Giles Allen in
-defending a claim made by the Earl of Rutland to the ‘debateable’
-ground, and remained a party to the consequent litigation in 1602, long
-after the Theatre had disappeared (Stopes, 184).
-
-[1159] Wallace, 184, 196, 204.
-
-[1160] Ibid. 221.
-
-[1161] Ibid. 164, 179, 197, 217, 222, 238, 278. The dates are not
-quite certain; possibly the 20 Jan. of _Allen v. Street_ was an error.
-Allen’s Answer in the Court of Requests places the whole transaction
-‘aboute the feast of the Natiuitie’, and this in his Star Chamber suit
-becomes ‘aboute the eight and twentyth day of December’, without any
-suggestion that more than one day was occupied.
-
-[1162] Ibid. 163.
-
-[1163] Ibid. 181.
-
-[1164] Wallace, 186, 215, 220.
-
-[1165] Ibid. 285.
-
-[1166] Ibid. 267, 275.
-
-[1167] Aubrey, ii. 12, on the authority of J. Greenhill, says that Ben
-Jonson ‘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 on that of Sir Edward Shirburn
-that Jonson killed Marlowe, ‘on Bunhill, comeing from the Green-Curtain
-play-house’. Hoxton, where Jonson killed Gabriel Spencer, is of course
-not far from Bunhill, and both are in the Holywell neighbourhood.
-Probably Aubrey, in giving a name to the theatre, is babbling of green
-frieze, rather than green fields. Steevens and Malone (_Variorum_, iii.
-54) committed themselves to the view that ‘the original sign hung out
-at this play-house was the painting of a curtain striped’.
-
-[1168] Thomas Wilkins was perhaps related to George Wilkins the
-dramatist, who was buried at Shoreditch 9 Aug. 1613. Sir William Allen
-is not known to have had anything to do either with Edward Alleyn or
-with Giles Allen, the ground-landlord of the Theatre. Lanman was 54 on
-30 July 1592. We cannot assume that the name is merely an orthographic
-variant of that of Laneham.
-
-[1169] Reproduced in Ordish, 40.
-
-[1170] Reproduced in Baker, 36, 135, with a photographic enlargement of
-the building, wrongly identified with the _Theatre_. It is shown as a
-round or hexagonal structure, with a large flag, standing in the middle
-of a square paled plot; but too much stress must not be laid on what is
-probably only a cartographic symbol. Immediately south of it is Bedlam.
-Kiechel tells us that the house had three galleries, and de Witt that
-it was an ‘amphitheatrum’ (cf. pp. 358, 362). In the epilogue to _Three
-English Brothers_ (1607) it is a ‘round circumference’.
-
-[1171] Cf. p. 393.
-
-[1172] Fleay, 40, 88, 145, 201, 300, assigns it as follows: Sussex’s
-(1576–83), Arundel’s and Oxford’s (1584), Howard’s and Hunsdon’s
-(1585), Oxford’s (1586–8), Pembroke’s (1589–97), Chamberlain’s
-(1597–9), Derby’s (1599–1600), uncertain company (1601), Queen Anne’s
-(1604–9), Duke of York’s (1610–23). But, of course, this _is_ guessing.
-
-[1173] Tarlton, 16. If _Tarlton’s Jig of a Horse Load of Fools_, taken
-from a manuscript of Collier’s (Tarlton, xx), is genuine, that also was
-given at the Curtain.
-
-[1174] _Sloane MS._ 2530, ff. 4, 12, 43, 44, 46.
-
-[1175] Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (S. R. 8 Sept. 1598), Sat. v:
-
- if my dispose
- Perswade me to a play, I’le to the Rose,
- Or Curtaine, one of Plautus comedies,
- Or the patheticke Spaniards tragedies;
-
-and in the _Preludium_, of a ‘Cittizen ... comming from the Curtaine’.
-
-[1176] _Scourge of Villainy_ (1598), xi. 37 (_Works_, iii. 372):
-
- Luscus, what’s play’d to-day? Faith now I know
- I set thy lips abroach, from whence doth flow
- Naught but pure Juliet and Romeo.
- Say who acts best? Drusus or Roscio?
- Now I have him, that ne’er of ought did speak
- But when of plays or players he did treat--
- Hath made a commonplace book out of plays,
- And speaks in print: at least what e’er he says
- Is warranted by Curtain plaudities.
-
-[1177] Cf. p. 365.
-
-[1178] Jeaffreson, i. 259.
-
-[1179] Heath, Epigram 39; Wither, _Abuses_, i. 1; ii. 3.
-
-[1180] Cf. App. C, No. lix.
-
-[1181] _Variorum_, iii. 54, 59; Ordish, 106, from _Vox Graculi_ (1623)
-and Jeaffreson, iii. 164.
-
-[1182] A writer in the _Daily News_ for 9 April 1898 identifies the
-site of the theatre, without giving any evidence, as ‘between Clock
-Passage, Newington Butts, Swan Place, and Hampton Street’; cf. _9 N.
-Q._ i. 386.
-
-[1183] App. D, Nos. xlvi, lxxvi, xcii.
-
-[1184] Cf. p. 373.
-
-[1185] C. W. Wallace in _N. U. S._ xiii. 2, ‘as shown by a contemporary
-record to be published later’.
-
-[1186] _A Woman is a Weathercock_, III. iii. 25.
-
-[1187] Rendle, _Antiquarian_, viii. 60, ‘Among the early Surveys, 1
-Edward VI, we see that this was not merely a name--the place was a
-veritable Rose Garden, and paid £1 3_s._ 4_d._ by the year, and the
-messuage called the Rose paid £4’.
-
-[1188] _Close Roll 6 Edw. VI_, p. 5, m. 13; cf. Rendle, _Bankside_, xv;
-_H. P._ 1.
-
-[1189] _Egerton MS._ 2623, f. 13, quoted in Henslowe, ii. 25. But in
-ii. 43 Dr. Greg misdescribes the Rose as on the west of the Barge,
-Bell, and Cock.
-
-[1190] _Henslowe Papers_, 1.
-
-[1191] Ibid. 2.
-
-[1192] Henslowe, i. 209.
-
-[1193] Cf. Dekker, _Satiromastix_, 1247, ‘th’ast a breath as sweet as
-the Rose, that growes by the Beare-garden’.
-
-[1194] G. L. Gomme, _The Story of London Maps_ (_Geographical Journal_,
-xxxi. 628), ‘1588. Henchley.--Item, we present Phillip Henchley to
-pull upp all the pylles that stand in the common sewer against the
-play-house to the stopping of the water course, the which to be done by
-midsomer next uppon paine of x^s yf it be undone. x^s (done)’. Wallace,
-in _The Times_ (1914), says that these records mention the theatre
-as ‘new’ in April 1588, and show other amercements during the next
-eighteen years.
-
-[1195] Dr. Greg, in Henslowe, ii. 46, is, I think, successful in
-showing that all the dated building entries belong to 1592 and not to
-1591 or 1593. I suppose the scattered entries with the date ‘1591’ to
-have been written in first, and the continuous account under the date
-‘1592’ added later, probably after Henslowe had changed the year-date
-in his play-entries, which seems to have been on 6 May.
-
-[1196] Henslowe, i. 7.
-
-[1197] App. D, No. xcii.
-
-[1198] The words ‘Chomley when’ appear with other scribbles by Henslowe
-on the first page of the diary (Henslowe, i. 217).
-
-[1199] Cf. p. 402.
-
-[1200] Henslowe, i. 4.
-
-[1201] Henslowe, i. 178.
-
-[1202] Ibid. ii. 55.
-
-[1203] Wallace, in _The Times_ (1914).
-
-[1204] Rendle, _Bankside_, xv, quotes
-
- In the last great fire
- The Rose did expire,
-
-and adds ‘but when that was, I am not clear’. It reads like Collier.
-
-[1205] I cannot endorse the suggestion of Dr. Martin (cf. p. 378)
-that the ‘Globe’ of Visscher (1616) was really the Rose. Baker, 165,
-reproducing a cut from Hollar (1640), also misnames the Globe as the
-Rose.
-
-[1206] Young, ii. 241.
-
-[1207] _Variorum_, iii. 56. I should have been happier if Malone had
-quoted _verbatim_, but I do not see that Adams, 160, explains away the
-statement by suggesting that a source for Malone’s ‘error’ is a note on
-p. 66, where he again cites Herbert for fencing at the Red Bull in 1623.
-
-[1208] _E. S._ xliii. 341; _Index to Remembrancia_, 277. It appears
-from _Hatfield MSS._ vi. 182, 184, that in May 1596 Langley was
-concerned in some negotiations about a missing diamond claimed by the
-Crown; cf. p. 396.
-
-[1209] Printed from a contemporary copy in the Guildhall by W. Rendle
-in Appendix to Part II of _Harrison’s Description of England_ (_N. S.
-S._, 1878) and Adams, 162. The original is held by the steward of the
-manor.
-
-[1210] App. D, No. cii.
-
-[1211] Cf. p. 361, and for the reliability and value of the record as
-evidence for the structure and staging of theatres, chh. xviii, xx.
-
-[1212] _S. v. L._ 352, ‘the said howse was then lately afore vsed to
-have playes in hit’.
-
-[1213] Ibid., ‘the Defendant should be allowed for the true value
-thereof out of the Complainantes moytie of the gains for the seuerall
-standinges in the galleries of the said howse which belonged to them’.
-As ‘which’ may follow on ‘moytie’, I see no reason for Wallace’s
-inference (360) that the galleries were structurally divided between
-the two parties, instead of the takings being shared.
-
-[1214] Cf. ch. xiv (Pembroke’s) and ch. xxii (Nashe).
-
-[1215] _S. v. L._ 353 (6 Feb. 1598), ‘the said Defendant hath euer
-synce had his said howse contynually from tyme to tyme exercysed with
-other players to his great gaines’.
-
-[1216] App. D, No. cxiv.
-
-[1217] App. D, No. cxv.
-
-[1218] App. C, No. lii.
-
-[1219] Cf. p. 362.
-
-[1220] App. D, No. cxxiii.
-
-[1221] Manningham, 130; Gawdy, 93.
-
-[1222] Ch. xxiii (Vennar).
-
-[1223] _E. S._ xliii. 342.
-
-[1224] Act v, sc. i.
-
-[1225] P. Norman, _The Accounts of the Overseers of the Poor of Paris
-Garden, 1608–71_ (1901, _Surrey Arch. Colls._ xvi. 55), from _Addl.
-MS._ 34, 110, and again by C. W. Wallace as a new discovery in _E. S._
-xliii. 390. The amounts are £4 6_s._ 8_d._ in 1611, £5 3_s._ 4_d._ in
-1612, £5 5_s._ in 1613, £3 0_s._ 10_d._ in 1614, 19_s._ 2_d._ in 1615,
-and £3 19_s._ 4_d._ in 1621.
-
-[1226] It can hardly have been open at the time of the Watermen’s
-petition early in 1614 (cf. p. 370).
-
-[1227] Herbert, 63; _Variorum_, iii. 56. Rendle, in _Antiquarian
-Magazine_, vii. 211, notes a ‘licence for T. B. and three assistants
-to make shows of Italian motion, at the Prince’s Arms, or the Swan’ in
-1623; cf. Herbert, 47.
-
-[1228] Cf. p. 376.
-
-[1229] _N. U. S._ xiii. 279; cf. p. 399.
-
-[1230] Wallace, in _The Times_ (1914), ‘Ac de et in vna domo de novo
-edificata cum gardino eidem pertinenti in parochia S^{ci} Salvatoris
-praedicta in comitatu Surria praedicta in occupacione Willielmi
-Shakespeare et aliorum’.
-
-[1231] Cf. p. 364.
-
-[1232] A rather fantastic argument of Ordish, 85, for the Curtain on
-the ground of the martial character of the neighbourhood is answered by
-Murray, i. 99.
-
-[1233] _E. M. O._ 4368.
-
-[1234] _O. v. H._ l. 110.
-
-[1235] _O. v. H._ l. 99; _W. v. H._ 313.
-
-[1236] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.
-
-[1237] _W. v. H._ 314.
-
-[1238] _Century_ (Aug. 1910), 508; cf. p. 424.
-
-[1239] _W. v. H._ 314.
-
-[1240] _O. v. H._ l. 194.
-
-[1241] _W. v. H._ 319.
-
-[1242] Ibid. 317. Wallace dates the admission of Condell in 1610, but
-this seems to be an error.
-
-[1243] _O. v. H._ l. 97; _W. v. H._ 321.
-
-[1244] Rye, 61, from _Relation_ of Hans Jacob Wurmsser von Vendenheym,
-‘Lundi 30 [April 1610] S. E. [Prince Lewis Frederick of Württemberg]
-alla au Globe, lieu ordinaire ou l’on joue les Commedies, y fut
-representé l’histoire du More de Venise’; cf. p. 369 on visit of Prince
-of Hesse-Cassel in 1611.
-
-[1245] _W. v. H._ 320.
-
-[1246] Stowe, 926. Jonas, 104, cites another record of the date from A.
-Hopten, _A Concordancy of Yeares_ (1615).
-
-[1247] Birch, _James_, i. 253.
-
-[1248] L. Pearsall Smith, _Letters of Wotton_, ii. 32.
-
-[1249] Winwood, iii. 469.
-
-[1250] Arber, iii. 528, ‘Simon Stafford ... a ballad called the sodayne
-Burninge of the Globe on the Bankside in the Play tyme on Saint Peters
-day last 1613’; ‘Edward White ... a doleful ballad of the general
-ouerthrowe of the famous theater on the Banksyde called the Globe &c. by
-William Parrat’.
-
-[1251] Halliwell-Phillipps, _Outlines_, i. 310, ‘from a manuscript
-of the early part of the seventeenth century, of unquestionable
-authenticity, preserved in the library of Sir Mathew Wilson, Bart., of
-Eshton Hall, co. York’. The Eshton Hall collection, originally formed
-by John Hopkinson in 1660, has recently been sold, with the verses, to
-Mr. G. D. Smith of New York. The ‘Sonnett’ was first printed [by Joseph
-Haslewood] in _The Gentleman’s Magazine_ (1816), lxxxvi. 114, ‘from an
-old manuscript volume of poems and therefrom by Collier, i. 371, and
-Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 225.
-
-[1252] _Taylors Water-Works_ (1614), reprinted as _The Sculler_ (1630,
-_Works_, 515), ep. 22 of 3rd series.
-
-[1253] _Underwoods_, lxii, written later than the Fortune fire of 9
-Dec. 1621.
-
-[1254] _Histriomastix_, 556.
-
-[1255] Birch, _James I_, i. 329.
-
-[1256] Cf. p. 374.
-
-[1257] _W. v. H._ 320.
-
-[1258] Ibid. 321.
-
-[1259] A later statement by Shank in the _Sharers Papers_ puts it at
-£1,400. Heminges describes Witter’s ‘parte’ by a slip as one-sixth
-instead of one-seventh of the moiety. If the £120 was one-twelfth of
-the total cost, his figure (£1,440) would agree with that of Shank.
-Professor Wallace says in _The Times_ of 2 Oct. 1909, ‘This amount is
-in fact excessive.... I have other contemporary documents showing the
-cost was far less than £1,400.’
-
-[1260] _W. v. H._ 323; Wallace in _The Times_ (1914).
-
-[1261] _O. v. H._ ll. 245 sqq.
-
-[1262] Lambert, _Shakespeare Documents_, 87.
-
-[1263] _W. v. H._ 323.
-
-[1264] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 312.
-
-[1265] Cf. ch. xi. There was a much rougher type of audience at the
-Globe; cf. Shirley, _Prologue at the Globe, to his Comedy called ‘The
-Doubtful Heir’, which should have been presented at the Blackfriars_,
-quoted in _Variorum_, iii. 69.
-
-[1266] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).
-
-[1267] Wallace in _The Times_ (1914). Bodley seems to have acquired
-a dubious title to hold the land in his own right in 1608, raised a
-fine of £20 for recognizing the players’ lease in 1609, and a fine of
-£2 on Heminges for leave to build his taphouse in 1615. Matthew Brend
-recovered the property through the Court of Wards, after the end of his
-minority, in 1622.
-
-[1268] Rendle, _Bankside_, xvii, from _Southwark Vestry Papers_. Brend
-was knighted in 1622.
-
-[1269] Cf. p. 374. Wallace, in _The Times_ (1914), makes Matthew
-Brend’s lease end on 25 Dec. Yet he puts the destruction after the
-expiration of the lease.
-
-[1270] Stowe, _Survey_, ii. 58.
-
-[1271] Martin, 158.
-
-[1272] Stopes, _Burbage_, 196; Martin, 169; from _Close Roll, 3 Car.
-I_, pt. 23, m. 22.
-
-[1273] Martin, 174.
-
-[1274] A. Hayward, _Autobiography of Mrs. Piozzi_, ii. 33.
-
-[1275] _History of St. Saviour’s_ (1795), 231.
-
-[1276] T. Pennant, _London_ (1791), 60, ‘A little west of S. Mary
-Overies (in a place still called Globe Alley) stood the Globe.... I
-have been told that the door was very lately standing’; Concanen and
-Morgan, 224, ‘Several of the neighbouring inhabitants remember these
-premises being wholly taken down about fifty years ago, having remained
-for many years in a very ruinous state: avoided by the young and
-superstitious as a place haunted by those imaginary beings called evil
-spirits’.
-
-[1277] Martin, 165, 177. It is probably a mere coincidence that John
-Knowles held a garden next the Globe site in 1599.
-
-[1278] Rendle, _Bankside_, xix; _Antiquarian_, viii. 216.
-
-[1279] Chalmers, _Apology_ (1797), 114, ‘I maintain, that the Globe
-was situated on the Bank, within eighty paces of the river, which has
-since receded from its former limits; that the Globe stood on the site
-of John Whatley’s windmill, which is at present used for grinding
-colours; as I was assured by an intelligent manager of Barclay’s
-brewhouse, which covers, in its ample range, part of Globe Alley;
-and that Whatley’s wind mill stands due south from the western side
-of Queenhythe by the compass, which I set for the express purpose of
-ascertaining the relative bearings of the windmill to the opposite
-objects on the Thames’; W. Wilson, _History and Antiquities of
-Dissenting Churches_ (1814), iv. 148, 175, ‘In former days there stood
-here [in Globe Alley] a theatre called the “Globe”.... Near to this
-place stood the meeting-house.... Its dissolution took place about the
-year 1752.... It is at present used for warehousing goods. A mill was
-also erected over it for the purpose of grinding bones’; R. Wilkinson,
-_Londina Illustrata_ (1819), i. 135, ‘Upon the disuse of the theatre,
-its site ... was formed into a meeting-house.... Afterwards a mill
-was erected here to grind bones; and it is at present appropriated
-for the purpose of grinding stones and similar materials’. The plan,
-however, which accompanies Wilkinson’s text, assigns the theatre to an
-improbable site some way west of the meeting-house. The Globe Alley
-meeting-house was built in 1672; it appears in a list of 1683, and is
-marked on Rocque’s map of 1746 on Rendle’s favourite site. Wilson only
-says the meeting-house was near the Globe; Wilkinson identifies the
-sites. Chalmers mentions the windmill, but not the meeting-house. I may
-add that a line drawn south from the west of Queenhithe would pass west
-of any possible site for the Globe. Malone’s ‘nearly opposite to Friday
-Street, Cheapside’ (_Variorum_, iii. 63) can also only be approximate.
-
-[1280] Cf. facsimile from token-book in Martin, 157.
-
-[1281] Concanen and Morgan, _History of St. Saviour’s_ (1795), 224,
-‘It was situated in what is now called Maid lane; the north side and
-building adjoining, extending from the west side of Counter-alley to
-the north side of the passage leading to Mr. Brook’s cooperage; on
-the east side beyond the end of Globe-alley, including the ground on
-which stood the late parish workhouse, and from thence continuing
-to the south end of Mr. Brook’s passage. Under this building was
-Fountain-alley, leading from Horseshoe-alley into Castle-lane.’ This
-account appears to make the site extend farther north than Dr. Martin
-allows for, right up, indeed, to Maid Lane.
-
-[1282] Plan of 1810 in R. Taylor, _Londina Illustrata_, ii. (1825) 136;
-plan of 1818 in Taylor, _Annals of St. Mary Overy_ (1833), 140.
-
-[1283] Martin, 171. One cannot lay much stress upon hearsay locations
-of the site by employees of the brewery (Martin, 183), or the discovery
-of underground staging still farther south than Dr. Martin’s site on a
-spot which in 1599 must have been well within Winchester Park (Martin,
-201), or of a stone inscribed ‘[T]heayter’, just south of Globe Alley
-(Martin, 184).
-
-[1284] Martin, 164.
-
-[1285] A Clink poor relief assessment of 1609 (Collier, _Alleyn
-Memoirs_, 91; Warner, 49) shows two names, each assessed for ‘halfe the
-parke’; this would hardly be the Bishop’s. The token-books also show
-persons resident in the park, but here the order of the entries points
-to a locality south of Maiden Lane, near the gate of the Bishop’s Park
-(_11 N. Q._ xii. 143).
-
-[1286] Wallace in _The Times_ (1914). Dr. Martin explains (_11 N. Q._
-xii. 161) that, in order to conduct their patrons from Bankside to the
-play-house south of Maiden Lane, ‘the owners of the Globe had erected a
-bridge over the ditches and quagmire of Maid Lane’.
-
-[1287] Dr. Wallace says that all these records were made by the
-Commissioners ‘in dealing with the property of Brend and others on the
-north side’ of Maiden Lane. But there is no reference to ‘the north
-side’ in the actual record. Bingham had, and Sellers may have had, more
-than one plot in the neighbourhood.
-
-[1288] Cf. p. 379.
-
-[1289] _R. I. B. A. Journal_, 3rd series, xvii. 26.
-
-[1290] Halliwell-Phillipps (_Calendar of Shakespeare Rarities_, 81)
-had a document of 1653 concerning a sewer ‘in Maide Lane nere the
-place where the Globe play-house lately stood’, which he considered as
-establishing the exact locality of the theatre. It is probably now in
-America.
-
-[1291] Cf. p. 436.
-
-[1292] I ought not to have suggested in _The Stage of the Globe_, 356,
-that the first Globe might have been rectangular.
-
-[1293] _Variorum_, iii. 67.
-
-[1294] _Henslowe Papers_, 14; Henslowe, ii. 56.
-
-[1295] _Henslowe Papers_, 16.
-
-[1296] Ibid. 25.
-
-[1297] Ibid. 108.
-
-[1298] Printed by W. W. Greg, _Henslowe Papers_, 4, from _Dulwich
-Muniments_, 22; also in _Variorum_, iii. 338, and Halliwell-Phillipps,
-_Illustrations_, 81; _Outlines_, i. 304.
-
-[1299] _Quarterly Review_, ccviii. 442; _Architectural Review_,
-xxiii. 239. Models by Mr. Godfrey are at the Columbia and Illinois
-Universities (Adams, 277). M. W. Sampson has pointed out in _M. L. N._
-for June 1915 (cited by Adams, 279) that the passage in _The Roaring
-Girl_ (1611), i. 1, where Sir Alexander Weargrave displays his house to
-his friends, is really a description of the Fortune when ‘Within one
-square a thousand heads are laid’.
-
-[1300] _Henslowe Papers_, 25.
-
-[1301] Ibid. 11.
-
-[1302] App. D, Nos. cxvii, cxviii, cxxi, cxxii, cxxiv.
-
-[1303] Cf. ch. viii and App. D, No. cl.
-
-[1304] _Henslowe Papers_, 110.
-
-[1305] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[1306] _Henslowe Papers_, 64.
-
-[1307] Ibid. 25.
-
-[1308] Ibid. 27.
-
-[1309] Birch, _James I_, ii. 270.
-
-[1310] Cf. ch. xi.
-
-[1311] Birch, _James I_, ii. 280.
-
-[1312] Young, ii. 225.
-
-[1313] _Henslowe Papers_, 28.
-
-[1314] Cf. App. I. It is this second house that is represented as a
-small angular flagged building in the ‘Ryther’ maps.
-
-[1315] _Fortnightly Review_ (May 1916).
-
-[1316] W. J. Lawrence in _Archiv_ (1914), 301; cf. p. 520.
-
-[1317] Adams, 284, gives the history of the Fortune during 1621–49.
-
-[1318] A Boar’s Head on the Bankside, which belonged to Henslowe in
-1604 and previously to Alleyn (Henslowe, ii. 30), was apparently not an
-inn.
-
-[1319] E. Gayton, _Pleasant Notes upon Don Quixot_ (1654), 277, ‘Sir
-John of famous memory; not he of the Boares Head in Eastcheap’. Neither
-the text nor the stage-directions of _Henry IV_ name the Boar’s Head;
-but the references to Eastcheap (_1 Hen. IV_, I. ii. 145, 176; II. iv.
-16, 485; _2 Hen. IV_, II. i. 76; II. ii. 161) are sufficient, and when
-Prince Hal asks (_2 Hen. IV_, II. ii. 159) ‘Doth the old boar feed
-in the old frank?’, Bardolph answers, ‘At the old place, my lord, in
-Eastcheap’. Doll Tearsheet (II. iv. 250) calls Falstaff a ‘whoreson
-little tidy Bartholomew boar-pig’.
-
-[1320] Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 258. Harben, 88, however, suggests that
-the name was transferred to this house from another on the north side
-of Great Eastcheap in St. Clement’s.
-
-[1321] Stowe, _Survey_, i. 126; ii. 72. I suppose the inn is identical
-with the ‘Blue Bore Inne’ marked by Ogilby (1677). The site is at No.
-30 on the north of Aldgate High Street (Harben, 87).
-
-[1322] Dasent, vi. 168.
-
-[1323] App. D, No. cxxx. The description of this letter in the _Index
-to Remembrancia_, 355, as referring to ‘the Boar’s Head in Eastcheap’
-has proved misleading.
-
-[1324] App. D, Nos. cxxv, cxxix, cxxxv.
-
-[1325] Cf. ch. xiii (Anne’s).
-
-[1326] Adams, 17; cf. ch. xiii (Duke of York’s). The further suggestion
-of Adams, 8, that Rawlidge in 1628 (cf. p. 360) wrote ‘Whitefriars’
-for ‘Whitechapel’ is less plausible. Rawlidge is only dealing with
-play-houses within the City.
-
-[1327] Adams, 17, identifies the site with Boar’s Head Yard, between
-Middlesex Street and Goulston Street, Whitechapel. But this is the
-house of 1557 (v. _supra_) within the liberties. Rocque (1746) shows
-an oval site, just east of Church Lane and south of the church of St.
-Mary, Whitechapel, which rather suggests an amphitheatre, but may be
-merely a churchyard.
-
-[1328] _Henslowe Papers_, 59.
-
-[1329] Cf. p. 374.
-
-[1330] The section is reproduced in Adams, 294.
-
-[1331] Not the mercer Stone who sold stuffs to the Admiral’s in 1601
-and 1602 (Henslowe, ii. 313); he was doubtless William Stone (Knt. in
-1604).
-
-[1332] _W. v. H._ 296. Professor Wallace has confused this 1_s._ 6_d._
-with the profits of Woodford’s seventh, and thinks that a gatherer got
-one-eighteenth of the receipts.
-
-[1333] I think the inference is that the gallery profits were divided
-in the proportion of seven-eighteenths to the housekeepers and
-eleven-eighteenths to the players.
-
-[1334] No order seems to have been made as to the gatherer’s place.
-
-[1335] _Knight of the Burning Pestle_, IV. i. 43.
-
-[1336] _Travels of the Three Brothers_ (ed. Bullen, p. 88).
-
-[1337] Dekker, _Works_, iv. 97; cf. p. 367.
-
-[1338] Jeaffreson, ii. 64, 86.
-
-[1339] Wither, _Abuses Stript and Whipt_ (1613), i. 1,
-
- ‘His poetry is such as he can cull
- From plays he heard at Curtain or at Bull’;
-
-_Albumazar_, II. i. 16, ‘Then will I confound her with
-compliments drawn from the plays I see at the Fortune and Red Bull,
-where I learn all the words I speak and understand not’; Gayton, 24,
-‘I have heard that the poets of the Fortune and Red Bull had always
-a mouth-measure for their actors (who were terrible tear-throats)
-and made their lines proportionable to their compass, which were
-sesquipedales, a foot and a half’.
-
-[1340] Collier, _Memoirs of Alleyn_, 107; _D. N. B._ s.v. Alleyn. The
-_Diary_ (Young, ii. 51) runs:
-
-‘Oct. 1, 1617. I came to London in the coach and went to the red Bull.
-2^d.
-
-Oct. 3. I went to the red bull and ℞ for the younger brother but 3. 6.
-4, water 4^d.’
-
-_The Younger Brother_ was entered in the Stationers’
-Register in 1653, but is not extant.
-
-[1341] Heywood, _Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas_, 247.
-
-[1342] Adams, 300.
-
-[1343] Prynne, _Epistle_ to _Histriomastix_ (1633); W. C., _London’s
-Lamentation for her Sins_ (1625), ‘Yet even then, Oh Lord, were the
-theatres magnified and enlarged’.
-
-[1344] _Fortnightly Review_ (May 1916).
-
-[1345] Cf. App. I.
-
-[1346] Cf. ch. xviii, _Bibl. Note_.
-
-[1347] _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 250; cf. i. 53, 68, 72; ii. 244 (Durham
-Priory), 246 (Thetford Priory), 247 (Winchester College), 248
-(Magdalen, Oxford).
-
-[1348] Strutt, _Sports and Pastimes_ (ed. Cox), 195.
-
-[1349] Rendle, _Old Southwark_, f. p., 31.
-
-[1350] It is also, although unnamed, in Smith’s drawing of 1588, but
-that is probably based on Agas.
-
-[1351] William Fitzstephen (_c._ 1170–82) in J. C. Robertson,
-_Materials for the History of Becket_ (R. S.), iii. 11, ‘In hieme
-singulis feré festis ante prandium ... pingues tauri cornipetae, seu
-ursi immanes, cum objectis depugnant canibus’.
-
-[1352] Erasmus, _Adagia_, 3354, ‘Sed intolerabilius est quod apud
-Britannos complures alunt greges ursorum ad saltationem, animal
-vorax et maleficum’. I owe the correct reference to Mr. P. S. Allen.
-Presumably ‘greges’ is no more than ‘numbers’.
-
-[1353] Collier, i. 42, from _Harl. MS._ 433.
-
-[1354] _Egerton MS._ 2623, f. 11. Collier, who owned this document,
-or some other modern, has substituted the name of John Dorrington.
-A copy, exemplified for Morgan Pope on 18 Nov. 1585, is at Dulwich;
-cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 1. Long became steward of Paris Garden in 1536
-(Kingsford, 159).
-
-[1355] Collier, i. 194, from list of fees payable by the Treasurer of
-the Chamber in 1571 (_Cotton MS._ Vesp. C. xiv), ‘keapers of Beares and
-Mastives, iij. Item to Mathew Becke, Sergeaunte of the beares, for his
-wages per ann. 12^l 10^s 7½^d. Item to Symon Powlter, yoman, per ann.
-14^l 6^s 3^d. Item to Richard Darryngton M^r and kepar of the bandogges
-and mastives, per ann. 21^l 5^s 10^d’. Similarly, the Treasurer’s
-_Declared Account_ for 1594–5 (_Pipe Roll_, 542) shows a total payment
-to keepers of Bears and Mastiffs of £48 12_s._ 8½_d._ There is an error
-in one or other entry of 10_s._
-
-[1356] The Privy Council Acts record warrants _inter alia_ to Ralph in
-1574 (Dasent, viii. 257), Thomas in 1576, 1577, 1578, 1579, and 1580
-(ix. 121, 153, 335; x. 148; xi. 70, 392), Ralph in 1581 (xii. 321), and
-Edward in 1581 and 1582 (xiii. 115, 311). Edward Bowes seems to have
-held the Keepership of Dogs, but disclaimed having a fee of £15 17_s._
-4_d._ at the subsidy of 1588 (_M. S. C._ i. 355).
-
-[1357] Earlier licensees were William Payne and Simon Powlter (> 1574).
-Wistow (_c._ 1575), John Napton, Morgan Pope (_c._ 1585–7), Thomas
-Burnaby (_c._ 1590–4), and perhaps others; cf. p. 464; Wallace in _The
-Times_ (1914); Kingsford, 171–8.
-
-[1358] _Alleyn Memoirs_, 213; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 4.
-
-[1359] Henslowe, i. 71. Some payments of June 1597 on account of a
-privy seal and a patent for Alleyn (Henslowe, i. 200) may relate to
-this.
-
-[1360] _Henslowe Papers_, 98. Possibly an undated letter from Arthur
-Langworth to Alleyn (_Henslowe Papers_, 99), in which he refers to
-Bowes’s illness and protests against a charge of not giving Alleyn
-sufficient help in procuring some ‘place’, relates to this. But it is
-allusive and obscure.
-
-[1361] _S. P. D. Eliz._ cclxviii. 18; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 12.
-
-[1362] Probably Bowes had also held this keepership with his
-Mastership, as he was drawing a fee from the Chamber in 1596 (Henslowe,
-i. 128).
-
-[1363] Muniment 19 in the _Dulwich MSS._ is a warrant of 24 Nov. 1599
-by Meade to a deputy; cf. Henslowe, ii. 38. A list of fees _c._ 1600
-in _Henslowe Papers_, 108, shows, under the general heading ‘Parris
-garden’, only two keeperships, instead of the three of 1571, that of
-Bears at £12 8_s._ 1½_d._, and that of Mastiffs at £21 5_s._ 10½_d._
-
-[1364] _Henslowe Papers_, 12; cf. Henslowe, ii. 37.
-
-[1365] Receipts by or on behalf of Dorrington dated Jan. and April
-1602 are in _Henslowe Papers_, 101; Henslowe, i. 212. Each is for a
-quarter’s ‘rent’ of £10, and the earlier is specified as ‘for the
-commissyon for the Bear-garden’. A letter of May 1600 from Dorrington
-to Henslowe asking him and Meade to have the ‘games’ ready for Court
-is in _Henslowe Papers_, 100. In 1603 Henslowe spent 16_s._ 4_d._ ‘for
-sewinge at the cort’, on petitions to Dorrington, the Lord Chamberlain,
-and the Council, the drawing of two licences, and ‘our warent for
-baytynge’ (_Henslowe Papers_, 109). I think that from 1603, if not
-earlier, he had a regular appointment as deputy to Dorrington. On 18
-April 1604 he received the Treasurer of the Chamber’s reward as ‘Deputy
-Master of the Game’.
-
-[1366] _Alleyn Memoirs_, 213; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 4.
-
-[1367] _S. P. D. Jac. I, 1603–10_, p. 134.
-
-[1368] _Henslowe Papers_, 101; _S. P. D. Jac. I_, x, p. 167. It appears
-from a memorandum of Alleyn’s in _Henslowe Papers_, 107, that he paid
-£250 for his share.
-
-[1369] _Henslowe Papers_, 104.
-
-[1370] This is recited in a warrant to one of their deputies in
-_Henslowe Papers_, 18.
-
-[1371] Henslowe, ii. 38. Dr. Greg gives many interesting details of the
-business, and of the relations of the Masters with their agents, for
-which I have not space. Others, of Bowes’s time, are in Dasent, ix. 9;
-xiii. 101.
-
-[1372] _Sydney Papers_, ii. 194 (12 May 1600), ‘This day she appointes
-to see a Frenchman doe feates upon a rope, in the Conduit court. To
-morrow she hath commanded the beares, the bull and the ape to be baited
-in the tiltyard. Upon Wednesday she will have solemn dawncing’; cf.
-_Epicoene_, iii. 1, ‘Were you ever so much as look’d upon by a lord or
-a lady, before I married you, but on the Easter or Whitsun-holidays?
-and then out at the banqueting-house window, when Ned Whiting or George
-Stone were at the stake?’ George Stone was killed during the visit of
-Christian of Denmark in 1606 (_H. P._ 105). The Court practice was
-followed by the Lord Mayor and Aldermen. Payments to the bearward of
-Paris Garden for pastime showed at the Conduit Heads are in Harrison,
-iv. 322.
-
-[1373] Machyn, 198.
-
-[1374] Ibid. 270; Nichols, _Eliz._ i. 305; ii. 469; Walsingham,
-_Journal_, 42; Boississe, i. 345. There is a spirited description of a
-baiting before Elizabeth at Kenilworth on 14 July 1575 in _Laneham’s
-Letter_ (Furnivall, _Captain Cox_, 17); but I do not suppose that these
-were the London bears. Leicester, whose cognizance was the bear and
-ragged staff, doubtless kept his own ursine establishment.
-
-[1375] Rye, 123.
-
-[1376] _Pipe Office Declared Account_, 543, m. 194.
-
-[1377] Stowe, _Annales_ (1615), 835, 865, 895.
-
-[1378] Translated by F. Madden in _Archaeologia_, xxiii. 354.
-
-[1379] Machyn, 198.
-
-[1380] Translated by G. von Bülow in _2 Transactions of Royal Hist.
-Soc._ ix. 230, from a manuscript in the possession of Graf von der
-Osten at Plathe, Pomerania. I add for the sake of completeness the
-following lines from the _Hodoeporica_ (1568, ed. 2, 1575), 224, of N.
-Chytraeus, whose visit was probably _c._ 1565–7:
-
- Opposita in Tamesis ripa, longa area paruis
- Distincta aspicitur tectis, vbi magna canum vis
- Vrsorumque alitur diuersarumque ferarum,
- Quae canibus commissae Anglis spectacula praebent,
- Hospitibusque nouis, vincti dum praelia miscent,
- Luctantes aut ungue fero, vel dentibus uncis.
-
-[1381] Cf. ch. xviii.
-
-[1382] Translated in Rye, 45.
-
-[1383] Cf. p. 362.
-
-[1384] Hentzner, 196; cf. p. 363.
-
-[1385] G. Binz in _Anglia_, xxii. 460, ‘Man pfleget auch alle Sontag
-vnndt mittwochen zu Londen, yenseits desz wassers den Berenhatz zu
-halten.... Der Schauplatz ist in die Ründe gebauwen, sind oben herumb
-viel geng, darauf man zusicht, vnden am boden vnder dem heiteren
-Himmel ist es nicht besetzet. Da bande man in mitten desz platzes
-einen grossen Beeren an ein stock am langen seil an.... Wie wir die
-stegen hinunter kamen, gungen wir hinder den schauwplatz, besahen die
-Englischen docken, deren bey 120 in einem bezirk beysamen, yedoch
-yetwederer in einem sonderbahren ställin an einer kettin angeheftet
-wahren.’
-
-[1386] _Hatfield MSS._ xi. 382.
-
-[1387] G. von Bülow in _2 Transactions of the Royal Hist. Soc._ vi. 16,
-‘16 Sept. Auf den Nachmittag haben wir den Bär u. Stierhetze zugesehen
-... wohlmehr as 200 Hünde an selbigem Ort in einem besonderen Häuslein
-unterhalten’.
-
-[1388] Rye, 61.
-
-[1389] Rye, 133.
-
-[1390] _Englische Studien_, xiv. 440.
-
-[1391] _Epigram_ xliii:
-
- Publius, student at the common law,
- Oft leaves his books, and for his recreation,
- To Paris Garden doth himself withdraw,
- Where he is ravished with such delectation,
- As down among the bears and dogs he goes;
- Where, whilst he skipping cries, ‘To head! to head!’
- His satin doublet and his velvet hose
- Are all with spittle from above bespread:
- When he is like his father’s country hall,
- Stinking with dogs and muted all with hawks;
- And rightly on him too this filth doth fall,
- Which for such filthy sports his books forsakes,
- Leaving old Ployden, Dyer, Brooke alone,
- To see old Harry Hunks, and Sacarson.
-
-[1392] _Merry Wives_, I. i. 306.
-
-[1393] Dekker, _Work for Armourers_ (1609, _Works_, iv. 98), ‘At length
-a blind bear was tied to the stake, and instead of baiting him with
-dogs, a company of creatures that had the shapes of men and faces of
-Christians (being either colliers, carters, or watermen) took the
-office of beadles upon them, and whipped Monsieur Hunkes till the blood
-ran down his old shoulders’.
-
-[1394] _Coryats Crudities_ (1611), i. 114, ‘Hunks of the Beare-garden
-to be feared if he be nigh on’.
-
-[1395] Cf. p. 453. Nashe, _Strange News_ (1592, _Works_, i. 281, also
-names ‘great Ned’ and adds ‘Harry of Tame’. In 1590 Burnaby had at the
-Bear Garden ‘Tom Hunckes’, ‘Whitinge’, ‘Harry of Tame’, three other
-bears, three bulls, a horse, an ape. A ‘great’ bear was worth £8 or
-£10, a bull £4 or £5 (Kingsford, 175).
-
-[1396] _Puritan_, iii. 5, ‘How many dogs do you think I had upon me?...
-almost as many as George Stone, the bear; three at once’.
-
-[1397] _Henslowe Papers_, 106.
-
-[1398] _Copley Accounts_, s. a. 1575, in _Collectanea Genealogica et
-Topographica_, viii. 253, ‘Gyven to the master of Paryshe Garden his
-man for goynge with Thos. Sharples into Barmensy Street to see certen
-mastyve dogges’.
-
-[1399] R. Crowley, _One and thyrtye Epigrammes_ (1550, ed. E. E. T.
-S.), 381:
-
- And yet me thynke those men be mooste foles of all,
- Whose store of money is but verye smale,
- And yet euerye Sondaye they will surely spende
- One peny or two, the bearwardes lyuyng to mende.
- At Paryse garden, eche Sundaye, a man shall not fayle
- To fynde two or thre hundredes for the bearwardes vaile.
- One halpenye a piece they vse for to giue,
- When some haue no more in their purse, I belieue;
-
-Jonson, _Execration upon Vulcan_ (_Works_, iii. 322):
-
- a threatning to the bears,
- And that accursed ground, the Paris-garden;
-
-Taylor, _Bull, Bear and Horse_ (1638):
-
- And that we have obtained again the game,
- Our Paris Garden flag proclaims the same.
-
-Cf. Sir John Davies’ lines already quoted; also Dekker,
-ii. 125 (_News from Hell_), iv. 109 (_Work for Armourers_), &c., &c.
-
-[1400] Stowe, _Annales_, 695.
-
-[1401] _Henslowe Papers_, 15, 104. Miss Dormer Harris kindly tells me
-that the Coventry Corporation rewarded the ‘Bearward of palace Garden’
-in 1576–7.
-
-[1402] Cf. p. 411.
-
-[1403] Malone, _Variorum_, xix. 483; Rendle, _Bankside_, iii;
-_Antiquarian_, vii. 277; Ordish, 128.
-
-[1404] _Annales Monasterii de Bermundseia_, s. a. 1113 (Luard,
-_Annales Monastici_, iii. 432), ‘Hoc anno Robertus Marmion dedit
-hidam de Wideflete cum molendino et aliis pertinentibus suis monachis
-de Bermundeseye’; _Register of Hospital of St. John_, s. a. 1420
-(_Monasticon Anglicanum_, vi. 819), ‘Haec sunt statuta et ordinationes
-concernentia locum privilegiatum vocatum Parishgardyn, alias dictum
-Wideflete, sive Wiles, cum pertinentiis, facta per Johannem nuper
-Ducem Bedfordiae, firmarium ibidem, anno Domini mccc[c]xx’ [Rules for
-a sanctuary, with a dominus, senescallus, ballivus, constabularius,
-and societas, follow]; _Liber Fundatorum of St. John_ (ibid. vi. 832),
-‘Molendina de Wideflete cum gardino vocato Parish-gardin ... tenentur
-de Abbate de Barmondesey’ (1434). Kingsford, 157, traces the manor
-through Bermondsey priory, the Templars, and St. John’s Hospital to the
-Crown in 1536.
-
-[1405] Blount, _Glossographia_ (ed. 4, 1674), 469, quotes _Close Roll,
-16 Rich. II_, dorso ii. Kingsford, 156, translates the writ, which
-is abstracted (Sharpe, _Letter Book H_, 392), ‘Writ to the Mayor
-and Sheriffs to proclaim ordinances made in the last Parliament at
-Winchester to the effect that the laystall or latrine (fimarium sive
-sterquilinium) on the bank of the Thames near the house of Robert de
-Parys be removed, and a house be built on its site for the use of
-butchers, where they may cut up their offal and take it in boats to
-mid-stream and cast it into the water at ebb-tide.... Witness the King
-at Westminster 21 Feb. 16 Rich. II’. The ordinance is recorded in _Rot.
-Parl._ iii. 306.
-
-[1406] _Index to Remembrancia_, 478.
-
-[1407] Brewer, xxi. 2. 88, ‘a licence for Thomas Fluddie, yeoman of
-your Majesty’s bears, to bait and make pastime with your Graces bears
-at the accustomed place at London, called the Stewes, notwithstanding
-the proclamation’ (Sept. 1546); Machyn, 78, ‘The sam day [9 Dec. 1554]
-at after-non was a bere-beytyn on the Banke syde, and ther the grett
-blynd bere broke losse, and in ronnyng away he chakt a servyng man by
-the calff of the lege, and bytt a gret pesse away, and after by the
-hokyll-bone, that within iij days after he ded’.
-
-[1408] Foxe, _Acts and Monuments_ (ed. 1846), v. 388. Collier, iii.
-94, cites ‘a book of the expenses of the Northumberland family’ to the
-effect that the earl went to Paris Garden to behold the bear-baiting in
-1525–6. Ordish, 129, criticizes this on the ground that the statement
-is not in the _Northumberland Household Book_ printed by Percy. It was
-in fact a different book, from which Collier, i. 86, gives entries,
-of which one is of boat-hire from and to ‘Parys gardyn’. But there is
-nothing about bear-baiting.
-
-[1409] _Account of Treasurer of Chamber_, s. a. 1515 (Brewer, ii.
-1466), ‘Hen. Anesley, conveying the King’s barge from Greenwich to
-Parys Garden, 16^d’.
-
-[1410] Ordish, 127.
-
-[1411] In _Shaw v. Langley_ (1597) the Swan is described as ‘in the
-oulde Parrisgardin’, although there is no specific mention of baiting
-(_E. S._ xliii. 345, 355).
-
-[1412] Fleetwood, writing to Burghley on 13 July 1578 (Rendle,
-_Antiquarian_, vii. 274, from _S. P. D. Eliz._ cxxv. 21), describes
-intrigues of the French ambassador ‘on the Thames side behind Paris
-Garden toward Lambeth, in the fields ... I got a skuller to Paris
-Garden, but the place was dark and shadowed with trees, that one man
-cannot see another unless they have _lynceos oculos_ or els cattes
-eys, shewing how admirable a place it was for such doings. The place
-is that boowre of conspiracies, it is the college of male cownsell....
-There be certain _virgulta_ or eightes of willows set by the Thames
-near that place; they grow now exceeding thick, and a notable covert
-for confederates to shrowd in; a milkmade lately did see the French
-ambassador land in that _virgulta_’.
-
-[1413] The ring, without a name, is also shown in Smith’s drawing
-(1588), but this is probably based on one of the maps.
-
-[1414] Rendle, _Antiquarian_, viii. 57, from _Exchequer Depositions, 18
-Jac. I_. The depositions also mention a bull-house built in a dog-yard,
-a bear-house, a hay-house, a pond for the bears to wash in, and a pond
-for dead dogs. Kingsford, 175, gives fuller extracts.
-
-[1415] Stowe, _Survey_, ii. 54. A short passage in i. 95 adds nothing.
-
-[1416] Stowe (1615), 695.
-
-[1417] Halliwell, _Dr. Dee’s Diary_ (C. S.), 18; App. C, No. xxxi; App.
-D, No. lxiv. The ballad of which four stanzas are given by Collier, i.
-244, is presumably a forgery.
-
-[1418] More, _Works_ (ed. 1557), 208, ‘This is much like as at Beuerlay
-late, whan much of the people beyng at a bere baytyng, the church
-fell sodeinly down at euensonge tyme, and ouer whelmed some that than
-were in it: a good felow, that after herde the tale tolde, “lo”, quod
-he, “now maie you see what it is to be at euensong whan ye should be
-at the bere baytynge”. How be it, the hurt was not ther in beinge at
-euensonge, but in that the churche was falsely wrought’.
-
-[1419] App. D, No. lxx.
-
-[1420] Rendle, _Antiquarian_, viii. 57.
-
-[1421] Rendle, _Antiquarian_, viii. 57; _Bankside_, xxx, with map.
-
-[1422] The tithes were for ‘the bear garden and for the ground
-adjoining to the same where the dogs are’ (Rendle, _Bankside_, v).
-It was for Morgan Pope that Bowes’s patent as Master of the Game was
-exemplified in 1585; cf. p. 450.
-
-[1423] Henslowe, ii. 25, from _Egerton MS._ 2623, f. 13, and _Dulwich
-MS._ iv. 21.
-
-[1424] Henslowe, i. 71, ‘Ano do 1595 the xxviij^{th} of Novembere
-Reseved of M^r Henslow the day and yeare abov written the som of syx
-poundes of curant mony of England and is in part of a mor som [yf he
-the sayd] by twyxt the sayd Phillyp Henslow and me consaning a bargen
-of the beargarden I say Reseved vj^{ll}. By me John Mavlthouse. Wittnes
-I E Alley.’ I take the words in square brackets, which are cancelled
-in the diary, to represent ‘if he proceed’. In Henslowe, i. 43, are
-further receipts for 40_s._ ‘in part of the bargen for the tenymentes
-on the bankes syd’ in Dec. 1595, and sums of £10, £20, and £4 for
-unspecified purposes in Jan. and Feb. 1596. Kingsford, 177, gives the
-date of Henslowe’s purchase.
-
-[1425] Henslowe, i. 209; cf. _Henslowe Papers_, 109.
-
-[1426] Henslowe, ii. 25.
-
-[1427] _Henslowe Papers_, 107. I agree with Dr. Greg (Henslowe, ii. 30,
-39) that it is difficult to see what a lease from Thomas Garland to
-Henslowe and Alleyn in 1608 of a close called Long Slip or Long Meadow
-in Lambeth can have had to do with the baiting. But Alleyn added the
-word ‘Bear-garden’ to the original endorsement ‘M^r Garlands lece’
-(_Henslowe Papers_, 12). Perhaps the land was used for some subsidiary
-purpose in connexion with the Garden.
-
-[1428] _Henslowe Papers_, 110; _Architectural Review_, xlvii. 152.
-
-[1429] Full text in _Alleyn Memoirs_, 78; abstract in _Henslowe
-Papers_, 102.
-
-[1430] Henslowe, i. 214; cf. p. 189 (_supra_).
-
-[1431] Cf. p. 458.
-
-[1432] Cf. ch. xviii.
-
-[1433] _Henslowe Papers_, 19, from Dulwich Muniment 49; also printed in
-_Variorum_, iii. 343. Muniment 50 is Katherens’ bond, and Muniment 51
-a sub-contract of 8 Sept. 1613 with John Browne, bricklayer, to do the
-brickwork for £80.
-
-[1434] Cf. p. 370.
-
-[1435] Taylor, _Works_ (1630), 304, with a reply by Fennor and
-rejoinder by Taylor. Incidentally Taylor mentions the arras of the
-theatre and the tiles with which it was covered.
-
-[1436] The Southwark vestry order of 1 May 1598 (App. D, No. cxv) seems
-to connect him with ‘play-houses’, but I doubt whether anything but the
-bear garden is meant.
-
-[1437] Cf. _Satiromastix_, 1247, ‘Th’ast a breath as sweet as the Rose
-that growes by the Beare-Garden’.
-
-[1438] _Alleyn Memoirs_, 159.
-
-[1439] Ordish, 235. No date can be assigned to _A North Countrey Song_
-in _Wit and Drollery_ (1656):
-
- When I’se come there [to Paris Garden], I was in a rage,
- I rayl’d on him that kept the Beares,
- Instead of a Stake was suffered a Stage,
- And in Hunkes his house a crue of Players.
-
-[1440] Collier, iii. 102.
-
-[1441] Cf. p. 375.
-
-[1442] Ordish, 244. A Bearsfoot Alley shown farther to the east by
-Rocque (1746) may derive from one of the earlier baiting-places.
-
-[1443] C. W. Wallace in _The Times_ (30 April 1914), ‘We present John
-Wardner William Sellors and all the land holders or their tenantes that
-holde anie landes gardeines ground or tenementes abbutting vpon the
-common sewer leadinge from Sellors gardin to the beare garden to cast
-clense and scoure their and euerie one of their seuerall partes of the
-common sewer by Candlemas nexte vpon paine of euerie pole then vndone
-... ij^s’.
-
-[1444] Cf. p. 458.
-
-[1445] E. Hake, _Newes out of Poules Churchyarde_ (1579), Sat. v:
-
- What else but gaine and money gote
- Maintaines each Saboth day
- The bayting of the Beare and Bull?
- What brings this brutish play?
-
-Many of the attacks on plays (App. C) also refer to
-baiting.
-
-[1446] App. D, No. lxxxiv.
-
-[1447] App. D, No. cxxxii.
-
-[1448] ‘In the late quenes tyme fre libertie was permited with
-owt restrainte to bayght them which now is tacken a way frome vs
-especiallye one the Sondayes in the after none after devine service
-which was the cheffest meanes and benefit to the place’; cf. p. 452.
-
-[1449] Cf. p. 375.
-
-[1450] _Henslowe Papers_, 88, 125.
-
-[1451] Printed in _M. S. C._ i. 277, from _P. R. 13 Jac. I_, pt. 20;
-also by Collier, i. 381, and Hazlitt, _E. D. S._ 46, from the Signet
-Bill, misdescribed as the Privy Seal, of 31 May.
-
-[1452] Cf. App. D, No. clvii.
-
-[1453] Cf. App. D, No. clx. Collier, i. 384, without giving his
-authority, says that the Corporation reported the carrying out of this
-mandate ‘before three days had elapsed’.
-
-[1454] Shaw. ii. 107. Sir Thomas Saunders had the same lodgings _c._
-1551 (cf. p. 478, n. 4; _M. S. C._ ii. 120).
-
-[1455] Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars); _M. S. C._ ii. 93, 110, 120.
-
-[1456] W. P. Baildon, _Black Books of Lincoln’s Inn_, iv. 263; C. F. R.
-Palmer, _The Friar-Preachers of Holborn, London_ (_Reliquary_, xvii.
-33, 75).
-
-[1457] Stowe, _Survey_, i. 9, 27, 40, 64, 339; ii. 14, 44, 89; (1720)
-i. 3. 177; Halle, ii. 150; Nicolas, _Acts of Privy Council_, _passim_;
-_Rot. Parl._ v. 171; Clapham, 58; _V. H._ i. 498; Brewer, iv. 2483;
-Riley, _Memorials of London_, 90; Baldwin, 154, 261, 355, 358, 499;
-Gairdner, _Paston Letters_, i. 426, ‘for the ease of resorting of the
-Lordys that are withinne the toun’.
-
-[1458] _V. H._ i. 498.
-
-[1459] Brewer, iii. 2. 1053.
-
-[1460] Ibid. xiii. 2. 215.
-
-[1461] Rymer, xiv. 609; Brewer, xiii. 2. 320.
-
-[1462] _M. S. C._ ii. 3.
-
-[1463] Ibid. ii. 4, 6, 8, 109, 114. Cawarden had had a lease of part of
-the property on 4 April 1548.
-
-[1464] Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178.
-
-[1465] Printed from _Journal_, 14, f. 129, as appendix to _Memoranda,
-References, and Documents relating to the Royal Hospitals of the City
-of London_ (1836).
-
-[1466] Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178. Portinari was a pensioner _c._ 1526
-(Brewer, iv. 871), and he was aged 64 in 1572 (_M. S. C._ ii. 52). He
-was a Florentine by birth and an engineer by profession (_Sp. P._ ii.
-399; Winwood, i. 145).
-
-[1467] _B. M. Lansd. MS._ 155, f. 80^v.
-
-[1468] _M. S. C._ ii. 2, 5, 103, 127; Stowe (1598), i. 339; _Athenaeum_
-(1886), ii. 91; Dasent, xxvi. 448; xxvii. 13.
-
-[1469] In 1585 the Lord Mayor asked that the Blackfriars might
-contribute to the musters (Stowe, ed. Strype, i. 3. 180). In 1588
-and 1593 requisitions for a levy were sent to the chief officer, i.
-e. the constable, and the inhabitants (Dasent, xv. 428; xxiv. 30).
-But in 1589 similar action was taken through the Lord Mayor (Dasent,
-xvii. 118). A local dispute was referred to Richard Young and another
-Middlesex justice in 1591, with whom the Lord Mayor was joined because
-a City company was involved (Dasent, xx. 245, 283). Young and others
-again received the Council’s instructions, after they had heard the
-inhabitants, on a building matter in 1591 (Dasent, xxi. 337). At a time
-of danger in 1592 the keeping of a midsummer watch was committed to
-Lord Cobham (Dasent, xxii. 551).
-
-[1470] Stowe (1720), i. 3. 183; Dasent, iii. 235 (Letter of 14 March
-1551 ‘to the Maiour of London to suffer the Lorde Cobham, the Lorde
-Wardein, and others dwelling within the Blacke Freres t’enjoye their
-liberties there’). The riot was put down by Sir Thomas Saunders, Sir
-Henry Jerningham, and William More.
-
-[1471] Stowe (1720), i. 3. 183.
-
-[1472] Stowe, ed. Strype (1720), i. 3. 184. The Blackfriars papers
-added by A. Munday in 1618 appear to be all notes and examinations
-taken by Sir Thomas Saunders, who appealed to the Earl of Arundel for
-support.
-
-[1473] Dasent, viii. 240, 257.
-
-[1474] Dasent, x. 429; xii. 19. Pending a decision the Lord Mayor was
-directed ‘not to intermeddle in any cawse within the saide liberties,
-savinge onlie for the punishment of fellons as heretofore he hath don’.
-The report dated 27 Jan. 1580 is printed by Ingleby, 250, from the
-Bridgewater MSS. It seems to be genuine. Collier does not print it,
-although he mentions it (_New Facts_, 9) in connexion with a forged
-Privy Council order which he dates 23 Dec. 1579. Wallace, ii. 22,
-describes an unprinted statement of the City’s case, dated 27 Jan.
-1579, in _Letter Book_ Z, f. 23^v.
-
-[1475] Dasent, xv. 137; Stowe (1720), i. 3. 177.
-
-[1476] This may be the undated petition relating both to the
-Blackfriars and the Whitefriars in _B. M. Lansd. MS._ 155, f. 79^v.
-
-[1477] Wallace, i. 174, from _Loseley MSS._, bundle 425.
-
-[1478] _M. S. C._ ii. 124; cf. Dasent, xiii. 76.
-
-[1479] Dasent, xxvi. 448. Lord Hunsdon and Sir John Fortescue, both
-residents in or near the Blackfriars, sat on the commission with the
-chief justices. Lady Russell records the want of a steward and bailiff
-to keep order in 1597 (_Hatfield MSS._ vii. 298).
-
-[1480] Dasent, xxvii. 13; xxx. 134, 149; cf. App. D, No. cxxvi.
-
-[1481] W. de G. Birch, _Historical Charters and Constitutional
-Documents of the City of London_, 142. James is said to have made the
-City pay for the rebuilding of the Banqueting House (cf. ch. i) in
-return for this extension of jurisdiction (Goodman, ii. 176). Collier,
-_N. F._ 20, 22, 32, although ignorant of the charter, quotes documents
-relating to the status of the Blackfriars in 1608, of which two at
-least, a note of the interest of the players in the theatre and a
-letter in their favour signed ‘H. S.’, are forgeries (Ingleby, 244,
-246, 256).
-
-[1482] _M. S. C._ ii. 66, 114; cf. Cawarden’s i. p.m. in Fry, _London
-Inquisitiones Post Mortem_, i. 191.
-
-[1483] The general lie of Blackfriars can be gathered from Stowe
-(1598), i. 313; ii. 11, with the maps described in the _Bibl. Note_ to
-ch. xvi, and the modern ordnance maps. The earlier maps are largely
-picturesque, and notably place far too much of the precinct on the
-east of Water Lane. But they seem to preserve certain details, such as
-the arches over the north to south highway. The old lines of the roads
-appear to have been preserved at the rebuilding after the great fire of
-1666. I have added some details from other sources.
-
-[1484] _M. S. C._ ii. 115.
-
-[1485] The reconstructed map of London by Emery Walker in C. L.
-Kingsford’s edition of Stowe gives this name in error to Water Lane.
-
-[1486] The 1586 documents in Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178, state that the
-prior held of the lord of St. John’s, ‘who did make the bridge at the
-Thames’. Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 454, however, quotes a Declared Account of
-1550 for ‘the ereccion and buyldynge ... of two bridges thone at the
-Blackfreers and thother at the Temple’. Under Elizabeth the liberty
-maintained the bridge as well as that at Bridewell (_Lansd. MS._ 155,
-f. 80^v). The tenure from St. John’s is also alleged (1587) in Dasent,
-xv. 137. It is rather curious that in an endorsement of the survey of
-St. John’s in 1586–7 (Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 47) that house, although in
-Clerkenwell, is described, perhaps by a slip, as in the Blackfriars.
-
-[1487] _M. S. C._ ii. 115. For the ‘turngate’ cf. _M. S. C._ ii. 114;
-Strype (1720), i. 3. 184. This, with the great gate, and the gates at
-the Thames and Fleet bridges, made up the four gates of conventual
-times. The gate, over which Shakespeare had a house, where Ireland Yard
-debouches into St. Andrew’s Hill, was probably of later date.
-
-[1488] _M. S. C._ ii. 6, 11, 109.
-
-[1489] The upper gate is described in a lease as ‘a gate of the Citie
-of London’ (_Loseley MS._ 1396, f. 44). It may have been a relic of the
-pre-1276 wall. Its site is shown on the Ordnance map. The lower gate is
-visible in the maps of Braun and Agas. It seems to have carried Charles
-V’s gallery over the roadway to the guest-house.
-
-[1490] _M. S. C._ ii. 9, 107, 110; Clapham, 64.
-
-[1491] The details for the rest of this paragraph are mainly taken
-from Crown surveys of 1548 and 1550 (_M. S. C._ ii. 6, 8), and from a
-memorandum by Cawarden on the grants anterior to his own (_M. S. C._
-ii. 1, 103), and Professor Feuillerat’s notes of the original patents
-which illustrate this.
-
-[1492] _M. S. C._ ii. 9, 107, 114; Clapham, 62; _London Inquisitiones
-Post Mortem_, ii. 115.
-
-[1493] Ibid. 9, 10, 112.
-
-[1494] Ibid. 111, 113.
-
-[1495] Ibid. 110; Clapham, 63.
-
-[1496] Ibid. 10, 110, 114.
-
-[1497] Ibid. 3.
-
-[1498] Some vaulted fragments stood until 1900 at a spot which must
-have been just east of the school-house. Possibly they formed part of
-the provincial’s lodging. They are shown in a plan of _c._ 1670–80
-(Clapham, 71), and their condition in 1900 was carefully recorded
-(Clapham, 69, 70, 78). Only a fragment of wall is now _in situ_, just
-north of what is now the west end of Ireland Yard, but appears on the
-seventeenth-century plan as Cloister Court. It must, however, have run
-out from the south-east corner of the cloister towards the east. The
-name Cloister Court has now passed to a yard farther south.
-
-[1499] Clapham, 68; cf. p. 486.
-
-[1500] Clapham suggests, plausibly enough, that the description (_c._
-1394) of a Dominican house in _Pierce the Ploughmans Crede_ (ed. Skeat,
-_E. E. T. S._ 153–215) was based upon the London Blackfriars. The
-following passages relate to the cloister and refectory.
-
- Þanne kam i to þat cloister . & gaped abouten
- Whouȝ it was pilered and peynt . & portred well clene,
- All y-hyled wiþ leed . lowe to þe stones,
- And y-paued wiþ peynt til . iche poynte after oþer;
- With kundites of clene tyn . closed all aboute,
- Wiþ lauoures of latun . louelyche y-greithed....
-
- ... Þanne was þe chaptire-hous wrouȝt . as a greet chirche,
- Coruen and couered . and queyntliche entayled;
- Wiþ semlich selure . y-set on lofte;
- As a Parlement-hous . y-peynted aboute....
-
- ... Þanne ferd y into fraytour . and fond þere an oþer,
- An halle for an heyȝ king . an housholde to holden,
- Wiþ brode bordes aboute . y-benched wel clene,
- Wiþ windowes of glas . wrouȝt as a Chirche....
-
- ... Chambers wiþ chymneyes . & Chapells gaie;
- And kychens for an hyȝe kinge . in castells to holden,
- And her dortour y-diȝte . wiþ dores ful stronge;
- Fermery and fraitur . with fele mo houses,
- And all strong ston wall . sterne opon heiþe,
- Wiþ gaie garites & grete . & iche hole y-glased;
- And oþere houses y-nowe . to herberwe þe queene.
-
-[1501] _M. S. C._ ii. 1.
-
-[1502] Ibid. 13, 115.
-
-[1503] Ibid. 6, 8, gives the texts of two surveys (_a_) of the property
-leased to Cawarden on 4 April 1548, (_b_) of that included in his grant
-of 12 March 1550.
-
-[1504] Ibid. 7, 12, 35; cf. p. 499.
-
-[1505] _London Inquisitiones Post Mortem_, i. 191; cf. _M. S. C._ ii.
-4, 12.
-
-[1506] Stowe (1598), i. 341; _Athenaeum_ (1886), ii. 91; _M. S. C._ ii.
-2, 127; Hennessy, 88; _Loseley MSS._
-
-[1507] _M. S. C._ ii. 103.
-
-[1508] Ibid. 92, 117.
-
-[1509] Ibid. 21, 31, 92, 126.
-
-[1510] Ibid. 21, 93, 119. They were let to Henry Knowles in 1565 and
-had been earlier occupied by Roger Lygon, Lady Parr, and Sir Thomas
-Saunders. Later Nicholas Saunders had them.
-
-[1511] Ibid. 117, 124, 125, show Anthony Browne, probably, as tenant in
-1560, Henry Lord Hunsdon, probably, in 1584 and 1585, and Ralph Bowes
-in 1596.
-
-[1512] Dasent, xxi. 402, gives a Privy Council letter of 18 August
-1591 to the Lord Mayor requiring him to repair the supply pipe from
-Clerkenwell; cf. p. 494.
-
-[1513] (1548) ‘A Cuchin yarde, an owlde Cuchyn, an entre or passage
-Ioyninge to the same, conteyninge in lengethe 84 fote, abuttinge to
-the lane aforseide on the weste side, being in breddethe at that ende
-68 fote, Abuttinge ageanste an owlde butery on the easte side, being
-in breddethe at that ende 74 foote, Abuttinge to M^r Portynarys parler
-nexte the lane on the Southe side, And to my lorde Cobhames brick
-wall and garden on the Northe syde. An owlde buttery and an entrye or
-passage with a greate stayre therin, with Sellers therunder, with a
-hall place at the vpper ende of the stayre and an entere there to the
-ffrater ouer the same buttery, all which conteyne in lengethe 36 foote
-and in breddethe 95 foote, abuttinge to the cloyster on the Este side,
-the Cuchin on the weste side, to the lorde Cobhams howse on the Northe
-syde, and on the Sowthe side to a blynd parlour that my lorde warden
-did clame.
-
-A howse called the vpper frater conteyninge in lengethe 107 foote
-and in breddethe 52 foote, abuttinge Sowthe and easte to my ladye
-Kingestons howse and garden, Northe to a hall where the kinges revelles
-lyes at this presente, and weste towardes the seide Duchie Chamber and
-M^r Portynaryes howse.
-
-[Sidenote: Memorandum my lorde warden clamethe the seide hall, parlour,
-Cutchin and Chaumber.]
-
-A hall and a parlour vnder the seide frater of the same lengethe
-and breddethe, A litle Cuchen conteyning in lengethe 23 foote and
-in breddethe 22 foote abuttinge to the aforseide lane on the weste,
-towardes the seide parlour on the este, to M^r Portinarys howse on
-the northe, and to a waye ledinge to my ladye Kingestons howse on the
-southe, A litle Chamber with a voyde rome therunder, conteyning in
-lengethe 26 fote, in breddeth 10 foote, abuttinge weste to the cuchin,
-este to the parlour, northe to M^r Portinarys howse, and ye seid way to
-my ladie Kingestons howse Sowthe, with 4 small Sellers or darke holes
-therunder.
-
-A voyde rome, beinge an entre towardes the lytle cytchin and colehowse,
-conteyning in lengeth 30 fote and in breddethe 17 fote.
-
-A Chamber called the Duchie Chaumber, with a darke loginge therunder,
-conteyninge in lengthe 50 fote and in breddethe 16 foote, abuttinge
-este ageanste the north ende of the seide ffrater, abuttinge weste on
-M^r Portinaryes parlour ---- 66^s 8^d.’
-
-(1550) ‘One Kitchyn yarde, an olde Kitchyn, an Entrie or passage
-ioyneinge to the same, Conteineinge in lengthe 84 fote, abutinge to
-the Lane aforesaid on the west side, beinge in bredethe at that ende
-three score fowrtene fote, abutinge to M^r Portinareys parler next the
-Lane on the southe side and to the Lord Cobham brickewall & gardeine
-on the Northe side. One olde Butterie & a Entrie or passage with a
-great staier therein, with Cellers therevnder, with a Hawle place at
-the vpper ende of the staiers and a entrie there to the ffrater ouer
-the same butterie, which all conteinethe in lengthe 95 fote and in
-bredethe 36 fote, abuttinge to the Cloyster on thest side, the kitchyn
-on the west side, to the Lorde Cobham howse on the northe side, and
-on the southe side to a blinde parler that my Lord warden did Clayme.
-One howse called the vpper ffrater conteinethe in Lengthe 107 fote and
-in bredethe 52 fote, Abuttinge southe and est to the Ladie Kingston
-howse and gardein, northe to a hawle where the Kinges Revelles
-Liethe at theis presentes, and west towardes the Duchie Chamber and
-M^r Portinareyes howse. A voide rome, beinge an Entrie towardes the
-Litle Kitchyn & Cole howse, conteininge in Lengthe 30 fote and in
-bredethe 17 fote. One Chamber called the Duchie chamber, with a darke
-Lodginge there vnder, conteininge in Lengthe 50 fote and in bredethe
-16 fote, abuttinge est agaynst the northe ende of the said ffrater,
-and abuttinge west apon M^r Portinareys parler. All which premisses be
-valued to be worthe by yere ---- iij^{li} vj^s viij^d.’
-
-[1514] _M. S. C._ ii. 14, 24, 116, 117, 119, 120; cf. p. 482. The stone
-gallery was removed in 1564.
-
-[1515] Ibid. 13, 16, 115.
-
-[1516] Ibid. 14, 16.
-
-[1517] Ibid. 7, 11, ‘an entrye or passage with a greate stayre therin’
-(1548, 1550), 21 ‘one entrye ledinge vnder parcell of the premysses
-demysed from that end of the house of William More wherin John Horleye
-his servaunt doth lodge’ (1560), 118, ‘the entre in the west ende
-of the garden openyng into the same garden’ (1560), 31, ‘an entrye
-leadynge from the sayde voyde ground into the sayd dwellynge howse or
-tenement of the sayd Sir William More’ (1576), 63, ‘the dore entry way
-voide ground and passage leadinge and vsed to and from the saide greate
-yard nexte the saide Pipe Office’ (1596), 126, ‘the gate-house with
-the appurtenances on the west side of the sayd monastery’ (1611), ‘the
-great gate near the play-house’ (1617).
-
-[1518] _M. S. C._ ii. 20.
-
-[1519] Ibid. 14 (cf. 116), ‘vnius paris graduum ducentium a coquina
-predicta vsque magnum claustrum’ (1546), 21, ‘the waye ledinge from the
-house and garden of William More towards the Water Lane’, ‘one entrye
-ledinge vnder parcell of the premysses demysed from the garden of
-William More to the voide grounde’ (1560), 119.
-
-[1520] Ibid. 16.
-
-[1521] Ibid. 115.
-
-[1522] Ibid. 27, 29.
-
-[1523] The whole length of the Neville-Farrant holding is given in
-1560 (_M. S. C._ ii. 20) as 157½ ft., and in 1576 (_M. S. C._ ii. 29)
-as 156½ ft. As this included 37 ft. of the northern block, 119½ ft. or
-120½ ft. seems to be left for the staircase and frater. The difference
-between inside and outside measurements often causes confusion in old
-surveys.
-
-[1524] _M. S. C._ ii. 62, 119; cf. p. 504.
-
-[1525] Ibid. 94.
-
-[1526] Cf. p. 513.
-
-[1527] _M. S. C._ ii. 105.
-
-[1528] The room is described as ‘intrale seu le parlour’ in Cawarden’s
-grant of 1550.
-
-[1529] _M. S. C._ ii. 105, 124. There was yet another room under the
-infirmary. One Kempe, an assign of Lady Kingston’s heir, tried to claim
-the Parliament Chamber from Cawarden, on the strength of her grant of
-the infirmary.
-
-[1530] Cf. p. 504.
-
-[1531] On Cheyne’s houses cf. p. 499.
-
-[1532] _M. S. C._ ii. 42–51. This hall is doubtless the ground-floor
-frater referred to in a document of _c_. 1562 (_M. S. C._ ii. 105).
-
-[1533] Cf. p. 499. The ‘blinde parler that my Lord warden did clayme’
-and ‘the litle kitchyn and cole howse’ are mentioned in the survey of
-1550 to define the position of other parcels. But the hall and parlour
-might be held to be covered by the grant of the ‘howse called the vpper
-frater’, and I do not know what the ‘little tenement’ near that held by
-Kirkham from Cheyne was, if it was not the little chamber and kitchen.
-It is noteworthy that the disputed rooms, after being included, with
-a note of Cheyne’s claim, in the survey of 1548, were left out of
-Cawarden’s lease of the same year.
-
-[1534] _M. S. C._ ii. 109.
-
-[1535] Brewer, ii. 2. 1494.
-
-[1536] _Tudor Revels_, 7.
-
-[1537] Feuillerat, _Edw. and Mary_, 255; Wallace, i. 140.
-
-[1538] _Athenaeum_ (1886), ii. 91.
-
-[1539] Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 430; cf. _M. S. C._ ii. 120; Wallace, i. 192.
-
-[1540] _M. S. C._ ii. 35. I do not know whether More deliberately
-confused the Tents and Revels.
-
-[1541] Ibid. 52.
-
-[1542] Ibid. 105.
-
-[1543] Ibid. 14, 116; _Hist. MSS._ vii. 603.
-
-[1544] Ibid. 15.
-
-[1545] Only an abstract of title at the date of the sale exists
-(Barrett, _Apothecaries_, 46), but Apothecaries’ Hall occupies the site
-of these rooms.
-
-[1546] _M. S. C._ ii. 4, 9; Feuillerat, _Eliz._ 440. In 1552 Jane
-Fremownte had succeeded Barnard (_M. S. C._ ii. 115), but she cannot
-have had the whole of the original lodge, as her 4 ft. entry on Water
-Lane is too small to have been the main access to the cloister.
-Probably part had been granted to her neighbour, Sir George Harper. Nor
-did all her holding pass to Cobham in 1554. Some of it was probably
-added to the house on the north, which occupied the site of the old
-church porch.
-
-[1547] _M. S. C._ ii. 44, 53; cf. p. 502.
-
-[1548] Ibid. 51, 121.
-
-[1549] Ibid. 16.
-
-[1550] Feuillerat, _Edw. and Mary_, 210, 230, 242, 301; _Eliz._ 103,
-107.
-
-[1551] _M. S. C._ ii. 118, ‘one other grete rome or vawte next the
-ground next the entre in the west ende of the garden openyng into the
-same garden wherin now the robes of the revelles do lye’ (Lease of 12
-Feb. 1560).
-
-[1552] _M. S. C._ ii. 19.
-
-[1553] Cf. p. 489.
-
-[1554] _M. S. C._ ii. 105, 118.
-
-[1555] Ibid. 119, 120.
-
-[1556] Wallace, i. 175.
-
-[1557] _M. S. C._ ii. 119.
-
-[1558] Ibid. 27; Wallace, i. 175.
-
-[1559] Wallace, i. 175.
-
-[1560] _M. S. C._ ii. 120.
-
-[1561] Ibid. 27.
-
-[1562] _Jahrbuch_, xlviii. 92; Wallace, i. 131.
-
-[1563] Ibid. 93; _M. S. C._ ii. 28; Wallace, i. 132.
-
-[1564] On the plays performed there, cf. chh. xii, xiii (Chapel,
-Paul’s, Oxford’s). Collier appears to have been aware, probably from
-the Lyly prologues and the reference in Gosson, _P. C._ 188, of the
-existence of the earlier Blackfriars play-house, and to have dated it,
-by a singular coincidence, in 1576. He knew nothing of the real facts,
-but inferred (_H. E. D. P._ i. 219) that the undated petition of the
-Blackfriars inhabitants, which is really of 1596, was of 1576, on the
-strength of a reference in it to a banishment of the players from the
-City, which an incorrect endorsement on a _Lansdowne MS._ (cf. App. D,
-No. lxxv) had led him to place in 1575. This did not prevent him from
-also assigning the petition, with a forged reply from the players, to
-1596 (cf. p. 508). He proceeded to forge (_a_) an order dated 23 Dec.
-1579 for the toleration of Leicester’s men at the Blackfriars (_New
-Facts_, 9), and (_b_) a memorial by Shakespeare and others as Queen’s
-men and Blackfriars ‘sharers’ in 1589 (_New Facts_, 11; cf. Ingleby,
-244, 249).
-
-[1565] Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).
-
-[1566] _Jahrbuch_, xlviii. 99; Wallace, i. 152 (Will of Farrant, 30
-Nov. 1580), 153 (Anne Farrant to More, 25 Dec. 1580), 154 (Leicester to
-More, 19 Sept. 1581), 158 (Anne Farrant to Walsingham, _c._ 1583), 159
-(Court of Common Pleas, _Farrant v. Hunnis_ and _Farrant v. Newman_,
-1583–4), 160 (Court of Requests, _Newman and Hunnis v. Farrant_, 1584),
-177 (Wolley to More, 13 Jan. 1587), 174 (Memoranda by More, _c._ 1587;
-cf. Dasent, xv. 137).
-
-[1567] _M. S. C._ ii. 123. More’s rental of 1584 includes £50 from
-Hunsdon for the mansion house, £20 from Oxford, £8 from Lyly; that of
-1585 the same three sums, all from Hunsdon. But the two smaller sums
-represent twice Farrant’s rent, which was £14.
-
-[1568] Kempe, 495; _M. S. C._ ii. 123; Wallace, i. 186 (More to
-Hunsdon, 8 April 1586; Hunsdon to More, 27 April 1586; Hunsdon to More,
-14 April 1590; More to Hunsdon, draft, 17 April 1590; More to Hunsdon,
-18 April 1590). Did the Paul’s ‘boyes’ keep up connexion with the
-Blackfriars by learning dancing and perhaps playing in Frith’s school?
-
-[1569] _M. S. C._ ii. 61, 93, 94, 98.
-
-[1570] Ibid. 123 (Skinner to More, 11 Oct. 1591).
-
-[1571] Ibid. 50, 54.
-
-[1572] This may have been Thomas Hale, Groom of the Tents, who was a
-witness in the case (ibid. 44), or the Thomas Hall, musician, who in
-1565 was sub-tenant of Frith’s garrets (ibid. 119).
-
-[1573] Ibid. 35 (memorandum by More), 36 (award by arbitrators), 40
-(depositions of More’s witnesses), 122 (notes of evidence by Pole’s
-witnesses).
-
-[1574] On Bonetti’s career as a fencer, cf. Wallace, i. 187; _M. S. C._
-ii. 122; Reyher, 257; G. Silver, _Paradoxes of Defence_, 64.
-
-[1575] _M. S. C._ ii. 56; Wallace, i. 188 (Willoughby to More, July
-1584), 190.
-
-[1576] Wallace, i. 189; _M. S. C._ ii. 122. I do not think the lease
-of the fencing-school was in question between More and Bonetti. Both
-Raleigh’s letter and the workmen’s petition imply house-building, not
-mere internal repairs. Bonetti could have added no building to the
-fencing-school except perhaps the kitchen which adjoined in 1596 (ibid.
-61). But the western house had been extensively rebuilt by 1584.
-
-[1577] Ibid. 55.
-
-[1578] Ibid. 56. The whole description from ‘All w^{ch} six foote & a
-halfe’ (l. 18) to ‘xxxix foote & viij inches’ (l. 29) is parenthetic, a
-point which the punctuation obscures.
-
-[1579] Cf. chh. ii, xiii (Chamberlain’s).
-
-[1580] _M. S. C._ ii. 124; cf. p. 490.
-
-[1581] Ibid. 62; cf. p. 504.
-
-[1582] _M. S. C._ ii. 36, 47, 51, 122.
-
-[1583] Ibid. 36, 38, 56 (‘the tenemente of Margrett Poole on the south
-and weste’), 70, 77, 81, 85, 125. Here must have been the chamber
-which Thomas Blagrave, finding the butler’s lodging too small, hired
-of Parson Wythers, Cheyne’s servant, from 1552 to 1560, and which Pole
-still had in 1572 (ibid. 53). But if it was strictly ‘adjoininge’ to
-his house he must have had the ‘little kitchen’ as well as the ‘little
-chamber’.
-
-[1584] Ibid. 63, 71.
-
-[1585] Ibid. 125. An unfortunate hiatus in a document (ibid. 70) leaves
-it uncertain whether Tice occupied one of Mrs. Pole’s houses or More’s
-enlarged ‘little kitchen’.
-
-[1586] Ibid. 50.
-
-[1587] Cf. p. 504.
-
-[1588] Kempe, 496; Wallace, i. 195; _M. S. C._ ii. 125, misdated 1595.
-The ‘other’ house was probably the mansion house, which was let to
-Ralph Bowes on 3 March 1596 (cf. p. 497). Hunsdon died on 22 July 1596.
-
-[1589] Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 299, from enrolment in R. O.; _M. S. C._
-ii. 60, from counterpart executed by Burbadge in _Loseley MS._ 348.
-
-[1590] I suppose that this was the old lavatory. If so, probably
-Burbadge’s use terminated when this became a glass-house in 1601; cf.
-p. 506.
-
-[1591] The account in Wallace, ii. 37, is not trustworthy; it assumes,
-in lieu of the Duchy Chamber and staircase tower, a ‘north section’ of
-the building 40 ft. from north to south.
-
-[1592] Cf. p. 498.
-
-[1593] Wallace, i. 196; ii. 38, is misleading here.
-
-[1594] _M. S. C._ ii. 70.
-
-[1595] Ibid. 76 (conveyance by Sir Richard Michelborne, George Pole,
-and Charles Pole), 84 (conveyance by Richard and Elizabeth Mansell),
-125.
-
-[1596] _Variorum_, iii. 62; Birch, ii. 426.
-
-[1597] H. R. Plomer, _The King’s Printing House under the Stuarts_ (_2
-Library_ ii. 353).
-
-[1598] _M. S. C._ ii. 83 (Recital of conveyance by trustees of Lady
-Howard); cf. p. 512.
-
-[1599] Ibid. 98 (Recital of lease in deed of sale of 1609).
-
-[1600] Ibid. 93, ‘all that greate Vault or lowe roome adioyneing to
-the said greate Garden lyeing and being at the south west end of the
-said greate garden nowe vsed and imployed for a glassehowse’ (1609).
-By 26 June 1601 (_M. S. C._ ii. 70) the way south of the kitchen yard
-has become ‘the yard or way ... which leadeth towardes the glassehouse
-nowe in the tenure of Sir Ierom Bowes’. Bowes had obtained a patent
-for making drinking-glasses in 1592 and occupied a warehouse under the
-church in 1597 (_D. N. B._). Dekker, _Newes from Hell_ (1606, _Works_,
-ii. 97), says, ‘Like the Glass-house Furnace in Blacke-friers, the
-bonefiers that are kept there neuer goe out’.
-
-[1601] _M. S. C._ ii. 92 (Deed of Sale).
-
-[1602] Ibid. 126. There is some confusion as to the position of Mrs.
-Basil’s house. I think it was west of the gate-house.
-
-[1603] Ibid. 88 (Deed of Sale, misdated 1602).
-
-[1604] Ibid. 64.
-
-[1605] Ibid. 83; _S. P. D. Jac. I_, viii. 18 (Grant to trustees for
-Lady Kildare). An _inquisitio_ on Cobham’s Blackfriars property (_1
-Jac. I_) appears to be amongst the Special Commissions and Returns in
-the Exchequer (R. O. _Lists and Indexes_, xxxvii. 61).
-
-[1606] C. R. B. Barrett, _History of the Society of Apothecaries_, 42.
-The existing Hall dates from 1669–70. John Downes (cf. App. I, No. iii)
-and Pepys, i. 336, record the use of the older building by Davenant for
-plays at the Restoration. So Farrant’s tradition survived.
-
-[1607] For text and discussion of bona fides cf. App. D, No. cvii.
-Collier, having already assigned the document to 1576 (cf. p. 496),
-uses it again for 1596 (_H. E. D. P._ i. 287). With it, in his first
-edition (i. 297), he printed a reply, now in _S. P. D. Eliz._ cclx.
-117, by Pope, Richard Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips, Shakespeare, Kempe,
-Sly, and Tooley, on behalf of the players, which is palaeographically a
-forgery (Ingleby, 289) and could not be genuine in substance, since it
-refers to the Globe, which did not exist in 1596.
-
-[1608] Cf. p. 511. Wallace, ii. 53, thinks this an error or invention
-of the City in 1619, because the Privy Council registers ‘giving all
-the official acts of that body, record no such order’. But the Privy
-Council registers notoriously do not record all the official acts of
-that body (cf. ch. ii). The petitioners of 1619 are not likely to have
-invented the ‘petition and indorsemente’ of 1596 to which they appealed.
-
-[1609] In the _Sharers Papers_ of 1635 (Halliwell-Phillipps, i.
-317) Cuthbert and the other Burbadges then living say ‘now for the
-Blackfriers, that is our inheritance; our father purchased it at
-extreame rates, and made it into a play-house with great charge and
-troble’. Further, Cuthbert was associated with Richard in buying
-subsidiary property in 1601, 1610, 1612, and 1614 (cf. p. 505). But the
-leases of 1600 and 1608 were by Richard alone, and under one of these
-Cuthbert became his tenant.
-
-[1610] Cf. p. 511.
-
-[1611] Fleay, 211, 234, 240.
-
-[1612] Cf. ch. xii.
-
-[1613] Fleay, 224, 230, 245, 250. Evans maintained that the assignment
-to Hawkins was absolute, to cover his liability under the bond to
-Burbadge. But the court appears to have held that a reassignment was
-intended, but that ‘the conveyance was never perfected and sealed’.
-
-[1614] Wallace, ii. 89, from unpublished document; _Evans v. Kirkham_
-in Fleay, 214.
-
-[1615] Ibid. 235.
-
-[1616] Ibid. 221, 231, 235, 246.
-
-[1617] The Burbadges say in the _Sharers Papers_ of 1635, ‘the more to
-strengthen the service, the boys daily wearing out, it was considered
-that house would be as fit for ourselves, and so purchased the lease
-remaining from Evans with our money, and placed men players, which were
-Hemings, Condall, Shakspeare, etc.’. They also say that the players had
-their shares ‘of us for nothing’. Very likely they paid no fine, but
-they had to pay their quota towards rent. It is reasonable to infer
-that Thomas Evans was a relative and nominee of Henry Evans. Kirkham’s
-allegation in the 1612 litigation that Henry Evans had shared in the
-Blackfriars profits during the past four years (Fleay, 225) was not
-seriously contested.
-
-[1618] Cf. ch. xiii. Collier (_New Facts_, 16) printed a document
-professing to set out action taken by the City against scurrilities of
-Kempe and Armin at Blackfriars in 1605. But this cannot be traced in
-the City archives (S. Lee in _D. N. B._ s.v. Kempe), and the City did
-not obtain control of the Blackfriars until 1608 (cf. p. 480). It is
-probably a forgery.
-
-[1619] Cf. vol. i, p. 357.
-
-[1620] C. W. Wallace, _Advance Sheets from Shakespeare, the Globe, and
-Blackfriars_ (p.p. 1909).
-
-[1621] _Sharers Papers_ in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 312. Collier,
-_Alleyn Memoirs_, 105, conjectures that Alleyn bought Shakespeare’s
-interest in April 1612, and it appears from G. F. Warner, _Dulwich
-MSS._ 115, 172, 174, that he forged entries in documents relating
-to other property of Alleyn’s in Blackfriars, as a support to this
-conjecture.
-
-[1622] Cf. p. 480.
-
-[1623] Text in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 311, and Harrison, iv. 323, from
-City _Repertory_, xxxiv, f. 38^v. The two petitions of the officials
-and inhabitants are in _M. S. C._ i. 90, from _Remembrancia_, v. 28,
-29. They are undated, but can be identified from a recital in the
-order. The officials allege ‘that whereas in November 1596 divers
-both honorable persons and others then inhabiting the said precinct
-made knowne to the Lordes and others of the privie Counsell, what
-inconveniencies were likelie to fall vpon them, by a common Play-house
-which was then preparinge to bee erected there, wherevpon their Honours
-then forbadd the vse of the said howse for playes, as by the peticion
-and indorsemente in aunswere thereof may appeare.... Nevertheles ...
-the owner of the said play-house doth vnder the name of a private howse
-(respectinge indeed private comoditie only) convert the said howse to
-a publique play-house.’ They dwell on the inconvenience caused by the
-congested streets and the difficulty of getting to church ‘the ordinary
-passage for a great part of the precinct aforesaid being close by the
-play house dore’.
-
-[1624] Text in _M. S. C._ i. 280.
-
-[1625] Text in Collier, i. 455, from _S. P. D. Car. I_, ccv. 32, where
-it is accompanied by copies of the Privy Council order and letter of
-22 June 1600 (App. D, No. cxxiv) and the City order of 21 Jan. 1619.
-Probably the copy of the petition of Blackfriars inhabitants in 1596
-(cf. p. 508), now in _S. P. D. Eliz._ cclx. 116, originally belonged to
-this set of documents.
-
-[1626] _M. S. C._ i. 386.
-
-[1627] The report of the commissioners is printed by Collier, _New
-Facts_, 27, and _H. E. D. P._ i. 477. It is confirmed by a memorandum
-of Secretary Windebank in _S. P. D. Car. I_, ccli. p. 293, and I think
-Ingleby, 304, is wrong in suspecting a forgery (cf. _M. S. C._ i. 386).
-The commissioners allowed (_a_) £700 to Cuthbert and William Burbadge
-for 14 years’ purchase of the rent of £50 reserved to them by lease,
-(_b_) £1,134 for 14 years’ purchase of an interest in four tenements
-rated at £75 and a piece of void ground to turn coaches at £6, (_c_)
-£1,066 13_s._ 4_d._ for 100 marks apiece to 16 players for ‘the
-interest that some of them haue by lease in the said Play-house, and in
-respect of the shares which others haue in the benefits thereof’, and
-for compensation for removal. Collier, _Reply_, 39, mentions but does
-not print another document containing a summary of the players’ claim,
-with notes by Buck. But Buck was long dead. A third valuation published
-by Collier, in which Laz. Fletcher’s name occurs, is certainly a
-forgery (Ingleby, 246).
-
-[1628] _M. S. C._ i. 386.
-
-[1629] Fleay, 211, 213. I suppose it was on this that Evans spent £11
-0_s._ 2_d._ in Dec. 1603 (Wallace, ii. 89).
-
-[1630] In _The Times_ of 12 Sept. 1906 Professor Wallace gives the
-number of new suits as four; in _The Children of the Chapel at
-Blackfriars_ (1908), 36, as twelve. Presumably the Court of Requests
-suit of _Keysar v. Burbadge et al._, printed in _Nebraska University
-Studies_, x. 336, is one of these.
-
-[1631] Wallace, ii. 39, 40, 41, 43, 49.
-
-[1632] Cf. p. 511.
-
-[1633] _M. S. C._ ii. 31, ‘all the Leds couerynge the premysses’
-(1576), 61, ‘the stone staires leadinge vpp vnto the Leades or route
-over the saide seaven greate vpper romes oute of the saide seaven
-greate vpper romes’ (1596).
-
-[1634] Wallace, ii. 40.
-
-[1635] Marston, _The Dutch Courtesan_, v. iii. 162.
-
-[1636] Cf. p. 425.
-
-[1637] R. Flecknoe, _Miscellania_ (1653), 141, ‘From thence passing
-on to the Black-fryers, and seeing never a Play-bil on the Gate, no
-Coaches on the place, nor Doorkeeper at the Play-house door, with his
-Boxe like a Churchwarden, desiring you to remember the poor Players, I
-cannot but say for Epilogue to all the Playes were ever acted there:
-
- Poor House that in dayes of our Grand-sires,
- Belongst unto the Mendiant Fryers:
- And where so oft in our Fathers dayes
- We have seen so many of Shakspears Playes,
- So many of Johnsons, Beaumonts & Fletchers.’
-
-[1638] I do not know what value to attach to a print in the Gardiner
-collection, reproduced by Baker, 44, 78, as representing the theatre.
-It shows a Renaissance façade, which can have been no part of the
-mediaeval building. Adams, 197, reproduces a painting of mediaeval
-fragments found in rebuilding _The Times_ in 1872, small ground-floor
-rooms divided by entries. But _The Times_ must cover the site of
-Hunsdon House as well as that of the theatre.
-
-[1639] As an epilogue to this narrative and an example of how popular
-history is written, I quote D. E. Oliver, _The English Stage_ (1912),
-9, ‘Blackfriars House, a deserted monastery on the Thames side, was
-granted by Edward VI in 1596 to the Court Players for their use
-as a play-house, but it was not until the accession of Elizabeth
-that it received official sanction as a recognized place of public
-entertainment’.
-
-[1640] Jonas, 132, however, quotes from the register of St. Dunstan’s,
-Whitefriars, with the date 29 Sept. 1607, ‘Gerry out of the play-house
-in the Friars buried’, which suggests use of the theatre before 1608.
-The King’s Revels may well have started by 1607. He also quotes,
-without date, ‘We present one play-house in the same precinct, not
-fitting these to be now tolerable’.
-
-[1641] I do not know why Adams, 312, identifies the play-house with a
-cloister shown in Clapham’s plan. Surely it is more likely to have been
-the hall also shown at the north-west corner.
-
-[1642] _P. C. Acts_ (1613–14), 166. One Sturgis had leased a house and
-garden from Sir Edward Gorge, and sublet the garden to ‘one Rossetoe
-Kynman and others, who goe aboute to erecte a p[l]aye house thereupon’.
-
-[1643] _M. S. C._ i. 91; cf. ch. xvii. The Blackfriars is still the
-‘private house’ of the King’s men in the patent of 1619 issued to them
-after this controversy.
-
-[1644] It is true that, when the prentices took up Whitefriars for _The
-Hog Hath Lost His Pearl_ in 1613, the admission _per bullettini_ is
-said to have been ‘for a note of distinction from ordinary comedians’.
-But the companies had no need to continue any special system of
-admission after they had the protection of their patents; Dekker
-(_vide_ p. 523) speaks of gatherers at private houses in 1609. After
-the Restoration, ‘ballatine, or tickets sealed for all doors and boxes’
-were introduced at the Duke’s Theatre in 1660 (R. W. Lowe, _Thomas
-Betterton_, 75).
-
-[1645] Lawrence, i. 230; cf. App. D, No. xxxii.
-
-[1646] The earliest example is _The Troublesome Reign of King John_
-(1591).
-
-[1647] But ‘priuately’ is also used of strictly private performances on
-the title-pages of _Caesar’s Revenge_ (1607) acted at Trinity College,
-Oxford, and, later, W. Montague’s _Shepherd’s Paradise_ (1659) acted by
-amateurs at Court.
-
-[1648] T. M., _Black Book_ (1604), in Bullen, _Middleton_, viii.
-42, ‘arch tobacco-taker of England ... upon stages both common and
-private’; _Malcontent_ (1604), ind., ‘we may sit upon the stage at the
-private house’; _Sophonisba_ (1606), _ad fin._, ‘it is printed only
-as it was represented by youths, and after the fashion of the private
-stage’; Dekker, _Gull’s Horn Book_ (cf. App. H), ‘Whether therefore
-the gatherers of the publique or priuate Play-house stand to receiue
-the afternoones rent’; Dekker, _Seven Deadly Sins_ (1606, _Works_, ii.
-41), ‘All the Citty lookt like a priuate Play-house, when the windowes
-are clapt downe’; _Roaring Girl_ (1611), ii. 1, ‘the private stage’s
-audience, the twelve-penny stool gentlemen’; _Daborne to Henslowe_
-(1613, _Henslowe Papers_, 79), ‘as good a play for your publique howse
-as ever was playd’.
-
-[1649] Cf. Wright (App. I).
-
-[1650] Lawrence (_Fortnightly_, May 1916) has shown that the rebuilt
-Fortune of 1623 and Red Bull of _c._ 1632 were probably roofed, and
-Wright’s description confuses the two phases of these houses.
-
-[1651] Chapman’s _Byron_ (1625) is said to have been acted ‘at the
-Blacke-Friers and other publique Stages’, Heywood’s _English Traveller_
-(1633), _A Maidenhead Well Lost_ (1634), and _Love’s Mistress_ (1636)
-to have been ‘publikely acted’ at the Cockpit, and Shirley’s _Martyred
-Soldier_ (1638) to have been acted ‘at the Private House in Drury Lane
-and at other publicke Theaters’. This is exceptional terminology, but
-shows the obsolescence of the distinction.
-
-[1652] Cf. ch. xvi.
-
-[1653] _Old Fortunatus_ (Rose, 1599), prol. 81, ‘this small
-circumference’; _Warning for Fair Women_ (? Curtain, 1599), prol. 83,
-88, ‘all this fair circuit ... this round’; _Hen. V_ (Curtain or Globe,
-1599), prol. 11, ‘this cockpit ... this wooden O’; _E. M. O._ (Globe,
-1599), prol. 199, epil. 4406, ‘this thronged round ... this faire-fild
-Globe’; _Sejanus_ (Globe, 1603), comm. v, ‘the Globe’s fair ring’;
-_Three English Brothers_ (Curtain or Red Bull, 1607), epil., ‘this
-round circumference’; _Merry Devil of Edmonton_ (Globe, 1608), prol. 5,
-‘this round’. On the other hand, _Whore of Babylon_ (Fortune, 1607),
-prol. 1, ‘The charmes of Silence through this Square be throwne’.
-
-[1654] Ordish, 12.
-
-[1655] Before the Swan was built, Nashe wrote in _The Unfortunate
-Traveller_ (1594), ‘I sawe a banketting house belonging to a merchant
-that was the meruaile of the world.... It was builte round of green
-marble like a Theater without’ (_Works_, ii. 282).
-
-[1656] Cf. chh. iv, xvi (introd.).
-
-[1657] _Atlantic Monthly_ (1906), xcvii. 369.
-
-[1658] Kirkman also says in the preface to _The Wits_ (1672), ‘I
-have seen the Red Bull Play-house, which was a large one’; but he is
-referring, more certainly than Wright, to the rebuilt house.
-
-[1659] Cf. Albright, 40; Lawrence, i. 12, and _E. S._ xxxii. 44.
-
-[1660] There is a dot in Wheatley’s facsimile over the second
-well-marked ‘r’ of the word ‘orchestra’. Is it possible that Van
-Buchell misread it ‘orchestia’?
-
-[1661] Cf. Brereton in _Homage_, 204.
-
-[1662] Cf. ch. xvi.
-
-[1663] The _Theatrum_ of Jonson’s 1616 Folio t.p. is oval, rather
-than round, but it is safer to take this, in spite of its hut, as
-representing Jonson’s notion of a classical theatre.
-
-[1664] Cf. ch. xvi. Graves, 32, tries to minimize the structural
-influence of inn-yards on the theatres, and even doubts whether the
-actors preferred to act in these ‘rather than in the great halls’. But
-I do not think that he makes much of a case. Had the inns, indeed,
-‘great halls’ at all?
-
-[1665] Gosson, _P. C._ (1582), ‘it is the fashion of youthes to go
-first into the yarde, and to carry theire eye through every gallery’;
-_Hamlet_, III. ii. 10, ‘tear a passion to tatters, to very rags, to
-split the ears of the groundlings, who for the most part are capable
-of nothing but inexplicable dumb-shows and noise’; Dekker, _G. H. B._
-(1609), ‘your _Groundling_ and _Gallery-Commoner_ buyes his sport by
-the penny ... neither are you to be hunted from thence, though the
-Scar-crows in the yard hoot at you, hisse at you, spit at you, yea,
-throw durt euen in your teeth’; _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), ind. 51,
-‘the vnderstanding Gentlemen o’ the ground here, ask’d my iudgement’,
-59, 79; _The Hog Has Lost His Pearl_ (1614), prol.:
-
- We may be pelted off for ought we know,
- With apples, egges, or stones,
-from thence belowe;
-
-W. Fennor, _Descriptions_ (1616):
-
- the understanding, grounded, men for their just reward,
- Shall gape and gaze among the fools in the yard.
-
-So later, _Vox Graculi_ (1623), ‘they will sit dryer in
-the galleries then those who are the understanding men in the yard’;
-
-Shirley, _The Changes_ (1632):
-
- Many gentlemen
- Are not, as in the days of understanding,
- Now satisfied with a Jig;
-
-Shirley, _The Doubtful Heir_ (1640), prol.:
-
- No shews, no frisk and, what you most delight in,
- Grave understanders, here’s no target-fighting.
-
-[1666] _Proscenium_ is the proper classical word for the space in front
-of the _scena_; cf. p. 539.
-
-[1667] Albright has no justification for introducing into his
-reconstruction of a typical Shakespearian stage the tapering, instead
-of quadrangular, platform which characterizes the late engraving in
-_The Wits_, and to a less degree those in _Roxana_ and _Messallina_.
-
-[1668] Wegener, 125, collects examples of the use of traps. They
-served, _inter alia_, for the representation of ‘hell-mouth’, which the
-Elizabethan stage inherited from the miracle-plays (cf. p. 544), and
-the space under the stage was known as ‘hell’; cf. Dekker, _News from
-Hell_ (1606, _Works_, ii. 92, 139), ‘Mary the question is, in which of
-the _Play-houses_ he [the Devil] would have performed his prize....
-Hell being vnder euerie one of their _Stages_, the Players (if they
-had owed him a spight) might with a false Trappe doore haue slipt him
-downe, and there kept him, as a laughing stocke to al their yawning
-spectators.... Tailors ... (as well as Plaiers) haue a hell of their
-owne, (vnder their shop-board).’
-
-[1669] Cf. Graves, 41. The register of the association of Masters of
-Defence (_Sloane MS._ 2530; cf. extracts in A. Hutton, _The Sword and
-the Centuries_, 259) records many ‘prizes’ played at theatres and
-theatrical inns during the sixteenth century; cf. App. D, Nos. lx-lxii,
-_Case is Altered_, II. vii. 28, ‘First they [maisters of defence] are
-brought to the publicke _Theater_’, and for later periods Henslowe,
-i. 98 (the Rose, 1598), the fatal contest at the Swan in 1602, and
-Herbert, 47, 81. For acrobats cf. App. D, No. cxxiii, on the use of the
-Swan by Peter Bromvill in 1600. Henslowe, i. 98, 106, records loans in
-connexion with vaulting performances with a horse, perhaps at the Rose,
-in 1598 and 1599 by John Haslett or Hassett, who was also paid for
-court performances (App. B) in 1603 and 1608.
-
-[1670] T. M. _Black Book_ (1604, Bullen, _Middleton_, viii. 7) opens
-with _Lucifer ascending, as Prologue to his own Play_:
-
- Now is hell landed here upon the earth,
- When Lucifer, in limbs of burning gold,
- Ascends the dusty theatre of the world,...
-
- ... my tortured spleen
- Melts into mirthful humour at this fate,
- That heaven is hung so high, drawn up so far,
- And made so fast, nailed up with many a star;
- And hell the very shop-board of the earth,...
-
- ... And now that I have vaulted up so high
- Above the stage-rails of this earthen globe,
- I must turn actor and join companies.
-
-Rails are shown in the late _Roxana_ and _Messallina_ engravings of
-indoor stages.
-
-[1671] Cf. H. Logeman in _Anglia_, xix. 117.
-
-[1672] Dekker, _G. H. B._ (1609), ‘on the very Rushes where the Commedy
-is to daunce ... must our fethered _Estridge_ ... be planted’ ...
-‘Salute all your gentle acquaintance, that are spred either on the
-rushes, or on stooles about you ... take vp a rush, and tickle the
-earnest eares of your fellow gallants’; _1 Hen. IV_, III. i. 214, ‘She
-bids you on the wanton rushes lay you down’. In _The Gentleman Usher_
-(_c. 1604_, Blackfriars), II. i. 72, ‘Enter Bassiolo with Servants,
-with rushes and a carpet’, and Bassiolo says,
-
- lay me ’em thus,
- In fine smooth threaves; look you, sir, thus, in threaves.
- Perhaps some tender lady will squat here,
- And if some standing rush should chance to prick her,
- She’d squeak, and spoil the songs that must be sung.’
-
-[1673] Lawrence, i. 39, 161.
-
-[1674] G. Harvey (1579, _Letter Book_, 67), ‘sum maltconceivid comedye
-fitt for the Theater, or sum other paintid stage whereat thou and thy
-liuely copesmates in London may lawghe ther mouthes and bellyes full
-for pence or twoepence apeece’; Spenser, _Tears of the Muses_ (1591),
-176, ‘That wont with comick sock to beautefie The painted Theaters’;
-cf. Graves, 68. Coryat, i. 386, in 1608, found a Venice play-house
-‘very beggarly and base in comparison of our stately Play-houses in
-England: neyther can their Actors compare with us for apparell, shewes
-and musicke’. So in _Case is Altered_, II. vii. 30, the plays in Utopia
-(= England) are ‘set foorth with as much state as can be imagined’.
-
-[1675] App. I; but cf. p. 524, n. 1.
-
-[1676] _Malcontent_ (_1604_, Globe), ind., ‘Good sir, will you leave
-the stage? I’ll help you to a private room’; cf. Sir J. Davies’
-epigram, _infra_.
-
-[1677] Wright, _Hist. Hist._ 407, ‘The prices were small (there being
-no scenes)’.
-
-[1678] L. Wager’s _Mary Magdalene_ (1566) has a prologue which says
-that the actors will take ‘halfpence or pence’ from the audience,
-but this was probably used by strolling actors and continues the
-miracle-play tradition. At almost the same date, a jest in _Merry
-Tales, Wittie Questions and Quick Answers_ (1567, Hazlitt, _Jest
-Books_, i. 145) tells how men stood at the gate of a play at
-Northumberland Place, ‘with a boxe (as the facion is) who toke of euery
-persone that came in a peny or an half peny at the least’.
-
-[1679] J. Mayne in _Jonsonus Virbius_ (1638):
-
- So when thy Fox had ten times acted been,
- Each day was first, but that ’twas cheaper seen;
- And so thy Alchemist played o’er and o’er,
- Was new o’ the stage, when ’twas not at the door.
-
-[1680] G. Harvey (p. 530, _supra_); Lyly, _Pappe with an Hatchet_
-(_Works_, iii. 408); cf. _Martin’s Month’s Mind_ (1589, App. C, No.
-xl). Lodge, _Scillaes Metamorphosis_ (1589), will not ‘tie my pen to
-Pennie-knaves delight’, and S. Rowlands, _Letting of Humour’s Blood in
-the Head Vein_ (1600), bids poets not ‘To teach stage parrots speak for
-penny pleasure’; cf. _Case is Altered_, I. i. 104, ‘Tut, giue me the
-penny, giue me the peny, I care not for the Gentlemen, I, let me haue a
-good ground’.
-
-[1681] Cf. ch. xvi, introd. Field says in 1583 (App. C, No. xxxi),
-‘Euery dore hath a payment, & euery gallerie maketh a yearely stipend’.
-
-[1682] _E. M. O._ (1599), ind. 425, ‘Let me neuer liue to looke as
-highe as the two-pennie roome, againe’; T. Garzoni, _Hospitall of
-Incurable Fooles_ (tr. 1600), epist., ‘a Player that in speaking
-an Epilogue makes loue to the two pennie roume for a plaudite’;
-_Satiromastix_ (1602), epil. 2690, ‘Are you pleas’d?... if you be not,
-by’th Lord Ile see you all--heere for your two pence a peice agen
-before Ile loose your company.... Good night, my two-penny Tenants’;
-_Mad World, my Masters_ (_c._ 1604–6), v. ii. 36, ‘some ... that ...
-took a good conceit of their parts into th’ two-penny room’; _Woman
-Hater_ (1607), prol. 5, ‘I do pronounce this, to the utter discomfort
-of all two-penny Gallery men, you shall have no bawdery’; _Fleire_
-(1607), ii. 30, ‘They (like your common players) let men come in for
-twopence a peece’; Dekker, _News from Hell_ (1606, _Works_, ii. 96),
-‘You may take him ... in the afternoones, in the twopeny roomes of a
-Play-house, like a Puny, seated Cheeke by Iowle with a punke’, _Seven
-Deadly Sins_ (1606, ii. 53), ‘_Sloth_ ... will come and sit in the
-two-pennie galleries amongst the gentlemen, and see their knaveries
-and their pastimes’, _The Dead Term_ (1608, iv. 55), ‘Players ...
-prostitute themselues to the pleasures of euery two-penny drunken
-Plebeian’, _Lanthorn and Candle-Light_ (1608, iii. 216), ‘Pay thy
-twopence to a Player, in his gallerie maist thou sitte by a Harlot’,
-_Raven’s Almanac_ (1609, iv. 184), ‘As if you sat in the moste
-perspicuous place of the two-penny gallerie in a play-house’; _Roaring
-Girl_ (1611), v. 1, ‘One of them is a nip; I took him once i’ the
-two-penny gallerie at the Fortune’; &c., &c.
-
-[1683] Dekker, _Seven Deadly Sins_ (1606, _Works_, ii. 53), ‘Their
-houses smoakt euery after noone with Stinkards who were so glewed
-together in crowdes with the steames of strong breath, that when
-they came foorth, their faces lookt as if they had beene per boyld’,
-_Raven’s Almanac_ (1609, iv. 194), ‘Hee shall be glad to play three
-houres for two pence to the basest stinkard in London, whose breth
-is stronger than garlicke, and able to poison all the twelve penny
-roomes’, _Work for Armourers_ (1609, iv. 96), ‘tearme times, when
-the Twopeny Clients and Peny Stinkards swarme together to heere the
-Stagerites’; _vide_ n. 2, _infra_, and p. 534, n. 1.
-
-[1684] _Satiromastix_ (1602), 1669, ‘a Gentleman or an honest Cittizen
-shall not sit in your pennie-bench Theaters, with his Squirrell by his
-side cracking nuttes ... but he shall be Satyr’d and Epigram’d vpon’;
-T. M. _Black Book_ (1604), ‘penny-rooms at theatres’; T. M. _Ant and
-Nightingale_ (1604), ‘stinkards sitting in the penny galleries of a
-theatre, and yawning upon the players’; Dekker, _Gull’s Horn Book_
-(1609, _Works_, ii. 208), ‘thou ... hast vouchsafed to be acquainted
-with penny galleries’; _Wit Without Money_ (_c._ 1614), iv. 1, ‘break
-in at plays like prentices for three a groat, and crack nuts with the
-scholars in peny rooms again’.
-
-[1685] A. Copley, _Wits, Fits and Fancies_ (1595; ed. 1614, p. 124),
-tells of a man cast off by his brother, an actor, who sent him sixpence
-in a sheet of paper, to show that, ‘though his brother had vowed not
-in seven years to see him, yet he for his sixpence could come and see
-him upon the stage at his pleasure’. If Platter’s 3_d._ was the highest
-normal charge in the sixteenth century, the 6_d._ may represent a first
-night’s charge.
-
-[1686] Most of the allusions to 6_d._ charges relate to private houses
-(cf. p. 556), but Beaumont’s grammar lecture (cf. ch. xxiii) gives
-this price for the Bankside, and T. M. _Black Book_ (1604, Bullen,
-_Middleton_, viii. 41) has ‘I give and bequeath to you Benedick
-Bottomless, most deep cut-purse, all the benefit of ... the sixpenny
-rooms in play-places, to cut, dive and nim’. Later, _The Actors
-Remonstrance_ (1643) professes that the players will not admit into
-their ‘sixpenny rooms those unwholesome enticing harlots that sit
-there merely to be taken up by prentices or lawyers’ clerks’; cf.
-Lawrence, i. 36, who thinks that the lord’s rooms became the sixpenny
-rooms. For the 1_s._ charge, cf. p. 533, n. 1, and _Malcontent_ (1604),
-ind. 63, ‘I say, any man that hath wit may censure, if he sit in the
-twelve-penny room’; Dekker, _G. H. B._ (1609), ‘When at a new play you
-take up the twelve-penny rome next the stage; (because the Lords and
-you may seeme to be haile fellow wel-met) there draw forth this booke,
-read alowd, laugh alowd, and play the _Antickes_, that all the garlike
-mouthed stinkards may cry out, _Away with the fool_’; _Hen. VIII_
-(_1613_), prol., ‘may see away their shilling’; Overbury, _Characters_
-(ed. Rimbault, 154, _The Proud Man_), ‘If he have but twelvepence in ’s
-purse he will give it for the best room in a play-house’.
-
-[1687] They include women, and certainly look more like spectators than
-actors or musicians.
-
-[1688] E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), ep. 53:
-
- See you him yonder, who sits o’re the stage,
- With the Tobacco-pipe now at his mouth?
-
-In _E. M. O._ (_1599_), 1390 (Q_{1}), Brisk is said to
-speak of lords ‘as familiarlie as if hee had ... ta’ne tabacco with
-them ouer the stage i’ the Lords roome’. Dekker-Wilkins, _Jests to
-Make you Merry_ (1607, _Works_, ii. 292), has a jest of ‘one that sat
-ouer the stage’ on a wench in the two-penny room. _Farmer-Chetham MS._
-(seventeenth-century, ed. Grosart, i. 104) has an epigram on Spongus,
-who ‘Plays at Primero over the stage’.
-
-[1689] _Satiromastix_ (1602), 2612, ‘You must forsweare to venter
-on the stage when your play is ended, and to exchange curtezies and
-complements with gallants in the Lordes roomes’. The subject is well
-discussed by Lawrence (i. 29), _The Situation of the Lords’ Room_.
-
-[1690] Sir J. Davies, _Epigrams_ (prob. < 1596), ep. 28, _In Sillam_,
-‘He that dares take Tobacco on the stage’; ep. 3, _In Rufum_:
-
- Rufus the Courtier at the theatre
- Leauing the best and most conspicuous place,
- Doth either to the stage himselfe transfer,
- Or through a grate doth show his doubtful face,
- For that the clamorous frie of Innes of court
- Filles vp the priuate roomes of greater prise:
- And such a place where all may haue resort
- He in his singularitie doth despise.
-
-It is not, I think, sitting on the stage that is
-satirized in J. Hall, _Virgedemiarum_ (1597), i. 3, but a performance
-by illiterate amateurs on a ‘hired Stage’.
-
-[1691] _C. Revels_ (_1601_), ind. 138:
-
-‘3. Child ... Here I enter.
-
-1. What, vpon the stage too?
-
-2. Yes: and I step forth like one of the children, and ask you, Would
-you have a Stool, Sir?
-
-3. A Stoole Boy?
-
-2. I Sir, if you’le giue me sixe Pence, I’le fetch you one.
-
-3. For what I pray thee? what shall I doe with it?
-
-2. O God Sir! will you betraye your Ignorance so much? why, throne your
-selfe in state on the stage, as other Gentlemen vse Sir’;
-
-_All Fools_ (_c. 1604_), prol. 30:
-
- if our other audience see
- You on the stage depart before we end,
- Our wits go with you all and we are fools.
-
-_Isle of Gulls_ (_1606_), ind., ‘But come boy, furnish us with
-stools’.... ‘He [the author] is not on the stage amongst gallants
-preparing a bespoke Plaudite’.
-
-_K. B. P._ (_1607_), ind. 41:
-
- _Wife below Rafe below._
-
-_Wife._ Husband, shall I come vp husband?
-
-_Citizen._ I cunny. Rafe helpe your mistresse this way: pray gentlemen
-make her a little roome, I pray you sir lend me your hand to helpe vp
-my wife.... Boy, let my wife and I haue a cupple stooles.... Come vp
-Rafe.
-
-It must not be assumed from this burlesque that women usually sat on
-the stage, even at the private houses.
-
-[1692] _What You Will_ (1602), ind., ‘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’; _Faery Pastoral_ (1603), author’s
-note, ‘If so be that the Properties of any of These, that be outward,
-will not serue the turne by reason of concourse of the People on the
-Stage, Then you may omit the sayd Properties’. In _Wily Beguiled_
-(possibly a Paul’s play), 2021, comes the s. d. ‘Stands vpon a stoole’,
-in a wood scene.
-
-[1693] _E. M. O._ (_1599_), 585 (Q_{1}), ‘Sit o’ the stage and flout;
-prouided, you haue a good suit’; 1784, ‘rich apparell ... takes
-possession of your stage at your new play’; _A Mad World, my Masters_
-(_c. 1604–6_), v. ii. 38, ‘The actors have been found i’ th’ morning
-in a less compass than their stage, though it were ne’er so full of
-gentlemen’; _Woman Hater_ (1607), i. 3, ‘All the Gallants on the stage
-rise, vail to me, kiss their hand, offer me their places’. It is true
-that _Roaring Girl_ (1611), ii. 1, has ‘the private stages audience,
-the twelve-penny stool gentlemen’, but this may only point to a
-higher price for a stool at the private house, and in any case cannot
-outweigh the allusions of Davies and Jonson before the Blackfriars, or
-probably Paul’s, were reopened, or T. M. _Black Book_ (1604, Bullen,
-_Middleton_, viii. 42), ‘Barnaby Burning-glass, arch tobacco-taker of
-England, in ordinaries, upon stages both common and private’; Dekker,
-_G. H. B._ (1609), ‘Whether therefore the gatherers of the publique
-or priuate Play-house stand to receiue the afternoones rent, let our
-Gallant (hauing paid it) presently aduance himselfe vp to the Throne
-of the Stage’ (cf. the whole passage on the procedure and advantages
-of sitting on the stage, where Dekker clearly mingles traits of both
-types of house, in App. H). Wallace, ii. 130, argues that the custom
-was started at Blackfriars and was confined to the private houses, but
-is hopelessly confuted by C. R. Baskervill in _M. P._ viii. 581.
-
-[1694] _Malcontent_ (1604, Globe), ind.:
-
-‘Enter W. Sly, a Tire-man following him with a stool.
-
-_Tire-man._ Sir, the gentlemen will be angry if you sit here.
-
-_Sly._ Why, we may sit upon the stage at the private house. Thou dost
-not take me for a country gentleman, dost? dost think I fear hissing?...
-
-_Lowin._ Good sir, will you leave the stage? I’ll help you to a private
-room.
-
-_Sly._ Come, coz, lets take some tobacco’;
-
-_M. D’Olive_ (1606, Blackfriars), IV. ii. 173, ‘I’ll take up some other
-fool for the Duke to employ: every ordinary affords fools enow; and
-didst not see a pair of gallants sit not far hence like a couple of
-bough-pots to make the room smell?’
-
-[1695]
-
- Yet, Grandee’s, would you were not come to grace
- Our matter, with allowing vs no place.
- Though you presume Satan a subtill thing,
- And may haue heard hee’s worne in a thumbe-ring;
- Doe not on these presumptions, force vs act,
- In compasse of a cheese-trencher. This tract
- Will ne’er admit our vice, because of yours.
- Anone, who, worse than you, the fault endures
- That your selues make? when you will thrust and spurne,
- And knocke vs o’ the elbowes, and bid, turne;
- As if, when wee had spoke, wee must be gone,
- Or, till wee speake, must all runne in, to one,
- Like the young adders, at the old ones mouth?
- Would wee could stand due North; or had no South,
- If that offend: or were Muscouy glasse,
- That you might looke our Scenes through as they passe.
- We know not how to affect you. If you’ll come
- To see new Playes, pray you affoord vs roome.
-
-[1696] Wallace, ii. 142.
-
-[1697] Dekker, _G. H. B._ (1609), ‘You may ... haue a good stoole
-for sixpence ... creepe from behind the Arras, with your Tripos or
-three-footed stoole in one hand, and a teston mounted betweene a
-forefinger and a thumbe in the other’; cf. pp. 535, n. 3, 536, n. 2.
-
-[1698] Cf. ch. xx.
-
-[1699] Godfrey (_Architectural Review_, xxiii. 239) has no authority
-for his internal roofed staircases and landings in the narrow spaces
-between the galleries and the sides of the stage.
-
-[1700] Henslowe made a ‘penthowsse shed at the tyeringe howsse doore’
-of the Rose in 1591. Doubtless the stage could also be reached from in
-front; cf. the _K. B. P._ passage on p. 536.
-
-[1701] Gosson, _P. C._ (1582, App. C, No. xxx), tells how youths are
-wont ‘to go first into the yarde, and to carry theire eye through euery
-gallery’ in search of attractive company; cf. p. 532.
-
-[1702] Cf. p. 541, and ch. xi.
-
-[1703] Peacham, however, may be merely versifying the story of the
-choleric justice and the provincial audience which laughed when he
-‘first peept out his head’ in Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_ (_Works_, i.
-188), and reading in a feature, in the process, of the stage as known
-to himself; and the same applies to Davenant, _The Unfortunate Lovers_
-(_c. 1638_), prol., on the play-goers of old times:
-
- For they, he swears, to the theatre would come,
- Ere they had din’d, to take up the best room;
- There sit on benches, not adorn’d with mats,
- And graciously did vail their high-crown’d hats
- To every half-dress’d player, as he still
- Through the hangings peeped to see how the house did fill.
-
-For Caroline practice, cf. T. Goffe, _Careless
-Shepherdess_ ind.:
-
- I never saw Rheade peeping through the curtain,
- But ravishing joy entered into my heart;
-
-also Tatham’s prologue for the Fortune players, when they
-moved to the Red Bull in 1640:
-
- Forbear
- Your wonted custom, banding tile and pear
- Against our curtains, to allure us forth;
- I pray, take notice, these are of more worth;
- Pure Naples silk, not worsted.
-
-I defer a full consideration of stage hangings to the
-chapters on staging; cf. vol. iii, p. 78.
-
-[1704] For the classical sense of _Scaena_, cf. the passage from
-Vitruvius quoted in vol. iii, p. 3. Florio, _Dictionary_ (1598),
-s.v. _Scena_, ‘a skaffold, a pavillion, or forepart of a theatre
-where players make them readie, being trimmed with hangings, out of
-which they enter upon the stage’, points to the identity of scene and
-tire-house front. This structure has therefore precisely the double
-function of the ‘domus’ of the court plays; cf. ch. xix. I owe the
-quotation to Graves, 15, who adds, _The Englysshe Mancyne upon the
-foure Cardynale Vertues_ (_c._ 1520), ‘a disgyser yt goeth into a
-secret corner callyd a sene of the pleyinge place to chaunge his
-rayment’, and Palsgrave, _Acolastus_ (1540), prol., ‘our scenes, that
-is to saye, our places appoynted for our players to come forth of’.
-The English ‘Mancyne’ is a translation, earlier than A. Barclay’s, of
-Dominic Mancini’s _De Quatuor Virtutibus_ (1516), and the original
-has only ‘Histrio, qui in scaenam vadit’. The notion of scena as not
-a mere wall, but a shelter for performers, is mediaeval, and appears
-to go back to an early definition from σκῆνος, a hut or tent, found,
-e. g., side by side with the regular mediaeval misunderstanding of
-the classical art of acting in Hugutius, _Liber Derivationum_, ‘Scena
-est umbraculum siue locus obumbratus in theatro et cortinis coopertus
-similis tabernaculis mercenariorum, quae sunt asseribus vel cortinis
-opertae, et secundum hoc scena potest dici a scenos, quod est domus,
-quae in modum domus erat constructa. In umbraculo latebant personae
-larvatae, quae ad vocem recitatoris exigebantur ad gestus faciendos’;
-cf. Herrmann, 280, W. Cloetta, _Komödie und Tragödie im Mittelalter_
-(1890), 38; _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 208. It is revised on humanist lines
-by Jodocus Badius Ascensius in the _Praenotamenta_ to his Terence of
-1502, ‘Intra igitur theatrum ab una parte opposita spectatoribus erant
-scenae et proscenia, id est loca lusoria ante scenas facta. Scenae
-autem erant quaedam umbracula seu absconsoria, in quibus abscondebantur
-lusores, donec exire deberent. Ante autem scenas erant quaedam
-tabulata, in quibus personae qui exierant ludebant.’
-
-[1705] The _Roxana_ engraving shows a projecting building at the back
-of the stage, but this can hardly be regarded as throwing light upon
-sixteenth-century structure.
-
-[1706] _C. Revels_ (1601), ind. 160. The author is not ‘in the
-Tiring-house, to prompt us aloud, stampe at the Booke-holder, sweare
-for our Properties, cursse the poore Tire-man, rayle the Musique out
-of tune’; _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614), ind. 8, ‘I am looking, lest the
-_Poet_ heare me, or his man, Master Broome, behind the Arras....
-Hee has (sirreuerence) kick’d me three, or foure times about the
-Tyring-house, I thanke him, for but offering to putt in, with my
-experience’; v. iii. 57, ‘I would be glad drinke with the young
-company; which is the Tiring-house?’
-
-[1707] _Every Woman in her Humour_, p. 354, ‘He would ... stamp and
-stare (God blesse us,) like a play-house book-keeper when the actors
-misse their entrance’; _R. J._ I. iv. 7,
-
- Nor no without-book prologue, faintly spoke
- After the prompter, for our entrance.
-
-The actor’s signal for entrance was already his ‘cue’;
-cf. _M. N. D._ III. i. 77, ‘And so every one according to his cue’;
-_Isle of Gulls_, ii. 2, ‘you know your que’; ii. 3, ‘She hath entred
-the Dutches iust at her que’.
-
-[1708] _2 Ant. Mellida_, II. i. 30, ‘The tiring man hath not glued on
-my beard half fast enough’. A tireman appears in the inductions to
-_Malcontent_, ‘Enter W. Sly, a Tire-man following him with a stool’,
-and to _What You Will_, ‘Enter Tire-man with lights’. ‘Steven the
-tyerman’ of the Admiral’s in 1596 is probably the Steven Magett of
-other entries by Henslowe (i. 31, 44, 45).
-
-[1709] Speakers in the induction to _Bartholomew Fair_ (1614) are
-the Booke-Holder and the Stage-Keeper, who ‘kept the _Stage_ in
-Master _Tarletons_ time’, and whose work is ‘sweeping the _Stage_? or
-gathering vp the broken apples for the beares within?’
-
-[1710] The Fortune company, _c._ 1617 (_H. P._ 85), offer to employ a
-dismissed ‘gatherer’ as ‘a nessessary atendaunt on the stage’ and to
-mend garments. On 27 Dec. 1624 the Master of Revels (_Var._ iii. 112;
-Herbert, 74) issued a warrant of protection for Nicholas Underhill,
-Robert Pallant, John Rhodes, and eighteen others ‘all imployed by the
-kings maiesties servantes in theire quallity of playinge as musitions
-and other necessary attendantes’. In _Devil’s Charter_ (1607), 3016,
-is the s. d. ‘Alexander vnbraced betwixt two Cardinalls in his study
-looking vpon a booke, whilst a groome draweth the curtaine’. Is this
-‘groom’ a character or an ‘attendant’? In any case attendants were
-naturally, with musicians and even ‘gatherers’ (on whom cf. ch. xi),
-used at need for supernumeraries; cf. the gatherers in the _Frederick
-and Basilea_ plot (1597, _H. P._ 136) and _2 If You Know Not Me_
-(1606), p. 297, ‘Enter ... the waits in sergeants’ gowns’. The long
-list of men and boys in the procession at the end of _1 Tamar Cham_
-(1602, _H. P._ 148) must have taxed all such resources. For the use
-of boys as attendants, cf. _Bartholomew Fair_, V. iii. 65, ‘Ha’ you
-none of your pretty impudent boyes, now; to bring stooles, fill
-Tabacco, fetch Ale, and beg money, as they haue at other houses?’
-Seventeenth-century gossip (_Centurie of Prayse_, 417) made Shakespeare
-join the stage as a ‘serviture’.
-
-[1711] Lawrence, i. 75, ii. 159; Wegener, 150; G. H. Cowling, _Music
-on the Shakespearian Stage_, 29, 70, 80. I refer to Cowling and to E.
-W. Naylor, _Shakespeare and Music_, for discussions of the instruments
-used--drums, timbrels, bells (percussion instruments), sackbuts,
-trumpets, horns (brass instruments), cornets, hautboys, recorders,
-fifes (wood instruments), viols, lutes, citterns, pandores (string
-instruments)--of such terms as ‘flourish’, ‘sennet’, ‘tucket’, ‘peal’,
-‘alarum’, ‘consort’, and of other technical matters with which I am not
-qualified to deal. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (_H. P._ 115, 116,
-118) include ‘iij trumpettes and a drum, and a trebel viall, a basse
-viall, a bandore, a sytteren ... j chyme of bells ... iij tymbrells ...
-j sack-bute’.
-
-[1712] _Malcontent_, ind. 89. The additions for the King’s are ‘to
-entertain a little more time, and to abridge the not-received custom of
-music in our theatre’. But ‘abridge’ only means shorten, and there are
-s. ds. for music between the acts of _Sejanus_ (Globe, _1603_) and in
-the plot of _Dead Man’s Fortune_ (Admiral’s, _c._ 1590, _H. P._ 133);
-cf. Dekker, _Belman of London_ (1608, _Works_, iii. 76), ‘These were
-appointed to be my Actes, in this goodly Theater, the musicke betweene,
-were the Singers of the Wood’. But such evidence is rare, and Lawrence,
-i. 75, and Cowling, 67, do not discriminate sufficiently the practice
-of the public theatres from that of the private theatres on the one
-hand and the early neo-classic court plays on the other. Here music is
-an integral part of the _intermedii_ or dumb-shows, which are little
-more than survivals in the full-blown public drama; cf. F. A. Foster in
-_E. S._ xliv. 8, and _Hamlet_, III. ii. 13, ‘inexplicable dumb-shows’.
-
-[1713] Cf. p. 551.
-
-[1714] _Alphonsus_, prol., ‘after you haue sounded thrise, let Venus be
-let downe from the top of the Stage’; Heywood, _Four Prentices_, prol.,
-‘Do you not know that I am the prologue? Do you not see the long black
-velvet coat upon my back? Have I not all the signs of the prologue
-about me? Have you not sounded thrice?’; Dekker, _Satiromastix_,
-epist., ‘In steed of the trumpets sounding thrice, before the play
-begin, it shall not be amisse ... first to beholde this short Comedy of
-Errors’; _G. H. B._ (cf. App. H), ‘untill the quaking prologue hath (by
-rubbing) got cullor into his cheekes, and is ready to give the trumpets
-their cue that hee’s upon point to enter’; _E. M. O._ (Q_{1}), 107,
-‘Inductio, sono secundo’, 402, ‘Sound the third time. Enter Prologue’.
-Jonson has a similar arrangement (F_{1}) in the private house plays
-_Cynthia’s Revels_ and _Poetaster_, but probably the trumpets were
-here replaced by more elaborate music; cf. _1 Ant. Mellida_, ind. 1,
-‘the music will sound straight for entrance’; _What You Will_, ind. 1
-(s. d.), ‘Before the music sounds for the Act’; _C. Revels_ (Q_{1}),
-1435, ‘Like an unperfect Prologue, at third musique’. Surely this is
-the origin of the ‘first’, ‘second’, and ‘third’ (or ‘curtain tune’)
-music of the Restoration and eighteenth-century overtures, described
-by Lawrence, ii. 155. Exceptionally the prologue in Percy’s _C. and C.
-Errant_ is between the second and third sounding.
-
-[1715] _Chaste Maid in Cheapside_, V. iv. 1 (s. d.), ‘There is a sad
-song in the music-room’; cf. _Thracian Wonder_, IV. i. 182, ‘Pythia
-speaks in the musick Room behind the Curtain’, 186, ‘Pythia above,
-behind the curtains.’ But these, although early plays, are in late
-prints, and the other examples of a music-room ‘above’ given by
-Lawrence, i. 91, are Caroline. Jasper Mayne says of Jonson (1638,
-_Jonsonus Virbius_), ‘Thou laid’st no sieges to the music-room’. My own
-impression is that when the lord’s room over the tire-house was disused
-by spectators (cf. p. 537) it became indifferently available for actors
-and for music, and that here, rather than, as is possible, higher still
-in the scenic wall, was the normal place for the seventeenth-century
-music, when it was not needed elsewhere, or the space needed for
-other purposes. The introduction of the high proscenium arch at the
-Restoration caused difficulties, and various experiments were tried in
-placing the music above (Lawrence, i. 91, 161; ii. 160; W. G. Keith,
-_The Designs for the First Movable Scenery on the English Public Stage_
-in _Burlington Magazine_, xxv. 29, 85), before the modern situation was
-adopted.
-
-[1716] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[1717] _R. J._, prol. 12, ‘the two hours’ traffic of our stage’;
-_Alchemist_, prol. 1, ‘these two short hours’; _Hen. VIII_, prol. 13,
-‘two short hours’; _T. N. K._, prol. 28, ‘Sceanes ... worth two houres
-travell’; Heywood, _Apology_, 11 (Beeston’s c. v.), ‘two houres well
-spent’; _Barth. Fair_, ind., ‘the space of two hours and a half and
-somewhat more’. Perhaps plays tended to grow shorter. Fenton (1574) and
-Northbrooke (1577–8) give ‘two or three houres’, and Whetstone (1578)
-three hours (cf. App. C), but Dekker (cf. p. 533, n. 3) seems to regard
-three hours as an exceptionally long period.
-
-[1718] Cotgrave, _French-English Dict._ (1611), s.v. Falot, ‘a cresset
-light (such as they use in play-houses) made of ropes wreathed, pitched
-and put into small and open cages of iron’; cf. Lawrence, ii. 13, who
-thinks the cressets were part of the lighting of private houses. But
-would they not smoke and smell badly, if used indoors? There is no
-particular reason for translating the _lucernae_ of Christ Church hall
-in 1566, with Schelling and Lawrence, as ‘cressets’.
-
-[1719] Nashe (iii. 329), epist. to _Astrophel and Stella_ (1591),
-‘here you shal find a paper stage streud with pearle, an artificial
-heau’n to ouershadow the faire frame’; _Wagnerbook_ (1594, cf. ch.
-xx), ‘Now aboue 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 liuely portrayed the whole Imperiall
-Army of the faire heauenly inhabitauntes’; _Birth of Hercules_ (1597
-<), i. 1, s. d., ‘Ad comoediae magnificentiam apprime conferet ut
-coelum Histrionium sit luna et stellis perspicue distinctum’; Heywood,
-_Apology_ (_c. 1608_), 34, of the Roman theatre, ‘the covering of the
-stage, which we call the heavens’; Cotgrave, _Dict._ (1611), s.v.
-_Volerie_, ‘a place over a stage, which we call the heavens’. The same
-word was used for the state over a throne; cf. Cotgrave, s.v. _Dais_,
-‘a cloth of estate, canopie, or Heaven, that stands over the heads of
-Princes thrones’. Graves, 24, gives examples of heavens used in Tudor
-pageants. It is to be noted that the ‘heavens’ and ‘hell’ (cf. p. 528)
-of a theatre continue characteristic features of mediaeval staging (cf.
-_Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 86, 137, 142); cf. _All Fools_, prol. 1:
-
- The fortune of a stage (like Fortunes selfe)
- Amazeth greatest judgments; and none knowes
- The hidden causes of those strange effects
- That rise from this Hell, or fall from this Heaven.
-
-The theory of J. Corbin in _Century_ (1911), 267, that
-the heavens was a mere _velarium_ or cloud of canvas thrown out from
-the hut, will not fit the evidence; cf. Lawrence, ii. 6.
-
-[1720] Cf. vol. iii, p. 78. Is this, or the hut, the ‘garret’ of R.
-M.’s _A Player_ (cf. p. 546)?
-
-[1721] I do not now regard as tenable my suggestion in _The Stage
-of the Globe_ (_Stratford Town Shakespeare_, x. 351) that De Witt
-represented as outstanding columns what were really mere pilasters in
-the tire-house wall.
-
-[1722] Kempe, _Nine Days Wonder_, 6, ‘I remembred one of them to be
-a noted Cut-purse, such a one as we tye to a poast on our stage, for
-all people to wonder at, when at a play they are taken pilfring’; cf.
-_Nobody and Somebody_, 1893,
-
- _Somebody_
- Once pickt a pocket in this Play-house yard,
- Was hoysted on the stage, and shamd about it;
-
-also ch. xx, p. 75; ch. xxi, pp. 108, 141.
-
-[1723] For criticism of the drawing of the heavens and hut, cf. Graves,
-22, and Brereton in _Homage_, 204.
-
-[1724] Henslowe paid in 1595 for ‘mackinge the throne in the heuenes’
-at the Rose; cf. R. M., _Micrologia_ (1629), in Morley, _Character
-Writings_, 285, _A Player_, ‘If his action prefigure passion, he raves,
-rages, and protests much by his painted heavens, and seems in the
-height of this fit ready to pull Jove out of the garret where perchance
-he lies leaning on his elbows, or is employed to make squibs and
-crackers to grace the play’. Wegener, 133, gives examples of the use of
-machines; for the throne, cf. vol. iii, p. 77.
-
-[1725] Field (1583, App. C, No. xxxi), ‘Those flagges of defiance
-against God’; Vennar’s apology (1614) for _England’s Joy_ (1602, cf.
-ch. xxiii). ‘The report of gentlemen and gentlewomens actions, being
-indeed the flagge to our theatre, was not meerely falcification’; _A
-Mad World, my Masters_ (1604–6), I. i. 38, III. iii. 143, ‘’Tis Lent in
-your cheeks; the flag’s down’.... ‘The hair about the hat is as good as
-a flag upo’ th’ pole, at a common play-house, to waft company’; Dekker,
-_Raven’s Almanac_ (1609, _Works_, iv. 210), ‘Another ciuill warre doe
-I finde will fal betweene players.... For it is thought that Flag will
-be aduanced (as it were in mortall defiance against Flag)’; _Work for
-Armourers_ (1609, _Works_, iv. 96), ‘Play-houses stand ... the dores
-locked vp, the flagges ... taken down’; _Curtain-Drawer of the World_
-(1612), ‘Each play-house advanceth his flag in the aire, whither
-quickly at the waving thereof are summoned whole troops of men, women,
-and children’. The maps regularly show flags on the theatres. The Globe
-fire in 1613 ‘did not spare the silken flagg’ (cf. p. 421). Heywood,
-_Apology_, 22, mistranslates Ovid’s ‘Tunc neque marmoreo pendebant vela
-theatro’ as:
-
- In those days from the marble house did waive
- No sail, no silken flag, no ensign brave.
-
-[1726] Cf. p. 542; _Cynthia’s Revels_, ind., where the boys struggle
-for the cloak; _Woman Hater_, prol. 1, ‘Gentlemen, Inductions are out
-of date, and a Prologue in Verse, is as stale as a black Velvet Cloak,
-and a Bay Garland’; _Birth of Hercules_ (1597 <), prol. 5, ‘Thepilogue
-is in fashion; prologues no more’; and much later. _Coronation_, prol.
-4,
-
- he
- That with a little Beard, a long black Cloak,
- With a starch’d face, and supple leg hath spoke
- Before the plays the twelvemonth.
-
-The prologue appears to be a composite figure, partly
-representing the poet, and deriving also in part from the presenter
-of dumb-shows, in part from the Chorus of neo-classic tragedy, and in
-part from the ‘exposytour in doctorys wede’, developed by miracle-plays
-and moralities out of the Augustine of the _Prophetae_; cf. _Mediaeval
-Stage_, ii. 52, 72, 153, 417, 423, 426, 429, 448; F. A. Foster in
-_E. S._ xliv. 13; F. Lüders, _Prolog und Epilog bei Shakespeare_
-(_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, v. 274); Creizenach, 275. The short dramatic
-inductions, often introducing actors _in propria persona_, favoured
-by Jonson, Marston, and others about the beginning of the seventeenth
-century, attempt to give new life to a waning convention.
-
-[1727] Cf. _Mediaeval Stage_, ii. 141, 156. Drums and trumpets were
-used as advertisements in the city at any rate until 1587 (App. C, Nos.
-xvii, xxxi, xxxviii), and were traditional in the provinces up to the
-middle of the eighteenth century (Lawrence, ii. 58). Parolles tells
-us (_All’s Well_, IV. iii. 298) that Captain Dumain ‘has led the drum
-before the English tragedians’. Henslowe (i. 118) bought a drum and two
-trumpets for the Admiral’s ‘when to go into the contry’ in Feb. 1600.
-In _Histriomastix_, ii. 80, ‘One of them steppes on the Crosse, and
-cryes, A Play’.
-
-[1728] H. Moseley, pref. verses to F_{1} of Beaumont and Fletcher
-(1647):
-
- As after th’ Epilogue there comes some one
- To tell spectators what shall next be shown;
- So here am I.
-
-This is, of course, only Caroline evidence; for the
-continuance of the practice after the Restoration, cf. Lawrence, ii.
-187.
-
-[1729] _Grindal to Cecil_ (1564, App. D, No. xv), ‘these Histriones,
-common playours who now daylye, butt speciallye on holydayes, sett vp
-bylles’; _Merry Tales, &c._ (1567; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Vennar), ‘billes
-... vpon postes about London’; Northbrooke (1577, App. C, No. xvi),
-‘they use to set vp their billes vpon postes certain dayes before’;
-Gosson, _S. A._ (1579, App. C, No. xxii), 44, ‘If players can ...
-proclame it in their billes, and make it good in theaters’; Rankins
-(1587, App. C, No. xxxviii), ‘sticking of their bills in London’;
-Marston, _Scourge of Villainy_ (Bullen, iii. 302), ‘Go read each post,
-view what is play’d to-day’; _Histriomastix_, v. 69, ‘Text-bills must
-now be turned to iron bills’; _Warning for Fair Women_, (> 1599):
-
- ’Tis you have kept the Theatres so long,
- Painted in play-bills upon every post.
- That I am scorned of the multitude.
-
-Wither, _Abuses Stript and Whipt_ (1613), ii. 2:
-
- But, by the way, a Bill he doth espy,
- Which showes theres acted some new Comedy.
-
-In _Bartholomew Fair_, v. iii. 6, Cokes ‘reads the Bill’
-of the motion; cf. Lawrence (ii. 55), _The Origin of the Theatre
-Programme_.
-
-[1730] _Devil an Ass_, I. iv. 43, ‘Hee giues him the Play-bill’.
-
-[1731] Arber, ii. 477; iii. 575.
-
-[1732] _Henslowe Papers_, 106.
-
-[1733] Lawrence, ii. 240.
-
-[1734] Jonson, in printing plays, and following him the editors of
-the Beaumont and Fletcher F_{1} often give the scene and the actors’
-names, and casts appear in _Duchess of Malfi_ (1623). But these are not
-necessarily taken from any documents put before the audiences.
-
-[1735] Lawrence, ii. 154; cf. the stipulation in Burbadge’s lease (p.
-387), and W. Fennor, _Compter’s Commonwealth_ (1617), 8, ‘he that first
-comes in is first seated, like those that come to see playes’.
-
-[1736] Cf. p. 540 (Tatham), and the notices of Hentzner and Platter
-(ch. xvi, introd.). In _K. B. P._ the wife comes with her pockets full
-of sweetmeats, which she bestows upon the actors, liquorice (i. 77),
-green ginger (ii. 279), sugar-candy (ii. 366), and her husband brings
-beer (iii. 631). The liquorice would open Ralph’s pipes; cf. ch. xii
-(Westminster) and _C. Revels_, ind. 215, ‘I would thou hadst some sugar
-candyed, to sweeten thy mouth’; Overbury, _Characters_ (ed. Rimbault,
-113, _A Puny-Clarke_), ‘Hee eats ginger-bread at a play-house’.
-
-[1737] Cf. pp. 534, 536 and Hentzner (ch. xvi, introd.); _C. Revels_,
-ind. 122, ‘I haue my three sorts of Tabacco, in my Pocket, my light by
-me’; _K. B. P._ i. 224, ‘Fie, this stinking Tobacco kils men, would
-there were none in _England_, now I pray Gentlemen, what good does this
-stinking Tobacco? do you nothing, I warrant you make chimnies a your
-faces’; Dekker, _G. H. B._, ‘By sitting on the stage, you may ... get
-your match lighted’; _Scornful Lady_, I. ii. 52, ‘They wear swords to
-reach fire at a play’; _Sir Giles Goosecap_, IV. ii. 87 (street-scene),
-‘By this fire, they do, my lord’. Burn, 84, cites a note by Sir J.
-Caesar in _Lansd. MS._ 160, p. 302, of a speech by James in a Star
-Chamber case of 1613, in which he advised gentlemen of the Temple not
-to frequent plays, whence the smoke of tobacco and the presence of
-painted ladies should deter them.
-
-[1738] W. Fennor, _Descriptions_ (1616), ‘I suppose this Pamphlet will
-hap into your hands before a Play begin, with the importunate clamour
-of “Buy a new Booke!” by some needy companion that will be glad to
-furnish you with worke for a turned teaster’. Dekker, _G. H. B._ (cf.
-App. H), recommends cards.
-
-[1739] _V. P._ xiv. 593, 599, records a charge against the ambassador
-Foscarini (1611–15) of pursuing a woman, and ‘sometimes attending the
-public comedies and standing among the people on the chance of seeing
-her’. Foscarini said he only went three or four times to the play and
-that the archduke’s ambassador and his wife did the same. It was given
-in evidence that the ambassador Giustiniani (Dec. 1605–Oct. 1608) went
-with the French ambassador and his wife to see _Pericles_ at a cost
-of 20 crowns. This must have been at the Globe. For the presence of
-harlots, cf. pp. 534, 535; vol. i, p. 255.
-
-[1740] Dekker, _G. H. B._ (1609, _Works_, ii. 201), ‘you can neither
-shake our _Comick Theater_ with your stinking breath of hisses, nor
-raise it with the thunder-claps of your hands’ (cf. also App. H); _Isle
-of Gulls_, ind., ’Tis growne into a custome at playes if anyone rise
-(especially of any fashionable sort) about what serious busines soeuer,
-the rest thinking it in dislike of the play, tho he neuer thinks it,
-cry “Mew! by Jesus, vilde!” and leaue the poore hartlesse children to
-speake their Epilogue to the emptie seates’. Later a Gent. says, ‘See
-it be baudy, or by the light I and all my friends will hisse’, and the
-Prologue replies, ‘You shoulde not deale gentlemanlike with us els’; E.
-Guilpin, _Skialetheia_ (1598), prol. to Sat., ‘It is the grand hisse to
-a filthy play’; _Roaring Girl_, prol., ‘If that he finds not here, he
-mews at it’; _T. and C._, epil.:
-
- my fear is this,
- Some galled goose of Winchester would hiss;
-
-_Downfall of Robin Hood_, _ad fin._:
-
- if I fail in this,
- Then let my pains be baffled with a hiss;
-
-_Devil an Ass_, III. v. 41:
-
- If I could but see a piece...
- Come but to one act, and I did not care--
- But to be seene to rise, and goe away,
- To vex the Players, and to punish their _Poet_--
- Keepe him in awe!
-
-[1741] _Isle of Gulls_, ind., ‘a prepared company of gallants to
-aplaud his iests and grace out his play’; _Histriomastix_, ii. 137,
-‘_Belch._’ ‘What’s an Ingle? _Posthaste._ One whose hands are hard as
-battle doors with clapping at baldness’. For the special use of ‘ingle’
-(= ‘intimate’) in the sense of a patron of players, cf. _Poetaster_,
-I. ii. 18, ‘What! shall I have my sonne a stager now? an enghle for
-players? a gull? a rooke? a shot-clogge? to make suppers, and bee
-laught at?’
-
-[1742] Cf. p. 547, n. 1.
-
-[1743] _K. to K. a Knave_ (1594), _ad fin._; _Looking-Glass_, 2282;
-_Locrine_, 2276; _2 Hen. IV_, epil. 35, ‘And so kneele down before
-you; but indeed, to pray for the Queene’; _Two Wise Men and All the
-Rest Fools_ (1619), epil., ‘It resteth that we render you very humble
-and hearty thanks, and that all our hearts pray for the king and his
-family’s enduring happiness, and our country’s perpetual welfare. _Si
-placet, plaudite_’; cf. ch. xxii.
-
-[1744] Cf. ch. x.
-
-[1745] _M. N. D._ v. i. 360, ‘Will it please you to see the epilogue,
-or to hear a Bergomask dance between two of our company?’; _Much Ado_,
-v. i. 130, ‘Strike vp, pipers. _Dance_’; _A. Y. L._ V. iv. 182.
-
-[1746] Cf. ch. xiii (Leicester’s).
-
-[1747] Murray, ii. 206, 293, 304, 367, ‘upon the Q. players at the
-dancing on the rop’ (1590, Bridgnorth), ‘vnto the Torkey Tumblers’
-(1589–90, Ipswich), ‘to certen playars, playinge uppon ropes at the
-Crosse Keyes’ (1590, Leicester), ‘to the Quenes men when the Turke
-wente vpon roppes at Newhall’ (22 April 1590, Norwich); _Coventry Corp.
-MS._ A 7 (b), ‘the Queens players & the turk’ (1589–90, Coventry);
-cf. Nashe, _Epistle to Strange Newes_ (1592, _Works_, i. 262), ‘Say I
-am as verie a Turke as hee that three yeeres ago ranne vpon ropes’. A
-Gloucester payment of 1594–5 for ‘a wagon in the pageant for the Turke’
-(Murray, ii. 285) may or may not refer to the acrobat of 1590.
-
-[1748] Cf. ch. xiv.
-
-[1749] Both Hentzner (1598) and Platter (1599) describe it; cf. ch.
-xvi, introd. Platter saw it at both the Globe and the Curtain, where
-it was ‘Englisch unndt Irlendisch’. Von Wedel also describes something
-very much like a well-developed jig after a baiting on the Bankside in
-1584 (cf. ch. xvi, Hope).
-
-[1750] Gosson, _P. C._ (1582; cf. App. C, No. xxx), ‘daunsing of
-gigges’; _Much Ado_, II. i. 78, ‘Wooing ... is hot and hasty, like a
-Scotch jig, and full as fantastical’; _Hamlet_, III. ii. 132, ‘O God,
-your only jig-maker’; _E. M. O._ (Q_{1}), 1147, ‘a thing studied, and
-rehearst as ordinarily at his comming from hawking, or hunting, as
-a Iigge after a play’; _Jack Drum_, i. 404, ‘as the Iigge is cal’d
-for when the play is done’; R. Knolles, _Six Bookes of a Commonweal_
-(1606), 645, ‘Now adayes they put at the end of euerie Tragedie (as
-poyson into meat) a comedie or jigge’ (translating Bodin’s ‘obscoena
-quadam fabula turpissimis ac sordidissimis narrationibus condita’);
-Cotgrave (1611), ‘Farce ... also, the Iyg at the end of an Enterlude,
-wherein some pretie knauerie is acted’; Dekker, _A Strange Horse Race_
-(1613, _Works_, iii. 340), ‘As I haue often seene, after the finishing
-of some worthy Tragedy, or Catastrophe in the open Theaters, that the
-sceane after the Epilogue hath been more blacke (about a nasty bawdy
-jigge) then the most horrid sceane in the play was: The stinkards
-speaking all things, yet no man understanding any thing’; cf. the late
-Shirley allusion on p. 528. The term is sometimes more loosely used.
-In _James IV_, 82, 88, 620, 636, 661, 666, 673, 1116, the speakers of
-the Induction call the main action a jig; cf. _1 Tamburlaine_, prol. 1,
-‘iygging vaines of riming mother wits’. Swaen (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlvi.
-122) points out that a tune known as _The Cobler’s Jig_ would fit the
-dialogue song by cobblers in _Locrine_, 569. Naylor, 124, gives some
-account of jig tunes and derives the term from _giga_, an instrument of
-the fiddle type.
-
-[1751] Cf. the quotation from _K. B. P._ on p. 557, and ch. v.
-
-[1752] Tarlton and Kempe (cf. ch. xv) are spoken of as acting in
-‘merriments’. I doubt whether anything more technical is meant than
-a farcical episode in a play, perhaps helped out with such ‘gags’ as
-_Hamlet_, III. ii. 42, deprecates.
-
-[1753] Arber, ii. 297, 298, 571, 600, 601, 669, 670, 671; iii. 49, 50,
-‘a newe Northerne Jigge’ (5 Jan. 1591), ‘the seconde parte of the gigge
-betwene Rowland and the Sexton’ (16 Dec. 1591), ‘the thirde and last
-parte of Kempes Jigge’ (28 Dec. 1591), ‘a merrie newe Jigge betwene
-Jenkin the Collier and Nansie’ (14 Jan. 1592), ‘a plesant newe Jigge
-of the broome-man’, ascribed in the margin to Kempe (16 Jan. 1595), ‘a
-pleasant Jigge betwene a tincker and a Clowne’ (4 Feb. 1595), ‘a ballad
-of Cuttinge George and his hostis beinge a Jigge’ (17 Feb. 1595),
-‘Master Kempes Newe Jigge of the kitchen stuffe woman’ (2 May 1595),
-‘Phillips his gigg of the slyppers’ (26 May 1595), ‘a pretie newe Jigge
-betwene Ffrancis the gentleman Richard the farmer and theire wyves’
-(14 Oct. 1595), and ‘Kemps newe Jygge betwixt a Souldiour and a Miser
-and Sym the clown’ (21 Oct. 1595); cf. ch. xv (Tarlton). Creizenach,
-312, cites a list of jig titles by Hoenig in _Anzeiger für deutsches
-Altertum_, xxii. 304.
-
-[1754] _Have With You to Saffron Walden_ (_Works_, iii. 114).
-
-[1755] Henslowe, i. 70, 82.
-
-[1756] E. Guilpin, _Skialetheia_, Sat. v.
-
-[1757] App. D, No. cl; cf. the quotation from Dekker, _supra_;
-_Hamlet_, II. ii. 522, of Polonius, ‘He ’s for a jig or a tale of
-bawdry, or he sleeps’; Wither, _Abuses Stript and Whipt_ (1613), ii.
-3, ‘a Curtaine Iigge, a Libell, or a Ballet’. Possibly the Middlesex
-order has a bearing on the curious variant in the Epistle to Jonson’s
-_Alchemist_ (1612), where some copies lament ‘the concupiscence of
-jigges and daunces’, others of ‘daunces and antikes’.
-
-[1758] _The Black Man_ is in Kirkman’s _The Wits_ (1672), and _Singing
-Simpkin_ is ascribed in undated texts to the Caroline Robert Cox,
-but a tune of this name was known in Basle in 1592, and a German jig
-of 1620 seems to be a translation; cf. Herz, 132; F. Bolte, _Die
-Singspiele der englischen Komödianten und ihrer Nachfolger_ (1893,
-_Theatergeschichtliche Forschungen_, vii); W. J. Lawrence (_T. L. S._ 3
-July 1919).
-
-[1759] A. Clark, _Shirburn Ballads_, 244 (cf. S. R. list, _supra_, s.
-a. 1595), ‘M^r Attowel’s Jigge: betweene Francis, a Gentleman; Richard,
-a farmer; and their wives’. It is in four scenes, sung respectively to
-the tunes of ‘Walsingham’, ‘The Jewishe Dance’, ‘Buggle-boe’, and ‘Goe
-from my windo’. In _Roxburghe Ballads_, i. 201; ii. 101, are ‘Clod’s
-Carroll, a proper new jigg’, and ‘A mery new Jigge’. Collier’s ‘Jigge
-of a Horse Loade of Fooles’ (_New Facts_, 18; cf. Halliwell, _Tarlton_,
-xx) is probably a fake.
-
-[1760] Clark, 354, from _Bodl. Rawlinson Poet. MS._ 185 (_c._ 1590), ‘A
-proper new ballett, intituled Rowland’s god-sonne’. It is to the tune
-of ‘Loth to departe’. Nashe, _Summer’s Last Will and Testament_, 76,
-mentions this jig. Two parts of a ‘Rowlandes godson moralised’ were
-entered in S. R. on 18 and 29 April 1592. Rowland is not a character,
-and numerous German allusions to and adaptations of a jig beginning ‘Oh
-neighbour Rowland’ (Herz, 134) have probably some other original. A
-‘Roland and the Sexton’ is in the S. R. list, _supra_. A verse dialogue
-in _Alleyn Papers_, 8, mentions ‘bonny Rowland’ and is probably a jig
-of his cycle; another (p. 29) does not read to me like a jig.
-
-[1761] Cf. ch. xv (Tarlton, Wilson) and Nashe, _Pierce Penilesse_
-(_Works_, i. 244), ‘the queint Comaedians of our time, That when their
-Play is doone, do fal to ryme’. Armin’s (q.v.) _Quips Upon Questions_
-(1600) are probably themes, or based upon the conception of themes. A
-theme is introduced in _Histriomastix_, ii. 293. The Lord sets it:
-
- Your poetts and your pottes
- Are knit in true-love knots,
-
-and a sixteen-line ‘song extempore’ by Posthaste follows.
-The verses on ‘theames’ in Gascoigne’s _Posies_ (ed. Cunliffe, 62) are
-not, I think, improvisations.
-
-[1762] Smith, _Commedia dell’ Arte_, 175; cf. M. J. Wolff, _Shakespeare
-und die Commedia dell’ arte_ (_Sh.-Jahrbuch_, xlvi. 1).
-
-[1763] _C. is A._ II. vii. 36, of the players in Utopia (England),
-‘_Sebastian._ And how are their plaies? as ours are? extemporall?
-_Valentine._ O no! all premeditated things’. The references of
-Whetstone, _Heptameron_ (1582), _Sp. Tragedy_, IV. i. 163, Middleton,
-_Spanish Gypsy_, IV. ii. 38, are specifically to French and Italian
-practice, and so too, presumably, _A. C._ v. ii. 216, ‘The quick
-comedians Extemporally will stage us’. The interpretation of Hamlet,
-II. ii. 420, ‘For the law of writ and the liberty, these are the only
-men’, is open, but Falstaff says in _1 Hen. IV_, II. iv. 309, ‘Shall we
-have a play extempore?’
-
-[1764] Hamlet, III. ii. 42; cf. _John a Kent and John a Cumber_, iii,
-_ad fin._, ‘One of us Johns must play beside the book’.
-
-[1765] In _K. B. P._, ind. 94, where Ralph ‘should have playd
-Jeronimo with a Shooemaker for a wager’; _Ratseis Ghost_ (1605,
-Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 326), ‘I durst venture all the mony in my
-purse on thy head to play Hamlet with him for a wager’; Dekker, _Jests
-to Make You Merrie_ (1607, _Works_, ii. 282), ‘A paire of players,
-growing into an emulous contention of one anothers worth, refusde to
-put themselves to a day of hearing (as any Players would haue done)
-but stood onely vpon their good parts’; cf. ch. xvi (Fortune), ch. xv
-(Alleyn).
-
-[1766] Cf. ch. xi, p. 371.
-
-[1767] _2 Ant. Mellida_, prol., ‘within this round ... this ring’; cf.
-p. 536. _Fawn_ (1604–6), prol., has ‘this fair-filled room’, but the
-play was transferred to Paul’s from Blackfriars.
-
-[1768] For the existence of tiring-houses in private theatres, cf.
-inductions to _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_ (Paul’s) and _C. Revels_
-(Blackfriars).
-
-[1769] Cf. ch. xvii.
-
-[1770] _Dutch Courtesan_ (_c. 1603_, Blackfriars), V. iii. 162, ‘my
-very fine Heliconian gallants, and you my worshipful friends in the
-middle region’.
-
-[1771] Cf. Wright (App. I). For the origin of the term, cf. the c. v.
-of L. Digges to Shakespeare’s _Poems_ (1640):
-
- Let but Beatrice
- And Benedicke be seene, loe in a trice
- The cockpit, galleries, boxes, are all full,
- To hear Malvoglio that crosse-garterd gull.
-
-[1772] Dekker, _G. H. B._ (cf. App. H), with its mingling of ‘public’
-and ‘private’ features, cannot be relied on. The _Roxana_ and _Wits_
-engravings show spectators ‘over the stage’, but cannot be treated as
-evidence for the private houses. The _Messallina_ engraving only shows
-a window closed by curtains.
-
-[1773] Cf. p. 556, _infra._
-
-[1774] _1 Ant. Mellida_ (Paul’s), prol., ‘select and most respected
-auditors’; _What You Will_ (Paul’s), ind., ‘the female presence, the
-genteletza, the women’; _Jack Drum’s Entertainment_ (Paul’s), ind.,
-‘this choise selected influence’. But it was still mixed enough; cf.
-Jonson’s c. v. to _Faithful Shepherdess_ (Revels, _c._ 1608–9):
-
- The wise and many-headed bench that sits
- Upon the life and death of plays and wits--
- Composed of gamester, captain, knight, knight’s man,
- Lady or pusill that wears mask or fan,
- Velvet or taffata cap, rank’d in the dark
- With the shop’s foreman, or some such brave spark,
- That may judge for his sixpence.
-
-[1775] Cf. chh. i, x, and _M. L. R._ ii. 12.
-
-[1776] Jonson, _supra_; _Mich. Term_ (_c._ 1606, Paul’s), ‘sixpenny
-fees all the year long’; Otho of Hesse-Cassel (1611, Whitefriars),
-‘hier kostet der eingang einen halben schilling nur, da an andern orten
-wohl eine halbe kron’; _Scornful Lady_ (1613–16,? Whitefriars), IV. i.
-238, ‘I ... can see a play For eighteen-pence again: I can, my lady’;
-_Wit Without Money_ (? 1614, Whitefriars), i. 1, ‘And who extoled
-you in the halfcrown boxes, where you might sit and muster all the
-beauties’. So later, Jonson, _Magnetic Lady_ (_1632_, Blackfriars),
-ind., ‘the faeces or grounds of your people, that sit in the oblique
-caves and wedges of your house, your sinful sixpenny mechanicks’. I am
-rather puzzled by Percy, _C. and C. Errant_, ‘Poules steeple stands in
-the place it did before; and twopence is the price for the going into
-a newe play there’. Even in 1589 (cf. p. 532) the price at Paul’s was
-4_d._ according to a Marprelate tract, and William Darrell in that year
-paid 6_d._ (Hall, _Society in Elizabethan Age_, 211).
-
-[1777] In _Isle of Gulls_ (1606, Blackfriars), ind., a Gent. can only
-see an act or two out, for ‘I lay in bed till past three a clock, slept
-out my dinner and my stomache will toule to supper afore fiue’. Otho of
-Hesse-Cassel (1611) says that the Whitefriars plays were at three, and
-from Michaelmas to Easter only. Percy, on the other hand (cf. ch. xii),
-says that the Paul’s boys were not allowed to begin before four, after
-prayers, and the gates of Paul’s shut at six. So, too, _Ram Alley_
-(King’s Revels), epil., ‘Thus two hours have brought to end’. Gerschow
-in 1602 (cf. ch. xii) says that the Chapel acted once a week; cf.
-_Eastward Hoe_ (1605, Blackfriars), epil., ‘May this attract you hither
-once a week’.
-
-[1778] Dekker, _Seven Deadly Sins_ (1606, Works, ii. 41), ‘All the
-Citty lookt like a priuate Play-house, when the windowes are clapt
-downe, as if some _Nocturnall_, or dismal _Tragedy_ were presently to
-be acted’.
-
-[1779] _What You Will_ (1601, Paul’s), ‘Enter Atticus, Doricus, and
-Philomuse, they sit a good while on the stage before the Candles are
-lighted.... Enter Tier-man with lights’; _Mich. Term_ (1607, Paul’s),
-‘Ours [terms] haue but sixpenny fees all the year long, yet we dispatch
-you in two hours without demur: your suits hang not long here after
-candles be lighted’; _Faithful Shepherdess_ (1608–9, Blackfriars),
-Beaumont’s c. v., ‘Some like, if the wax lights be new that day’. Otho
-of Hesse-Cassel (1611) says that the Whitefriars plays were ‘nur bei
-lichtern’. Later we have G. Wither, _Fair Virtue_ (1622), 1781:
-
- those lamps which at a play
- Are set up to light the day;
-
-Lenton, _The Young Gallants Whirligig_ (1629):
-
- spangled, rare perfumed attires,
- Which once so glister’d at the torchy Friars.
-
-Cf. Lawrence (ii. 1), _Light and Darkness in the Elizabethan Theatre_;
-also _E. S._ xlviii. 213.
-
-[1780] Cf. ch. xii; and for evidence of inter-act music, Lawrence, i.
-81; Cowling, 68. Papers on _Early Elizabethan Stage Music_ in _Musical
-Antiquary_ (Oct. 1909, Jan. 1913) show the origin of the musical
-tradition in the earlier boy companies; for its seventeenth-century
-development, cf. Wallace, ii. 114.
-
-[1781] _Faithful Shepherdess_ (1608–9, Blackfriars), Beaumont’s c. v.:
-
- Nor wants there those who, as the boy doth dance
- Between the acts, will censure the whole play.
-
-In _K. B. P._ (1607, Blackfriars) a boy dances after Acts i and iii,
-and the citizens comment, ‘I will haue him dance _Fading_; _Fading_
-is a fine Iigge’. After Act ii there are fiddlers. After Act iv Ralph
-intervenes with a May Day speech.
-
-[1782] _2 Ant. Mellida_, V. i. 50, ‘Andrugio’s ghost is placed betwixt
-the music-houses’; _Faery Pastoral_, s. ds., ‘Highest aloft and on
-the Top of the Musick Tree the Title The Faery Pastoral. Beneath him
-pind on Post of the Tree The Scene Eluida Forest Lowest of all ouer
-the Canopie ΝΑΠΑΙΤΒΟΔΑΙΟΝ or Faery Chappell’.... ‘Here they shutt both
-into the Canopie Fane or Trophey’; _Cuck Queenes and Cuckolds Errants_,
-prol. by Tarlton, ‘standing at entrance of the doore and right vnder
-the Beame I think Graves, 14, rightly explains ‘Trophey’ as ‘arch’,
-on the analogy of its use for a triumphal arch in Dekker, _Coronation
-Pageant_ (1603). The only other use of ‘canopy’ for a structural part
-of a theatre seems to be in _Sophonisba_, iv. 1, ‘Play softly within
-the canopy’.... ‘Syphax hasteneth within the canopy, as to Sophonisba’s
-bed’. This is a Blackfriars play, but it might conceivably have been
-written for Paul’s.
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been
- corrected silently.
-
-2. Where necessary, original spelling has been retained.
-
-3. Where hyphenation is in doubt, it has been retained as in the
- original.
-
-4. Hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have been
- retained as in the original.
-
-
-5. Some words seem to have been written as one word, e.g.
- thexecutor. These have been retained as in the original.
-
-6. Superscripts are represented using the caret character, e.g.
- D^r. or X^{xx}.
-
-7. Italics are shown as _xxx_.
-
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-<body>
-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 2 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
-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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Elizabethan Stage (Vol 2 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 17, 2022 [eBook #67423]</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 2 OF 4) ***</div>
-
-<p id="half-title" class="p6">THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE<br />
-
-<span class="smaller">VOL. II</span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center p6">Oxford University Press</p>
-</div>
-
-<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 />
-</p>
-
-<p class="center sm">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="p1 center sm">FROM THE ENGRAVING BY WENCESLAUS HOLLAR IN DUGDALE’S</p>
- <p class="p0 center sm"><i>St. Paul’s</i> 1658</p>
- </div>
-
-<h1 class="p6">THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE<br />
-
-BY E. K. CHAMBERS. VOL. II</h1>
-
-<p class="p6 p-left">OXFORD: AT THE CLARENDON PRESS<br />
-
-M.CMXXIII</p>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span></p>
-<p class="center sm p6">Printed in England</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="p4">CONTENTS<br />
-<span class="lg">VOLUME II</span></h2></div>
-
-<table summary="contents" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <td class="header" colspan="5">BOOK III. THE COMPANIES</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <th></th>
- <th></th>
- <th></th>
- <th></th>
- <th class="pag">PAGE</th>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">XII.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Introduction. The Boy Companies</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">A.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="2">Introduction</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_3">3</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">B.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="2">The Boy Companies&mdash;</td>
- <td class="pag"></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Paul’s</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_8">8</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of the Chapel and Queen’s Revels</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Windsor</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of the King’s Revels</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Bristol</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Westminster School</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Eton College</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_73">73</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Merchant Taylors School</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Leicester’s Boys</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Oxford’s Boys</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Mr. Stanley’s Boys</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_76">76</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn1">XIII.</td>
- <td class="cht1" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Adult Companies</span></td>
- <td class="pag1"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Court Interluders</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Leicester’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Rich’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Abergavenny’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Sussex’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Sir Robert Lane’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Lincoln’s (Lord Clinton’s) Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_96">96</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Warwick’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_97">97</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Oxford’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_99">99</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Essex’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Vaux’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Berkeley’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_103">103</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Queen Elizabeth’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_104">104</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Arundel’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Hertford’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_116">116</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xvi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Mr. Evelyn’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_117">117</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xvii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Derby’s (Lord Strange’s) Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_118">118</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xviii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Pembroke’s Men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_vi">[vi]</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lord Admiral’s (Lord Howard’s, Earl of Nottingham’s), Prince Henry’s,
-and Elector Palatine’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_134">134</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xx.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord Hunsdon’s) and King’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_192">192</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xxi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Worcester’s and Queen Anne’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_220">220</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xxii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Duke of Lennox’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xxiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Duke of York’s (Prince Charles’s) Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xxiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lady Elizabeth’s Men</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_246">246</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn1">XIV.</td>
- <td class="cht1" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">International Companies</span></td>
- <td class="pag1"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">Italian Players in England</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">English Players in Scotland</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_265">265</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">English Players on the Continent</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_270">270</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn1">XV.</td>
- <td class="cht1" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Actors</span></td>
- <td class="pag1"><a href="#Page_295">295</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="header" colspan="5">BOOK IV. THE PLAY-HOUSES</td>
- </tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td class="chn">XVI.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">Introduction. The Public Theatres</span></td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">A.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="2">Introduction</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_355">355</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">B.</td>
- <td class="cht" colspan="2">The Public Theatres&mdash;</td>
- <td class="pag"></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Red Lion Inn</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_379">379</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bull Inn</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_380">380</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bell Inn</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_381">381</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bel Savage Inn</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_382">382</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Cross Keys Inn</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_383">383</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Theatre</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_383">383</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Curtain</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_400">400</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Newington Butts</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_404">404</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Rose</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Swan</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_411">411</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Globe</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_414">414</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Fortune</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_435">435</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Boar’s Head</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_443">443</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Red Bull</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_445">445</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Hope</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_448">448</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">xvi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Porter’s Hall</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_472">472</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn1">XVII.</td>
- <td class="cht1" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Private Theatres</span></td>
- <td class="pag1"><a href="#Page_475">475</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Blackfriars</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_475">475</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td></td>
- <td></td>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Whitefriars</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#Page_515">515</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn1">XVIII.</td>
- <td class="cht1" colspan="3"><span class="smcap">The Structure and Conduct of Theatres</span></td>
- <td class="pag1"><a href="#Page_518">518</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_vii">[vii]</span></p>
-
-<h2>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="illos">
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Domus Capitularis S<sup>ti</sup> Pauli a Meridie Prospectus.
-By Wenceslaus Hollar. From Sir William Dugdale,
-<i>History of St. Paul’s Cathedral</i> (1658)</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#i_frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Diagrams of the Blackfriars Theatres</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#i_504b">p. 504</a></td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="cht">Interior of the Swan Theatre. From the drawing
-after Johannes de Witt in Arend van Buchell’s
-commonplace book</td>
- <td class="pag"><a href="#i_521">p. 521</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<h2 class="lg">NOTE ON SYMBOLS</h2>
-
-<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">
-<h2><span class="smaller">BOOK III</span><br />
-
-<span class="lg">THE COMPANIES</span></h2></div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>‘Has led the drum before the English tragedians.’</div>
- <div class="right"><i>All’s Well that Ends Well.</i></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span></p>
-<h3>XII<br />
-
-INTRODUCTION. THE BOY COMPANIES</h3></div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The first systematic
-investigation into the history of the companies was that of F.
-G. Fleay, which, after tentative sketches in his <i>Shakespeare
-Manual</i> (1876) and <i>Life and Work of Shakespeare</i>
-(1886), took shape in his <i>Chronicle History of the
-Stage</i> (1890). Little is added by the compilations of A.
-Albrecht, <i>Das Englische Kindertheater</i> (1883), H. Maas,
-<i>Die Kindertruppen</i> (1901) and <i>Äussere Geschichte
-der Englischen Theatertruppen</i> (1907), and J. A. Nairn,
-<i>Boy-Actors under the Tudors and Stewarts</i> (<i>Trans.
-of Royal Soc. of Lit.</i> xxxii). W. W. Greg, <i>Henslowe’s
-Diary</i> (1904–8), made a careful study of all the companies
-which had relations with Philip Henslowe, and modified or
-corrected many of Fleay’s results. An account of the chief
-London companies is in A. H. Thorndike, <i>Shakespeare’s
-Theater</i> (1916), and utilizes some new material collected
-in recent years. W. Creizenach, <i>Schauspiele der Englischen
-Komödianten</i> (1889), and E. Herz, <i>Englische Schauspieler
-und Englisches Schauspiel</i> (1903), have summarized the
-records of the travels of English actors in Germany. C. W.
-Wallace, besides his special work on the Chapel, has published
-the records of several theatrical lawsuits in <i>Advance Sheets
-from Shakespeare, the Globe, and Blackfriars</i> (1909), in
-<i>Nebraska University Studies</i>, ix (1909), 287; x (1910),
-261; xiii (1913), 1, and in <i>The Swan Theatre and the Earl
-of Pembroke’s Servants</i> (1911, <i>Englische Studien</i>,
-xliii. 340); the present writer has completed the information
-drawn from the <i>Chamber Accounts</i> in P. Cunningham’s
-<i>Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels at Court</i> (1842)
-by articles in <i>M. L. R.</i> ii (1906), 1; iv (1909), 153
-(cf. App. B); and a number of documents, new and old, including
-the texts of all the patents issued to companies, have been
-carefully edited in vol. i of the <i>Collections of the Malone
-Society</i> (1907–11). Finally, J. T. Murray, <i>English
-Dramatic Companies</i> (1910), has collected the published
-notices of performances in the provinces, added others from the
-municipal archives of Barnstaple, Bristol, Coventry, Dover,
-Exeter, Gloucester, Marlborough, Norwich, Plymouth, Shrewsbury,
-Southampton, Winchester, and York, and on the basis of these
-constructed valuable accounts of all the London and provincial
-companies between 1558 and 1642. Most of the present chapter
-was written before Murray’s book appeared, but it has been
-carefully revised with the aid of his new material. I have
-not thought it necessary to refer to my original provincial
-sources, where they are included in his convenient Appendix
-G, but in using his book it should be borne in mind that he
-has made a good many omissions in carrying data from this
-Appendix to the tables of provincial visits, which he gives
-for each company. For a few places I have had the advantage of
-sources not drawn upon by Murray, and these should be treated
-as the references for any facts as regards such places not
-discoverable in Murray’s Appendix.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span> They are:&mdash;for Belvoir
-and other houses of the Earls of Rutland, <i>Rutland MSS.</i>
-(<i>Hist. MSS.</i>), iv. 260; for the house of Richard Bertie
-and his wife the Duchess of Suffolk at Grimsthorpe, <i>Ancaster
-MSS.</i> (<i>Hist. MSS.</i>), 459; for Wollaton, the house of
-Francis Willoughby, <i>Middleton MSS.</i> (<i>Hist. MSS.</i>),
-446; for Maldon and Saffron Walden in Essex, A. Clark’s extracts
-in <i>10 Notes and Queries</i>, vii. 181, 342, 422; viii. 43;
-xii. 41; for Newcastle-on-Tyne, G. B. Richardson, <i>Reprints
-of Rare Tracts</i>, vol. iii, and <i>10 N. Q.</i> xii. 222;
-for Reading, <i>Hist. MSS.</i> xi. 177; for Oxford, F. S.
-Boas in <i>Fortnightly Review</i> (Aug. 1913; Aug. 1918; May
-1920); for Stratford, J. O. Halliwell, <i>Stratford-upon-Avon
-in the Time of the Shakespeares, illustrated by Extracts from
-the Council-Books</i> (1864); for Weymouth, H. J. Moule,
-<i>Weymouth and Melcombe Regis Documents</i> (1883), 136; for
-Dunwich, <i>Various Collections</i> (<i>Hist. MSS.</i>), vii.
-82; for Aldeburgh, Suffolk, C. C. Stopes, <i>William Hunnis</i>,
-314. References for a few other scattered items are in the
-foot-notes. The warning should be given that the dates assigned
-to some of the provincial performances are approximate, and
-may be in error within a year or so either way. For this there
-are more reasons than one. The zealous antiquaries who have
-made extracts from local records have not realized that precise
-dates might be of value, and have often named a year without
-indicating whether it represents the calendar year (Circumcision
-style) or the calendar year (Annunciation style) in which a
-performance fell, or the calendar year in which a regnal,
-mayoral, or accounting year, in which the performance fell,
-began or ended. When they are clearly dealing with accounting
-years, they do not always indicate whether these ended at
-Michaelmas or at some other date. They sometimes give only the
-year of a performance, when they might have given, precisely or
-approximately, the month and day of the month as well. But it is
-fair to add that the accounts of City Chamberlains and similar
-officers, from which the notices of plays are generally derived,
-are not always so kept as to render precise dating feasible.
-Some accountants specify the days, others the weeks to which
-their entries relate; others put their entries in chronological
-order and date some of them, so that it is possible to fix the
-dates of the rest within limits; others again render accounts
-analysed under heads, grouping all payments to players perhaps
-under a head of ‘Gifts and Rewards’, and in such cases you
-cannot be sure that the companies are even entered in the order
-of their visits, and if months and days are not specified,
-cannot learn more than the year to which a visit belongs.
-Where, for whatever reason, I can only assign a performance to
-its accounting year, I generally give it under the calendar
-year in which the account ends. This, in the case of a London
-company and of a Michaelmas year (much the commonest year for
-municipal accounts), is pretty safe, as the touring season was
-roughly July to September. Some accounting years (Coventry,
-Marlborough, Stratford-on-Avon) end later still, but if, as at
-Bath, the year ends about Midsummer, it is often quite a toss-up
-to which of two years an entry belongs. In the case of Leicester
-performances before 1603, I have combined the indications of
-Michaelmas years in M. Bateson, <i>Leicester Records</i>, vol.
-iii, with those of calendar years in W. Kelly, <i>Notices
-Illustrative of the Drama</i> (1865), 185, and distinguished
-between performances before and after Michaelmas. I hope Kelly
-has not misled me, and that he found evidence in the entries for
-his dating. After 1603 he is the only source. I do not think
-that the amount of error which has crept into the following
-chapter from the various causes described is likely to be at all
-considerable. I have been as careful as possible and most of
-Murray’s own extracting is excellently done. I should, however,
-add that the Ipswich dates, as given both here and by Murray,
-ii. 287.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span> from <i>Hist. MSS.</i> ix. i, 248, are unreliable,
-because some of the rolls from which they are taken contain
-membranes properly belonging to those for other years; cf. my
-notes on Leicester’s (pp. 89, 91), Queen’s (p. 106), Warwick’s
-(p. 99), Derby’s (p. 120), King’s (p. 209).]</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h4>A. INTRODUCTION</h4>
-
-<p>The present chapter contains detailed chronicles&mdash;too often, I
-fear, lapsing into arid annals of performances at Court or in the
-provinces&mdash;of all the companies traceable in London during any year
-between 1558 and 1616. The household and other establishments to which
-the companies were attached are taken as the basis of classification.
-This principle is open to criticism. Certainly it has not always the
-advantage of presenting economic units. It is improbable that there
-was any continuity as regards membership between the bodies of actors
-successively appearing, often after long intervals, under the names of
-Sussex or Hunsdon or Derby. On the other hand, particular associations
-of actors can sometimes be discerned as holding together under a change
-of patrons. Thus between 1571 and 1583 Laurence and John Dutton seem to
-have led a single company, which earned the nickname of the Chameleons,
-first in the service of Sir Robert Lane and then, turn by turn, in that
-of the Earls of Lincoln, Warwick, and Oxford. The real successors,
-again, of the Derby’s men of 1593 are less the Derby’s men of 1595–1618
-than the Hunsdon’s men of 1594–1603, who in course of time became the
-King’s men without any breach of their unity as a trading association.
-Nevertheless, an arrangement under patrons is a practicable one, since
-companies nearly always appear under the names of their patrons in
-official documents, while an arrangement under trading associations
-is not. Actors are a restless folk, and the history of the Admiral’s
-men, or the Queen’s Revels, or the Lady Elizabeth’s men, will show how
-constantly their business organizations were disturbed by the coming
-and going of individuals, and by the breaking and reconstruction of the
-agreements on which they were based. It is but rarely that we have any
-clue to these intricacies; and I have therefore followed the households
-as the best available guides, indicating breaches of continuity and
-affiliations, where these appear to exist, and adopting as far as
-possible an order which, without pretence of being scientific, will
-bring each household under consideration roughly at the point at
-which its servants become of the greatest significance to the general
-history of the stage. The method may perhaps be described as that of a
-λαμπαδηφορία.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span></p>
-
-<p>A study of the succession of the companies gives rise to a few general
-considerations. During the earlier years of Elizabeth’s reign the drama
-is under the domination of the boy companies. This may be in part due
-to the long-standing humanistic tradition of the Renaissance, although
-the lead is in fact taken not so much by schoolboys in the stricter
-sense, as by the trained musical establishments of the royal chapels
-and still more that of the St. Paul’s choir under Sebastian Westcott.
-More important points perhaps are, that the Gentlemen of the Chapel,
-who had been prominent under Henry VIII, had ceased to perform, that
-the royal Interluders had been allowed to decay, and that the other
-professional companies had not yet found a permanent economic basis in
-London, while their literary accomplishment was still upon a popular
-rather than a courtly level. Whatever the cause or causes, the fact is
-undeniable. Out of seventy-eight rewards for Court performances between
-1558 and 1576, twenty-one went to the Paul’s boys, fifteen to the royal
-chapels, and ten to schoolboys, making a total of forty-six, as against
-only thirty-two paid to adult companies. And if the first half of this
-period only be taken, the disproportion is still greater, for by 1567
-the Paul’s boys had received eleven rewards, other boys two, and the
-adult companies six. A complete reversal of this position coincides
-rather markedly with the building of the first permanent theatres in
-1576. Between 1576 and 1583 the adult companies had thirty-nine rewards
-and the boys only seventeen. There is also a rapid growth in the number
-of companies. Before 1576 the Earl of Leicester’s men and the Duttons
-were alone conspicuous. After 1576 the entertainment of a London
-company seems to become a regular practice with those great officers
-the Lord Chamberlain and the Lord Admiral, as well as with special
-favourites of the Queen, such as the Earl of Leicester himself or the
-Earl of Oxford. Stockwood in 1578 speaks of ‘eighte ordinarie places’
-in the City as occupied by the players. A Privy Council order of the
-same year limits the right to perform to six companies selected to take
-part in the Court festivities at Christmas, namely Leicester’s men,
-Warwick’s, Sussex’s, Essex’s, and the Children of the Chapel and St.
-Paul’s. Gabriel Harvey, writing to Edmund Spenser of the publication of
-his virelays in the following summer, says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Ye have preiudished my good name for ever in thrustinge me
-thus on the stage to make tryall of my extemporall faculty,
-and to play Wylsons or Tarletons parte. I suppose thou wilt
-go nighe hande shortelye to sende my lorde of Lycesters or my
-lorde of Warwickes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span> Vawsis, or my lord Ritches players, or sum
-other freshe starteupp comedanties unto me for sum newe devised
-interlude, or sum maltconceivid comedye fitt for the Theater, or
-sum other paintid stage whereat thou and thy lively copesmates
-in London maye lawghe ther mouthes and bellyes full for pence or
-twoepence apeece.’<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Doubtless many of this mushroom brood of ‘freshe starteupp comedanties’
-never succeeded in making good their permanent footing in the
-metropolis. Lord Vaux’s men, whom Harvey mentions, were never fortunate
-enough to be summoned to Court; and the same may be said of Lord
-Arundel’s men, Lord Berkeley’s, and Lord Abergavenny’s. Such men, after
-their cast for fortune, had to drift away into the provinces, and pad
-the hoof on the hard roads once more.</p>
-
-<p>The next septennial period, 1583–90, witnessed the extinction, for
-a decade or so, of the boy companies, in spite of the new impulse
-given to the latter by the activity as a playwright of John Lyly. Of
-forty-five Court payments made during these years, thirty apparently
-went to men and only fifteen to boys. This ultimate success of
-the professional organizations may largely have been due to their
-employment of such university wits as Marlowe, Peele, Greene, Lodge,
-and Nashe in the writing of plays, with which Lyly could be challenged
-on his own ground before the Court, while a sufficient supply of
-chronicle histories and other popular stuff could still be kept on
-the boards to tickle the ears of the groundlings. The undisputed
-pre-eminence lay during this period with the Queen’s men, who made
-within it no less than twenty-one appearances at Court. This company
-enjoyed the prestige of the royal livery, transferred to it from the
-now defunct Interluders, which had a ready effect in the unloosing of
-municipal pockets. And at its foundation in 1583 it incorporated, in
-addition to Tarlton, whose origin is unknown, the leading members of
-the pre-existing companies: Wilson and Laneham from Leicester’s, Adams
-from Sussex’s, and John Dutton from Oxford’s. The former fellows of
-these lucky ones were naturally hardly able to maintain their standing.
-In January 1587 Leicester’s, Oxford’s, and the Admiral’s were still
-setting up their bills side by side with those of the Queen’s.<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> But
-the first two are not heard of at Court again, and even the Admiral’s
-were hardly able to make a show except by coalition with other
-companies. Thus we find the Admiral’s combining with Hunsdon’s in
-1585, and with Strange’s perhaps from 1589 onwards, and it became the
-destiny of this last alliance,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span> under the leadership of Edward Alleyn,
-to dispossess the Queen’s men, after the death of Tarlton in 1588, from
-their pride of place. The fall of the Queen’s men was sudden. In 1590–1
-they gave four Court plays to two by their rivals; in 1591–2 they gave
-one, and their rivals six. In their turn they appear to have been
-reduced to forming a coalition with Lord Sussex’s men.</p>
-
-<p>The plague-years of 1592–4 brought disaster, chaos, and change
-into the theatrical world. Only the briefest London seasons were
-possible. The necessities of travelling led to further combinations
-and recombinations of groups, one of which may have given rise to
-the ephemeral existence of Lord Pembroke’s men. And, by the time the
-public health was restored, the Queen’s had reconciled themselves
-to a provincial existence, and continued until 1603 to make their
-harvest of the royal name, as their predecessors in title had done,
-without returning to London at all. The combination of which Alleyn
-had been the centre broke up, and its component elements reconstituted
-themselves as the two great companies of the Chamberlain’s and the
-Admiral’s men. Between these there was a vigorous rivalry, which
-sometimes showed itself in lawsuits, sometimes in the more legitimate
-form of competing plays on similar themes. Thus a popular sentiment
-offended by the Chamberlain’s men in <i>1 Henry IV</i> was at once
-appealed to by the Admiral’s with <i>Sir John Oldcastle</i>. And when
-the Admiral’s scored a success by their representation of forest life
-in <i>Robin Hood</i>, the Chamberlain’s were quickly ready to counter
-with <i>As You Like It</i>. I think the Chamberlain’s secured the
-better position of the two. They had their Burbadge to pit against the
-reputation of Alleyn; they had their honey-tongued Shakespeare; and
-they had a business organization which gave them a greater stability
-of membership than any company in the hands of Henslowe was likely to
-secure. If one may once more use the statistics of Court performances
-as a criterion, they are found to have appeared thirty-two times and
-their rivals only twenty times from 1594 to 1603. Between them the
-Chamberlain’s and the Admiral’s enjoyed for some years a practical
-monopoly of the London stage, which received an official recognition by
-the action of the Privy Council in 1597. But this state of things did
-not long continue. Ambitious companies, such as Pembroke’s, disregarded
-the directions of the Council. Derby’s men, Worcester’s, Hertford’s,
-one by one obtained at least a temporary footing at Court, and in 1602
-the influence of the Earl of Oxford was strong enough to bring about
-the admission to a permanent home in London<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span> of a third company made up
-of his own and Worcester’s servants. Even more dangerous, perhaps, to
-the monopoly was the revival of the boy companies, Paul’s in 1599 and
-the Chapel in 1600. The imps not only took by their novelty in the eyes
-of a younger generation of play-goers. They began a warfare of satire,
-in which they ‘berattled the common stages’ with a vigour and dexterity
-that betray the malice of the poets against the players which had been
-a motive in their rehabilitation.<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p>
-
-<p>No material change took place at the coming of James. The three adult
-companies, the Chamberlain’s, the Admiral’s, Worcester’s, passed
-respectively under the patronage of James, Prince Henry, and Queen
-Anne.<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a> On the death of Prince Henry in 1612 his place was taken
-by the Elector Palatine. The Children of the Chapel also received
-the patronage of Queen Anne, as Children of the Queen’s Revels. The
-competition for popular favour continued severe. Dekker refers to it in
-1608 and the preacher Crashaw in 1610.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> It is to be noticed, however,
-that Dekker speaks only of ‘a deadly war’ between ‘three houses’,
-presumably regarding the boy companies as negligible. And in fact
-these companies were on the wane. By 1609 the Queen’s Revels, though
-still in existence, had suffered from the wearing off of novelty,
-from the tendency of boys to grow older, from the plague-seasons of
-1603–4 and 1608–9, which they were less well equipped than the better
-financed adults to withstand, from the indiscretions and quarrels of
-their managers, and from the loss of the Blackfriars, of which the
-King’s men had secured possession.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> The Paul’s boys had been bought
-off by the payment of a ‘dead rent’ or blackmail to the Master. A
-third company, the King’s Revels, had been started, but had failed to
-establish itself.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> The three houses were not, indeed, left<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span> with
-an undisputed field. Advantage was taken of the predilection of the
-younger members of the royal family for the drama, and patents were
-obtained, in 1610 for a Duke of York’s company, and in 1611 for a Lady
-Elizabeth’s company. These also had but a frail life. In 1613 the
-Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels coalesced under the dangerous
-wardenship of Henslowe. In 1615 the Duke of York’s, now Prince
-Charles’s, men joined the combination. And finally in 1616 the Prince’s
-men were left alone to make up the tale of four London companies,
-and the Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels disappeared into the
-provinces. The list of men summoned before the Privy Council in March
-1615 to account for playing in Lent contains the names of the leaders
-of the four companies, the King’s, the Queen’s, the Palsgrave’s, and
-the Prince’s. The King’s played at the Globe and Blackfriars, the
-Queen’s at the Red Bull, whence they moved in 1617 to the Cockpit, the
-Palsgrave’s at the Fortune, and the Prince’s at the Hope. The supremacy
-of the King’s men during 1603–16 was undisputed. Of two hundred and
-ninety-nine plays rewarded at Court for that period, they gave one
-hundred and seventy-seven, the Prince’s men forty-seven, the Queen’s
-men twenty-eight, the Duke of York’s men twenty, the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men nine, the Queen’s Revels boys fifteen, and the Paul’s boys three.
-Their plays, moreover, were those usually selected for performance
-before James himself. It is possible, however, that the Red Bull and
-the Fortune were better able to hold their own against the Globe when
-it came to attracting a popular audience.</p>
-
-
-<h4>B. THE BOY COMPANIES</h4>
-
-<table summary="boys" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Paul’s.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of the Chapel and Queen’s Revels.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Windsor.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of the King’s Revels.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">Children of Bristol.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Westminster School.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Eton College.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Merchant Taylors School.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">Earl of Leicester’s Boys.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">Earl of Oxford’s Boys.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Mr. Stanley’s Boys.</td>
- </tr>
-
-</table>
-
-
-<h5>i. THE CHILDREN OF PAUL’S</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>High Masters of Grammar School</i>:&mdash;William Lily (1509–22); John
-Ritwise (1522–32); Richard Jones (1532–49); Thomas Freeman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span> (1549–59);
-John Cook (1559–73); William Malim (1573–81); John Harrison (1581–96);
-Richard Mulcaster (1596–1608).</p>
-
-<p><i>Masters of Choir School</i>:&mdash;? Thomas Hikeman (<i>c.</i> 1521);
-John Redford (<i>c.</i> 1540);? Thomas Mulliner (?); Sebastian Westcott
-(&gt; 1557–1582); Thomas Giles (1584–1590 &lt;); Edward Pearce (&gt; 1600–1606
-&lt;).</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The documents bearing upon the
-early history of the two cathedral schools, often confused, are
-printed and discussed by A. F. Leach in <i>St. Paul’s School
-before Colet</i> (<i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 191) and in
-<i>Journal of Education</i> (1909), 503. M. F. J. McDonnell,
-<i>A History of St. Paul’s School</i> (1909), carries on the
-narrative of the grammar school. The official chroniclers of
-the cathedral, perhaps owing to the loss of archives in the
-Great Fire, have given no connected account of the choir school;
-with the material available on the dramatic side they appear
-to be unfamiliar. Valuable contributions are W. H. G. Flood,
-<i>Master Sebastian</i>, in <i>Musical Antiquary</i>, iii. 149;
-iv. 187; and H. N. Hillebrand, <i>Sebastian Westcote, Dramatist
-and Master of the Children of Paul’s</i> (1915, <i>J. G. P.</i>
-xiv. 568). Little is added to the papers on <i>Plays Acted by
-the Children of Paul’s and Music in St. Paul’s Cathedral</i>
-in W. S. Simpson, <i>Gleanings from Old St. Paul’s</i> (1889),
-101, 155, by J. S. Bumpus, <i>The Organists and Composers of St.
-Paul’s Cathedral</i> (1891), and W. M. Sinclair, <i>Memorials of
-St. Paul’s Cathedral</i> (1909).]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mr. Leach has succeeded in tracing the grammar school, as part of
-the establishment of St. Paul’s Cathedral, to the beginning of the
-twelfth century. It was then located in the south-east corner of the
-churchyard, near the bell-tower, and here it remained to 1512, when it
-was rebuilt, endowed, and reorganized on humanist lines by Dean Colet,
-and thereafter to 1876, when it was transferred to Horsham in Sussex.
-Originally the master was one of the canons; but by the beginning
-of the thirteenth century this officer had taken on the name of
-chancellor, and the general supervision of the actual schoolmaster, a
-vicar choral, was only one of his functions. Distinct from the grammar
-school was the choir school, for which the responsible dignitary was
-not the chancellor, but the precentor, in whose hands the appointment
-of a master of the song school rested.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> There was, however, a third
-branch of the cathedral organization also concerned with the training
-of boys. The almonry or hospital, maintained by the chapter for the
-relief of the poor, seems to have been established at the end of the
-twelfth century,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span> and statutes of about the same date make it the duty
-of a canon residentiary to assist in the maintenance of its <i>pueri
-elemosinarii</i>, and prescribe the special services to be rendered
-them at their great annual ceremony of the Boy Bishop on Innocents’
-Day.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> In the thirteenth century the supervision of these boys was in
-the hands of another subordinate official, appointed by the chapter and
-known as the almoner. The number of the boys was then eight; it was
-afterwards increased, apparently in 1358, to ten.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> The almoner is
-required to provide for their literary and moral education, and their
-liturgical duties are defined as consisting of standing in pairs at the
-corners of the choir and carrying candles.<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> A later version of the
-statutes provides for their musical education, and it is clear that
-these <i>pueri elemosinarii</i> were in fact identical with or formed
-the nucleus of the boys of the song school.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> During the sixteenth
-century the posts of almoner and master of the song school, although
-technically distinct, were in practice held together, and the holder
-was ordinarily a member of the supplementary cathedral establishment
-known as the College of Minor Canons.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> To this college had been
-appropriated the parish church of St. Gregory, on the south side of St.
-Paul’s, just west of the Chapter or Convocation House, and here the
-song school was already<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span> housed by the twelfth century.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a> The college
-had also a common hall on the north of the cathedral, near the Pardon
-churchyard; and hard by was the almonry in Paternoster Row.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a> The
-statutes left the almoner the option of either giving the boys their
-literary education himself, or sending them elsewhere. It naturally
-proved convenient to send them to the grammar school, and the almoners
-claimed that they had a right to admission without fees.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> On the
-other side we find the grammar school boys directed by Colet to attend
-the Boy Bishop ceremony and make their offerings.<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> Evidently there
-was much give and take between song school and grammar school.</p>
-
-<p>As early as 1378 the scholars of Paul’s are said to have prepared a
-play of the History of the Old Testament for public representation
-at Christmas.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Whether they took a share in the other miracles
-recorded in mediaeval London, it is impossible to say. A century and
-a half later the boys of the grammar school, during the mastership
-of John Ritwise, are found contributing interludes, in the humanist
-fashion, to the entertainment of the Court. On 10 November 1527 they
-gave an anti-Lutheran play in Latin and French before the King and the
-ambassadors of Francis I, and in the following year the <i>Phormio</i>
-before Wolsey, who also saw them, if Anthony Wood can be trusted, in
-a <i>Dido</i> written by Ritwise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span> himself.<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> There is no evidence
-that Ritwise’s successors followed his example by bringing their
-pupils to Court; and the next performances by Paul’s boys, which can
-be definitely traced, began a quarter of a century later, and were
-under the control of Sebastian Westcott, master of the song school,
-and were therefore presumably given by boys of that school. Westcott
-in 1545 was a Yeoman of the Chamber at Court.<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> He was ‘scolemaister
-of Powles’ by New Year’s Day 1557, when he presented a manuscript
-book of ditties to Queen Mary.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a> Five years earlier, he had brought
-children to Hatfield, to give a play before the Princess Elizabeth; and
-the chances are that these were the Paul’s boys.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a> With him came one
-Heywood, who may fairly be identified with John Heywood the dramatist;
-and this enables us, more conjecturally, to reduce a little further the
-gap in the dramatic history of the Paul’s choir, for some years before,
-in March 1538, Heywood had already received a reward for playing an
-interlude with ‘his children’ before the Lady Mary.<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> There is
-nothing beyond this phrase to suggest that Heywood had a company of
-his own, and it is not probable that he was ever himself master of
-the choir school.<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">[24]</a> But he may very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span> well have supplied them with
-plays, both in Westcott’s time and also in that of his predecessor John
-Redford. Several of Heywood’s verses are preserved in a manuscript,
-which also contains Redford’s <i>Wyt and Science</i> and fragments of
-other interludes, not improbably intended for performance by the boys
-under his charge.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">[25]</a> A play ‘of childerne sett owte by Mr. Haywood’ at
-Court during the spring of 1553 may also belong to the Paul’s boys.<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">[26]</a>
-Certain performances ascribed to them at Hatfield, during the Princess
-Elizabeth’s residence there in her sister’s reign, have of late fallen
-under suspicion of being apocryphal.<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">[27]</a></p>
-
-<p>From the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign Westcott’s theatrical
-enterprise stands out clearly enough. On 7 August 1559 the Queen was
-entertained by the Earl of Arundel at Nonsuch with ‘a play of the
-chylderyn of Powlles and ther Master Se[bastian], Master Phelypes,
-and Master Haywod’.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">[28]</a> If ‘Master Phelypes’ was the John Philip or
-Phillips who wrote <i>Patient Grissell</i> (<i>c.</i> 1566), this play
-may also belong<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span> to the Paul’s repertory. Heywood could not adapt
-himself again to a Protestant England, and soon left the country.
-Sebastian Westcott was more fortunate. In 1560 he was appointed as Head
-of the College of Minor Canons or Sub-dean.<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">[29]</a> Shortly afterwards,
-being unable to accept the religious settlement, he was sentenced
-to deprivation of his offices, which included that of organist, but
-escaped through the personal influence of Elizabeth, in spite of
-some searchings of the heart of Bishop Grindal as to his suitability
-to be an instructor of youth.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">[30]</a> In fact he succeeded in remaining
-songmaster of Paul’s for the next twenty-three years, and during that
-period brought his boys to Court no less than twenty-seven times,
-furnishing a far larger share of the royal Christmas entertainment,
-especially during the first decade of the reign, than any other single
-company. The chronicle of his plays must now be given. There was one
-at each of the Christmases of 1560–1 and 1561–2, one between 6 January
-and 9 March 1562, and one at the Christmas of 1562–3.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">[31]</a> During the
-next winter the plague stopped London plays. At the Christmas of
-1564–5 there were two by the Paul’s boys, of which the second fell on
-2 January, and at that of 1565–6 three, two at Court and one at the
-Lady Cecilia’s lodging in the Savoy. There were two again at each of
-the Christmases of 1566–7 and 1567–8, and one on 1 January 1569. During
-the winter of 1569–70 the company was, exceptionally, absent from
-Court. They reappeared on 28 December 1570, and again at Shrovetide
-(25–7 February) 1571. On 28 December 1571 they gave the ‘tragedy’ of
-<i>Iphigenia</i>, which Professor Wallace identifies with the comedy
-called <i>The Bugbears</i>, but which might, for the matter of that, be
-Lady Lumley’s translation from the Greek of Euripides. At the Christmas
-of 1572–3 they played before 7 January.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span> On 27 December 1573 they gave
-<i>Alcmaeon</i>. They played on 2 February 1575, and a misfortune which
-befell them in the same year is recorded in a letter of 3 December from
-the Privy Council, which sets out that ‘one of Sebastianes boyes, being
-one of his principall plaiers, is lately stolen and conveyed from him’,
-and instructs no less personages than the Master of the Rolls and Dr.
-Wilson, one of the Masters of Requests, to examine the persons whom he
-suspected and proceed according to law with them.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">[32]</a> Five days later
-the Court of Aldermen drew up a protest against Westcott’s continued
-Romish tendencies.<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">[33]</a> The next Court performance by the boys was on
-6 January 1576. On 1 January 1577 they gave <i>Error</i>, and on 19
-February <i>Titus and Gisippus</i>. They played on 29 December 1577,
-and one wonders whether it was anything amiss with that performance
-which led to an entry in the Acts of the Privy Council for the same
-day that ‘Sebastian was committid to the Marshalsea’.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">[34]</a> Whether
-this was so or not, the Paul’s boys were included in the list of
-companies authorized to practise publicly in the City for the following
-Christmas. On 1 January 1579 they gave <i>The Marriage of Mind and
-Measure</i>, on 3 January 1580 <i>Scipio Africanus</i>, and on 6
-January 1581 <i>Pompey</i>. A play on 26 December 1581 is anonymous,
-but may possibly be the <i>Cupid and Psyche</i> mentioned as ‘plaid at
-Paules’ in Gosson’s <i>Playes Confuted</i> of 1582.<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">[35]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the course of 1582 Sebastian Westcott died, and this event led to
-an important development in the dramatic activities of the boys.<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">[36]</a>
-Hitherto their performances, when not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span> at Court, had been in their own
-quarters ‘at Paules’, although the notice of 1578, as well as Gosson’s
-reference, suggests that the public were not altogether excluded from
-their rehearsals. Probably they used their singing school, which
-may have been still, as in the twelfth century, the church of St.
-Gregory itself.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">[37]</a> This privacy, even if something of a convention,
-had perhaps enabled them to utilize the services of the grammar
-school when they had occasion to make a display of erudition.<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">[38]</a>
-After Westcott’s death, however, they appear to have followed the
-example of the Chapel, who had already<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span> in 1576 taken a step in the
-direction of professionalism, by transferring their performances
-to Farrant’s newly opened theatre at the Blackfriars. Here, if the
-rather difficult evidence can be trusted, the Paul’s boys appear to
-have joined them, and to have formed part of a composite company, to
-which Lord Oxford’s boys also contributed, and which produced the
-<i>Campaspe</i> and <i>Sapho and Phao</i> of the earl’s follower John
-Lyly. Lyly took these plays to Court on 1 January and 3 March 1584,
-and Henry Evans, who was also associated with the enterprise, took a
-play called <i>Agamemnon and Ulysses</i> on 27 December. On all three
-occasions the official patron of the company was the Earl of Oxford.
-In <i>Agamemnon and Ulysses</i> it must be doubtful whether the Paul’s
-boys had any share, for in the spring of 1584 the Blackfriars theatre
-ceased to be available, and the combination probably broke up.<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">[39]</a>
-This, however, was far from being the end of Lyly’s connexion with
-the boys, for the title-pages of no less than five of his later plays
-acknowledge them as the presenters. They had, indeed, a four years’
-period of renewed activity at Court, under the mastership of Thomas
-Giles, who, being already almoner, became Master of the Song School on
-22 May 1584, and in the following year received a royal commission to
-‘take up’ boys for the choir, analogous to that ordinarily granted to
-masters of the Chapel Children.<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">[40]</a> There is no specific mention of
-plays in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span> the document, but its whole basis is in the service which
-the boys may be called upon to do the Queen in music and singing.
-Under Giles the company appeared at Court nine times during four
-winter seasons; on 26 February 1587, on 1 January and 2 February
-1588, on 27 December 1588, 1 January and 12 January 1589, and on
-28 December 1589, 1 January and 6 January 1590. The title-pages of
-Lyly’s <i>Endymion</i>, <i>Galathea</i>, and <i>Midas</i> assign the
-representation of these plays at Court to a 2 February, a 1 January,
-and a 6 January respectively. <i>Endymion</i> must therefore belong to
-1588 and <i>Midas</i> to 1590; for <i>Galathea</i> the most probable
-of the three years is 1588. <i>Mother Bombie</i> and <i>Love’s
-Metamorphosis</i> can be less precisely dated, but doubtless belong
-to the period 1587–90. At some time or other, and probably before
-1590, the Paul’s boys performed a play of <i>Meleager</i>, of which an
-abstract only, without author’s name, is preserved. It is not, I think,
-to be supposed that Lyly, although he happened to be a grandson of the
-first High Master of Colet’s school, had any official connexion either
-with that establishment or with the choir school. It is true that
-Gabriel Harvey says of him in 1589, ‘He hath not played the Vicemaster
-of Poules and the Foolemaster of the Theatre for naughtes’.<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">[41]</a> But
-this is merely Harvey’s jesting on the old dramatic sense of the term
-‘vice’, and the probabilities are that Lyly’s relation as dramatist
-to Giles as responsible manager of the company was much that which
-had formerly existed between John Heywood and Sebastian Westcott.
-Nevertheless, it was this connexion which ultimately brought the Paul’s
-plays to a standstill. Lyly was one of the literary men employed about
-1589 to answer the Martin Marprelate pamphleteers in their own vein,
-and to this end he availed himself of the Paul’s stage, apparently
-with the result that, when it suited the government to disavow its
-instruments, that stage was incontinently suppressed.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">[42]</a> The reason
-may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span> be conjectural, but the fact is undoubted. The Paul’s boys
-disappear from the Court records after 1590. In 1591 the printer of
-<i>Endymion</i> writes in his preface that ‘Since the Plaies in Paules
-were dissolved, there are certaine Commedies come to my handes by
-chaunce’, and the prolongation of this dissolution is witnessed to in
-1596 by Thomas Nashe, who in his chaff of Gabriel Harvey’s anticipated
-practice in the Arches says, ‘Then we neede neuer wish the Playes at
-Powles vp againe, but if we were wearie with walking, and loth to goe
-too farre to seeke sport, into the Arches we might step, and heare
-him plead; which would bee a merrier Comedie than euer was old Mother
-<i>Bomby</i>’.<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">[43]</a></p>
-
-<p>A last theatrical period opened for the boys with the appointment about
-1600 of a new master. This was one Edward Pearce or Piers, who had
-become a Gentleman of the Chapel on 16 March 1589, and by 15 August
-1600, when his successor was sworn in, had ‘yealded up his place for
-the Mastership of the children of Poules’.<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">[44]</a> I am tempted to believe
-that in reviving the plays Pearce had the encouragement of Richard
-Mulcaster, who had become High Master of the grammar school in 1596,
-and during his earlier mastership of Merchant Taylors had on several
-occasions brought his boys to Court. Pearce is first found in the
-Treasurer of the Chamber’s Accounts as payee for a performance on 1
-January 1601, but several of the extant plays produced during this
-section of the company’s career are of earlier date, and one of them,
-Marston’s <i><span class="allsmcap">I</span> Antonio and Mellida</i>, can hardly be later
-than 1599. A stage direction of this play apparently records the names
-of two of the performers as Cole and Norwood.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">[45]</a> The Paul’s boys,
-therefore, were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span> ‘up again’ before their rivals of the Chapel, who
-cannot be shown to have begun in the Blackfriars under Henry Evans
-until 1600.<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">[46]</a> This being so, they were probably also responsible
-for Marston’s revision in 1599 of <i>Histriomastix,</i> which by
-giving offence to Ben Jonson, led him to satire Marston’s style in
-<i>Every Man Out of His Humour</i>, and so introduced the ‘war of
-the theatres’.<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">[47]</a> Before the end of 1600 they had probably added to
-their repertory Chapman’s <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i>, and certainly <i>The
-Maid’s Metamorphosis</i>, <i>The Wisdom of Dr. Dodipoll</i>, and
-<i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>, all three of which were entered on
-the Stationers’ Register, and the first two printed, during that year.
-<i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i> followed in 1601 and contains the
-following interesting passage of autobiography:<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">[48]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Sir Edward Fortune.</i> I saw the Children of <i>Powles</i> last night,</div>
- <div class="i1">And troth they pleas’d me prettie, prettie well:</div>
- <div class="i1">The Apes in time will doe it handsomely.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Planet.</i> I faith, I like the audience that frequenteth there</div>
- <div class="i1">With much applause: A man shall not be chokte</div>
- <div class="i1">With the stench of Garlick; nor be pasted</div>
- <div class="i1">To the barmie Iacket of a Beer-brewer.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Brabant Junior.</i> ’Tis a good, gentle audience, and I hope the boies</div>
- <div class="i1">Will come one day into the Court of requests.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Brabant Senior.</i> I, and they had good Plaies. But they produce</div>
- <div class="i1">Such mustie fopperies of antiquitie,</div>
- <div class="i1">And do not sute the humorous ages backs,</div>
- <div class="i1">With clothes in fashion.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The criticism, being a self-criticism, must not be taken too seriously.
-So far as published plays are concerned, <i>Histriomastix</i> is the
-only one to which it applies. In Marston, Chapman, and Middleton the
-company had enlisted vigorous young playwrights, who were probably not
-sorry to be free from the yoke of the professional actors, and appear
-to have followed the exceptional policy of printing some at least of
-their new plays as soon as they were produced.</p>
-
-<p>On 11 March 1601, two months after the boys made their first bow at
-Court, the Lord Mayor was ordered by the Privy Council to suppress
-plays ‘at Powles’ during Lent. It is to be inferred that they were,
-as of old, acting in their singing school. Confirmation is provided
-by a curious note appended by William Percy to his manuscript volume
-of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span> plays, presumably in sending them to be considered with a view to
-production by the boys. The plays bear dates in 1601–3, but it can
-hardly be taken for granted that they were in fact produced by the
-Paul’s or any other company. The note runs:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">A note to the Master of Children of Powles.</p>
-
-<p>Memorandum, that if any of the fine and formost of these
-Pastorals and Comoedyes conteyned in this volume shall but
-overeach in length (the children not to begin before foure,
-after prayers, and the gates of Powles shutting at six) the
-tyme of supper, that then in tyme and place convenient, you do
-let passe some of the songs, and make the consort the shorter;
-for I suppose these plaies be somewhat too long for that place.
-Howsoever, on your own experience, and at your best direction,
-be it. Farewell to you all.<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">[49]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Both parts of Marston’s <i>Antonio and Mellida</i> were entered on
-the Stationers’ Register in the autumn of 1601 and printed in 1602.
-The second part may have been on the stage during 1601, and in the
-same year the boys probably produced John Marston’s <i>What You
-Will</i>, and certainly played ‘privately’, as the Chamberlain’s men
-did ‘publicly’, <i>Satiromastix</i> in which Dekker, with a hand from
-Marston, brought his swashing blow against the redoubtable Jonson. This
-also was registered in 1601 and printed in 1602. There is no sign of
-the boys at Court in the winter of 1601–2. In the course of 1602 their
-play of <i>Blurt Master Constable</i>, by Middleton, was registered
-and printed. They were at Court on 1 January 1603, for the last time
-before Elizabeth, and on 20 February 1604, for the first time before
-James. Either the choir school or the grammar school boys took part in
-the pageant speeches at the coronation triumph on 15 March 1604.<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">[50]</a>
-To the year 1604 probably belongs <i>Westward Ho!</i> which introduced
-to the company, in collaboration with Dekker, a new writer, John
-Webster. <i>Northward Ho!</i> by the same authors, followed in 1605.
-The company was not at Court for the winter of 1604–5, but during that
-of 1605–6 they gave two plays before the Princes Henry and Charles. For
-these the payee was not Pearce, but Edward Kirkham, who is described
-in the Treasurer of the Chamber’s account as ‘one of the Mr<sup>es</sup> of
-the Childeren of Pawles’. Kirkham, who was Yeoman of the Revels, had
-until recently been a manager of the Children of the Revels at the
-Blackfriars. It may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span> have been the disgrace brought upon these by
-<i>Eastward Ho!</i> in the course of 1605 that led him to transfer his
-activities elsewhere.<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">[51]</a> With him he seems to have brought Marston’s
-<i>The Fawn</i>, probably written in 1604 and ascribed in the first of
-the two editions of 1606 to the Queen’s Revels alone, in the second to
-them ‘and since at Poules’. The charms of partnership with Kirkham were
-not, however, sufficient to induce Pearce to continue his enterprise.
-The last traceable appearance of the Paul’s boys was on 30 July 1606,
-when they gave <i>The Abuses</i> before James and King Christian of
-Denmark.<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">[52]</a> Probably the plays were discontinued not long afterwards.
-This would account for the large number of play-books belonging to
-the company which reached the hands of the publishers in 1607 and
-1608. The earlier policy of giving plays to the press immediately
-after production does not seem to have endured beyond 1602. Those now
-printed, in addition to <i>Bussy D’Ambois</i>, <i>What You Will</i>,
-<i>Westward Ho!</i> and <i>Northward Ho!</i> already mentioned,
-included Middleton’s <i>Michaelmas Term</i>, <i>The Phoenix</i>, <i>A
-Mad World, my Masters</i>, and <i>A Trick to Catch the Old One</i>,
-together with <i>The Puritan</i>, very likely also by Middleton, and
-<i>The Woman Hater</i>, the first work of Francis Beaumont. <i>The
-Puritan</i> can be dated, from a chronological allusion, in 1606. The
-title-pages of <i>The Woman Hater</i>, <i>A Mad World, my Masters</i>,
-and <i>A Trick to Catch the Old One</i> specify them to have been
-‘lately’ acted. It is apparent from the second quarto of <i>A Trick to
-Catch the Old One</i> that the Children of the Blackfriars took it over
-and presented it at Court on 1 January 1609. This was probably part of
-a bargain as to which we have another record. Pearce may have had at
-the back of his mind a notion of reopening his theatre some day. But
-it is given in evidence in the lawsuit of <i>Keysar v. Burbadge</i>
-in 1610 that, while it was still closed, he was approached on behalf
-of the other ‘private’ houses in London, those of the Blackfriars
-and the Whitefriars, and offered a ‘dead rent’ of £20 a year, ‘that
-there might be a cessation of playeinge and playes to be acted in the
-said howse neere S<sup>t</sup>. Paules Church’.<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">[53]</a> This must have been in the
-winter of 1608–9, just as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span> Revels company was migrating from the
-Blackfriars to the Whitefriars. The agent was Philip Rosseter who, with
-Robert Keysar, was financially interested in the Revels company. When
-the King’s men began to occupy the Blackfriars in the autumn of 1609,
-they took on responsibility for half the dead rent, but whether the
-arrangement survived the lawsuit of 1610 is unknown.</p>
-
-
-<h5>ii. THE CHILDREN OF THE CHAPEL AND OF THE QUEEN’S REVELS</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Chapel (1501–1603).</p>
-
-<p><i>Masters of the Children</i>: William Newark (1493–1509),
-William Cornish (1509–23), William Crane (1523–45), Richard
-Bower (1545–61), Richard Edwardes (1561–6), William Hunnis
-(1566–97), Richard Farrant (acting, 1577–80), Nathaniel Giles
-(1597–1634).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Queen’s Revels (1603–5).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Revels (1605–6).</p>
-
-<p><i>Masters</i>: Henry Evans, Edward Kirkham, and others.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Blackfriars (1606–9).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Whitefriars (1609–10).</p>
-
-<p><i>Masters</i>: Robert Keysar and others.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Children of the Queen’s Revels (1610–16).</p>
-
-<p><i>Masters</i>: Philip Rosseter and others.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Official records of the Chapel
-are to be found in E. F. Rimbault, <i>The Old Cheque Book of
-the Chapel Royal</i> (1872, <i>Camden Soc.</i>). Most of the
-material for the sixteenth-century part of the present section
-was collected before the publication of C. W. Wallace, <i>The
-Evolution of the English Drama up to Shakespeare</i> (1912,
-cited as Wallace, i), which has, however, been valuable for
-purposes of revision. J. M. Manly, <i>The Children of the Chapel
-Royal and their Masters</i> (1910, <i>C. H.</i> vi. 279), W.
-H. Flood, <i>Queen Mary’s Chapel Royal</i> (<i>E. H. R.</i>
-xxxiii. 83), H. M. Hildebrand, <i>The Early History of the
-Chapel Royal</i> (1920, <i>M. P.</i> xviii. 233), are useful
-contributions. The chief published sources for the seventeenth
-century are three lawsuits discovered by J. Greenstreet and
-printed in full by F. G. Fleay, <i>A Chronicle History of the
-London Stage</i> (1890), 127, 210, 223. These are (a) <i>Clifton
-v. Robinson and Others</i> (Star Chamber, 1601), (b) <i>Evans
-v. Kirkham</i> (Chancery, May–June 1612), cited as <i>E. v.
-K.</i>, with Fleay’s pages, and (c) <i>Kirkham v. Painton and
-Others</i> (Chancery, July–Nov. 1612), cited as <i>K. v. P.</i>
-Not much beyond dubious hypothesis is added by C. W. Wallace,
-<i>The Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars</i> (1908, cited
-as Wallace, ii). But Professor Wallace published an additional
-suit of importance, (d) <i>Keysar v. Burbadge and Others</i>
-(Court of Requests, Feb.–June 1610), in <i>Nebraska University
-Studies</i> (1910), x. 336, cited as <i>K. v. B.</i> This is
-apparently one of twelve suits other than Greenstreet’s, which
-he claims (ii. 36) to have found, with other material, which
-may alter the story. In the meantime, I see no reason to depart
-from the main outlines sketched in my article on <i>Court
-Performances under James the First</i> (1909, <i>M. L. R.</i>
-iv. 153).]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Chapel was an ancient part of the establishment of the Household,
-traceable far back into the twelfth century.<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">[54]</a> Up to the end of
-the fourteenth, we hear only of chaplains and clerks. These were
-respectively priests and laymen, and the principal chaplain came to
-bear the title of Dean.<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">[55]</a> Children of the Chapel first appear under
-Henry IV, who appointed a chaplain to act as Master of Grammar for them
-in 1401.<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">[56]</a> In 1420 comes the first of a series of royal commissions
-authorizing the impressment of boys for the Chapel service, and in
-1444 the first appointment of a Master of the Children, John Plummer,
-by patent.<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">[57]</a> It is probably to the known tastes of Henry VI that the
-high level of musical accomplishment, which had been reached by the
-singers of the Chapel during the next reign was due.<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">[58]</a> The status
-and duties of the Chapel are set out with full detail in the <i>Liber
-Niger</i> about 1478, at which date the establishment consisted of a
-Dean, six Chaplains, twenty Clerks, two Yeomen or Epistolers, and eight
-Children. These were instructed by a Master of Song, chosen by the Dean
-from ‘the seyd felyshipp of Chapell’, and a Master of Grammar, whose
-services were also available for the royal Henchmen.<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">[59]</a> There is no
-further record of the Master of Grammar; but with this exception the
-establishment continued to exist on much the same footing, apart from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>
-some increase of numbers, up to the seventeenth century.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">[60]</a> Although
-subject to some general supervision from the Lord Chamberlain and
-to that extent part of the Chamber, it was largely a self-contained
-organization under its own Dean. Elizabeth, however, left the post
-of Dean vacant, and the responsibility of the Lord Chamberlain then
-became more direct.<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">[61]</a> It probably did not follow, at any rate in
-its full numbers, a progress, but moved with the Court to the larger
-‘standing houses’, except possibly to Windsor where there was a
-separate musical establishment in St. George’s Chapel.<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">[62]</a> It does
-not seem, at any rate in Tudor times, to have had any relation to the
-collegiate chapel of St. Stephen in the old palace of Westminster.<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">[63]</a>
-The number of Children varied between eight and ten up to 1526, when
-it was finally fixed by Henry VIII at twelve.<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">[64]</a> The chaplains and
-clerks were collectively known in the sixteenth century<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span> as the
-Gentlemen of the Chapel, and the most important of them, next to one
-who acted as subdean, was the Master of the Children, who trained
-them in music and, as time went on, also formed them into a dramatic
-company. The Master generally held office under a patent during
-pleasure, and was entitled in addition to his fee of 7½<i>d.</i> a day
-or £91 8<i>s.</i> 1½<i>d.</i> a year as Gentleman and his share in
-the general ‘rewards’ of the Chapel, to a special Exchequer annuity
-of 40 marks (£26 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>), raised in 1526 to £40,
-‘pro exhibicione puerorum’, which is further defined in 1510 as ‘pro
-exhibicione vesturarum et lectorum’ and in 1523 as ‘pro sustencione
-et diettes’.<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">[65]</a> To this, moreover, several other payments came to be
-added in the course of Henry VIII’s reign. Originally the Chapel dined
-and supped in the royal hall; but this proved inconvenient, and a money
-allowance from the Cofferer of the Household was substituted, which was
-fixed in 1544 at 1<i>s.</i> a day for each Gentleman and 2<i>s.</i> a
-week for each Child.<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">[66]</a> The allowance for the Children was afterwards
-raised to 6<i>d.</i> a day.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">[67]</a> Long before this, however, the Masters
-had succeeded in obtaining an exceptional allowance of 8<i>d.</i> a
-week for the breakfast of each Child, which was reckoned as making £16
-a year and paid them in monthly instalments of 26<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-by the Treasurer of the Chamber. The costs of the Masters in their
-journeys for the impressment of Children were also recouped by the
-Treasurer of the Chamber. And from him they also received rewards of
-20<i>s.</i> when <i>Audivi vocem</i> was sung on All Saints’ Day, £6
-13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the Children’s feast of St. Nicholas on 6
-December, and 40<i>s.</i> when <i>Gloria in Excelsis</i> was sung on
-Christmas and St. John’s Days. These were, of course, over and above
-any special rewards received for dramatic performances.<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">[68]</a> In the
-provision of <i>vesturae</i> the Masters were helped by the issue
-from the Great Wardrobe of black and tawny camlet gowns, yellow satin
-coats, and Milan bonnets, which presumably constituted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span> the festal
-and penitential arrays of the choir.<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">[69]</a> The boys themselves do not
-appear to have received any wages but, when their voices had broken,
-the King made provision for them at the University or otherwise, and
-until this could be done, the Treasurer of the Chamber sometimes paid
-allowances to the Master or some other Gentleman for their maintenance
-and instruction.<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">[70]</a></p>
-
-<p>The earlier Masters were John Plummer (1444–55), Henry Abyngdon
-(1455–78), Gilbert Banaster (1478–83?), probably John Melyonek
-(1483–5), Lawrence Squier (1486–93), and William Newark
-(1493–1509).<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">[71]</a> Some of these have left<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span> a musical or literary
-reputation, and Banaster is said to have written an interlude in
-1482.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">[72]</a> But until the end of this period only occasional traces of
-dramatic performances by the Chapel can be discerned. An alleged play
-by the Gentlemen at the Christmas of 1485 cannot be verified.<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">[73]</a> The
-first recorded performance, therefore, is one of the disguisings at the
-wedding of Prince Arthur and Katharine of Spain in 1501, in which two
-of the children were concealed in mermaids ‘singing right sweetly and
-with quaint hermony’.<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">[74]</a></p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of Henry VII’s reign begins a short series of plays
-given at the rate of one or two a year by the Gentlemen, which lasted
-through 1506–12.<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">[75]</a> Thereafter there is no other play by the Gentlemen
-as such upon record until the Christmas of 1553, when they performed
-a morality of which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span> the principal character was Genus Humanum.<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">[76]</a>
-This had been originally planned for the coronation on the previous 1
-October, and as a warrant then issued states that a coronation play
-had customarily been given ‘by the gentlemen of the chappell of our
-progenitoures’, it may perhaps be inferred that Edward VI’s coronation
-play of ‘the story of Orpheus’ on 22 February 1547 was also by the
-Gentlemen.<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">[77]</a> In the meantime the regular series of Chapel plays at
-Court had been broken after 1512, and when it was taken up again in
-1517 it was not by the Gentlemen, but by the Children.<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">[78]</a> This is,
-of course, characteristic of the Renaissance.<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">[79]</a> But an immediate
-cause is probably to be found in the personality of William Cornish, a
-talented and energetic Master of the Children, who succeeded William
-Newark in the autumn of 1509, and held office until his death in
-1523.<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">[80]</a> Cornish appears to have come of a musical family.<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">[81]</a> He took
-part<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span> in a play given by the Gentlemen of the Chapel shortly before
-his appointment as Master. And although it was some years before he
-organized the Children into a definite company, he was the ruling
-spirit and chief organizer of the elaborate disguisings which glorified
-the youthful court of Henry VIII from the Shrovetide of 1511 to the
-visit of the Emperor Charles V in 1522, and hold an important place in
-the story, elsewhere dealt with, of the Court mask.<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">[82]</a> In these revels
-both the Gentlemen and the Children of the Chapel, as well as the King
-and his lords and ladies took a part, and they were often designed so
-as to frame an interlude, which would call for the services of skilled
-performers.<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">[83]</a></p>
-
-<p>In view of Cornish’s importance in the history of the stage at
-Court, it is matter for regret that none of his dramatic writing
-has been preserved, for it is impossible to attach any value to the
-fantastic attributions of Professor Wallace, who credits him not only
-with the anonymous <i>Calisto and Meliboea</i>, <i>Of Gentleness
-and Nobility</i>, <i>The Pardoner and the Frere</i>, and <i>Johan
-Johan</i>, but also with <i>The Four Elements</i> and <i>The Four P.
-P.</i>, for the authorship of which by John Rastell and John Heywood
-respectively there is good contemporary evidence.<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">[84]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span> Cornish was
-succeeded as Master of the Children by William Crane (1523–45) and
-Crane by Richard Bower, whose patent was successively renewed by Edward
-VI, presumably by Mary, and finally by Elizabeth on 30 April 1559.<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">[85]</a>
-His service was almost certainly continuous, and it is therefore
-rather puzzling to be told that a commission to take up singing
-children for the Chapel, similar to that of John Melyonek in 1484,
-was issued in February 1550 to Philip van Wilder, a Gentleman of the
-Privy Chamber.<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">[86]</a> Neither the full text nor a reference to the source
-for the warrant is given, and I suspect the explanation to be that it
-was not for the Chapel at all. Philip van Wilder was a lutenist, one
-of a family of musicians of whom others were in the royal service,
-and he may not improbably have had a commission to recruit a body of
-young minstrels with whom other notices suggest that he may have been
-connected.<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">[87]</a> Bower himself had a commission for the Chapel on 6 June
-1552.<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">[88]</a> Although the Children continued to give performances at Court
-both under<span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span> Crane and under Bower, it may be doubted whether they
-were quite so prominent as they had been in Cornish’s time. Certainly
-they had to contend with the competition of the Paul’s boys. Crane
-himself is not known to have been a dramatist. It has been suggested
-that Bower’s authorship is indicated by the initials R. B. on the
-title-page of <i>Apius and Virginia</i> (1575), but, in view of the
-date of the publication, this must be regarded as very doubtful. The
-chief Marian producer of plays was Nicholas Udall, but it remains
-uncertain whether he wrote for the Chapel Children. Professor Wallace
-has no justification whatever for his confident assertions that John
-Heywood ‘not only could but did’ write plays for the Chapel, that he
-‘had grown up in the Chapel under Cornish’, and that ‘as dramatist and
-Court-entertainer’ he ‘was naturally associated with the performances
-of the Chapel’.<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">[89]</a> There is no proof whatever that Heywood began as a
-Chapel boy, and although he certainly wrote plays for boys, they are
-nowhere said or implied to have been of the Chapel company. There are
-scraps of evidence which indicate that they may have been the Paul’s
-boys.<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">[90]</a> It is also conceivable that they may have been Philip van
-Wilder’s young minstrels.</p>
-
-<p>When Elizabeth came to the throne, then, the Chapel had already a
-considerable dramatic tradition behind it. But for a decade its share
-in the Court revels remains somewhat obscure. The Treasurer of the
-Chamber records no payments for performances to its Masters before
-1568.<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">[91]</a> A note in a Revels inventory of 1560 of the employment of
-some white sarcenet ‘in ffurnishinge of a pley by the children of
-the Chapple’ may apparently refer to any year from 1555 to 1560, and
-it is therefore hazardous to identify the Chapel with the anonymous
-players of the interlude of 31 December 1559 which contained ‘suche
-matter that they wher commondyd to leyff off’.<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">[92]</a> Bower may of course
-have retained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span> Catholic sympathies, but he died on 26 July 1561, and
-it is difficult to suppose that the high dramatic reputation of his
-successor Richard Edwardes was not based upon a greater number of Court
-productions than actually stand to his name.<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">[93]</a> Edwardes had been a
-Gentleman of the Chapel from 1556 or earlier. His patent as Master is
-dated on 27 October 1561, and on the following 10 December he received
-a commission the terms of which served as a model for those of the next
-two Masterships:<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">[94]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Memorandum quod x<sup>o</sup> die
-Januarii anno infra scripto istud breve deliberatum fuit domino
-custodi magni Sigilli apud Westmonasterium exequendum.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Elizabeth by the grace of God Quene of England Fraunce &amp;
-Ireland defender of the faythe &amp;c. To our right welbeloved &amp; faythfull
-counsaylour Sir Nicholas Bacon knight Keper of our great Seale of
-Englande, commaundinge you that vnder our great Seale aforsayd
-ye cause to be made our lettres patentes in forme followinge. To
-all mayours sherifs bayliefes constables &amp; all other our officers
-gretinge. For that it is mete that our chappell royall should be
-furnysshed with well singing children from tyme to tyme we have &amp; by
-these presentes do authorise our welbeloved servaunt Richard Edwardes
-master of our children of our sayd chappell or his deputie beinge
-by his bill subscribed &amp; sealed so authorised, &amp; havinge this our
-presente comyssion with hym, to take as manye well singinge children
-as he or his sufficient deputie shall thinke mete in all chathedrall
-&amp; collegiate churches as well within libertie[s] as without within
-this our realme of England whatsoever they be, And also at tymes
-necessarie, horses, boates, barges, cartes, &amp; carres, as he for the
-conveyaunce of the sayd children from any place to our sayd chappell
-royall [shall thinke mete] with all maner of necessaries apperteynyng
-to the sayd children as well by lande as water at our prices ordynarye
-to be redely payed when they for our service shall remove to any place
-or places, Provided also that if our sayd servaunt or his deputie or
-deputies bearers hereof in his name cannot forthwith remove the chyld
-or children when he by vertue of this our commyssyon hathe taken hym or
-them that then the sayd child or children shall remayne there vntill
-suche tyme as our sayd servaunt Rychard Edwardes shall send for him
-or them. Wherfore we will &amp; commaunde you &amp; everie of you to whom
-this our comyssion shall come to be helpinge aydinge &amp; assistinge to
-the vttermost of your powers as ye<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span> will answer at your vttermoste
-perylles. In wytnes wherof &amp;c. Geven vnder our privie seale at our
-Manor of St James the fourth daye of Decembre in the fourth yere of our
-Raigne.</p>
-
-<p class="r2">R. Jones.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">At Christmas 1564–5 the boys appeared at Court in a tragedy by
-Edwardes, which may have been his extant <i>Damon and Pythias</i>.<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">[95]</a>
-On 2 February 1565 and 2 February 1566 they gave performances before
-the lawyers at the Candlemas feasts of Lincoln’s Inn.<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">[96]</a> There is
-nothing to show that the Chapel had any concern with the successful
-play of <i>Palamon and Arcite</i>, written and produced by Edwardes for
-Elizabeth’s visit to Oxford in September 1566. Edwardes died on the
-following 31 October, and on 15 November William Hunnis was appointed
-Master of the Children.<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">[97]</a> His formal patent of appointment is dated
-22 April 1567, and the bill for his commission, which only differs from
-that of Edwardes in minor points of detail, on 18 April.<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">[98]</a> Hunnis
-had been a Gentleman at least since about 1553, with an interval of
-disgrace under Mary, owing to his participation in Protestant plots.
-He was certainly himself a dramatist, but none of his plays are known
-to be extant, and a contemporary eulogy speaks of his ‘enterludes’ as
-if they dated from an earlier period than that of his Mastership. It
-is, however, natural to suppose that he may have had a hand in some at
-least of the pieces which his Children produced at Court. The first
-of these was a tragedy at Shrovetide 1568. In the following year is
-said to have been published a pamphlet entitled <i>The Children of
-the Chapel Stript and Whipt</i>, which apparently originated in some
-gross offence given by the dramatic activities of the Chapel to the
-growing Puritan sentiment. ‘Plaies’, said the writer, ‘will never be
-supprest, while her maiesties unfledged minions flaunt it in silkes and
-sattens. They had as well be at their Popish service, in the deuils
-garments.’ And again, ‘Even in her maiesties chappel do these pretty
-upstart youthes profane the Lordes Day by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span> lascivious writhing
-of their tender limbs, and gorgeous decking of their apparell, in
-feigning bawdie fables gathered from the idolatrous heathen poets’. I
-should feel more easy in drawing inferences from this, were the book
-extant.<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">[99]</a> But it seems to indicate either that the controversialist
-of 1569 was less careful than his successors to avoid attacks upon
-Elizabeth’s private ‘solace’, or that the idea had already occurred to
-the Master of turning his rehearsals of Court plays to profit by giving
-open performances in the Chapel. That the Court performances themselves
-took place in the Chapel is possible, but not very likely; the usual
-places for them seem to have been the Hall or the Great Chamber.<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">[100]</a>
-But no doubt they sometimes fell on a Sunday.</p>
-
-<p>The boys played at Court on 6 January 1570 and during Shrovetide 1571.
-On 6 January 1572 they gave <i>Narcissus</i>, and on 13 February 1575 a
-play with a hunt in it.<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">[101]</a> On all these occasions Hunnis was payee.
-An obvious error of the clerk of the Privy Council in entering him as
-‘John’ Hunnis in connexion with the issue of a warrant for the payment
-of 1572 led Chalmers to infer the existence of two Masters of the name
-of Hunnis.<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">[102]</a> During the progress of 1575 Hunnis contributed shows to
-the ‘Princely Pleasures’ of Kenilworth, and very likely utilized the
-services of the boys in these.<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">[103]</a> And herewith his active conduct
-of the Chapel performances appears to have been suspended for some
-years. A play of <i>Mutius Scaevola</i>, given jointly at Court by
-the Children of the Chapel and the Children of Windsor on 6 January
-1577, is the first of a series for which the place of Hunnis as payee
-is taken by Richard Farrant. To this series belong unnamed plays on
-27 December 1577 and 27 December 1578, <i>Loyalty and Beauty</i> on 2
-March 1579, and <i>Alucius</i> on 27 December<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span> 1579.<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">[104]</a> Farrant, who
-is known as a musician, had been a Gentleman of the Chapel in 1553,
-and had left on 24 April 1564, doubtless to take up the post of Master
-of the Children of Windsor, in which capacity he annually presented a
-play at Court from 1566–7 to 1575–6.<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">[105]</a> But evidently the two offices
-were not regarded as incompatible, for on 5 November 1570, while still
-holding his Mastership, he was again sworn in as Gentleman of the
-Chapel ‘from Winsore’.<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">[106]</a> A recent discovery by M. Feuillerat enables
-us to see that his taking over of the Chapel Children from Hunnis
-in 1576 was part of a somewhat considerable theatrical enterprise.
-Stimulated perhaps by the example of Burbadge’s new-built Theatre, he
-took a lease of some of the old Priory buildings in the Blackfriars;
-and here, either for the first time, or in continuation of a similar
-use of the Chapel itself, which had provoked criticism, the Children
-appeared under his direction in performances open to the public.<a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">[107]</a>
-The ambiguous relation of the Blackfriars precinct to the jurisdiction
-of the City Corporation probably explains the inclusion of the Chapel
-in the list of companies whose exercises the Privy Council instructed
-the City to tolerate on 24 December 1578. It is, I think, pretty clear
-that, although Farrant is described as Master of the Chapel Children
-by the Treasurer of the Chamber from 1577 to 1580, and by Hunnis
-himself in his petition of 1583,<a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">[108]</a> he was never technically Master,
-but merely acted as deputy to Hunnis, probably even to the extent of
-taking all the financial risks off his hands. Farrant was paid for
-a comedy at Lincoln’s Inn at Candlemas 1580 and is described in the
-entry as ‘one of the Queen’s chaplains’.<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">[109]</a> On 30 November 1580 he
-died and Hunnis then resumed his normal functions.<a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">[110]</a> The Chapel
-played at Court on 5 February 1581, 31 December 1581, 27 February
-1582, and 26 December<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span> 1582. One of these plays may have been Peele’s
-<i>Arraignment of Paris</i>; that of 26 December 1582 was <i>A Game of
-Cards</i>, possibly the piece which, according to Sir John Harington,
-was thought ‘somewhat too plaine’, and was championed at rehearsal by
-‘a notable wise counseller’.<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">[111]</a> On the first three of these occasions
-the Treasurer merely entered a payment to the Master of the Children,
-without giving a name, but in the entry for the last play Hunnis is
-specified. It is known, moreover, that Hunnis, together with one John
-Newman, took a sub-lease of the Blackfriars from Farrant’s widow
-on 20 December 1581. They do not seem to have been very successful
-financially, for they were irregular in their rent, and neglected their
-repairs. It was perhaps trepidation at the competition likely to arise
-from the establishment of the Queen’s men in 1583, which led them to
-transfer their interest to one Henry Evans, a scrivener of London, from
-whom, when Sir William More took steps to protect himself against the
-breach of covenant involved in an alienation without his consent, it
-was handed on to the Earl of Oxford and ultimately to John Lyly.<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">[112]</a>
-In November 1583, therefore, Hunnis found himself much dissatisfied
-with his financial position, and drew up the following memorial,
-probably for submission to the Board of Green Cloth of the royal
-household:<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">[113]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Maye it please your honores, William Hunnys, M<sup>r</sup> of the
-Children of hir highnes Chappell, most humble beseecheth to
-consider of these fewe lynes. First, hir Maiestie alloweth for
-the dyett of xij children of hir sayd Chappell daylie vi<sup>d</sup> a
-peece by the daye, and xl<sup>li</sup> by the yeare for theyre aparrell
-and all other furneture.</p>
-
-<p>‘Agayne there is no ffee allowed neyther for the m<sup>r</sup> of the
-sayd children nor for his ussher, and yet neuertheless is he
-constrayned, over and besydes the ussher still to kepe bothe a
-man servant to attend upon them and lykewyse a woman seruant to
-wash and kepe them cleane.</p>
-
-<p>‘Also there is no allowance for the lodginge of the sayd
-chilldren, such tyme as they attend vppon the Courte, but the
-m<sup>r</sup> to his greate charge is dryuen to hyer chambers both for
-himself, his usher chilldren and servantes.</p>
-
-<p>‘Also theare is no allowaunce for ryding jornies when occasion
-serueth the m<sup>r</sup> to trauell or send into sundrie partes within
-this realme, to take vpp and bring such children as be thought
-meete to be trayned for the service of hir Maiestie.</p>
-
-<p>‘Also there is no allowance ne other consideracion for those
-children whose voyces be chaunged, whoe onelye do depend vpon
-the charge of the sayd m<sup>r</sup> vntill such tyme as he may preferr
-the same with cloathing and other furniture, vnto his no smalle
-charge.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span></p>
-
-<p>‘And although it may be obiected that hir Maiesties allowaunce
-is no whitt less then hir Maiesties ffather of famous memorie
-therefore allowed: yet considering the pryces of thinges present
-to the tyme past and what annuities the m<sup>r</sup> then hadd out of
-sundrie abbies within this realme, besydes sondrie giftes from
-the Kinge, and dyuers perticuler ffees besydes, for the better
-mayntenaunce of the sayd children and office: and besides also
-there hath ben withdrawne from the sayd chilldren synce hir
-Maiesties comming to the crowne xij<sup>d</sup> by the daye which was
-allowed for theyr breakefastes as may apeare by the Treasorer
-of the Chamber his acompt for the tyme beinge, with other
-allowaunces incident to the office as appeareth by the auntyent
-acomptes in the sayd office which I heere omytt.</p>
-
-<p>‘The burden heerof hath from tyme to tyme so hindred the M<sup>rs</sup>
-of the Children viz. M<sup>r</sup> Bower, M<sup>r</sup> Edwardes, my sellf and M<sup>r</sup>
-Farrant: that notwithstanding some good helpes otherwyse some of
-them dyed in so poore case, and so deepelie indebted that they
-haue not left scarcelye wherewith to burye them.</p>
-
-<p>‘In tender consideracion whereof, might it please your honores
-that the sayde allowaunce of vj<sup>d</sup> a daye apeece for the
-childrens dyet might be reserued in hir Maiesties coffers during
-the tyme of theyre attendaunce. And in liew thereof they to be
-allowed meate and drinke within this honorable householde for
-that I am not able vppon so small allowaunce eny longer to beare
-so heauie a burden. Or otherwyse to be consydred as shall seeme
-best vnto your honorable wysdomes.</p>
-
-<p>‘[<i>Endorsed</i>] 1583 November. The humble peticion of the
-M<sup>r</sup> of the Children of hir highnes Chappell [<i>and in another
-hand</i>] To have further allowances for the finding of the
-children for causes within mentioned.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The actual request made by Hunnis seems a modest one. He seems to
-have thought that for his boys to have the run of their teeth at the
-tables of Whitehall would be a better bargain than the board-wages
-of 6<i>d.</i> a day. Doubtless he knew their appetites. I do not
-think that the Green Cloth met his views, for in the next reign the
-6<i>d.</i> was still being paid and was raised to 10<i>d.</i> for the
-benefit of Nathaniel Giles.<a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">[114]</a> Possibly Hunnis did get back the £16
-a year for breakfasts, which seems to be the fee described by him as
-1<i>s.</i> a day, although that in fact works out to £18 5<i>s.</i> a
-year, and the £9 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for largess, if that also had
-been withdrawn, since these are included in fee lists for 1593 and
-1598.<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">[115]</a> The ‘perticuler ffees’ to which he refers are presumably the
-allowances occasionally paid by Henry for the maintenance of boys whose
-voices had changed. In any case Hunnis’s personal grievance must have
-been fully met by liberal grants<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span> of Crown lands which were made him
-in 1585.<a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">[116]</a> It will be observed that he says nothing of any profits
-derived by him from the dramatic activities of the Children; whether
-in the form of rewards at Court or in that of admission fees to public
-performances. Plays were no part of the official functions of the
-Chapel, although it is consistent with the general policy of the reign
-towards the London stage to suppose that Elizabeth and her economical
-ministers were well enough content that the deficiencies of her Chapel
-maintenance should be eked out, and her Christmas ‘solace’ rendered
-possible, out of the profits of public exercise. So far, however, as
-the Chapel was concerned, this convenient arrangement was, for the
-time, nearly at an end. The facts with regard to the boy companies
-during 1584 are somewhat complicated. The Treasurer of the Chamber
-paid the Master of the Chapel Children, without specifying his name,
-for plays on 6 January and 2 February 1584. He also paid John Lyly
-for plays by the Earl of Oxford’s ‘servants’ on 1 January and 3 March
-1584, and Henry Evans for a play by the Earl of Oxford’s ‘children’
-on 27 December 1584. Were this all, one would naturally assume that
-Oxford had brought to Court the ‘lads’ who appeared under his name at
-Norwich in 1580, and that these formed a company, quite distinct from
-the Chapel, of which the Earl entrusted the management either jointly
-or successively to Lyly and Evans. Lyly, of course, is known to have
-been at one time in the Earl’s service.<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">[117]</a> One would then be left to
-speculate as to which company played at the Blackfriars during 1584 and
-where the other played. But the real puzzle begins when it is realized
-that in the same year 1584 two of Lyly’s plays, <i>Campaspe</i> and
-<i>Sapho and Phao</i>, were for the first time printed, that these have
-prologues ‘at the Blackfriars’, that their title-pages indicate their
-performance at Court, not by Oxford’s company, but by the Chapel and
-the Paul’s boys, of which latter the Treasurer of the Chamber makes no
-mention, and that the title-pages of the two issues of <i>Campaspe</i>
-further specify, in the one case Twelfth Night, and in the other,
-which is apparently corrected, New Year’s Day, as the precise date of
-performance, while that of <i>Sapho and Phao</i> similarly specifies
-Shrove Tuesday. But New Year’s Day and Shrove Tuesday of 1584 are the
-days which the Treasurer of the Chamber assigns not to the Chapel, but
-to Oxford’s company; and even if you accept Professor Feuillerat’s
-rather far-fetched assumption that the days referred to in the
-title-pages were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span> not necessarily those falling in the year of issue,
-you will not find a New Year’s Day, or for the matter of that a Twelfth
-Night, since the opening of the Blackfriars, which, if a play-day at
-all, is not occupied either by some Chapel or Paul’s play of which the
-name is known, or by some other company altogether.<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">[118]</a> The conjecture
-seems inevitable that, when he found himself in financial straits and
-with the rivalry of the Queen’s men to face in 1583, Hunnis came to
-an arrangement with the Paul’s boys, who had recently lost Sebastian
-Westcott, on the one hand, and with the Earl of Oxford and his agents
-Lyly and Evans on the other, and put the Blackfriars at the disposal
-of a combination of boys from all three companies, who appeared
-indifferently at Court under the name of the Master or that of the
-Earl. In the course of 1584 Sir William More resumed possession of the
-Blackfriars. Henry Evans must have made some temporary arrangement to
-enable the company to appear at Court during the winter of 1584–5.<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">[119]</a>
-But for a year or two thereafter there were no boys acting in London
-until in 1586 an arrangement with Thomas Giles, Westcott’s successor at
-St. Paul’s, afforded a new opportunity for Lyly’s pen.<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">[120]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Chapel had contributed pretty continuously to Court drama for
-nearly a century. They now drop out of its story for about seventeen
-years.<a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">[121]</a> In addition to the two plays of Lyly, one other of their
-recent pieces, Peele’s <i>Arraignment of Paris</i>, was printed in
-1584. Two former Children, Henry Eveseed and John Bull, afterwards
-well known as a musician, became Gentlemen on 30 November 1585 and
-in January 1586 respectively.<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">[122]</a> Absence from Court did not entail
-an absolute cessation of dramatic activities. Performances by the
-Children are recorded at Ipswich and Norwich in 1586–7 and at Leicester
-before Michaelmas in 1591. There is, however, little to bear out the
-suggestion that the Chapel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span> furnished the boys who played at Croydon,
-probably in the archbishop’s palace, during the summers of 1592 and
-1593, other than the fact that the author of the play produced in
-1593, <i>Summer’s Last Will and Testament</i>, was Thomas Nashe, who
-was also part author with Marlowe of <i>Dido</i>, one of two plays
-printed as Chapel plays in 1594. The extant text of the other play,
-<i>The Wars of Cyrus</i>, seems to be datable between 1587 and 1594.
-Hunnis died on 6 June 1597, and on 9 June 1597 Nathaniel Giles, ‘being
-before extraordinary’, was sworn as a regular Gentleman of the Chapel
-and Master of the Children. Giles, like Farrant, came ‘from Winsore’.
-Born about 1559, he was educated at Magdalen College, Oxford, and was
-appointed Clerk in St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, and Master of the
-Children on 1 October 1595. He earned a considerable reputation as a
-musician, and died in possession of both Masterships at the age of
-seventy-five on 24 January 1634.<a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">[123]</a> His patent of appointment to the
-Chapel Royal is dated 14 July and his commission 15 July 1597.<a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">[124]</a>
-They closely follow in terms those granted to Hunnis.<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">[125]</a></p>
-
-<p>Three years later the theatrical enterprise which had been dropped in
-1584 was renewed by Giles, in co-operation with Henry Evans, who had
-been associated with its final stages. The locality chosen was again
-the Blackfriars, in the building reconstructed by James Burbadge in
-1596, and then inhibited, on a petition of the inhabitants, from use
-as a public play-house. Of this, being ‘then or late in the tenure or
-occupacion of’ Henry Evans, Richard Burbadge gave him on 2 September
-1600 a lease for twenty-one years from the following Michaelmas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span> at a
-rent of £40.<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">[126]</a> According to Burbadge’s own account of the matter,
-Evans ‘intended then presentlye to erect or sett vp a companye of boyes
-... in the same’, and knowing that the payment of the rent depended
-upon the possibility of maintaining a company ‘to playe playes and
-interludes in the said Playhowse in such sort as before tyme had bene
-there vsed’, he thought it desirable to take collateral security in
-the form of a bond for £400 from Evans and his son-in-law Alexander
-Hawkins.<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">[127]</a> Long after, the Blackfriars <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635
-describe the lease as being to ‘one Evans that first sett vp the boyes
-commonly called the Queenes Majesties Children of the Chapell’.<a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">[128]</a> I
-find nothing in this language to bear out the contention of Professor
-Wallace that Evans’s occupation of the Blackfriars extended back long
-before the date of his lease, and that, as already suggested by Mr.
-Fleay, the Chapel plays began again, not in 1600, but in 1597.<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">[129]</a>
-Burbadge speaks clearly of the setting up of the company as still an
-intention when the lease was drawn, and the reference to earlier plays
-in the house may either be to some use of it unknown to us between 1596
-and 1600, or perhaps more probably to the performances by Evans and
-others before the time of James Burbadge’s reconstruction. Mr. Fleay’s
-suggestion rested, so far as I can judge, upon the evidence for the
-existence of Jonson’s <i>Case is Altered</i> as early as January 1599
-and its publication as ‘acted by the children of the Blacke-friers’.
-But this publication was not until 1609 and represents a revision
-made not long before that date; and as will be seen the company
-did not use the name Children of the Blackfriars until about 1606.
-There is no reason to suppose that they were the original producers
-of the play. A confirmatory indication for 1600 as the date of the
-revival may be found in the appearance of the Chapel at Court, for
-the first time since 1584, on 6 January and 22 February 1601. On both
-occasions Nathaniel Giles was payee. The performance of 6 January,
-described by the Treasurer of the Chamber as ‘a showe with musycke
-and speciall songes’ was probably Jonson’s <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-which that description well fits; that of 22 February may have been
-the anonymous <i>Contention between Liberality and Prodigality</i>.
-Both of these were published in 1601. Jonson has preserved for us in
-his Folio of 1616 the list of the principal actors of <i>Cynthia’s
-Revels</i>, who were ‘Nat. Field, Sal. Pavy, Tho. Day, Ioh. Underwood,
-Rob. Baxter and Ioh. Frost’. The induction of the play is spoken by
-‘Iacke’ and two other of the Children, of whom one, impersonating a
-spectator, complains that ‘the vmbrae, or ghosts of some three or
-foure playes, departed a dozen yeeres since, haue bin seene walking
-on your stage heere’. <i>Liberality and Prodigality</i> may be one
-of the old-fashioned plays here scoffed at, but it is probable that
-Jonson also had in mind Lyly’s <i>Love’s Metamorphosis</i>, which
-was published in 1601 as ‘first playd by the Children of Paules, and
-now by the Children of the Chappell’, and there may have been other
-revivals of the same kind. The company was included in the Lenten
-prohibition of 11 March 1601. Later in the year they produced Jonson’s
-<i>Poetaster</i>, containing raillery of the common stages, which
-stimulated a reply in Dekker’s <i>Satiromastix</i>, and which, together
-with their growing popularity, sufficiently explains the reference
-to the ‘aerie of children, little eyases’ in <i>Hamlet</i>.<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">[130]</a>
-The <i>Poetaster</i> was published in 1602 and the actor-list of
-the Folio of 1616 contains the names of ‘Nat. Field, Sal Pavy, Tho.
-Day, Ioh. Underwood, Wil. Ostler and Tho. Marton’. The full name of
-Pavy, who died after acting for three years, is given as Salathiel
-in the epigram written to his memory by Jonson; it appears as Salmon
-in a document which adds considerably to our knowledge both of the
-original constitution of the company and of the lines on which it
-was managed. This is a complaint to the Star Chamber by one Henry
-Clifton, Esq., of Toftrees, Norfolk, against a serious abuse of the
-powers of impressment entrusted under the royal commission to Nathaniel
-Giles.<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">[131]</a> Clifton alleged that Giles, in confederacy with Evans,
-one James Robinson and others, had set up a play-house for their own
-profit in the Blackfriars, and under colour of the commission had taken
-boys, not for the royal service in the Chapel Royal, but employment in
-acting interludes. He specified as so taken, ‘John Chappell, a gramer
-schole scholler of one Mr. Spykes schole neere Criplegate, London;
-John Motteram, a gramer scholler in the free schole at Westmi[n]ster;
-Nathan ffield, a scholler of a gramer<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span> schole in London, kepte by one
-Mr. Monkaster; Alvery Trussell, an apprentice to one Thomas Gyles;
-one Phillipp Pykman and Thomas Grymes, apprentices to Richard and
-Georg Chambers; Salmon Pavey, apprentice to one Peerce’. These were
-all children ‘noe way able or fitt for singing, nor by anie the sayd
-confederates endevoured to be taught to singe’. Finally they had
-made an attempt upon Clifton’s own son Thomas, a boy of thirteen,
-who had been seized by Robinson in Christ Church cloister on or
-about 13 December 1600, as he went from Clifton’s house in Great St.
-Bartholomew’s to the grammar school at Christ Church, and carried off
-to the play-house ‘to exercyse the base trade of a mercynary enterlude
-player, to his vtter losse of tyme, ruyne and disparagment’. Clifton
-went to the Blackfriars, where his son was ‘amongste a companie of
-lewde and dissolute mercenary players’, and made a protest; but Giles,
-Robinson, and Evans replied that ‘yf the Queene would not beare them
-furth in that accion, she should gett another to execute her comission
-for them’, that ‘they had aucthoritie sufficient soe to take any noble
-mans sonne in this land’, and that ‘were yt not for the benefitt they
-made by the sayd play howse, whoe would, should serve the Chappell
-with children for them’. Then they committed Thomas Clifton to the
-charge of Evans in his father’s presence, with a threat of a whipping
-if he was not obedient, and ‘did then and there deliuer vnto his sayd
-sonne, in moste scornefull disdaynfull and dispightfull manner, a
-scrolle of paper, conteyning parte of one of theire sayd playes or
-enterludes, and him, the sayd Thomas Clifton, comaunded to learne
-the same by harte’. Clifton appealed to Sir John Fortescue and got
-a warrant from him for the boy’s release after a day and a night’s
-durance. It was not, however, until a year later, on 15 December 1601,
-that he made his complaint.<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">[132]</a> During the following Christmas Giles
-brought the boys to Court on 6 and 10 January and 14 February 1602,
-and then with the hearing of the case in the Star Chamber during
-Hilary Term troubles began for the syndicate. Evans was censured ‘for
-his vnorderlie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span> carriage and behauiour in takinge vp of gentlemens
-childeren against theire wills and to ymploy them for players and
-for other misdemeanors’, and it was decreed that all assurances made
-to him concerning the play-house or plays should be void and should
-be delivered up to be cancelled.<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">[133]</a> Evans, however, had apparently
-prepared himself against this contingency by assigning his lease to
-his son-in-law Alexander Hawkins on 21 October 1601. This at least
-is one explanation of a somewhat obscure transaction. According to
-Evans himself, the assignment was to protect Hawkins from any risk
-upon the bond given to Burbadge. On the other hand, there had already
-been negotiations for the sale of a half interest in the undertaking
-to three new partners, Edward Kirkham, William Rastall, and Thomas
-Kendall, and it was claimed later by Kirkham that the assignment to
-Hawkins had been in trust to reassign a moiety to these three, in
-return for a contribution of capital variously stated at from £300 to
-£600. No such reassignment was, however, carried out.<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">[134]</a> But although
-the lease from Burbadge was certainly not cancelled as a result of the
-Star Chamber decree, it probably did seem prudent that the original
-managers of the theatre should remain in the background for a time.
-Nothing more is heard of James Robinson, while the partnership between
-Evans and Hawkins on the one side and Kirkham, Rastall, and Kendall on
-the other was brought into operation under articles dated on 20 April
-1602. For the observance of these Evans and Hawkins gave a bond of
-£200.<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">[135]</a> Kirkham, Rastall, and Kendall in turn gave Evans a bond of
-£50 as security<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span> for a weekly payment of 8s., ‘because after the said
-agreements made, the complainant [Kirkham] and his said parteners would
-at their directions haue the dieting and ordering of the boyes vsed
-about the plaies there, which before the said complainant had, and for
-the which he had weekely before that disbursed and allowed great sommes
-of monie’.<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">[136]</a></p>
-
-<p>Of the new managers, Rastall was a merchant and Kendall a haberdasher,
-both of London.<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">[137]</a> Kirkham has generally been assumed to be the
-Yeoman of the Revels, but of this there is not, so far as I know,
-any definite proof. The association did not prove an harmonious one.
-According to Evans, Kirkham and his fellows made false information
-against him to the Lord Chamberlain, as a result of which he was
-‘comaunded by his Lordship to avoyd and leave the same’, had to quit
-the country, and lost nearly £300 by the charge he was put to and the
-negligence of Hawkins in looking after his profits.<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">[138]</a> This seems
-to have been in May 1602. Meanwhile the performances continued. The
-company did not appear at Court during the winter of 1602–3, but <i>Sir
-Giles Goosecap</i> and possibly Chapman’s <i>Gentleman Usher</i>
-were produced by them before the end of Elizabeth’s reign; and on 18
-September 1602 a visit was paid to the theatre by Philipp Julius, Duke
-of Stettin-Pomerania, of which the following account is preserved in
-the journal of Frederic Gerschow, a member of his suite:<a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">[139]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Von dannen sind wir auf die Kinder-comoediam gangen, welche
-im Argument iudiciret eine castam viduam, war eine historia
-einer königlichen Wittwe aus Engellandt. Es hat aber mit dieser
-Kinder-comoedia die Gelegenheit: die Königin hält viel junger
-Knaben, die sich der Singekunst mit Ernst befleissigen müssen
-und auf allen Instrumenten lernen, auch dabenebenst studieren.
-Diese Knaben<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span> haben ihre besondere praeceptores in allen
-Künsten, insonderheit sehr gute musicos.’</p>
-
-<p>‘Damit sie nun höfliche Sitten anwenden, ist ihnen aufgelegt,
-wöchentlich eine comoedia zu agiren, wozu ihnen denn die Königin
-ein sonderlich theatrum erbauet und mit köstlichen Kleidern zum
-Ueberfluss versorget hat. Wer solcher Action zusehen will, muss
-so gut als unserer Münze acht sundische Schillinge geben, und
-findet sich doch stets viel Volks auch viele ehrbare Frauens,
-weil nutze argumenta und viele schöne Lehren, als von andern
-berichtet, sollen tractiret werden; alle bey Lichte agiret,
-welches ein gross Ansehen macht. Eine ganze Stunde vorher höret
-man eine köstliche musicam instrumentalem von Orgeln, Lauten,
-Pandoren, Mandoren, Geigen und Pfeiffen, wie denn damahlen ein
-Knabe cum voce tremula in einer Basgeigen so lieblich gesungen,
-dass wo es die Nonnen zu Mailand ihnen nicht vorgethan, wir
-seines Gleichen auf der Reise nicht gehöret hatten.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This report of a foreigner must not be pressed as if it were precise
-evidence upon the business organization of the Blackfriars. Yet it
-forms the main basis of the theory propounded by Professor Wallace
-that Elizabeth personally financed the Chapel plays and personally
-directed the limitation of the number of adult companies allowed to
-perform in London, as part of a deliberate scheme of reform, which
-her ‘definite notion of what the theatre should be’ had led her to
-plan&mdash;a theory which, I fear, makes his <i>Children of the Chapel at
-Blackfriars</i> misleading, in spite of its value as a review of the
-available evidence, old and new, about the company.<a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">[140]</a> Professor
-Wallace supposes that Edward Kirkham, acting officially as Yeoman of
-the Revels, was Elizabeth’s agent, and that, even before he became a
-partner in the syndicate, he dieted the boys and supplied them with the
-‘köstlichen Kleidern zum Ueberfluss’ mentioned by Gerschow, accounting
-for the expenditure either through the Revels Accounts or through some
-other unspecified accounts ‘yet to be discovered’.<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">[141]</a> Certainly
-no such expenditure appeared in the Revels Accounts, and no other
-official account with which Kirkham was concerned is known. It may be
-pointed out that, if we took Gerschow’s account as authoritative, we
-should have to suppose that Elizabeth provided the theatre building,
-which we know she did not, and I think it may be taken for granted
-that her payments for the Chapel were no more than those with which
-we are already quite familiar, namely the Master’s fee of £40 ‘pro
-exhibicione puerorum’, the board-wages of 6<i>d.</i> a day for each
-of twelve children,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span> possibly the breakfast allowance of £16 a year
-and the largess of £9 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for high feasts, and the
-occasional rewards for actual performances. None of these, of course,
-passed through the Revels Office, and although this office may, as in
-the past, have helped to furnish the actual plays at Court, the cost
-of exercising in public remained a speculation of the Master and his
-backers, who had to look for recoupment and any possible profits to
-the sums received from spectators. If it is true, as Gerschow seems
-to say, that performances were only given on Saturdays, the high
-entrance charge of 1<i>s.</i> is fully explained. The lawsuits, of
-course, bear full evidence to the expenditure by the members of the
-syndicate upon the ‘setting forward’ of plays.<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">[142]</a> Nor is there any
-ground for asserting, as Professor Wallace does, that there were two
-distinct sets of children, one lodged in or near the palace for chapel
-purposes proper, and the other kept at the Blackfriars for plays.<a id="FNanchor_143" href="#Footnote_143" class="fnanchor">[143]</a>
-It is true that Clifton charged Giles with impressing boys who could
-not sing, but Gerschow’s account proves that there were others at the
-Blackfriars who could sing well enough, and it would be absurd to
-suppose that there was one trained choir for the stage and another for
-divine service. Doubtless, however, the needs of the theatre made it
-necessary to employ, by agreement or impressment, a larger number of
-boys than the twelve borne on the official establishment.<a id="FNanchor_144" href="#Footnote_144" class="fnanchor">[144]</a> And that
-boys whose voices had broken were retained in the theatrical company
-may be inferred from the report about 1602 that the Dowager Countess of
-Leicester had married ‘one of the playing boyes of the chappell’.<a id="FNanchor_145" href="#Footnote_145" class="fnanchor">[145]</a>
-I cannot, finally, agree with Professor Wallace in assuming that the
-play attended by Elizabeth at the Blackfriars on 29 December 1601 was
-necessarily a public one at the theatre; much less that it was ‘only
-one in a series of such attendances’. She had dined with Lord Hunsdon
-at his house in the Blackfriars. The play may have been in his great
-chamber, or he may have borrowed the theatre next door for private use
-on an off-day. And the actors may even more probably have been his own
-company than the Chapel boys.<a id="FNanchor_146" href="#Footnote_146" class="fnanchor">[146]</a></p>
-
-<p>The appointment of a new Lord Chamberlain by James I seems to have
-enabled Evans to return to England. He found<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span> theatrical affairs in a
-bad way, owing to the plague of 1603, and ‘speach and treatie’ arose
-between him and Burbadge about a possible surrender of his lease.<a id="FNanchor_147" href="#Footnote_147" class="fnanchor">[147]</a>
-By December, however, things looked brighter. Evans did some repairs
-to the Blackfriars, and the enterprise continued.<a id="FNanchor_148" href="#Footnote_148" class="fnanchor">[148]</a> Like the adult
-companies, the partners secured direct royal protection under the
-following patent of 4 February 1604:<a id="FNanchor_149" href="#Footnote_149" class="fnanchor">[149]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De licencia speciali pro Eduardo Kirkham et aliis pro le
-Revell domine Regine.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Mayors Shiriffes Justices
-of Peace Baliffes Constables and to all other our officers
-mynisters and lovinge Subiectes to whome theis presentes shall
-come, greeting. Whereas the Queene our deerest wief hath for her
-pleasure and recrea[~c]on when she shall thinke it fit to have
-any playes or shewes appoynted her servauntes Edward Kirkham
-Alexander Hawkyns Thomas Kendall and Robert Payne to provyde and
-bring vppe a convenient nomber of Children, whoe shalbe called
-children of her Revelles, knowe ye that we have appointed and
-authorized and by theis presentes doe authorize and appoynte
-the said Edward Kirkham Alexander Hawkins Thomas Kendall and
-Robert Payne from tyme to tyme to provide keepe and bring vppe a
-convenient nomber of Children, and them to practize and exercise
-in the quality of playinge by the name of Children of the
-Revells to the Queene within the Black-fryers in our Cytie of
-London, or in any other convenient place where they shall thinke
-fit for that purpose. Wherefore we will and commaunde [you] and
-everie of you to whome it shall appertayne to permytt her said
-Servauntes to keepe a convenient nomber of Children by the name
-of Children of her Revells and them to exercise in the quality
-of playing according to her pleasure. Provided allwaies that noe
-such Playes or Shewes shalbee presented before the said Queene
-our wief by the said Children or by them any where publiquelie
-acted but by the approbacion and allowaunce of Samuell Danyell,
-whome her pleasure is to appoynt for that purpose. And theis
-our lettres Patentes shalbe your sufficient warraunte in this
-behalfe. In witnes whereof &amp;c., witnes our self at Westminster
-the fourth day of February.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">Apparently it was still thought better to keep the name of Evans out of
-the patent, and he was represented by Hawkins; of the nature of Payne’s
-connexion with the company I know<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span> nothing. The adoption of the name of
-Children of the Queen’s Revels should perhaps be taken as indicating
-that, as the boy-actors grew older, the original connexion with the
-Chapel became looser. The use of Giles’s commission as a method of
-obtaining recruits was probably abandoned, and there is no evidence
-that he had any further personal association with the theatre.<a id="FNanchor_150" href="#Footnote_150" class="fnanchor">[150]</a>
-The commission itself was, however, renewed on 13 September 1604,
-with a new provision for the further education of boys whose voices
-had changed;<a id="FNanchor_151" href="#Footnote_151" class="fnanchor">[151]</a> and in December Giles was successful in getting
-the board-wages allowed for his charges raised from 6<i>d.</i> to
-10<i>d.</i> a day.<a id="FNanchor_152" href="#Footnote_152" class="fnanchor">[152]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Revels children started gaily on the new phase of their career,
-and the <i>Hamlet</i> allusion is echoed in Middleton’s advice to a
-gallant, ‘if his humour so serve him, to call in at the Blackfriars,
-where he should see a nest of boys able to ravish a man’.<a id="FNanchor_153" href="#Footnote_153" class="fnanchor">[153]</a> They
-were at Court on 21 February 1604 and on 1 and 3 January 1605. Their
-payees were Kirkham for the first year and Evans and Daniel for
-the second. Evidently Daniel was taking a more active part in the
-management than that of a mere licenser. Their play of 1 January 1605
-was Chapman’s <i>All Fools</i> (1605), and to 1603–5 may also be
-assigned his <i>Monsieur d’Olive</i> (1606), and possibly his <i>Bussy
-d’Ambois</i> (1607), and <i>Day’s Law Tricks</i> (1608). I venture to
-conjecture that the boys’ companies were much more under the influence
-of their poets than were their adult rivals; it is noteworthy that
-plays written for them got published much more rapidly than the King’s
-or Prince’s men ever permitted.<a id="FNanchor_154" href="#Footnote_154" class="fnanchor">[154]</a> And it is known that one poet,
-who now began for the first time to work for the Blackfriars, acquired
-a financial interest in the undertaking. This was John Marston, to
-whom Evans parted, at an unspecified date, with a third of the moiety
-which the arrangement of 1602 had left on his hands.<a id="FNanchor_155" href="#Footnote_155" class="fnanchor">[155]</a> Marston’s
-earliest contributions were probably <i>The Malcontent</i> (1604)
-and <i>The Dutch Courtesan</i> (1605). From<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span> the induction to the
-<i>Malcontent</i> we learn that it was appropriated by the King’s
-men, in return for the performance by the boys of a play on Jeronimo,
-perhaps the extant <i>I Jeronimo</i>, in which the King’s claimed
-rights. Marston’s satirical temper did not, however, prove altogether
-an asset to the company; and I fear that the deference of its directors
-to literary suggestions was not compatible with that practical
-political sense, which as a rule enabled the professional players to
-escape conflicts with authority. The history of the next few years is
-one of a series of indiscretions, which render it rather surprising
-that the company should throughout have succeeded in maintaining its
-vitality, even with the help of constant reconstructions of management
-and changes of name. The first trouble, the nature of which is unknown,
-appears to have been caused by Marston’s <i>Dutch Courtesan</i>.
-Then came, ironically enough, the <i>Philotas</i> of the company’s
-official censor, Samuel Daniel. Then, in 1605, the serious affair of
-<i>Eastward Ho!</i> for which Marston appears to have been mainly
-responsible, although he saved himself by flight, whereas his fellow
-authors, Jonson and Chapman, found themselves in prison and in imminent
-danger of losing their ears.<a id="FNanchor_156" href="#Footnote_156" class="fnanchor">[156]</a> I do not think that the scandal
-arose on the performance of the play, but on its publication in the
-late autumn.<a id="FNanchor_157" href="#Footnote_157" class="fnanchor">[157]</a> The company did not appear at Court during the
-winter of 1605–6, but the ingenious Kirkham seems to have succeeded in
-transferring one of its new plays, Marston’s <i>Fawn</i>, and possibly
-also <i>Bussy D’Ambois</i>, to Paul’s, and appeared triumphantly before
-the Treasurer of the Chamber’s paymaster the following spring as ‘one
-of the Masters of the Children of Pawles’. Meanwhile the Blackfriars
-company went on acting, but it is to be inferred from the title-pages
-of its next group of plays, Marston’s <i>Sophonisba</i> (1606),
-Sharpham’s <i>The Fleir</i> (1607), and Day’s <i>Isle of Gulls</i>
-(1606), that its misdemeanour had cost it the direct patronage of the
-Queen, and that it was now only entitled to call itself, not Children
-of the Queen’s Revels, but Children of the Revels.<a id="FNanchor_158" href="#Footnote_158" class="fnanchor">[158]</a> Possibly
-the change of name also<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span> indicates that thereafter, not Daniel, but
-the Master of the Revels, acted as its censor. Anne herself, by the
-way, must have felt the snub, for it was probably at the Blackfriars
-that, if the French ambassador may be trusted, she had attended
-representations ‘to enjoy the laugh against her husband’.<a id="FNanchor_159" href="#Footnote_159" class="fnanchor">[159]</a> The
-alias, whatever it connoted, proved but an ephemeral one. By February
-1606 one of the plays just named, the <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, had given
-a new offence. Some of those responsible for it were thrown into
-Bridewell, and a fresh reconstruction became imperative.<a id="FNanchor_160" href="#Footnote_160" class="fnanchor">[160]</a> It was
-probably at this date that one Robert Keysar, a London goldsmith, came
-into the business. Kirkham, like Evans before him, discreetly retired
-from active management, and the Children, with Keysar as ‘interest
-with them’, became ‘Masters themselves’, taking the risks and paying
-the syndicate for the use of the hall.<a id="FNanchor_161" href="#Footnote_161" class="fnanchor">[161]</a> Kirkham claims that under
-this arrangement the moiety of profits in which he had rights amounted
-to £150 a year, as against £100 a year previously earned.<a id="FNanchor_162" href="#Footnote_162" class="fnanchor">[162]</a> Shortly
-afterwards the dissociation of the Chapel from the Blackfriars was
-completed by a new commission issued to Giles on 7 November 1606, to
-which was added the following clause:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Prouided alwayes and wee doe straightlie charge and commaunde
-that none of the saide Choristers or Children of the Chappell
-so to be taken by force of this commission shalbe vsed or
-imployed as Comedians or Stage players, or to exercise or acte
-any Stage playes Interludes Comedies or tragedies, for that it
-is not fitt or decent that such as shoulde singe the praises
-of God Allmightie shoulde be trayned vpp or imployed in suche
-lascivious and prophane exercises.’<a id="FNanchor_163" href="#Footnote_163" class="fnanchor">[163]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is presumably to this pronouncement that Flecknoe refers in 1664,
-when he speaks of the Chapel theatre being converted to the use of the
-Children of the Revels, on account of the growing precision of the
-people and the growing licentiousness<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span> of plays.<a id="FNanchor_164" href="#Footnote_164" class="fnanchor">[164]</a> It is, however,
-curious to observe that the abandoned titles of the company tended to
-linger on in actual use. Evans in 1612 speaks of the syndicate as ‘the
-coparteners sharers, and Masters of the Queenes Maiesties Children
-of the Revells (for so yt was often called)’ in 1608;<a id="FNanchor_165" href="#Footnote_165" class="fnanchor">[165]</a> while the
-name Children of the Chapel is used in the Stationers’ Register entry
-of <i>Your Five Gallants</i> in 1608, at Maidstone in 1610, and even
-in such official documents as the Revels Accounts for 1604–5 and the
-Chamber Accounts for 1612–13.</p>
-
-<p>Under Keysar the name was Children of the Blackfriars. For a couple
-of years the company succeeded in keeping clear of further disaster.
-But on 29 March 1608 the French ambassador, M. de la Boderie, reported
-that all the London theatres had been closed, and were now threatened
-by the King with a permanent inhibition on account of two plays which
-had given the greatest offence.<a id="FNanchor_166" href="#Footnote_166" class="fnanchor">[166]</a> Against one of these, which
-dealt with the domestic affairs of the French king, he had himself
-lodged a protest, and his description leaves no doubt that this was
-one of the parts of Chapman’s <i>Conspiracy and Tragedy of Byron</i>,
-which was published, without the offending scene, later in the year,
-as ‘acted at the Black-Friars’. The other play was a personal attack
-upon James himself. ‘Un jour ou deux devant’, says La Boderie, ‘ilz
-avoient dépêché leur Roi, sa mine d’Escosse, et tous ses favorits
-d’une estrange sorte; car aprés luy avoir fait dépiter le ciel sur
-le vol d’un oyseau, et faict battre un gentilhomme pour avoir rompu
-ses chiens, ils le dépeignoient ivre pour le moins une fois le jour.’
-This piece is not extant, but I have recently come across another
-allusion to it in a letter of 11 March 1608 to Lord Salisbury from
-Sir Thomas Lake, a clerk of the signet in attendance upon the King at
-Thetford.<a id="FNanchor_167" href="#Footnote_167" class="fnanchor">[167]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘His ma<sup>tie</sup> was well pleased with that which your lo.
-advertiseth concerning the committing of the players y<sup>t</sup>
-have offended in y<sup>e</sup> matters of France, and commanded me to
-signifye to your lo. that for y<sup>e</sup> others who have offended in
-y<sup>e</sup> matter of y<sup>e</sup> Mynes and other lewd words, which is y<sup>e</sup>
-children of y<sup>e</sup> blackfriars, That though he had signified
-his mynde to your lo. by my lo. of Mountgommery yet I should<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>
-repeate it again, That his G. had vowed they should never play
-more, but should first begg their bred and he wold have his vow
-performed, And therefore my lo. chamberlain by himselfe or your
-ll. at the table should take order to dissolve them, and to
-punish the maker besides.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Sir Thomas Lake appears to have been under the impression that two
-companies were concerned, and that the ‘matters of France’ were
-not played by the Children of Blackfriars. If so, we must suppose
-that <i>Byron</i> was originally produced elsewhere, perhaps by the
-King’s Revels, and transferred to the Blackfriars after ‘reformation’
-by the Council. M. de la Boderie, however, writes as if the same
-company were responsible for both plays, and perhaps it is on the
-whole more probable that Sir Thomas Lake misunderstood the situation.
-I feel very little doubt that the maker of the play on the mines
-was once more Marston, who was certainly summoned before the Privy
-Council and committed to Newgate, on some offence not specified in
-the extant record, on 8 June 1608.<a id="FNanchor_168" href="#Footnote_168" class="fnanchor">[168]</a> And this was probably the
-end of his stormy connexion with the stage. He disappeared from
-the Blackfriars and from literary life, leaving <i>The Insatiate
-Countess</i> unfinished, and selling the share in the syndicate
-which he had acquired from Evans about 1603 to Robert Keysar for
-£100. Before making his purchase, Keysar, who tells us that he put
-a value of £600 on the whole of the enterprise, got an assurance,
-as he thought, from the King’s men that they would not come to any
-arrangement with Henry Evans which would prejudice his interests.<a id="FNanchor_169" href="#Footnote_169" class="fnanchor">[169]</a>
-This the King’s men afterwards denied, and as a matter of fact the
-negotiations, tentatively opened as far back as 1603, between Evans
-and Burbadge for a surrender of the lease were now coming to a head,
-and its actual surrender took place about August 1608.<a id="FNanchor_170" href="#Footnote_170" class="fnanchor">[170]</a> On the
-ninth of that month Burbadge executed fresh leases of the theatre to
-a new syndicate representing the King’s men.<a id="FNanchor_171" href="#Footnote_171" class="fnanchor">[171]</a> The circumstances
-leading up to Evans’s part in this transaction became subsequently
-the subject of hostile criticism by Kirkham, who asserted that the
-lease, which Alexander Hawkins held in trust, had been stolen from his
-custody by Mrs. Evans, and that the surrender was effected with the
-fraudulent intention of excluding Kirkham from the profits to which he
-was entitled under the settlement of 1602.<a id="FNanchor_172" href="#Footnote_172" class="fnanchor">[172]</a> According to Evans,
-however, Kirkham was at least implicitly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span> a consenting party, for it
-was he who, after the King’s inhibition had brought the profits to an
-end, grew weary of the undertaking and initiated measures for winding
-it up. On or about 26 July 1608 he had had the ‘apparells, properties
-and goods’ of the syndicate appraised and an equitable division made.
-When some of the boys were committed to prison he had ‘said he would
-deale no more with yt, “for”, quoth he, “yt is a base thing”, or vsed
-wordes to such, or very like effect’. And he had ‘delivered up their
-commission, which he had vnder the greate seale aucthorising them to
-plaie, and discharged divers of the partners and poetts’. In view of
-this, Evans claimed that he was fully justified in coming to terms with
-Burbadge.<a id="FNanchor_173" href="#Footnote_173" class="fnanchor">[173]</a></p>
-
-<p>After all, the King’s anger proved only a flash in the pan. Perhaps
-the company travelled during the summer of 1608, if they, and not
-the King’s Revels, were ‘the Children of the Revells’ rewarded at
-Leicester on 21 August.<a id="FNanchor_174" href="#Footnote_174" class="fnanchor">[174]</a> But by the following Christmas they were
-in London, and with Keysar as their payee gave three plays at Court,
-where they had not put in an appearance since 1604–5. Two of these were
-on 1 and 4 January 1609. As they still bore the name of Children of
-Blackfriars, they had presumably remained on sufferance in their old
-theatre, which the King’s men may not have been in a hurry to occupy
-during a plague-stricken period.<a id="FNanchor_175" href="#Footnote_175" class="fnanchor">[175]</a> But when a new season opened in
-the autumn of 1609, new quarters became necessary. These they found at
-Whitefriars, which had been vacated by the failure of the short-lived
-King’s Revels company, and it was as the Children of Whitefriars that
-Keysar brought them to Court for no less than five plays during the
-winter of 1609–10. He had now enlisted a partner in Philip Rosseter,
-one of the lutenists of the royal household, who carried out a scheme,
-with the co-operation of the King’s men, for buying off with a ‘dead
-rent’ the possible competition of the Paul’s boys, who had closed their
-doors about 1606, but might at any moment open<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span> them again.<a id="FNanchor_176" href="#Footnote_176" class="fnanchor">[176]</a> More
-than this, through the influence of Sir Thomas Monson, Rosseter was
-successful in obtaining a new patent, dated on 4 January 1610, by which
-the Children once more became entitled to call themselves Children of
-the Queen’s Revels.<a id="FNanchor_177" href="#Footnote_177" class="fnanchor">[177]</a> It ran as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De concessione Roberto Daborne &amp; aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c., To all Maiors Sheriffes Iustices
-of peace Bayliffes Constables and to all other our Officers
-Ministers and loving Subiects to whome theis presentes shall
-come Greeting. Whereas the Quene our deerest wyfe hathe for
-hir pleasure, and recreacion, when shee shall thinke it fitt
-to have any Playes or Shewes, appoynted hir servantes Robert
-Daborne, Phillippe Rosseter, Iohn Tarbock, Richard Iones, and
-Robert Browne to prouide and bring vpp a convenient nomber of
-Children whoe shalbe called Children of hir Revelles, knowe ye
-that wee haue appoynted and authorised, and by theis presentes
-do authorize and appoynte the said Robert Daborne, Phillipp
-Rosseter, Iohn Tarbock, Richard Iones, and Robert Browne from
-tyme to tyme to provide keepe and bring vpp a convenient nomber
-of children, and them to practice and exercise in the quality of
-playing, by the name of Children of the Revells to the Queene,
-within the white ffryers in the Suburbs of our Citty of London,
-or in any other convenyent place where they shall thinke fitt
-for that purpose. Wherfore wee will and commaund you and euery
-of you to whome it shall appertayne to permitt her said seruants
-to keepe a conuenient nomber of Children by the name of the
-Children of hir Revells, and them to exercise in the qualitye
-of playing according to hir pleasure, And theis our lettres
-patentes shalbe your sufficient warrant in this behaulfe.
-Wittnes our self at Westminster, the ffourth daye of Ianuary.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">Of the new syndicate Browne and Jones were old professional actors
-who had belonged to the Admiral’s men a quarter of a century before,
-and had since been prominent, Browne in particular, as organizers
-of English companies for travel in Germany. Daborne was or became a
-playwright. Of Tarbock I know nothing; he may have been a nominee of
-Keysar,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span> whose own name, perhaps for reasons of diplomacy, does not
-appear in the patent. He may, of course, have retired, but a lawsuit
-which he brought in 1610 suggests that his connexion with the company
-was not altogether broken. The Whitefriars had not the tradition of
-the Blackfriars, and Keysar was aggrieved at the surrender of the
-Blackfriars lease by Evans over his head. On 8 February 1610 he laid a
-bill in the Court of Requests against the housekeepers of the King’s
-men, claiming a share in their profits since the date of surrender,
-which he estimated at £1,500, on the strength of the one-sixth interest
-in the lease assigned by Evans to Marston and by Marston to him.<a id="FNanchor_178" href="#Footnote_178" class="fnanchor">[178]</a>
-He asserted that he had kept boys two years in the hope of playing
-‘vpon the ceasing of the generall sicknes’, and had spent £500 on
-that and on making provision in the house, and had now, at a loss of
-£1,000, had to disperse ‘a companye of the moste exparte and skilful
-actors within the realme of England to the number of eighteane or
-twentye persons all or moste of them trayned vp in that service, in
-the raigne of the late Queene Elizabeth for ten yeares togeather and
-afterwardes preferred into her Maiesties service to be the Chilldren
-of her Revells’.<a id="FNanchor_179" href="#Footnote_179" class="fnanchor">[179]</a> Burbadge and his fellows denied that they had
-made £1,500, or that they had attempted to defraud Keysar either about
-the surrender of the lease or, as he also alleged, the ‘dead rent’ to
-Paul’s, and they pointed out that his losses were really due to the
-plague. He could recover his share of the theatrical stock from Evans.
-Evans had had no legal right to assign his interest under the lease.
-As only the pleadings in the case and not the depositions or the order
-of the court are extant, we do not know what Evans, who was to be a
-witness, had to say.<a id="FNanchor_180" href="#Footnote_180" class="fnanchor">[180]</a> The fact that one of the new Blackfriars
-leases of 1608 was to a Thomas Evans leaves the transaction between
-Henry Evans and Burbadge not altogether free from a suspicion of bad
-faith. Kirkham also found that he had been either hasty or outwitted in
-1608, and as the deaths of Rastall and Kendall in that year had left
-him the sole claimant to any interest under the arrangement of 1602, he
-had recourse to litigation. In the course of 1611 and 1612 he brought
-a ‘multiplicitie of suites’ against Evans and Hawkins, and was finally
-non-suited in the King’s Bench.<a id="FNanchor_181" href="#Footnote_181" class="fnanchor">[181]</a> Then, in May 1612, Evans in his
-turn brought a Chancery action against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span> Kirkham, in the hope of getting
-his bond of 1602 cancelled, and thus securing himself against any
-further persecution for petty breaches of the articles of agreement.
-The result of this is unknown, but in the course of it many of the
-incidents of 1600–8 were brought into question, and Kirkham claimed
-that not merely had Evans shut him out in 1604 from certain rooms in
-the Blackfriars which he was entitled to use, but that by the surrender
-of the lease in 1608 he had lost profits which he estimated at £60
-a year.<a id="FNanchor_182" href="#Footnote_182" class="fnanchor">[182]</a> Finally in July 1612 Kirkham brought a Chancery action
-against Evans, Burbadge, and John Heminges, and also against the widow
-of Alexander Hawkins and Edward Painton, to whom she was now married,
-for reinstatement in his moiety of the lease. In this suit much of the
-same ground was again traversed, but the Court refused to grant him any
-relief.</p>
-
-<p>It is not altogether easy to disentangle the plays produced at the
-Blackfriars under Keysar from those produced immediately afterwards
-at the Whitefriars. The only title-page which definitely names the
-Children of the Blackfriars is that of Jonson’s <i>The Case is
-Altered</i> (1609). But Chapman’s <i>Byron</i> (1608) and <i>May
-Day</i> (1611) and Middleton’s <i>Your Five Gallants</i> (n.d.?1608)
-also claim to have been acted at the Blackfriars. The Q<sub>1</sub> of
-Middleton’s <i>A Trick to Catch the Old One</i> (1608) assigns it to
-Paul’s; the Q<sub>2</sub> both to Paul’s and Blackfriars, with an indication
-of a Court performance on New Year’s Day, which can only be that of
-1 January 1609. This play, therefore, must have been taken over from
-Paul’s, when that house closed in 1606 or 1607. As Middleton is not
-generally found writing for Blackfriars, <i>Your Five Gallants</i> may
-have been acquired in the same way. It is also extremely likely that
-Chapman’s <i>Bussy d’Ambois</i> passed from Paul’s to Blackfriars on
-its way to the King’s men. No name of company or theatre is attached
-to Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>Knight of the Burning Pestle</i> (1613)
-or to <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i> (<i>c.</i> 1609). But the <i>K.
-B. P.</i> was published with an epistle to Keysar as its preserver and
-can be securely dated in 1607–8; it refers to the house in which it
-was played as having been open for seven years, which just fits the
-Blackfriars. <i>The Faithful Shepherdess</i> is of 1608–9 and a boys’
-play; the commendatory verses by Field, Jonson, and Chapman justify an
-attribution to the company with which they had to do. Chapman’s <i>The
-Widow’s Tears</i> (1612) had been staged both at Blackfriars and at
-Whitefriars before publication, and was probably therefore produced
-shortly before the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span> company moved house. The greatest difficulty is
-Jonson’s <i>Epicoene</i> (S. R. 20 September 1610). No edition is
-known to be extant earlier than the Folio of 1616, in which Jonson
-ascribed the production to ‘1609’ and to the Children of the Revels.
-According to the system of dating ordinarily adopted by Jonson in this
-Folio, ‘1609’ should mean 1609 and not 1609–10. Yet the Children were
-not entitled to call themselves ‘of the Revels’ during 1609. Either
-Jonson’s chronology or his memory of the shifting nomenclature of the
-company has slipped. The actor-list of <i>Epicoene</i> names ‘Nat.
-Field, Gil. Carie, Hug. Attawel, Ioh. Smith, Will. Barksted, Will.
-Pen, Ric. Allin, Ioh. Blaney’. Amongst these Field is the sole direct
-connecting link with the Chapel actor-lists of 1600 and 1601. Keysar’s
-pleading shows us that from 1600 to 1610 the company had maintained
-a substantial identity throughout all its phases, as successively
-Children of the Chapel, Children of the Queen’s Revels, Children of the
-Blackfriars, Children of the Whitefriars; but part of his grievance is
-its dispersal, and possibly the continuity with the second Children
-of the Revels may not have been quite so marked. ‘In processe of
-time’, say the Burbadges in the <i>Blackfriars Sharers Papers</i> of
-1635, ‘the boyes growing up to bee men, which were Underwood, Field,
-Ostler, and were taken to strengthen the King’s service’.<a id="FNanchor_183" href="#Footnote_183" class="fnanchor">[183]</a> This,
-which is written in relation to the acquisition of the Blackfriars, is
-doubtless accurate as regards Ostler and Underwood, and their transfer
-may reasonably be placed in the winter of 1609–10. But it was not until
-some years later that Field joined the King’s men.</p>
-
-<p>The career of the second Queen’s Revels, but for the temporary
-suppression of <i>Epicoene</i> owing to a misconstruction placed on it
-by Arabella Stuart, was comparatively uneventful. They are recorded at
-Maidstone as the Children of the Chapel about March 1610. They made
-no appearance at Court during the following winter, and were again
-travelling in the following autumn, when they came to Norwich under
-the leadership of one Ralph Reeve, who showed the patent of 4 January
-1610, and at first claimed to be Rosseter, but afterwards admitted
-that he was not. As he could show no letters of deputation, he was not
-allowed to play, although he received a reward on the following day,
-which was recorded, not quite correctly, as paid to ‘the master of the
-children of the King’s Revells’. By 29 August Barksted and Carey had
-left the company to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span> join the newly formed Lady Elizabeth’s men. We may
-therefore place at some time before this date Barksted’s completion
-of Marston’s <i>Insatiate Countess</i>, which was published in 1613
-as ‘acted at Whitefriars’. The entry in the Stationer’s Register of
-Field’s <i>A Woman is a Weathercock</i> (1612) on 23 November 1611
-shows that he also had begun to experiment in authorship. As this had
-been acted at Court, as well as by the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars,
-it probably dates back to the winter of 1609–10. The company returned
-to court on 5 January 1612 with Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>Cupid’s
-Revenge</i>, and the Clerk of the Revels entered them as the Children
-of Whitefriars.<a id="FNanchor_184" href="#Footnote_184" class="fnanchor">[184]</a> The travels of 1612 were under the leadership of
-Nicholas Long, and on 20 May another <i>contretemps</i> occurred at
-Norwich. The instrument of deputation was forthcoming on this occasion,
-but the mayor chose to interpret the patent as giving authority only
-to teach and instruct children, and not to perform with them; and so
-once again ‘the Master of the Kings Revells’ got his reward of 20s.,
-but was not allowed to play. Between Michaelmas and Christmas ‘the
-queens maiesties revellers’ were at Bristol, and at some time during
-1612–13 ‘two of the company of the childeren of Revells’ received a
-reward at Coventry. Conceivably the provincial company of Reeve and
-Long was a distinct organization from that in London. Rosseter was
-payee for four performances at Court during the winter of 1612–13. On
-the first occasion, in the course of November, the play was Beaumont
-and Fletcher’s <i>Coxcomb</i>; on 1 January and again on 9 January it
-was <i>Cupid’s Revenge</i>; and on 27 February it was <i>The Widow’s
-Tears</i>. In one version of the <i>Chamber Accounts</i> the company
-appears this year as the Children of the Queen’s Revels, but in another
-under the obsolete designation of Children of the Chapel. In addition
-to the plays already named, Chapman’s <i>Revenge of Bussy</i> had been
-on the Whitefriars stage before it was published in 1613; and it is
-conceivable that Chapman’s <i>Chabot</i> and Beaumont and Fletcher’s
-<i>Monsieur Thomas</i> and <i>The Nightwalker</i> may be Queen’s
-Revels plays of 1610–13. They may also, indeed, be Lady Elizabeth’s
-plays of 1613–16, but during this period the Lady Elizabeth and the
-Queen’s Revels appear to have been practically amalgamated, under an
-arrangement made between Henslowe and Rosseter in March 1613 and then
-modified, first in 1614, and again on the addition of Prince Charles’s
-men to the ‘combine’ in 1615. Yet in some way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span> the Children of the
-Revels maintained a separate individuality, at least in theory, during
-these years, as may be seen from the patent of 3 June 1615, which
-licensed Rosseter and Reeve, together with Robert Jones and Philip
-Kingman, to build a new Blackfriars theatre in the house known as
-Porter’s Hall.<a id="FNanchor_185" href="#Footnote_185" class="fnanchor">[185]</a> The main purpose of this undertaking was expressed
-to be the provision of a new house for the Children of the Queen’s
-Revels instead of the Whitefriars, where Rosseter’s lease was now
-expired, although it was also contemplated that use might be made of it
-by the Prince’s and the Lady Elizabeth’s players. Porter’s Hall only
-stood for a short time before civic hostility procured its demolition,
-and the single play, which we can be fairly confident that the Children
-of the Revels gave in it, is Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>Scornful
-Lady</i>. This presumably fell after the amalgamation under Henslowe
-broke up about the time of his death early in 1616. Field appears to
-have joined the King’s men about 1615. The Queen’s Revels dropped out
-of London theatrical life. Their provincial travels under Nicholas Long
-had apparently terminated in 1612, as in 1614 he is found using the
-patent of the Lady Elizabeth’s men (q. v.) in the provinces. But some
-members of the company seem to have gone travelling during the period
-of troubled relations with Henslowe, and are traceable at Coventry on
-7 October 1615, and at Nottingham in February 1616 and again later in
-1616–17. On 31 October 1617 a new Queen’s Revel’s company was formed by
-Rosseter, in association with Nicholas Long, Robert Lee of the Queen’s
-men, and William Perry of the King’s Revels.<a id="FNanchor_186" href="#Footnote_186" class="fnanchor">[186]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>iii. THE CHILDREN OF WINDSOR</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Masters of the Children</i>:&mdash;Richard Farrant (1564–80),
-Nathaniel Giles (1595–1634).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Chapel Royal at Windsor was served by an ecclesiastical college,
-which had been in existence as far back as the reign of Henry I, and
-had subsequently been resettled as St. George’s Chapel in connexion
-with the establishment of the Order of the Garter by Edward III,
-finally incorporated under Edward IV, and exempted from dissolution at
-the Reformation. Edward III had provided for a warden, who afterwards
-came to be called dean, 12 canons, 13 priest vicars, 4 clerks, 6 boy
-choristers, and 26 ‘poor knights’. The boys were to be ‘endued with
-clear and tuneable voices’, and to succeed the clerks as their voices
-changed. Their number was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span> altered from time to time; during the
-greater part of Elizabeth’s reign it stood at 10. Each had an annual
-fee of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> They were lodged within the Castle, in
-a chamber north of the chapel, and next to a building founded by James
-Denton in 1520, known as the ‘New Commons’. This is now merged in the
-canons’ houses, but a doorway is inscribed ‘Edes pro Sacellaenorum
-et Choristarum conviviis extructae <span class="allsmcap">A. D.</span> 1519’. There were
-also an epistoler and a gospeller.<a id="FNanchor_187" href="#Footnote_187" class="fnanchor">[187]</a> The music was ‘useyd after ye
-order and maner of ye quenes chappell’.<a id="FNanchor_188" href="#Footnote_188" class="fnanchor">[188]</a> One of the clerks, whose
-position corresponded to that of the Gentlemen of the household Chapel
-Royal, was appointed by the Chapter of the College to act as Organist
-and Master of the Children. The College was privileged, like the Chapel
-Royal itself, to recruit its choir by impressment. A commission for
-this purpose, issued on 8 March 1560, merely repeats the terms of one
-granted by Mary, which itself had confirmed earlier grants by Henry
-VIII and Edward VI.<a id="FNanchor_189" href="#Footnote_189" class="fnanchor">[189]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Master at Elizabeth’s accession was one Preston.<a id="FNanchor_190" href="#Footnote_190" class="fnanchor">[190]</a> But he was
-deprived, as unwilling to accept the new ecclesiastical settlement;
-and the first Master under whom the choristers appear to have acted at
-Court was Richard Farrant. He had been a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal
-from about 1553, but was replaced on 24 April 1564, doubtless on his
-appointment as Master at Windsor.<a id="FNanchor_191" href="#Footnote_191" class="fnanchor">[191]</a> On the following 30 September
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span> Chapter assigned a chantry to the teacher of the choristers for
-an increase of his maintenance.<a id="FNanchor_192" href="#Footnote_192" class="fnanchor">[192]</a> On 5 November 1570, Farrant was
-reappointed a Gentleman of the Chapel Royal, but evidently did not
-resign his Mastership.<a id="FNanchor_193" href="#Footnote_193" class="fnanchor">[193]</a> On 11 February 1567 he began a series of
-plays with the ‘Children of Windsor’ at Court, which was continued at
-Shrovetide 1568, on 22 February and 27 December 1569, at Shrovetide
-1571, on 1 January 1572, when he gave <i>Ajax and Ulysses</i>, on 1
-January 1573, on 6 January 1574, when he gave <i>Quintus Fabius</i>,
-on 6 January 1575, when he gave <i>King Xerxes</i>, and on 27 December
-1575. With the winter of 1576–7 the entries of his name in the accounts
-of the Treasurer take a new form; he is no longer ‘M<sup>r</sup> of the children
-of the Chappell at Wyndsore’ but ‘M<sup>r</sup> of the children of the Chappell’.
-The Revels Accounts for the same season record that on 6 January
-1577 <i>Mutius Scaevola</i> was played at Court by ‘the Children of
-Windsore and the Chappell’, and it is a fair inference that Farrant, in
-addition to exercising his own office, was now also acting as deputy
-to William Hunnis, the Master by patent of the Children of the Chapel
-Royal, and had made up a combined company from both choirs for the
-Christmas delectation of the Queen.<a id="FNanchor_194" href="#Footnote_194" class="fnanchor">[194]</a> This interpretation of the
-facts was confirmed when Professor Feuillerat was able to show from the
-Loseley archives that in 1576 Farrant had taken a lease of rooms in the
-Blackfriars from Sir William More and had converted them into the first
-Blackfriars theatre.<a id="FNanchor_195" href="#Footnote_195" class="fnanchor">[195]</a> Whether boys from Windsor continued to take
-a share in the performances by the Chapel during 1577–8, 1578–9, and
-1579–80, for all of which Farrant was payee, we do not know; there is
-no further mention of them as actors in the Court accounts, although
-they accompanied the singing men from Windsor to Reading during the
-progress of 1576.<a id="FNanchor_196" href="#Footnote_196" class="fnanchor">[196]</a> Farrant died on 30 November 1580, leaving a
-widow Anne, who in 1582 obtained the reversion of a small lease from
-the Crown, and was involved in controversies with Sir William More over
-the Blackfriars tenement at least up to 1587.<a id="FNanchor_197" href="#Footnote_197" class="fnanchor">[197]</a> He had acquired some
-reputation as a musician, and amongst his surviving compositions are
-a few which may have been intended for use in plays.<a id="FNanchor_198" href="#Footnote_198" class="fnanchor">[198]</a> Farrant was
-succeeded at Windsor<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span> by Nathaniel Giles, but only after an interval
-of either five or fifteen years. Ashmole reports Giles’s monument as
-crediting him with forty-nine years’ service as Master of St. George’s
-before his death in 1634.<a id="FNanchor_199" href="#Footnote_199" class="fnanchor">[199]</a> There must be an inaccuracy, either
-here or in the date of 1 October ’37 Eliz.’ (1595) upon a copy of his
-indenture of appointment by the Windsor chapter, which is amongst
-Ashmole’s papers.<a id="FNanchor_200" href="#Footnote_200" class="fnanchor">[200]</a> This recites that the chapter ‘are now destitute
-of an experte and cunnynge man’, and that Giles ‘is well contented to
-come and serve’ them. He is granted from the previous Michaelmas to
-the end of his life ‘the Roome and place of a Clerk within the said
-ffree Chappell and to be one of the Players on the Organes there,
-and also the office of Instructor and Master of the ten Children
-or Choristers of the same ffree Chappell, And the office of tutor,
-creansor, or governor of the same tenn Children or Coristers’. He is
-to have an annuity of £81 6s. 8d. and ‘tholde comons howse’, wherein
-John Mundie lately dwelt, which he is to hold on the same terms as
-‘one Richarde ffarrante enjoyed the same’ at a rent of £1 6<i>s.</i>
-8<i>d.</i> His fee is to be ‘over and besides all such giftes, rewardes
-or benevolences as from time to time during the naturall lief of him
-the said Nathanaell Gyles shall be given bestowed or ymployed to or
-upon the Choristers for singinge of Balattes, playes or for the like
-respects whatsoever’. He is to maintain the children and to supply
-vacancies, ‘her Maiesties comission for the taking of Children which
-her highnes hath alredie graunted to the said Dean and Canons being
-allowed vnto him the said Nathanaell Gyles for that purpose’. Evidently
-the door was left open for a resumption of theatrical activities, such
-as was afterwards brought about at the London Chapel Royal during the
-Mastership of Giles there; but there is no proof that such a resumption
-ever took place at Windsor. It is perhaps a fanciful conjecture that
-the boys may have helped with <i>The Merry Wives of Windsor</i> about
-1600.<a id="FNanchor_201" href="#Footnote_201" class="fnanchor">[201]</a></p>
-
-
-
-<h5>iv. CHILDREN OF THE KING’S REVELS</h5>
-
-<p class="center smaller"><i>Masters</i>:&mdash;Martin Slater and others.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot sm">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The chief source of information
-is J. Greenstreet, <i>The Whitefriars Theatre in the Time of
-Shakspere</i> (<i>N. S. S. Trans. 1887–92</i>, 269), which gives
-the text of the bill and answer in <i>Androwes v. Slater</i>
-(1609, Chancery).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span></p>
-
-<p>The accident of litigation brings into light a company of boys, who
-appear to have acted for a brief and troubled period, which probably
-ended in 1608 or early in 1609. The story is told by one George
-Androwes a silk-weaver of London, and begins in February 1608. At
-that date a part of the dissolved Whitefriars monastery was held, in
-contemplation of a lease from Lord Buckhurst, by Michael Drayton and
-Thomas Woodford. The lease was actually executed about the following
-March, and was for six years, eight months, and twenty days, at a rent
-of £50. Woodford had assigned his interest to one Lording Barry; and
-Barry in turn persuaded Androwes to take over a third of it, and to
-join a syndicate, of which the active manager was Martin Slater, who
-is described as a citizen and ironmonger of London, but is, of course,
-well known as an actor in the Admiral’s and other companies. The bill
-incorporates the terms of Articles of Agreement entered into on 10
-March 1608 by Slater on the one hand and Barry, Androwes, and Drayton,
-together with William Trevell, William Cooke, Edward Sibthorpe, and
-John Mason, all of London, gentlemen, on the other. They throw a
-good deal of light upon the business organization of a theatrical
-enterprise. Slater is to have a sixth part of the net profits of ‘any
-playes, showes, interludes, musique, or such like exercises’ in the
-Whitefriars play-house or elsewhere, together with lodging for himself
-and his family on the premises, and any profits that can be made in the
-house ‘either by wine, beere, ale, tobacco, wood, coales, or any such
-commoditie’. When the ‘pattent for playinge’ shall be renewed, Slater’s
-name is to be joined in it with Drayton’s, because ‘if any restrainte
-of their playinge shall happen by reason of the plague or other
-wise, it shalbe for more creditt of the whole company that the said
-Martyn shall travel with the children, and acquainte the magistrates
-with their busines’. During any such travel his allowance is to be
-increased to a share and a half, no apparel, books, or other property
-of the company is to be removed without the consent of the sharers,
-and none of them is to print any of the play-books, ‘except the booke
-of Torrismount, and that playe not to be printed by any before twelve
-monthes be fully expired’. In order to avoid debt, a sixth part is
-to be taken up each day of the ‘chardges of the howse’ for the week,
-including ‘the gatherers, the wages, the childrens bourd, musique,
-booke keeper, tyreman, tyrewoman, lights, the Maister of the revells’
-duties, and all other things needefull and necessary’. The children are
-to be ‘bound’ for three years to Slater, who undertakes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span> not to part
-with ‘the said younge men or ladds’ during their apprenticeship except
-on the consent of his fellow sharers.</p>
-
-<p>The theatrical experience of the syndicate presumably rested with
-Slater and Drayton. Of Trevell, Cooke, and Sibthorpe I know nothing,
-except that Trevell, like Woodford, seems still to have had an interest
-in the lease of the Whitefriars (cf. ch. xvii) in 1621. But Mason and
-Barry were the authors respectively of <i>The Turk</i> (1610, S. R. 10
-March 1609), and <i>Ram Alley</i> (1611, S. R. 9 November 1610), the
-title-pages of which ascribe them to the children of the King’s Revels,
-and thereby enable us to give a more definite title to the boys, who
-are only described in the Chancery pleadings as ‘the Children of the
-revells there beinge’, that is to say, at the Whitefriars. And we can
-trace the King’s Revels a little farther back than February 1608 with
-the aid of the earliest of similar entries on the title-pages of other
-plays, which are, in the chronological order of publication, Sharpham’s
-<i>Cupid’s Whirligig</i> (1607, S. R. 29 June 1607), Middleton’s
-<i>Family of Love</i> (1608, S. R. 12 October 1607), Day’s <i>Humour
-Out Of Breath</i> (1608, S. R. 12 April 1608), Markham’s (and Machin’s)
-<i>The Dumb Knight</i> (1608, S. R. 6 October 1608), and Armin’s <i>Two
-Maids of Moreclack</i> (1609). If Lewis Machin was the author of the
-anonymous <i>Every Woman In Her Humour</i> (1609), it is possible that
-this ought to be added to the list. Clearly the boys were playing at
-least as early as the first half of 1607 and the agreement of 1608 must
-represent a reconstruction of the original business organization. I
-do not find anything in the plays to prove an earlier date than 1607,
-but it is quite conceivable that the King’s Revels may have come into
-existence as early as 1606, perhaps with the idea of replacing the
-Queen’s Revels after their disgrace over <i>The Isle of Gulls</i>. But
-if so, the Queen’s Revels managed to hold together under another name,
-and in fact proved more enduring than their rivals. Mr. Fleay, however,
-suggests that the King’s Revels were a continuation of the Paul’s boys,
-and played at the singing-school, and apparently also that they were
-themselves continued as the Duke of York’s men (<i>H. of S.</i> 152,
-188, 202, 206). He did not, I think, know of <i>Androwes v. Slater</i>,
-but <i>Androwes v. Slater</i> does not indicate that the King’s Revels
-were at Whitefriars before 1608; rather the contrary.<a id="FNanchor_202" href="#Footnote_202" class="fnanchor">[202]</a> The dates
-render Mr. Fleay’s conjectures tempting, although it must be admitted
-that there is not much evidence. But <i>The Family of Love</i> was
-played in a round theatre and the Paul’s house was round.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span> The curious
-description of the Duke of York’s men at Leicester in 1608 as ‘of the
-White Chapple, London’, might conceivably be a mistake for ‘of the
-Whitefriars’, but more probably indicates that they came from the
-Boar’s Head (cf. ch. xvi). ‘The Children of the Revells’ followed them
-at Leicester on 21 August 1608, but these may have been the Blackfriars
-children under a not quite official name. A complete search through
-the Patent Rolls for 1606–8 might disinter the patent for the King’s
-Revels, which is referred to in the Articles of Agreements; I find
-no obvious clue to it in the printed index of signet bills. It seems
-possible that William Barksted (cf. ch. xv) may have belonged to the
-King’s Revels.</p>
-
-<p>The syndicate did not hold together long. It will be noticed that, in
-spite of the attempt in the articles to bar the printing of plays,
-these had begun to reach the stationers again as early as April 1608.
-The inhibition of 1608 hardly gave the company a chance, and then came
-the plague. They were probably broken before the end of 1608, and
-although Mason and Barry had at least the consolation that they had
-got their own plays staged, other members of the syndicate could only
-reflect that they had lost their money. And when dissensions broke
-out, and Slater sued Androwes on a bond of £200 given by the sharers
-for observance of the articles, and this for defaults which Androwes
-himself had not committed, it is not surprising that Androwes drew the
-conclusion that he had been a gull. He took Slater to Chancery, and
-alleged that he had been asked £90 and paid £70 for his share in the
-expectation of a profit of £100 a year, and on the understanding that
-the apparel was worth £400 when it was not worth £5, that he had been
-led into building and other expenses to the tune of £300, that the
-lease had been forfeited for non-payment of rent before any assignation
-had been made to him, and that he had been clearly told by Slater
-that his obligation was not to extend beyond any breaches of covenant
-that he might himself commit. Slater denied any responsibility for
-Androwes’s misunderstandings, and pointed out that he had himself been
-the principal sufferer by the breakdown of the enterprise, since he and
-his family of ten had been illegally turned out of the rooms to which
-they were entitled under the articles of agreement, and were now driven
-to beg their bread. The view taken by the court is not upon record.</p>
-
-<p>The company which was described as the King’s Revels at Norwich in 1611
-and 1612 was travelling under the Queen’s Revels patent of 1610, and
-was therefore clearly misnamed. But a second King’s Revels company did
-in fact come into<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span> existence through a licence given to William Hovell,
-William Perry, and Nathan May under the royal signet on 27 February
-1615. It performed only in the provinces, and is traceable at Norwich,
-Coventry, and Leicester. Its warrant was condemned and withdrawn by an
-order of the Lord Chamberlain on 16 July 1616 (Murray, ii. 343), and
-in the following year the company seems to have amalgamated with the
-provincial relics of the Queen’s Revels.</p>
-
-
-<h5>v. CHILDREN OF BRISTOL</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Masters</i>:&mdash;John Daniel (1615–17); Martin Slater, John
-Edmonds, Nathaniel Clay (1618).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A signet bill for a patent for a company of Children of Bristol under
-the patronage of Queen Anne was passed in June 1615, perhaps as a
-result of her visit to that city in 1613.<a id="FNanchor_203" href="#Footnote_203" class="fnanchor">[203]</a> On 10 July Sir George
-Buck wrote to John Packer, the Earl of Somerset’s secretary, to say
-that the grant had been made through the Queen’s influence on behalf
-of Samuel Daniel, and that he was prepared to assent to it, without
-prejudice to his rights as Master of the Revels.<a id="FNanchor_204" href="#Footnote_204" class="fnanchor">[204]</a> The actual
-patent, dated 13 July, is made out to Daniel’s brother John.<a id="FNanchor_205" href="#Footnote_205" class="fnanchor">[205]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De concessione regardante Iohannem Daniell.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Iustices of peace, Mayors,
-Sheriffes, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes and other our
-lovinge subjectes and Officers greetinge. Knowe yee that wee at
-the mocion of our most deerelie loved consort the Queene have
-licenced and authorised, And by theise presentes do licence
-and authorise, our welbeloved subjectes Iohn Daniell and his
-Assignes to entertaine and bringe vp a company of children
-and youthes vunder the name and title of the children of her
-Maiesties royall Chamber of Bristoll, to vse and exercise the
-arte and qualitie of playinge Comedies, histories, Enterludes,
-Moralles, Pastoralles, Stageplayes, and such other like, as they
-have alreadie studied or hereafter shall studie or vse, aswell
-for the solace and delight of our most derely loved Consort the
-Queene whensoever they shalbe called, as for the recreacion
-of our loving Subiectes, And the said Enterludes or other to
-shewe and exercise publiquely to their best commoditie, aswell
-in and about our said Citie of Bristoll in such vsuall houses
-as themselves shall provide, as other convenient places within
-the liberties and freedomes of any other Cittie, vniversitie,
-Towne, or Burrowe whatsoever within our Realmes and Dominions,
-willing and commaundinge you and every of you, as you tender our
-pleasures, not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein without
-any your lettes, hinderances, molestacions, and disturbances<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be aydinge and assistinge
-vnto them, yf any wronge be done vnto them or to them offred,
-and to allowe them such further curtesies as have bene given
-to other of the like qualitie, And alsoe what further grace
-and favour you shall show vnto them for our sakes wee shall
-take kindly at your handes. Provided alwaies and our will and
-pleasure is, all authoritie, power, priviledge, and profitt
-whatsoever belonginge and properlie apperteyninge to the Maister
-of the Revelles in respect of his office shall remayne and abide
-entire and in full force, effect, and vertue, and in as ample
-sort as if this our Commission had never byn made. In witnes
-whereof &amp;c., witnes our selfe at Westminster the seaventeenth day
-of Iuly.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The company is not traceable in London, but Daniel brought it to
-Norwich in 1616–17. By April 1618 he had assigned his privilege
-to Martin Slater, John Edmonds and Nathaniel Clay, who obtained,
-presumably from the Privy Council, supplementary letters of assistance
-in which they are described as ‘her Maiesties servants’, and are
-authorized to play as ‘her Maiesties servants of her Royall Chamber
-of Bristoll’.<a id="FNanchor_206" href="#Footnote_206" class="fnanchor">[206]</a> From a complaint sent in the following June by
-the Mayor of Exeter to Sir Thomas Lake, it emerges that, although
-the patent was for children, the company consisted of five youths
-and several grown men.<a id="FNanchor_207" href="#Footnote_207" class="fnanchor">[207]</a> Slater and Edmonds still held their
-<i>status</i> as Queen’s men (q.v.) in 1619.</p>
-
-
-<h5>vi. WESTMINSTER SCHOOL</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Head Masters</i>:&mdash;John Adams (1540); Alexander Nowell
-(1543–53); Nicholas Udall (1555–6); John Passey (1557–8, with
-Richard Spencer as usher); John Randall (1563); Thomas Browne
-(1564–9); Francis Howlyn (1570–1); Edward Graunte (1572–92);
-William Camden (1593–8, Undermaster 1575–93); Richard Ireland
-(1599–1610); John Wilson (1610–22).</p>
-
-<p><i>Choir Masters</i> (?):&mdash;William Cornish (1480); John Taylor
-(1561–7); John Billingsley (1572); William Elderton (1574).</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The best sources of information
-are: R. Widmore, <i>History of Westminster Abbey</i> (1751); J.
-Welch [&mdash;C. B. Phillimore], <i>Alumni Westmonasterienses</i>,
-ed. 2 (1852); <i>Appendix to First Report of the Cathedral
-Commissioners</i> (1854); F. H. Forshall, <i>Westminster
-School, Past and Present</i> (1884); J. Sargeaunt, <i>Annals
-of Westminster School</i> (1898); A. F. Leach, <i>The Origin
-of Westminster School in Journal of Education</i>, n. s. xxvii
-(1905), 79. Some valuable records have been printed by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span> E. J.
-L. Scott in the <i>Athenaeum</i>, and extracts from others are
-given in the <i>Observer</i> for 7 Dec. 1919. A. F. Leach has
-fixed the dates of Udall’s life in <i>Encycl. Brit.</i> s.v.]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>There is no trace of any grammar school in the abbey of Westminster
-until the fourteenth century. The <i>Customary</i> of 1259–83 (ed. E.
-M. Thompson for <i>Henry Bradshaw Soc.</i>) only contemplates education
-for the novices, and in the earliest almoner’s accounts, which begin
-with 1282, entries of 1317 ‘in maintaining Nigel at school for the
-love of God’ (Leach, 80) and 1339–40, ‘pro scholaribus inueniendis ad
-scolas’ (E. H. Pearce, <i>The Monks of Westminster Abbey</i>, 79), need
-only refer to the support of scholars at a University. But from 1354–5
-there were almonry boys (<i>pueri Elemosinariae</i>) under the charge
-of the Sub-Almoner, and these are traceable up to the dissolution. To
-them we may assign the <i>ludus</i> of the Boy Bishop on St. Nicholas’
-day, mentions of which have been noted in 1369, 1388, 1413, and 1540
-(<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 360; Leach, 80). They had a school house
-near ‘le Millebank’, and from 1367 the Almoner paid a <i>Magister
-Puerorum</i>. From 1387 he is often called <i>Magister Scolarum</i>
-and in the fifteenth century <i>Magister Scolarium</i>. From 1510 the
-boys under the <i>Magister</i> become <i>pueri grammatici</i>, and
-may be distinct from certain <i>pueri cantantes</i> for whom since
-1479–80 the Almoner had paid a separate teacher of singing. The first
-of these song-masters was William Cornish, doubtless of the family so
-closely connected with the Chapel Royal (q.v.). In 1540 the <i>pueri
-grammatici</i> were reorganized as the still existing College of St.
-Peter, Westminster, which is therefore generally regarded as owing its
-origin to Henry VIII, who on the surrender of the abbey in 1540 turned
-it into a college of secular canons, and provided for a school of forty
-scholars. This endured in some form through the reactionary reign of
-Mary, whose favourite dramatist Nicholas Udall became its Head Master,
-although the date of his appointment on 16 December 1555 (A. F. Leach
-in <i>Encycl. Brit.</i>, s.v. Udall) makes it probable that, if he
-wrote his <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i> for a school at all, it was for
-Eton (q.v.) rather than Westminster. His predecessor Alexander Nowell
-is said by Strype to have ‘brought in the reading of Terence for the
-better learning the pure Roman style’, and, as the Sub-Almoner paid
-‘xvi<i>d.</i> for wryting of a play for the chyldren’ as early as 1521
-(<i>Observer</i>), the performance of Latin comedies by the boys may
-have been pre-Elizabethan. It is provided for in the statutes drafted
-by Dean Bill (<i>c.</i> 1560) after the restoration of her father’s
-foundation by Elizabeth. These statutes also contemplate a good deal of
-interrelation between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span> the choir school and the grammar school. They
-are printed in the <i>Report of the Cathedral Commission</i> (App. I,
-80). The personnel of the foundation was to include (a) ‘<i>clerici
-duodecim</i>’, of whom ‘<i>unus sit choristarum doctor</i>’, (b)
-‘<i>decem pueri symphoniaci sive choristae</i>’, presumably in
-continuation of the former singing boys, (c) ‘<i>praeceptores
-duo ad erudiendam iuventutem</i>’, (d) ‘<i>discipuli grammatici
-quadraginta</i>’. The ‘<i>praeceptores</i>’ are distinguished later in
-the document as ‘<i>archididascalus</i>’ and ‘<i>hypodidascalus</i>’,
-and the former is also called ‘<i>ludimagister</i>’. By c. 5 the
-choristers are to have a preference in elections to the grammar school.
-The following section ‘<i>De Choristis et Choristarum Magistro</i>’
-forms part of c. 9:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Statuimus et ordinamus ut in ecclesia nostra praedicta sint
-decem choristae, pueri tenerae aetatis et vocibus sonoris ad
-cantandum, et ad artem musicam discendam, et etiam ad musica
-instrumenta pulsanda apti, qui choro inserviant, ministrent,
-et cantent. Ad hos praeclare instituendos, unus eligatur qui
-sit honestae famae, vitae probae, religionis sincerae, artis
-musicae peritus, et ad cantandum et musica instrumenta pulsanda
-exercitatus, qui pueris in praedictis scientiis et exercitiis
-docendis aliisque muniis [? muneribus] in choro obeundis
-studiose vacabit. Hunc magistrum choristarum appellari volumus.
-Cui muneri doctores et baccalaureos musices aliis praeferendos
-censemus. Volumus etiam quoties eum ab ecclesia nostra
-abesse contingat, alterum substituat a decano vel eo absente
-prodecano approbandum. Prospiciat item puerorum saluti, quorum
-et in literis (donec ut in scholam nostram admittantur apti
-censebuntur) et in morum modestia et in convictu educationem
-et liberalem institutionem illius fidei et industriae
-committimus. Quod si negligens et in docendo desidiosus, aut in
-salute puerorum et recta eorum educatione minime providus et
-circumspectus, et ideo non tolerandus inveniatur, post trinam
-admonitionem (si se non emendaverit) ab officio deponatur. Qui
-quidem choristarum magister ad officium suum per se fideliter
-obeundum iuramento etiam adigetur. Choristae postquam octo
-orationis partes memoriter didicerint et scribere mediocriter
-noverint, ad scholam nostram ut melius in grammatica proficiant
-singulis diebus profestis accedant, ibique duabus minimum horis
-maneant, et a praeceptoribus instituantur.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following section ‘<i>De Comoediis et Ludis in Natali Domini
-exhibendis</i>’ comes in c. 10:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Quo iuventus maiore cum fructu tempus Natalis Christi terat,
-et tum actioni tum pronunciationi decenti melius se assuescat:
-statuimus ut singulis annis intra 12<sup>m</sup> post festum Natalis
-Christi dies [? diem], vel postea arbitrio decani, ludimagister
-et praeceptor simul Latine unam, magister choristarum Anglice
-alteram comoediam aut tragoediam a discipulis et choristis suis
-in aula privatim vel publice agendam,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span> curent. Quod si non
-prestiterint singuli quorum negligentia omittuntur decem solidis
-mulctentur.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The statutes appear never to have been confirmed by the Crown, and
-their practical adoption was subject to certain exceptions. Thus, it
-is stated in the report of the Public Schools Commission in 1864 (i.
-159) that there is no reason to believe that the provision giving a
-preference to choristers in elections for the grammar school was ever
-attended to.</p>
-
-<p>Of plays and the like, however, there are various records. The first
-since 1521 is at the Lord Mayor’s Day of 1561, when the Merchant
-Taylors’ expenses for their pageant included items ‘to John Tayllour,
-master of the Children of the late monastere of Westminster, for his
-children that sung and played in the pageant’, and ‘to John Holt
-momer in reward for attendance given of the children in the pageant’.
-Similar payments were made to Taylor as ‘M<sup>r</sup> of the quirysters’ for
-the services of the children on the Ironmongers’ pageant of 1566.<a id="FNanchor_208" href="#Footnote_208" class="fnanchor">[208]</a>
-In 1562 the choristers of Westminster Abbey performed a goodly play
-before the Society of Parish Clerks after their annual dinner.<a id="FNanchor_209" href="#Footnote_209" class="fnanchor">[209]</a>
-In 1564–5 comes the first of a series of Court performances, which
-received assistance from the Revels office. To this occasion belongs
-a memorandum of ‘Thexpenses of twoo playes viz. Heautontimoroumenos
-Terentii and Miles Gloriosus Plauti plaied by the children of the
-grammer schoole in the colledge of Westminster and before the Quenes
-maiestie anno 1564’.<a id="FNanchor_210" href="#Footnote_210" class="fnanchor">[210]</a> The items include, ‘At ye rehersing before
-Sir Thomas Benger for pinnes and suger candee vj<i>d.</i>’, ‘For a
-lynke to bring thapparell from the reuells iiij<i>d.</i>’, ‘At the
-playing of Miles Glor: in M<sup>r</sup>. Deanes howse for pinnes half a thousand
-vj<i>d.</i>’, ‘Geuen to M<sup>r</sup>. Holte yeoman of the reuells x<i>s.</i>’,
-‘To M<sup>r</sup>. Taylor his man’, ‘For one Plautus geven to ye Queenes maiestie
-and fowre other vnto the nobilitie xj<i>s.</i>’ It is not quite
-clear whether the <i>Heautontimorumenus</i>, as well as the <i>Miles
-Gloriosus</i>, was given before the Queen, but I think not. In 1565–6
-Elizabeth was again present at the play of <i>Sapientia Solomonis</i>,
-and there were payments ‘For drawing the city and temple of Jerusalem
-and paynting towers’, ‘To a woman that brawght her childe to the stadge
-and there attended uppon it’, and for a copy of the play bound ‘in
-vellum with the Queenes Ma<sup>tie</sup> hir armes and sylke ribben strings’,
-almost certainly that still extant as <i>Addl. MS.</i> 20061 (cf.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-App. K), which shows that Elizabeth was accompanied by Cecilia of
-Sweden.<a id="FNanchor_211" href="#Footnote_211" class="fnanchor">[211]</a> Whether these plays were at the school or at Court is not
-quite clear. I should, on the whole, infer the latter, but no rewards
-were paid for them by the Treasurer of the Chamber. John Taylor was,
-however, paid for plays by the Children of Westminster during the
-Shrovetide of 1566–7 and the Christmas of 1567–8; John Billingesley
-for their <i>Paris and Vienna</i> on 19 February 1572; and William
-Elderton for their <i>Truth, Faithfulness, and Mercy</i> on 1 January
-1574. In 1567 also the boys are recorded (<i>Observer</i>) to have
-played at Putney before Bishop Grindal. I suppose that Billingesley
-and Elderton succeeded Taylor as <i>Magistri Choristarum</i>. Taylor
-himself is probably the same who on 8 September 1557 was Master of the
-singing children at the hospital of St. Mary Woolnoth. Elderton is
-presumably the same who brought the Eton boys to Court in 1573. Whether
-he is also the bibulous balladist of the pamphleteers (cf. ch. xv) is
-more doubtful. The absence of a payment for <i>Miles Gloriosus</i> may
-suggest that this was given by the grammar school who, like the Inns of
-Court, did not expect a reward, and that the English plays were given
-by the choristers, who were on the same footing as the choristers of
-Paul’s. I am not sure, however, that the wording of the statutes quite
-implies such a sharp distinction between the two sets of boys, and it
-will be noticed that Taylor, or his man, was in some way concerned
-with the Latin play. Very possibly grammar boys and choristers acted
-together. With 1574 the Court performances end, but expenses of plays
-are traceable in the college accounts in 1604–5, 1605–6, 1606–7, and
-1609–10, and up to about 1640, when they stop for sixty-four years.<a id="FNanchor_212" href="#Footnote_212" class="fnanchor">[212]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>vii. ETON COLLEGE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Head Masters</i>:&mdash;William Malim (c. 1555–73); William Smyth
-(c. 1563); Reuben Sherwood (c. 1571); Thomas Ridley (1579); John
-Hammond (1583); Richard Langley (1594); Richard Wright (1611);
-Matthew Bust (1611–30).</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The best sources of information
-are J. Heywood and T. Wright, <i>Ancient Laws of King’s College
-and Eton College</i> (1850); <i>Report of Public Schools
-Commission</i> (1864); W. L. Collins, <i>Etoniana</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span> 1865); H.
-Maxwell-Lyte, <i>History of Eton</i> (1875, 4th ed. 1911); W.
-Sterry, <i>Annals of Eton College</i> (1898).]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The King’s College of Our Lady of Eton beside Windsor was founded
-by Henry VI in 1441. The Statutes of 1444 provide for a Boy Bishop
-(<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 365), but the custom was discontinued
-before 1559–61, when William Malim prepared a <i>Consuetudinarium</i>
-for a Royal Commission appointed to visit the college. By this time,
-however, Christmas plays by the boys had become the practice, and Malim
-writes:<a id="FNanchor_213" href="#Footnote_213" class="fnanchor">[213]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Circiter festum D. Andreae [Nov. 30] ludimagister eligere
-solet pro suo arbitrio scaenicas fabulas optimas et quam
-accommodatissimas, quas pueri feriis natalitiis subsequentibus
-non sine ludorum elegantia, populo spectante, publice aliquando
-peragant. Histrionum levis ars est, ad actionem tamen oratorum,
-et gestum motumque corporis decentem tantopere facit, ut nihil
-magis. Interdum etiam exhibet Anglico sermone contextas fabulas,
-quae habeant acumen et leporem.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>There are ‘numerous’ entries of expenditure on these plays in the
-Audit Books from 1525–6 to 1572–3, of which a few only have been
-printed.<a id="FNanchor_214" href="#Footnote_214" class="fnanchor">[214]</a> There is also an inventory, apparently undated, of
-articles in ‘M<sup>r</sup>. Scholemasters chamber’, which includes ‘a great
-cheste bound about with yron to keepe the players coats in’, and a list
-of the apparel, beards, and properties. The Eton boys played under
-Udall before Cromwell in 1538 (<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 196, 451),
-and it is possible that <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i> may belong to his
-Eton mastership.<a id="FNanchor_215" href="#Footnote_215" class="fnanchor">[215]</a> The only Court performance by Eton boys on record
-was one on 6 January 1573, for which the payee was Elderton, presumably
-the William Elderton who was payee for the Westminster boys in the
-following year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>viii. MERCHANT TAYLORS SCHOOL</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>Head Masters</i>:&mdash;Richard Mulcaster (1561–86); Henry
-Wilkinson (1586–92); Edmund Smith (1592–9); William Hayne
-(1599–1625).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The London school of the Merchant Taylors was founded in 1561, and
-its first master was Richard Mulcaster, or Moncaster, as his name
-is spelt in some of the earlier records.<a id="FNanchor_216" href="#Footnote_216" class="fnanchor">[216]</a> He was a student of
-King’s, Cambridge and Christ Church, Oxford, who had been teaching
-in London since 1559. The first performances by his boys, of which
-record remains, were in 1572–3. In that and the following year they
-played before the Merchant Taylors Company at the Common Hall.<a id="FNanchor_217" href="#Footnote_217" class="fnanchor">[217]</a>
-Unfortunately the audience, who had paid for their seats, and very
-likely Mulcaster himself, paid more attention to the plays than to the
-dignitaries in whose hall they were given. The plays were therefore
-stopped, and the following pleasing example of civic pomposity inserted
-in the archives of the Company on 16 March 1574:<a id="FNanchor_218" href="#Footnote_218" class="fnanchor">[218]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Whereas at our comon playes and suche lyke exercises whiche
-be comonly exposed to be seene for money, everye lewd persone
-thinketh himself (for his penny) worthye of the chiefe and most
-comodious place withoute respecte of any other either for age
-or estimacion in the comon weale, whiche bringeth the youthe to
-such an impudente famyliaritie with theire betters that often
-tymes greite contempte of maisters, parents, and magistrats
-foloweth thereof, as experience of late in this our comon hall
-hath sufficyently declared, where by reasone of the tumultuous
-disordered persones repayringe hither to see suche playes as
-by our schollers were here lately played, the Maisters of this
-Worshipful Companie and their deare ffrends could not have
-entertaynmente and convenyente place as they ought to have had,
-by no provision beinge made, notwithstandinge the spoyle of this
-howse, the charges of this Mystery, and theire juste authoritie
-which did reasonably require the contrary. Therefore and ffor
-the causes ffirst above saide, yt is ordeyned and decreed by
-the authoritie of this presente Courte, with the assente and
-consente of all the worshipfull persones aforesaide, that
-henceforthe theire shall be no more plays suffered to be played
-in this our Comon Hall, any use or custome heretofore to the
-contrary in anywise notwithstandinge.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Mulcaster, however, found more tolerant critics than his own employers.
-His first appearance at Court was on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span> 3 February 1573.<a id="FNanchor_219" href="#Footnote_219" class="fnanchor">[219]</a> On 2
-February 1574 he presented <i>Timoclia at the Siege of Thebes</i> and
-on 23 February <i>Percius and Anthomiris</i>; at Shrovetide 1575 and on
-6 March 1576 plays unnamed; and on 12 February 1583 <i>Ariodante and
-Geneuora</i>. A reminiscence of these performances has been left us by
-the seventeenth-century judge, Sir James Whitelocke, who entered the
-school in 1575 and left for St. John’s, Oxford, in 1588:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘I was brought up at school under M<sup>r</sup> Mulcaster, in the famous
-school of the Merchantaylors in London.... Yeerly he presented
-sum playes to the court, in which his scholers wear only actors,
-and I on among them, and by that meanes taughte them good
-behaviour and audacitye.’<a id="FNanchor_220" href="#Footnote_220" class="fnanchor">[220]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1586 Mulcaster quarrelled with the Merchant Taylors and resigned.
-In 1596 he became High Master of St. Paul’s grammar school, but it is
-only conjecture that his influence counted for anything in the revival
-of plays by the choir master, Edward Pearce. Regular plays at Merchant
-Taylors probably ceased on his withdrawal. When Sir Robert Lee, one
-of the Company, became Lord Mayor in 1602, a payment was made to Mr.
-Haines, the Schoolmaster, for a wagon and the apparel of ten scholars,
-who represented Apollo and the Muses in Cheapside. But when James came
-to dine at the hall on 16 July 1607, it was thought best to apply for
-help to Heminges of the King’s men and Nathaniel Giles of the Chapel,
-on the ground that the Schoolmaster and children were not familiar with
-such entertainments.<a id="FNanchor_221" href="#Footnote_221" class="fnanchor">[221]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>ix. THE EARL OF LEICESTER’S BOYS</h5>
-
-<p>Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Leicester’s men).</p>
-
-
-<h5>x. THE EARL OF OXFORD’S BOYS</h5>
-
-<p>Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Oxford’s men).</p>
-
-
-<h5>xi. MR. STANLEY’S BOYS</h5>
-
-<p>Vide ch. xiii (Earl of Derby’s men).</p>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XIII<br />
-
-THE ADULT COMPANIES</h3></div>
-
-<table summary="adult" class="smaller">
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Court Interluders.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Leicester’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Rich’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Abergavenny’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Sussex’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Sir Robert Lane’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Lincoln’s (Lord Clinton’s) men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Warwick’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Oxford’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Essex’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Vaux’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Lord Berkeley’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Queen Elizabeth’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Arundel’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Hertford’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xvi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Mr. Evelyn’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xvii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Derby’s (Lord Strange’s) men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xviii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Pembroke’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lord Admiral’s (Lord Howard’s, Earl of Nottingham’s),
- Prince Henry’s, and Elector Palatine’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xx.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord Hunsdon’s) and King’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xxi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Earl of Worcester’s and Queen Anne’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xxii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Duke of Lennox’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xxiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Duke of York’s (Prince Charles’s) men.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xxiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Lady Elizabeth’s men.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<h5>i. THE COURT INTERLUDERS</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry VII (22 Aug. 1485&mdash;21 Apr. 1509); Henry VIII (22 Apr.
-1509&mdash;28 Jan. 1547); Edward VI (28 Jan. 1547&mdash;6 July 1553); Mary
-(19 July 1553&mdash;24 July 1554); Philip and Mary (25 July 1554&mdash;17
-Nov. 1558); Elizabeth (17 Nov. 1558&mdash;24 Mar. 1603).</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The <i>doyen</i> of the Court companies, when Elizabeth came to
-the throne, was the royal company of Players of Interludes. This
-had already half a century of history behind it. Its beginnings
-are probably traceable in the reign of Henry VII. Richard III had
-entertained a company, as Duke of Gloucester, in 1482; but nothing is
-known of it during his short reign from 1583 to 1585.<a id="FNanchor_222" href="#Footnote_222" class="fnanchor">[222]</a> Nor is a
-royal company discoverable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span> amongst the earlier records of Henry VII
-himself.<a id="FNanchor_223" href="#Footnote_223" class="fnanchor">[223]</a> But from 1493 onwards Exchequer documents testify to the
-continuous existence of a body of men under the style of <i>Lusores
-Regis</i>, or in the vulgar tongue, Players of the King’s Interludes.
-In 1494 there were four of them, John English, Edward May, Richard
-Gibson, and John Hammond, and each had an annual fee, payable out of
-the Exchequer, of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> In 1503 there were five,
-William Rutter and John Scott taking the place of Hammond, but the
-total Exchequer payment to the company of £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a
-year, seems to have remained unaltered to the end of the reign.<a id="FNanchor_224" href="#Footnote_224" class="fnanchor">[224]</a>
-They received, however, additional sums from time to time, as ‘rewards’
-for performances, which were charged to the separate account of the
-Chamber.<a id="FNanchor_225" href="#Footnote_225" class="fnanchor">[225]</a> In 1503, under the leadership of John English, they
-attended the Princess Margaret to Edinburgh, for her wedding with
-James IV of Scotland. Here they ‘did their devoir’, both on the day of
-the wedding, 8 August, and on the following days. On 11 August they
-played after supper, and on 13 August they played ‘a Moralite’ after
-dinner.<a id="FNanchor_226" href="#Footnote_226" class="fnanchor">[226]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span></p>
-
-<p>The royal company continued under Henry VIII, who appears to have
-increased its numbers, and doubled the charge upon the Exchequer.<a id="FNanchor_227" href="#Footnote_227" class="fnanchor">[227]</a>
-The financial records are, however, a little complicated. The
-Exchequer officials presumably continued to regard the establishment
-as consisting of four members drawing fees of ten instead of five
-marks each.<a id="FNanchor_228" href="#Footnote_228" class="fnanchor">[228]</a> But the individual members were in fact paid on
-different scales. John English, the leader, got £6 13<i>s.</i>
-4<i>d.</i> Others got £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> as before, and others
-again only two-thirds of this amount, £2 4<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i> By this
-arrangement, it was possible to maintain an actual establishment of
-from eight to ten within the limits of the Exchequer allowance. It
-seems also to have been found convenient to transfer the responsibility
-for some at least of the payments from the Exchequer to the Treasurer
-of the Chamber.<a id="FNanchor_229" href="#Footnote_229" class="fnanchor">[229]</a> The same distinction between players of different
-grades is also reflected in the annual rewards paid by the Treasurer
-of the Chamber for Christmas performances. These were increased
-in amount, and for a time the general reward to the players as a
-whole was supplemented by an additional sum to the ‘old’ players.
-Ultimately an amalgamated sum of £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> became
-the customary reward for the company.<a id="FNanchor_230" href="#Footnote_230" class="fnanchor">[230]</a> Details of a performance
-of Henry Medwall’s <i>Finding of Truth</i> on 6 January 1514 are
-related by Collier from a document which cannot be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span> regarded as free
-from suspicion.<a id="FNanchor_231" href="#Footnote_231" class="fnanchor">[231]</a> The name of Richard Gibson now disappears from
-the notices of the company. He may, likely enough, have given up
-playing on his appointment to be Porter and Yeoman Tailor of the Great
-Wardrobe.<a id="FNanchor_232" href="#Footnote_232" class="fnanchor">[232]</a> But in his capacity of officer in charge of the Revels
-he must have maintained close relations with his former fellows, and
-his Account for 1510 records the delivery to John English of a ‘red
-satin ladies garment, powdered, with tassels of silver of Kolen’.<a id="FNanchor_233" href="#Footnote_233" class="fnanchor">[233]</a>
-English remained at the head of the company, and is traceable in
-the <i>Chamber Accounts</i> up to 1531. John Scott died in 1528–9,
-in singular circumstances which are detailed by a contemporary
-chronicler.<a id="FNanchor_234" href="#Footnote_234" class="fnanchor">[234]</a> Other names which come in succession before us are
-those of Richard Hole, George Maylor, George Birch, John Roll or Roo
-(<i>d.</i> 1539), Thomas Sudbury or Sudborough (<i>d.</i> 1546),
-Robert Hinstock, Richard Parrowe, John Slye, and John Young.<a id="FNanchor_235" href="#Footnote_235" class="fnanchor">[235]</a>
-Some interesting information is disclosed by two lawsuits, in both of
-which George Maylor figured. The first of these was a dispute between
-John Rastell and Henry Walton as to the dilapidations of certain
-playing garments, during which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span> George Mayler, merchant tailor, aged
-40, and George Birch, coriar, aged 32, were called to give evidence
-as to the value of the garments and their use for a royal banquet at
-Greenwich in 1527.<a id="FNanchor_236" href="#Footnote_236" class="fnanchor">[236]</a> In the second Mayler was himself a party. He
-is here described as a glazier, and an agreement of November 1528 is
-recited between him and one Thomas Arthur, tailor, whom he took as an
-apprentice for a year, promising to teach him to play and to obtain
-him admission into the King’s company and the right to the privileges
-(<i>libertatem</i>) thereof and ‘the Kinges bage’. According to Mayler,
-he found Arthur meat and drink and 4<i>d.</i> a day, but after seven
-weeks Arthur left him, beguiling away three of his covenant servants
-upon a playing tour in the provinces, out of which they made a profit
-of £30. He was, adds Mayler, ‘right harde and dull too taike any
-lernynge, whereby he was nothinge meate or apte too bee in service
-with the Kinges grace too maike any plaiez or interludes before his
-highnes’. Arthur, on the other hand, alleged that it was Mayler who
-had broken the indentures, and sued him before the sheriffs of London
-for £26 damages. Owing to the accident of Mayler’s being in Ludgate
-prison and unable to defend himself, the jury found against him for £4,
-and he appealed to Chancery to remove the action to that court.<a id="FNanchor_237" href="#Footnote_237" class="fnanchor">[237]</a>
-The King’s men, even apart from their other occupations as Household
-servants or tradesmen, were not wholly dependent on the royal bounty.
-The reward at Christmas was supplemented by minor gifts from the
-Princess Mary, or from lords and ladies of the Court, such as the
-Duke of Rutland and the Countess of Devon;<a id="FNanchor_238" href="#Footnote_238" class="fnanchor">[238]</a> and the glamour of
-the King’s badge doubtless added to the liberality of the company’s
-reception in many a monastery, country mansion, and town hall. They are
-found during the reign at the priories of Thetford, Dunmow (1531–2),
-and Durham (1532–3), at the house of the Lestranges at Hunstanton (23
-October 1530), at New Romney (1526–7), Shrewsbury (1527, 1533, 1540),
-Leicester (1531), Norwich (1533), Bristol (1535, 1536, 1537, 1541),
-Cambridge (1537–8), Beverley (1540–1), and Maldon (1546–7).<a id="FNanchor_239" href="#Footnote_239" class="fnanchor">[239]</a>
-A private performance by the King’s men forms an episode in the
-Elizabethan play of <i>Sir Thomas More</i>, although the Mason there
-named cannot be traced amongst their number.</p>
-
-
-<p>No important change in the status of the company is to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span> be observed
-under Edward VI. Some of the existing members seem to have retired,
-and four new ones, Richard Coke, John Birch, Henry Heryot, and John
-Smyth, were appointed.<a id="FNanchor_240" href="#Footnote_240" class="fnanchor">[240]</a> The first three of these, together with
-two others, Richard Skinner and Thomas Southey, received a warrant to
-the Master of the Great Wardrobe on 15 February 1548, for the usual
-livery assigned to yeomen officers of the household, which consisted of
-three yards of red cloth, with an allowance of 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for the embroidering thereon of the royal initials.<a id="FNanchor_241" href="#Footnote_241" class="fnanchor">[241]</a> The fees of
-these five, and of George Birch and Robert Hinstock, who were survivors
-from Henry VIII’s time, are traceable, as well as the annual reward
-of £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, in the Chamber Accounts.<a id="FNanchor_242" href="#Footnote_242" class="fnanchor">[242]</a> Each now
-got £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a year, under a warrant of 24 December
-1548. The same names appear in a list of 30 September 1552, with the
-exception of Robert Hinstock, whose place had probably been taken by
-John Browne, appointed as from the previous Christmas by a warrant of
-9 June 1552, which introduced the innovation of granting him a livery
-allowance of £1 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a year instead of the actual
-livery.<a id="FNanchor_243" href="#Footnote_243" class="fnanchor">[243]</a> If we suppose that John Smith and John Young continued
-to be borne on the Exchequer pay-roll, the total number of eight
-interlude-players provided for in fee-lists of Edward’s reign is made
-up.<a id="FNanchor_244" href="#Footnote_244" class="fnanchor">[244]</a> John Smith is probably to be identified with the ‘disard’ or
-jester of that name who took part in George Ferrers’s Christmas gambols
-of 1552–3.<a id="FNanchor_245" href="#Footnote_245" class="fnanchor">[245]</a> John Young may be the ‘right worshipful esquire John
-Yung’ to whom William Baldwin dedicated his <i>Beware the Cat</i>
-in 1553. He certainly survived into Elizabeth’s reign and was still
-drawing an annuity of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> as ‘agitator comediarum’
-in 1569–70.<a id="FNanchor_246" href="#Footnote_246" class="fnanchor">[246]</a> I have not noticed any provincial performances by the
-company during 1547–53, except at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span> Maldon in 1549–50, but they are
-referred to more than once in the archives of the Revels. The Revels
-Office made them an oven and weapons of wood at Shrovetide 1548 and a
-seven-headed dragon at Shrovetide 1549. At Christmas 1551–2 the Privy
-Council gave them a warrant to borrow ‘apparell and other fornyture’
-from the Master, and Lord Darcy gave John Birch and John Browne another
-for garments to serve in an interlude before the King on 6 January
-1552.<a id="FNanchor_247" href="#Footnote_247" class="fnanchor">[247]</a> William Baldwin, in his <i>Beware the Cat</i>, relates that
-during the Christmas of 1552–3, they were learning ‘a play of Esop’s
-Crowe, wherin the moste part of the actors were birds’.<a id="FNanchor_248" href="#Footnote_248" class="fnanchor">[248]</a> Their only
-other play of which the name is known is that of <i>Self Love</i>,
-for which Sir Thomas Chaloner gave them 20s. on a Shrove Monday in
-1551–3.<a id="FNanchor_249" href="#Footnote_249" class="fnanchor">[249]</a> </p>
-
-<p>The company no doubt took their share in Court revels during the
-earlier part of Mary’s reign. But when the eclipse of gaiety came upon
-her later years they travelled. They are noted as the King and Queen’s
-men in 1555–6 at Ipswich and Gloucester, in 1557 at Bristol, and in
-1558 at Barnstaple, and as the Queen’s men in 1555 at Leicester, in
-1555–6 at Beverley, in 1556–7 at Beverley, Oxford, Norwich and Exeter,
-and in 1557–8 at Beverley, Leicester, Maldon, Dover, Lyme Regis, and
-Barnstaple. The nominal establishment continued to be eight.<a id="FNanchor_250" href="#Footnote_250" class="fnanchor">[250]</a> But
-Heriot disappears after 1552 and John Birch, Coke, and Southey after
-1556, and their vacancies do not seem to have been filled.<a id="FNanchor_251" href="#Footnote_251" class="fnanchor">[251]</a></p>
-
-<p>Under Elizabeth the interlude players were certainly a moribund folk.
-They were reappointed ‘during pleasure’ under a warrant of 25 December
-1559, and apparently Edmund Strowdewike and William Reading took the
-place of George Birch and Skinner.<a id="FNanchor_252" href="#Footnote_252" class="fnanchor">[252]</a> They drew their fees of £3
-6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> and livery allowances of £1 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-from the Treasurer of the Chamber. The eight posts figure on the
-fee-lists long after there were no holders left.<a id="FNanchor_253" href="#Footnote_253" class="fnanchor">[253]</a> The last ‘reward’
-to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span> company, not improbably for the anti-papal farce of 6 January
-1559, is to be found in the Chamber Account for 1558–60. It may be
-inferred that they never again played at Court. They were allowed to
-dwindle away. Browne and Reading died in 1563, Strowdewike on 3 June
-1568, and Smith survived in solitary dignity until 1580.<a id="FNanchor_254" href="#Footnote_254" class="fnanchor">[254]</a> Up to
-about 1573 he kept up some sort of provincial organization, doubtless
-with the aid of unofficial associates, and the Queen’s players are
-therefore traceable in many municipal Account-books. In October 1559
-they were at Bristol and before Christmas at Leicester, in 1559–60 at
-Gloucester, in 1560–1 at Barnstaple, in 1561 at Faversham,<a id="FNanchor_255" href="#Footnote_255" class="fnanchor">[255]</a> in
-October–December 1561 at Leicester, in 1561–2 at Gloucester, Maldon,
-and Beverley, in July 1562 at Grimsthorpe, and on 4 October at Ipswich,
-in August 1563 at Bristol, in 1563–4 at Maldon, on 12 and 20 March 1564
-at Ipswich again, and on 2 August at Leicester, in 1564–5 at Abingdon,
-Maldon, and Gloucester, in 1565–6 at Maldon, Oxford, and Shrewsbury,
-in July 1566 at Bristol, before 29 September at Leicester, and on 9
-October at Ipswich, in July 1567 at Bristol, in 1567–8 at Oxford and
-Gloucester, in 1568–9 at Abingdon, Ipswich, and Stratford-upon-Avon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-in August 1569 at Bristol, and on 7 December at Oxford, in 1569–70 at
-Gloucester and Maldon, before 29 September 1570 at Leicester, in 1570–1
-at Winchester, and during October-December 1571 at Leicester, in 1571–2
-at Oxford, on 23 May 1572 at Nottingham, and on 20 November at Maldon,
-in 1572–3 at Ipswich, on 7 January 1573 at Beverley, and in 1573 at
-Winchester. This list is not exhaustive.<a id="FNanchor_256" href="#Footnote_256" class="fnanchor">[256]</a> A reward to ‘the Queens
-Majesty’s men’ in the Doncaster accounts for 1575 can hardly be assumed
-to refer to actors.</p>
-
-
-<h5>ii. THE EARL OF LEICESTER’S MEN</h5>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Robert Dudley; 5th s. of John, 1st Duke of Northumberland,
-<i>nat.</i> 24 June 1532 or 1533; m. (1) Amy, d. of Sir John
-Robsart, 4 June 1550, (2) Douglas Lady Sheffield, d. of William,
-1st Lord Howard of Effingham, May 1573, (3) Lettice Countess of
-Essex, d. of Sir Francis Knollys, 1578; Master of the Horse, 11
-Jan. 1559; High Steward of Cambridge, 1562; Earl of Leicester,
-29 Sept. 1564; Chancellor of Oxford, 31 Dec. 1564; Lord Steward,
-1584–8; Absolute Governor of United Provinces, 25 Jan. 1586–12
-Apr. 1588; <i>ob.</i> 4 Sept. 1588.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The earliest mention of Lord Robert Dudley’s players is in a letter
-which he wrote in June 1559 to the Earl of Shrewsbury, Lord President
-of the North, as Lord Lieutenant of Yorkshire, asking licence for them
-to perform in that county, in accordance with the proclamation of 16
-May 1559.<a id="FNanchor_257" href="#Footnote_257" class="fnanchor">[257]</a> The terms of the letter suggest that the company may
-already have played in London, but it is probable, as nothing is said
-of a hearing by the Queen, that they had not been at Court. They were
-there at each Christmas from 1560–1 to 1562–3, and then not for a
-decade. They were in 1558–9 at Norwich, in 1559–60 at Oxford, Saffron
-Walden, and Plymouth, in July 1560 at Bristol, in October 1561 at
-Grimsthorpe, in 1561–2 at Oxford, Maldon, and Ipswich, in September
-1562 at Bristol, where they are called ‘Lord Dudley’s’ players, on 12
-November 1563 at Leicester, and on 17 November at Ipswich, in 1563–4 at
-Maldon, on 2 January 1564 at Ipswich, and on 1 July at Leicester. They
-are also found, as the Earl of Leicester’s, in 1564–5 at Maldon, on 6
-April 1565 at York, on 11 August 1569 at Nottingham, in January 1570 at
-Bristol, on 4 May 1570 at Oxford, and in October-December at Leicester,
-in 1570–1 at Abingdon, Barnstaple, and Gloucester, on 9 August 1571
-at Saffron Walden,<a id="FNanchor_258" href="#Footnote_258" class="fnanchor">[258]</a> in October–December<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span> at Leicester, in the
-same year at Beverley, on 15 July 1572 at Ipswich, and on 20 August
-at Nottingham. The gap in my records between 1565 and 1569 is bridged
-in the fuller list covering other towns given by Mr. Murray.<a id="FNanchor_259" href="#Footnote_259" class="fnanchor">[259]</a>
-Information as to the company in 1572 is derived from the signatures to
-a letter asking for appointment by Leicester, not merely as liveried
-retainers but as household servants, in order to meet the terms of the
-proclamation of 3 January in that year.<a id="FNanchor_260" href="#Footnote_260" class="fnanchor">[260]</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">To the right honorable Earle of Lecester, their good lord and
-master.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Maye yt please your honour to understande that forasmuche as
-there is a certayne Procalmation out for the revivinge of a
-Statute as touchinge retayners, as youre Lordshippe knoweth
-better than we can enforme you thereof: We therfore, your humble
-Servaunts and daylye Oratours your players, for avoydinge all
-inconvenients that maye growe by reason of the saide Statute,
-are bold to trouble your Lordshippe with this our Suite, humblie
-desiringe your honor that (as you have bene alwayes our good
-Lord and Master) you will now vouchsaffe to reteyne us at this
-present as your houshold Servaunts and daylie wayters, not
-that we meane to crave any further stipend or benefite at your
-Lordshippes hands but our lyveries as we have had, and also your
-honors License to certifye that we are your houshold Servaunts
-when we shall have occasion to travayle amongst our frendes as
-we do usuallye once a yere, and as other noble-mens Players do
-and have done in tyme past, Wherebie we maye enjoye our facultie
-in your Lordshippes name as we have done hertofore. Thus beyinge
-bound and readie to be alwayes at your Lordshippes commandmente
-we committ your honor to the tuition of the Almightie.</p></div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Long may your Lordshippe live in peace,</div>
- <div class="i1">A pere of noblest peres:</div>
- <div>In helth welth and prosperitie</div>
- <div class="i1">Redoubling Nestor’s yeres.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p class="left1 hangingindent">Your Lordshippes Servaunts most bounden</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">Iames Burbage.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Iohn Perkinne.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Iohn Laneham.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">William Iohnson.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Roberte Wilson.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Thomas Clarke.</p></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span></p>
-
-
-<p>Several of these men were to achieve distinction in their ‘quality’;
-of none of them is there any earlier record, unless John Perkin is to
-be identified with the Parkins who had been in 1552–3 one of the train
-of the Lord of Misrule.<a id="FNanchor_261" href="#Footnote_261" class="fnanchor">[261]</a> By 6 December 1571 the company were in
-London.<a id="FNanchor_262" href="#Footnote_262" class="fnanchor">[262]</a> Three years later they obtained a very singular favour in
-the patent of 10 May 1574, the general bearings of which have already
-been discussed.<a id="FNanchor_263" href="#Footnote_263" class="fnanchor">[263]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">pro Iacobo Burbage &amp; aliis de licencia speciali</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Elizabeth by the grace of God quene of England, &amp;c. To all
-Iustices, Mayors, Sheriffes, Baylyffes, head Constables, vnder
-Constables, and all other our officers and mynisters gretinge.
-Knowe ye that we of oure especiall grace, certen knowledge,
-and mere mocion haue licenced and auctorised, and by these
-presentes do licence and auctorise, oure lovinge Subiectes,
-Iames Burbage, Iohn Perkyn, Iohn Lanham, William Iohnson, and
-Roberte Wilson, seruauntes to oure trustie and welbeloued Cosen
-and Counseyllor the Earle of Leycester, to vse, exercise, and
-occupie the arte and facultye of playenge Commedies, Tragedies,
-Enterludes, stage playes, and such other like as they haue
-alredie vsed and studied, or hereafter shall vse and studie,
-aswell for the recreacion of oure loving subiectes, as for oure
-solace and pleasure when we shall thincke good to see them,
-as also to vse and occupie all such Instrumentes as they haue
-alredie practised, or hereafter shall practise, for and during
-our pleasure. And the said Commedies, Tragedies, Enterludes,
-and stage playes, to gether with their musicke, to shewe,
-publishe, exercise, and occupie to their best commoditie during
-all the terme aforesaide, aswell within oure Citie of London
-and liberties of the same, as also within the liberties and
-fredomes of anye oure Cities, townes, Bouroughes &amp;c. whatsoeuer
-as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span> without the same, thoroughte oure Realme of England.
-Willynge and commaundinge yow and everie of yowe, as ye tender
-our pleasure, to permytte and suffer them herein withoute anye
-yowre lettes, hynderaunce, or molestacion duringe the terme
-aforesaid, anye acte, statute, proclamacion, or commaundement
-heretofore made, or hereafter to be made, to the contrarie
-notwithstandinge. Prouyded that the said Commedies, Tragedies,
-enterludes, and stage playes be by the master of oure Revells
-for the tyme beynge before sene &amp; allowed, and that the same be
-not published or shewen in the tyme of common prayer, or in the
-tyme of greate and common plague in oure said Citye of London.
-In wytnes whereof &amp;c. wytnes oure selfe at Westminster the
-x<sup>th</sup> daye of Maye.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>The names in this patent only differ from those in the letter of 1572
-by the omission of Thomas Clarke. By the time of its issue Leicester’s
-men were again a Court company. They had made their reappearance
-at the Christmas of 1572–3 with three plays, all given before the
-end of December. They continued to appear in every subsequent year
-until the formation of the Queen’s men in 1583. The building of the
-Theatre by James Burbadge in 1576 gave them a valuable head-quarters
-in London<a id="FNanchor_264" href="#Footnote_264" class="fnanchor">[264]</a>; but they are still found from time to time about the
-provinces. Their detailed adventures are as follows. In 1572–3 they
-were at Stratford-on-Avon, on 8 August 1573 at Beverley, on 1 September
-at Nottingham, and in October at Bristol. On 26 December they played
-<i>Predor and Lucia</i> at Court, on 28 December <i>Mamillia</i>, and
-on 21 February 1574 <i>Philemon and Philecia</i>. In 1573–4 they were
-at Oxford and Leicester, on 13 June 1574 at Maldon, on 3 December at
-Canterbury. In 1574 they were also at Doncaster, where they played
-in the church. For the Court they rehearsed <i>Panecia</i>, and this
-was probably either their play of 26 December in which ‘my Lord of
-Lesters boyes’ appeared, or that of 1 January 1575, in which there were
-chimney-sweepers. From 9 to 27 July 1575 Elizabeth paid her historic
-visit to Kenilworth, and there is no proof, but much probability, that
-the company were called upon to take their part in her entertainment.
-Its chronicler, Robert Laneham, may well have been a kinsman of the
-player. I have not come across them elsewhere this year, except at
-Southampton. They played at Court on 28 December 1575 and 4 March
-1576, and are described in the account for their payment as ‘Burbag<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-and his company’. A record of them at Ipswich in 1575–6 as ‘my Lorde
-Robertes’ men is probably misdated. On 30 December 1576 they acted
-<i>The Collier</i> at Court. In 1576–7 they were at Stratford-on-Avon,
-in September 1577 at Newcastle, and between 13 and 19 October at
-Bristol, where they gave <i>Myngo</i>.<a id="FNanchor_265" href="#Footnote_265" class="fnanchor">[265]</a> In 1577–8 they were also at
-Bath. They were at Court on 26 December 1577 and were to have performed
-again on 11 February 1578, but were displaced for Lady Essex’s men.
-They may have been at Wanstead in May 1578 when Leicester entertained
-Elizabeth with Sidney’s <i>The May Lady</i>. On 1 September they
-were at Maldon, on 9 September at Ipswich, and on 3 November at Lord
-North’s at Kirtling. They played <i>A Greek Maid</i> at Court on 4
-January 1579.<a id="FNanchor_266" href="#Footnote_266" class="fnanchor">[266]</a> Their play on 28 December 1579 fell through because
-Elizabeth could not be present, but they played on 6 January 1580. In
-1579–80 they were at Ipswich and Durham, and from 15 to 17 May 1580
-at Kirtling. Vice-Chancellor Hatcher’s letter of 21 January 1580 to
-Burghley about Oxford’s men (<i>vide infra</i>) shows that Leicester’s
-had then recently been refused leave to play at Cambridge. They played
-<i>Delight</i> at Court on 26 December and appeared again on 7 February
-1581. That Wilson was still a member of the company in 1581 is shown
-by the reference to him in the curious Latin letter written by one
-of Lord Shrewsbury’s players on 25 April of that year.<a id="FNanchor_267" href="#Footnote_267" class="fnanchor">[267]</a> In the
-following winter they did not come to Court, but on 10 February 1583
-they returned with <i>Telomo</i>.<a id="FNanchor_268" href="#Footnote_268" class="fnanchor">[268]</a></p>
-
-<p>The best of Leicester’s men, including Laneham, Wilson, and Johnson,
-appear to have joined the Queen’s company on its formation in
-March 1583. Probably the Queen’s also took over the Theatre. James
-Burbadge himself may have given up acting. Nothing more is heard of
-Leicester’s men until 1584–5, when players under his name visited
-Coventry, Leicester, Gloucester, and Norwich. They were at Dover in
-June 1585, and at Bath as late as August. These may have been either
-the relics of the old company, or a new one formed to attend the Earl
-in his expedition to aid the States-General in the Low Countries.
-He was appointed to the command of the English forces on 28 August,
-and reached Flushing on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span> 10 December. The pageants in his honour
-at Utrecht, Leyden, and the Hague were remarkable. Stowe records
-festivities at Utrecht on St. George’s Day, 23 April 1586. These
-included an after-dinner show of ‘dauncing, vauting, and tumbling, with
-the forces of Hercules, which gave great delight to the strangers, for
-they had not seene it before’.<a id="FNanchor_269" href="#Footnote_269" class="fnanchor">[269]</a> It is a reasonable inference that
-the performers in <i>The Forces of Hercules</i> were English.<a id="FNanchor_270" href="#Footnote_270" class="fnanchor">[270]</a> And
-on 24 March 1586 Sir Philip Sidney, writing to Walsingham from Utrecht,
-says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘I wrote to yow a letter by Will, my lord of Lester’s jesting
-plaier, enclosed in a letter to my wife, and I never had answer
-thereof ... I since find that the knave deliverd the letters to
-my ladi of Lester.’<a id="FNanchor_271" href="#Footnote_271" class="fnanchor">[271]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>That the ‘jesting plaier’ was William Shakespeare is on the whole less
-likely than that he was the famous comic actor, William Kempe; and this
-theory is confirmed by a mention in an earlier letter of 12 November
-1585 from Thomas Doyley at Calais to Leicester himself of ‘Mr. Kemp,
-called Don Gulihelmo’, as amongst those remaining at Dunkirk.<a id="FNanchor_272" href="#Footnote_272" class="fnanchor">[272]</a>
-Leicester returned to England in November 1586. ‘Wilhelm Kempe,
-instrumentist’ and his lad ‘Daniell Jonns’ were at the Danish Court at
-Helsingör in August and September of the same year; and so, from 17
-July to 18 September, were five ‘instrumentister och springere’ whose
-names may evidently be anglicized as Thomas Stevens, George Bryan,
-Thomas King, Thomas Pope, and Robert Percy (cf. ch. xiv). Some or all
-of these men are evidently the company of English comedians referred to
-by Thomas Heywood as commended by the Earl of Leicester to Frederick II
-of Denmark. Stevens and his fellows, but not apparently<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span> Kempe, went on
-to Dresden. Some of them ultimately became Lord Strange’s men. But it
-seems to me very doubtful whether, as is usually suggested, they passed
-direct into his service from that of Leicester.<a id="FNanchor_273" href="#Footnote_273" class="fnanchor">[273]</a> They did not leave
-Dresden until 17 July 1587. But Leicester’s were at Exeter on 23 March
-1586. They played at Court on 27 December 1586, and were in London
-about 25 January 1587. They were at Abingdon, Bath, Lathom, Coventry,
-Leicester, Oxford, Stratford-on-Avon, Dover, Canterbury, Marlborough,
-Southampton, Exeter, Gloucester, and Norwich during 1586–7. Kempe may,
-of course, have been with them on these occasions; but if Stevens and
-the rest passed as Leicester’s in the Low Countries, it is likely that
-they ceased to do so when they went to Denmark.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, Leicester’s men were at Coventry, Reading, Bath, Maidstone,
-Dover, Plymouth, Gloucester, York, Saffron Walden, and probably Exeter
-in 1587–8.<a id="FNanchor_274" href="#Footnote_274" class="fnanchor">[274]</a> On 4 September they were at Norwich, and here William
-Stonage, a cobbler, was committed to prison at their suit, ‘for lewd
-words uttered against the ragged staff’.<a id="FNanchor_275" href="#Footnote_275" class="fnanchor">[275]</a> As late as 14 September
-they did not yet know that the lord in whose name they wore this badge
-was dead, for on that day, unless the records are again in error, they
-were still playing at Ipswich.<a id="FNanchor_276" href="#Footnote_276" class="fnanchor">[276]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>iii. LORD RICH’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Richard Rich; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1496; cr. 1st Baron Rich,
-26 Feb. 1548; Lord Chancellor, 23 Oct. 1548–21 Dec. 1551; m.
-Elizabeth Jenks; <i>ob.</i> 12 June 1567.</p>
-
-<p>Robert, s. of 1st Baron; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1537; succ. as
-2nd Baron, 1567; <i>ob.</i> 1581.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The company was at Ipswich on 3 May 1564, Saffron Walden in 1563–4,
-Maldon in 1564–5, York on 6 April 1565,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span> and Ipswich on 31 July 1567.
-Then it secured a footing in London, and appeared at Court during the
-Christmas of 1567–8, on 26 December 1568, and on 5 February 1570.
-On 2 February 1570 it played at the Lincoln’s Inn Candlemas ‘Post
-Revels’.<a id="FNanchor_277" href="#Footnote_277" class="fnanchor">[277]</a> It was also at Canterbury in 1569, Saffron Walden in
-1569–70, and Maldon in 1570. Presumably it was a later company to which
-Gabriel Harvey referred in 1579 (cf. p. 4), and the death of Lord
-Rich in 1581 might naturally have led to its disbandment or change of
-service.</p>
-
-
-<h5>iv. LORD ABERGAVENNY’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry Neville, s. of George, 3rd Lord Abergavenny; succ. as 4th
-Lord, 1535; <i>ob.</i> 1586.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The only London record of this company is a civic licence for it of 29
-January 1572 (App. D, No. xxi), but it is found in provincial records
-at Dover, Canterbury, Leicester, Bristol, and Faversham in 1571 and
-1572, and at Ludlow in 1575–6.</p>
-
-
-<h5>v. THE EARL OF SUSSEX’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Thomas Radcliffe, s. of Henry, 2nd Earl; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i>
-1526; m. (1) Elizabeth, d. of Thomas Earl of Southampton, (2)
-Frances, d. of Sir William Sidney, 26 Apr. 1555; succ. as 3rd
-Earl, 17 Feb. 1557; Lord Chamberlain, 13 July 1572; <i>ob.</i> 9
-June 1583.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Radcliffe, s. of Henry, 2nd Earl; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i>
-1530; m. Honora, d. of Anthony Pound, before 24 Feb. 1561; succ.
-as 4th Earl, 1583; <i>ob.</i> 14 Dec. 1593.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Radcliffe, s. of 4th Earl; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1569;
-m. (1) Bridget, d. of Sir Charles Morison, who <i>ob.</i> Dec.
-1623, (2) Frances Shute; succ. as 5th Earl, 1593; acting Earl
-Marshal, 1597, 1601; <i>ob.</i> 22 Sept. 1629.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The third Earl of Sussex had a company, which proved one of the most
-long-lived of the theatrical organizations of Elizabeth’s time and held
-together, now in London and now in the provinces, under no less than
-three earls. It first makes its appearance at Nottingham on 16 March
-1569, at Maldon in 1570, on 28 January 1571, and on 20 August 1572, at
-Ipswich in 1571–2, at Canterbury and Dover in 1569 and 1570, and in
-1569–70 at Bristol, Gloucester, and Ludlow, where it was of six men.
-Sussex became Chamberlain in July 1572 and in the following winter
-his company came to the Court, whose Christmases it helped to enliven
-pretty regularly until the death of its first patron in 1583. As I have
-shown elsewhere (ch. vi), Sussex seems to have had occasional<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span> deputies
-in Lord Howard of Effingham and Lord Hunsdon during his term of office,
-but it is probably justifiable to assume that, when the Chamberlain’s
-men are referred to at any time during 1572–83, Sussex’s men are meant,
-and in 1577 and 1581 there is clear evidence that the names are used
-synonymously. Oddly enough, Howard’s men are also referred to in one
-record of 1577 (cf. p. 134) as the Chamberlain’s, but that is probably
-a slip. The detailed history of the company during this period is as
-follows. In 1572–3 they were at Bath, in July 1573 at Leicester, on 14
-September at Nottingham, in 1573–4 at Coventry, in 1574, on some date
-before 29 September, at Leicester again, on 13 July at Maldon, and in
-September at Wollaton (Francis Willoughby’s). They rehearsed two Court
-plays for Christmas on 14 December, <i>Phedrastus</i> and <i>Phigon
-and Lucia</i>, but in the end did not give a performance. In 1574–5
-they were at Gloucester, in 1575 at Maldon, and before 29 September at
-Leicester. They played at Court on 2 February 1576. Their payee was
-John Adams, the only actor whose name is recorded in connexion with the
-company. In 1575–6 they were at Ipswich, on 27 July 1576 at Cambridge,
-and between 29 July and 5 August at Bristol, where they played <i>The
-Red Knight</i>. On 2 February 1577 they played <i>The Cynocephali</i>
-at Court. In 1576–7 they were at Coventry and Bath, on 30 May 1577 at
-Ipswich, and on 31 August at Nottingham. On 2 February 1578 they played
-at Court. In 1577–8 they were at Bath, on 15 July 1578 at Maldon, in
-the same year at Bristol, and in 1578–9 at Bath. Thereafter their
-activities seem to have been mainly confined to London. They were named
-by the Privy Council to the Lord Mayor among the Court companies for
-the Christmas of 1578–9 (App. D, No. xl), and played <i>The Cruelty
-of a Stepmother</i> on 28 December 1578, <i>The Rape of the Second
-Helen</i> on 6 January, and <i>Murderous Michael</i> on 3 March 1579.
-In the following winter their pieces were <i>The Duke of Milan and the
-Marquess of Mantua</i> on 26 December, <i>Portio and Demorantes</i>
-on 2 February, and <i>Sarpedon</i> on 16 February 1580.<a id="FNanchor_278" href="#Footnote_278" class="fnanchor">[278]</a> The
-names of their Court plays on 27 December 1580 and 2 February 1581
-are unfortunately not recorded. On 14 September they recur in the
-provinces, at Nottingham.<a id="FNanchor_279" href="#Footnote_279" class="fnanchor">[279]</a> They missed the next winter at Court,
-and made their last appearance there for a decade in <i>Ferrar</i> on 6
-January 1583.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span></p>
-
-<p>Either the death of their patron in June 1583, or possibly the
-formation of the Queen’s men in the previous March, eclipsed them, but
-in 1585 they reappear as a provincial company, visiting Dover on 15
-May, Bath on 22 July and in May 1586, Coventry twice in 1585–6, Ipswich
-in 1586–7, York in 1587, Leicester before Michaelmas of the same year,
-and Coventry in September. Here they were playing under the name of the
-Countess of Sussex. In 1587–8 they were at Coventry and Bath, on 18
-April 1588 at Ipswich, on 17 February 1589 at Leicester, on 1 March at
-Ipswich, on 19 November at Leicester again, in the course of 1589 at
-Faversham, and in 1588–9 at Aldeburgh. On 17 February 1590 they were
-at Ipswich. In the spring of 1591 they appear to have made a temporary
-amalgamation with a group of the Queen’s men (q.v.) and appeared with
-them on 14 February at Southampton, on 24 March at Coventry, and during
-1590–1 at Gloucester. This arrangement probably terminated in May, and
-on 11 August Sussex’s were alone at Leicester.<a id="FNanchor_280" href="#Footnote_280" class="fnanchor">[280]</a></p>
-
-<p>They enter the charmed London circle again with a Court performance
-on 2 January 1592.<a id="FNanchor_281" href="#Footnote_281" class="fnanchor">[281]</a> It is possible that they had attracted the
-services of Marlowe, for Kyd in a letter, probably to be dated in 1593,
-speaks of himself as having been in the service of a lord for whose
-players Marlowe was writing, and there are some traces of connexion
-between Kyd and the house of Radcliffe. During the plague of 1593 the
-company were obliged to travel again, and on 29 April the Privy Council
-Register records the issue of</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘an open warrant for the plaiers, servantes to the Erle of
-Sussex, authorysinge them to exercyse theire qualitie of
-playinge comedies and tragedies in any county, cittie, towne or
-corporacion not being within vij<sup>en</sup> miles of London, where the
-infection is not, and in places convenient and tymes fitt.’<a id="FNanchor_282" href="#Footnote_282" class="fnanchor">[282]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The company were at Ipswich, Newcastle, and York in 1592–3. They
-were at Winchester on 7 December 1593; then came to London under the
-patronage of the fifth Earl, and, although not at Court, had a season
-of about six weeks, beginning on 26 December and ending on 6 February,
-with Henslowe, probably at the Rose. The names and dates of their
-plays and sums received at each, probably by himself as owner of the
-theatre, are noted by Henslowe in his diary. The company performed
-on thirty nights, in twelve plays.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span> Henslowe’s receipts averaged
-£1 13<i>s.</i>, amounting to £3 1<i>s.</i> on the first night and
-£3 10<i>s.</i> on each of the next two, and thereafter fluctuating
-greatly, from a minimum of 5<i>s.</i> to a maximum of £3 8<i>s.</i>
-This last was at the production of the one ‘new’ play of the season,
-<i>Titus Andronicus</i>, on 24 January. The enterprise was brought to
-an abrupt termination by a renewed alarm of plague, and a consequent
-inhibition of plays by the Privy Council on 3 February. <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i> was played for the third and last time on 6 February,
-and on the same day the book was entered for copyright purposes in
-the Stationers’ Register. The edition published in the same year
-professes to give the play as it was played by ‘the Earle of Darbie,
-Earle of Pembrooke, and Earle of Sussex their Servants’. I suppose
-it to have passed, probably in a pre-Shakespearian version, from
-Pembroke’s to Sussex’s, when the former were bankrupt in the summer
-of 1593 (cf. <i>infra</i>), and to have been revised for Sussex’s by
-the hand of Shakespeare. If so, it is a plausible conjecture that
-certain other plays, which were once Pembroke’s and ultimately came
-to the Chamberlain’s men, also passed through the hands of Sussex’s.
-Such were <i>The Taming of A Shrew</i>, <i>The Contention of York and
-Lancaster</i>, and perhaps the <i>Ur-Hamlet</i>, <i>1 Henry VI</i>, and
-<i>Richard III</i>. There is no basis for determining whether any of
-Shakespeare’s work on the York tetralogy was done for Sussex’s; but it
-is worth noting that one of their productions was <i>Buckingham</i>, a
-title which might fit either <i>Richard III</i> or that early version
-of <i>Henry VIII</i>, the existence of which, on internal grounds,
-I suspect. Of Sussex’s other plays in this season, one, <i>George a
-Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield</i>, was published as theirs in 1599;
-another, Marlowe’s <i>Jew of Malta</i>, probably belonged to Henslowe,
-as it was acted in turn by nearly every company which he financed; and
-of the rest, <i>God Speed the Plough</i>, <i>Huon of Bordeaux</i>,
-<i>Richard the Confessor</i>, <i>William the Conqueror</i>, <i>Friar
-Francis</i>, <i>Abraham and Lot</i>, <i>The Fair Maid of Italy</i>,
-and <i>King Lud</i>, nothing is known, except for the entry of <i>God
-Speed the Plough</i> in 1601 and an edifying tale related about 1608
-by Thomas Heywood in connexion with an undated performance of <i>Friar
-Francis</i> by the company at King’s Lynn.<a id="FNanchor_283" href="#Footnote_283" class="fnanchor">[283]</a></p>
-
-<p>At Easter 1594 Henslowe records another very brief season of eight
-nights between 1 and 9 April, during which the Queen’s and Sussex’s
-men played ‘together’. This suggests to Dr. Greg that the companies
-appeared on different nights, but to me rather that they combined
-their forces, as they seem to have already done at Coventry in 1591.
-Henslowe’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span> receipts averaged £1 17<i>s.</i> The repertory included,
-besides <i>The Fair Maid of Italy</i> and <i>The Jew of Malta</i>,
-<i>King Leare</i>, doubtless to be identified with <i>King Leire
-and his Three Daughters</i> (1605), <i>The Ranger’s Comedy</i>, and
-<i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>. The latter was published in 1594
-as a Queen’s play. Both it and <i>The Ranger’s Comedy</i> were played
-at a later date by the Admiral’s, and may have belonged to Henslowe.
-Strange’s had played <i>Friar Bacon</i> in 1592–3.</p>
-
-<p>Thereafter Sussex’s men vanish from the annals; they may have been
-absorbed in the Queen’s men for travelling purposes. Later players
-under the same name are recorded at Coventry in 1602–3, Dover in
-1606–7, Canterbury in 1607–8, Bristol, Norwich, and Dunwich in 1608–9,
-Leicester on 31 August 1615, and Leominster in 1618, and it may be
-these to whom Heywood alludes as visiting King’s Lynn. If so, their
-possession of <i>Friar Francis</i> suggests some affiliation to the
-earlier company.</p>
-
-
-<h5>vi. SIR ROBERT LANE’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Robert Lane, of Horton, Northants; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1528;
-Kt. 2 Oct. 1553; m. (1) Catherine, d. of Sir Roger Copley, (2)
-Mary, d. of John Heneage.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I have not come across Sir Robert Lane’s men except at Bristol in
-August 1570, and at Court during the Christmas of 1571–2. On 27
-December 1571 they played <i>Lady Barbara</i> and on 17 February 1572
-<i>Cloridon and Radiamanta</i>. The first performance was paid for by
-a warrant of 5 January to Laurence Dutton; the second by a warrant of
-26 February, in which, according to the entry in the Privy Council
-Register, Dutton was again named.<a id="FNanchor_284" href="#Footnote_284" class="fnanchor">[284]</a> But the Treasurer of the Chamber
-records the payment as made to John Greaves and Thomas Goughe. Probably
-this company is identical with that found next year in the service of
-the Earl of Lincoln.</p>
-
-
-<h5>vii. THE EARL OF LINCOLN’S (LORD CLINTON’S) MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Edward Fiennes de Clinton; s. of Thomas, 8th Lord Clinton and
-Saye, <i>nat.</i> 1512; m. (1) Elizabeth Lady Talboys, d. of
-Sir John Blount, 1534, (2) Ursula, d. of William Lord Stourton,
-<i>c.</i> 1540, (3) Elizabeth Lady Browne, ‘the fair Geraldine,’
-d. of Gerald, 9th Earl of Kildare, <i>c.</i> 1552; succ. as 9th
-Baron, 1517; Lord High Admiral, 1550–3, and again 13 Feb. 1558;
-1st Earl of Lincoln, 4 May 1572; ambassador to France, 1572;
-Lord Steward, 1581–5; <i>ob.</i> 16 Jan. 1585.</p>
-
-
-<p>Henry Fiennes de Clinton, s. of Edward and Ursula; <i>nat.</i>
-<i>c.</i> 1541; m. (1) Catharine, d. of Francis, 2nd Earl of
-Huntingdon, Feb. 1557,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span> (2) Elizabeth, d. of Sir Richard Morison
-and wid. of William Norreys, after 1579; Kt. 29 Sept. 1553;
-succ. as 2nd Earl, 16 Jan. 1585; <i>ob.</i> 29 Sept. 1616.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Players serving the Lord Admiral were at Winchester in 1566–7. A
-company under the name of the Earl of Lincoln and led by Laurence
-Dutton played at Court during the Christmas of 1572–3, and a company
-under that of Lord Clinton, and also led by Dutton, in <i>Herpetulus
-the Blue Knight and Perobia</i> on 3 January 1574, and on 27 December
-1574 and 2 January 1575. For 1574–5 they rehearsed three plays, one
-of which was <i>Pretestus</i>. Probably these are the same company
-transferred by the Lord Admiral to his son. Dutton was with Sir Robert
-Lane’s men in 1571–2 and with the Earl of Warwick’s in 1575–6. The
-whole company may have taken service with Lincoln instead of Lane as
-a result of the statute of 1572 (App. D, No. xxiv), but it does not
-seem to have been altogether absorbed in Warwick’s, as Lord Clinton’s
-men are found at Southampton on 24 June 1577, when they were six in
-number, at Bristol in July, and at Coventry in 1576–7. A later company
-under the name of the Earl of Lincoln has a purely provincial record in
-1599–1604. There is an isolated notice at Norwich in 1608–9.</p>
-
-
-<h5>viii. THE EARL OF WARWICK’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Ambrose Dudley, 3rd s. of John, 1st Duke of Northumberland;
-<i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1528; m. (1) Anne Whorwood, (2) Elizabeth
-Talboys, <i>c.</i> 1553, (3) Anne, d. of Francis, Earl of
-Bedford, 11 Nov. 1565; Master of Ordnance, 12 Apr. 1560; Earl
-of Warwick, 26 Dec. 1561; Chief Butler of England, 4 May 1571;
-Privy Councillor, 5 Sept. 1573; <i>ob.</i> 20 Feb. 1590.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Dudley seems to have had players in London in January 1562, when they
-were rewarded by the Duchess of Suffolk.<a id="FNanchor_285" href="#Footnote_285" class="fnanchor">[285]</a> They are also found in
-1559–64 at Oxford, Gloucester, Bristol, Plymouth, Winchester, Dover,
-Canterbury, and Norwich. Their only Court performances upon record were
-two during the Christmas of 1564–5. In 1564–5 they were apparently at
-Canterbury.<a id="FNanchor_286" href="#Footnote_286" class="fnanchor">[286]</a></p>
-
-<p>After an interval of ten years there are Warwick’s men at Court on
-14 February 1575 and also at Stratford in the course of 1574–5, at
-Lichfield between 27 July and 3 August during the progress,<a id="FNanchor_287" href="#Footnote_287" class="fnanchor">[287]</a> and
-at Leicester before 29 September 1575. At the following Christmas they
-gave three plays at Court,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span> on 26 December 1575 and 1 January and on
-5 March 1576. John and Laurence Dutton and Jerome Savage were their
-payees. Laurence Dutton and possibly others of the company had been, a
-year before, in Lord Clinton’s service. During the next four winters
-they appeared regularly at Court, and are recorded at Leicester in 1576
-and Nottingham on 1 September 1577. On 26 December 1576 they played
-<i>The Painter’s Daughter</i>, and on 18 February 1577 <i>The Irish
-Knight</i>. The names of their plays on 28 December 1577 and 6 January
-and 9 February 1578 are not preserved. They were notified by the
-Privy Council to the Lord Mayor as one of the Court companies for the
-Christmas of 1578–9 (App. D, No. xl), and played <i>The Three Sisters
-of Mantua</i> on 26 December and <i>The Knight in the Burning Rock</i>
-on 1 March. A play intended for 2 February was not performed, but
-payment was made to Jerome Savage. Gabriel Harvey (cf. p. 4) mentions
-them as a London company in the summer of 1579. On 1 January 1580 they
-played <i>The Four Sons of Fabius</i>. A Winchester record of ‘Lord
-Ambrose Dudley’s’ men in 1581–2 must be an error.</p>
-
-<p>The Duttons were evidently a restless folk, and the disappearance of
-Warwick’s men and the appearance of Oxford’s men in 1580 is to be
-explained by another transfer of their services. This is referred to in
-the following verses:<a id="FNanchor_288" href="#Footnote_288" class="fnanchor">[288]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>The Duttons and theyr fellow-players forsakyng the Erle of
-Warwycke theyr mayster, became followers of the Erle of Oxford,
-and wrot themselves his</i> <span class="smcap">Comoedians</span>, <i>which
-certayne Gentlemen altered and made</i> <span class="smcap">Camoelions</span>.
-<i>The Duttons, angry with that, compared themselves to any
-gentleman; therefore these armes were devised for them.</i></p></div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The fyeld, a fart durty, a gybbet crosse-corded,</div>
- <div>A dauncing Dame Flurty of alle men abhorred;</div>
- <div>A lyther lad scampant, a roge in his ragges,</div>
- <div>A whore that is rampant, astryde wyth her legges,</div>
- <div>A woodcocke displayed, a calfe and a sheepe,</div>
- <div>A bitch that is splayed, a dormouse asleepe;</div>
- <div>A vyper in stynche, <i>la part de la drut</i>,</div>
- <div>Spell backwarde this Frenche and cracke me that nut.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Parcy per pillery, perced with a rope,</div>
- <div>To slythe the more lytherly anoynted with sope;</div>
- <div>A coxcombe crospate in token of witte,</div>
- <div>Two eares perforate, a nose wythe slytte.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Three nettles resplendent, three owles, three swallowes,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Three mynstrellmen pendent on three payre of gallowes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span></div>
- <div>Further sufficiently placed in them</div>
- <div>A knaves head, for a difference from alle honest men.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The wreathe is a chayne of chaungeable red,</div>
- <div>To shew they ar vayne and fickle of head;</div>
- <div>The creste is a lastrylle whose feathers ar blew,</div>
- <div>In signe that these fydlers will never be trew;</div>
- <div>Whereon is placed the horne of a gote,</div>
- <div>Because they ar chast, to this is theyr lotte,</div>
- <div>For their bravery, indented and parted,</div>
- <div>And for their knavery innebulated.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Mantled lowsy, wythe doubled drynke,</div>
- <div>Their ancient house is called the Clynke;</div>
- <div>Thys Posy they beare over the whole earthe,</div>
- <div>Wylt please you to have a fyt of our mirthe?</div>
- <div>But reason it is, and heraultes allowe welle,</div>
- <div>That fidlers should beare their armes in a towelle.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>In 1587–8 tumblers were at Bath under Warwick’s name. I do not
-understand the entry of his men in the Ipswich accounts, as playing
-on 10 March 1592. Ambrose Dudley died in 1590, and his doubtfully
-legitimate nephew, Sir Robert Dudley, does not seem even to have
-claimed the title until 1597. The Ipswich records are unreliable, but
-possibly Lady Warwick maintained a company for a while. The Corporation
-of London were considering some ‘cause’ of hers as to plays in May 1594
-(App. D, No. xcviii).</p>
-
-
-<h5>ix. THE EARL OF OXFORD’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>John de Vere, s. of John, 15th Earl of Oxford; <i>nat.</i>
-<i>c.</i> 1512; succ. as 16th Earl and Lord Great Chamberlain,
-21 Mar. 1540; m. Margaret Golding, 1547; <i>ob.</i> 3 Aug. 1562.</p>
-
-<p>Edward de Vere, s. of John, 16th Earl of Oxford; <i>nat.</i> 2
-Apr. 1550; succ. as 17th Earl and Lord Great Chamberlain, 3 Aug.
-1562; m. (1) Anne, d. of William Lord Burghley, Dec. 1571, (2)
-Elizabeth Trentham, <i>c.</i> 1591; <i>ob.</i> 24 June 1604. Of
-his daughters by (1), Elizabeth m. William Stanley, 6th Earl of
-Derby, 26 Jan. 1595; Bridget m. Francis, Lord Norris; Susan m.
-Sir Philip Herbert, afterwards Earl of Montgomery, 27 Dec. 1604.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Earls of Oxford had their players as far back as 1492.<a id="FNanchor_289" href="#Footnote_289" class="fnanchor">[289]</a> A
-company belonging to the 16th Earl caused a scandal by playing in
-Southwark at the moment when a dirge was being sung for Henry VIII
-in St. Saviour’s on 6 February 1547.<a id="FNanchor_290" href="#Footnote_290" class="fnanchor">[290]</a> It is probably the same
-company which is traceable in 1555–6 at Dover, in 1557–8 at Ipswich, in
-1559–60 and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span> 1560–1 at Maldon, and in 1561–2 at Barnstaple, Maldon, and
-Ipswich. Murray (ii. 63) adds a few notices. There is no sign of it at
-Court, and it is likely that the 17th Earl discontinued it soon after
-his succession. The last notices of it are at Leicester, Plymouth, and
-Ipswich in 1562–3.</p>
-
-<p>At a later date, however, this Earl was clearly interested in things
-dramatic. He took part in a Shrovetide device at Court in 1579, and is
-recorded in Francis Meres’s <i>Palladis Tamia</i> (1598) to have been
-himself a playwright and one of ‘the best for comedy amongst us’ (App.
-C, No. lii). In 1580 the Duttons and the rest of the Earl of Warwick’s
-men transferred themselves to his service, and thereby laid themselves
-open to satire upon their fickleness (cf. <i>supra</i>). I do not know
-whether it was their resentment at this that brought them into trouble,
-but on 12 April 1580 the Lord Mayor wrote to Sir Thomas Bromley, the
-Lord Chancellor, about a disorder at the Theatre two days before, which
-he understood to be already before the Privy Council; and on 13 April
-we find the Council committing Robert Leveson and Laurence Dutton,
-servants of the Earl of Oxford, to the Marshalsea for a fray with the
-Inns of Court. On 26 May the matter was referred to three judges for
-examination, and on 18 July Thomas Chesson, sometime servant to the
-Earl, was released on bail (App. D, Nos. xliii, xliv). These notices
-suggest that the company had arranged, possibly during the absence of
-Leicester’s men from town, to occupy the Theatre. In view of their
-disgrace, it was no doubt better for them to travel, and on 21 June
-John Hatcher, Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge, wrote to Lord Oxford’s
-father-in-law, Lord Burghley, to acknowledge recommendations received
-from him, as well as from the Lord Chancellor and Lord Chamberlain
-Sussex, that Oxford’s men should be allowed to ‘show their cunning in
-several plays already practised by them before the Queen’s majesty’,
-and to explain that, in view of pestilence, the need for industry
-at commencement, a previous refusal to Leicester’s men, and a Privy
-Council order of 1575 against assemblies in Cambridge, he had thought
-it better to give them 20<i>s.</i>, and send them away unheard.<a id="FNanchor_291" href="#Footnote_291" class="fnanchor">[291]</a>
-They are traceable provincially in 1580–3.<a id="FNanchor_292" href="#Footnote_292" class="fnanchor">[292]</a> At Norwich (1580–1)
-the payment was made to ‘the Earle of Oxenfordes lads’, and at Bristol
-(Sept. 1581) there were nine boys and a man. These were probably<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span> boys
-of the Earl’s domestic chapel, travelling either with the Duttons or as
-a separate company.</p>
-
-<p>The Duttons joined the Queen’s company, John on its first establishment
-in 1583. It is in the following winter, however, that an Oxford’s
-company first appears at Court. Here the Earl’s ‘servauntes’ performed
-on 1 January and 3 March 1584. Their payee was John Lyly, who had
-probably been for some years in the Earl’s service. Provincial
-performances continue during 1583–5, and in the records the company
-are always described as ‘players’ or ‘men’.<a id="FNanchor_293" href="#Footnote_293" class="fnanchor">[293]</a> On 27 December 1584
-<i>Agamemnon and Ulysses</i> was played at Court by the Earl of
-Oxford’s ‘boyes’. For this the payee was Henry Evans, probably the same
-who in 1600 set up the Chapel plays. I do not feel much doubt that the
-companies under Lyly and Evans were the same, or that in 1583–4 they
-in fact consisted of a combination of Oxford’s boys, Paul’s and the
-Chapel, working under Lyly and Evans at the Blackfriars theatre.<a id="FNanchor_294" href="#Footnote_294" class="fnanchor">[294]</a>
-This arrangement had, no doubt, to be modified when Sir William More
-recovered possession of the premises in the spring of 1584, and after
-the performance of December 1584 Oxford perhaps ceased to maintain boy
-players and contented himself with another company of his servants, who
-made an appearance at Court on 1 January 1585, under John Symons, in
-feats of activity and vaulting. These tumblers had apparently been Lord
-Strange’s men in 1583, and by 1586 had returned into the service of the
-Stanley family.</p>
-
-<p>An Oxford’s company did not again perform at Court, but his ‘plaiers’
-were at Norwich in 1585–6, and Ipswich in 1586–7,<a id="FNanchor_295" href="#Footnote_295" class="fnanchor">[295]</a> and players
-under his name were notified to Walsingham amongst others setting up
-their bills in London on 25 January 1587 (App. D, No. lxxviii). They
-were at York in June 1587 and Maidstone in 1589–90. Finally, at the end
-of the reign, comes a letter from the Privy Council to the Lord Mayor
-on 31 March 1602, which informs him that at the Earl’s suit the Queen
-has tolerated a new company formed by a combination of his servants
-and those of the Earl of Worcester, and that they are to play at the
-Boar’s Head (App. D, No. cxxx). Oxford’s men had probably then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span> been
-established for some little time, as they are indicated as having
-played <i>The Weakest Goeth to the Wall</i> (1600, S. R. 23 October
-1600) by the title-page, and <i>The History of George Scanderbarge</i>
-by the entry in the Stationers’ Register (3 July 1601). Meres’s
-reference to Oxford in 1598 suggests that they may have been in
-existence still earlier, as it is natural to suppose that he wrote
-comedies for his own men. Some of the writers, however, with whom Meres
-groups him belong to the early years of the reign, although others are
-contemporary. From 1602 the company was no doubt merged in Worcester’s,
-which in its turn became Queen Anne’s.</p>
-
-
-<h5>x. THE EARL OF ESSEX’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Walter Devereux, s. of Sir Richard Devereux and g.s. of Walter,
-Lord Bourchier and 1st Viscount Hereford; <i>nat.</i> 1541;
-succ. as 2nd Viscount Hereford, 1558; m. Lettice, d. of Sir
-Francis Knollys, <i>c.</i> 1561; 1st Earl of Essex, 4 May 1572;
-<i>ob.</i> 22 Sept. 1576.</p>
-
-<p>Lettice, Countess of Essex, b. <i>c.</i> 1541; m. (2) Robert,
-Earl of Leicester, 21 Sept. 1578, (3) Sir Christopher Blount,
-July 1589; <i>ob.</i> 25 Dec. 1634.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Devereux, s. of 1st Earl of Essex; b. 19 Nov. 1566; succ.
-as 2nd Earl, 1576; m. Frances, Lady Sidney, d. of Sir Francis
-Walsingham, 1590; Master of the Horse, 23 Dec. 1587; Earl
-Marshal, 28 Dec. 1597; Chancellor of Cambridge University, 10
-Aug. 1598; rebelled, 8 Feb. 1601; executed, 25 Feb. 1601.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Bourchiers, Earls of Essex, whom the Devereux succeeded through
-an heiress, had their players well back into the fifteenth century.
-In fact, the earliest household troop on record is that of Henry
-Bourchier, first earl of the senior creation, which is found at Maldon
-in 1468–9 and at Stoke-by-Nayland on 9 January 1482.<a id="FNanchor_296" href="#Footnote_296" class="fnanchor">[296]</a></p>
-
-<p>Walter Devereux had a company, which visited Bath, Bristol, Gloucester,
-and Nottingham in 1572–3, Wollaton (Francis Willoughby’s) in July
-1574, Coventry on 29 August, and Leicester before 29 September 1574,
-Gloucester, Dover, and Coventry in 1574–5, Coventry and Leicester in
-1575–6, Nottingham in September 1576, and Bristol in September 1577.
-On the Earl’s death the Countess retained the company, and under her
-name it appeared at Coventry and Oxford in 1576–7. On 11 February 1578
-it gave its only performance at Court, taking the place of Leicester’s
-men, to whom that day had originally been assigned. It was included
-in the list of Court companies sent to the Lord Mayor in December<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-1578 (App. D, No. xl), but gave no play that winter. The Privy Council
-described it as the Earl of Essex’s men, and it played under that
-name at Coventry in 1577–8 and at Ipswich in 1579–80; but at Oxford,
-Coventry, and Stratford-on-Avon in 1578–9, and at Oxford in 1579–80,
-it is still called the Countess of Essex’s. It could hardly have borne
-that name after August 1579, when the Countess’s secret marriage
-with Leicester was revealed to Elizabeth, and doubtless her disgrace
-debarred it from any further Court favour.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Earl of Essex had a provincial company from 1581 to 1596.
-In 1581–2 it was at Exeter, in July 1584 at Ludlow, in 1583–4 at
-Leicester, Stratford-on-Avon, and Ipswich, and in 1584–5 at Bath. On
-26 June 1585 it played at Thorpe in Norwich, in spite of a prohibition
-by the Corporation, and was sentenced to be excluded from civic reward
-in future. In 1585–6 it was at Coventry and Ipswich, in 1586 before
-29 September at Leicester, and possibly about May at Oxford, on 27
-February 1587 at York, on 16 July at Leicester, and in the course of
-the year at Stratford-on-Avon. In 1587–8 it was at Coventry, Ipswich,
-Saffron Walden, and Leicester, in 1588–9 at Bath, Saffron Walden, and
-Reading, on 7 September 1589 at Knowsley, on 31 October at Ipswich, and
-in the same year at Faversham. It was also at Coventry and Faversham in
-1589–90, at Maldon in 1590, and twice at Faversham in 1590–1, and is
-last recorded at Ludlow in April 1596. Murray adds some intermediate
-dates. A company of Essex’s men which appeared at Coventry in 1600–1 is
-probably distinct. The execution of Essex on 25 February 1601 must have
-brought it to a premature end.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xi. LORD VAUX’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>William Vaux, 3rd Lord Vaux; <i>nat.</i> <i>c.</i> 1542; m. (1)
-Elizabeth Beaumont, (2) Mary Tresham; <i>ob.</i> 20 Aug. 1595.</p>
-
-<p>Edward Vaux, 4th Lord Vaux; <i>nat.</i> 1588; <i>ob.</i> 1661.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>These companies are extremely obscure. Gabriel Harvey mentions
-the first in 1579 (cf. p. 4); the second was at Leicester in
-October-December 1601, Coventry in 1603–4 and 1608, and Skipton in 1609.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xii. LORD BERKELEY’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry FitzHardinge Berkeley, Baron Berkeley; succ. 1553; m.
-Catherine, d. of Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey; <i>ob.</i>
-1613; father of Thomas Berkeley, <i>nat.</i> 11 July 1575; m.
-Elizabeth, d. of Sir G. Carey, afterwards 2nd Baron Hunsdon, 19
-Feb. 1596; <i>ob.</i> 22 Nov. 1611.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The only London record of this company is in July 1581, when some
-of them, including Arthur King and Thomas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span> Goodale, were committed
-to the Counter after a brawl with Inns of Court men. Lord Berkeley
-apologized to the Lord Mayor on their behalf, and said that they would
-go to the country (App. D, Nos. xlix, l). Their other appearances are
-all in the country, at Bristol between 6 and 12 July 1578, where they
-played <i>What Mischief Worketh in the Mind of Man</i>, at Bath on
-11 July 1578 and on another day in 1578–9, at Abingdon in 1579–80,
-Stratford-on-Avon in 1580–1, Maldon in 1581, Stratford-on-Avon in
-1582–3, Barnstaple in 1583–4, and Bath in 1586–7. Long after they, or a
-later company under the same name, reappear at Coventry in 1597–8, at
-Leicester in 1598 before Michaelmas, at Saffron Walden in 1598–9, and
-at Coventry and elsewhere in 1603–10. Lord Berkeley’s name is sometimes
-misspelt in the account-books as ‘Bartlett’.<a id="FNanchor_297" href="#Footnote_297" class="fnanchor">[297]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>xiii. QUEEN ELIZABETH’S MEN</h5>
-
-<p>The origin of this company, the most famous of all the London companies
-during the decade of the ’eighties, can be dated with an extreme
-minuteness.<a id="FNanchor_298" href="#Footnote_298" class="fnanchor">[298]</a> The Revels Accounts for 1582–3 record an expenditure
-of 20s. in travelling charges by</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Edmond Tylney Esquire Master of the office being sente for
-to the Courte by Letter from M<sup>r</sup>. Secreatary dated the x<sup>th</sup>
-of Marche 1582. To choose out a companie of players for her
-majestie.’<a id="FNanchor_299" href="#Footnote_299" class="fnanchor">[299]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The date then was 10 March 1583, and the business was in the hands
-of Sir Francis Walsingham. Lord Chamberlain Sussex, to whom it would
-naturally have fallen, was ill in the previous September<a id="FNanchor_300" href="#Footnote_300" class="fnanchor">[300]</a> and died
-on the following 9 June. Walsingham’s agency in the matter is confirmed
-in the account of the formation of the company inserted by Edmund Howes
-in the 1615 and 1631 editions of Stowe’s <i>Annales</i>:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Comedians and stage-players of former time were very poor
-and ignorant in respect of these of this time: but being now
-grown very skilful and exquisite actors for all matters, they
-were entertained into the service of divers great lords: out
-of which companies there were twelve of the best chosen, and,
-at the request of Sir Francis Walsingham, they were sworn the
-queens servants and were allowed wages and liveries as grooms
-of the chamber: and until this yeare 1583,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span> the queene had no
-players. Among these twelve players were two rare men, viz.
-Thomas Wilson, for a quicke, delicate, refined, extemporall
-witt, and Richard Tarleton, for a wondrous plentifull pleasant
-extemporall wit, he was the wonder of his time. He lieth buried
-in Shoreditch church. [In a note] He was so beloved that men use
-his picture for their signs.’<a id="FNanchor_301" href="#Footnote_301" class="fnanchor">[301]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Howes is not altogether accurate. ‘Thomas’ is obviously a mistake
-for ‘Robert’ Wilson. Elizabeth had maintained players before, the
-Interluders, although they had cut little figure in the dramatic
-history of the reign, and the last of them had died in 1580. Dr. Greg
-thinks that the players were not appointed as grooms of the Chamber, on
-the ground that their names do not appear in a list of these officers
-appended to a warrant of 8 November 1586.<a id="FNanchor_302" href="#Footnote_302" class="fnanchor">[302]</a> But Tarlton is described
-as ‘ordenary grome off her majestes chamber’ in the record of his
-graduation as a master of fence in 1587, and both he and his ‘fellow’,
-William Johnson, are described as ‘grooms of her majesties chamber’
-in his will of 1588. Their absence from Dr. Greg’s list is probably
-due to their treatment as a special class of grooms of the chamber in
-ordinary without fee, who were not called upon to perform the ordinary
-duties of the office, such as helping to watch the palace.<a id="FNanchor_303" href="#Footnote_303" class="fnanchor">[303]</a>
-That they had liveries, which were red coats, is borne out by the
-particular mention of the fact that they were not wearing them, in the
-depositions concerning a very untoward event which took place in the
-first few months of their service. On the afternoon of 15 June 1583
-they were playing at the Red Lion in Norwich. A dispute as to payment
-arose between a servant of one Mr. Wynsdon and Singer, who, in a black
-doublet and with a player’s beard on, was acting as gatekeeper. Tarlton
-and Bentley, who was playing the duke, came off the stage, and Bentley
-broke the offender’s head with the hilt of his sword. The man fled,
-pursued by Singer with an arming-sword which he took off the stage,
-and by Henry Browne, a servant of Sir William Paston. Both of them
-struck him, and one of the blows, but it was not certain whose, proved
-mortal.<a id="FNanchor_304" href="#Footnote_304" class="fnanchor">[304]</a></p>
-
-<p>Several other places, besides Norwich, received a visit from the
-Queen’s men during the first summer of their existence. In April they
-were at Bristol, on 9 July at Cambridge, and between 24 July and 29
-September at Leicester.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span> Their travels also extended to Gloucester,
-Aldeburgh, Nottingham, and Shrewsbury.<a id="FNanchor_305" href="#Footnote_305" class="fnanchor">[305]</a> In the winter they returned
-to London, and on 26 November the Privy Council wrote to the Lord Mayor
-to bespeak for them permission to play in the City and the liberties
-upon week-days until Shrovetide. The City accordingly licensed them to
-play at the Bull and the Bell, but with unwelcome limitations, for on
-1 December it was necessary for Walsingham to write a personal letter,
-explaining that it was not the intention of the Council that the
-licence to play should be confined to holidays. The City record gives
-the names of the twelve members of the company as Robert Wilson, John
-Dutton, Richard Tarlton, John Laneham, John Bentley, Thobye Mylles,
-John Towne, John Synger, Leonall Cooke, John Garland, John Adams, and
-William Johnson. The company made its initial appearance at Court on 26
-December, and played again on 29 December, and on 3 March 1584. Their
-public performances probably continued through the spring, but in June
-there were disturbances in and around the Middlesex theatres, and the
-City obtained leave from the Council to suppress plays. The Queen’s
-submitted to an injunction from William Fleetwood, the Recorder; and
-their leader advised him to send for the owner of the Theatre, who
-was Lord Hunsdon’s man, and bind him. They travelled again, and are
-found in 1583–4 at Bath and Marlborough, and in October or November at
-Dover. When the winter came on, they once more approached the Council
-and requested a renewal of the previous year’s privilege, submitting
-articles in which they pointed out that the time of their service was
-drawing near, and that the season of the year was past to play at any
-of the houses outside the City. They also asked for favourable letters
-to the Middlesex justices. The City opposed the concession, and begged
-that, if it were granted, the number and names of the Queen’s men might
-be set out in the warrant, complaining that in the previous year, when
-toleration was granted to this company alone, all the playing-places
-were filled with men calling themselves the Queen’s players. The
-records do not show whether the Council assented.<a id="FNanchor_306" href="#Footnote_306" class="fnanchor">[306]</a> The company
-appeared four times at Court, giving <i>Phillyda and Corin</i> on 26
-December, <i>Felix and Philiomena</i> on 3 January 1585, <i>Five Plays
-in One</i> on 6 January, and an antic play and a comedy on 23 February.
-They had prepared a fifth performance, of <i>Three Plays in One</i>,
-for 21 February, but it was not called for. Mr. Fleay has conjectured
-that the <i>Five Plays in One</i> and the <i>Three<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span> Plays in One</i>
-may have been the two parts of Tarlton’s <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i>.<a id="FNanchor_307" href="#Footnote_307" class="fnanchor">[307]</a>
-The payment for this winter’s plays was made to Robert Wilson.</p>
-
-<p>There is no evidence that the company were travelling in 1585. They
-were at Court again on 26 December and on 1 January and 13 February
-1586. During 1586 they were at Maidstone, in July at Bristol, on 22
-August and later at Faversham, and before 29 September at Leicester.
-In 1585–6 they were also at Coventry. On 26 December 1586 and on 1
-and 6 January and 28 February 1587 they were at Court, and in the
-same January a correspondent of Walsingham’s names them amongst
-other companies then playing regularly in the City (App. D, No.
-lxxviii). During 1586–7 they were at Bath, Worcester, Canterbury,
-and Stratford-on-Avon, whence Malone thought that they might have
-enlisted Shakespeare.<a id="FNanchor_308" href="#Footnote_308" class="fnanchor">[308]</a> They were at Bath again on 13 July 1587,
-and at Aldeburgh on 20 May and 19 July. Before 29 September they were
-at Leicester, on 9 September at York, where it is recorded that they
-‘cam in her Majesties lyvereys’, twice in September at Coventry, and at
-Aldeburgh on 16 December. They were at Court on 26 December 1587 and on
-6 January and 18 February 1588.</p>
-
-<p>A subsidy list of 30 June 1588 shows that Tarlton, Laneham, Johnson,
-Towne, Adams, Garland, John Dutton, Singer, and Cooke were then still
-household players.<a id="FNanchor_309" href="#Footnote_309" class="fnanchor">[309]</a> It can, perhaps, hardly be assumed that the
-whole of the company is here represented. Mills, Wilson, and Bentley
-may have dropped out since 1583. But one would have expected to find
-the name of Laurence Dutton beside that of John, as he was certainly
-a Queen’s man by 1589. Knell also acted with Tarlton in <i>The Famous
-Victories of Henry the Fifth</i>, and must have belonged to the
-company. He also may have been dead by 1588. And this must certainly
-be the case if he is the William Knell whose widow Rebecca John
-Heminges married on 10 March 1588. There is some reason to suppose
-that Heminges himself joined the Queen’s men, perhaps in right of his
-wife. The composition of the list of 1583 generally bears out the
-statement of Howes, that the Queen’s men were selected as the best
-out of the companies of divers great lords, for Wilson, Laneham, and
-Johnson belonged to Leicester’s in 1572, Adams to Sussex’s in 1576, and
-Dutton, after a chameleon past, to Oxford’s in 1580. Mr. Fleay, who did
-not know either the list of 1583 or that of 1588, declares that the
-original members of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span> company included James Burbadge and William
-Slaughter, and probably John Perkyn.<a id="FNanchor_310" href="#Footnote_310" class="fnanchor">[310]</a> Of these William Slaughter
-is merely what the philologists would call a ‘ghost’-name, for there
-is no evidence that any such actor ever existed.<a id="FNanchor_311" href="#Footnote_311" class="fnanchor">[311]</a> Evidently James
-Burbadge did not join the Queen’s men. Probably Mr. Fleay was biased by
-his knowledge that these men acted at the Theatre, which was Burbadge’s
-property. But this could prove nothing, as the relations between
-particular companies and particular theatres were much less permanent
-than Mr. Fleay is apt to suppose. The Queen’s seem to have been acting
-at the Theatre when Fleetwood suppressed them in June 1584, but the
-owner of the house, who can hardly be any other than James Burbadge,
-is specifically described as Lord Hunsdon’s man, which of course does
-not necessarily signify that he was a player at all. Moreover, it is
-clear from the official correspondence of the following autumn, not
-only that, as we know from other sources, the companies regularly moved
-in from the suburban houses to the City inn-yards at the approach of
-winter, but also that the Queen’s in particular had in the winter of
-1583 dispersed themselves for their public performances over various
-play-places. The view that they did not exclusively<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span> attach themselves
-to Burbadge’s, or to any other one theatre, is further borne out
-by the indications in the <i>Jests</i> of Tarlton, which there is
-no reason to reject, however apocryphal they may be in detail, as
-evidence of the theatrical conditions under which the famous mime
-appeared. The <i>Jests</i> frequently speak of Tarlton as a Queen’s
-man and never mention any other company in connexion with him.<a id="FNanchor_312" href="#Footnote_312" class="fnanchor">[312]</a>
-And, as it happens, they record performances at the Curtain,<a id="FNanchor_313" href="#Footnote_313" class="fnanchor">[313]</a>
-the Bell,<a id="FNanchor_314" href="#Footnote_314" class="fnanchor">[314]</a> and the Bull,<a id="FNanchor_315" href="#Footnote_315" class="fnanchor">[315]</a> but none at the Theatre. Nashe,
-however, tells us that Tarlton made jests of Richard Harvey and his
-<i>Astrological Discourse</i> of 1583 there;<a id="FNanchor_316" href="#Footnote_316" class="fnanchor">[316]</a> and an entry in the
-Stationers’ Register makes it possible to add that shortly before
-his death he appeared at the Bel Savage.<a id="FNanchor_317" href="#Footnote_317" class="fnanchor">[317]</a> The stage-keeper in
-<i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614), Ind. 37, gives us a reminiscence of a
-scene between Tarlton and John Adams, ‘I am an Asse! I! and yet I kept
-the <i>Stage</i> in Master <i>Tarletons</i> time, I thanke my starres.
-Ho! and that man had liu’d to haue play’d in <i>Bartholmew Fayre</i>,
-you should ha’ seene him ha’ come in, and ha’ beene coozened i’ the
-Cloath-quarter, so finely! And <i>Adams</i>, the Rogue, ha’ leap’d and
-caper’d vpon him, and ha’ dealt his vermine about, as though they had
-cost him nothing. And then a substantiall watch to ha’ stolne in vpon
-’hem, and taken ’hem away, with mistaking words, as the fashion is, in
-the <i>Stage</i>-practice.’</p>
-
-<p>Tarlton’s own talent probably ran more to ‘jigs’ and ‘themes’ than to
-the legitimate drama. But the palmy days of the Queen’s company were
-those that intervened between its foundation in 1583 and his death on
-3 September 1588. To it belonged the men whom such an actor of the
-next generation as Thomas Heywood could remember as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span> giants of the
-past,<a id="FNanchor_318" href="#Footnote_318" class="fnanchor">[318]</a> and whose reputation Edward Alleyn’s friends were ready to
-back him to excel.<a id="FNanchor_319" href="#Footnote_319" class="fnanchor">[319]</a> From 1588 the future of the stage lay with
-Alleyn and the Admiral’s men and Marlowe, and it may reasonably be
-supposed that the Queen’s men were hard put to it to hold their own
-against their younger rivals. Adams probably survived Tarlton, and his
-name appears to be traceable as that of the clowns in <i>A Looking
-Glass for London and England</i> (<i>c.</i> 1590) and <i>James IV</i>
-(<i>c.</i> 1591). In 1587–8 the Queen’s visited Coventry and Exeter,
-and in 1588 Dover, and on two occasions Faversham. On 19 July and 14
-August they were at Bath. The Bath accounts for this year also show
-a payment ‘to the quenes men that were tumblers’. Owing to Tarlton’s
-death or to some other reason, the Queen’s men prolonged their travels
-far into the winter. On 31 October they were at the Earl of Derby’s
-house at New Park, Lancashire; on 6 November ‘certen of’ them were at
-Leicester; on 10 December they were at Norwich and on 17 December at
-Ipswich. But they reached the Court in time for the performance on 26
-December, with which they seem to have had the prerogative of opening
-the Christmas season, and appeared again on 9 February. They must have
-had some share in the Martin Marprelate controversy, which raged during
-1589. In the previous year, indeed, Martin was able to claim Tarlton as
-an ally who had ‘taken’ Simony ‘in Don John of London’s cellar’, and
-was himself accused of borrowing his ‘foolery’ from Laneham. But when
-the bishops determined to meet the Puritans with literary weapons like
-their own, they naturally turned to the Queen’s men amongst others.
-About April 1589 <i>A Whip for an Ape</i> bids Martin’s grave opponents
-to ‘let old Lanam lash him with his rimes’, and although it cannot be
-assumed that, if the <i>Maygame of Martinism</i> was in fact played at
-the Theatre, it was the Queen’s men who played it, <i>Martin’s Month’s
-Minde</i> records in August the chafing of the Puritans at players
-‘whom, saving their liveries (for indeed they are hir Majesty’s men
-...) they call rogues’. Influence was brought to bear to suppress
-the anti-Martinist plays. A pamphlet of October notes that <i>Vetus
-Comoedia</i> has been ‘long in the country’; and this accords with
-the fact that the provincial performances of the Queen’s men began at
-an unusually early date in 1589. They are found at Gloucester on 19
-April, at Leicester on 20 May, at Ipswich on 27 May, at Aldeburgh on
-30 May, and at Norwich on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span> 3 June. On 5 July they were at the Earl of
-Derby’s at Lathom, and on 6 and 7 September at another house of the
-Earl’s at Knowsley. On 22 September Lord Scrope wrote from Carlisle
-to William Asheby, the English ambassador in Scotland, that they had
-been for ten days in that town. He had heard from Roger Asheton of the
-King’s desire that they should visit Scotland, and had sought them out
-from ‘the furthest parte of Langkeshire’.<a id="FNanchor_320" href="#Footnote_320" class="fnanchor">[320]</a> One would be glad to
-know whether they did in fact visit Scotland. In any case they were
-back in England and at Bath by November. During 1588–9 they were also
-at Reading, at Nottingham, and twice at Coventry. Both the Nottingham
-records and those of Leicester furnish evidence that for travelling
-purposes they divided themselves into two companies. At Leicester
-the town account for 1588–9 shows ‘certen of her Maiests playars’ as
-coming on 6 November, and ‘others moe of her Mayestyes playars’ as
-coming on 20 May; that of Nottingham for the same year has an entry of
-‘Symons and his companie, being the Quenes players’ and another of ‘the
-Quenes players, the two Duttons and others’. The arrangement was of
-course natural enough, seeing that even in London the Queen’s men were
-sufficiently numerous to occupy more than one inn-yard. Laurence Dutton
-was evidently by now a member of the company with his brother John.
-It is to be presumed that Symons is the John Symons who on not less
-than five occasions presented ‘activities’ at Court, in 1582–3 with
-Strange’s (q.v.), in 1585 with Oxford’s, in 1586 with ‘Mr. Standleyes
-boyes’, in 1587–8 with a company under his own name, and in 1588–9
-either with the Admiral’s or possibly with the Queen’s itself.</p>
-
-<p>Doubtless the incorporation of Symons into the Queen’s service explains
-the appearance of the Queen’s tumblers at Bath in 1589. Performances at
-Court, for which John Dutton and John Laneham received payment, took
-place on 26 December 1589 and 1 March 1590. During 1589–90 the company
-were at Coventry, Ludlow, Nottingham, Bridgnorth, and Faversham, on 22
-April 1590 at Norwich, on 24 June under the leadership of ‘Mr. Dutton’
-at Knowsley, and on 30 October at Leicester. Acrobatic feats still
-formed a part of their repertory, and in these they had the assistance
-of a Turkish rope-dancer.<a id="FNanchor_321" href="#Footnote_321" class="fnanchor">[321]</a> There were further Court performances
-on 26 December and on 1, 3, and 6 January, and 14 February 1591. It is
-to be noted that payment was made for the play of 1 January to ‘John
-Laneham and his companye her maiesties players’ and for the rest by a
-separate warrant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span> to ‘Lawrence Dutton and John Dutton her maiesties
-players and there companye’; and that this distinction indicates some
-further development of the tendency to bifurcation already observed may
-be gathered from a study of the provincial records for 1590–1. On the
-very day of the performance of 14 February Queen’s men were also at
-Southampton, and the form of the entry indicates that they were there
-playing in conjunction with the Earl of Sussex’s men. This was the case
-also at Coventry on 24 March and at Gloucester during 1590–1.<a id="FNanchor_322" href="#Footnote_322" class="fnanchor">[322]</a> At
-Ipswich during the same year there are two entries, of ‘the Quenes
-players’ on 15 May 1591 and of ‘another company of the Quenes players’
-on 18 May. Obviously two groups were travelling this year and one
-had strengthened itself by a temporary amalgamation with Sussex’s.
-Perhaps the normal combination was restored when the two groups found
-themselves on the same road at the end of May, for Queen’s men are
-recorded alone at Faversham on 2 June 1591, at Wirkburn on 18 August,
-and at Coventry on 24 August and 20 October.</p>
-
-<p>It was probably during this summer that Greene, having sold <i>Orlando
-Furioso</i> to the Queen’s men for twenty nobles, resold it ‘when they
-were in the country’ to the Admiral’s for as much more. The winter
-of 1591–2 marks a clear falling-off in the position of the company
-at Court, since they were only called upon to give one performance,
-on 26 December, as against six assigned to Lord Strange’s men, with
-whom at this date Alleyn and the Admiral’s men appear to have been
-in combination. Yet it was still possible for the City, writing to
-Archbishop Whitgift on 25 February 1592, to suggest that Elizabeth’s
-accustomed recreation might be sufficiently served, without the need
-for public plays, ‘by the privat exercise of hir Ma<sup>ts</sup> own players in
-convenient place’.<a id="FNanchor_323" href="#Footnote_323" class="fnanchor">[323]</a> That they were again making use of the Theatre
-may perhaps be inferred from a passage in Nashe’s <i>Summer’s Last Will
-and Testament</i> of the following autumn, in which a Welshman is said
-to ‘goe ae Theater, and heare a Queenes Fice, and he make hur laugh,
-and laugh hur belly-full’.<a id="FNanchor_324" href="#Footnote_324" class="fnanchor">[324]</a> During 1591–2 they were at Nottingham,
-Coventry, Stratfordon-Avon,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span> twice at Aldeburgh, and twice at Bath. In
-1592 they were at Rochester, on 27 May at Norwich, before 29 September
-at Leicester, and early in September at Chesterton close to Cambridge.
-Here they came into conflict with the authorities of Cambridge
-University, who were apprehensive of infection from the crowds
-assembled at Sturbridge fair, and forbade them to play. Encouraged by
-Lord North and by the constables of Chesterton, they disobeyed, set
-up their bills upon the college gates, and gave their performance. It
-is interesting to note that ‘one Dutton’ was ‘a principale’, and to
-remember that, twelve years before, the Duttons had gone to Cambridge
-as Lord Oxford’s men and had been refused permission to play by the
-University authorities.<a id="FNanchor_325" href="#Footnote_325" class="fnanchor">[325]</a> The outcome of the present encounter was
-a formal protest by the Vice-Chancellor and Heads of Houses to the
-Privy Council for which they requested Burghley’s support as Chancellor
-of the University. After a further appeal about a year later, they
-succeeded in obtaining a confirmation of their privileges.<a id="FNanchor_326" href="#Footnote_326" class="fnanchor">[326]</a> Another
-letter from the University to their Chancellor, written on 4 December
-1592, is of a different character. Its object is to excuse themselves
-from accepting an invitation conveyed through the Vice-Chamberlain to
-present an English comedy before Elizabeth at Christmas. Sir Thomas
-Heneage appears to have given it as a reason for his request ‘that her
-Maiesties owne servantes, in this time of infection, may not disport
-her Highnes w<sup>th</sup> theire wonted and ordinary pastimes’.<a id="FNanchor_327" href="#Footnote_327" class="fnanchor">[327]</a></p>
-
-<p>On 11 October 1592 the Queen’s men were at Aldeburgh, on the same day
-as, and conceivably in association with, Lord Morley’s men, although
-the payments are distinct. They did not in fact appear at Court during
-the Christmas of 1592–3, although both Lord Pembroke’s and Lord
-Strange’s did. They were at Coventry and Stratford-on-Avon in the
-course of 1592–3, at Leicester in June 1593 and again after Michaelmas,
-at Bath on 22 August, and at York in September. On 6 January 1594 they
-returned to Court and gave what proved to be their last performance
-there. On 1 April they began to play at one of Henslowe’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span> theatres ‘to
-geather’&mdash;that is to say, either alternately or in combination&mdash;with
-Sussex’s men, who had already performed there for the six weeks between
-Christmas and Lent. Possibly this was a renewal of an earlier alliance
-of 1591. Only eight performances are recorded, and of the five plays
-given only <i>King Leire</i> can very reasonably be assigned to the
-repertory of the Queen’s men. The others were <i>The Jew of Malta</i>
-and <i>The Fair Maid of Italy</i>, which Sussex’s men had been playing
-in the winter, Greene’s <i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, which
-was played for Henslowe by other companies both before and after,
-and was probably his property, and <i>The Ranger’s Comedy</i>, the
-performances of which were being continued by the Admiral’s men in the
-following autumn, but which it is possible that they or Henslowe may
-have acquired from the Queen’s. For there can be no doubt that the
-Queen’s men, whether because they had ceased to be modish, or because
-their finances had proved unable to stand the strain of the plague
-years, were now at the end of their London career. On 8 May 1594 the
-significant entry occurs in Henslowe’s diary of a loan of £15 to his
-nephew Francis Henslowe ‘to lay downe for his share to the Quenes
-players when they broke &amp; went into the contrey to playe’.<a id="FNanchor_328" href="#Footnote_328" class="fnanchor">[328]</a> This
-by itself would not perhaps be conclusive, as there are other years
-in which the company began its provincial wanderings as early as May.
-But from the present journey there is nothing to show that they ever
-returned, and it may fairly be reckoned as another sign of defeat that
-while <i>The Troublesome Reign of King John</i> (1591) was the only
-play certainly theirs which was printed before 1594, no less than
-nine found their way into the publishers’ hands during that and the
-following year. These were, besides <i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>
-(1594, S. R. 14 May 1594), with which they probably had only a recent
-connexion, <i>A Looking Glass for London and, England</i> (1594, S. R.
-5 March 1594), <i>King Leire</i> (1594, S. R. 14 May 1594), <i>James
-IV</i> and <i>The Famous Victories of Henry V</i> (1598, S. R. 14 May
-1594), <i>The True Tragedy of Richard III</i> (1594, S. R. 19 June
-1594), <i>Selimus</i> (1594), Peele’s <i>Old Wive’s Tale</i> (1595, S.
-R. 16 April 1595), and <i>Valentine and Orson</i> (S. R. 23 May 1595),
-of which no copy is known to be extant. Somewhat later came <i>Sir
-Clyomon and Clamydes</i> (1599).</p>
-
-<p>The Queen’s men were at Coventry on 4 July 1594, at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span> Bristol in August,
-and at Bath and Barnstaple, where they were unlucky enough to break
-down the ceiling in the Guildhall, during 1593–4, and thereafter they
-are traceable right up to the end of the reign, at Coventry, Oxford,
-and Bath in 1594–5, at Leicester both before and after Michaelmas
-1595, twice at Coventry and at Ludlow in 1595–6, at Stratford-on-Avon
-on 16 and 17 July 1596, at Bristol in August, at Leicester between
-October and December 1596, and at Faversham and Bridgnorth in the same
-year, at Coventry, at Dunwich, and twice at Bath in 1596–7, at Bristol
-again about Christmas 1597, at Nottingham on 8 July 1597, at Bristol
-about 25 July, at Bath in 1597–8, at Leicester on 9 January 1598, at
-Maldon in 1598, at Ipswich and Reading in 1598–9, at Maldon in 1599,
-at Dunwich in 1599–1600, at Ipswich on 2 June 1600, and at Leicester
-before 29 September in the same year, at Coventry and Bath in 1600–1,
-at York in July 1602, at Leicester on 30 September 1602, at Belvoir
-in August or September of the same year, and at Coventry in 1602–3.
-But little, naturally enough, is known of the <i>personnel</i> of
-the company during this period of its decay. On 1 June 1595 Francis
-Henslowe borrowed another £9 from his uncle ‘to laye downe for his
-hallfe share w<sup>th</sup> the company w<sup>ch</sup> he dothe playe w<sup>th</sup> all’,<a id="FNanchor_329" href="#Footnote_329" class="fnanchor">[329]</a>
-and I see no particular reason to suppose that this was another company
-than the Queen’s. The loan is witnessed by William Smyght, George
-Attewell, and Robert Nycowlles, each of whom is described as ‘player’.
-It is likely enough that these were now fellows of Francis Henslowe.
-Attewell had been payee for Lord Strange’s men in 1591. The earlier
-loan was witnessed by John Towne, Hugh Davis, and Richard Alleyn. Davis
-and Alleyn appear elsewhere in connexion with Henslowe, but Towne was
-certainly a Queen’s man. He is in the 1588 list and is described as
-‘one of her Majesties plears’ when on 8 July 1597 he obtained a release
-of debts due to Roger Clarke of Nottingham.<a id="FNanchor_330" href="#Footnote_330" class="fnanchor">[330]</a> The other men of 1588
-had nearly all vanished. John Singer had joined the Admiral’s by the
-autumn of 1594. I should not be surprised, however, to find that John
-Garland was still with the Queen’s. He was an associate of Francis
-Henslowe in the Duke of Lennox’s men in 1604, and was then ‘owld’
-Garland. Indeed, it seems probable that, when the Queen’s men lost
-their last shred of claim to a livery on Elizabeth’s death, they made
-an attempt still to hold together under the patronage of Lennox. John
-Shank was once a Queen’s man.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xiv. THE EARL OF ARUNDEL’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry Fitzalan, 12th Earl of Arundel; <i>nat. c.</i> 1511; m.
-(1) Katherine, d. of Thomas Grey, Marquis of Dorset, before
-1532, (2) Mary, Countess of Sussex, d. of Sir John Arundel,
-after 1542; succ. Jan. 1544; Lord Chamberlain, 1544; Lord
-Steward, 1553, and again 1558–64; <i>ob.</i> 24 Feb. 1580.</p>
-
-<p>Philip Howard, 13th Earl of Arundel, s. of Thomas Howard, 4th
-Duke of Norfolk, attainted 1572, and Mary, d. and h. of 12th
-Earl; <i>nat.</i> 28 June 1557; m. Anne, d. of Thomas, Lord
-Dacre, 1571; succ. Feb. 1580; sent to Tower, 25 Apr. 1585, and
-<i>ob.</i> there, 19 Oct. 1595.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Earls of Arundel had players as far back as the fifteenth
-century.<a id="FNanchor_331" href="#Footnote_331" class="fnanchor">[331]</a> The 12th Earl entertained Elizabeth with a mask at
-Nonsuch on 5 August 1559. He had players, who were rewarded by the
-Duchess of Suffolk, apparently during a London visit, in December
-1561. The 13th Earl had a company in 1584. It was in London when plays
-were suppressed in June, and obediently submitted. It seems to have
-been located at the Curtain. It can be traced at Ipswich on 1 July, at
-Leicester before 29 September, at Aldeburgh in 1583–4, at Norwich in
-1585–6, and thereafter no more.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xv. THE EARL OF HERTFORD’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Edward Seymour, s. of Edward, Protector and 1st and attainted
-Duke of Somerset; <i>nat.</i> 25 May 1539; cr. Earl of Hertford,
-13 Jan. 1559; m. (1) Lady Catherine Grey, d. of Henry, Duke
-of Suffolk, <i>c.</i> Nov. 1560, (2) Frances, d. of William,
-1st Lord Howard of Effingham, before 1582, (3) Frances, d. of
-Thomas, Lord Howard of Bindon and widow of Henry Pranell, Dec.
-1600; <i>ob.</i> 6 Apr. 1621.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>These are among the most obscure of the companies. They appeared at
-Canterbury in 1582, Faversham in 1586, Newcastle in October 1590,
-Leicester on 22 November 1590, and Bath, Marlborough, and Southampton
-in 1591–2. During the progress of 1591 Elizabeth was entertained from
-20 to 24 September by the Earl at Elvetham in Hampshire ‘beeing none
-of the Earles chiefe mansion houses’ (cf. ch. xxiv). This was really
-a visit of reconciliation, for much of Hertford’s life had been spent
-in disgrace, owing to his first marriage with the heiress, under
-Henry VIII’s will, to Elizabeth’s throne. The entertainment was very
-elaborate, and at its close Elizabeth protested to the Earl that it
-was so honourable ‘as hereafter he should find the rewarde thereof in
-her especiall favour’. No doubt Hertford’s players took a part, and
-shared the ‘largesse’ which she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span> bestowed upon the ‘actors’ of the
-pastimes before she departed. I think it must have also been their
-success on this occasion which earned them their only appearance at
-Court, on the following 6 January 1592. I have elsewhere tried to show
-that there is a special connexion between this Elvetham entertainment
-and <i>A Midsummer-Night’s Dream</i>,<a id="FNanchor_332" href="#Footnote_332" class="fnanchor">[332]</a> and if any special company
-is satirized in Bottom and his fellows, I feel sure that it must have
-been the Earl of Hertford’s and not, as Mr. Fleay thinks, the Earl of
-Sussex’s.<a id="FNanchor_333" href="#Footnote_333" class="fnanchor">[333]</a></p>
-
-<p>Probably the company went under in the plague of 1592–4, and in 1595
-Hertford was again in disgrace for presuming so far upon his favour
-as to claim a declaration of the validity of his first marriage. But
-there were players under his name at Coventry in 1596–7, at Ipswich in
-1600–1, and on 8 May 1602, at Norwich in 1601, and at Bath in 1601–2,
-and this company appeared at Court on 6 January 1603. Their payee was
-Martin Slater, formerly of the Admiral’s, and since then, possibly, an
-associate of Laurence Fletcher in his Scottish tours. In 1604–5 they
-were at Norwich. In 1606 they visited Leicester, on 9 July Oxford,
-and on 2 December the Earl of Derby wrote to the Mayor of Chester to
-bespeak for them the use of the town-hall. In 1606–7 they were at
-Coventry.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xvi. MR. EVELYN’S MEN (1588)</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>George Evelyn, of Wotton, Surrey; <i>nat.</i> 1530; <i>ob.</i>
-1603.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Collier gives no authority for the following rather puzzling
-statement:<a id="FNanchor_334" href="#Footnote_334" class="fnanchor">[334]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘In Feb. 1587, the Earl of Warwick obtained a warrant for the
-payment of the claim of George Evelyn of Wotton, for provisions
-supplied to the Tower, and for the reward of actors on Shrove
-Tuesday for a Play, the title of which is not given nor the name
-of the company by which it was performed: the whole sum amounted
-to only 12<i>s.</i>’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The date intended must be 1588, as in 1587 Shrovetide fell in March.
-But there is probably some misunderstanding, as no such payment occurs
-in the Treasurer of the Chamber’s accounts, and the sum named is too
-small for a reward. Moreover, private gentlemen do not seem to have
-entertained Court companies at so late a date. The Revels Account for
-1587–8 only records seven plays. Of these the Treasurer of the Chamber
-paid for six, and the seventh was presented by Gray’s Inn.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xvii. THE EARL OF DERBY’S (LORD STRANGE’S) MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry Stanley, s. of Edward, 3rd Earl of Derby; <i>nat.</i>
-1531; known as Lord Strange; m. Margaret, d. of Henry, 2nd Earl
-of Cumberland, 7 Feb. 1555; succ. as 4th Earl, 24 Oct. 1572;
-Lord Steward, 1588; <i>ob.</i> 25 Sept. 1593.</p>
-
-<p>Ferdinando Stanley, 2nd s. of Henry, 4th Earl of Derby; <i>nat.
-c.</i> 1559; m. Alice, d. of Sir John Spencer of Althorp, 1579;
-summoned to Parliament as Lord Strange, 28 Jan. 1589; succ. as
-5th Earl of Derby, 25 Sept. 1593; <i>ob.</i> 16 Apr. 1594.</p>
-
-<p>William Stanley, s. of Henry, 4th Earl of Derby; <i>nat.</i>
-1561; succ. as 6th Earl of Derby, 16 Apr. 1594; m. Elizabeth,
-d. of Edward, 17th Earl of Oxford, 26 Jan. 1595; <i>ob.</i> 29
-Sept. 1642.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The companies connected with the great northern house of Stanley
-present a history perhaps more complicated than that of any other
-group, partly because it seems to have been not unusual for the heir
-of the house to entertain players during his father’s lifetime. The
-3rd Earl had a company in Henry the Eighth’s reign. His successor
-had one as Lord Strange, which is only recorded in the provinces, in
-1563–70.<a id="FNanchor_335" href="#Footnote_335" class="fnanchor">[335]</a> Four years later he had again a company as Earl of Derby.
-The earliest mention of it is at Coventry in 1573–4. It was at Dover
-and Coventry in 1577–8, at Ipswich on 28 May 1578, at Nottingham on 31
-August 1578, at Bristol in the same year, and at Bath in 1578–9. In the
-last three months of 1579 it was at Leicester; and during the following
-Christmas it made its first appearance at Court with a performance
-of <i>The Soldan and the Duke of &mdash;&mdash; </i> on 14 February 1580. In
-1579–80 it was at Stratford-on-Avon, Exeter, and Coventry, on 1 January
-1581 at Court, in 1580–1 at Bath, Leicester, Nottingham, Exeter, and
-Winchester, in 1581–2 at Nottingham, Winchester, and Abingdon, in
-October to December 1582 at Leicester, and in 1582–3 at Bath, Norwich,
-and Southampton. Its last appearance at Court was in <i>Love and
-Fortune</i> on 30 December 1582.</p>
-
-<p>I think that the Earl of Derby’s players must be taken to be distinct
-from another company, which was performing during much the same period
-of years under the name of Lord Strange. These men are found in 1576–7
-at Exeter, in 1578–9 at Bath, Ipswich, Rochester, Nottingham, Coventry,
-and Stratford-on-Avon. They also made their first appearance at Court
-in the winter of 1579–80. Their performance was on 15 January 1580,
-and they are spoken of, not as players, but as tumblers. On the other
-hand they appear as players<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span> at Bath, side by side with Derby’s men,
-in 1580–1 and 1582–3, and as players also at Bristol, Canterbury, and
-Gloucester in 1580–1, Plymouth in 1581–2, and Barnstaple in 1582–3 and
-1583–4. With the tumbling at Court in 1580 begins a rather puzzling
-series of records. There are further Court entries of feats of activity
-by Lord Strange’s men on 28 December 1581, and of feats of activity and
-tumbling on 1 January 1583. For this last occasion the payee of the
-company was John Symons. Two years later Symons and his ‘fellows’ were
-again at Court with feats of activity and vaulting, but they were then
-under the patronage, not of Lord Strange, but of the Earl of Oxford.
-There would be nothing extraordinary about such a transference of
-service, were it not that during the following Christmas, on 9 January
-1586, tumbling and feats of activity are ascribed to John Symons and
-‘Mr. Standleyes boyes’, and that by ‘Mr. Standley’ one can hardly help
-assuming either Ferdinando Stanley, Lord Strange, or some other member
-of his family to be intended. This inference is confirmed by a mention
-of Lord Strange’s men at Faversham in 1585–6, and it becomes necessary
-to assume that, after attaching himself for a year to the Earl of
-Oxford, Symons thought better of it, and returned to his original
-master. Symons and his company again showed feats of activity on 28
-December 1587. No patron is named on this occasion, but as Strange’s
-men are traceable at Coventry during 1587–8, it is natural to assume
-that they were still holding together. Now a new complication comes
-in. There were activities again at Court in the winter of 1588–9, and
-Symons certainly took part in them.<a id="FNanchor_336" href="#Footnote_336" class="fnanchor">[336]</a> But the only men companies
-to whom payments were made were the Queen’s and the Admiral’s, who
-now reappear at Court after absence during two winters, and it is
-only in the case of the Admiral’s that the payment is specified to be
-for activities. If the restless Symons had joined the Admiral’s men,
-it cannot have been for long, since in the course of 1588–9 he was
-leading one section of the Queen’s men to Nottingham. Nor had Strange’s
-yet entirely broken up, for on 5 November 1589, both they and the
-Admiral’s, evidently playing as distinct companies, were suppressed by
-the Lord Mayor in the City.<a id="FNanchor_337" href="#Footnote_337" class="fnanchor">[337]</a> Strange’s, who were then at the Cross
-Keys, played contemptuously, and some of them were imprisoned.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span> A year
-later, the Admiral’s were with Burbadge at the Theatre, and there I
-conceive that the residue of Strange’s, deserted by Symons, had joined
-them. If they were too many for the house, we know that the Curtain
-was available as an ‘easer’. After the quarrel with Burbadge in May
-1591, the two companies probably went together to the Rose. The main
-evidence for such a theory is that, while the Privy Council record of
-play-warrants include two for the Admiral’s men in respect of plays
-and feats of activity on 27 December 1590 and 16 February 1591, the
-corresponding Chamber payments are to George Ottewell on behalf of
-Strange’s men.</p>
-
-<p>This amalgamation of Strange’s and the Admiral’s, tentative perhaps
-in 1588–9, and conclusive, if not in 1589–90, at any rate in 1590–1,
-lasted until 1594. So far as Court records are concerned, the company
-seems to have been regarded as Strange’s. But the leading actor, Edward
-Alleyn, kept his personal status as the Lord Admiral’s servant, and
-it is to be observed that, for whatever reason, both the Admiral’s
-and Strange’s continue to appear, not only in combination, but also
-separately in provincial documents.<a id="FNanchor_338" href="#Footnote_338" class="fnanchor">[338]</a> Of this various explanations
-are conceivable. One is that the municipal officials were not very
-precise in their methods, and when an amalgamated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span> company came before
-them, sometimes entered the name of one lord, sometimes of the other,
-sometimes of both. Another is that a few of the Admiral’s men may have
-been left out of the amalgamation and have travelled separately under
-that name. We know, of course, that Richard Jones and others went
-abroad in 1592, but they may have spent some time in the provinces
-first. And thirdly, it is possible that, while the combined company
-performed as a whole in London, they found it more economical to
-take their authorities from both lords with them, when they went to
-the country in the summer, and to unite or divide their forces as
-convenience prompted. I am the more inclined to this third conjecture,
-in that the ‘intollerable’ charge of travelling with a great company
-and the danger of ‘division and separacion’ involved were explicitly
-put forward by Lord Strange’s men in a petition to the Privy Council
-for leave to quit Newington Butts, where they had been commanded to
-play during a long vacation, and return to their normal quarters,
-doubtless at the Rose, on the Bankside. They particularly wanted to
-avoid going to the country, but Newington Butts did not pay, and they
-were backed by the Thames watermen, who lost custom when the Rose
-was not open. It is not clear whether this petition belongs to 1591
-or 1592.<a id="FNanchor_339" href="#Footnote_339" class="fnanchor">[339]</a> The provincial records show that the company probably
-travelled during 1592, but not 1591. If the petition belongs to 1592,
-it is obvious that the plague intervened, and I strongly suspect that
-the company’s fears proved justified, and that the reorganization for
-provincial work did in fact lead to a ‘division and separacion’, by the
-splitting off of some members of the combine as Pembroke’s men (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p>This, however, anticipates a little. To Alleyn’s talent must be
-attributed the remarkable success of the company in the winter of
-1591–2, during which they were called upon to give six performances at
-Court, on 27 and 28 December, 1 and 9 January, and 6 and 8 February, as
-against one each allotted to the Queen’s, Sussex’s, and Hertford’s men.
-On 19 February 1592 the company began a season with Philip Henslowe,
-probably at the Rose, and played six days a week for a period of
-eighteen weeks, during which they only missed Good Friday and two other
-days. Henslowe records in his diary the name of the play staged at each
-of the hundred and five performances, together with a sum of money
-which probably represents his share of the takings.<a id="FNanchor_340" href="#Footnote_340" class="fnanchor">[340]</a> If so, his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-average receipts were £1 14<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>; but the daily amounts
-fluctuated considerably, sometimes falling to a few shillings and again
-rising to twice the average on the production of a new or popular play
-or during the Easter or Whitsun holiday. Twenty-three plays in all
-were given, for any number of days from one to fifteen; the same play
-was rarely repeated in any one week. Five of the plays are marked in
-the diary with the letters <i>ne</i>, which are reasonably taken to
-indicate the production of a new piece. These were ‘Harey the vj’,
-probably Shakespeare’s <i>1 Henry VI</i>, <i>Titus and Vespasian</i>,
-probably the play on which was based Shakespeare’s <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>, the <i>Second Part</i> of <i>Tamar Cham</i>, <i>The
-Tanner of Denmark</i>, and <i>A Knack to Know a Knave</i>. The eighteen
-old plays included Marlowe’s <i>Jew of Malta</i>, Greene’s <i>Orlando
-Furioso</i> and <i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, Greene and
-Lodge’s <i>A Looking Glass for London</i>; also <i>Muly Mollocco</i>
-which might be Peele’s <i>Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>Four Plays in
-One</i>, which is conjectured to be a part of Tarlton’s <i>Seven
-Deadly Sins</i>, and <i>Jeronimo</i>, which is almost certainly Kyd’s
-<i>Spanish Tragedy</i>. There was also a play, sometimes given on the
-day before this last, under the varying titles of <i>Don Horatio</i>,
-the <i>Comedy of Jeronimo</i>, or <i>The Spanish Comedy</i>, which does
-not appear to have been preserved.<a id="FNanchor_341" href="#Footnote_341" class="fnanchor">[341]</a> The same fate has befallen the
-other ten plays, of which the names were <i>Sir John Mandeville</i>,
-<i>Henry of Cornwall</i>, <i>Clorys and Orgasto</i>, <i>Pope Joan</i>,
-<i>Machiavel</i>, <i>Bindo and Richardo</i>, <i>Zenobia</i>,
-<i>Constantine</i>, <i>Jerusalem</i>, and <i>Brandimer</i>. From the
-financial point of view, the greatest successes were <i>Titus and
-Vespasian</i>, <i>The Jew of Malta</i>, <i>2 Tamar Cham</i>, <i>1 Henry
-VI</i>, and <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>. These averaged respectively
-for Henslowe £2 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for seven days, £2 3<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i> for ten days, £2 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for five days, £2
-0<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for fifteen days, and £1 17<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>
-for thirteen days. The <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i> and perhaps also the
-<i>Looking Glass</i> must have passed in some way into the hands of
-Strange’s or the Admiral’s, or into Henslowe’s, from the Queen’s.</p>
-
-<p>The performances came to an end on 23 June, for on that day the Privy
-Council inhibited all plays until Michaelmas. Whether the Newington
-Butts episode and the watermen’s petition followed or not, at any rate
-plague intervened in the course of the summer, and the company had to
-face the disadvantages of travelling. They were afoot by 13 July and
-still on 19 December. Ten days later, Henslowe resumed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span> his account,
-and the resemblance of the list of plays to that of the previous spring
-renders it reasonable to suppose that the actors were the same.<a id="FNanchor_342" href="#Footnote_342" class="fnanchor">[342]</a>
-The season lasted to the end of January 1593, and a play was given on
-each of the twenty-six week-days of this period. <i>Muly Mollocco</i>,
-<i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, <i>A Knack to Know a Knave</i>, <i>The Jew
-of Malta</i>, <i>Sir John Mandeville</i>, <i>Titus and Vespasian</i>,
-<i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, <i>1 Henry VI</i>, and <i>2
-Tamar Cham</i> all made their appearance again. In addition, there
-were a comedy called <i>Cosmo</i>, and two new plays, <i>The Jealous
-Comedy</i>, which may, I think, be <i>The Comedy of Errors</i>, and
-<i>The Tragedy of the Guise</i>, which is usually accepted as Marlowe’s
-<i>Massacre of Paris</i>. The first representation of the former
-yielded Henslowe £2 4<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>, that of the latter £3
-14<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>; as in the spring, his daily takings averaged £1
-14<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> Besides their public performances, Strange’s men
-were called upon for three plays at Court, on the evenings of 27 and 31
-December 1592 and 1 January 1593.</p>
-
-<p>The plague made a new inhibition of plays necessary on 28 January, but
-it does not seem to have been for some months that Strange’s men made
-up their minds to travel. A special licence issued in their favour by
-the Privy Council on 6 May is registered in the following terms:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Whereas it was thought meet that during the time of the
-infection and continewaunce of the sicknes in the citie of
-London there shold no plaies or enterludes be usd, for th’
-avoiding of th’ assemblies and concourse of people in anie usual
-place apointed nere the said cittie, and though the bearers
-hereof, Edward Allen, servaunt to the right honorable the
-Lord Highe Admiral, William Kemp, Thomas Pope, John Heminges,
-Augustine Phillipes and Georg Brian, being al one companie,
-servauntes to our verie good the Lord the Lord Strainge, ar
-restrained their exercize of playing within the said citie and
-liberties thereof, yet it is not therby ment but that they
-shal and maie in regard of the service by them don and to be
-don at the Court exercize their quallitie of playing comodies,
-tragedies and such like in anie other cities, townes and
-corporacions where the infection is not, so it be not within
-seaven miles of London or of the Coort, that they maie be in the
-better readines hereafter for her Majesty’s service whensoever
-they shalbe therunto called. Theis therfore shalbe to wil and
-require you that they maie without their lett or contradiccion
-use their said exercize at their most convenient times and
-places (the accustomed times of Devine praiers excepted).’<a id="FNanchor_343" href="#Footnote_343" class="fnanchor">[343]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The importance of this document is in the information which it gives
-as to the composition of the company. Presumably only the leaders
-are named, and of these Alleyn alone<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span> is specially designated as an
-Admiral’s man. Kempe, at any rate, and probably also Pope and Bryan,
-were in Leicester’s service in the Low Countries during 1586, and all
-three were together during the same year in Denmark. Whether they had
-belonged, as has sometimes been supposed, to Leicester’s long-enduring
-company of Court players is less certain. Pope and Bryan passed from
-Denmark to Germany, and may have joined the Admiral’s or Strange’s on
-their return. They also were acrobats as well as players.<a id="FNanchor_344" href="#Footnote_344" class="fnanchor">[344]</a> Kempe,
-however, seems to have parted company from the others in Denmark,
-and may have joined Strange’s independently, presumably before 10
-June 1592, when <i>A Knack to Know a Knave</i>, in which he played
-‘merrimentes’, was produced. Heminges may possibly have been a Queen’s
-man.</p>
-
-<p>Some details of the 1593 tour and the names of two or three more
-members of the company are found in the familiar correspondence of
-Alleyn with his wife, whom he had married on 22 October 1592, and with
-Philip Henslowe, who was her step-father.<a id="FNanchor_345" href="#Footnote_345" class="fnanchor">[345]</a> On 2 May he writes from
-Chelmsford, and on 1 August from Bristol. Here he had received a letter
-by Richard Cowley and he sends his reply by a kinsman of Thomas Pope.
-At the moment of writing he is ready to play <i>Harry of Cornwall</i>.
-He asks that further letters may be sent to him by the carriers to
-Shrewsbury, West Chester, or York, ‘to be keptt till my Lord Stranges
-players com’. He does not expect to be home until All Saints’ Day. A
-reply from Henslowe and Mrs. Alleyn on 14 August is in fact addressed
-to ‘Mr. Edwarde Allen on of my lorde Stranges players’. This mentions
-an illness of Alleyn at Bath during which one of his fellows had had
-to play his part. With these letters is one written to Mrs. Allen on
-behalf of a ‘servant’ of Alleyn’s, whose name was Pige or Pyk, by the
-hand of Mr. Doutone, possibly Edward Dutton, but perhaps more probably
-Thomas Dowten or Downton, who was later a sharer among the Admiral’s
-men. The provincial records, subject to the confusion of company
-nomenclature already noted, appear to confirm the visits to Bath,
-Shrewsbury, and York, to indicate others to Southampton, Leicester,
-Coventry, Ipswich, and Newcastle, and to show that some temporary
-alliance had been entered into with the purely provincial company of
-Lord Morley.<a id="FNanchor_346" href="#Footnote_346" class="fnanchor">[346]</a> After 25 September 1593 Strange’s men of course
-became Derby’s men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span></p>
-
-<p>I now come to a difficult point. There exists amongst the Dulwich
-papers a ‘plott’ or prompter’s abstract of a play called <i>The Second
-Part of the Seven Deadly Sins</i>, which an ingenious conjecture of
-Mr. Fleay has identified on internal evidence with the <i>Four Plays
-in One</i> included in the Strange’s repertory of 1592.<a id="FNanchor_347" href="#Footnote_347" class="fnanchor">[347]</a> In this
-leading parts were taken, not only by ‘Mr. Pope’, ‘Mr. Phillipps’, and
-‘Mr. Brian’, but also by ‘Richard Burbadge’; lesser ones by Richard
-Cowley, John Duke, Robert Pallant, John Sincler, Thomas Goodale,
-William Sly, J. Holland, and three others described only as Harry,
-Kitt, and Vincent; and female parts by Saunder, Nick, Robert, Ned,
-Will, and T. Belt, who may be presumed to have been boys.<a id="FNanchor_348" href="#Footnote_348" class="fnanchor">[348]</a> Alleyn,
-Kempe, and Heminges are not named, but there are several parts to which
-no actors are assigned. What, however, is the date of the ‘plott’? Not
-necessarily 1592, for the performance of <i>Four Plays in One</i> in
-that year was only a revival. The authorship of the <i>Seven Deadly
-Sins</i> is ascribed to Tarlton, and therefore the original owners were
-probably the Queen’s men. They are not very likely to have parted with
-it before Tarlton’s death in 1588 brought the first shock to their
-fortunes, but clearly it may have come into the possession of Strange’s
-or the Admiral’s or the combined company before ever they reached the
-Rose. And surely the appearance of Richard Burbadge suggests that the
-‘plott’ was brought from the Theatre, and represents a performance
-there. He is very unlikely to have joined at the Rose the company which
-had just been driven there by a quarrel with his father. It is true
-that in the ‘plott’ of <i>Dead Man’s Fortune</i>, which also probably
-dates from the sojourn of the Admiral’s (q.v.) at the Theatre, he was
-apparently not playing leading parts but only a messenger. But the
-wording is obscure, and after all the absence of the prefix ‘Mr.’ from
-his name in the ‘plott’ of the <i>Sins</i> may indicate, in accordance
-with the ordinary usage of the Dulwich documents,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span> that he was not
-yet a sharer when it was drawn up. Apparently, then, at least four
-of Strange’s men, as we find them in 1593, besides Alleyn, had been
-playing at the Theatre about 1590–1. These were Pope, Phillips, Bryan,
-and Cowley. Obviously we cannot say whether it was to the original
-Admiral’s or the original Strange’s that they belonged. One other point
-of <i>personnel</i> must not be overlooked. Shakespeare contributed to
-the repertory of Strange’s in 1592 and perhaps also in 1593. Greene
-calls him a Shake-scene, but neither the ‘plott’ of 1590, nor the
-licence of 1593, nor the Alleyn correspondence of the same year, yields
-his name.<a id="FNanchor_349" href="#Footnote_349" class="fnanchor">[349]</a></p>
-
-<p>Derby’s men did not appear at Court during the winter of 1593–4. On 16
-April 1594 Lord Derby died. On 16 May the company used the Countess’s
-name at Winchester. It seems clear that during the summer there was
-some reshuffling of the companies, that Alleyn took the leadership of
-a new body of Admiral’s men, that several other members of the old
-combination, including Pope, Heminges, Kempe, and Phillips, joined
-with Burbadge, Shakespeare, and Sly, under the patronage of the Lord
-Chamberlain, Henry Lord Hunsdon, and that, after a short period of
-co-operation with each other and Henslowe, the two companies definitely
-parted. In the course of 1594 the name of Derby’s men appeared upon the
-title-page of <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, probably because they had played
-it in its earlier form of <i>Titus and Vespasian</i> in 1592–3, before
-it passed to Pembroke’s and from them to Sussex’s. In the same year
-was published <i>A Knack to Know a Knave</i> (S. R. 7 January 1594) as
-played ‘by Ed. Allen and his companie’ and with ‘merrimentes’ by Kemp.
-This also belongs to the 1592–3 repertory, of the other plays in which
-<i>1 Henry VI</i>, like <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, passed ultimately to
-the Chamberlain’s men, and a considerable number, either as their own
-property or that of Henslowe, to the Admiral’s. These included <i>Tamar
-Cham</i>, <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>,
-<i>The Jew of Malta</i>, <i>The Massacre of Paris</i>, <i>Friar Bacon
-and Friar Bungay</i>, and probably <i>Orlando Furioso</i>, of Orlando’s
-part in which a transcript, with alterations in Alleyn’s hand, is
-preserved at Dulwich.<a id="FNanchor_350" href="#Footnote_350" class="fnanchor">[350]</a> The only play not named in Henslowe’s diary
-which can be traced to the company is <i>Fair Em</i>, which bears the
-name of Lord Strange’s men on its title-page, but of which the first
-edition is undated.</p>
-
-<p>It is possible that those of the fifth Earl of Derby’s men who did not
-take service with the Lord Chamberlain, passed into a provincial period
-of existence under his successor,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span> the sixth Earl. A company bearing
-his name was at Norwich on 15 September 1594, at Dunwich in 1594–5
-and 1595–6, at Coventry, Bath, and Stratford in 1595–6, at Leicester
-between October and December 1596, at Bath in 1596–7, at Maldon in
-1597, at Coventry twice in 1597–8, at Leicester in 1597–8, and between
-October and December 1598, at Wollaton (Percival Willoughby’s) on 7
-October 1599, and at Leicester again on 16 October 1599. Letters of 30
-June 1599 relate that the Earl of Derby was then ‘busy penning comedies
-for the common players’, and it is perhaps natural to suppose that his
-own company were chosen as the exponents of his art.<a id="FNanchor_351" href="#Footnote_351" class="fnanchor">[351]</a> This perhaps
-explains its appearance at Court during the winters of 1599–1600 and
-1600–1. Four performances were given, on 3 and 5 February 1600 and 1
-and 6 January 1601, and for these Robert Browne, who had been both
-with Worcester’s men and the Admiral’s, but much of whose dramatic
-career had been spent in Germany, was the payee. In an undated letter
-to Sir Robert Cecil, Lady Derby writes, ‘Being importuned by my Lord
-to intreat your favor that his man Browne, with his companye, may not
-be bared from ther accoustomed plaing, in maintenance wherof they have
-consumde the better part of ther substance, if so vaine a matter shall
-not seame troublesum to you, I could desier that your furderance might
-be a meane to uphold them, for that my Lord taking delite in them, it
-will kepe him from moer prodigall courses’.<a id="FNanchor_352" href="#Footnote_352" class="fnanchor">[352]</a> To this company are
-doubtless to be assigned <i>Edward IV</i>, perhaps by Heywood (1600, S.
-R. 28 August 1599), and the anonymous <i>Trial of Chivalry</i> (1605,
-S. R. 4 December 1604), both of which are credited to Derby’s men on
-their title-pages. It again becomes provincial and is traceable at
-Norwich on 27 February and 9 June 1602, at Ipswich on 4 June 1602, and
-thereafter up to 1618, chiefly at Coventry and at Gawthorpe Hall, the
-house of Derby’s neighbours, the Shuttleworths.<a id="FNanchor_353" href="#Footnote_353" class="fnanchor">[353]</a></p>
-
-<p>John Taylor, the water-poet, returned from his journey to Scotland in
-1618 at the Maidenhead Inn, Islington, and here after supper on 14
-October ‘we had a play of the Life and Death of Guy of Warwick, played
-by the Right Honourable the Earl of Derby his men’. Presumably this
-was Day and Dekker’s play entered on the Stationers’ Register in 1619,
-which Mr. Bullen declines to identify with the <i>Guy of Warwick</i>
-published as ‘by B. J.’ in 1661.<a id="FNanchor_354" href="#Footnote_354" class="fnanchor">[354]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xviii. THE EARL OF PEMBROKE’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry Herbert, s. of William, 1st Earl of Pembroke; <i>nat.
-c.</i> 1534; succ. as 2nd Earl, 17 Mar. 1570; m. (1) Catherine,
-d. of Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, 21 May 1553, (2) Catherine,
-d. of George Talbot, Earl of Shrewsbury, 17 Feb. 1563, (3)
-Mary, d. of Sir Henry Sidney, <i>c.</i> Apr. 1577; President of
-Wales, 1586; residences, Baynard’s Castle, London, Wilton House,
-Wilts., Ludlow Castle, &amp;c.; <i>ob.</i> 9 Jan. 1601.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Halliwell-Phillipps collected
-provincial records and other notes on Pembroke’s men in <i>A
-Budget of Notes and Memoranda</i> (1880). The Bill, Answer, and
-Replication in Shaw <i>et al.</i> v. Langley (1597–8, Court of
-Requests) are in C. W. Wallace, <i>The Swan Theatre and the Earl
-of Pembroke’s Servants</i> (1911, <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 340).]</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>There is an isolated record of a Pembroke’s company at Canterbury in
-1575–6, hardly to be regarded as continuous with that which makes its
-appearance in the last decade of the century. Fleay, 87, puts the
-origin of the latter in 1589, and supposes it to be a continuation
-of Worcester’s men after the death of their original patron in 1589,
-and to be the company ridiculed by Nashe (iii. 324) for playing
-<i>Delphrigus</i> and <i>The King of the Fairies</i>, in his preface to
-Greene’s <i>Menaphon</i> (1589). But this Worcester’s company is not
-in fact traceable during 1585–9, and Fleay’s theory is only based on
-the allusion to <i>Hamlet</i> in the same preface (iii. 315), and the
-assumption that the <i>Ur-Hamlet</i>, like some other plays, passed
-to the Chamberlain’s from Pembroke’s, whereas it may just as well
-have passed to them from Strange’s. As a matter of fact, there is no
-mention of Pembroke’s before 1592 and no reason to suppose that it had
-an earlier existence. It will be well to detail the few facts of its
-history before attempting anything in the nature of conjecture. It
-was at Leicester in the last three months of 1592 and made its only
-appearances at Court on 26 December 1592 and 6 January 1593. In the
-following summer it travelled, and is found at York in June, at Rye in
-July, and in 1592–3 at Ludlow, Shrewsbury, Coventry, Bath, and Ipswich.
-But it had little success. Henslowe wrote to Alleyn on 28 September,
-‘As for my lorde a Penbrockes w<sup>ch</sup> you desier to knowe wheare they
-be they ar all at home and hausse ben this v or sixe weackes for they
-cane not saue ther carges w<sup>th</sup> trauell as I heare &amp; weare fayne
-to pane ther parell for ther carge’.<a id="FNanchor_355" href="#Footnote_355" class="fnanchor">[355]</a> About the same time three
-of their plays came to the booksellers’ hands. These were Marlowe’s
-<i>Edward the Second</i> (1594, S. R. 6 July 1593), <i>The Taming of A
-Shrew</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span> (1594, S. R. 2 May 1594), and <i>The True Tragedy of Richard
-Duke of York</i> (1595). Probably the play to which this last is a
-sequel, <i>1 Contention of York and Lancaster</i> (1594, S. R. 12 March
-1594) was also theirs, although the name of the company is not on the
-title-page. It is on the title-page of <i>Titus Andronicus</i> (1594),
-and its position suggests that the play passed to them from Strange’s
-and from them before publication to Sussex’s. All these plays, with
-the exception of <i>Edward II</i>, seem to have been worked upon by
-Shakespeare, and probably they ultimately became part of the stock of
-the Chamberlain’s men. These men were playing <i>Titus Andronicus</i>
-and <i>The Taming of The Shrew</i> in June 1594, and that they also
-owned <i>The Contention</i> in its revised form of <i>2, 3 Henry VI</i>
-is suggested both by its inclusion in the First Folio and by the
-reference in the Epilogue to <i>Henry V</i> not only to the loss of
-France but also to the bleeding of England ‘which oft our stage hath
-shown’.</p>
-
-<p>I now enter a region of conjecture. It seems to me, on the whole,
-likely that the origin of Pembroke’s men is to be explained by the
-special conditions of the plague-years 1592–3, and was due to a
-division for travelling purposes of the large London company formed
-by the amalgamation of Strange’s and the Admiral’s. Such a division
-had been foreshadowed as likely to be necessary in the petition sent
-by Strange’s men to the Privy Council during the summer of 1592 or
-earlier, and may actually have become necessary when, after all, the
-plague rendered travelling imperative. If this suggestion is well
-founded, it becomes not difficult to explain some of the transferences
-of acting rights in certain plays which seem to have taken place. Thus
-Strange’s may have handed over <i>Titus Andronicus</i> in its earlier
-form of <i>Titus and Vespasian</i> to Pembroke’s for the travels of
-1593, and may also have handed over <i>The Contention of York and
-Lancaster</i>, if that was originally theirs, as is suggested by their
-production of <i>1 Henry VI</i>, which belongs to the same closely
-related series. This opens up a more important line of speculation.
-It is usual to assume that one of the members of Strange’s from 1592
-or earlier until its reconstitution as the Chamberlain’s in 1594 was
-William Shakespeare, and there is no reason to doubt his authorship
-at any rate of the Talbot scenes, which we know from Nashe to have
-been staged as part of <i>1 Henry VI</i> in 1592. At the same time,
-the names of at least seventeen of Strange’s and the Admiral’s men
-in 1590–3 are otherwise known, and his is not one of them, and in
-particular his prominence amongst the Chamberlain’s men from the very
-beginning renders it extremely<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span> unlikely that, if he had been a member
-of the company in 1593, he would not have been mentioned in the Privy
-Council warrant of 6 May. Further, it seems to me impossible to resist
-the inference that the attribution to him of <i>Titus Andronicus</i>
-both by Francis Meres in 1598 and in the First Folio of 1623 can
-only be explained by his revision under that name of <i>Titus and
-Vespasian</i>, and that this was for the second production of the
-play as ‘ne’ for Henslowe by Sussex’s men on 24 January 1594. There
-is, therefore, really some basis for the suggestion made long ago by
-Halliwell-Phillipps that he is to be looked for during these years
-in Pembroke’s company until its collapse and then in Sussex’s, and
-that it was from this rather than directly from Strange’s that he
-went to the Chamberlain’s.<a id="FNanchor_356" href="#Footnote_356" class="fnanchor">[356]</a> On the other hand, it may be that for
-a time he was not attached as an actor to any company at all. It is
-possible that he took advantage of the plague-interval to travel in
-Italy and only resumed the regular exercise of his profession when
-the Chamberlain’s company was formed. In any event, it must have been
-he who revised <i>The Contention</i> as <i>2, 3 Henry VI</i>, and the
-close stylistic relation of these plays to <i>1 Henry VI</i> makes
-it probable that the work on all three belongs to about the same
-date. The limitations of conjecture on so intricate a question are
-obvious, but I can conceive the order of events as being somewhat as
-follows. Shakespeare’s first dramatic job, which earned him the ill
-will of Greene, was the writing or re-writing of <i>1 Henry VI</i> for
-Strange’s, in the early spring of 1592. During the winter of 1592–3 he
-revised <i>The Contention</i> for Pembroke’s and completed the series
-of his early histories with <i>Richard III</i>, and, as I am inclined
-to suspect, also an <i>Ur-Henry VIII</i>. He also wrote <i>The Jealous
-Comedy</i> or <i>Comedy of Errors</i> for Strange’s. In the summer
-of 1593 Sussex’s took over the plays of the bankrupt Pembroke’s,
-including the Shakespearian histories <i>Titus and Vespasian</i> and
-<i>The Taming of A Shrew</i>. Some at least of these Pembroke’s had
-themselves derived in 1592 or 1593 from Strange’s. During the winter of
-1593–4 Sussex’s played either <i>Richard III</i> or <i>Henry VIII</i>
-as <i>Buckingham</i>, and also <i>Titus and Vespasian</i> revised
-for them by Shakespeare as <i>Titus Andronicus</i>. Alarmed at the
-further inhibition of plays in February, they allowed the revised
-<i>Titus</i> and unrevised texts of <i>The Taming of A Shrew</i> and
-<i>The Contention</i> to get into the hands of the booksellers. Whether
-Shakespeare had already revised <i>A Shrew</i> or did so later for the
-Chamberlain’s (q.v.) I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span> uncertain. Finally, by the transfer of their
-plays to the Chamberlain’s men, who at once revived <i>A Shrew</i> and
-<i>Titus Andronicus</i>, and by the incorporation of Strange’s men in
-the same company, the original stock of Strange’s plays, as distinct
-from the Admiral’s, came together in the same hands once more. On the
-assumption that Shakespeare never left Strange’s, it is difficult to
-explain either the fortunes of <i>Titus Andronicus</i>, or the absence
-from the lists of Strange’s plays in Henslowe’s diary of <i>Richard
-III</i>, which must have been written about 1592–4. The silence as
-regards Strange’s both of the Court records and of Henslowe’s diary
-during the winter of 1593–4 makes it unlikely that they were in London,
-and they would surely not produce a new play in the country.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing further is heard of a Pembroke’s company for three or four
-years.<a id="FNanchor_357" href="#Footnote_357" class="fnanchor">[357]</a> But in 1597 one appeared in London about which we have
-rather full information, recently increased by Mr. Wallace’s discovery
-of a Court of Requests suit in which they were concerned. Towards
-the end of February in that year Robert Shaw, Richard Jones, Gabriel
-Spencer, William Bird <i>alias</i> Borne, and Thomas Downton, who
-describe themselves in a suit of the following November as Pembroke’s
-servants, together with others their ‘accomplices and associates’,
-entered into an agreement with Francis Langley to play for twelve
-months ending on 20 February 1598 at the Swan. Each man gave a bond of
-£100, which was apparently to safeguard Langley against any failure by
-the company as a whole or of Robert Shaw or a sufficient substitute in
-particular to perform during this period, or against any performance
-elsewhere, otherwise than ‘in private places’, within five miles of
-London. Langley found £300 for apparel and, as he claimed, making ready
-of the play-house, and was to receive a moiety of the takings of the
-galleries and to be repaid for the apparel out of the other moiety.
-Of the men concerned, Jones and Downton had been Admiral’s men during
-1594–7, and their transference coincides with a three weeks’ break in
-the performances of the Admiral’s at the Rose from 12 February onwards.
-Mr. Wallace (<i>E. S.</i> xliii. 357) says that Shaw, Spencer, and
-Bird were also of the Admiral’s, but of this there is no evidence. If
-Pembroke’s had any continued life during 1594–7, they may have shared
-it. But this seems improbable, and on the whole I am inclined to think
-that they came from the Chamberlain’s (q.v.). Plays were given at the
-Swan for some months, and Langley took £100 from the galleries, and
-£100 more for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span> apparel. Then came an inhibition of plays near London on
-28 July 1597, caused by the production of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i>, as a
-result of which one of the authors, Nashe, fled, and the other, Jonson,
-together with Shaw and Spencer, was committed to the Marshalsea. The
-definite evidence that Shaw and Spencer were Pembroke’s men at the
-Swan, now produced by Mr. Wallace, confirms my conjecture (<i>M. L.
-R.</i> iv. 411, 511) that <i>The Isle of Dogs</i> was an adventure
-of that house and not, as has sometimes been thought, of the Rose.
-Either in anticipation of a prolonged closing of the house or for some
-other reason, the company now desired to shake off their relations
-with Langley. Early in August Jones returned to Henslowe and made a
-new covenant with him. His example was followed by Shaw, Spencer, and
-Bird, and early in October by Downton. Their prescience was justified,
-for when in the course of October the chief offenders were released,
-and the inhibition, which was nominally terminable on 1 November, was
-in practice relaxed, it proved that, while Henslowe was able to get
-a new licence for the Rose, Langley could get none for the Swan. He
-urged them to try their fortunes without a licence, as others of their
-company were willing to do, but they not unnaturally refused, and
-Henslowe (i. 54) records, ‘The xj of October begane my lord Admerals
-and my lord of Penbrockes men to playe at my howsse 1597’. He describes
-the company under the double name again on 21 and 23 October and 5
-November, but on 1 December and thereafter as the Lord Admiral’s
-(i. 68–70). A study of the Admiral’s repertory for 1597–8 suggests
-that some or all of the plays <i>Black Joan</i>, <i>Hardicanute</i>,
-<i>Bourbon</i>, <i>Sturgflattery</i>, <i>Branholt</i>, <i>Friar
-Spendleton</i>, <i>Alice Pierce</i>, and <i>Dido and Aeneas</i> may
-have been brought in by Pembroke’s men.</p>
-
-<p>The five seceders had not heard the last of Langley. He sued them
-at common law on the bonds given not to play in a rival house. They
-successfully applied to have the case transferred to the Court of
-Requests, and in the course of the pleadings maintained, firstly, that
-they were prevented from playing at the Swan by the restraint and
-Langley’s failure to get a licence; secondly, that Langley had orally
-assented to their transfer to Henslowe; thirdly, that they could not
-appear at the Swan as a company, since Langley had ‘procured from
-them’ two (or, as they afterwards said, three) of their associates,
-to whom he had returned their obligations; and fourthly, that Langley
-had suffered no damage, since other men were occupying his house.
-They also complained that Langley had never handed over the apparel
-for which they had recouped him out of their gallery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span> takings. The
-negotiations with Langley which they describe seem to have taken place
-during October. About the covenants entered into with Henslowe as far
-back as the beginning of August they said nothing, and whether either
-Langley or the court ever found out about these, and what the ultimate
-decision of the court on the main issue was, must remain uncertain.
-But certain loans entered in Henslowe’s diary suggest that in March
-1598 Langley was in a position to arrest Bird, and that in September
-of the same year some kind of agreement was arrived at, under which
-Langley received £35, as well as £19 or more for a rich cloak (i. 63,
-72, 73, 95, 96). It is possible that a ‘sewt agenste Thomas Poope’ of
-the Chamberlain’s, for which Henslowe (i. 72) made a personal advance
-of 10<i>s.</i> to William Bird on 30 August 1598, may also have been
-connected with the shiftings of companies in 1597.</p>
-
-<p>The names of the two or three members of the company to whom Langley
-gave back their bonds are not stated in the pleadings. Perhaps one
-was Jonson, and the other two might conceivably have been Humphrey
-and Anthony Jeffes, since the name of ‘Humfrey’ stands with that of
-‘Gabriel’ in stage-directions to <i>3 Henry VI</i>, and Henslowe’s
-list of the reconstituted Admiral’s company as it stood in October
-1597–January 1598 contains ‘the ij Geffes’, who are not traceable in
-the 1594–7 company and may well have come in with the five Pembroke’s
-men. Langley tells us that certain ‘fellows’ of his opponents had
-taken a more reasonable line than theirs and returned to the Swan.
-How long these men remained there we do not know, but probably they
-secured Pembroke’s patronage after the five had been definitely merged
-in the Admiral’s, for by the end of 1597 there was clearly a distinct
-Pembroke’s company again. Provincial records yield the name, not only
-at Bath in 1596–7 and at Bristol in September 1597, which may point to
-a tour of the undivided Swan company during the period of restraint,
-but also at Bath in 1598–9, at Bristol in July 1598, at Leicester
-between October and December, at Dover on 7 October, at Coventry on
-12 December, and at Bewdley on 22 December. They were at Norwich in
-April 1599, at Coventry on 4 July, and at Bristol in July. They were
-at York on 21 January 1600, Bristol in April, Marlborough in May, and
-Leicester before Michaelmas. In October they were in relationship
-with Henslowe, who notes ‘my Lordes of Penbrockes men begane to playe
-at the Rosse’, and records performances of <i>Like Unto Like</i> and
-<i>Roderick</i> on 28 and 29 October respectively.<a id="FNanchor_358" href="#Footnote_358" class="fnanchor">[358]</a> The former<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-brought him 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and the latter 5<i>s.</i>, and there
-apparently the experiment ended, and with it, so far as is known, the
-career of Pembroke’s men. It is just possible that they were merged
-in Worcester’s company, which arose shortly afterwards. Mr. Fleay
-expands this possibility into a definite theory that Kempe, Beeston,
-Duke, and Pallant left the Chamberlain’s men for Pembroke’s in 1599,
-and ultimately passed from these to Worcester’s. This is improbable as
-regards Kempe, and unproved as regards the rest.<a id="FNanchor_359" href="#Footnote_359" class="fnanchor">[359]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>xix. THE LORD ADMIRAL’S (LORD HOWARD’S, EARL OF NOTTINGHAM’S),
-PRINCE HENRY’S, AND ELECTOR PALATINE’S MEN</h5>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Charles Howard, s. of William, 1st Baron Howard of Effingham,
-g.s. of Thomas, 2nd Duke of Norfolk; <i>nat.</i> 1536; m. (1)
-Catherine Carey, d. of Henry Lord Hunsdon, Lady of the Privy
-Chamber, (2) Margaret Stuart, d. of James Earl of Murray,
-<i>c.</i> 1604; succ. as 2nd Baron, 29 Jan. 1573; Deputy Lord
-Chamberlain, 1574–5; Vice-Admiral, Feb. 1582; Lord Chamberlain,
-<i>c.</i> Dec. 1583; Lord High Admiral, 8 July 1585–1619; Earl
-of Nottingham, 22 Oct. 1596; Lord Steward, 1597; <i>ob.</i> 14
-Dec. 1624.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Frederick, s. of James VI of Scotland and I of England;
-<i>nat.</i> 19 Feb. 1594; cr. Duke of Rothesay, 30 Aug. 1594;
-succ. as Duke of Cornwall, 24 Mar. 1603; cr. Earl of Chester and
-Prince of Wales, 4 June 1610; <i>ob.</i> 6 Nov. 1612.</p>
-
-<p>Frederick, s. of Frederick IV, Count Palatine of the Rhine;
-<i>nat.</i> 19 Aug. 1596; succ. as Frederick V, 1610; m.
-Princess Elizabeth of England, 14 Feb. 1613; elected King of
-Bohemia, 1619; <i>ob.</i> 1632.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The material preserved amongst
-the papers of Philip Henslowe and Edward Alleyn at Dulwich has
-been fully collected and studied by W. W. Greg in <i>Henslowe’s
-Diary</i> (1904–8) and <i>Henslowe Papers</i> (1907), which
-replace the earlier publications of Malone, Collier, and others
-from the same source. I have added a little from Professor
-Wallace’s researches and elsewhere, and have attempted to give
-my own reading of the evidence, which differs in a few minor
-points from Dr. Greg’s.]</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>It was perhaps his employment as deputy to the Earl of Sussex in the
-office of Lord Chamberlain which led Lord Howard to encourage players.
-A company, under the name of Lord Howard’s men, appeared at Court for
-the first time at the Christmas of 1576–7. On 27 December they played
-<i>Tooley</i>, and on 17 February <i>The Solitary Knight</i>.<a id="FNanchor_360" href="#Footnote_360" class="fnanchor">[360]</a> They
-came again for the last time in the following winter, and performed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span> on
-5 January 1578. They were also at Kirtling on 3 December 1577, Saffron
-Walden in 1577–8, Ipswich on 24 October 1577, in 1578–9, and perhaps on
-8 October 1581, Bristol, where they gave <i>The Queen of Ethiopia</i>,
-between 31 August and 6 September 1578, Nottingham on 19 December 1578,
-and Bath and Coventry in 1578–9.</p>
-
-<p>Howard again had players at Court, after he became Admiral in 1585.
-The first record of them is at Dover in June 1585. Later in the year
-they were playing in conjunction with the Lord Chamberlain’s (Lord
-Hunsdon’s). ‘The Lorde Chamberlens and the Lord Admirall’s players’
-were rewarded at Leicester in October-December 1585, and ‘the servants
-of the lo: admirall and the lo: Chamberlaine’ for a play at Court on 6
-January 1586.<a id="FNanchor_361" href="#Footnote_361" class="fnanchor">[361]</a> During the same Christmas, however, the Admiral’s
-played alone on 27 December 1585, and as Hunsdon’s survived in the
-provinces, the two organizations may have been amalgamated for one
-performance only. The Admiral’s were at Coventry, Faversham, Ipswich,
-and Leicester in 1585–6. They were reported to Walsingham amongst other
-London companies on 25 January 1587 (App. D, No. lxxviii), although
-they did not appear at Court during this winter. In 1586–7 they were at
-Cambridge, Coventry, Bath, York, Norwich, Ipswich, Exeter, Southampton,
-and Leicester. By November they were back in London, and on the 16th
-an accident at their theatre is thus related by Philip Gawdy to his
-father:<a id="FNanchor_362" href="#Footnote_362" class="fnanchor">[362]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Yow shall vnderstande of some accydentall newes heare in this
-towne thoughe my self no wyttnesse thereof, yet I may be bold
-to veryfye it for an assured troth. My L. Admyrall his men
-and players having a devyse in ther playe to tye one of their
-fellowes to a poste and so to shoote him to deathe, having
-borrowed their callyvers one of the players handes swerved his
-peece being charged with bullett missed the fellowe he aymed
-at and killed a chyld, and a woman great with chyld forthwith,
-and hurt an other man in the head very soore. How they will
-answere it I do not study vnlesse their profession were better,
-but in chrystyanity I am very sorry for the chaunce but God his
-iudgementes ar not to be searched nor enquired of at mannes
-handes. And yet I fynde by this an old proverbe veryfyed ther
-never comes more hurte than commes of fooling.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Possibly the company went into retirement as a result of this disaster;
-at any rate nothing more is heard of them<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span> until the Christmas of
-1588–9. They then came to Court, and were rewarded for two interludes
-and ‘for showinge other feates of activitye and tumblinge’ on 29
-December 1588 and 11 February 1589.<a id="FNanchor_363" href="#Footnote_363" class="fnanchor">[363]</a> On 6 November 1589 they were
-playing in the City, and were suppressed by the Lord Mayor, because
-Tilney, the Master of the Revels, misliked their plays. Probably
-they had been concerning themselves with the Marprelate controversy.
-Strange’s men, who were evidently performing as a separate company,
-shared their fate. It may have been this misadventure which led the
-Admiral’s to seek house-room with James Burbadge at the Theatre (q.v.),
-where some evidence by John Alleyn, who, with James Tunstall, was of
-their number, locates them in November 1590 and May 1591. A relic of
-this period may be presumed to exist in the ‘plot’ of <i>Dead Man’s
-Fortune</i>, preserved with other plots belonging to the company at
-Dulwich, in which Burbadge, doubtless Richard Burbadge, then still a
-boy, appeared. Certainly there is nothing to connect Burbadge with
-the company at any other date. Other actors in the piece were one
-Darlowe, ‘b[oy?] Samme’, and Robert Lee, later of Anne’s men. The
-Admiral’s again showed ‘feats of activitie’ at Court on 28 December
-1589, and a play on 3 March 1590. In 1589–90 they were at Coventry,
-Ipswich, Maidstone, Marlborough, Winchester, and Gloucester, and in
-1590–1 at Winchester and Gloucester. Marlowe’s <i>Tamburlaine</i> was
-published in 1590 as ‘shewed upon stages in the City of London’ by
-the Admiral’s men. The Court records for the following winter present
-what looks at first sight like a curious discrepancy. The accounts of
-the Treasurer of the Chamber include payments for plays and activities
-on 27 December 1590 and 16 February 1591 to Lord Strange’s men. The
-corresponding warrants, however, were made out, according to the
-Privy Council Register, for the Admiral’s. Probably there is no error
-here, and the entries are evidence of an amalgamation between the two
-companies, which possibly dated from as far back as the winter of 1589,
-and which seems to have endured until the summer of 1594. Technically,
-it would seem that it was the Admiral’s who were merged in Strange’s
-men. It is the latter and not the former who generally appear in
-official documents during this period. I have therefore dealt with
-its details for both companies, with the question of the precise date
-of the amalgamation, and with the possibility that the plot of <i>The
-Seven Deadly Sins</i> and its list of actors also belong to a Theatre
-performance of about 1590, in my account of Strange’s men,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span> and need
-only remark here that the name of the Admiral’s does not altogether
-fall into disuse, especially in provincial records, and that the
-leading actor, Edward Alleyn, in particular, is shown by an official
-document to have retained his personal status as an Admiral’s servant.</p>
-
-<p>It is a question of some interest how early Alleyn’s connexion with
-the Admiral’s may be supposed to have begun. Was he, for example, the
-original Tamburlaine of 1587, and was it as an Admiral’s man that
-Nashe referred to him, if it was he to whom Nashe referred, as the
-Roscius of the contemporary players in his <i>Menaphon</i> epistle
-of 1589? He is known to have been a member of Worcester’s company in
-1583. Dr. Greg is disposed to think that he remained with them until
-the death of the third Earl of Worcester on 22 February 1589, and
-then joined the Admiral’s.<a id="FNanchor_364" href="#Footnote_364" class="fnanchor">[364]</a> It is, however, to be observed that
-there is no trace of Worcester’s men between 1584 and 1590, and that
-it is in 1585 that the Admiral’s men begin to appear at Court. On the
-whole, it commends itself to me as the more probable conjecture that
-the first Earl of Worcester’s company passed into Howard’s service,
-when he became Admiral in 1585, and that the players of the fourth
-Earl of Worcester between 1590 and 1596 were distinct from those of
-his father. The issue concerns others besides Edward Alleyn himself.
-Amongst the members of Worcester’s company in 1583 were Robert Browne,
-James Tunstall, and Richard Jones; and all three of these are found
-concerned with Alleyn in matters of theatrical business during 1589–91.
-The most important document is a deed of sale by ‘Richarde Jones of
-London yoman’ to ‘Edwarde Allen of London gent’ for £37 10s. of ‘all
-and singuler suche share parte and porcion of playinge apparrelles,
-playe bookes, instrumentes, and other comodities whatsoeuer belonginge
-to the same, as I the said Richarde Jones nowe haue or of right ought
-to haue joyntlye with the same Edwarde Allen, John Allen citizen and
-inholder of London and Roberte Browne yoman’.<a id="FNanchor_365" href="#Footnote_365" class="fnanchor">[365]</a> This is dated 3
-January 1589. There are also three deeds of sale to Edward and John
-Alleyn of theatrical apparel between 1589 and 1591, and to two of these
-James Tunstall was a witness.<a id="FNanchor_366" href="#Footnote_366" class="fnanchor">[366]</a> On Dr. Greg’s theory as to the date
-at which Alleyn took service with the Lord Admiral, the organization
-in whose properties Richard Jones had an interest would naturally be
-Worcester’s men; on mine it would be the Admiral’s, and it would follow
-that Jones and Browne, as well as Alleyn, had joined that company.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-We have seen that James Tunstall had done so by 1590–1. John Alleyn
-was an elder brother of Edward. There is nothing to connect him with
-Worcester’s men. He was a servant of Lord Sheffield in November 1580
-and of the Lord Admiral in 1589.<a id="FNanchor_367" href="#Footnote_367" class="fnanchor">[367]</a> A letter of one Elizabeth Socklen
-to Edward Alleyn refers to a time ‘when your brother, my lovinge cozen
-John Allen, dwelt with my very good lord, Charles Heawarde’, and this
-rather suggests that his service was in some household capacity, and
-not merely as player.<a id="FNanchor_368" href="#Footnote_368" class="fnanchor">[368]</a> If so, it may have been through him that
-Edward Alleyn and his fellows became Admiral’s men. The first period of
-their activity seems to have lasted from 1585 to 1589, and it was no
-doubt Edward Alleyn’s genius, and perhaps also his business capacity,
-which enabled them to offer a serious rivalry to the Queen’s company.
-I suspect that in 1589 or 1590 they were practically dissolved, and
-this view is confirmed by the fact that their most important play was
-allowed to get to the hands of the printers. Alleyn, with the help
-of his brother, bought up the properties, and allied himself with
-Lord Strange’s men, and so far as the Admiral’s continued to exist
-at all for the next few years, it was almost entirely in and through
-him that it did so. After a financial quarrel with James Burbadge in
-May 1591, the combined companies moved to the Rose. There is nothing
-to show whether the Alleyns bought up Robert Browne’s interest as
-well as that of Richard Jones. At any rate Browne began in 1590 that
-series of continental tours which occupied most of the rest of his
-career (cf. ch. xiv). Jones joined him in one of these adventures in
-1592, and it is possible that John Bradstreet and Thomas Sackville,
-who went with them, were also old Admiral’s men. But I do not think
-that it is accurate to regard this company, as Dr. Greg seems to be
-inclined to do, as being itself under the Admiral’s patronage. It is
-true that they obtained a passport from him, but this was probably
-given rather in his capacity as warden of the seas than in that of
-their lord. His name is not mentioned in any of the foreign records
-of their peregrinations. It is not possible to say which, other than
-Alleyn, of the members of the 1592–3 Strange’s and Admiral’s company,
-whose names have been preserved, came from each of the two contributing
-sources. They do not include either John Alleyn or James Tunstall, or
-Edward Browne, a Worcester’s man of 1583, who reappears with Tunstall
-among the Admiral’s after 1594. Nor is it possible to say how far the
-repertory of Strange’s men, as disclosed by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span> 1592–3 entries in
-Henslowe’s diary, included plays drawn from the Admiral’s stock. This
-may have been the case with <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, which was
-printed as an Admiral’s play in 1594, and with <i>Orlando Furioso</i>,
-which contemporary gossip represents Greene as selling first to the
-Queen’s and then to the Admiral’s. And it may have been the case with
-<i>1 Tamar Cham</i>, which passed to the later Admiral’s. Neither
-<i>Tamburlaine</i> nor <i>The Wounds of Civil War</i>, printed like
-<i>The Battle of Alcazar</i> as an Admiral’s play in 1594, is recorded
-to have been played by Strange’s.</p>
-
-<p>When the companies settled down again to a London life after the
-conclusion of the long plague in 1594, the Admiral’s men reconstituted
-themselves as an independent company with Alleyn at its head, leaving
-the greater number of their recent comrades of the road to pass, as
-the Lord Chamberlain’s men, under the patronage of Lord Hunsdon. The
-personal alliance between Alleyn and Henslowe, whose step-daughter,
-Joan Woodward, he had married on 22 October 1592, led to the
-institution of close business relations between the company and the
-pawnbroker, and the record of these in the famous diary enables us to
-follow with a singular minuteness the almost daily fortunes of the
-Admiral’s men during the course of some nine or ten years, broken into
-two periods by a reconstruction of the company in 1597 and finally
-closing about the time of their conversion into Prince Henry’s men in
-1604. The precise nature of the position occupied by Henslowe has been
-carefully investigated by Dr. Greg,<a id="FNanchor_369" href="#Footnote_369" class="fnanchor">[369]</a> and has already been briefly
-considered in these pages (ch. xi). He was not a member of the company,
-but its landlord, and, probably to an increasing extent, its financier.
-In the former capacity he received, after every day’s performance,
-a fluctuating sum, which seems to have represented half the amount
-received for admission to the galleries of the house; the other half,
-with the payments for entrance to the standing room in the yard, being
-divided amongst such of the players as had a share in the profits.
-Out of this, of course, they had to meet all expenditure other than
-by way of rent, such as the wages of hired men, payments for apparel
-and play-books, fees to the Master of the Revels for the licensing of
-plays, and the like. In practice it became convenient for Henslowe, who
-was a capitalist, while many of the players lived from hand to mouth,
-to advance sums to meet such expenditure as it fell due, and to recoup
-himself from time to time out of the company’s profits. It seems likely
-that,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span> when the system was in full working, the moiety of the gallery
-money, which remained after the deduction of the rent, was assigned for
-the purpose of these repayments. During the period 1597–1604 Henslowe’s
-entries in his diary are mainly in the nature of a running account of
-these advances and of the receipts set off against them; for 1594–7
-similar entries occur irregularly, but the principal record is a daily
-list, such as Henslowe had already kept during his shorter associations
-with Strange’s, the Queen’s, and Sussex’s companies in the course of
-1592–4, of each performance given, with the name of the play and of
-the amount accruing to Henslowe himself in the form of rent. This list
-renders possible a very interesting analysis, both of the repertory of
-the company and of some at least of the financial conditions of their
-enterprise.</p>
-
-<p>The entries start with the heading, ‘In the name of God Amen begininge
-the 14 of Maye 1594 by my lord Admeralls men’. After three days, during
-which <i>The Jew of Malta</i>, <i>Cutlack</i>, and <i>The Ranger’s
-Comedy</i>, all of which are found in the later repertory of the
-company, were given, they stop abruptly.<a id="FNanchor_370" href="#Footnote_370" class="fnanchor">[370]</a> To about the same date
-may be assigned a fragmentary account, headed ‘Layd owt for my Lorde
-Admeralle seruantes as ffoloweth 1594’, and recording expenditure for
-coming and going to Court and to Somerset House, the residence of
-the Lord Chamberlain, ‘for mackinge of our leater twise’, and ‘for
-drinckinge with the jentellmen’, all evidently concerned with the
-initial business of forming and licensing the company.<a id="FNanchor_371" href="#Footnote_371" class="fnanchor">[371]</a> On 5 June
-the account of performances is resumed with a fresh heading, ‘In the
-name of God Amen begininge at Newington my Lord Admeralle men and my
-Lorde Chamberlen men as ffolowethe 1594’.<a id="FNanchor_372" href="#Footnote_372" class="fnanchor">[372]</a> Henslowe’s takings only
-averaged 9<i>s.</i> for the first ten days, probably on account of the
-distance of Newington Butts from London.<a id="FNanchor_373" href="#Footnote_373" class="fnanchor">[373]</a> The takings for the three
-days in May averaged 41<i>s.</i>, and it may perhaps be inferred that
-these May performances were at the Rose, and that some fear of renewed
-plague on the part of the authorities led to their being relegated to
-a safer quarter. The tentative character of these early performances
-is shown by the fact that the Admiral’s were still sharing a theatre
-with the Chamberlain’s. To the repertory of the latter it seems safe
-to assign three of the seven plays produced, <i>Titus Andronicus</i>,
-<i>Hamlet</i>, and <i>The Taming of A Shrew</i>, and probably also
-a fourth, <i>Hester and Ahasuerus</i>, as there is no later sign of
-this amongst the Admiral’s plays. This leaves<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span> three others to be
-regarded as the Admiral’s contribution, <i>The Jew of Malta</i> and
-<i>Cutlack</i>, which they had played in May and were often to play
-again, and <i>Belin Dun</i>, to which are attached the letters ‘ne’,
-Henslowe’s normal indication of a new play.<a id="FNanchor_374" href="#Footnote_374" class="fnanchor">[374]</a> There is nothing in
-the order in which the plays were taken to indicate an alternation
-of the two companies, and it is likely enough that neither was yet
-fully constituted, and that they actually joined forces in the same
-performances.</p>
-
-<p>After the tenth play on 15 June, Henslowe drew a line across the
-page, and although the entries continue without any indication of a
-change in the conditions under which the performances were given, I
-can only concur in the conjecture of Mr. Fleay and Dr. Greg that at
-this point the Admiral’s plays were transferred to the Rose, and the
-combination with the Chamberlain’s ceased.<a id="FNanchor_375" href="#Footnote_375" class="fnanchor">[375]</a> A sudden rise in the
-amount of Henslowe’s takings, and the absence from the rest of the
-list of the four plays named above and of any other attributable to
-the Chamberlain’s repertory, are alike strongly in favour of this
-view, which may be treated as a practical certainty. Henceforward the
-fortunes of the company seem to have followed a smooth course for the
-space of three years. Their proceedings may be briefly summed up as
-follows. They played for thirty-nine consecutive weeks from 15 June
-1594 to 14 March 1595, appearing at Court during this season on 28
-December, 1 January, and 6 January. After a break of thirty-seven days
-during Lent, opportunity of which was taken to repair the Rose, they
-played again for ten weeks from Easter Monday, 21 April, to 26 June
-1595. Then came a vacation of fifty-nine days, with visits to Bath and
-Maidstone. They began again in London on 25 August 1595 and played for
-twenty-seven weeks to 28 February 1596, giving Court performances on
-1 January, 4 January, and 22 and 24 February. This took them to the
-end of the first week in Lent. After forty-three days’ interval, they
-played for fifteen weeks, from Easter Monday, 12 April, to 23 July
-1596. Their summer vacation lasted for ninety-five days, and they are
-noted during 1595–6 at Coventry, Bath, Gloucester, and Dunwich. In the
-autumn they started playing on 27 October, but the receipts were low,
-and if the record is complete, they suspended performances between
-15 and 25 November, and then went on to 12 February 1597, making up
-a season of about fourteen weeks in all. They do not seem to have
-played at Court at all this winter. This year they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span> rather disregarded
-Lent, stopping for eighteen days only, during a reconstruction of the
-company, and then playing three days a week until Easter, and then
-regularly until the end of July, in all twenty-one weeks. To certain
-irregularities at the close of this season it will be necessary to
-refer later. During the three years, then, there were three winter
-and three summer seasons of London playing, covering about a hundred
-and twenty-six weeks. Except in Lent or at the beginning or end of
-a season, or occasionally, probably for climatic reasons, at other
-times, especially in December, plays were given upon every week-day.
-It emerges from Dr. Greg’s re-ordering of Henslowe’s very inaccurate
-dates that there were no plays on Sundays.<a id="FNanchor_376" href="#Footnote_376" class="fnanchor">[376]</a> On the other hand, a
-summons to play at Court in the evening did not necessarily entail a
-blank day in the afternoon. The total number of performances during
-the three years was seven hundred and twenty-eight. It is reasonable
-to assume that Henslowe’s takings varied roughly with those of the
-company, although the reserve must be made that different plays
-might prove the most attractive to the galleries and to the yard
-respectively. The amounts entered range from a minimum of 3<i>s.</i> to
-a maximum of 73<i>s.</i> Dr. Greg calculates the average over ‘certain
-typical periods of 1595’ as 30<i>s.</i>;<a id="FNanchor_377" href="#Footnote_377" class="fnanchor">[377]</a> during the first half
-of 1597 it was 24<i>s.</i> The fluctuations are determined, partly
-by the popularity or novelty of the plays presented, partly by the
-season of the year, and doubtless the weather and the competition
-of other amusements. There were generally some high receipts during
-Christmas, Easter, and Whitsun weeks. Unfortunately there is no means
-of estimating the proportion which Henslowe’s share bore to that
-which fell for division among the players. Some light is thrown upon
-the expenses by the subsidiary accounts of advances, which Henslowe
-began to keep from time to time in 1596. In May of that year he lent
-Alleyn ‘for the company’ a total amount of £39 in several instalments,
-and recovered it by small sums of £1 to £3 at a time during the next
-three months.<a id="FNanchor_378" href="#Footnote_378" class="fnanchor">[378]</a> A longer account extending from October 1596 to
-March 1597 reaches, with the aid of a miscalculation, a total of £52.
-Of this £22 was repaid during the same period, chiefly by deductions
-from the profits of first nights, and an acknowledgement given for the
-balance of £30.<a id="FNanchor_379" href="#Footnote_379" class="fnanchor">[379]</a> The advances were made through various members of
-the company, and the purposes specified include apparel for three new
-plays, travelling expenses, and fees to playwrights. A third account,
-if I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span> right in the interpretation of some very disputable figures,
-shows an expenditure at the average rate of 31<i>s.</i> a day during
-the six months from 24 January to 28 July 1597, of which, however,
-nearly half was in fact incurred during the first twenty-four days of
-the period. In this case only the sums and not the purposes for which
-they were advanced are entered.<a id="FNanchor_380" href="#Footnote_380" class="fnanchor">[380]</a></p>
-
-
-<p>During the three years the Admiral’s men produced new plays to the
-total number of fifty-five, and at the average rate of one a fortnight.
-The productions were not at regular intervals, and often followed each
-other in successive weeks. There is, however, no example of two new
-productions in the same week.<a id="FNanchor_381" href="#Footnote_381" class="fnanchor">[381]</a> These are the names and dates of the
-new plays:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Belin Dun</i> (10 June 1594).</li>
- <li><i>Galiaso</i> (28 June 1594).</li>
- <li><i>Philipo and Hippolito</i> (9 July 1594).</li>
- <li><i>2 Godfrey of Bulloigne</i> (19 July 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The Merchant of Emden</i> (30 July 1594).</li>
- <li><i>Tasso’s Melancholy</i> (13 Aug. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The Venetian Comedy</i> (27 Aug. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>Palamon and Arcite</i> (18 Sept. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The Love of an English Lady</i> (26 Sept. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>A Knack to Know an Honest Man</i> (23 Oct. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>1 Caesar and Pompey</i> (8 Nov. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>Diocletian</i> (16 Nov. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The Wise Man of West Chester</i> (3 Dec. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The Set at Maw</i> (15 Dec. 1594).</li>
- <li><i>The French Comedy</i> (11 Feb. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>The Mack</i> (21 Feb. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Olympo</i> (5 Mar. 1595).<a id="FNanchor_382" href="#Footnote_382" class="fnanchor">[382]</a></li>
- <li><i>1 Hercules</i> (7 May 1595).<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span></li>
- <li><i>2 Hercules</i> (23 May 1595).</li>
- <li><i>1 The Seven Days of the Week</i> (3 June 1595).</li>
- <li><i>2 Caesar and Pompey</i> (18 June 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Longshanks</i> (29 Aug. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Crack me this Nut</i> (5 Sept. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>The New World’s Tragedy</i> (17 Sept. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>The Disguises</i> (2 Oct. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>The Wonder of a Woman</i> (16 Oct. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Barnardo and Fiammetta</i> (30 Oct. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies</i> (14 Nov. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Henry V</i> (28 Nov. 1595).</li>
- <li><i>Chinon of England</i> (3 Jan. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Pythagoras</i> (16 Jan. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>2 The Seven Days of the Week</i> (23 Jan. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>The Blind Beggar of Alexandria</i> (12 Feb. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Julian the Apostate</i> (29 Apr. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>1 Tamar Cham</i> (7 May 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Phocas</i> (20 May 1596).</li>
- <li><i>2 Tamar Cham</i> (11 June 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Troy</i> (25 June 1596).</li>
- <li><i>The Paradox</i> (1 July 1596).</li>
- <li><i>The Tinker of Totnes</i> (23 July 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Vortigern</i>, <i>Valteger</i>, or <i>Hengist</i> (4 Dec. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Stukeley</i> (10 Dec. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Nebuchadnezzar</i> (18 Dec. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>That Will Be Shall Be</i> (30 Dec. 1596).</li>
- <li><i>Jeronimo</i> (7 Jan. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>Alexander and Lodowick</i> (14 Jan. 1597).<a id="FNanchor_383" href="#Footnote_383" class="fnanchor">[383]</a></li>
- <li><i>Woman Hard to Please</i> (27 Jan. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>Guido</i> (21 Mar. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>Five Plays in One</i> (7 Apr. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>A French Comedy</i> (18 Apr. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>Uther Pendragon</i> (29 Apr. 1597).</li>
- <li><i>The Comedy of Humours</i> (11 May 1597).</li>
- <li><i>The Life and Death of Henry I</i> (26 May 1597).</li>
- <li><i>Frederick and Basilea</i> (3 June 1597).</li>
- <li><i>The Life and Death of Martin Swart</i> (30 June 1597).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Oblivion has overtaken the great majority of these plays.
-<i>Longshanks</i> is possibly Peele’s <i>Edward I</i>, and
-<i>Jeronimo</i> certainly Kyd’s <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>. The title of
-<i>The Wise Man of West Chester</i> agrees with the subject of Munday’s
-<i>John a Kent</i> and <i>John a Cumber</i>, the manuscript of which is
-dated December 1595. One would be more willing to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span> identify <i>Henry
-V</i> with <i>The Famous Victories</i>, if the latter had not been
-printed in 1598 with the name of the Queen’s men on its title-page.
-<i>A Knack to Know an Honest Man</i> was printed, as acted ‘about
-the Citie of London’, but without any company name, in 1596 (S. R.
-26 November 1595). <i>Stukeley</i> was also printed without a name,
-as <i>The Famous History of the Life and Death of Captain Thomas
-Stukeley</i>, in 1605 (S. R. 11 August 1600). <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> and
-<i>Frederick and Basilea</i> are extant in ‘plots’ alone, and <i>Belin
-Dun</i>, or <i>Bellendon</i>, as Henslowe writes it, was entered in
-the Stationers’ Register on 24 November 1595 as <i>The true tragicall
-historie of Kinge Rufus the first with the life and deathe of Belyn
-Dun the first thief that ever was hanged in England</i>, but is not
-known to be extant. The list also contains two of the early works of
-George Chapman, <i>The Blind Beggar of Alexandria</i> (1598, Admiral’s,
-S. R. 15 August 1598), and <i>The Comedy of Humours</i>, which can be
-safely identified with <i>A Humorous Day’s Mirth</i> (1599, Admiral’s).
-Ingenious attempts have been made to trace in some of the remaining
-titles other plays by Chapman, or by Heywood, Dekker, and the like, or
-presumed early drafts of these, or the English originals of plays or
-titles preserved in German versions; but in most cases the material
-available is so scanty as to render the game a hazardous one.<a id="FNanchor_384" href="#Footnote_384" class="fnanchor">[384]</a> It
-appears, however, from Henslowe’s notes of advances during 1596–7 that
-payment was made to Heywood for a book, from which it may be inferred
-that his activity as a dramatist for the company had already began.
-Payments to ‘marcum’ and ‘Mr. porter’ perhaps indicate the same of
-Gervase Markham and Henry Porter.<a id="FNanchor_385" href="#Footnote_385" class="fnanchor">[385]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is evident that some of the plays marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe cannot
-have been new in the fullest sense. This applies to <i>Jeronimo</i>,
-which had been played by Strange’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span> men as an old play during 1592–3,
-and to <i>2 Tamar Cham</i>, which had been produced by the same company
-on 28 April 1592, and on that occasion also marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe.
-It applies also to <i>Longshanks</i> and <i>Henry V</i>, if these are
-really the same as <i>Edward I</i> and <i>The Famous Victories</i>.
-And it may, of course, apply also in other cases, which cannot now be
-distinguished. Two explanations are possible. One is that plays were
-treated as new, for the purpose of Henslowe’s entries, which were only
-new to the repertory of the particular company concerned, having been
-purchased by them or by Henslowe from the stock of some other company.
-There is, however, no indication that Henslowe received any special
-financial advantage from the production of a new play, such as would
-give point to such an arrangement. The other, and perhaps the most
-plausible, is that an old play was marked ‘ne’ if it had undergone any
-substantial process of revision before revival. But it must be admitted
-that the problem set is one that we have hardly the means to solve.</p>
-
-<p>In addition to their new and revised plays, the Admiral’s had a
-considerable stock of old ones. Some of these they were playing, when
-they began their first season in June 1594. Several others were revived
-in the course of that season, and a few at later dates. The only new
-play of the repertory which reached the stage of revival during the
-three years was <i>Belin Dun</i>, which was originally produced on 10
-June 1594, played to the end of the year, then dropped, and afterwards
-revived for a single performance on 11 July 1596, and for a series
-in the spring of 1597. But it is not likely that many new plays were
-written during the plague years, and probably most of the revived plays
-of 1594–5 were a good deal more than two or three years old. A list of
-the plays not marked ‘ne’ by Henslowe, nineteen in number, follows.
-It is, however, possible that some of them are only plays in the list
-already given, masquerading under different names.</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Cutlack.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Ranger’s Comedy.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Guise</i>, or, <i>The Massacre of Paris.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Jew of Malta.</i></li>
- <li><i>Mahomet.</i></li>
- <li><i>1 Tamburlaine.</i></li>
- <li><i>Dr. Faustus.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Love of a Grecian Lady</i>, or, <i>The Grecian Comedy</i>.<a id="FNanchor_386" href="#Footnote_386" class="fnanchor">[386]</a></li>
- <li><i>The French Doctor.</i></li>
- <li><i>Warlamchester.</i></li>
- <li><i>2 Tamburlaine.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Siege of London.</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span></li>
- <li><i>Antony and Valia.</i><a id="FNanchor_387" href="#Footnote_387" class="fnanchor">[387]</a></li>
- <li><i>1 Long Meg of Westminster.</i><a id="FNanchor_388" href="#Footnote_388" class="fnanchor">[388]</a></li>
- <li><i>The Welshman.</i><a id="FNanchor_389" href="#Footnote_389" class="fnanchor">[389]</a></li>
- <li><i>1 Fortunatus.</i></li>
- <li><i>Osric.</i></li>
- <li><i>Time’s Triumph and Fortune’s.</i></li>
- <li><i>The Witch of Islington.</i></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Five plays of Marlowe’s are conspicuous in the list. <i>Mahomet</i>
-might be either Greene’s <i>Alphonsus</i>, <i>King of Arragon</i>
-or Peele’s lost <i>Turkish Mahomet and Hiren the Fair Greek</i>.
-<i>Fortunatus</i>, as revised by Dekker in 1599, is extant, but it
-is doubtful whether Dekker was writing early enough to have been the
-author of the original play. Conjectural identifications of some
-of the other titles have been attempted.<a id="FNanchor_390" href="#Footnote_390" class="fnanchor">[390]</a> There is, perhaps, a
-natural inclination to eke out our meagre knowledge of the repertory
-of the earlier Admiral’s men, as it was constituted before 1590, by
-the assumption that the old and the revised new plays of 1594–7 belong
-to that stock. But this can only be proved to be so in the case of
-<i>1 and 2 Tamburlaine</i>, where the title-page of the 1590 edition
-comes to our assistance. There is no trace between 1594 and 1597 of
-any of the other three plays, <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, <i>The
-Wounds of Civil War</i>, and <i>Orlando Furioso</i>, which there is
-independent evidence for connecting with the Admiral’s. And it must
-be borne in mind that there were several other sources from which
-a supply of old plays might be drawn. Alleyn seems to have bought
-up the books and properties of the pre-1590 men, and we do not know
-how far he also retained rights in some or all of the plays produced
-during his alliance with Strange’s. Moreover, there were plenty of
-opportunities for either Alleyn, Henslowe, or the Admiral’s men as a
-whole, to acquire copies from one or more of the companies, Pembroke’s,
-the Queen’s, Sussex’s, which went under in the plague years. <i>Henry
-V</i>, if identical with <i>The Famous Victories</i>, had certainly
-been a Queen’s play; <i>The Ranger’s Comedy</i> had been played for
-Henslowe by the Queen’s and Sussex’s in April 1594; <i>Jeronimo</i> and
-<i>The Guise</i> had been similarly played by Strange’s in 1592–3; and
-the fact that Strange’s, the Queen’s, Sussex’s, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span> Admiral’s, all
-in turn played <i>The Jew of Malta</i> leads to a strong suspicion that
-it was Henslowe’s property and placed by him at the disposal of any
-company that might from time to time be occupying his theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The Rose was what is now known as a ‘repertory’ house. A very
-successful play might be repeated on the night after its first
-production or revival, or in the course of the same week. But as a
-rule one performance a week was the limit, and after a play had been
-on the boards a few weeks, the intervals between its appearances
-rapidly became greater. <i>The Wise Man of West Chester</i>, which
-was presented thirty-two times between December 1594 and July 1597,
-had a longer life than any other new play during the three years.
-Next came <i>A Knack to Know an Honest Man</i>, with twenty-one
-performances in two years, <i>1 Seven Days of the Week</i>, with
-twenty-one performances in fifteen months, and <i>The Blind Beggar
-of Alexandria</i>, with twenty-two performances in fourteen months.
-<i>Belin Dun</i>, although not continuously upon the stage for long
-together, achieved with the aid of its revival a total of twenty-four
-performances. The only other new plays, that outlived a year, were <i>2
-Godfrey of Bulloigne</i> and <i>A Toy to Please Chaste Ladies</i>.
-Even such highly successful plays as <i>1 and 2 Hercules</i> ceased
-to be heard of after six months. The usual run of a play was anything
-from six to seventeen nights, but sixteen plays failed to obtain even
-such a run, and several plays, which apparently did well enough on the
-first night, were not repeated at all. As a rule the first night of a
-play brought Henslowe the highest returns; but this was by no means
-invariably the case, and the success of any play, which held the boards
-for as many as six nights, can perhaps best be measured by its average
-returns. By far the most fortunate was <i>The Comedy of Humours</i>
-which averaged 53<i>s.</i> for the eleven nights available before
-the summer season of 1597 closed. Next came <i>1 and 2 Hercules</i>
-with 42<i>s.</i> and 43<i>s.</i> respectively, <i>1 Seven Days of the
-Week</i> with 35<i>s.</i>, and <i>The Wise Man of West Chester</i> with
-34<i>s.</i> On the other hand the average of <i>Henry I</i> was no more
-than 19<i>s.</i> and that of the second <i>French Comedy</i> no more
-than 16<i>s.</i> The highest individual returns were those from the
-first nights of <i>1 and 2 Hercules</i>, <i>2 Godfrey of Bulloigne</i>,
-and <i>1 Seven Days of the Week</i>, which yielded 73<i>s.</i>,
-70<i>s.</i>, 71<i>s.</i>, and 70<i>s.</i> respectively, and that
-from the sixth night of the <i>Comedy of Humours</i>, which was also
-70<i>s.</i> The booking for this play shows a curious progress, being
-43<i>s.</i>, 55<i>s.</i>, 58<i>s.</i>, 64<i>s.</i>, 66<i>s.</i>,
-70<i>s.</i>, for the first six nights. Similarly <i>The Wise Man of
-West Chester</i>, which began with a bad first night of 33<i>s.</i>,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-rose to a good average, while <i>2 Godfrey of Bulloigne</i>, for all
-its start of 70<i>s.</i>, ended with an average of only 28<i>s.</i> The
-worst first night taking was the 22<i>s.</i> of <i>Nebuchadnezzar</i>,
-and this affords another curious example of box-office fluctuations,
-for, though it achieved no higher average than 22<i>s.</i>, it rose on
-its third night to 68<i>s.</i> The worst takings, on other than first
-nights, were 3<i>s.</i> for <i>Chinon of England</i>,<a id="FNanchor_391" href="#Footnote_391" class="fnanchor">[391]</a> 4<i>s.</i>
-for <i>Vortigern</i>, and for <i>Olympo</i>, and 5<i>s.</i> twice
-over for <i>A Woman Hard to Please</i>. Probably these were due to
-weather or other accidents, as each play averaged enough to justify a
-reasonable run. The success of the old plays followed much the same
-lines as that of the new ones. They ran for anything from one night to
-twenty-four, this total being reached by <i>Dr. Faustus</i>. The best
-average returns were the 32<i>s.</i> and 38<i>s.</i> of <i>1 and 2
-Tamburlaine</i>, the 30<i>s.</i> of <i>Mahomet</i>, the 29<i>s.</i> of
-<i>1 Long Meg of Westminster</i>, the 27<i>s.</i> of <i>The Guise</i>,
-and the 26<i>s.</i> of <i>The Jew of Malta</i>; the best individual
-returns the 72<i>s.</i> and 71<i>s.</i> yielded by the respective
-first nights of <i>Dr. Faustus</i> and <i>1 Tamburlaine</i>. The
-persistent popularity of Marlowe’s work comes out quite clearly from
-the statistics; and the success of Chapman’s first attempts is also not
-to be overlooked.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>personnel</i> of the Admiral’s men during 1594–7 can be
-determined with some approach to certainty. They were Edward Alleyn,
-John Singer, Richard Jones, Thomas Towne, Martin Slater, Edward Juby,
-Thomas Downton, and James Donstone. Their names are found in a list
-written in the diary, without any explanation of its object, amongst
-memoranda of 1594–6.<a id="FNanchor_392" href="#Footnote_392" class="fnanchor">[392]</a> There can be little doubt that it represents
-the principal members of the company, and in most cases corroborative
-evidence is available. The books of the Treasurer of the Chamber
-indicate Alleyn, Jones, and Singer as payees for the Court money of
-1594–5, and Alleyn and Slater for that of 1595–6. Alleyn, Slater,
-Donstone, and Juby are noted in Henslowe’s subsidiary accounts for 1596
-as responsible for advances made by him on behalf of the company.<a id="FNanchor_393" href="#Footnote_393" class="fnanchor">[393]</a>
-Another advance was made to Stephen the tireman, and he is doubtless
-the Stephen Magett who also appears in personal financial relations
-with Henslowe during 1596.<a id="FNanchor_394" href="#Footnote_394" class="fnanchor">[394]</a> Transactions by way of loan, sale,
-or pawn are also noted by Henslowe during 1594–7 with Slater, Jones,
-Donstone, Singer, and Towne, and also with Edward Dutton and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span> Richard
-Alleyn.<a id="FNanchor_395" href="#Footnote_395" class="fnanchor">[395]</a> These latter were probably not sharers in the company,
-but can be traced with others amongst its subordinate members by means
-of the ‘plot’ of <i>Frederick and Basilea</i>, which it is reasonable
-to connect with the performances of the play in June and July 1597,
-since it was a new play on 3 June, and it is recorded in the diary
-that Martin Slater, who figures in the ‘plot’, left the company on
-18 July. It is to be inferred from the plot that the principal parts
-in <i>Frederick and Basilea</i> were taken by Mr. Alleyn, Mr. Thomas
-Towne, Mr. Martin [Slater], Mr. Juby, Mr. Donstone, and R. Alleyn;
-that minor male parts were taken by Edward Dutton, Thomas Hunt, Robert
-Ledbetter, Black Dick, Pigge, Sam, Charles, and the ‘gatherers’ or
-money-takers and other ‘attendants’; and that female parts were taken
-by Edward Dutton’s boy Dick and two other boys known as Will and
-Griffen. Apparently the play, although not employing all the principal
-actors, made considerable demands on the minor staff. Dr. Greg may
-be right in identifying Sam and Charles with the Samuel Rowley and
-Charles Massey who became members of the company at a later date.<a id="FNanchor_396" href="#Footnote_396" class="fnanchor">[396]</a>
-It will be seen that the only name in Henslowe’s undated list which
-cannot be verified as that of a member of the company during 1594–7
-is that of Thomas Downton; but it may safely be accepted. Downton had
-accompanied Alleyn on the provincial tour with Strange’s men in 1593.
-So had Pigge or Pyk. Jones and Donstone, who is the same as Tunstall,
-had belonged to Worcester’s men in 1583, and probably to the Admiral’s
-men before 1590; Jones had been abroad, as we have seen, during the
-plague years. John Singer had been a member of the Queen’s men in 1588.
-The other names now come into the story for the first time. Henslowe’s
-advances for 1596 included sums ‘to feache Fletcher’ and ‘to feache
-Browne’.<a id="FNanchor_397" href="#Footnote_397" class="fnanchor">[397]</a> It can only be matter of conjecture whether there is
-evidence here of negotiations for the incorporation in the company of
-Robert Browne and of Laurence Fletcher, at a later date a colleague of
-Slater’s, and if so, whether they led to any fruitful result.</p>
-
-<p>The departure of Martin Slater on 18 July 1597 was only one of several
-changes which profoundly modified the composition of the company in
-the course of that year.<a id="FNanchor_398" href="#Footnote_398" class="fnanchor">[398]</a> In February<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span> Richard Jones and Thomas
-Downton went to the Swan as Pembroke’s men, and the disturbance thereby
-caused probably accounts for the three weeks’ cessation of playing
-during Lent. The Swan enterprise was brought to a disastrous conclusion
-after five months by the production of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i>, which
-not only brought personal trouble on the chief offenders, but also led
-to a restraint of plays at all the theatres. This event synchronizes
-with the first appearance in the diary of Nashe’s collaborator in
-<i>The Isle of Dogs</i>, Ben Jonson. On 28 July Henslowe lent him no
-less a sum than £4, and took Alleyn and Singer as witnesses. On the
-same day he opened an account headed ‘℞ of Bengemenes Johnsones share
-as ffoloweth’ with a first instalment of 3<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i><a id="FNanchor_399" href="#Footnote_399" class="fnanchor">[399]</a>
-On this very day of 28 July the Privy Council’s inhibition fell, and
-Jonson went to prison and paid no more instalments. It is impossible to
-say whether his ‘share’ was in the Admiral’s company or in Pembroke’s.
-In any event, although he continued to write for the Admiral’s men
-after 1597, there is no further sign that he was either a ‘sharer’, or
-indeed an actor in any capacity.</p>
-
-<p>One result of the restraint was that Jones and Downton not merely
-returned to the Rose, but brought at least three other of Pembroke’s
-men, Robert Shaw, Gabriel Spencer, and William Bird, known also by the
-<i>alias</i> of Borne, with them. Henslowe was thus enabled, almost
-immediately after playing stopped, to set about the reconstitution of
-his company, and the memoranda of agreement which he noted in his diary
-during the next fourteen months are so interesting for the light which
-they throw upon his relations with the actors, that I think it well,
-before discussing them, to transcribe them in full. There are in all
-eleven of them, as follows:<a id="FNanchor_400" href="#Footnote_400" class="fnanchor">[400]</a></p>
-
-
-<h6>i. (<i>Thomas Hearne</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that the 27 of Jeuley 1597 I heayred Thomas Hearne
-with ij pence for to searve me ij yeares in the qualetie of
-playenge for fyve shellynges a weacke for one yeare &amp; vj<sup>s</sup>
-viij<sup>d</sup> for the other yeare which he hath covenanted hime seallfe
-to searue me &amp; not to departe frome my companey tyll this ij
-yeares be eanded wittnes to this</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">John Synger.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Jeames Donston.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Thomas Towne.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<h6>ii. (<i>John Helle</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Lent John Helle the clowne the 3 of Aguste 1597 in redy money
-the some of x<sup>s</sup>. At that tyme I bownd hime by ane a sumsett of
-ij<sup>d</sup> to contenew with me at my howsse in playinge tylle Srafte
-tid next after the date a boue written yf not to forfytte vnto
-me fortipowndes wittneses to the same</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">E Alleyn</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">John Synger</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Jeames Donstall.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Edward Jubey</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Samewell Rowley.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h6>iii. (<i>Richard Jones</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that the 6 of Aguste 1597 I bownd Richard Jones by &amp;
-a sumsett of ij<sup>d</sup> to contenew &amp; playe with the companye of my
-lord Admeralles players frome Mihelmase next after the daye a
-bowe written vntell the eand &amp; tearme of iij yeares emediatly
-followinge &amp; to playe in my howsse only known by the name of the
-Rosse &amp; in no other howse a bowt London publicke &amp; yf restraynte
-be granted then to go for the tyme into the contrey &amp; after to
-retorne agayne to London yf he breacke this a sumsett then to
-forfett vnto me for the same a hundreth markes of lafull money
-of Ingland wittnes to this E Alleyn &amp; John Midelton.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h6>iv. (<i>Robert Shaw</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>More over Richard Jones at that tyme [6 Aug. 1597] hath tacken
-one other ij<sup>d</sup> of me vpon &amp; asumset to forfet vnto me one
-hundrethe markes yf one Robart Shaee do not playe with my lordes
-Admeralles men as he hath covenanted be fore in euery thinge &amp;
-time to the oter moste wittnes E Alleyn John Midellton.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h6>v. (<i>William Borne</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that the 10 of Aguste 1597 William Borne came &amp;
-ofered hime sealfe to come and playe with my lord Admeralles
-mean at my howsse called by the name of the Rosse setewate
-one the back after this order folowinge he hath receued of me
-iij<sup>d</sup> vpon &amp; a sumsette to forfette vnto me a hundrethe marckes
-of lafull money of Ingland yf he do not performe thes thinges
-folowinge that is presentley after libertie being granted for
-playinge to come &amp; to playe with my lordes Admeralles men at
-my howsse aforsayd &amp; not in any other howsse publicke a bowt
-London for the space of iij yeares beginynge imediatly after
-this restraynt is recaled by the lordes of the cownsell which
-restraynt is by the meanes of playinge the Jeylle of Dooges
-yf he do not then he forfettes this asumset afore or ells not
-wittnes to this E Alleyn &amp; Robsone.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h6>vi. (<i>Thomas Downton</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that the 6 of October 1597 Thomas Dowton came &amp; bownd
-him seallfe vnto me in xxxx<sup>ll</sup> in &amp; a somesett by the receuing
-of iij<sup>d</sup> of me before wittnes the covenant is this that he
-shold frome<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span> the daye a bove written vntell Sraftid next come
-ij yeares to playe in my howsse &amp; in no other a bowte London
-publickely yf he do with owt my consent to forfet vnto me this
-some of money a bove written wittnes to this</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">E Alleyn</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">W<sup>m</sup> Borne</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Dicke Jonnes</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Robarte Shawe</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">John Synger</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h6>vii. (<i>William Kendall</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandum that this 8<sup>th</sup> of December 1597 my father Philyp
-Hinshlow hierd as a covenauant servant Willyam Kendall for ij
-years after the statute of Winchester with ij single penc a to
-geue hym for his sayd servis everi week of his playng in London
-x<sup>s</sup> &amp; in the cuntrie v<sup>s</sup> for the which he covenaunteth for the
-space of those ij years to be redye att all tymes to play in the
-howse of the sayd Philyp &amp; in no other during the said terme.</p>
-
-<p>Wittnes my self the writer of this <span style="margin-left: 3em">E Alleyn.</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-<h6>viii. (<i>James Bristow</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Bought my boye Jeames Brystow of William Agusten player the 18
-of Desember 1597 for viij<sup>li</sup>.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h6>ix. (<i>Richard Alleyn</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that this 25 of Marche 1598 Richard Alleyne came &amp;
-bownde hime seallfe vnto me for ij yeares in &amp; asumsette as a
-hiered servante with ij syngell pence &amp; to contenew frome the
-daye aboue written vnto the eand &amp; tearme of ij yeares yf he do
-not performe this covenant then he to forfette for the breache
-of yt fortye powndes &amp; wittnes to this</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">W<sup>m</sup> Borne.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Thomas Dowton.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Gabrell Spencer.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Robart Shawe.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Richard Jonnes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-<h6>x. (<i>Thomas Heywood</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that this 25 of Marche 1598 Thomas Hawoode came and
-hiered hime seallfe with me as a covenante searvante for ij
-yeares by the receuenge of ij syngell pence acordinge to the
-statute of Winshester &amp; to begine at the daye a boue written &amp;
-not to playe any wher publicke a bowt London not whille these ij
-yeares be expired but in my howsse yf he do then he doth forfett
-vnto me by the receuinge of these ij<sup>d</sup> fortie powndes &amp; wittnes
-to this</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">Antony Monday</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Gabrell Spencer</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Robart Shawe</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Richard Alleyn.</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">W<sup>m</sup> Borne</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Thomas Dowton</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Richard Jonnes.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span></p>
-
-
-
-<h6>xi. (<i>Charles Massey and Samuel Rowley</i>)</h6>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Memorandom that this 16 of November 1598 I hired as my covenant
-servantes Charles Massey &amp; Samewell Rowley for a yeare &amp; as
-mvche as to Sraftide begenynge at the daye a bove written after
-the statute of Winchester with ij syngell pence &amp; for them they
-haue covenanted with me to playe in my howes &amp; in no other
-howsse dewringe the thime publeck but in mine yf they dooe with
-owt my consent yf they dooe to forfett vnto me xxxx<sup>li</sup> a pece
-wittnes</p>
-
-<p class="left2 narrow">Thomas Dowton</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Robart Shawe</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">W<sup>m</sup> Borne</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Jubey</p>
-<p class="left2 narrow">Richard Jonnes.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Evidently the position of James Bristow is distinct from that of the
-other players. He was a ‘boy’ or apprentice, whose indentures had been
-transferred to Henslowe for a consideration by his former master. In
-the rest of the cases, the essence of the agreement appears to be the
-undertaking by the player under bond to play only with the Admiral’s
-men at Henslowe’s house. It is interesting to notice that in the
-agreement with Hearne Henslowe calls the company ‘my company’; and the
-fact that its members were constituted Henslowe’s covenant servants
-seems to argue a closer personal relation between the organization
-and its financier, than might on other grounds have been inferred.
-Dr. Greg, indeed, draws a distinction between the agreements with
-Jones, Shaw, Borne, and Downton, whom he regards as merely ‘binding
-themselves to play at Henslowe’s house like other sharers’, and those
-with the rest, whom he regards as ‘placing themselves in the position
-of covenant servants to him, which would seem to imply that they
-were merely hired men’.<a id="FNanchor_401" href="#Footnote_401" class="fnanchor">[401]</a> But I do not think that there is any
-justification for this theory in the terms of the documents, and it
-immediately gets Dr. Greg into difficulties about Massey and Rowley,
-who, as we shall see, were in fact on the footing of full members of
-the company even before the date of their agreement. I do not mean
-that I deny the distinction between sharers and hired men, which is of
-course important, but that I do not think that it is relevant to the
-contractual relations set up by the agreements. I am not quite clear
-whether Henslowe’s memoranda, which are written throughout, including
-the names of the witnesses, in his own hand or Alleyn’s, constitute
-the formal instruments under which the agreements were effected, or
-are merely notes for his own information. But in either event their
-terminology is loose. They are not always expressed as being agreements
-of hiring, or for service, even in the cases of those men whom Dr.
-Greg does not suppose to have been sharers, and they are not careful
-to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span> specify the considerations, other than the formal 2<i>d.</i> or
-3<i>d.</i>, which the actors were to receive. Wages are, in fact,
-provided for only in the agreements with Hearne and Kendall, and it
-is quite possible that, if we had the full terms before us, we should
-find that, while some of the others were also to receive wages, some
-were to find their recompense in a share of such profits as the company
-might make. It is probable that, even where Henslowe undertook to pay
-wages, the general agreement between him and the company provided for
-the shifting of that liability to them. They certainly had to pay
-him, at the rate of 3<i>s.</i> a week, for the services of his boy
-Bristow.<a id="FNanchor_402" href="#Footnote_402" class="fnanchor">[402]</a> To a slightly later date belongs an agreement with an
-unnamed actor, in which the hirer is not Henslowe but Thomas Downton,
-and this I add in order to complete the series.<a id="FNanchor_403" href="#Footnote_403" class="fnanchor">[403]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>xii.</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Thomas Downton the 25 of Janewary 1599 ded hire as his couenante
-servante &mdash;&mdash; for ij yers to begyne at Shrofe Tewesday next &amp;
-he to geue hime viij<sup>s</sup> a wecke as longe as they playe &amp; after
-they lye stylle one fortnyght then to geue hime hallfe wages&emsp;&emsp;wittnes P H &amp; Edward Browne &amp; Charlles Masey.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The appearance of Jones as guarantee for Shaw is due to the fact that,
-as a result of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i>, the latter was languishing
-with Gabriel Spencer and Ben Jonson in the Marshalsea. Meanwhile some
-at least of the company travelled. Henslowe lent Alleyn 40<i>s.</i>
-for John Singer and Thomas Towne ‘when they went into the contrey’ and
-noted that this was ‘at ther last cominge’. There is another entry
-of a small loan to Singer on 9 August, so they cannot have started
-before that; and they must have been back by 6 October, when Singer
-witnessed the agreement with Thomas Downton. Possibly Edward Dutton
-and Richard Alleyn, who also borrowed money from Henslowe, went with
-them.<a id="FNanchor_404" href="#Footnote_404" class="fnanchor">[404]</a> The Privy Council warrants for the release of the prisoners
-in the Marshalsea were signed on 3 October,<a id="FNanchor_405" href="#Footnote_405" class="fnanchor">[405]</a> and a few days later
-Henslowe, more successful than Langley of the Swan in getting the
-licence for his house renewed, even before the formal expiration of the
-restraint on 1 November, was in a position to resume his play list with
-the heading, ‘The xj of Octobe begane my lord Admerals &amp; my lorde of
-Penbrockes men to play at my howsse 1597’.<a id="FNanchor_406" href="#Footnote_406" class="fnanchor">[406]</a> The entries of plays
-are few and irregular up to 5 November, and then stop.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span> A note is
-appended that on 26 November the Master of the Revels was paid for four
-weeks. The performances included one new play, <i>Friar Spendleton</i>,
-and five old ones, <i>Jeronimo</i>, <i>The Comedy of Humours</i>,
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i>, <i>Hardicanute</i>, and <i>Bourbon</i>, of which
-the last two do not belong to the 1594–7 repertory, and may have been
-contributed by Pembroke’s men. The diary also contains an account of
-weekly receipts running from 21 October 1597 to 4 March 1598, under
-the heading, ‘A juste a cownte of all suche monye as I haue receyed of
-my lord Admeralles &amp; my lord of Penbrocke men as foloweth be gynynge
-the 21 of October 1597’, and some notes of individual advances and
-repayments, mainly through Robert Shaw and Thomas Downton, on behalf
-of the company, from 23 October to 12 December.<a id="FNanchor_407" href="#Footnote_407" class="fnanchor">[407]</a> In the course of
-these the company is again described on 23 October and 5 November as
-‘the company of my lord Admeralles men &amp; my lord Penbrockes’, but on 1
-December as ‘the companey of my lord Admeralles men’; and the substance
-of the whole of these advances is set out again, without any reference
-to Pembroke’s men, at the beginning of a continuous account from 21
-October onwards, which is headed, ‘A juste a cownt of all suche money
-as I haue layd owt for my lord Admeralles players begynyng the xj of
-October whose names ar as foloweth Borne Gabrell Shaw Jonnes Dowten
-Jube Towne Synger &amp; the ij Geffes’.<a id="FNanchor_408" href="#Footnote_408" class="fnanchor">[408]</a> Nothing very certain is known
-of the previous career of Humphrey and Anthony Jeffes, but if the
-former is the ‘Humfrey’ who appears with ‘Gabriel’ [Spencer] in the
-stage-directions to <i>3 Henry VI</i> it is most likely that these men
-also came from Pembroke’s.<a id="FNanchor_409" href="#Footnote_409" class="fnanchor">[409]</a></p>
-
-<p>The responsible members of the Admiral’s company at the beginning
-of the third period of their existence were, then, so far as their
-relations to Henslowe were concerned, Thomas Downton, Richard Jones,
-Edward Juby, Thomas Towne, John Singer, Robert Shaw, William Borne, who
-seems to have had the regular <i>alias</i> of William Bird, Gabriel
-Spencer, Humphrey Jeffes, and Anthony Jeffes. To these must probably
-be added a number of hired men, including Thomas Hearne, John Helle,
-William Kendall, Richard Alleyn, Thomas Heywood, and probably Charles
-Massey, Samuel Rowley, Thomas Hunt, and Stephen Maget the tireman,
-and of apprentices, including James Bristow and Pigge. Of the sharers
-Downton, Jones, Juby, Towne, and Singer had alone belonged to the
-earlier Admiral’s men. Slater’s departure involved the company in a
-lawsuit, the nature of which is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span> not stated in the diary. Professor
-Wallace, however, has found an independent record of a Queen’s Bench
-action by Thomas Downton to recover £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, the
-value of a playbook which Downton had lost in the parish of St. Mary le
-Bow on 1 December 1597, and Slater had ‘found’, refused to surrender,
-and was alleged to have disposed of for his own profit. Damages of
-£10 10<i>s.</i> were awarded on 3 November 1598.<a id="FNanchor_410" href="#Footnote_410" class="fnanchor">[410]</a> Donstone also
-seems to have dropped out or may have been dead; he witnessed Helle’s
-agreement on 3 August 1597, and thereafter no more is heard of him.
-But incomparably the greatest loss was that of Edward Alleyn, who
-now retired from the stage and did not return to it for a period of
-three years.<a id="FNanchor_411" href="#Footnote_411" class="fnanchor">[411]</a> From 29 December 1597 to 8 November 1598 Henslowe
-made notes of playing goods bought ‘sence my sonne Edward Allen
-leafte [p]laynge’, and it would appear that the company acknowledged
-a debt of £50 in respect of his interest on retirement.<a id="FNanchor_412" href="#Footnote_412" class="fnanchor">[412]</a> In place
-of Alleyn, it would seem that the lead was taken by Robert Shaw and
-Thomas Downton, perhaps as representing the two elements of which the
-company was made up. These two were joint payees for the Court money
-of both 1597–8 and 1598–9. For 1599–1600 Shaw was sole payee. It was,
-moreover, most often, although by no means always, to one or other
-of these men that Henslowe’s advances on behalf of the company were
-made. It must be added that some of the new-comers appear to have
-sought private assistance from Henslowe in order to enable them to
-take up their shares. On 14 January 1598, he opened an account of sums
-received ‘of Humfreye Jeaffes hallfe share’, entered seven instalments
-up to 4 March, amounting to a total of 60<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and
-then noted, ‘This some was payd backe agayne vnto the companey of my
-lord Admeralles players the 8 of Marche 1598, &amp; they shared yt amonste
-them’. There is a later account, running from 29 April to 21 July
-1598, and amounting by small instalments to 35<i>s.</i>, of ‘all such
-money as I dooe receue for Umfrey Jeaffes and Antoney Jeaffes ... of
-the companey’.<a id="FNanchor_413" href="#Footnote_413" class="fnanchor">[413]</a> Possibly the brothers only held a single share
-between them. A similar transaction took place with Gabriel Spencer. On
-20 April 1598 this actor gave an acknowledgement for £4 and between 6
-April and 24 June Henslowe carried to an account headed ‘℞ of Gabrell
-Spencer at severall tymes of his share in the gallereyes’ a total of
-25<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, of which 5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> was paid over to
-Downton.<a id="FNanchor_414" href="#Footnote_414" class="fnanchor">[414]</a> In addition, personal loans were negotiated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span> from time
-to time by various members of the company, and the reasons given for
-these indicate that in the course of 1598, besides the dispute of the
-ex-Pembroke’s men with Langley, Bird and perhaps the company as a whole
-were engaged in litigation with Thomas Pope, presumably the actor in
-the Chamberlain’s company.<a id="FNanchor_415" href="#Footnote_415" class="fnanchor">[415]</a></p>
-
-<p>There does not seem to have been much further change in the composition
-of the Admiral’s men during 1597–1600. An acknowledgement of the state
-of their account with Henslowe between 8 and 13 March 1598 bears the
-signatures of ‘J. Singer, Thomas Downton, William Birde, Robt Shaa,
-Richard Jones, Gabriell Spenser, Thomas Towne, Humfry Jeffes, Charles
-Massye, and Samuell Rowlye’.<a id="FNanchor_416" href="#Footnote_416" class="fnanchor">[416]</a> The last two had evidently become
-sharers in the course of the year. Juby and Anthony Jeffes do not sign,
-but this is probably due to an accident, as they were certainly sharers
-both in 1597 and in 1600.<a id="FNanchor_417" href="#Footnote_417" class="fnanchor">[417]</a> Gabriel Spencer was killed by Ben Jonson
-(cf. ch. xxiii) on 22 September 1598. On 26 September Henslowe wrote to
-Alleyn at the Brill in Sussex, ‘Now to leat you vnderstand newes I will
-teall you some but yt is for me harde &amp; heavey. Sence you weare with
-me I haue loste one of my company which hurteth me greatley; that is
-Gabrell, for he is slayen in Hogesden fylldes by the handes of Bengemen
-Jonson bricklayer’.<a id="FNanchor_418" href="#Footnote_418" class="fnanchor">[418]</a> No doubt Henslowe wrote from the heart.
-Probably Spencer’s share was not yet paid for, and in addition small
-personal loans to the amount of 66<i>s.</i> stand undischarged against
-him in the diary, of which the last was on 19 May ‘to bye a plume of
-feathers which his mane Bradshawe feched of me’. Richard Bradshaw
-was an actor and may have played as a hired man with the company. A
-fragmentary ‘plot’ of <i>Troilus and Cressida</i>, probably to be dated
-in April 1599, yields the names of ‘Mr. Jones’ and his ‘boy’, Thomas
-Hunt, Stephen, Proctor, and Pigge. Mr. Jones’s boy is shown by a note
-of 17 November 1599 in the diary to have been called James.<a id="FNanchor_419" href="#Footnote_419" class="fnanchor">[419]</a> Of
-Proctor no more is known. Stephen is probably Stephen Magett, the
-tireman, and Pigge was with Alleyn on the tour of Strange’s men in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-1593. He is also mentioned, with Dobe, Whittcombe, and Anderson, who
-may have been actors, in some inventories of properties belonging to
-Alleyn or to the company in March 1598.<a id="FNanchor_420" href="#Footnote_420" class="fnanchor">[420]</a> Thomas Downton also had in
-June 1600 a ‘boye’ who played in <i>Cupid and Psyche</i>.<a id="FNanchor_421" href="#Footnote_421" class="fnanchor">[421]</a> Another
-acknowledgement of account, dated on 10 July 1600, only differs from
-the former one by the omission of Spencer’s name and the inclusion of
-those of Juby and Anthony Jeffes.<a id="FNanchor_422" href="#Footnote_422" class="fnanchor">[422]</a> The alleged manuscript notes
-to a copy of Dekker’s <i>Shoemaker’s Holiday</i> (q.v.), produced in
-January 1600, which are discredited by Dr. Greg, give the cast as
-composed of ‘Jones, H. Jeffes, Rowley, Shawe, Massy, Dowton, Singer,
-Jewby, Towne, A. Jeffes, Birde, Wilson, Flower, Price, Day, Dowton’s
-boy Ned and Alleine’; the last for a female part. Certainly nothing is
-known of Day or Wilson as actors for the Admiral’s, or of Price at any
-such early date, or of Flower at all. But if the document is a forgery,
-it is a very pointless, and at the same time a very cautious one. And
-how did the forger, unless he were Collier or Cunningham, know that Day
-was an actor at all?</p>
-
-<p>The records kept by Henslowe for the period 1597–1600 differ
-considerably in character from those for 1594–7. The diurnal list of
-plays performed and of rent-takings disappears altogether. On the
-other hand, the records of advances made, for the books and licensing
-of plays, for costumes and properties, and for certain miscellaneous
-items of expenditure, become full and systematic. A <i>per contra</i>
-account is also kept of weekly sums received by Henslowe in repayment
-of such advances, and from time to time a balance is struck, and the
-hands of the company taken to a settlement or acknowledgement of debt.
-Henslowe’s book-keeping, however, if not exactly faulty, is not always
-sufficiently lucid to make the whole of the financial transactions
-perfectly clear. In the absence of the daily entries of performances,
-the weekly records of repayments make it possible to determine roughly
-the periods covered by the theatrical seasons.<a id="FNanchor_423" href="#Footnote_423" class="fnanchor">[423]</a> The company played
-for twenty continuous weeks from 11 October 1597 to about 4 March 1598,
-apparently with some irregularity at the beginning and again about
-Christmas time. Their Court plays were on 27 December and 28 February.
-In Lent they had a three weeks’ interval, during the course of which
-they met to read a book in New Fish Street, and ‘played in Fleatstreet
-pryuat’.<a id="FNanchor_424" href="#Footnote_424" class="fnanchor">[424]</a> Playing was resumed about 25 March and lasted for some
-fifteen weeks, until about 8 July, making<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span> thirty-five weeks in all
-for the year 1597–8. The company only took two weeks’ vacation in the
-summer and are not likely to have travelled, although on 27 September,
-after the new season had begun, Borne is found riding to the Lord
-Admiral at Croydon at the time of the Queen’s visit there.<a id="FNanchor_425" href="#Footnote_425" class="fnanchor">[425]</a> They
-played for thirty-one weeks from about 22 July to 24 February 1599,
-with performances at Court on 27 December, 6 January and 18 February,
-and stopped for three weeks in Lent. The summer season lasted for
-eleven weeks from about 19 March to 3 June, making forty-four weeks
-playing for 1598–9. On Easter Eve Towne and Richard Alleyn went to
-Court for some unspecified purpose. About the same time Anthony Jeffes
-was making purchases against St. George’s Day.<a id="FNanchor_426" href="#Footnote_426" class="fnanchor">[426]</a> The interval
-of this summer was seventeen weeks, but I have no evidence of any
-travelling. The next season was one of nineteen weeks from about 29
-September 1599 to 10 February 1600, with Court performances on 27
-December and 1 January, and was followed by a Lenten interval of
-about four weeks. At the beginning of February they bought a drum and
-trumpets ‘when to go into the contry’.<a id="FNanchor_427" href="#Footnote_427" class="fnanchor">[427]</a> Whether these were for
-use during the short break in Lent or not until the following summer
-must remain uncertain; at any rate the purchase confirms the view that
-there had been no provincial tour since 1596.<a id="FNanchor_428" href="#Footnote_428" class="fnanchor">[428]</a> Finally they played
-for nineteen weeks from about 2 March to 13 July, thus completing
-thirty-six weeks for 1599–1600. Apparently the summer season was
-diversified by a visit to Windsor for the Garter installation of Henri
-IV of France on 27 April.<a id="FNanchor_429" href="#Footnote_429" class="fnanchor">[429]</a> In all they seem to have played for
-about 115 weeks or something under 690 days in 1597–1600, as compared
-with 728 days in 1594–7.</p>
-
-<p>The entries of sums paid for plays usually give the names of the
-authors as well as those of the plays, and therefore furnish a good
-deal of material for reconstituting the literary side of the company’s
-activity. Henslowe’s terminology is neither precise nor uniform, but
-it is clear that, while the payments were always entered as loans to
-the company, they were often made direct by him to the playwrights,
-on the ‘appointment’ of one or more of its members. Sometimes they
-are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span> expressed as being ‘to bye a boocke of’ a play; that is to say,
-for the purchase outright of an old or even a new manuscript. But a
-new play was generally commissioned, upon the strength of a sample
-or of an outline of the plot, and in such cases payment was made by
-instalments, of which the earlier ones were ‘lent upon’ or ‘in earneste
-of’ or ‘in parte paymente of’, and the last ‘in full paymente of’ the
-book. Portions of the manuscript were handed over as security for the
-earlier payments. Production was very rapid, and a play put together
-in two or three weeks often represented the collaboration of as many
-as four or even five or six authors. The procedure, which prevailed
-during the whole of the period covered by the diary, is illustrated by
-a small group of letters preserved amongst the miscellaneous papers
-found at Dulwich. Thus on 8 November 1599 Shaw writes with regard to
-<i>2 Henry Richmond</i>, ‘Mr. Henshlowe, we haue heard their booke and
-lyke yt. Their pryce is eight poundes, which I pray pay now to Mr.
-Wilson, according to our promysse’; and accordingly Henslowe includes
-in his account, by an entry written and signed by Wilson, a sum of £8
-‘by a note vnder the hand of Mr. Rob: Shaw’.<a id="FNanchor_430" href="#Footnote_430" class="fnanchor">[430]</a> On 14 June 1600 Shaw
-writes again, ‘I pray you, Mr. Henshlowe, deliuer vnto the bringer
-hereof the some of fyue &amp; fifty shillinges to make the 3<sup>ll</sup> fyue
-shillinges which they receaued before full six poundes in full payment
-of their booke called the fayre Constance of Roome, whereof I pray
-you reserue for me Mr. Willsons whole share which is xj<sup>s</sup>. which I to
-supply his neede deliuered him yesternight.’ The diary duly records the
-payment to Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Dekker ‘at the a poyntment of
-Roberte Shawe’ of 44<i>s.</i><a id="FNanchor_431" href="#Footnote_431" class="fnanchor">[431]</a> Similarly Samuel Rowley writes on 4
-April 1601, ‘Mr. Hinchloe, I haue harde fyue shetes of a playe of the
-Conqueste of the Indes &amp; I dow not doute but it wyll be a verye good
-playe; tharefore I praye ye delyuer them fortye shyllynges in earneste
-of it &amp; take the papers into your one hands &amp; on Easter eue thaye
-promyse to make an ende of all the reste’. The earnest and several
-supplementary earnests were paid to Day, Haughton, and Smith, but the
-completion of the play lagged until the following September.<a id="FNanchor_432" href="#Footnote_432" class="fnanchor">[432]</a> An
-undated letter of Rowley’s relates to the withdrawal of a play, ‘Mr.
-Hynchlo, I praye ye let Mr. Hathwaye haue his papars agayne of the
-playe of John a Gante &amp; for the repayement of the monye back agayne
-he is contente to gyue ye a byll of his hande to be payde at some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-cartayne tyme as in your dyscressyon yow shall thinke good; which done
-ye may crose it oute of your boouke &amp; keepe the byll; or else wele
-stande so much indetted to you &amp; kepe the byll our selues’. Henslowe
-appears to have thought it safer to adopt the second alternative,
-as incomplete payments to the amount of £1 19<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>
-for <i>The Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt</i> still stand in his
-‘boouke’.<a id="FNanchor_433" href="#Footnote_433" class="fnanchor">[433]</a> Other letters of the same kind concern <i>Six Yeomen of
-the West</i>, and <i>Too Good to be True</i>.<a id="FNanchor_434" href="#Footnote_434" class="fnanchor">[434]</a> The normal price for
-a new play during 1597–1601 seems to have been £6, but sometimes it
-fell to £5 or possibly even £4, and sometimes the playwrights succeeded
-in squeezing out a few shillings more. One or two of them, notably
-Chapman, were able to secure a higher rate from the beginning; and
-about 1599 a general tendency towards a higher scale of prices becomes
-discernible. The ‘book’ of an old play could generally be purchased for
-about £2.</p>
-
-<p>In attempting to estimate the actual ‘output’ of the company, one
-is faced by the difficulty that some of the plays commissioned are
-not shown by the diary to have reached the stage of payment in full,
-and that it must, therefore, remain doubtful whether they were ever
-completed. It is possible that, as Dr. Greg thinks,<a id="FNanchor_435" href="#Footnote_435" class="fnanchor">[435]</a> some of the
-payments were made direct by the company, instead of through Henslowe.
-But the correspondence just quoted rather suggests that any such
-arrangement would be exceptional; and it would not be inconsistent
-with human nature, if the extremely out-at-elbows men of letters
-who hung about the Rose occasionally found it profitable to take
-their ‘earnest’ for a play, and then to find plausible reasons for
-indefinitely delaying its completion. Probably in the long run they
-had to account for the advance, but the example of <i>The Conquest of
-Spain</i> shows that such a repayment would not necessarily find its
-way into Henslowe’s account. This view is borne out by an examination
-of the affairs of one of the most impecunious of them all, Henry
-Chettle, during 1598–9. During the first six months of the year, he
-had a hand in half a dozen plays, all of which were completed and paid
-for in full. But on one of these, <i>1 Black Bateman of the North</i>,
-Henslowe appears, perhaps by an oversight, to have paid him £1 too
-much. At the beginning of May £1 was lent to Chettle upon this play,
-and the loan does not appear to have been considered when, on 22 May,
-a further sum of £6 was laid out upon ‘a boocke called Blacke Battmane
-of the North ... which coste sixe powndes’. On 24 June Chettle borrowed
-10<i>s.</i>, not apparently on any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span> particular play, and Henslowe seems
-then to have recalled the overpayment, and noted against Chettle’s
-name in the diary, ‘All his parte of boockes to this place are payde
-which weare dew unto hime &amp; he reastes be syddes in my deatte the
-some of xxx<sup>s</sup>.’ Chettle collaborated in several other plays, which
-got completed during the year, but no deduction seems to have been
-made from his share of the fees in respect of this debt. In addition
-he had £5 upon <i>A Woman’s Tragedy</i>, upon condition ‘eather to
-deliver the playe or els to paye the mony with in one forthnyght’; he
-had 5<i>s.</i> in earnest upon <i>Catiline’s Conspiracy</i>; and he
-had £1 14<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> in earnest upon <i>Brute</i>, probably a
-continuation of an older <i>1 Brute</i> bought by the company. When the
-last payment on <i>Brute</i> was made on 16 September Henslowe noted,
-‘Hary Cheattell vntell this place owes vs viij<sup>li</sup> ix<sup>s</sup> dew al his
-boockes &amp; recknynges payd’. This amount is precisely made up of the
-30<i>s.</i> due on 24 June and the sums paid on account of these three
-plays. By 22 October Chettle had completed <i>2 Brute</i> and managed
-somehow to get £6 for it in full. On the same day he gave Henslowe an
-acknowledgement of a debt, not of £8 9<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i>, but of £9
-9<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> In November he got an earnest of £1 for <i>Tis
-no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver</i>, and £1 for ‘mending’ <i>Robin
-Hood</i>, and in January 1599 30<i>s.</i> ‘to paye his charges in
-the Marshallsey’. Small loans of a shilling or two are also noted
-in the margin of the book, and appear to be quite distinct from the
-company’s account with him, and to indicate private generosities of
-Henslowe. In February 1599 Chettle had finished <i>Polyphemus</i>,
-and it is recorded that in full payment of £6 he got £2 10<i>s.</i>
-down, ‘&amp; strocken of his deatte which he owes vnto the companey fyftye
-shelenges more’. A separate entry in the diary indicates that he paid
-off yet another 10<i>s.</i> out of his fee for <i>The Spencers</i>
-in March.<a id="FNanchor_436" href="#Footnote_436" class="fnanchor">[436]</a> Material is not available for the further tracing of
-this particular chain of transactions, but the inference that credit
-obtained for an unfinished play had sometimes to be redeemed out of
-the profits of a finished one is irresistible. Chettle, at least, does
-not seem to have been hardly treated, but obviously the unbusinesslike
-methods of the playwrights kept down the price of plays, and a familiar
-device of the modern Barabbas was anticipated when Henry Porter was
-obliged, on the receipt of an earnest, to give Henslowe ‘his faythfulle
-promysse that I shold haue alle the boockes which he writte ether him
-sellfe or with any other’.<a id="FNanchor_437" href="#Footnote_437" class="fnanchor">[437]</a> Whatever Henslowe’s precise financial
-relations with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span> company may have been, by the way, he seems to
-have been in a position to pose as paymaster, so far as the poets were
-concerned.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, I think it must be concluded that, if the diary fails
-to record payments to the amount of at least £5 for a new play,
-there is <i>prima facie</i> evidence that that play never got itself
-finished. Occasionally, of course, apparently incomplete payments may
-be explained by the fact that the same play is entered under more than
-one name. Occasionally, also, a particular play may have been tacitly
-debited with payments not specifically expressed in the diary to have
-been made in respect of that play. Thus a sum of £2 paid on 4 February
-1598 ‘to dise charge Mr. Dicker owt of the cownter in the Powltrey’
-was probably treated as an instalment of the price of <i>Phaethon</i>
-on which Dekker was then working, and for which otherwise only £4 is
-entered. Another sum of £3 10<i>s.</i> paid on 30 January 1599 ‘to
-descarge Thomas Dickers frome the a reaste of my lord Chamberlens men’
-seems similarly to have gone towards <i>The First Introduction of
-the Civil Wars of France</i>. And Haughton probably got 10<i>s.</i>
-less than he would otherwise have done for <i>Ferrex and Porrex</i>,
-because he had required a loan of that amount on 10 March 1600, ‘to
-releace him owt of the Clyncke’.<a id="FNanchor_438" href="#Footnote_438" class="fnanchor">[438]</a> The record, again, for a few
-plays is most likely rendered imperfect by the loss of a leaf or two
-from the manuscript, which once contained entries for the end of April
-and beginning of May 1599.<a id="FNanchor_439" href="#Footnote_439" class="fnanchor">[439]</a> When these factors have been taken
-into consideration, the resultant total of possibly unfinished plays
-is not a very large one, amounting for 1597–1600 on my calculation to
-not more than twenty as against fifty-six new plays duly completed and
-paid for in full. Of these twenty it is very likely that some were in
-fact finished, either for other companies, or for the Admiral’s men
-themselves, later than the period covered by the diary. It is, however,
-consonant with the literary temperament to suppose that some at least
-remained within the category of unrealized projects. The most puzzling
-problem is that of Haughton’s <i>A Woman will have her Will</i>. For
-this it is impossible to trace payments beyond £2 10<i>s.</i>, and
-these are not stated to be in full. Yet the play is not only now extant
-but was certainly extant in 1598. In this case I see no alternative to
-Dr. Greg’s theory of direct payments by the company.</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe’s notes of advances to authors are not the sole material
-which is available for drawing up an account of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span> the repertory of the
-Admiral’s men. There are also entries of the purchase of costumes
-and properties for certain plays, and of fees for the licensing of
-plays by the Master of the Revels. And there is a valuable series of
-inventories, formerly preserved at Dulwich, and dating from 1598, which
-record respectively the stock of apparel and properties in the hands of
-the Admiral’s men during the second week of March, their play-books at
-the same date, and the additions made out of Henslowe’s purchases up
-to about the following August.<a id="FNanchor_440" href="#Footnote_440" class="fnanchor">[440]</a> The theory that some of the plays
-recorded in the diary were never finished receives confirmation from
-the absence of any corroborative proof of their existence in these
-subsidiary entries and documents, whereas such evidence exists in
-the case of a very large proportion of the plays for which the diary
-records payment in full. It must not, however, be assumed, either that
-every play completed necessarily got produced, although it is not
-likely that many were withheld, or that a play was necessarily not
-produced, because no special apparel or properties were bought for it,
-since it may have been quite possible to mount some plays out of the
-company’s existing stock. The number of fees paid for licensing is so
-small in proportion to the number of plays certainly produced, that
-these fees cannot all be supposed to have passed through Henslowe’s
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>Subject to the difficulties discussed in the foregoing paragraphs, I
-think that the following is a fairly accurate account of the repertory
-of the company for the three years now in question.<a id="FNanchor_441" href="#Footnote_441" class="fnanchor">[441]</a> During 1597–8
-they purchased seventeen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span> new plays. These, with the names of their
-authors, were:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Mother Redcap</i> (Drayton and Munday).</li>
- <li><i>Phaethon</i> (Dekker).</li>
- <li><i>1 Robin Hood</i> (Munday).</li>
- <li><i>2 Robin Hood</i> (Chettle and Munday).</li>
- <li><i>The Triangle of Cuckolds</i> (Dekker).<a id="FNanchor_442" href="#Footnote_442" class="fnanchor">[442]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Welshman’s Prize</i>, or, <i>The Famous Wars of Henry I and the Prince of Wales</i> (Chettle, Dekker, and Drayton).<a id="FNanchor_443" href="#Footnote_443" class="fnanchor">[443]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons</i> (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>2 Earl Godwin and his Three Sons</i> (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).</li>
- <li><i>King Arthur</i> (Hathway).</li>
- <li><i>Love Prevented</i> (Porter).<a id="FNanchor_444" href="#Footnote_444" class="fnanchor">[444]</a></li>
- <li><i>A Woman will have her Will</i> (Haughton).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 Black Bateman of the North</i> (Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).</li>
- <li><i>2 Black Bateman of the North</i> (Chettle and Wilson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Madman’s Morris</i> (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Funeral of Richard Cœur de Lion</i> (Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Hannibal and Hermes</i> (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).<a id="FNanchor_445" href="#Footnote_445" class="fnanchor">[445]</a></li>
- <li><i>Valentine and Orson</i> (Hathway and Munday).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>There is evidence of the actual performance of <i>Mother Redcap</i>,
-<i>Phaethon</i> (January), <i>1 and 2 Robin Hood</i> (March), <i>1 Earl
-Godwin</i> (April), <i>King Arthur</i> (May), <i>2 Earl Godwin</i>
-(June), <i>1 Black Bateman</i> (June). Properties were bought for
-<i>The Madman’s Morris</i> in July, and the next season probably opened
-with it. To the new plays must be added <i>Friar Spendleton</i>,
-produced as ‘ne’ on 31 October, and <i>Dido and Aeneas</i>. A loan
-of 30<i>s.</i> on 8 January ‘when they fyrst played Dido at nyght’
-suggests a supper, not a night performance. Either play may have been
-purchased at the end of 1596–7, or may have come from Pembroke’s stock.
-The same applies to <i>Branholt</i> and <i>Alice Pierce</i>, which
-were probably new when properties were purchased for them in November
-and December. The company also bought on 12 December two jigs<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span> from
-two young men, for which they paid 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> Hardly any of
-the 1597–8 new plays are extant. The two parts of <i>Robin Hood</i>
-are <i>The Downfall of Robert Earl of Huntingdon</i>, and <i>The Death
-of Robert Earl of Huntingdon</i>, printed without Munday’s name as
-Admiral’s plays in 1601. Haughton’s <i>A Woman will have her Will</i>
-was entered on the Stationers’ Register on 3 August 1601, and printed
-with the alternative title of <i>Englishmen for my Money</i> in 1616.
-<i>Phaethon</i> probably underlies Dekker and Ford’s <i>The Sun’s
-Darling</i>, and it is a plausible conjecture of Mr. Fleay’s that
-<i>Love Prevented</i> may be <i>1 The Two Angry Women of Abingdon</i>,
-printed as an Admiral’s play in 1599, and not to be traced elsewhere
-in the diary. The payments for four plays during the year, besides the
-puzzling <i>A Woman will have her Will</i>, were incomplete. I take it
-that the £2 paid to Chettle, Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson for <i>Pierce
-of Exton</i> was transferred to the account for <i>2 Earl Godwin</i>,
-which otherwise lacks just that amount of the full £6; that Chettle
-failed to deliver <i>A Woman’s Tragedy</i>; that Chapman’s <i>Isle of a
-Woman</i> was held over until 1598–9; and that a projected tragedy of
-Ben Jonson’s was similarly held over, and then indefinitely postponed
-owing to the tragedy in real life of Spencer’s death. There are two
-entries with regard to this. On 3 December 1597, Henslowe lent Jonson
-20<i>s.</i> ‘vpon a boocke which he showed the plotte vnto the company
-which he promysed to deliver vnto the company at Cryssmas next’. On 23
-October 1598, a month after the duel, not Jonson, but Chapman, received
-£3 ‘one his playe boocke &amp; ij ectes of a tragedie of Bengemenes
-plotte’. I think that Chapman’s own play was <i>The Four Kings</i>
-and that he finished it in 1599; but I see no sign that he ever did
-anything with ‘Bengemenes plotte’.</p>
-
-<p>Of older plays the Admiral’s revived at the beginning of the year
-Chapman’s success of the previous spring, <i>The Comedy of Humours</i>;
-also the perennial <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, and two pieces which, as they
-formed no part of the 1594–7 repertory, may have been brought in by
-Pembroke’s men, <i>Hardicanute</i> and <i>Bourbon</i>. They bought
-for £8 from Martin Slater <i>1 and 2 Hercules</i>, <i>Phocas</i>,
-<i>Pythagoras</i>, and <i>Alexander and Lodowick</i>, all of which had
-been produced between May 1595 and January 1597, and had evidently been
-retained by Slater when he left the company. These books presumably
-do not include that which became the subject of the lawsuit between
-Slater and the Admiral’s men, and as they had afterwards to buy back
-some of their old books in a precisely similar way from Alleyn, it
-is probable that a retiring member<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span> of the company had a right to
-claim a partition of the repertory. They also bought <i>The Cobler of
-Queenhithe</i>,<a id="FNanchor_446" href="#Footnote_446" class="fnanchor">[446]</a> and from Robert Lee, formerly of the Admiral’s
-men and afterwards of Queen Anne’s, <i>The Miller</i>. But of these
-seven purchased plays, the only one that they can be proved to have
-revived is one of the <i>Hercules</i> plays, for which they bought
-properties in July. The book-inventory shows that they had plays
-called <i>Black Joan</i> and <i>Sturgflattery</i>,<a id="FNanchor_447" href="#Footnote_447" class="fnanchor">[447]</a> also possibly
-from Pembroke’s stock; and the property-inventories that they had
-properties and clothes, if not in all cases books,<a id="FNanchor_448" href="#Footnote_448" class="fnanchor">[448]</a> for <i>The
-Battle of Alcazar</i><a id="FNanchor_449" href="#Footnote_449" class="fnanchor">[449]</a> and for a number of pieces staged during
-1594–7, including <i>Mahomet</i>,<a id="FNanchor_450" href="#Footnote_450" class="fnanchor">[450]</a> <i>Tamburlaine</i>,<a id="FNanchor_451" href="#Footnote_451" class="fnanchor">[451]</a> <i>The
-Jew of Malta</i>,<a id="FNanchor_452" href="#Footnote_452" class="fnanchor">[452]</a> <i>1 Fortunatus</i>,<a id="FNanchor_453" href="#Footnote_453" class="fnanchor">[453]</a> <i>The Siege of
-London</i>,<a id="FNanchor_454" href="#Footnote_454" class="fnanchor">[454]</a> <i>Belin Dun</i>,<a id="FNanchor_455" href="#Footnote_455" class="fnanchor">[455]</a> <i>Tasso’s Melancholy</i>,<a id="FNanchor_456" href="#Footnote_456" class="fnanchor">[456]</a>
-<i>1 Caesar and Pompey</i>,<a id="FNanchor_457" href="#Footnote_457" class="fnanchor">[457]</a> <i>The Wise Man of West
-Chester</i>,<a id="FNanchor_458" href="#Footnote_458" class="fnanchor">[458]</a> <i>The Set at Maw</i>,<a id="FNanchor_459" href="#Footnote_459" class="fnanchor">[459]</a> <i>Olympo</i>,<a id="FNanchor_460" href="#Footnote_460" class="fnanchor">[460]</a>
-<i>Henry V</i>,<a id="FNanchor_461" href="#Footnote_461" class="fnanchor">[461]</a> <i>Longshanks</i>,<a id="FNanchor_462" href="#Footnote_462" class="fnanchor">[462]</a> <i>Troy</i>,<a id="FNanchor_463" href="#Footnote_463" class="fnanchor">[463]</a>
-<i>Vortigern</i>,<a id="FNanchor_464" href="#Footnote_464" class="fnanchor">[464]</a> <i>Guido</i>,<a id="FNanchor_465" href="#Footnote_465" class="fnanchor">[465]</a> <i>Uther Pendragon</i>.<a id="FNanchor_466" href="#Footnote_466" class="fnanchor">[466]</a>
-To these must be added <i>Pontius Pilate</i>,<a id="FNanchor_467" href="#Footnote_467" class="fnanchor">[467]</a> revived in 1601 and
-perhaps from the Pembroke’s stock, and others now unidentifiable.<a id="FNanchor_468" href="#Footnote_468" class="fnanchor">[468]</a>
-As the company revived <i>The Blind Beggar of Alexandria</i> in 1601
-they probably had this also.<a id="FNanchor_469" href="#Footnote_469" class="fnanchor">[469]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span></p>
-
-<p>The new plays purchased in 1598–9 were twenty-one in number:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Pierce of Winchester</i> (Dekker, Drayton, and Wilson).</li>
- <li><i>Hot Anger Soon Cold</i> (Chettle, Jonson, and Porter).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Chance Medley</i> (Chettle or Dekker, Drayton, Munday, and Wilson).<a id="FNanchor_470" href="#Footnote_470" class="fnanchor">[470]</a></li>
- <li><i>Worse Afeared than Hurt</i> (Dekker and Drayton).<a id="FNanchor_471" href="#Footnote_471" class="fnanchor">[471]</a></li>
- <li><i>1 Civil Wars of France</i> (Dekker and Drayton).</li>
- <li><i>The Fount of New Fashions</i> (Chapman).<a id="FNanchor_472" href="#Footnote_472" class="fnanchor">[472]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>2 The Conquest of Brute</i>, or, <i>Brute Greenshield</i> (Chettle).<a id="FNanchor_473" href="#Footnote_473" class="fnanchor">[473]</a></li>
- <li><i>Connan, Prince of Cornwall</i> (Dekker and Drayton).</li>
- <li><i>2 Civil Wars of France</i> (Dekker and Drayton).</li>
- <li><i>3 Civil Wars of France</i> (Dekker and Drayton).</li>
- <li><i>The Four Kings</i> (Chapman).<a id="FNanchor_474" href="#Footnote_474" class="fnanchor">[474]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>War without Blows and Love without Suit</i> (Heywood).<a id="FNanchor_475" href="#Footnote_475" class="fnanchor">[475]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>First Introduction of the Civil Wars of France</i> (Dekker).</li>
- <li><i>2 Two Angry Women of Abingdon</i> (Porter).</li>
- <li><i>Joan as Good as my Lady</i> (Heywood)</li>
- <li><i>Friar Fox and Gillian of Brentford</i> (Anon.).</li>
- <li><i>The Spencers</i> (Chettle and Porter).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Troy’s Revenge and the Tragedy of Polyphemus</i> (Chettle).</li>
- <li><i>Troilus and Cressida</i> (Chettle and Dekker).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Agamemnon</i>, or, <i>Orestes Furious</i> (Chettle and Dekker).<a id="FNanchor_476" href="#Footnote_476" class="fnanchor">[476]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The World Runs on Wheels</i>, or, <i>All Fools but the Fool</i> (Chapman).<a id="FNanchor_477" href="#Footnote_477" class="fnanchor">[477]</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The property and licence entries only make it possible to trace the
-actual performance during the year of <i>Pierce of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span> Winchester</i>
-(October), <i>1 and 2 Civil Wars of France</i> (October and November),
-<i>The Fount of New Fashions</i> (November), <i>2 Angry Women
-of Abingdon</i> (February), <i>2 Conquest of Brute</i> (March),
-<i>The Four Kings</i> (March), <i>The Spencers</i> (April), and
-<i>Agamemnon</i> (June). Probably, in view of the extant fragment of
-a ‘plot’ <i>Troilus and Cressida</i> should be added. The production
-of <i>Troy’s Revenge</i> was deferred until the following October.
-No one of this year’s new plays is extant, unless, as is possible,
-<i>All Fools but the Fool</i> was an early form of Chapman’s <i>All
-Fools</i>.<a id="FNanchor_478" href="#Footnote_478" class="fnanchor">[478]</a> Earnests were paid in the course of 1598–9 for
-<i>Catiline’s Conspiracy</i> (Chettle), <i>Tis no Deceit to Deceive
-the Deceiver</i> (Chettle), <i>William Longsword</i><a id="FNanchor_479" href="#Footnote_479" class="fnanchor">[479]</a> (Drayton),
-<i>Two Merry Women of Abingdon</i> (Porter), and an unnamed pastoral
-tragedy by Chapman, but there is no reason to suppose that any one of
-these was ever finished. On 9 August 1598 Munday had 10s. in earnest
-of an unnamed comedy ‘for the corte’ and Drayton gave his word for
-the book to be done in a fortnight, but the project must have been
-dropped, as the entry was cancelled. Of old plays the company revived
-in August <i>Vayvode</i>, in November <i>The Massacre at Paris</i>,
-in which Bird played the Guise,<a id="FNanchor_480" href="#Footnote_480" class="fnanchor">[480]</a> in December <i>1 The Conquest
-of Brute</i>, bought from John Day, and in March <i>Alexander and
-Lodowick</i>, bought from Martin Slater in the preceding year. As to
-<i>Vayvode</i>, the entries are rather puzzling. In August Chettle
-received £1 ‘for his playe of Vayvode’, and the purchase of properties
-show that the production took place. But in the following January
-there was a payment of £2 to Alleyn ‘for the playe of Vayvod for the
-company’. Possibly Alleyn had some rights in the manuscript, which
-were at first overlooked. On 25 November Chettle had 10<i>s.</i> ‘for
-mendinge of Roben Hood for the corte’. Either <i>1</i> or <i>2</i>
-<i>Robin Hood</i> was therefore probably the play given on 6 January
-1599. At the beginning of the year the company bought <i>Mulmutius
-Dunwallow</i> from William Rankins and another old play called
-<i>Tristram of Lyons</i>, but it must be uncertain whether they played
-them. A reference in Guilpin’s <i>Skialetheia</i> suggests that <i>The
-Spanish Tragedy</i> may have been on the boards of the Rose not long
-before September 1598.<a id="FNanchor_481" href="#Footnote_481" class="fnanchor">[481]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span></p>
-
-<p>The new plays completed during 1599–1600, twenty in all, were:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>The Gentle Craft</i> (Dekker).<a id="FNanchor_482" href="#Footnote_482" class="fnanchor">[482]</a></li>
- <li><i>Bear a Brain</i> (Dekker).<a id="FNanchor_483" href="#Footnote_483" class="fnanchor">[483]</a></li>
- <li><i>Page of Plymouth</i> (Dekker and Jonson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Robert II</i>, or, <i>The Scot’s Tragedy</i> (Chettle, Dekker, Jonson, and Marston).<a id="FNanchor_484" href="#Footnote_484" class="fnanchor">[484]</a></li>
- <li><i>The Stepmother’s Tragedy</i> (Chettle and Dekker).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i> (Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson).</li>
- <li><i>Cox of Collumpton</i> (Day and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>2 Henry Richmond</i> (Wilson).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>2 Sir John Oldcastle</i> (Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson).</li>
- <li><i>Patient Grissell</i> (Chettle, Dekker, and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>The Whole History of Fortunatus</i> (Dekker).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Thomas Merry</i>, or, <i>Beech’s Tragedy</i> (Day and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>Jugurtha</i> (Boyle).<a id="FNanchor_485" href="#Footnote_485" class="fnanchor">[485]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Seven Wise Masters</i> (Chettle, Day, Dekker, and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>Ferrex and Porrex</i> (Haughton).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Cupid and Psyche</i>, or, <i>The Golden Ass</i> (Chettle, Day, and Dekker).</li>
- <li><i>Damon and Pythias</i> (Chettle).</li>
- <li><i>Strange News out of Poland</i> (Haughton and Pett).</li>
- <li><i>1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> (Chettle and Day).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 Fair Constance of Rome</i> (Dekker, Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and Wilson).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span></p>
-
-<p>It is possible to verify the actual performance of <i>Page of
-Plymouth</i> (September), <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i> (November),<a href="#Footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a>
-Fortunatus (December), <i>The Gentle Craft</i> (January), <i>Thomas
-Merry</i> (January), <i>Patient Grissell</i> (January), <i>2 Sir John
-Oldcastle</i> (March), <i>The Seven Wise Masters</i> (March), <i>Ferrex
-and Porrex</i> (May), <i>Damon and Pythias</i> (May), <i>Strange News
-out of Poland</i> (May), <i>Cupid and Psyche</i> (June). <i>Sir John
-Oldcastle</i> must of course be regarded as a counterblast to the
-<i>Henry IV</i> plays of the Chamberlain’s men, in which the character
-of Falstaff originally bore the name of the Lollard hero. One infers
-that it had a considerable success, for the company gave 10s. for
-‘Mr. Mundaye and the reste of the poets at the playnge of Sr John
-Oldcastell the ferste tyme’, and Henslowe notes in the margin that
-this was ‘as a gefte’. It is with some hesitation that I have included
-<i>Fortunatus</i> in the list of new plays, because it is impossible
-to suppose that it was not based upon the earlier <i>Fortunatus</i>,
-already an old play in 1596, of the properties of which the Admiral’s
-men certainly retained possession. But Dekker was paid on the scale
-of a new play, for he got a full £6 in the course of November for
-the book, together with an additional £1 ‘for the altrenge of the
-boocke’ and £2 a fortnight later ‘for the eande of Fortewnatus for
-the corte’. I take it that this was the Court play of 27 December.
-That of 1 January was another of Dekker’s, <i>The Gentle Craft</i>,
-also called <i>The Shoemaker’s Holiday</i>, which was published in
-the year ‘1600’ as played before the Queen ‘on New Year’s Day at
-night last’ by the Admiral’s men. <i>Fortunatus</i>, <i>1 Sir John
-Oldcastle</i>,<a id="FNanchor_486" href="#Footnote_486" class="fnanchor">[486]</a> <i>Patient Grissell</i>, and
-<i>1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> have also been preserved, while
-the publication, also in the course of the twelve months ending on 24
-March 1601, of <i>Look About You</i> as an Admiral’s play must surely
-render plausible the hypothesis, rejected by Dr. Greg, of its identity
-with <i>Bear a Brain</i>. It would seem that <i>Thomas Merry</i>
-furnishes one of the two parallel plots of Robert Yarington’s <i>Two
-Lamentable Tragedies</i>, and a notice by Simon Forman suggests that
-<i>Cox of Collumpton</i> was ultimately finished.<a id="FNanchor_487" href="#Footnote_487" class="fnanchor">[487]</a> An outline of
-the opening scenes of <i>2 Henry Richmond</i> is among the Dulwich
-papers.<a id="FNanchor_488" href="#Footnote_488" class="fnanchor">[488]</a> Publication was a form of popularity which the actors
-were apt to resent. The Admiral’s men spent £2 on 18 March 1600 ‘to
-geue vnto the printer to staye the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span> printing of Patient Gresell’. This
-did not prevent the play being entered on the Stationers’ Register on
-28 March, but does perhaps explain why the earliest known edition is
-dated 1603. The unfinished plays of 1599–1600 were <i>The Poor Man’s
-Paradise</i> (Haughton), <i>The Orphans’ Tragedy</i> (Chettle),<a id="FNanchor_489" href="#Footnote_489" class="fnanchor">[489]</a>
-an unnamed Italian tragedy by Day, <i>The Arcadian Virgin</i> (Chettle
-and Haughton), <i>Owen Tudor</i> (Drayton, Hathway, Munday, and
-Wilson), <i>Truth’s Supplication to Candlelight</i> (Dekker),<a id="FNanchor_490" href="#Footnote_490" class="fnanchor">[490]</a>
-<i>The Spanish Moor’s Tragedy</i> (Day, Dekker, and Haughton),<a id="FNanchor_491" href="#Footnote_491" class="fnanchor">[491]</a>
-<i>The English Fugitives</i> (Haughton), <i>The Devil and his Dame</i>
-(Haughton),<a id="FNanchor_492" href="#Footnote_492" class="fnanchor">[492]</a> <i>The Wooing of Death</i> (Chettle), <i>Judas</i>
-(Haughton),<a id="FNanchor_493" href="#Footnote_493" class="fnanchor">[493]</a> <i>2 Fair Constance of Rome</i> (Hathway), and
-an unnamed play by Chettle and Day.<a id="FNanchor_494" href="#Footnote_494" class="fnanchor">[494]</a> Except in so far as
-<i>Fortunatus</i> was an old play, I find no trace of a revival during
-1599–1600, but it may be assumed that some of the productions of the
-last two years still held the boards.</p>
-
-<p>The year 1600 was another turning-point in the history of the company.
-Probably at some date between 14 August, when the first entry in a
-fresh account was made, and 28 October, when Pembroke’s men were in
-occupation of the Rose, they crossed the river, and took up their
-quarters at Alleyn’s recently built Fortune, on the north-west boundary
-of the City. A more important event still was the return of Alleyn
-himself to the stage, from which he had been absent for three years.
-It is suggested in the Privy Council letter of 8 April 1600 to the
-Middlesex justices in favour of the Fortune project, that this step was
-determined by the personal wish of the Queen to see the great actor at
-Court with his fellows again.<a id="FNanchor_495" href="#Footnote_495" class="fnanchor">[495]</a> It is not quite clear on what terms
-he rejoined the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span> company. There was a ‘composicion’ or agreement, in
-connexion with which a payment of £4 was made to him on 11 November.
-The next entry, which is undated, runs, ‘P<sup>d</sup> vnto my sonne Alleyn for
-the firste weckes playe the xj parte of xvij<sup>ll</sup> ix<sup>s</sup> which came to
-therti &amp; ij shellinges’. There are no further entries of the same
-kind until the date of a reckoning in February 1602, when Henslowe
-paid Alleyn 27<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> ‘dew to my sone out of the gallery
-money’. Probably this was a share of some small residue, the origin of
-which cannot now be traced. The earlier payment suggests that Alleyn
-received one full share of the actors’ takings, for, if I am right in
-supposing that the brothers Jeffes only held half a share each, there
-would have been just ten sharers besides himself. Or possibly his share
-may have been limited to the actors’ moiety of the gallery takings,
-and the outgoings may all have been charged to the receipts from the
-yard. Certainly Alleyn does not seem to have had any responsibility for
-these outgoings. His name is never put with those of other sharers to
-Henslowe’s periodical reckonings, and if his play-books were used, they
-were bought from him. On the other hand, he sometimes, although not so
-often as some of his fellows, ‘appointed’ payments, and he received the
-Court money for the company, alike in 1601, 1602, and 1603. That his
-share did not pass through Henslowe’s hands after the date of the first
-instalment is perhaps explained by the assumption that, as the owner
-and joint occupier with Henslowe of the Fortune, the appointment of a
-‘gatherer’ for the gallery money may naturally have fallen to him.</p>
-
-<p>Some such change in the financial arrangements may also account for the
-fact that, while Henslowe’s record of advances continues on the same
-lines as that for 1597–1600, the notes of weekly repayments are now
-discontinued. As a result it is no longer possible to determine with
-any exactness the length of the theatrical seasons, since, naturally
-enough, the outgoings did not altogether stop while the house was
-closed. Their course, however, suggests intervals in February and March
-1601, February to April 1602, August 1602 and January and February
-1603. It is possible, although not very likely, that there was no
-cessation of playing during the summer of 1601. I find no evidence of
-further provincial travels before the end of the reign. These were, I
-think, years of prosperity. The players still required small personal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>
-advances from time to time, and Thomas Towne was reduced to pawning
-a pair of stockings on 13 March 1602.<a id="FNanchor_496" href="#Footnote_496" class="fnanchor">[496]</a> But it is noticeable that
-about the previous June Henslowe opened an account under the heading,
-‘Begininge to receue of thes meane ther privet deates which they
-owe vnto me’, and was able to enter in it a series of repayments by
-Jones, Downton, Bird, and Shaw.<a id="FNanchor_497" href="#Footnote_497" class="fnanchor">[497]</a> Bird, however, still owed £10
-10<i>s.</i> on 12 March 1602, and Henslowe noted, ‘He is cleere of all
-debtes &amp; demaundes except theis debtes and such stocke &amp; covenentes as
-I maie clayme &amp; challendge of him by reason of his coniunction with
-the companie’.<a id="FNanchor_498" href="#Footnote_498" class="fnanchor">[498]</a> Whether the playwrights reaped any benefit may be
-doubted. The tendency to a rise of prices which showed itself in 1599
-was hardly maintained. Some of them were still impecunious enough.
-The company had, on more than one occasion to redeem a play which the
-unfortunate Chettle had pawned with one Bromfield, a mercer; and in
-March 1602 he seems to have followed Porter’s example and put his hand,
-for a consideration of £3, to an instrument binding him to write for
-them alone.<a id="FNanchor_499" href="#Footnote_499" class="fnanchor">[499]</a> There were some legal troubles in the course of 1601.
-A sum of £21 10<i>s.</i> had to be paid on a bond to a Mr. Treheren
-during March, and in August there were fees to a jury and a clerk of
-assizes. The company had also to find 10<i>s.</i> in May ‘to geatte
-the boye into the ospetalle which was hurt at the Fortewne’.<a id="FNanchor_500" href="#Footnote_500" class="fnanchor">[500]</a>
-Information as to the composition of the company at some time between
-Alleyn’s return and February 1602 is given by the ‘plot’ of <i>The
-Battle of Alcazar</i>, although, as this is mutilated, it must not be
-treated as negative evidence, and in particular the names of W. Borne
-and John Singer are missing.<a id="FNanchor_501" href="#Footnote_501" class="fnanchor">[501]</a> All the other sharers, however, are
-found in it&mdash;‘Mr. Ed. Allen, Mr. Doughton, Mr. Juby, Mr. Shaa, Mr.
-Jones, Mr. Towne, Antony Jeffes, H. Jeffes, Mr. Charles [Massey],
-and Mr. Sam [Rowley]’. There are also Mr. Rich. Allen and Mr. Hunt,
-who were not sharers, but whose long service had apparently earned
-them the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span> dignity of the ‘Mr.’, W. Kendall, Jeames, who was possibly
-Henslowe’s apprentice James Bristow and possibly Jones’s boy of the
-same name, and Dob, who was probably the Dobe of the 1598 inventory.
-The remaining names, all of which are new, are those of W. Cartwright,
-who, however, had witnessed a loan for Henslowe as far back as 21
-April 1598,<a id="FNanchor_502" href="#Footnote_502" class="fnanchor">[502]</a> Dick Jubie, Ro. Tailor, George Somerset, Tho. Drum,
-[Thomas] Parsons, Harry, and the ‘boys’ of Mr. Allen and Mr. Towne. The
-only important woman’s part, that of Callipolis, is assigned by the
-‘plot’ to Pisano, which does not look like an actor’s name and may be a
-mistake. The services of Bristow were evidently leased out by Henslowe
-to the company or some one of its members, at a rate of 3<i>s.</i> a
-week. Antony Jeffes paid two weeks’ arrears ‘for my boyes Jeames wages’
-in August 1600, and Henslowe charged the company £6 10<i>s.</i> on the
-same account in the following February.<a id="FNanchor_503" href="#Footnote_503" class="fnanchor">[503]</a> Another boy attached to
-the company about the same time must have been ‘Nick’, for whom hose
-‘to tumbell in be fore the quen’ were bought on 25 December 1601. Hugh
-Davis, for the mending of whose tawny coat ‘which was eatten with the
-rattes’ 6<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> was paid in November 1601, was perhaps a
-hired man. A list of the responsible members of the company is attached
-by Henslowe to a reckoning cast between 7 and 23 February 1602. They
-were then ‘John Singer, Thomas Downton, William Byrd, Edward Juby,
-Thomas Towne, Humphrey Jeffs, Anthony Jeffs, Samuel Rowley, and Charles
-Massy’.<a id="FNanchor_504" href="#Footnote_504" class="fnanchor">[504]</a> A note is added that £50 had been advanced ‘to geve vnto
-Mr. Jonnes &amp; Mr. Shaw at ther goinge a waye’. This departure must have
-been quite recent. Shaw had been agent for the company on the previous
-21 January, and the list of continuing members is in fact in his
-handwriting. The last instalment of Jones’s private debt had been paid
-off on 1 November. His three years’ agreement with Henslowe had expired
-at Michaelmas 1600. Richard Alleyn must have died in September 1602,
-for on the 19th of that month his widow borrowed £5 10<i>s.</i> to take
-her mantle and sheet and face-cloth out of pawn.<a id="FNanchor_505" href="#Footnote_505" class="fnanchor">[505]</a> Neither Shaw nor
-Jones nor Richard Alleyn is in the plot of <i>1 Tamar Cham</i>, which
-may reasonably be assigned to a date in the vicinity of the purchase
-of the book from Alleyn on 2 October 1602. This is of interest, partly
-because it is complete, and partly because there was a procession
-in the play, and the number of supernumeraries required must have
-tried the resources<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span> of the establishment to their utmost. All the
-principal members of the company appeared&mdash;‘Mr. Allen, Mr. Denygten,
-Mr. Boorne, Mr. Towne, Mr. Singer, Mr. Jubie, H. Jeffs, A. Jeffs, Mr.
-Charles [Massey], and Mr. Sam [Rowley]’; and in addition Dick Jubie, W.
-Cart[wright], George [Somerset], Tho. Parsons, and Jeames [Bristow],
-who were in <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, and W. Parr, Tho. Marbeck,
-Jack Grigorie, Gedion, Gibbs, Tho. Rowley, Rester, ‘old Browne’, Ned
-Browne, ‘the red fast fellow’ and several boys, described, perhaps
-in some cases twice over, as Jack Jones, ‘little Will’, ‘little
-Will Barne’, who do not seem to be identical, ‘Gils his boy’, ‘Mr.
-Denyghtens little boy’, perhaps the same already recorded in 1600,
-and ‘the other little boy’. ‘Old Browne’ can hardly be Robert Browne,
-who seems to have been in Germany; but Ned Browne may be the Edward
-Browne who, like Robert, was a member of Worcester’s company in 1583.
-Little is added by the only other extant ‘plot’, the fragmentary one of
-<i>2 Fortune’s Tennis</i>. This is difficult to date, but it must be
-later than Dekker’s <i>1 Fortune’s Tennis</i> of September 1600, and
-may not improbably be Munday’s <i>Set at Tennis</i> of December 1602.
-The few names which it contains&mdash;Mr. Singer, Sam, Charles, Geo[rge
-Somerset], R. Tailor, W. Cartwright, Pavy&mdash;suggest proximity to <i>The
-Battle of Alcazar</i> and <i>1 Tamar Cham</i>. The only fresh one is
-that of Pavy, who may or may not be connected with the Salathiel Pavy
-of Ben Jonson’s epitaph. Both <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> and <i>2 Fortune’s
-Tennis</i> must be earlier than January 1603, a month which saw the
-retirement of the old Queen’s man, John Singer. So at least may be
-inferred from the fact that he makes no further appearance in the diary
-after 13 January, when he received £5 ‘for his play called Syngers
-Vallentarey’. I take ‘vallentarey’ to mean ‘valediction’. His name
-is absent from the next list of the company, which belongs to 1604.
-He probably left to become an ordinary Groom of the Chamber in the
-royal household, a post which he is found occupying at the time of
-Elizabeth’s funeral.<a id="FNanchor_506" href="#Footnote_506" class="fnanchor">[506]</a></p>
-
-<p>The succession of new plays was not quite so rapid during 1600–3 as
-in previous periods. I can only trace thirty-one in all, as against
-fifty-five in 1594–7 and sixty-two in 1599–1600. It may well have
-been the case that Alleyn, who had ‘created’ parts in the ’eighties
-and early ’nineties, had a tendency towards revivals. For 1600–1 the
-company bought only seven new books. These were:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>1 Fortune’s Tennis</i> (Dekker).</li>
- <li><i>Hannibal and Scipio</i> (Hathway and Rankins).<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span></li>
- <li><i>Scogan and Skelton</i> (Hathway and Rankins).</li>
- <li><i>All is not Gold that Glisters</i> (Chettle).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> (Day and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>The Six Yeomen of the West</i> (Day and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>King Sebastian of Portugal</i> (Chettle and Dekker).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>None of these plays is extant, but the purchase of properties testifies
-to the performance of <i>2 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> in April
-and <i>The Six Yeomen of the West</i> in July. Moreover, Day received a
-bonus of 10<i>s.</i> between 27 April and 2 May ‘after the playinge of’
-the former piece. Only £1 was paid for <i>1 Fortune’s Tennis</i>, but
-the existence of a ‘plot’ for <i>2 Fortune’s Tennis</i> suggests that
-it must have been completed. Probably it was a short topical overture
-designed to celebrate the opening of the Fortune.<a id="FNanchor_507" href="#Footnote_507" class="fnanchor">[507]</a> Unfinished
-plays were <i>Robin Hood’s Pennyworths</i> (Haughton)<a id="FNanchor_508" href="#Footnote_508" class="fnanchor">[508]</a> and <i>The
-Conquest of Spain by John of Gaunt</i> (Hathway and Rankins). The
-revivals included <i>Phaethon</i> (January), <i>The Blind Beggar of
-Alexandria</i> (May), and <i>The Jew of Malta</i> (May). Dekker had
-£2 for ‘alterynge of’ <i>Phaethon</i> for the Court, and this was
-therefore the Admiral’s play of 6 January 1601. They also appeared
-on 28 December and 2 February. <i>Dr. Faustus</i> was entered on 7
-January; the earliest print (1604) bears their name. The new books of
-1601–2 were fourteen in number, as follows:<a id="FNanchor_509" href="#Footnote_509" class="fnanchor">[509]</a></p>
-
-<ul>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Conquest of the West Indies</i> (Day, Haughton, and Smith).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> (Day and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>The Life of Cardinal Wolsey</i> (Chettle).<a id="FNanchor_510" href="#Footnote_510" class="fnanchor">[510]</a></li>
- <li><i>1 The Six Clothiers</i> (Hathway, Haughton, and Smith).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Rising of Cardinal Wolsey</i> (Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and Smith).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Friar Rush and the Proud Woman of Antwerp</i> (Chettle, Day, and Haughton).</li>
- <li><i>Judas</i> (Bird and Rowley).<a id="FNanchor_511" href="#Footnote_511" class="fnanchor">[511]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span></li>
- <li><i>Too Good to be True</i> (Chettle, Hathway, and Smith).</li>
- <li><i>Malcolm King of Scots</i> (Massey).</li>
- <li><i>Love Parts Friendship</i> (Chettle and Smith).</li>
- <li><i>Jephthah</i> (Dekker and Munday).</li>
- <li><i>Tobias</i> (Chettle).</li>
- <li><i>The Bristol Tragedy</i> (Day).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Caesar’s Fall</i>, or, <i>The Two Shapes</i> (Dekker, Drayton, Middleton, Munday, and Webster).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>At least ten of these appear to have been played: <i>2 Cardinal
-Wolsey</i> (August), <i>3 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i>
-(September), <i>Judas</i> (January), <i>The Conquest of the West
-Indies</i> (January), <i>Malcolm King of Scots</i> (April), <i>Love
-Parts Friendship</i> (May), <i>1 Cardinal Wolsey</i> (June),
-<i>Jephthah</i> (July), and at uncertain dates, <i>Tobias</i> and
-probably <i>The Bristol Tragedy</i>.<a id="FNanchor_512" href="#Footnote_512" class="fnanchor">[512]</a> None is now extant. The
-unfinished plays were <i>The Humorous Earl of Gloucester with his
-Conquest of Portugal</i> (Wadeson), <i>2 Tom Dough</i><a id="FNanchor_513" href="#Footnote_513" class="fnanchor">[513]</a> (Day and
-Haughton), <i>The Orphan’s Tragedy</i> (Chettle),<a id="FNanchor_514" href="#Footnote_514" class="fnanchor">[514]</a> <i>2 The Six
-Clothiers</i> (Hathway, Haughton, and Smith),<a id="FNanchor_515" href="#Footnote_515" class="fnanchor">[515]</a> <i>The Spanish
-Fig</i> (Anon.),<a id="FNanchor_516" href="#Footnote_516" class="fnanchor">[516]</a> <i>Richard Crookback</i> (Jonson),<a id="FNanchor_517" href="#Footnote_517" class="fnanchor">[517]</a> <i>A
-Danish Tragedy</i> (Chettle),<a id="FNanchor_518" href="#Footnote_518" class="fnanchor">[518]</a> and <i>A Medicine for a Curst
-Wife</i> (Dekker).<a id="FNanchor_519" href="#Footnote_519" class="fnanchor">[519]</a> There was considerable activity of revival
-during the year. Six old plays belonging to the 1594–7 repertory,
-for some of which the company already held the properties,<a id="FNanchor_520" href="#Footnote_520" class="fnanchor">[520]</a> were
-bought<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span> from Alleyn at £2 each, <i>Mahomet</i> in August, <i>The Wise
-Man of West Chester</i> in September, <i>Vortigern</i> in November,
-and <i>The French Doctor</i>, <i>The Massacre at Paris</i>, and
-<i>Crack Me this Nut</i> in January. The first and the last three
-of these certainly were played, and the revival of <i>The Massacre
-at Paris</i> appears to have caused annoyance to Henri IV.<a id="FNanchor_521" href="#Footnote_521" class="fnanchor">[521]</a> In
-addition, properties were bought for one of the <i>Hercules</i> plays
-in December, Dekker got 10<i>s.</i> for a prologue and epilogue to
-<i>Pontius Pilate</i><a id="FNanchor_522" href="#Footnote_522" class="fnanchor">[522]</a> in January, and Jonson wrote additions to
-<i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, possibly those now extant, in September,
-although it may be doubted whether the further additions contemplated
-in the following June were ever made. There is nothing to show what was
-selected, other than Nick’s tumbling, for the Admiral’s only Court play
-of 1601–2, which took place on 27 December.</p>
-
-<p>The season of 1602–3 was, of course, shortened by the death of
-Elizabeth and the outbreak of plague. The new plays numbered nine. They
-were:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>Samson</i> (Anon.).</li>
- <li><i>Felmelanco</i> (Chettle and Robinson).</li>
- <li><i>Joshua</i> (Rowley).</li>
- <li><i>Randal Earl of Chester</i> (Middleton).</li>
- <li><i>Merry as May Be</i> (Day, Hathway, and Smith).</li>
- <li><i>The Set at Tennis</i> (Munday).</li>
- <li><i>1 The London Florentine</i> (Chettle and Heywood).</li>
- <li><i>Singer’s Voluntary</i> (Singer).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Boss of Billingsgate</i> (Day, Hathway, and another).<a id="FNanchor_523" href="#Footnote_523" class="fnanchor">[523]</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>It must be added that in September properties were bought for a ‘new
-playe’ called <i>The Earl of Hertford</i>, which it seems impossible
-to identify with any of the pieces bought. This looks like one of the
-rare cases in which payment did not pass through Henslowe’s hands.
-This and <i>Samson</i> are the only new plays of the year, the actual
-performance of which can be verified; and none of these plays is
-extant.<a id="FNanchor_524" href="#Footnote_524" class="fnanchor">[524]</a> I suspect, however, that Munday’s <i>Set at Tennis</i> is
-the <i>2 Fortune’s Tennis</i> of which a ‘plot’ survives. The payment,
-of only £3, was ‘in full’, and it may, like <i>1 Fortune’s Tennis</i>,
-have been a short piece of some exceptional character, motived by
-the name of the theatre in which it was presented. Unfinished<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span> plays
-at the end of the season were <i>The Widow’s Charm</i> (Munday or
-Wadeson),<a id="FNanchor_525" href="#Footnote_525" class="fnanchor">[525]</a> <i>William Cartwright</i> (Haughton), <i>Hoffman</i>
-(Chettle),<a id="FNanchor_526" href="#Footnote_526" class="fnanchor">[526]</a> <i>2 London Florentine</i> (Chettle and Heywood),
-<i>The Siege of Dunkirk and Alleyn the Pirate</i> (Massey). The
-revival of old plays continued. Costumes for <i>Vortigern</i>, one of
-those bought from Alleyn in the previous year, were in preparation
-during September, and Alleyn’s stock yielded three more, <i>Philip
-of Spain</i> and <i>Longshanks</i> in August and <i>Tamar Cham</i>,
-probably the second part, as the extant ‘plot’ testifies, in October.
-The last two of these belonged to the Admiral’s repertory of 1594–7,
-but the origin of <i>Philip of Spain</i> is unknown. A book of <i>The
-Four Sons of Aymon</i>, for which £2 was paid to Robert Shaw, was
-probably also old, and was bought on condition that Shaw should repay
-the £2, unless the play was used by the Admiral’s or some other company
-with his consent by Christmas 1604. Bird and Rowley had £4 in September
-for additions to <i>Dr. Faustus</i>. Dekker completed some alterations
-of <i>Tasso’s Melancholy</i>, another 1594–7 play, in December, and in
-the same month Middleton wrote ‘for the corte’ a prologue and epilogue
-to Greene’s <i>Friar Bacon and Friar Bungay</i>, which I should suppose
-to have been Henslowe’s property, as it was played by Strange’s men in
-1592–3 and the Queen’s and Sussex’s in 1594. This probably served for
-the first of the three appearances made by the Admiral’s at Court, on
-27 December. The other two were on 6 March and on a date unspecified.
-For one of these occasions Chettle was writing a prologue and epilogue
-at the end of December, but the play is not named.<a id="FNanchor_527" href="#Footnote_527" class="fnanchor">[527]</a> One of the new
-plays, <i>Merry as May Be</i>, was intended for Court, when the first
-payment on account of it was made on 9 November.</p>
-
-<p>On 12 March 1603 Henslowe practically closes the detailed record
-which he had kept continuously in his diary since October 1597 of
-his financial transactions, otherwise than by way of rent, with the
-Admiral’s men. A brief review of these is not without interest.<a id="FNanchor_528" href="#Footnote_528" class="fnanchor">[528]</a>
-His advances from 21 October 1597 to 8 March 1598 amounted to £46
-7<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i>, and to this he took the signatures of the
-company, with the note, ‘Thes men dothe aknowlege this deat to be dewe
-by them by seatynge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span> of ther handes to yette’. By 28 July a further
-amount of £120 15<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> had been incurred, making a
-total of £166 17<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for 1597–8.<a id="FNanchor_529" href="#Footnote_529" class="fnanchor">[529]</a> During the
-same period he entered weekly receipts from the company to a total
-of £125. These must have gone to an old debt, for he did not balance
-them with the payments for the year, but carried on the whole debit
-of £166 17<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> to 1598–9. Apparently, however, he
-was not satisfied with the way in which expenditure was outstripping
-income, for he headed a new receipts account, ‘Here I begyne to receue
-the wholle gallereys frome this daye beinge the 29 of July 1598’, and
-the weekly entries become about double what they were during 1597–8.
-On the other hand, there is also a considerable increase in the rate
-of expenditure. It is an ingenious and, I think, sound conjecture of
-Dr. Greg’s, that throughout 1594–1603 Henslowe was taking half the
-gallery money for rent, and that, at different times, he also took
-either the other half, or another quarter only, to recoup himself
-for his advances.<a id="FNanchor_530" href="#Footnote_530" class="fnanchor">[530]</a> The outgoings entered during 1598–9 reach
-£435 7<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, but some items for March and April 1599
-are probably missing, owing to a mutilation of the manuscript.<a id="FNanchor_531" href="#Footnote_531" class="fnanchor">[531]</a>
-The receipts for the same period were £358 3<i>s.</i> On 13 October
-1599, about a fortnight after the beginning of the 1599–1600 season,
-a balance was struck. Henslowe credited the company with the £358
-received from the gallery money, and debited them with £632 advanced
-by him. This includes £166 17<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i> for 1597–8, £435
-7<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for 1598–9, and £29 15<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i>, which
-may reasonably be taken as the sum of the missing entries for March and
-April 1599. The balance of £274 remained as a debt from the company.
-They did not, however, set their hands to a reckoning until the end
-of the next year, on 10 July 1600. During 1599–1600 a fresh account
-had been running, on which Henslowe’s receipts were £202 10<i>s.</i>
-and his payments £222 5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> At the reckoning the
-company’s indebtedness is calculated at £300, and is admitted by the
-formula, ‘which some of three hundred powndes we whose names are here
-vnder written doe acknowledge our dewe debt &amp; doe promyse payment’. To
-this their signatures are appended. There is, however, an unexplained
-discrepancy of £6 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span> old debt of £274 and
-the 1599–1600 debit balance of £19 15<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> only make up
-£293 15<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
-
-<p>From 1600 onwards there are no records of receipts. A continuous
-account of payments is kept up to 7 February 1602. The total amounts
-to £304 10<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, but Henslowe sums it in error as
-£308 6<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>, and notes, ‘Frome ther handes to this
-place is 308<sup>ll</sup>-06<sup>s</sup>-04<sup>d</sup> dewe vnto me &amp; with the three hundred of
-owld is £608-06-04<sup>d</sup>’. He then adds the £50 paid to Jones and Shaw
-on retirement, ‘which is not in this recknynge’. Above this summary
-comes a list of names, said by Dr. Greg to be in Shaw’s hand, of those
-sharers who were continuing in the company, headed by the figures ‘211.
-9. 0.’ I think the interpretation is that £386 17<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-of the £608 6<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> was paid out of gallery money or
-other sources, leaving £211 9<i>s.</i>, together with the £50 for Jones
-and Shaw, chargeable on the company. This is borne out by the remnant
-of the accounts, which is headed, ‘Begininge with a new recknyng with
-my lord of Notingames men the 23 daye of Febreary 1601 as foloweth’.
-The expenditure on this new reckoning up to 12 March 1603 was, as
-calculated by Henslowe, £188 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, and he adds to
-this total a sum of £211 9<i>s.</i> ‘vpon band’, being evidently the
-residue of the debt as it stood at the close of the old reckoning, and
-makes a total of £400 0<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> This, with the £50 for
-Jones and Shaw, was no doubt what the company owed when the detailed
-account in the diary closed. There was, however, an unstated amount
-of gallery receipts during 1602–3 to set against it; and in fact a
-retrospect of the whole series of figures shows that there would
-have been a pretty fair equivalence of gallery money and advances
-throughout, but for the exceptionally heavy expenditure of 1598–9, £465
-2<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i> in all, which left the company saddled with an
-obligation which they never quite overtook. This expenditure was more
-than half the total expenditure of £854 5<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for the
-<i>triennium</i> 1597–1600, and nearly as much as the whole expenditure
-of £493 1<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i> for the <i>triennium</i> 1600–3, during
-which it may be suspected that the business capacities of Alleyn
-brought about considerable economies.</p>
-
-<p>The accounts may be looked at from another point of view. If the
-unanalysable sum of £29 15<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> for the missing items
-of March and April 1599 be neglected, there was a total expenditure
-for the six years of £1,317 11<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i> Of this £652
-13<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, being about half, went in payments in respect
-of play-books; £561 1<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> for properties and apparel;
-and £103 16<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> in miscellaneous outgoings, such
-as licensing fees, legal charges, musical instruments, travelling
-expenses,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span> merry-makings and the like. Thus, if the company supped
-together at Mr. Mason’s of the Queen’s Head, or met to read a ‘book’
-at the Sun in New Fish Street, Henslowe would put his hand into his
-pocket to pay the score, and would not forget afterwards to debit the
-company with the amount in his diary.<a id="FNanchor_532" href="#Footnote_532" class="fnanchor">[532]</a> It must, of course, be
-borne in mind that only part of this miscellaneous expenditure was
-incurred through Henslowe. He certainly did not, for example, pay all
-the fees for the licensing of new plays by the Master of the Revels.
-And of course there were many matters, in particular the wages of hired
-actors and servitors, for which the company had regularly to find funds
-in other ways. It is probable that only play-books, properties, and
-apparel were normally charged to his account, although the convenience
-of an occasional extension of his functions can readily be understood.
-Dr. Greg may be right in thinking that his position as agent for the
-company in its purchases was a natural development of his pawnbroking
-business.<a id="FNanchor_533" href="#Footnote_533" class="fnanchor">[533]</a> But during the period under review he did not, as a
-rule, supply them with goods himself. A sale of ‘A shorte velluett
-clocke wraght with bugell &amp; a gearcken of velluet layd with brade
-coper sylver lace’ for £4 on 28 November 1598 was exceptional. Usually
-the payments are to tradesmen, to the mercers Stone, Richard Heath,
-and Robert Bromfield, to ‘him at the Eagell and Chylld’ for armour,
-to Mrs. Gosson for head-tires, and for wigs to one Father Ogle, who
-is mentioned also in the Revels Accounts and in the play of <i>Sir
-Thomas More</i>. Sometimes ready-made garments, new or second-hand,
-were bought. A doublet and hose of sea-water green satin cost £3 and
-a doublet and ‘venesyons’ of cloth of silver wrought with red silk
-£4 10<i>s.</i> But often stuffs were obtained in piece and made up
-by tailors, of whom the company employed two, Dover and Radford, the
-latter known, for the sake of distinction, as ‘the little tailor’.
-These and William White, who made the crowns, probably worked at the
-theatre, in the tiring-house. The company gave 6<i>s.</i> a yard for
-russet broadcloth and the same for murrey satin, 12<i>s.</i> for other
-satins, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for taffeties, and no less than £1 for
-‘ij pylle velluet of carnardyn’. Laces cost 1<i>d.</i> each; copper
-lace anything from 4<i>s.</i> a pound to 1<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> an
-ounce. Of this they used quantities, and in the summer of 1601 they
-had run up a considerable ‘old debt’ to the copper lace-man, as well
-as another to Heath the mercer, which had to be paid off by degrees.
-The more expensive garments,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span> such as a rich cloak bought of Langley
-for £19, were, of course, an investment on the part of the company,
-and were worn in their time by many sharers and hired men in different
-parts. But the principal actors had also, as Alleyn’s inventory shows,
-their private wardrobes. Henslowe was prepared to furnish these on the
-instalment system. Thus Richard Jones bought in 1594 ‘a manes gowne of
-pechecoler in grayne’ for £3 payable in weekly sums of 5<i>s.</i>, and
-Thomas Towne in 1598 ‘a blacke clothe clocke layd with sylke lace’ for
-26<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> at 1<i>s.</i> weekly. It was as hard to keep
-these glories as to procure them. On one occasion the company came to
-the rescue and lent Thomas Downton £12 10<i>s.</i>, to fetch out of
-pawn two cloaks, ‘which they exsepted into the stock’. The one was
-‘ashecolerd velluet embradered with gowld’, the other ‘a longe black
-velluet clocke layd with sylke lace’.<a id="FNanchor_534" href="#Footnote_534" class="fnanchor">[534]</a></p>
-
-<p>The termination of the record of advances after 12 March 1603 indicates
-an interruption of performances, probably due to the increasing illness
-of Elizabeth, who died on the following 24 March. Thereafter there
-are only a few winding-up entries in the diary. The company must have
-immediately begun to travel under the leadership of Thomas Downton, who
-in the course of 1602–3 received a gift for them from the Corporation
-of Canterbury, ‘because it was thought fitt they should not play at
-all, in regard that our late Queene was then very sicke or dead as they
-supposed’. London playing, if resumed at all, must have very soon been
-stopped again by the plague. There was some further small expenditure,
-of which the details are not given, before Henslowe noted that, in
-addition to the bond for £211 9<i>s.</i>, ‘Ther reasteth dew vnto me
-to this daye beinge the v daye of Maye 1603 when we leafte of playe
-now at the Kynges cominge all recknynges abated the some of a hundred
-fowerscore &amp; sevntenepowndes &amp; thirteneshellynges &amp; fowerpence I saye
-dew&mdash;£197 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> the fyftye powndes which Jonnes &amp;
-Shawe had at ther goinge a way not reconed’. The company travelled
-again during the plague, being traceable as the Admiral’s men in
-1602–3 at Bath and York and on 18 August 1603 at Leicester, and as the
-Earl of Nottingham’s in 1602–3 at Coventry. The tour was over by 21
-October, on which date Joan Alleyn wrote to her husband at the house
-of Mr. Chaloner in Sussex, telling him amongst other things that ‘all
-of your owne company ar well at theyr owne houses’, that all the other
-companies had returned, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span> ‘Nicke and Jeames be well’, and that
-‘Browne of the Boares head’ had not gone into the country at all, and
-was now dead, ‘&amp; dyed very pore’. This might be either Edward Browne,
-or the ‘old Browne’ who appeared with him in <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> in the
-previous autumn. In any case, it is clear from the reference to him
-that he was not a regular member of Alleyn’s company. ‘Jeames’ is no
-doubt James Bristow, who, as Henslowe’s apprentice, would be likely to
-form part of his household; and ‘Nicke’, who seems to have been in the
-same position, may be supposed to be the Nick who tumbled before the
-Queen at Christmas 1601.</p>
-
-<p>The Jacobean records of the company seem meagre in the absence of
-Henslowe’s detailed register of proceedings. About Christmas 1603 they
-were taken into the service of Prince Henry, and are hereafter known
-as the Prince’s players.[535] They are entered amongst other ‘Officers
-to the Prince’ as receiving four and a half yards of red cloth apiece
-as liveries for the coronation procession on 15 March 1604, and
-their names are given as ‘Edward Allen, William Bird, Thomas Towne,
-Thomas Dowton, Samuell Rowley, Edward Jubie, Humfry Jeffes, Charles
-Massey, and Anthony Jeffes’.<a id="FNanchor_536" href="#Footnote_536" class="fnanchor">[536]</a> Alleyn, even if not a ‘sharer’,
-was therefore a member of the company in its official capacity. He
-is also named as the Prince’s servant, both in the printed account
-of the entertainment at which, dressed as a Genius, he delivered a
-speech, and in Stowe’s description of a bear-baiting which formed part
-of the festivities.<a id="FNanchor_537" href="#Footnote_537" class="fnanchor">[537]</a> It may, however, be inferred that he took an
-early opportunity of leaving a profession to which he had only been
-recalled by the personal whim of the late Queen.<a id="FNanchor_538" href="#Footnote_538" class="fnanchor">[538]</a> He was joint
-payee with Juby in the warrant of 19 February, but Juby’s name stands
-alone in another of 17 April and in those of all subsequent years up
-to 1615. And when the company received a formal licence by patent on
-30 April 1606, Alleyn’s name was omitted, and does not appear in any
-further list of its members. It is true that as late as 11 May 1611
-he is still described in a formal document as the Prince’s servant,
-but he may have held some other appointment, actual or honorific, in
-the household.<a id="FNanchor_539" href="#Footnote_539" class="fnanchor">[539]</a> A note of his resources about 1605, however,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-includes ‘my share of aparell, £100’.<a id="FNanchor_540" href="#Footnote_540" class="fnanchor">[540]</a> And he certainly remained
-interested in the company. They were his tenants at the Fortune,
-although an unexecuted draft of a lease to Thomas Downton dated in
-1608 suggests that he may have taken steps to transfer the whole or a
-share of his direct interest to them. Under this lease Downton was to
-receive during thirteen years a thirty-second part of the daily profits
-accruing to Henslowe and Alleyn, and in return to pay £27 10<i>s.</i>,
-a rent of 10<i>s.</i> annually and his proportionate share of repairs,
-and to bind himself to play in the house and not elsewhere without
-consent.<a id="FNanchor_541" href="#Footnote_541" class="fnanchor">[541]</a> On 11 April 1612 Robert Browne is found writing to Alleyn
-on behalf of one Mr. Rose, lately ‘entertayned amongst the princes
-men’, to request his interest as one ‘who he knowes can strike a greter
-stroke amongst them then this’ to procure him a ‘gathering place’
-for his wife.<a id="FNanchor_542" href="#Footnote_542" class="fnanchor">[542]</a> Another letter from Bird to Alleyn, also about a
-gatherer, is amusing enough to quote in full. It is undated.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Sir there is one Jhon Russell, that by yowr apoyntment was made
-a gatherer w<sup>th</sup> vs, but my fellowes finding often falce to vs,
-haue many tymes warnd him ffrom taking the box. And he as often,
-with moste damnable othes, hath vowde neuer to touch, yet not
-with standing his execrable othes, he hath taken the box, &amp; many
-tymes moste vnconsionablye gathered, for which we haue resolued
-he shall neuer more come to the doore; yet for your sake, he
-shall haue his wages, to be a nessessary atendaunt on the stage,
-and if he will pleasure himself and vs, to mend our garmentes,
-when he hath leysure, weele pay him for that to. I pray send vs
-word if this motion will satisfie you; for him his dishonestye
-is such we knowe it will not, Thus yealding our selues in that
-&amp; a farr greater matter to be comaunded by you I committ you to
-god. Your loving ffrend to comaunde. W Birde.’<a id="FNanchor_543" href="#Footnote_543" class="fnanchor">[543]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>With the exception of Alleyn, all the players of the 1604 list and no
-others appear in the patent of 1606, the text of which follows:<a id="FNanchor_544" href="#Footnote_544" class="fnanchor">[544]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De concessione licenciae pro Thoma Downton et aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
-Sheriffes, bailiffes, Constables, headboroughes and other our
-officers and loving subiectes greeting. Knowe ye that wee of
-our especiall grace, certaine knowledge, and meere mocion haue
-licenced and auctorized, and by theis presentes doe licence
-and auctorize Thomas Downton, Thomas Towne, William Byrde,
-Edwarde Iuby, Samuell Rowle, Humfrey Ieffes, Charles Massey, and
-Anthonie Ieffes, Servauntes to our dearest sonne the Prince, and
-the rest of theire<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span> Associates to vse and exercise the arte and
-facultie of playing Commedies, Tragedies, Histories, Enterludes,
-Moralls, Pastoralls, Stageplayes, and such other like as they
-haue alreadie studied or hereafter shall vse or studie, aswell
-for the recreacion of our loving subiectes, as for our solace
-and pleasure when wee shall thincke good to see them, during
-our pleasure, And the said Commedies, Tragedies, histories,
-Enterludes, Moralls, pastoralls, stageplaies, and suche like
-to shewe and exercise publiquelie to their best Commoditie,
-aswell within theire nowe vsuall house called the Fortune within
-our Countie of Middlesex, as alsoe within anie Towne halls or
-Moutehalls or other convenient places within the libertie and
-ffredome of anie other Cittie, vniversitie, Towne, or Boroughe
-whatsoever, within our Realmes and Domynions, willing and
-Commaunding you and everie of you, as you tender our pleasure,
-not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein without anie your
-lettes, hindraunces, or molestacions during our saide pleasure,
-but alsoe to be aiding and assisting vnto them yf anie wrong be
-to them offered, And to allowe them such former curtesies as
-hath been given to men of theire place and quallitie, And alsoe
-what further favour you shall shewe vnto them for our sake wee
-shall take kindelie at your handes. Prouided alwaies, and our
-will and pleasure ys, that all auctoritie, power, priuiledges,
-and profittes whatsoever belonging and properlie appertaining
-to the Maister of our Revells in respecte of his office, and
-everie Clause, article, or graunte conteined within the letteres
-patentes or Commission, which haue heretofore been graunted
-or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our deere Sister, or
-by our selves, to our welbeloued servantes Edmonde Tilney,
-Maister of the office of our said Revells, or to Sir George
-Bucke knighte, or to either of them in possession or reversion,
-shall be remayne and abide entire, and in full force estate and
-vertue, and in as ample sorte as yf this our Commission had
-never been made. In witnesse whereof etc. Witnesse our selfe at
-Westminster the Thirtith daie of Aprill. per breve de priuato
-sigillo.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Between 1606 and 1610 it seems to have been thought desirable to
-strengthen the composition of the company by the introduction of
-new blood. A list of ‘Comedyanes and Playores’, included in the
-establishment book drawn up when Henry formed his own Household as
-Prince of Wales in 1610, contains six names in addition to the eight
-of the patent.<a id="FNanchor_545" href="#Footnote_545" class="fnanchor">[545]</a> They are ‘Edward Colbrande, Wm. Parre, Rychard
-Pryore, William Stratford, Frauncys Grace, and John Shanke’. Of these
-William Parr, who is in the plot of <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> in 1602, is
-alone traceable in the earlier records of the company. Shank had been
-of Pembroke’s and Queen Elizabeth’s men.</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe entered two more advances in his diary, one for ‘facynge
-of a blacke grogren clocke with taffytye’, the other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span> to Dekker and
-Middleton in earnest of <i>The Patient Man and the Honest Whore</i>.
-This was entered in the Stationers’ Register on 9 November 1604, and
-printed as <i>The Honest Whore</i> during the year. The name of Towne
-is in a stage-direction. On 14 March ‘1604’, which may have been
-either 1604 or 1605, Henslowe had a final reckoning with the company
-and noted ‘Caste vp all the acowntes frome the begininge of the world
-vntell this daye beinge the 14 daye of Marche 1604 by Thomas Dowghton
-&amp; Edward Jube for the company of the prynces men &amp; I Phillipe Henslow
-so ther reasteth dew vnto me P Henslow the some of xxiiij<sup>li</sup> all
-reconynges consernynge the company in stocke generall descarged &amp; my
-sealfe descarged to them of al deates’.<a id="FNanchor_546" href="#Footnote_546" class="fnanchor">[546]</a> With this, so far as the
-extant book goes, the record of his transactions with the company
-practically ceases. The only exception is a note of receipts at the
-Fortune during the three days next after Christmas in 1608, which
-amounted to 25<i>s.</i>, 45<i>s.</i>, and 44<i>s.</i> 9<i>d.</i>
-respectively.<a id="FNanchor_547" href="#Footnote_547" class="fnanchor">[547]</a> Something of the career of the Prince’s men may
-be gleaned from other sources. They played at Court before James on
-21 January and 20 February 1604, and before Henry on 4, 15, and 22
-January; and during the following Christmas before Anne on 23 November
-1604 and before Henry on 24 November, 14 and 19 December, and on 15
-and 22 January and 5 and 19 February 1605. On 8 February 1605 their
-play of <i>Richard Whittington</i>, of which nothing further is known,
-was entered on the Stationers’ Register.<a id="FNanchor_548" href="#Footnote_548" class="fnanchor">[548]</a> In the same year Samuel
-Rowley’s <i>When You See Me, You Know Me</i>, was printed as played
-by them. During the Christmas of 1605–6 they gave three plays before
-James and three before Henry.<a id="FNanchor_549" href="#Footnote_549" class="fnanchor">[549]</a> In 1604–5 they were at Maidstone
-and Winchester, in 1605–6 at Bath, on 17 July 1606 at Oxford, and on
-17 October at Ipswich. During the Christmas of 1606–7 they gave six
-plays before James. Dekker’s <i>Whore of Babylon</i> was entered on
-the Stationers’ Register on 20 April 1607 and printed as theirs in
-the same year. In 1606–7 they were at Bath. During the Christmas of
-1607–8 they gave four plays before James and Henry. In 1607–8 they
-were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span> at Maidstone and Saffron Walden, and on 1 October 1608 they were
-at Leicester; but a visit of the same year from ‘the Princes players
-of the White Chapple, London’ is rather to be assigned to the Duke of
-York’s men (q.v.). They gave three plays before James and Henry during
-the Christmas of 1608–9, four before James during that of 1609–10, and
-four before James during that of 1610–11. Middleton and Dekker’s <i>The
-Roaring Girl</i> was printed in 1611 as lately played by them at the
-Fortune, and Field’s <i>Amends for Ladies</i> (<i>c.</i> 1610–11) names
-‘Long Meg and the Ship’ as in their repertory. Presumably their <i>Long
-Meg of Westminster</i> of 1595 still held the boards.<a id="FNanchor_550" href="#Footnote_550" class="fnanchor">[550]</a> In 1608–9
-they were at Shrewsbury and Saffron Walden, in 1609–10 at Shrewsbury
-and Hereford, in 1610–11 at Shrewsbury and Winchester.</p>
-
-<p>They played at Court before James on 28 and 29 December 1611, giving
-on the second night <i>The Almanac</i>, and before Henry in February
-and Elizabeth in April 1612. On 1 October 1612 the lewd jigs, songs,
-and dances at the Fortune are recited in an order of the Middlesex
-justices as tending to promote breaches of the peace. One of these may
-have been the occasion on which an obscure actor, Garlick by name, made
-himself offensive to the more refined part of his audience.<a id="FNanchor_551" href="#Footnote_551" class="fnanchor">[551]</a> On the
-following 7 November Henry died and on 7 December his players figured
-in his funeral procession.<a id="FNanchor_552" href="#Footnote_552" class="fnanchor">[552]</a></p>
-
-<p>They found a new patron in the Elector Palatine, then in England,
-and on entering his service got a new patent, which bears date 11
-January 1613 and closely follows in its terms that of 1606.<a id="FNanchor_553" href="#Footnote_553" class="fnanchor">[553]</a> The
-house specified for them was again the Fortune, which they had no
-doubt continuously occupied since its opening in 1600. The players
-named were ‘Thomas Downton, William Bird, Edward Juby, Samuell Rowle,
-Charles Massey, Humfrey Jeffs, Frank Grace, William Cartwright, Edward
-Colbrand, William Parr, William Stratford, Richard Gunnell, John
-Shanck, and Richard Price’. Possibly Price may be the Pryor of the 1610
-list. Cartwright and Gunnell are new since that list, but Cartwright
-had been in <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i> and <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> plots
-of 1601 and 1602. These two must be supposed to have taken the places
-of Thomas Towne and Antony Jeffes. Thomas Towne had enjoyed an annuity
-of £12 out of Alleyn’s manor of Dulwich from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span> 28 October 1608 to 15
-January 1612, but on 5 November 1612 ‘widow Towne’ is mentioned,<a id="FNanchor_554" href="#Footnote_554" class="fnanchor">[554]</a>
-and further evidence of his death is supplied by a letter from Charles
-Massey to Alleyn, not dated, but from internal evidence written not
-very long after the prince’s death, to which reference is made. Massey
-is in debt and wants £50. He offers two things as security. One is
-‘that lyttell moete I have in the play hovsses’; from which it may
-be inferred that, like Downton, he had obtained an interest in the
-Fortune, although what the second house may have been can hardly be
-conjectured. The other is his interest under ‘the composisions betwene
-ovre compenye that if any one give over with consent of his fellowes,
-he is to receve three score and ten poundes (Antony Jefes hath had
-so much) if any on dye his widow or frendes whome he appoyntes it
-tow reseve fyfte poundes (M<sup>r</sup>es Pavie and M<sup>r</sup>es Tovne hath had the
-lyke)’. In order to be in a position to repay the loan at the end of
-the year he undertakes to get Mr. Jube to reserve ‘my gallery mony
-and my quarter of the hovse mony’ for the purpose, and should it
-prove at the end of six months that this will be insufficient, he
-will be prepared to surrender his whole share, with the exception of
-13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> a week for household expenses.<a id="FNanchor_555" href="#Footnote_555" class="fnanchor">[555]</a> From this
-letter it may also be gathered that Antony Jeffes had retired, and
-apparently that Pavy, whose name is found in the plot of <i>2 Fortune’s
-Tennis</i>, which I assign to 1602–3, had at some time become a sharer
-in the company. One other player, originally in 1597 a hired man, had
-evidently reached some prominence between that date and 1614. William
-Fennor, in the course of a rhyming controversy with John Taylor, makes
-the following boast of his histrionic talent:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And let me tell thee this to calme thy rage,</div>
- <div>I chaleng’d Kendall on the Fortune stage;</div>
- <div>And he did promise ‘fore an audience,</div>
- <div>For to oppose me. Note the accidence:</div>
- <div>I set up bills, the people throngd apace,</div>
- <div>With full intention to disgrace, or grace;</div>
- <div>The house was full, the trumpets twice had sounded,</div>
- <div>And though he came not, I was not confounded,</div>
- <div>But stept upon the stage, and told them this,</div>
- <div>My aduerse would not come: not one did hisse,</div>
- <div>But flung me theames: I then <i>extempore</i></div>
- <div>Did blot his name from out their memorie,</div>
- <div>And pleasd them all, in spight of one to braue me,</div>
- <div>Witnesse the ringing plaudits that they gaue me.<a id="FNanchor_556" href="#Footnote_556" class="fnanchor">[556]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span></p>
-
-<p>As the Elector Palatine’s men the company played at Court during the
-winter of 1613–14, twice before James and once before Charles. They
-were amongst the companies which performed irregularly in the Lent
-of 1615, and Humphrey Jeffes and Thomas Downton were summoned before
-the Privy Council to account for their misdoing. One of the irregular
-licences condemned by the Lord Chamberlain on 16 July 1616 was an
-exemplification of the patent of 1613, taken out by Charles Marshall,
-Humphrey Jeffes, and William Parr for provincial purposes.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xx. THE LORD CHAMBERLAIN’S (LORD HUNSDON’S) AND KING’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Henry Carey, s. of William Carey and Mary, sister of Anne
-Boleyn; <i>nat. c.</i> 1524; cr. 1st Lord Hunsdon, 13 Jan. 1559;
-m. Anne, d. of Sir Thomas Morgan; Warden of East Marches and
-Governor of Berwick, Aug. 1568; Lord Chamberlain, 4 July 1585;
-lived at Hunsdon House, Herts., and Somerset House, London;
-<i>ob.</i> 22 July 1596.</p>
-
-<p>George Carey, s. of Henry, 1st Lord Hunsdon; <i>nat.</i> 1547;
-Kt. 18 May 1570; m. Elizabeth, d. of Sir John Spencer of
-Althorp; Captain-General of Isle of Wight, 1582; succ. as 2nd
-Baron, 22 July 1596; Lord Chamberlain, 17 Mar. 1597; lived at
-Carisbrooke Castle, Hunsdon House, Drayton, and Blackfriars;
-<i>ob.</i> 9 Sept. 1603.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A company of Lord Hunsdon’s men was at Leicester in the last three
-months of 1564, at Norwich and Maldon in 1564–5, at Plymouth before
-Michaelmas in 1565, at Canterbury in the autumn of 1565, at Gloucester
-and Maldon in 1565–6, at Bristol in July 1566, and at Canterbury in the
-spring of 1567. Another makes its appearance at Ludlow on 13 July 1581,
-and at Doncaster in 1582. In the winter Lord Hunsdon was apparently
-deputy for the Earl of Sussex as Lord Chamberlain, and took occasion to
-bring his men to Court, where they acted <i>Beauty and Housewifery</i>
-on 27 December 1582. They did not again appear at Court, but when
-plays were temporarily suppressed on 14 June 1584 the owner of the
-Theatre, presumably James Burbadge, made a claim to be Lord Hunsdon’s
-man. Meanwhile ‘my L. Hunsdouns and my Lords Morleis players being
-bothe of one companye’ are recorded at Bristol in March 1583, and Lord<span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>
-Hunsdon’s alone at Norwich in 1582–3, Bath in June 1583, and Exeter
-in July 1583. Hunsdon became Lord Chamberlain on 4 July 1585. Between
-October and December of that year, a visit was paid to Leicester by
-‘the Lord Chamberlens and the Lord Admiralls players’, and on 6 January
-1586 ‘the servants of the lo: Admirall and the lo: Chamberlaine’ gave
-a play at Court. These entries suggest an amalgamation of Hunsdon’s
-men with those of Lord Admiral Howard, both of whom had perhaps been
-weakened by the formation of the Queen’s men in 1583. But if so, it
-was only a partial or temporary one, for while the Admiral’s men
-established themselves in London, the Chamberlain’s are traceable in
-the provinces, at Coventry in 1585–6, at Saffron Walden in 1587–8, and
-at Maidstone in 1589–90.</p>
-
-<p>An interval of four or five years renders improbable any continuity
-between this company and the famous Lord Chamberlain’s company, which
-first emerged on the resorting of the plague-stricken mimes in 1594,
-passed under royal patronage in 1603, and prolonged an existence
-illumined by the genius of Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, Beaumont and
-Fletcher, Massinger and Shirley, until the closing of the theatres
-in 1642. The first notice of the new organization is in June 1594,
-when ‘my Lord Admeralle men and my Lorde Chamberlen men’ played from
-the 3rd to the 13th of the month, either in combination or separately
-on allotted days, for Henslowe at Newington Butts.<a id="FNanchor_557" href="#Footnote_557" class="fnanchor">[557]</a> Some of
-the plays given during this period can be traced to the subsequent
-repertory of the Admiral’s men; others, which cannot, may be assigned
-to the Chamberlain’s. They are <i>Hester and Ahasuerus</i>, <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>, <i>Hamlet</i>, and <i>Taming of A Shrew</i>, which,
-although so described, may of course have been really the <i>Taming
-of The Shrew</i>, Shakespeare’s adaptation of the older play entered
-in the Stationers’ Register on the previous 2 May. It is ingeniously,
-and I think rightly, inferred from a line drawn in Henslowe’s account
-after 13 June, that from that date all the performances recorded are by
-the Admiral’s men, probably at the Rose, and that his relations with
-the Chamberlain’s men had ceased. The company is found at Marlborough
-about September, and on 8 October Lord Hunsdon wrote to the Lord Mayor,
-asking permission for ‘my nowe companie’ to continue an occupation
-of the Cross Keys,<a id="FNanchor_558" href="#Footnote_558" class="fnanchor">[558]</a> on which it seems to have already entered.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-Henceforward the company was regularly established in London, took the
-lead annually at Court, and except for brief periods of inhibition in
-1596, 1597, and possibly 1601, does not appear to have travelled during
-the remainder of Elizabeth’s reign. Whether Hunsdon’s men got the Cross
-Keys for the winter or not, they probably had from the beginning the
-use of the Theatre for the summer seasons, for Richard Burbage, the
-son of the owner, was one of their leading members, and on 15 March
-1595 appears as joint payee with William Kempe and William Shakespeare
-for two plays given at Court on 26 and 28 December 1594. These plays
-cannot be identified, but Shakespeare’s <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i> and
-<i>Romeo and Juliet</i> may well have been produced this winter.<a id="FNanchor_559" href="#Footnote_559" class="fnanchor">[559]</a>
-Most likely the date 28 December was entered in the payment warrant
-by mistake for 27 December, for the Admiral’s men are also recorded
-as playing at Court on 28 December, and on the same night ‘a company
-of base and common fellows’, with whom one is bound to identify
-the Chamberlain’s men, played ‘a Comedy of Errors’ as part of the
-Christmas revels of the Prince of Purpoole at Gray’s Inn.<a id="FNanchor_560" href="#Footnote_560" class="fnanchor">[560]</a> There
-seems to be some echo of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> in the Pyramus and
-Thisbe interlude of <i>A Midsummer-Night’s Dream</i>, which may very
-well have been given at Greenwich or Burghley House for the wedding
-of William Stanley, Earl of Derby, and Elizabeth Vere, daughter of
-the Earl of Oxford, on 26 January 1595. Another possible occasion
-for the production, however, is the wedding of Elizabeth, daughter
-of Sir George Carey and grand-daughter of Lord Hunsdon, to Thomas,
-son of Henry Lord Berkeley on 19 February 1596. This took place at
-Blackfriars, presumably in Sir George Carey’s house there.<a id="FNanchor_561" href="#Footnote_561" class="fnanchor">[561]</a></p>
-
-<p>To 1595 or thereabouts I also assign Shakespeare’s <i>Two Gentlemen
-of Verona</i> and <i>King John</i> and <i>Richard II</i>.<a id="FNanchor_562" href="#Footnote_562" class="fnanchor">[562]</a> The
-company played at Court on 26, 27, and 28 December 1595<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span> and 6 January
-and 22 February 1596. In the warrant for their fees, dated on 21
-December 1596, and made payable to John Heminges and George Bryan, they
-are described as ‘servauntes to the late Lord Chamberlayne and now
-servauntes to the Lorde Hunsdon’. It is clear that, when the first Lord
-Hunsdon died on 22 July 1596, the players had been retained by his son
-and heir, Sir George Carey. The Lord Chamberlainship passed to Lord
-Cobham; but he died on 5 March 1597, and on 17 March the post was given
-to the second Lord Hunsdon. The company, then, was properly known as
-Lord Hunsdon’s men from 22 July 1596 to 17 March 1597; before and after
-that period it was the Lord Chamberlain’s men.</p>
-
-<p>To 1596 I assign Shakespeare’s <i>Merchant of Venice</i>. Evidence of
-the occupation of the Theatre about this time by the company is to be
-found in Lodge’s allusion to a revival of <i>Hamlet</i> there, for
-this play is not likely to have been in other hands.<a id="FNanchor_563" href="#Footnote_563" class="fnanchor">[563]</a> It is not
-an unreasonable conjecture that James Burbadge destined to their use
-the play-house in the Blackfriars, which he purchased in February, and
-had converted for ‘publique’ use by November of this year. If so, he
-and they were disappointed, for a petition of the inhabitants, amongst
-the signatories to an alleged copy of which Lord Hunsdon himself is
-somewhat oddly found, led to an intervention of the Privy Council,
-who forbade plays to be given within the liberty.<a id="FNanchor_564" href="#Footnote_564" class="fnanchor">[564]</a> At this time
-also the Corporation seem to have succeeded in finally and permanently
-expelling the players from the City inns which had long been their
-head-quarters, and Nashe connects this persecution with the loss of
-‘their old Lord’, by whom he doubtless means Henry Lord Hunsdon. It
-is possible that plays were inhibited altogether during the summer
-of 1596, although no formal order to that effect is preserved, for
-Hunsdon’s went to Faversham, and Nashe himself was disappointed of
-‘an after harvest I expected by writing for the stage and for the
-presse’.<a id="FNanchor_565" href="#Footnote_565" class="fnanchor">[565]</a></p>
-
-<p>In the following winter the company played at Court on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span> 26 and 27
-December 1596 and on 1 and 6 January and 6 and 8 February 1597. Their
-payees, for this and for the next two years, were Thomas Pope and John
-Heminge. In 1597 began the printing of plays written by Shakespeare for
-this company, with a ‘bad’ quarto of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, bearing
-on its title-page the name of Lord Hunsdon’s men and ‘good’ quartos
-of <i>Richard II</i> and <i>Richard III</i>, bearing that of the Lord
-Chamberlain’s.<a id="FNanchor_566" href="#Footnote_566" class="fnanchor">[566]</a> From the text of <i>Richard II</i> was omitted the
-deposition scene, which did not appear in print until after the death
-of Elizabeth. The only Shakespearian productions that can be plausibly
-ascribed to this year are those of the two parts of <i>Henry IV</i>.
-The presentation of Sir John Oldcastle in the original versions of
-these seems to have led to a protest, and the character was renamed
-Sir John Falstaff. It is not improbable that the offence taken was by
-Lord Chamberlain Cobham, whose ancestress, Joan Lady Cobham, Oldcastle
-had married.<a id="FNanchor_567" href="#Footnote_567" class="fnanchor">[567]</a> It is impossible to say whether either this scandal
-or any possible interpretation of disloyalty put upon <i>Richard
-II</i> contributed to the inhibition of plays on 28 July, of which the
-main exciting cause was certainly the performance of <i>The Isle of
-Dogs</i> at the Swan on the Bankside.<a id="FNanchor_568" href="#Footnote_568" class="fnanchor">[568]</a> For the second time since
-their formation in 1594 the company had to travel. They are traceable
-at Rye in August, at Dover between 3 and 20 September, at Marlborough,
-Faversham, and Bath during 1596–7, and at Bristol about 29 September.
-This inhibition was removed early in October. There is some reason to
-believe that, when the Chamberlain’s men resumed playing, it was not
-at the Theatre, as to the renewal of the lease of which the Burbadges
-were disputing with their ground landlord, but at the Curtain. Marston,
-in one and the same passage of his <i>Scourge of Villainy</i>, entered
-in the Stationers’ Register on 8 September 1598, alludes to the acting
-of <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> and to ‘Curtaine plaudeties’, while almost
-simultaneously Edward Guilpin in his <i>Skialetheia</i>, entered on
-15 September, speaks of ‘the unfrequented Theater’. The transfer may,
-however, not have taken place until 1598.<a id="FNanchor_569" href="#Footnote_569" class="fnanchor">[569]</a></p>
-
-<p>The company played at Court on 26 December 1597 and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span> on 1 and 6
-January and 26 February 1598. It is conceivable that one of these
-plays may have been a revised version of <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i>,
-which was printed as ‘newly corrected and augmented’ and ‘as it
-was presented before her Highnes this last Christmas’ in 1598. On
-the other hand, it is also possible that this print may have been
-intended to replace an earlier ‘bad’ quarto, not now preserved, and
-if so, the reference to the representation may have been carried on
-from the earlier title-page. In 1598 were also printed <i>1 Henry
-IV</i>, and the anonymous <i>Mucedorus</i>, which may have already
-belonged to the Chamberlain’s repertory, as it was certainly revised
-for them about 1610. <i>The Merchant of Venice</i> was entered in the
-Stationers’ Register on 22 July, but with a proviso that it must not
-be printed ‘without lycence first had from the Right honorable the
-lord chamberlen’. On 7 September 1598 was entered in the Stationers’
-Register the <i>Palladis Tamia</i> of Francis Meres, with its list of
-Shakespeare’s plays up to date, including the mysterious <i>Love’s
-Labours Won</i>, which I incline to identify with the <i>Taming of the
-Shrew</i>.<a id="FNanchor_570" href="#Footnote_570" class="fnanchor">[570]</a> The earliest play not mentioned by Meres is probably
-<i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>, which may belong to 1598 itself. Another
-production of this year was Jonson’s <i>Every Man In his Humour</i>,
-which was still a new play about 20 September, when an Almain in the
-audience lost 300 crowns. Possibly John Aubrey has this period in mind
-when he says that Jonson ‘acted and wrote, but both ill, at the Green
-Curtaine, a kind of nursery or obscure play-house, somewhere in the
-suburbes, I thinke towardes Shoreditch or Clarkenwell’.<a id="FNanchor_571" href="#Footnote_571" class="fnanchor">[571]</a> Jonson,
-however, was in prison soon after the production of the play for the
-manslaughter of Gabriel Spencer on 22 September in Hoxton Fields, and
-there is no other evidence that he ever acted with the Chamberlain’s
-men. His own name is not in the list of the original ‘principall
-Comoedians’ affixed to the text of <i>Every Man In his Humour</i> in
-the folio of 1616. This is of great value, as being the earliest extant
-list of the company. The ten names given are:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>Will. Shakespeare.</li>
- <li>Aug. Philips.</li>
- <li>Hen. Condel.</li>
- <li>Will. Slye.</li>
- <li>Will. Kempe.</li>
- <li>Ric. Burbage.</li>
- <li>Joh. Flemings.</li>
- <li>Tho. Pope.</li>
- <li>Chr. Beeston.</li>
- <li>Joh. Duke.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span></p>
-
-<p>It must not, of course, be assumed, either that the list is in
-itself quite complete, or that there had been no changes amongst the
-Chamberlain’s men between 1594 and 1598; but as those named include
-five out of the six payees for that period, they may perhaps be taken,
-with the sixth payee, George Bryan, who does not reappear after
-1596, and was by 1603 an ordinary groom of the Chamber of the royal
-Household, as fairly representing the original constitution of the
-company.<a id="FNanchor_572" href="#Footnote_572" class="fnanchor">[572]</a> And an inference to its origin at once becomes possible,
-for of these eleven men five (Kempe, Pope, Heminges, Phillips, and
-Bryan) formed, with Edward Alleyn, the company of Lord Strange’s men
-to whom Privy Council letters of assistance were granted in 1593, and
-at least six (Pope, Phillips, Bryan, Burbadge, Duke, and Sly) are
-to be found in the cast of <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> as performed
-by Strange’s or the Admiral’s or the two together about 1590–1. It
-will be remembered that the Strange’s company of 1593, known as the
-Earl of Derby’s after 25 September 1593, was apparently formed by a
-combination of the earlier Strange’s and Admiral’s men somewhere near
-the time of this performance, if not earlier, and that its composite
-character never wholly disappeared, Alleyn in particular, who was its
-leading member, retaining his personal status as an Admiral’s man.
-It seems clear that in 1594 the combination broke up, that Alleyn
-became the nucleus of a new Admiral’s company at the Rose, and that
-the group with whom he had been travelling took fresh service with the
-Lord Chamberlain. It is not, I think, quite accurate to treat this
-transaction as a mere continuance of Lord Derby’s men under the style
-of Lord Chamberlain’s, entailing no reconstruction other than a change
-of patron following upon Lord Derby’s death on 16 April 1594. On the
-one hand a Derby’s company continued in existence, and is traceable
-under the sixth earl from 1594 to 1617. On the other hand, while
-we do not know what business reconstruction there may have been, a
-very fundamental change is involved in the replacement of Alleyn as
-principal actor by Richard Burbadge, who is not at all likely to have
-played with Strange’s men after the break between the Admiral’s and
-his father at the Theatre in 1591. Except for Alleyn, all the more
-important members of the company, as it existed in 1593, seem to have
-been included<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span> in the transfer to Lord Hunsdon. It is, however, little
-more than conjecture that finds Henry Condell and Christopher Beeston
-in the ‘Harry’ and ‘Kitt’, or Alexander Cooke, Nicholas Tooley, and
-Robert Gough, who were numbered amongst the King’s men at a later
-date, in the ‘Saunder’, ‘Nick’, and ‘R. Go.’ of the <i>2 Seven Deadly
-Sins</i> plot. Alleyn’s correspondence of 1593 adds Richard Cowley to
-the list of Lord Strange’s men, and, as we shall find him acting as a
-payee for the Chamberlain’s men in 1601, he may have been one of them
-from the beginning. In any case he had joined them by 1598, as the
-stage-directions of <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i> show that he played
-Verges to Kempe’s Dogberry.<a id="FNanchor_573" href="#Footnote_573" class="fnanchor">[573]</a></p>
-
-<p>There is, of course, one conspicuous Chamberlain’s man who is not
-discoverable either in the Privy Council letter of 1593 or in the <i>2
-Seven Deadly Sins</i> of 1590–1. Even the audacity of Mr. Fleay has not
-attempted to identify the ‘Will’ of the plot with Will Shakespeare.
-Some relations, if only as author, Shakespeare must have had with Lord
-Strange’s men, when they produced <i>1 Henry VI</i> on 3 March 1592,
-and Greene’s satire of him as a ‘Shake-scene’ in the same year must
-indicate that he was an actor as well as an author.<a id="FNanchor_574" href="#Footnote_574" class="fnanchor">[574]</a> He may have
-stood aside altogether during the period of the provincial tours,
-and devoted himself to poetry, and perhaps, although this is very
-conjectural, to travel abroad. Or he may, as I have already suggested,
-have joined Lord Pembroke’s men (q.v.), whom I suspect to have been
-an offshoot for provincial purposes of the Strange’s combination, and
-have passed from them to Lord Sussex’s, ultimately rejoining his old
-fellows in 1594. The possibility of identifying certain minor members
-of the Chamberlain’s company is also affected by this somewhat obscure
-problem of Pembroke’s men. The most obvious of these is John Sincler or
-Sincklo, who was in the cast of <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> as played
-by the Admiral’s or Strange’s about 1590–1, and must have ultimately
-joined the Chamberlain’s, as his name occurs in a stage-direction to
-Q<sub>1</sub> of <i>2 Henry IV</i> (1600), and in the induction to <i>The
-Malcontent</i> (1604). It also occurs in stage-directions to <i>3
-Henry VI</i> and the <i>Taming of The Shrew</i> in the Folio of
-1623.<a id="FNanchor_575" href="#Footnote_575" class="fnanchor">[575]</a> These both happen to be plays which passed through the
-hands of Pembroke’s, and the inference may be that Sincler<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span> had also
-passed through this company. But this is far from being conclusive. It
-is the revised and not the unrevised texts that yield the name, and
-although I think it likely, on stylistic grounds, that the revision of
-<i>3 Henry VI</i> was done for Pembroke’s (q.v.), it is probable from
-the reference in <i>Henry V</i>, epil. 12, to the loss of France and
-the civil wars, ‘which oft our stage hath shown’, that the play was
-revived by the Chamberlain’s, and it may have been in such a revival
-that Sincler took part. As to the <i>Shrew</i>, it is impossible to say
-whether Shakespeare’s work upon it was before or after its transfer
-to the Chamberlain’s. In any case the Chamberlain’s were playing it
-in some form on 13 June 1594, so that here again the appearance of
-Sincler’s name cannot ear-mark him as Pembroke’s. We can now go a
-step farther. The stage-directions to <i>3 Henry VI</i> contain not
-only Sincler’s name, but those of a certain ‘Gabriel’ and a certain
-‘Humfrey’, not common Elizabethan names even separately, and certainly
-suggesting, when found in combination, the Gabriel Spencer and Humphrey
-Jeffes, who were fellows of the Admiral’s in 1597. Now Spencer, and
-very likely also Jeffes, had come from Pembroke’s, the short-lived
-Pembroke’s of 1597 at the Swan. Had they been Pembroke’s men ever
-since 1593? If so, it would be difficult to resist the conclusion
-that the performance which brought their names into the text of <i>3
-Henry VI</i>, and with theirs John Sincler’s, was one by Pembroke’s
-about that date. The obstacle is that there is no known evidence,
-in provincial records or elsewhere, for any continuous existence
-of Pembroke’s between 1593 and 1597. Pending the discovery of any
-such evidence, it seems better to assume that Sincler, Spencer, and
-Jeffes were all Chamberlain’s men before 1597, and that it was from
-a combination of discontented elements in that company and in the
-Admiral’s that the Pembroke’s of the Swan arose. If so, the rest of
-the Pembroke’s men not traceable as coming from the Admiral’s, namely
-Robert Shaw, William Bird <i>alias</i> Borne, and probably Anthony
-Jeffes, may also have come from the Chamberlain’s; and such an origin
-might explain the suit with Thomas Pope in which Bird was entangled
-in 1598.<a id="FNanchor_576" href="#Footnote_576" class="fnanchor">[576]</a> Two other minor actors in the company about 1597 were
-probably Harvey and Rossill, whose names appear to have got into the
-text of <i>1 Henry IV</i> in place of those of Bardolph and Peto, whom
-they represented.<a id="FNanchor_577" href="#Footnote_577" class="fnanchor">[577]</a> The list of actors in Shakespeare’s plays given
-by the editors of the First Folio includes Samuel Crosse, of whom
-nothing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span> more is known except that he was of an early generation. As
-the list in the Folio appears to be limited to Chamberlain’s and King’s
-men, excluding for example Alleyn, who certainly acted in Shakespearian
-plays, e.g. <i>1 Henry VI</i>, it may be that Crosse was for a short
-time a member of the company soon after 1594.</p>
-
-<p>It is hardly possible to carry the analysis of origins any further with
-profit, or to assume that the groups which segregated themselves from
-the Strange-Admiral’s combination in 1594 bore any close correspondence
-to the respective contributions of Strange’s and the Admiral’s to that
-combination in 1589 or 1590. The only name that can be connected with
-Strange’s men before 1588 is John Symons and neither he nor George
-Attewell, their payee in 1591, became a Chamberlain’s man. Hypotheses
-have been framed, mainly in the hope of affiliating Shakespeare to
-Lord Leicester’s men, who are supposed to have carried him away from
-Stratford-on-Avon when they visited it in 1586–7, and ultimately
-to have become Lord Strange’s men.<a id="FNanchor_578" href="#Footnote_578" class="fnanchor">[578]</a> So far as Shakespeare is
-concerned, the first record of him on the boards is in 1592, and
-the interval since his hegira from Stratford may have been quite
-otherwise spent. The proof of continuity between Leicester’s men and
-Strange’s altogether fails, since the latter made their appearance a
-decade before the former came to an end. The only member of the Lord
-Chamberlain’s company of 1594 who can be traced to Leicester’s service
-was Kempe, and he had left Leicester’s men by the summer of 1586 and
-was in Denmark. With him were Bryan and Pope, who afterwards spent a
-year in Germany, and may have joined either Strange’s or the Admiral’s
-on their return. The only other Chamberlain’s man, who can be assigned
-to an earlier company than Strange’s, is Heminges, who was probably at
-some time a Queen’s man.</p>
-
-<p>The Chamberlain’s men evidently started business in 1594 with something
-of a repertory derived by inheritance or purchase from antecedent
-companies. Our knowledge of this is mainly confined to plays with
-which Shakespeare was concerned as author or reviser. They certainly
-did not get all the plays produced by Strange’s men at the Rose
-during 1592 and 1593. Some of these were Henslowe’s property; others
-passed with Alleyn to the Admiral’s men. But they got <i>The Jealous
-Comedy</i>, if I am right in identifying this with <i>The Comedy of
-Errors</i>. They probably got <i>1 Henry VI</i>, for although the
-appearance of a Shakespearian play in the 1623<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span> Folio is not perhaps,
-in view of the composition of the 1647 ‘Beaumont and Fletcher’ Folio,
-absolute proof that the King’s men possessed the copy, their stage
-had often shown both the loss of France and the bleeding of England
-before <i>Henry V</i> was produced in 1599.<a id="FNanchor_579" href="#Footnote_579" class="fnanchor">[579]</a> And they got <i>Titus
-and Vespasian</i>, as revised, after passing through the hands of
-Pembroke’s men, for production by Sussex’s under the title of <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>. Three other of Pembroke’s men’s plays came to them,
-<i>The Taming of A Shrew</i> and <i>2 and 3 Henry VI</i>, and probably
-<i>Hamlet</i> belongs to the same group. It is of course only a guess
-of mine that these also went with Shakespeare to Sussex’s men and
-came thence with him. <i>Titus Andronicus</i> and <i>A Shrew</i>,
-indeed, became available in print during 1594, but not <i>Hamlet</i>,
-and not <i>Henry VI</i>, except in the obsolete version called <i>The
-Contention of York and Lancaster</i>. I think Shakespeare must also
-have brought <i>Richard III</i> and possibly an early version of
-<i>Henry VIII</i>, and that one or other of these had already been
-played by Sussex’s as <i>Buckingham</i>. Of the <i>provenance</i> of
-<i>Hester and Ahasuerus</i> nothing can be said. It is not necessary to
-suppose that the Chamberlain’s acquired any plays from the stock of the
-Queen’s men. It is true that Shakespeare subsequently made some use of
-<i>The Troublesome Reign of King John</i>, <i>The Famous Victories of
-Henry V</i>, and <i>King Leire</i>, but these were all in print before
-he needed them.<a id="FNanchor_580" href="#Footnote_580" class="fnanchor">[580]</a> <i>Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany</i>, published in
-1654 as a play the King’s men at the Blackfriars is believed by some
-to be an early play, possibly by Peele, and if so, may belong to the
-repertory of 1594.</p>
-
-<p>I now return to the chronicle of the Chamberlain’s men from 1598
-onwards. The restriction of the London companies by the action of
-the Privy Council to two had left them in direct rivalry with the
-Admiral’s at the Rose. Disputes broke out. Henslowe made a loan to
-William Bird of the Admiral’s on 30 August 1598 to follow a ‘sewt
-agenste Thomas Poope’, and another to Thomas Downton on 30 January
-1599, ‘to descarge Thomas Dickers [Dekker] from the areaste of my lord
-chamberlens men’.<a id="FNanchor_581" href="#Footnote_581" class="fnanchor">[581]</a> The company played at Court on 26 December 1598
-and 1 January and 20 February 1599. During this winter they undertook
-the enterprise of finding a new head-quarters on the Bankside. The
-disputes between<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span> landlord and tenants as to the lease of the Theatre
-had reached a crisis, and in December or January the Burbadges removed
-the timber of the house across the Thames, to serve as material for
-the construction of the Globe. The lease of the new site was signed
-on 21 February 1599. Under it one moiety of the interest was retained
-by Richard Burbadge and his brother Cuthbert, who was not himself an
-actor; the other was assigned to Shakespeare, Pope, Phillips, Heminges,
-and Kempe.<a id="FNanchor_582" href="#Footnote_582" class="fnanchor">[582]</a> Shortly afterwards Kempe made over his share to the
-other four. Presumably he now quitted the company, having first, as a
-stage-direction shows, played Peter in the revised version of <i>Romeo
-and Juliet</i> printed in 1599. His place was probably taken by Robert
-Armin, formerly of Lord Chandos’s men, who describes himself in two
-successive issues of his <i>Fool upon Fool</i> (1600 and 1605), first
-as ‘clonnico del Curtanio’, and then as ‘clonnico del Mondo’, and
-who had therefore probably joined the Chamberlain’s men before their
-actual transfer to the Globe. As the Theatre had to be built, this is
-not likely to have taken place until the autumn of 1599, and it must
-therefore remain doubtful which house was the ‘wooden O’ of <i>Henry
-V</i>, produced during the absence of Essex in Ireland between 27
-March and 28 September 1599. It was, however, certainly at the Globe
-that Thomas Platter saw <i>Julius Caesar</i> on 21 September.<a id="FNanchor_583" href="#Footnote_583" class="fnanchor">[583]</a>
-‘This fair-filled Globe’, too, is named in the epilogue to Jonson’s
-<i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>, which is ascribed in the Folio
-of 1606 to 1599, although if this be correct, an apparent allusion
-to Kempe’s journey to Norwich in the spring of 1600 must, on the
-assumption that it is a real allusion, be an interpolation. The
-‘principall Comoedians’ in this play were Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips,
-Condell, Sly, and Pope. Four of the 1598 names are missing. Shakespeare
-evidently stood aside. Kempe had gone. Beeston and Duke may have gone
-also, although it is only a conjecture of Mr. Fleay’s that they and
-Kempe now seceded to Pembroke’s men at the Rose, and they are not
-definitely heard of again until they are found with Worcester’s men
-in August 1602.<a id="FNanchor_584" href="#Footnote_584" class="fnanchor">[584]</a> Mr. Fleay thinks that another Worcester’s man,
-Robert Pallant, had accompanied them; but, although Pallant was with
-Strange’s or the Admiral’s about 1590, there is no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span> evidence that he
-was ever a Chamberlain’s man. Conceivably he may have joined the King’s
-men about 1619, but that is another matter.<a id="FNanchor_585" href="#Footnote_585" class="fnanchor">[585]</a> About November 1599
-was published <i>A Warning for Fair Women</i>, which belonged to the
-company.</p>
-
-<p>The Court plays called for from the Chamberlain’s men during the
-following winter were on 26 December 1599 and on 6 January and 3
-February 1600. Heminges was sole payee, and occupied the same position
-in every subsequent year, up to and beyond 1616, except in 1600–1, when
-Richard Cowley was associated with him, and for a special payment made
-to Burbadge in 1604. On 6 March 1600 the company had an opportunity
-of rendering direct service to their patron Lord Hunsdon, by playing
-<i>Henry IV</i>, still oddly called <i>Sir John Oldcastle</i>, after
-a dinner which he gave to the Flemish ambassador, Ludovic Verreyken,
-presumably at his house in the Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_586" href="#Footnote_586" class="fnanchor">[586]</a> To 1600 I assign
-Shakespeare’s <i>Merry Wives of Windsor</i>, not improbably prepared
-for performance, with the aid of the boys of Windsor Chapel, at the
-Garter Feast on 23 April, and also <i>As You Like It</i>. This was a
-year of some activity among the publishers and, as in 1598, the company
-had to take steps to protect their interests. In May John Roberts was
-prevented from printing their moral of <i>Cloth Breeches and Velvet
-Hose</i>, until he could bring proper authority, and in August a note
-was made in the Stationers’ Register to stay the printing of <i>As You
-Like It</i>, <i>Henry V</i>, and <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>.<a id="FNanchor_587" href="#Footnote_587" class="fnanchor">[587]</a>
-The last two of these, but not the first, were in fact printed during
-the year, and so were <i>A Midsummer-Night’s Dream</i>, <i>The Merchant
-of Venice</i>, <i>2 Henry IV</i>, <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>,
-and <i>An Alarum for London</i>, all plays belonging to the company.</p>
-
-<p>The Chamberlain’s men played at Court on 26 December 1600 and on 6
-January and 24 February 1601. Shortly before this last performance,
-they had been involved in one of the tragedies of history. This was
-the abortive <i>coup d’état</i> of 8 February 1601 in which the Earl
-of Essex, smarting under the disgrace which his failure in Ireland
-had brought upon him, attempted to secure his position and get rid of
-Sir Walter Raleigh and other enemies by taking forcible possession
-of the person of Elizabeth and the palace of Whitehall. Some of his
-followers seem to have conceived the idea of predisposing the mind
-of the populace to their cause by a dramatic representation of the
-dangers of evil counsellors and the possible remedy of a deposition, as
-illustrated in the case of Elizabeth’s predecessor Richard II, in whom
-for some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span> obscure reason the political thought of the time was fond of
-finding an analogue to the Queen. Saturday, 7 February, the day before
-the outbreak, was chosen for the performance, and the players applied
-to were the Chamberlain’s. A deposition by Augustine Phillips, taken
-before Chief Justice Popham and Justice Fenner during the subsequent
-inquiries, records the transaction.<a id="FNanchor_588" href="#Footnote_588" class="fnanchor">[588]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The Examination of Augustine Phillips, servant unto the L.
-Chamberlain and one of his players, taken the xviij<sup>th</sup> of
-February, 1600, upon his oath.</p>
-
-<p>‘He saith that on Friday last was sennight or Thursday Sir
-Charles Percy Sir Josceline Percy and the Lord Mounteagle with
-some three more spoke to some of the players in the presence
-of this Examinate to have the play of the deposing and killing
-of King Richard the Second to be played the Saturday next,
-promising to get them xl<i>s.</i> more than their ordinary to
-play it. Where this Examinate and his fellows were determined to
-have played some other play, holding that play of King Richard
-to be so old and so long out of use that they should have small
-or no company at it. But at their request this Examinate and
-his fellows were content to play it the Saturday and had their
-xl<sup><i>s.</i></sup> more than their ordinary for it, and so played it
-accordingly.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The fact that Phillips speaks of the play as old and long out of
-use, which becomes in the narrative of Camden ‘exoleta tragoedia’,
-hardly justifies the suggestion that it was something earlier than
-Shakespeare’s <i>Richard II</i>. This, if produced in 1596, may well
-have been off the boards by 1601.</p>
-
-<p>A good deal of misunderstanding has gathered round the connexion of
-the Chamberlain’s men with this affair. Mr. Fleay is responsible for
-the theory that they fell into disgrace, had to travel, and were
-excluded from the Court festivities of the following Christmas.<a id="FNanchor_589" href="#Footnote_589" class="fnanchor">[589]</a> As
-a matter of fact they played four times during that winter. This Mr.
-Fleay did not know, as he only had before him Cunningham’s incomplete
-extracts from the accounts of the Treasurer of the Chamber. But he
-ought to have noticed that their last performance for 1600–1 was
-itself some days later than the examination of Augustine Phillips.
-Nor is any evidence that the company travelled in 1601 forthcoming
-from the provincial archives. Mr. Fleay’s identification of them with
-Laurence Fletcher’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span> Scottish company of that year merely rests upon
-the presence of Fletcher’s name in the patent of 1603, and this will
-not bear the strain of the argument.<a id="FNanchor_590" href="#Footnote_590" class="fnanchor">[590]</a> Thus remains, however, the
-possibly autobiographical passage in <i>Hamlet</i>, ii. 2. 346, which
-assigns an ‘inhibition by the means of the late innovation’ as a cause
-of the travelling of players to Elsinore. The date of <i>Hamlet</i>
-may well be 1601, since the same passage refers to the theatrical
-competition set up by the establishment of boy companies at St. Paul’s
-in 1599 and at the Chapel Royal in 1600. But it must be borne in mind
-that this competition is the only reason given for the travelling in
-the 1603 edition of the play. In the 1604 edition the only reason
-is the inhibition, while in the text of the 1623 Folio both reasons
-stand somewhat inconsistently side by side.<a id="FNanchor_591" href="#Footnote_591" class="fnanchor">[591]</a> No doubt the text
-of 1603 is an imperfect piratical reprint. On the other hand that of
-1604 almost certainly represents a revised version of the play, and
-the ‘inhibition’ cited, if it had an historical existence at all,
-may be that of 1603, during which certainly the company travelled. I
-suppose that ‘innovation’ might mean the accession of a new sovereign,
-although it does not seem a very obvious term. But then it does not
-seem a very obvious term for a seditious rising either.<a id="FNanchor_592" href="#Footnote_592" class="fnanchor">[592]</a> On the
-whole, there is no reason to suppose that any serious blame was
-attached to the Chamberlain’s men for lending themselves to Sir Gilly
-Meyrick’s intrigue. It is certainly absurd to suggest, as has been
-suggested, that the ‘adorned creature’, whose ingratitude instigated
-the comparison between Elizabeth and Richard, was not Essex but
-Shakespeare.<a id="FNanchor_593" href="#Footnote_593" class="fnanchor">[593]</a> At the same time the company may, of course, have
-been told to leave London for a few weeks. At some time, as the 1603
-title-page tells us, they took <i>Hamlet</i> both to Oxford and to
-Cambridge, and it is at least tempting to find a reminiscence of the
-Cambridge visit in the scene from <i>2 Return from Parnassus</i> cited
-below. It is possible that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span> Phillips and his fellows, and even their
-relation to the Essex crisis itself, may be glanced at in the satirical
-picture of the Roman actors in Jonson’s <i>Poetaster</i>, produced by
-the Chapel boys in the course of 1601.<a id="FNanchor_594" href="#Footnote_594" class="fnanchor">[594]</a> Certainly the play betrays
-its author’s knowledge of a counter-attack which the Chamberlain’s men
-were already preparing for him in Dekker’s <i>Satiromastix</i>. This
-play, in which Dekker may have had some help from Marston, was entered
-in the Stationers’ Register on 11 November 1601, and had probably been
-on the stage not long before. It is noteworthy that it was produced by
-the Paul’s boys, as well as by the Chamberlain’s men. It was actually
-published in 1602. Another play which may reasonably be assigned to
-1601 is <i>Twelfth Night</i>.</p>
-
-<p>In the following winter the company played at Court on 26 and 27
-December 1601 and on 1 January and 14 February 1602. They also gave
-<i>Twelfth Night</i> at the Middle Temple feast on 2 February;<a id="FNanchor_595" href="#Footnote_595" class="fnanchor">[595]</a>
-and I have very little doubt that it was they who furnished the
-play at which Elizabeth and her maids of honour were present in the
-Blackfriars after dining with Lord Hunsdon on 31 December.<a id="FNanchor_596" href="#Footnote_596" class="fnanchor">[596]</a> The
-alleged production of <i>Othello</i> before the Queen when Sir Thomas
-Egerton entertained her at Harefield from 31 July to 2 August 1602
-rests on a forgery by Collier.<a id="FNanchor_597" href="#Footnote_597" class="fnanchor">[597]</a> It is possible that, as Professor
-Wallace conjectures, the play was on the capture of Stuhl-Weissenburg,
-seen by the Duke of Stettin on 13 September 1602, may have been a
-Globe production.<a id="FNanchor_598" href="#Footnote_598" class="fnanchor">[598]</a> <i>Sir Thomas Cromwell</i>, a play of unknown
-authorship belonging to the company, was published in the course of
-1602, with an ascription on the title-page to W. S., and to this year
-I assign Shakespeare’s <i>All’s Well that Ends Well</i> and <i>Troilus
-and Cressida</i>. If so, the portrait of Ajax in the latter play cannot
-very well have been the ‘purge’ administered by Shakespeare to Jonson,
-to which reference is made in <i>2 Return from Parnassus</i>. This is
-a Cambridge Christmas piece, probably of 1601–2, and in it Burbadge
-and Kempe are introduced as in search of scholars to write for them.
-Perhaps the Cambridge author did not know that Kempe had ceased to be
-the ‘fellow’ of Burbadge and Shakespeare in 1599, and was at the time
-playing with Worcester’s men at the Rose. It is, however, just possible
-that after returning from his continental tour and before throwing in
-his lot with Worcester’s, he may have rejoined the Chamberlain’s for a
-while, and may<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span> have accompanied them to Cambridge, if they did travel
-in 1601.<a id="FNanchor_599" href="#Footnote_599" class="fnanchor">[599]</a></p>
-
-<p>The last performances of the company before Elizabeth took place on 26
-December 1602 and 2 February 1603, and on the following 24 March the
-Queen died. Playing immediately ceased in London. Strictly speaking,
-the Chamberlain’s men must have again become Lord Hunsdon’s men for
-a month or so, for the Household appointments naturally lapsed with
-the death of the sovereign, and Hunsdon, being in failing health, was
-relieved of his duties on 6 April. On 9 September he died.<a id="FNanchor_600" href="#Footnote_600" class="fnanchor">[600]</a> The
-company, however, had already passed under royal patronage.</p>
-
-<p>A contemporary panegyrist records the graciousness of James in
-‘taking to him the late Lord Chamberlaines servants, now the Kings
-acters’.<a id="FNanchor_601" href="#Footnote_601" class="fnanchor">[601]</a> The appointment was by letters patent dated 19 May 1603,
-of which the text follows.<a id="FNanchor_602" href="#Footnote_602" class="fnanchor">[602]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Commissio specialis pro Laurencio Fletcher &amp; Willelmo
-Shackespeare et aliis</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of god &amp;c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
-Sheriffes, Constables, hedborowes, and other our Officers and
-louinge Subiectes greetinge. Knowe yee that Wee of our speciall
-grace, certeine knowledge, &amp; mere motion haue licenced and
-aucthorized and by theise presentes doe licence and aucthorize
-theise our Servauntes Lawrence Fletcher, William Shakespeare,
-Richard Burbage, Augustyne Phillippes, Iohn Heninges, Henrie
-Condell, William Sly, Robert Armyn, Richard Cowly, and the rest
-of theire Assosiates freely to vse and exercise the Arte and
-faculty of playinge Comedies, Tragedies, histories, Enterludes,
-moralls, pastoralls, Stage-plaies, and Suche others like as
-theie haue alreadie studied or hereafter shall vse or studie,
-aswell for the recreation of our lovinge Subjectes, as for
-our Solace and pleasure when wee shall thincke good to see
-them, duringe our pleasure. And the said Commedies, tragedies,
-histories, Enterludes, Morralles, Pastoralls, Stageplayes, and
-suche like to shewe and exercise publiquely to theire best
-Commoditie, when the infection of the plague shall decrease,
-aswell within theire nowe vsual howse called the Globe within
-our County of Surrey, as alsoe within anie towne halls or Moute
-halls or other conveniente places within the liberties and
-freedome of anie other Cittie, vniversitie, towne, or Boroughe
-whatsoever within our said Realmes and domynions. Willinge and
-Commaundinge you and everie of you, as you tender our pleasure,
-not onelie to permitt and suffer them herein<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span> without anie your
-lettes hindrances or molestacions during our said pleasure, but
-alsoe to be aidinge and assistinge to them, yf anie wronge be to
-them offered, And to allowe them such former Curtesies as hath
-bene given to men of theire place and quallitie, and alsoe what
-further favour you shall shewe to theise our Servauntes for our
-sake wee shall take kindlie at your handes. In wytnesse whereof
-&amp;c. witnesse our selfe at Westminster the nyntenth day of May</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">Of the nine players named, eight are recognizable as the principal
-members of the Lord Chamberlain’s company as it stood at the end of
-Elizabeth’s reign. Only Thomas Pope is not included. He was near his
-end. He made his will on 22 July 1603, and it was proved on 13 February
-1604. In it he names none of his fellows, unless Robert Gough, who has
-a legacy, was already of the company; his interest in the house of
-the Globe passed to legatees and was thus alienated from the company.
-Laurence Fletcher, on the other hand, whose name heads the list in
-the patent, is not discernible as a Chamberlain’s man. His inclusion
-becomes readily intelligible, when it is recalled that he had headed
-English actors on tour in Scotland, and had already been marked by the
-personal favour of James.<a id="FNanchor_603" href="#Footnote_603" class="fnanchor">[603]</a> Whether he ever joined the company in
-the full sense, that is to say, the association of actors as distinct
-from the body of royal servants, seems to me very doubtful. His name is
-not in the <i>Sejanus</i> list, or in the Folio list of Shakespearian
-players, and that he was described as a ‘fellow’ by Phillips in 1605
-hardly takes the matter further. He may have held a relation to the
-King’s men analogous to that of Martin Slater to Queen Anne’s men.
-After 1605 nothing is heard of him.<a id="FNanchor_604" href="#Footnote_604" class="fnanchor">[604]</a></p>
-
-<p>The terms of the patent imply that it was issued during a suspension
-of playing through plague. Probably this had followed hard upon the
-suspension at Elizabeth’s death. The company travelled, being found at
-Bath, Coventry, and Shrewsbury in the course of 1602–3. A misplaced
-Ipswich entry of 30 May 1602 may belong to 1603. The visits to Oxford
-and Cambridge referred to on the title-page of the 1603 edition of
-<i>Hamlet</i> must also have taken place in this year, if they did
-not take place in 1601. On 2 December 1603 the company were summoned
-from Mortlake to perform before the King at Lord Pembroke’s house of
-Wilton.<a id="FNanchor_605" href="#Footnote_605" class="fnanchor">[605]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span></p>
-
-<p>During the winter of 1603–4 the company gave eight more plays at
-Court, a larger number than Elizabeth had ever called for. They took
-place on 26, 27, 28, and 30 December 1603 and on 1 January and 2 and
-19 February 1604. On New Year’s Day there were two performances, one
-before James, the other before Prince Henry. The plague had not yet
-subsided by 8 February, and James gave his men £30 as a ‘free gifte’
-for their ‘mayntenaunce and releife’ till it should ‘please God to
-settle the cittie in a more perfecte health’. One of the plays of this
-winter was <i>The Fair Maid of Bristow</i>. Another, produced before
-the end of 1603, was probably Ben Jonson’s <i>Sejanus</i>. For alleged
-popery and treason in this play Jonson was haled before the Privy
-Council by the Earl of Northampton, but there is nothing to show that
-the players were implicated. The principal actors in <i>Sejanus</i>
-were Burbadge, Shakespeare, Phillips, Heminges, Sly, Condell, John
-Lowin, and Alexander Cooke. This is Shakespeare’s last appearance in
-the cast of any play. He may have ceased to act, while remaining a
-member of the company and its poet. The names of Lowin and Cooke are
-new. Lowin had been with Worcester’s men in 1602–3. Cooke had probably
-begun his connexion with the company as an apprentice to Heminges.
-The identification of him with the ‘Sander’ of Strange’s men in 1590
-is more than hazardous. The Induction to Marston’s <i>Malcontent</i>,
-published in 1604, records the names of Burbadge, who played Malevole,
-Condell, Sly, Lowin, Sincler, and a Tire-man. Sincler was probably
-still only a hired man. Nothing further is heard of him. This
-Induction seems to have been written by John Webster to introduce the
-presentation by the King’s men of <i>The Malcontent</i>, which was
-really a Chapel play. The transaction is thus explained:<a id="FNanchor_606" href="#Footnote_606" class="fnanchor">[606]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<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 decimo-sexto with them? They taught us a name for our play;
-we call it <i>One for Another</i>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The play of <i>Jeronimo</i>, which the Chapel are here
-accused of taking, cannot be <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i>, which was an
-Admiral’s play, and is not very likely to have been the ‘comedy of
-Jeronimo’ which Strange’s men had in 1592, and which was evidently
-related to <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i> and may be expected to have
-remained with it. It might be the extant <i>First Part of Jeronimo</i>,
-written perhaps for the Chamberlain’s men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span> about 1601–2, when Jonson
-was revising <i>The Spanish Tragedy</i> for the Admiral’s. A reference
-in T. M.’s <i>Black Book</i> shows that <i>The Merry Devil of
-Edmonton</i>, which belonged to the company, was already on the stage
-by 1604.<a id="FNanchor_607" href="#Footnote_607" class="fnanchor">[607]</a></p>
-
-<p>The coronation procession of James, deferred on account of the plague,
-went through London on 15 March 1604, and the Great Wardrobe furnished
-each of the King’s players with four and a half yards of red cloth. The
-same nine men are specified in the warrant as in the patent of 1603,
-and their names stand next those of various officers of the Chamber.
-They did not, however, actually walk in the procession.<a id="FNanchor_608" href="#Footnote_608" class="fnanchor">[608]</a> From 9 to
-27 August 1604, they were called upon in their official capacity as
-Grooms of the Chamber to form part of the retinue assigned to attend
-at Somerset House upon Juan Fernandez de Velasco, Duke of Frias and
-Constable of Castile, who was in England as Ambassador Extraordinary
-for the negotiation of a peace with Spain. The descriptions of his
-visit, which have been preserved, do not show that any plays were given
-before him.<a id="FNanchor_609" href="#Footnote_609" class="fnanchor">[609]</a></p>
-
-<p>The company were at Oxford between 7 May and 16 June 1604. About
-18 December they had got into trouble through the production of a
-tragedy on <i>Gowry</i>, always a delicate subject with James.<a id="FNanchor_610" href="#Footnote_610" class="fnanchor">[610]</a>
-But this did not interfere with a long series of no less than eleven
-performances which they gave at Court between 1 November 1604 and
-12 February 1605, and of which the Revels Accounts fortunately
-preserve the names.<a id="FNanchor_611" href="#Footnote_611" class="fnanchor">[611]</a> The series included one play, <i>The Spanish
-Maze</i>, of which nothing is known; two by Ben Jonson, <i>Every Man
-In his Humour</i> and <i>Every Man Out of his Humour</i>; and seven
-by Shakespeare, <i>Othello</i>, <i>The Merry Wives of Windsor</i>,
-<i>Measure for Measure</i>, <i>The Comedy of Errors</i>, <i>Henry
-V</i>, <i>Love’s Labour’s Lost</i>, and <i>The Merchant of Venice</i>,
-which was given twice. <i>Othello</i> and <i>Measure for Measure</i>
-had probably been produced for the first time during 1604, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span> the
-rest of the list suggests that opportunity was being taken to revive
-a number of Elizabethan plays unknown to the new sovereigns. This
-is borne out by the terms of a letter from Sir Walter Cope to Lord
-Southampton with regard to the performance of <i>Love’s Labour ’s
-Lost</i>.<a id="FNanchor_612" href="#Footnote_612" class="fnanchor">[612]</a></p>
-
-<p>Between 4 May 1605, when he made his will, and 13 May, when it was
-proved, died Augustine Phillips. Unlike Pope, he was full of kindly
-remembrances towards the King’s men. He appointed Heminges, Burbadge,
-and Sly overseers of the will. He left legacies to his ‘fellows’
-Shakespeare, Condell, Fletcher, Armin, Cowley, Cooke, and Nicholas
-Tooley; to the hired men of the company; to his ‘servant’ Christopher
-Beeston; to his apprentice James Sands, and to his late apprentice
-Samuel Gilburne. We have here practically a full list of the company.
-The name of Nicholas Tooley is new, unless indeed he was the ‘Nick’ of
-Strange’s men in 1592. He speaks of Richard Burbadge in his will as his
-‘master’ and may have been his apprentice. The use of the term ‘fellow’
-suggests that Tooley and Cooke were now sharers in the company. On
-the other hand Lowin, who is not named among the ‘fellows’, may still
-have been only a hired man. Beeston’s legacy is doubtless in memory
-of former service as hired man or apprentice; he was in 1605 and for
-long after with the Queen’s men. Samuel Gilburne is recorded as a
-Shakespearian actor in the 1623 Folio, but practically nothing is known
-of him or of James Sands. The exact legal disposal of the interest held
-by Phillips in the Globe subsequently became matter of controversy, but
-in effect it remained from 1605 to 1613 with his widow and her second
-husband, and was thus alienated from the company.</p>
-
-<p>On some date before Michaelmas in 1605 the King’s men visited
-Barnstaple, and on 9 October they were at Oxford. This year saw the
-publication of <i>The Fair Maid of Bristow</i> and of <i>The London
-Prodigal</i>, which was assigned on its title-page to Shakespeare. To
-it I also assign Shakespeare’s <i>Macbeth</i> and <i>King Lear</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Ten Court plays were given in the winter of 1605–6, but the dates are
-not recorded. Three more were given in the summer of 1606 during the
-visit of the King of Denmark to James, which lasted from 7 July to 11
-August, and then the company seem to have gone on tour. They were at
-Oxford between 28 and 31 July, at Leicester in August, at Dover between
-6 and 24 September, at Saffron Walden and Maidstone during 1605–6, and
-at Marlborough in 1606. To<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span> this year I assign Shakespeare’s <i>Antony
-and Cleopatra</i> and <i>Coriolanus</i>, and to the earlier part of
-it Ben Jonson’s <i>Volpone</i>, in which the principal actors were
-Burbadge, Condell, Sly, Heminges, Lowin, and Cooke.</p>
-
-<p>Nine Court plays were given during the winter of 1606–7, on 26 and 29
-December 1606, and on 4, 6, and 8 January and 2, 5, 15, and 27 February
-1607. The entry in the Stationers’ Register for <i>King Lear</i> and
-the title-page of Barnes’ <i>The Devil’s Charter</i>, both dated in
-1607, show these to have been the plays selected for 26 December and 2
-February respectively. In the same year were also published Tourneur’s
-<i>The Revenger’s Tragedy</i> and Wilkins’ <i>The Miseries of Enforced
-Marriage</i>, and to it I assign the production of <i>Timon of
-Athens</i>. On 16 July 1607 Heminges lent his boy John Rice to appear
-as an angel of gladness with a taper of frankincense, and deliver an
-eighteen-verse speech by Ben Jonson as part of the entertainment of
-James by the Merchant Taylors at their hall.<a id="FNanchor_613" href="#Footnote_613" class="fnanchor">[613]</a> During the summer the
-company travelled to Barnstaple, to Dunwich, to Oxford, where they were
-on 7 September, and possibly to Cambridge. <i>Volpone</i> had probably
-been given in both Universities before its publication about February
-1607 or 1608.</p>
-
-<p>During the winter of 1607–8 the company gave thirteen Court plays, on
-26, 27, and 28 December 1606, and on 2, 6, 7, 9, 17, and 26 January,
-and 2 and 7 February 1607. On each of the nights of 6 and 17 January
-there were two plays. In 1608 was published <i>A Yorkshire Tragedy</i>,
-with Shakespeare’s name on the title-page, and to it I assign the
-production of <i>Pericles</i>, in which Shakespeare probably had
-Wilkins for a collaborator. About May the company had to find their
-share of the heavy fine necessary to buy off the inhibition due to
-the performance of Chapman’s <i>Duke of Byron</i> by the Queen’s
-Revels.<a id="FNanchor_614" href="#Footnote_614" class="fnanchor">[614]</a> The year was in many ways an eventful one for the King’s
-men. They had, I suspect, to face a growing detachment of Shakespeare
-from London and the theatre; and the loss was perhaps partly supplied
-by the establishment of relations with Beaumont and Fletcher, whose
-earliest play for the company, <i>Philaster</i>, may be of any date
-from 1608 to 1610. About 16 August died William Sly, leaving his
-interest in the Globe to his son Robert and legacies to Cuthbert
-Burbadge and James Sands. Both he and Henry Condell had been admitted
-to an interest at some date subsequent to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span> November 1606, the moiety
-of the lease not retained by the Burbadges having been redistributed
-into sixths to allow of this. The deserts of Pope, Phillips, and Sly
-are all commemorated in the <i>Apology</i> of Thomas Heywood, which,
-though not published until 1612, was probably written in 1608.<a id="FNanchor_615" href="#Footnote_615" class="fnanchor">[615]</a>
-Sly’s death complicated an important transaction in which the King’s
-men were engaged. This was the acquisition of the Blackfriars, of which
-the freehold already belonged to the Burbadges, but which had been
-leased since 1600 to Henry Evans and occupied by the Children of the
-Revels. About July 1608 Evans was prepared to surrender his lease, and
-the Burbadges decided to take the opportunity of providing the King’s
-men with a second house on the north side of the Thames, suitable
-for a winter head-quarters. As in the case of the Globe, they shared
-their interest as housekeepers with some of the leading members of the
-company. New leases were executed on 9 August 1608, by which the house
-was divided between a syndicate of seven, of whom five were Richard
-Burbadge, Shakespeare, Heminges, Condell, and Sly, while the other two,
-Cuthbert Burbadge and Thomas Evans, were not King’s men. When Sly’s
-death intervened, his executrix surrendered his interest and the number
-of the syndicate was reduced to six. Probably, however, the King’s men
-did not enter upon the actual occupation of the Blackfriars until the
-autumn of the following year.<a id="FNanchor_616" href="#Footnote_616" class="fnanchor">[616]</a> In fact the plague kept the London
-theatres closed from July 1608 to December 1609. The King’s men were
-at Coventry on 29 October 1608 and at Marlborough in the course of
-1607–8. The plague did not prevent them from appearing at Court during
-the winter of 1608–9, and they gave twelve plays on unspecified dates.
-But their difficulties are testified to by a special reward ‘for their
-private practise in the time of infeccion’, which had rendered their
-Christmas service possible.</p>
-
-<p>The plague led to an early provincial tour. The company were at Ipswich
-on 9 May, at Hythe on 16 May, and at New Romney on 17 May 1609. Their
-winter season was again interfered with, and a further grant was
-made in respect of six weeks of private practice. Amongst the plays
-so practised may, I think, have been <i>Cymbeline</i>. They gave
-thirteen plays at Court on unspecified dates during the holidays of
-1609–10.<a id="FNanchor_617" href="#Footnote_617" class="fnanchor">[617]</a> One of these may have been <i>Mucedorus</i>, the edition
-of which with the imprint<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span> 1610 represents a revised version performed
-at Court on the previous Shrove Sunday. This might be either 18
-February 1610 or 3 February 1611. The epilogue contains an apology for
-some recent indiscretion of the company in a play of which no more is
-known, but which might conceivably be Daborne’s <i>A Christian Turned
-Turk</i>, since this certainly brought its players into some disgrace.
-By April the company were at the Globe, playing <i>Macbeth</i> on 20
-April, <i>Cymbeline</i> probably shortly before, and <i>Othello</i>
-on 30 April.<a id="FNanchor_618" href="#Footnote_618" class="fnanchor">[618]</a> To this year I assign <i>The Winter’s Tale</i>
-and Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>The Maid’s Tragedy</i>. It also saw
-the production of Jonson’s <i>Alchemist</i>, with a cast including
-Burbadge, Lowin, Condell, Cooke, Armin, Heminges, William Ostler, John
-Underwood, Tooley, and William Ecclestone. This is the last mention of
-Armin in connexion with the King’s men, but it is sufficient to show
-that the production of his <i>Two Maids of Moreclack</i> by the King’s
-Revels about 1608 did not involve any breach with his old company. Of
-Ecclestone’s origin nothing is known.<a id="FNanchor_619" href="#Footnote_619" class="fnanchor">[619]</a> Ostler and Underwood came
-from the Queen’s Revels, probably when the Blackfriars was taken over
-in 1609. In fact an account of the transaction given by the Burbadges
-in 1635 suggests that the desire to acquire these boys was its
-fundamental motive. They say:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘In processe of time, the boyes growing up to bee men, which
-were Underwood, Field, Ostler, and were taken to strengthen the
-King’s service; and the more to strengthen the service, the
-boyes dayly wearing out, it was considered that house would bee
-as fitt for ourselves, and soe purchased the lease remaining
-from Evans with our money, and placed men players, which were
-Heminges, Condall, Shakspeare, &amp;c.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This narrative seems, however, to have antedated matters as regards
-Field. Or, if he did come to the King’s men in 1609, he almost
-immediately returned to the Queen’s Revels at Whitefriars, joining the
-King’s again about 1616.<a id="FNanchor_620" href="#Footnote_620" class="fnanchor">[620]</a></p>
-
-<p>About 8 May 1610 some superfluous apparel of the company was sold
-by Heminges on their behalf to the Duke of York’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span> men (q.v.). On
-31 May Burbadge and Rice were employed by the City to make speeches
-on fish-back at the civic pageant of welcome to Prince Henry.<a id="FNanchor_621" href="#Footnote_621" class="fnanchor">[621]</a>
-The autumn travelling took the company to Dover between 6 July and 4
-August 1610, to Oxford in August, and to Shrewsbury and Stafford in
-1609–10. During the following winter they gave fifteen Court plays on
-unspecified days. They were playing a piece on the story of Richard
-II, not now extant, at the Globe on 30 April 1611, and <i>A Winter’s
-Tale</i> on 15 May.<a id="FNanchor_622" href="#Footnote_622" class="fnanchor">[622]</a> During 1611 Jonson’s <i>Catiline</i> was
-produced, with a cast similar to that of <i>The Alchemist</i>, except
-that Armin was replaced by Richard Robinson, whose earlier history is
-unknown. Robinson, playing a female part, and Robert Gough also appear
-in the stage directions of <i>The Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i>, licensed
-for the stage by Sir George Buck on 31 October 1611. Gough was probably
-one of Strange’s men in 1592. He appears in the wills of Pope in 1603
-and of Phillips, who was his brother-in-law, in 1605, but with no
-indication that he belonged to the King’s men. Beaumont and Fletcher’s
-<i>A King and No King</i> was also licensed by Buck in 1611, and to
-this year I assign Shakespeare’s <i>Tempest</i>. On 25 August 1611 the
-interest in the Blackfriars originally intended for Sly was assigned
-to Ostler. Ecclestone, on the other hand, later in the year than the
-production of <i>Catiline</i>, but before 29 August, left the company
-for the Lady Elizabeth’s men.</p>
-
-<p>The only provincial visit by the King’s men recorded in 1610–11 was
-to Shrewsbury. They gave twenty-two plays at Court during a rather
-prolonged winter season extending from 31 October 1611 to 26 April
-1612. Two of these, on 12 and 13 January, were joint performances with
-the Queen’s men, and the plays used, Heywood’s <i>Silver Age</i> and
-<i>Rape of Lucrece</i>, were from the repertory of the latter.<a id="FNanchor_623" href="#Footnote_623" class="fnanchor">[623]</a> The
-King’s men also gave <i>The Tempest</i> and <i>A Winter’s Tale</i>,
-<i>A King and No King</i>, Tourneur’s <i>The Nobleman</i>, and <i>The
-Twins’ Tragedy</i>. On 20 February 1612 the actors’ moiety of the
-Globe was again redistributed, into sevenths, so as to allow of the
-admission as a housekeeper of Ostler, who had married a daughter of
-Heminges. From the statement of the interests held by the parties to
-this transaction, it is to be inferred that Heminges and Condell had
-between them bought out since 1608 the representatives of Sly. On
-21 April 1612 the company was at New Romney and at some date during
-1611–12<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span> at Winchester. Heminges received a payment for services to the
-Lord Mayor’s pageant of this year, which was Dekker’s <i>Troja Nova
-Triumphans</i>.<a id="FNanchor_624" href="#Footnote_624" class="fnanchor">[624]</a></p>
-
-<p>The actor-list attached to <i>The Captain</i> in the Beaumont and
-Fletcher Folio of 1679 probably belongs to the original production of
-the play between 1609 and 1612. It names Burbadge, Condell, Cooke,
-and Ostler. It was one of the plays selected for the Court season of
-1612–13, during which, on 14 February, took place the wedding of the
-Elector Palatine Frederick and the Princess Elizabeth, and which was
-therefore singularly rich in plays, notwithstanding the interruption of
-the festivities due to the death of Prince Henry on 7 November 1612.
-Heminges lent a boy for Chapman’s mask on 15 February. The twenty
-plays given this winter by the King’s men, the exact dates of which
-are not upon record, were Shakespeare’s <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>
-(performed twice), <i>The Tempest</i>, <i>A Winter’s Tale</i>,
-<i>Julius Caesar</i>, <i>Othello</i>, and <i>1 and 2 Henry IV</i>,
-Jonson’s <i>Alchemist</i>, Beaumont and Fletcher’s <i>Philaster</i>
-(also performed twice), <i>The Maid’s Tragedy</i>, <i>A King and No
-King</i>, <i>The Captain</i> and the lost play of <i>Cardenio</i>,
-Tourneur’s <i>Nobleman</i>, and four plays of unknown authorship,
-<i>The Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>, <i>The Knot of Fools</i>, <i>The
-Twins’ Tragedy</i>, and <i>A Bad Beginning Makes a Good Ending</i>.
-On 8 June there was a special performance of <i>Cardenio</i> for
-the Savoyan ambassador. Some unknown cause seems to have brought
-Shakespeare back in 1613 to the assistance of his fellows, and he
-collaborated with Fletcher in <i>The Two Noble Kinsmen</i> and in
-<i>Henry VIII</i> or <i>All is True</i>, possibly a revision of the
-<i>Buckingham</i> which formed part of the repertory of Sussex’s men
-in 1594. During a performance of <i>Henry VIII</i>, on 29 June 1613,
-the Globe was burnt to the ground. Some contemporary verses mention
-Burbadge, Heminges, and Condell as present on this occasion. A levy was
-called for from the housekeepers to meet the cost of rebuilding, and
-owing to the inability of the representatives of Augustine Phillips to
-meet the call upon them, Heminges was enabled to recover one of the
-alienated interests, which he divided with Condell.</p>
-
-<p>The company was at Oxford before November in 1613, and also visited
-Shrewsbury, Stafford, and Folkestone during 1612–13. They played
-sixteen times at Court in the winter of 1613–14, on 1, 4, 5, 15, and
-16 November and 27 December 1613, and on 1, 4, and 10 January, 2, 4,
-8, 10, and 18 February and 6 and 8 March 1614. The rebuilding of the
-Globe was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span> complete by 30 June 1614, and in the course of 1613–14
-the company visited Coventry. Cooke died in February 1614, being
-then a sharer. Ostler died on 16 December, and his interests in the
-Globe and Blackfriars became matter of dispute between his widow and
-her father, John Heminges. The ascertained dates of Ostler’s career
-render it possible to assign to 1609–14, the period of his connexion
-with the King’s men, three plays in which he took part. These are
-Webster’s <i>Duchess of Malfi</i>, at the first production of which,
-if the actor-list of the 1623 edition is rightly interpreted, the
-parts of Ferdinand, the Cardinal, and Antonio were played respectively
-by Burbadge, Condell, and Ostler, Fletcher’s <i>Valentinian</i>,
-played by Burbadge, Condell, Lowin, Ostler, and Underwood, and his
-<i>Bonduca</i>, played by Burbadge, Condell, Lowin, Ostler, Underwood,
-Tooley, Ecclestone, and Robinson. <i>Bonduca</i> must be either earlier
-than Ecclestone’s departure for the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1611, or
-after he quitted that company and presumably rejoined the King’s in
-1613.</p>
-
-<p>The King’s men gave eight plays at Court on unspecified days during the
-winter of 1614–15. On 29 March 1615 they were in trouble with other
-companies for playing in Lent, and Heminges and Burbadge appeared on
-their behalf before the Privy Council. In April 1615 they were at
-Nottingham. They gave fourteen plays at Court between 1 November 1615
-and 1 April 1616, and again the precise dates are not specified. They
-also appeared before Anne at Somerset House on 21 December 1615.</p>
-
-<p>Shakespeare died on 23 April 1616, and with this event I must close my
-detailed chronicle of the fortunes of the company. A new patent was
-issued to them on 27 March 1619, probably to secure their right to
-perform in the Blackfriars, which was being challenged by the action
-of the City.<a id="FNanchor_625" href="#Footnote_625" class="fnanchor">[625]</a> Since 1603 Shakespeare, Phillips, Sly, Cowley,
-Armin, and Fletcher have dropped out of the list, and are replaced by
-Lowin, Underwood, Tooley, Ecclestone, Gough, and Robinson, together
-with Nathan Field, Robert Benfield, and John Shank, who now appear
-for the first time as members of the company.<a id="FNanchor_626" href="#Footnote_626" class="fnanchor">[626]</a> Benfield and Field
-are last traceable with the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1613 and 1615
-respectively, Shank with the Palsgrave’s men in 1613. The only names
-common to both patents are those of Burbadge, Heminges, and Condell.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-But in fact Burbadge died on 13 March 1619, while the patent was going
-through its stages, and his place was almost immediately taken by
-Joseph Taylor, from Prince Charles’s men. About the same time Field
-left the company.<a id="FNanchor_627" href="#Footnote_627" class="fnanchor">[627]</a> Heminges, described as ‘stuttering’ in 1613,
-cannot be shown to have acted since the <i>Catiline</i> of 1611. He had
-probably devoted himself to the business management of the company, in
-which he always appears prominent. Condell also seems to have given up
-acting about 1619, and during the rest of the history of the company
-up to its extinction in 1642, its mainstays were Lowin and Taylor,
-who became depositaries of the tradition of the great Shakespearian
-parts. John Downes, who was prompter to the Duke of York’s men after
-the Restoration, relates how, when Betterton played Hamlet, ‘Sir
-<i>William</i> [Davenant] (having seen <i>Mr. Taylor</i> of the
-<i>Black-Fryers</i> Company Act it, who being instructed by the Author
-<i>Mr. Shakespear</i>) taught <i>Mr. Betterton</i> in every Particle
-of it’; and how Davenant was similarly able to act as Betterton’s
-tutor for Henry the Eighth, for he ‘had it from Old <i>Mr. Lowen</i>,
-that had his Instructions from <i>Mr. Shakespear</i> himself’.<a id="FNanchor_628" href="#Footnote_628" class="fnanchor">[628]</a>
-When Heminges and Condell came to print Shakespeare’s plays in 1623,
-they prefixed ‘the names of the principall Actors in all these playes’
-as follows: ‘William Shakespeare, Richard Burbadge, John Hemmings,
-Augustine Phillips, William Kempt, Thomas Poope, George Bryan, Henry
-Condell, William Slye, Richard Cowly, John Lowine, Samuell Crosse,
-Alexander Cooke, Samuel Gilburne, Robert Armin, William Ostler, Nathan
-Field, John Underwood, Nicholas Tooley, William Ecclestone, Joseph
-Taylor, Robert Benfield, Robert Goughe, Richard Robinson, John Shancke,
-John Rice.’ The order is a little puzzling. The first ten entries may
-be those of the original members of the Chamberlain’s company in 1594;
-and if so, their order does not matter. But it is difficult to believe
-that the other sixteen can represent either the order in which the
-men began to play for the company, or the order in which they became
-sharers. Of course, there may have been comings and goings known to
-Heminges and Condell, but not now traceable. Thus Field and even Taylor
-may have come for a short while and gone again before 1611. But it
-seems impossible that Tooley, who was ‘fellow’ to Phillips in 1605,
-could really have been junior to the recruits from the Queen’s Revels
-in 1609. On the whole, one must suppose that, if Heminges and Condell<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-aimed at an exact chronology, their memory occasionally failed them.
-The omission from the Folio of Duke, Beeston, Sincler, and Sands may
-indicate that the list is confined to sharers. It is probable that
-Fletcher, who is also omitted, was not a sharer and did not act in any
-Shakespearian play.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xxi. THE EARL OF WORCESTER’S AND QUEEN ANNE’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>William Somerset, <i>nat.</i> 1526; succ. as 3rd Earl of
-Worcester, 1548; m. Christian, d. of Edward, 1st Lord North;
-<i>ob.</i> 22 Feb. 1589.</p>
-
-<p>Edward Somerset, s. of William; <i>nat.</i> 1553; Lord Herbert
-of Chepstow; succ. as 4th Earl, 1589; m. Elizabeth, d. of
-Francis, 2nd Earl of Huntingdon; Deputy Master of the Horse,
-Dec. 1597; Master of the Horse, 21 Apr. 1601; Earl Marshal,
-1603; Lord Privy Seal, 2 Jan. 1616; <i>ob.</i> 3 Mar. 1628.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Somerset, s. of Edward; <i>nat.</i> 1577; Lord Herbert
-of Chepstow from 1589; m. 16 June 1600, Anne, d. of John, Lord
-Russell; succ. as 5th Earl, 1628; cr. 1st Marquis of Worcester,
-1642.</p>
-
-<p>Anne, d. of Frederick II, King of Denmark and Norway;
-<i>nat.</i> 12 Dec. 1574; m. James VI, King of Scotland, 20 Aug.
-1589; Queen Consort of England, 24 Mar. 1603; <i>ob.</i> 2 Mar.
-1619.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The records of Worcester’s men in
-1602–3 are printed and discussed by W. W. Greg in <i>Henslowe’s
-Diary</i> (1904–8). The will of Thomas Greene (1612) was printed
-by J. Greenstreet in the <i>Athenaeum</i> (29 August 1895), and
-the Bill, Answer, and Orders in the Chancery suit of <i>Worth
-et al. v. Baskerville et al.</i> (1623–6) by the same in the
-<i>Athenaeum</i> (11 July and 29 August 1885) and <i>N. S. S.
-Trans.</i> (<i>1880–6</i>), 489. Both are reprinted in Fleay,
-192, 271. The Court of Requests suit of <i>Smith v. Beeston et
-al.</i> (1619–20) is printed by C. W. Wallace in <i>Nebraska
-University Studies</i>, ix. 315.]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first company under the patronage of this house had a long and
-wholly provincial career.<a id="FNanchor_629" href="#Footnote_629" class="fnanchor">[629]</a> The earliest record of it is at
-Barnstaple in 1555. On 10 October 1563 it was at Leicester. On 13 and
-14 January 1565 it was at Sir George Vernon’s, Haddon Hall, Derbyshire,
-under the leadership of one Hamond.<a id="FNanchor_630" href="#Footnote_630" class="fnanchor">[630]</a> It is further traceable in
-December 1565 at Newcastle, before Michaelmas 1566 at Leicester,
-in 1567–8 at Gloucester, in 1568–9 at Ipswich, Stratford-on-Avon,
-and Bath, on 11 August 1569 at Nottingham, in 1569–70 and 1570–1 at
-Gloucester and Barnstaple, in 1571 at Leicester and Beverley, on 9
-January 1572 at Nottingham, before Michaelmas at Leicester, on 31
-December 1572 at Wollaton, Notts. (Francis Willoughby’s), on 6 January
-1573 at Nottingham, in 1572–3 at Bath, in 1573–4 at Abingdon, and in
-January 1574 at Wollaton again. As the Earl of Worcester’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span> eldest
-son bore the courtesy title of Lord Herbert, it is probably the same
-company which appeared at Leicester, after Michaelmas in 1574, as
-‘Lorde Harbards’. But it is named as Worcester’s again in 1574–5 at
-Stratford-on-Avon, on 28 April 1575 at Nottingham, and after Michaelmas
-in the same year at Leicester, in 1575–6 at Coventry, in 1576–7 at
-Stratford-on-Avon and Bath, and on 14 June 1577 at Southampton, where
-it consisted of ten men. On 19 January 1578 it was at Nottingham, in
-1577–8 at Coventry, in 1580–1 and 1581–2 at Stratford-on-Avon, in
-1581–2 at Abingdon, on 15 June 1582 at Ipswich, in the same year at
-Doncaster.</p>
-
-<p>Two incidents in successive years suggest that Worcester’s men were not
-always quite so amenable, as vagrants should have been, to municipal
-discipline. The first was at Norwich on 7 June 1583. Here there was a
-fear of plague, and the company were given 26<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, on
-a promise not to play. In spite of this they played in their host’s
-house. The Corporation ordered ‘that their lord shall be certified of
-their contempt’, and that they should never again receive reward in
-Norwich, and should presently depart the town on pain of imprisonment.
-It was afterwards agreed, however, on submission and earnest entreaty,
-not to report the misdemeanour to the Earl of Worcester. The second
-occasion was in the following March in Leicester, and the entries in
-the Corporation archives are so interesting as to deserve reproduction
-in full.<a id="FNanchor_631" href="#Footnote_631" class="fnanchor">[631]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">
-
-<p class="p-left">
-M<sup>r</sup> Mayor<br />
-M<sup>r</sup> J. Tatam<br />
-M<sup>r</sup> Morton.
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Tuesdaie the third daie of Marche, 1583, certen playors whoe
-said they were the seruants of the Quenes Maiesties Master
-of the Revells, who required lycence to play &amp; for there
-aucthorytye showed forth an Indenture of Lycense from one M<sup>r</sup>
-Edmonde Tylneye esquier M<sup>r</sup> of her Maiesties Revells of the one
-parte, and George Haysell of Wisbiche in the Ile of Elye in the
-Countie of Cambridge, gentleman on the other parte.</p>
-
-<p>The which indenture is dated the vj<sup>th</sup> daie of Februarye in
-the xxv<sup>th</sup> yere of her Maiesties raign &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>In which Indenture there ys one article that all Justices,
-Maiores, Sherifs, Bayllyfs, Constables, and all other her
-officers, ministers &amp; subiects whatsoeuer to be aydinge &amp;
-assistinge vnto the said Edmund<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span> Tilneye, his Deputies &amp;
-Assignes, attendinge &amp; havinge due regard vnto suche parsons
-as shall disorderly intrude themselves into any the doings and
-actions before mencioned, not beinge reformed, qualifyed &amp; bound
-to the orders prescribed by the said Edmund Tyllneye. These
-shalbee therefore not only to signifye &amp; geve notice vnto all
-&amp; euery her said Justices &amp;c. that none of there owne pretensed
-aucthoritye intrude themselves &amp; presume to showe forth any
-suche playes, enterludes, tragedies, comodies, or shewes in
-any places within this Realm, withoute the orderlye allowance
-thereof vnder the hand of the sayd Edmund.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nota.</span> No play is to bee played, but suche as is allowed
-by the sayd Edmund, &amp; his hand at the latter end of the said
-booke they doe play.</p>
-
-<p>The forsed Haysell is nowe the chefe playor &amp;c.</p>
-
-
-<h6>Fridaye the 6 of Marche.</h6>
-
-<p>Certen players came before M<sup>r</sup> Mayor at the Hall there beinge
-present M<sup>r</sup> John Tatam, M<sup>r</sup> George Tatam, M<sup>r</sup> Morton &amp; M<sup>r</sup>
-Worship: who sayed they were the Earle of Wosters men: who sayd
-the forsyd playors were not lawfully aucthorysed, &amp; that they
-had taken from them there commyssion, but it is untrue, for they
-forgat there box at the Inne in Leicester, &amp; so these men gat yt
-&amp; they sed the syd Haysell was not here hymself and they sent
-the same to Grantom to the syd Haysell who dwellith there.</p>
-
-<p>William Earle of Worcester &amp;c. hath by his wrytinge dated the 14
-of Januarye Anno 25<sup>o</sup> Eliz. Reginae licensed his Seruants viz.
-Robert Browne, James Tunstall, Edward Allen, William Harryson,
-Thomas Cooke, Rychard Johnes, Edward Browne, Rychard Andrewes
-to playe &amp; goe abrode, vsinge themselves orderly &amp;c. (in theise
-words &amp;c.) These are therefore to require all suche her Highnes
-offycers to whom these presents shall come, quietly &amp; frendly
-within your severall presincts &amp; corporacions to permytt &amp;
-suffer them to passe with your furtherance vsinge &amp; demeanynge
-themselves honestly &amp; to geve them (the rather for my sake)
-suche intertaynement as other noble mens players haue (In Wytnes
-&amp;c.)</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Mayor</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Jo. Heyrycke</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Noryce</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Ja. Clarke</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> George Tatam</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Morton</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Rob<sup>t</sup> Heyrycke</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Ellys</li>
- <li>M<sup>r</sup> Newcome.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>Memorandum that M<sup>r</sup> Mayor did geve the aforesaid playors an
-angell towards there dinner &amp; wild them not to playe at this
-present: being Fryday the vj<sup>th</sup> of Marche, for that the tyme
-was not conveynyent.</p>
-
-<p>The foresaid playors mett M<sup>r</sup> Mayor in the strete nere M<sup>r</sup>
-Newcomes housse, after the angell was geven abowte a ij howers,
-who then craived lycense ageyne to play at there inn, &amp; he told
-them they shold not, then they went away &amp; seyd they wold play,
-whether he wold or not, &amp; in dispite of hym, with dyvers other
-evyll &amp; contemptyous words: Witness here of M<sup>r</sup> Newcome, M<sup>r</sup>
-Wycam, &amp; William Dethicke.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span></p>
-
-<p>More, these men, contrary to M<sup>r</sup> Mayors comandment, went with
-their drum &amp; trumppytts thorowe the Towne, in contempt of M<sup>r</sup>
-Mayor, neyther wold come at his comandment, by his offycer, viz.
-Worship.</p>
-
-<table summary="men">
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">William Pateson my lord Harbards man</td>
- <td rowspan="2"><img src="images/big_right_bracket.png" alt="big right bracket"
-style="height:2em; padding:0 0em 0 0em;" />
-</td>
- <td class="tdc" rowspan="2">these ij</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="tdl">Thomas Powlton my lord of Worcesters man</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="p-left">were they which dyd so much abuse M<sup>r</sup> Mayor in the
-aforesayd words.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Nota.</span> These sayd playors have submytted them selves,
-&amp; are sorye for there words past, &amp; craved pardon, desyeringe
-his worship not to write to there Master agayne them, &amp; so vpon
-there submyssyn, they are lycensed to play this night at there
-inn, &amp; also they have promysed that vppon the stage, in the
-begynyng of there play, to shoe vnto the hearers that they are
-licensed to playe by M<sup>r</sup> Mayor &amp; with his good will &amp; that they
-are sory for the words past.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The latter part of this record is intelligible enough;
-evidently there was a repetition of the misrule at Norwich. But
-the earlier part, which refers to a different matter altogether,
-is distinctly puzzling. The ‘theys’ in the first sentence of the
-Corporation minute of 6 March are complicated, and it has sometimes
-been supposed that there was really a company of Master of the Revels’
-men, and that it was Worcester’s men who questioned the licence of
-these.<a id="FNanchor_632" href="#Footnote_632" class="fnanchor">[632]</a> On the whole, I think that a different interpretation of
-the documents is the more natural one. No doubt Worcester’s men had
-found it necessary, as a result of the powers granted to Tilney as
-Master of the Revels by the patent of 24 December 1581, to renew the
-authority under which they travelled. In addition to a fresh warrant
-from their lord licensing them to travel as his household servants,
-and dated 14 January 1583, they obtained on the following 6 February a
-further licence from Tilney, issued under the clause of his commission
-which appointed him to ‘order and reforme, auctorise and put downe’ all
-players in any part of England, whether they were ‘belonginge to any
-noble man’ or otherwise.<a id="FNanchor_633" href="#Footnote_633" class="fnanchor">[633]</a> This licence, but not the other, they
-left at their inn in Leicester, while passing through on some previous
-occasion; and here it was found by some unlicensed players, who
-appropriated it, and either through misunderstanding or through fraud,
-imposed it upon the Corporation as an instrument constituting a Master
-of the Revels’ company. There are two difficulties in this theory. One
-is that George Haysell, to whom Tilney’s licence was issued, is not
-one of the actors named in the Earl of Worcester’s warrant. But there
-are other cases in which the constitution of a company in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span> eyes
-of its lord was not quite the same as its constitution from the point
-of view of business relations, and I should suppose that Haysell, who
-was evidently not himself acting at the time, was the financier of the
-enterprise, and gave the bonds which Tilney would probably require for
-the satisfaction of the covenants of his indenture of licence. The
-other difficulty is that Leicester is not the only place in which the
-presence of a Master of the Revels’ company is recorded. Such a company
-was at Ludlow on 7 December 1583 and at Bath in 1583–4.<a id="FNanchor_634" href="#Footnote_634" class="fnanchor">[634]</a> But, after
-all, this need mean no more than that the bogus company kept up their
-fraud for two or three months before they were exposed. If Tilney had
-really started a company of his own, it might have been expected to
-have a longer life. The establishment in 1583 of the Queen’s men makes
-it the less probable that he did so.</p>
-
-<p>The list of this provincial company, as it stood in January 1583, is
-interesting, because at least four of its members, Robert Browne,
-Richard Jones, James Tunstall, and above all Edward Alleyn, then only
-a lad of sixteen, were destined to take a considerable share in the
-stage history of the future. Edward Browne, too, was afterwards one of
-the Admiral’s men. Of the rest, William Harrison, Thomas Cooke, Richard
-Andrewes, as well as of George Haysell (cf. ch. xv) and of the two
-players who were not named in the warrant, Thomas Powlton and William
-Pateson, Lord Herbert’s man, nothing or practically nothing further is
-known.<a id="FNanchor_635" href="#Footnote_635" class="fnanchor">[635]</a> It is possible that the escapades of the company at Norwich
-and Leicester came, after all, to Worcester’s ears and aroused his
-displeasure. Visits are recorded to Coventry and Stratford in 1583–4,
-to Maidstone in 1584–5, to York in March 1585, and thereafter no more.
-It is also possible that the company passed from Worcester’s service
-into that of Lord Howard, when the latter became Lord Admiral in 1585.
-If so, a conveyance by Richard Jones to Edward Alleyn on 3 January 1589
-of his share in a stock of apparel, play-books, and so forth, held
-jointly with Edward and John Alleyn and Robert Browne, must relate, not
-to a break up of Worcester’s men shortly before the death of the third
-earl, but to some internal change in the organization of the Admiral’s
-men.<a id="FNanchor_636" href="#Footnote_636" class="fnanchor">[636]</a> In any case Mr. Fleay’s theory that Worcester’s men, other
-than Alleyn, became Pembroke’s in 1589 and only joined the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span> Admiral’s
-in 1594 is quite gratuitous, as there is no evidence of the existence
-of Pembroke’s men before 1592.<a id="FNanchor_637" href="#Footnote_637" class="fnanchor">[637]</a> Whether there was a Worcester’s
-company or not from 1585 to 1589, there was certainly one after the
-accession of the fourth earl. It is traceable at Coventry in 1589–90,
-at Newcastle in October 1590, at Leicester during the last three months
-of the same year, at Coventry and Faversham in 1590–1, at Leicester
-on 26 June 1591 and again in the last three months of the year, at
-Coventry and Shrewsbury in 1591–2, at Ipswich in 1592–3, twice at
-Leicester in 1593, both before and after Michaelmas, twice at Bath in
-1593–4, at Leicester before Michaelmas in 1595, at Ludlow on 3 December
-1595, at Bath in 1595–6, at Leicester on 1 August 1596, at Bristol in
-August 1598, at York in April 1599, and at Coventry on 3 January 1600
-and in 1600–1 and 1601–2.<a id="FNanchor_638" href="#Footnote_638" class="fnanchor">[638]</a></p>
-
-<p>By the end of 1601 the Earl of Worcester was holding the Mastership of
-the Horse and other important offices at Court, and may have thought it
-consonant with his dignity to have London players under his patronage.
-On 3 January 1602 his company was at Court. On 31 March the Privy
-Council, after attempting for some years to limit the number of London
-companies to two, made an order that Oxford’s and Worcester’s men,
-‘beinge ioyned by agrement togeather in on companie’, should be allowed
-to play at the Boar’s Head and nowhere else.<a id="FNanchor_639" href="#Footnote_639" class="fnanchor">[639]</a> In the course of 1602
-<i>How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad</i> was published as
-played by Worcester’s men. By 17 August the company were in relations,
-under the style of ‘my lorde of Worsters players’, with Henslowe, who
-opened an account of advances made for their play-books and apparel,
-on the same lines as that which he kept during 1597–1603 with the
-Admiral’s men.<a id="FNanchor_640" href="#Footnote_640" class="fnanchor">[640]</a> An early entry is of 9<i>s.</i> for a supper ‘at
-the Mermayd when we weare at owre a grement’. The account was continued
-until the spring of 1603, when Henslowe’s famous diary was disused.
-No theatre is named, but it is probable that, with or without leave
-from the Privy Council, the company moved to the Rose, which had been
-vacated by the Admiral’s men on the opening of the Fortune<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span> in 1600.
-Certainly this was so by May 1603, when an acquittance for an advance
-entered in the account refers to a play to be written for ‘the Earle
-of Worcesters players at the Rose’.<a id="FNanchor_641" href="#Footnote_641" class="fnanchor">[641]</a> There is no complete list
-of the company in the diary. The names of those members incidentally
-mentioned, as authorizing payments or otherwise, are John Duke, Thomas
-Blackwood, William Kempe, John Thare, John Lowin, Thomas Heywood,
-Christopher Beeston, Robert Pallant, and a Cattanes whose first name
-is not preserved. The payees for the performance of 1601–2 were Kempe
-and Heywood. One Underell was in receipt of wages from the company,
-together with a tireman, who made purchases of stuffs for them. It
-is impossible to say which of these men had been with Worcester’s
-and which with Oxford’s before the amalgamation. Heywood, who was
-playwright as well as actor, had written for the Admiral’s from 1596 to
-1599, and had bound himself to play in Henslowe’s house for two years
-from 25 March 1598. Pallant had been with Strange’s or the Admiral’s in
-1590–1, and Duke, Kempe, and Beeston with the Chamberlain’s in 1598.
-Since then Kempe had travelled abroad, returning in September 1601. It
-is little more than a guess that some of these men may have played with
-Henslowe as Pembroke’s.<a id="FNanchor_642" href="#Footnote_642" class="fnanchor">[642]</a> Several members of the company borrowed
-money from Henslowe, in some cases before their connexion with the
-Rose began. Duke had a loan as early as 21 September 1600, and Kempe
-on 10 March 1602.<a id="FNanchor_643" href="#Footnote_643" class="fnanchor">[643]</a> Blackwood and Lowin borrowed on 12 March 1603
-to go into the country with the company.<a id="FNanchor_644" href="#Footnote_644" class="fnanchor">[644]</a> This was, no doubt, when
-playing in London was suspended owing to the illness of Elizabeth.
-A loan for a similar purpose was made on the same day to Richard
-Perkins, and suggests that he too was already one of Worcester’s men.
-There is, indeed, an earlier note of 4 September 1602 connecting him
-with one Dick Syferweste, whose fellows were then in the country,
-while Worcester’s were, of course, at the Rose. But this itself makes
-it clear that he was interested in a play of Heywood’s, which can
-hardly be other than that then in preparation at the Rose, and perhaps
-Syferwest was an unfortunate comrade in Oxford’s or Worcester’s, who
-had been left out at the reconstruction.<a id="FNanchor_645" href="#Footnote_645" class="fnanchor">[645]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span></p>
-
-<p>During the seven months of the account Worcester’s men bought twelve
-new plays. These were:</p>
-
-<ul>
- <li><i>A Medicine for a Curst Wife</i> (Dekker).</li>
- <li><i>Albere Galles</i> (Heywood and Smith).</li>
- <li><i>Marshal Osric</i> (Heywood and Smith).</li>
- <li><i>The Three Brothers</i> (Smith).<a id="FNanchor_646" href="#Footnote_646" class="fnanchor">[646]</a></li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 Lady Jane</i>, or, <i>The Overthrow of Rebels</i><a id="FNanchor_647" href="#Footnote_647" class="fnanchor">[647]</a>
-(Chettle, Dekker, Heywood, Smith, and Webster).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year</i> (Chettle, Dekker,
-Heywood, and Webster).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>1 The Black Dog of Newgate</i> (Day, Hathaway, Smith, and
-another).</li>
- <li><i>The Blind Eats Many a Fly</i> (Heywood).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>The Unfortunate General</i> (Day, Hathaway, and Smith).</li>
- <li class="hangingindent"><i>2 The Black Dog of Newgate</i> (Day, Hathaway, Smith, and
-another).</li>
- <li><i>A Woman Killed with Kindness</i> (Heywood).</li>
- <li><i>The Italian Tragedy</i> (Smith).</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p class="p-left">As a rule the price was £6 a play; occasionally £1 or £2 more. Dekker
-had 10<i>s.</i> ‘over &amp; above his price of’ <i>A Medicine for a Curst
-Wife</i>. This had originally been begun for the Admiral’s and was
-evidently transferred to Worcester’s by arrangement. After buying <i>2
-Black Dog of Newgate</i> for £7, the company apparently did not like
-it, and paid £2 more for ‘adycyones’. It is possible to verify from the
-purchase of properties the performance of nine of the twelve plays.
-These are <i>Albere Galles</i> (September), <i>The Three Brothers</i>
-(October), <i>Marshal Osric</i> (November), <i>1 Lady Jane</i>
-(November), <i>Christmas Comes but Once a Year</i> (December), <i>1
-Black Dog of Newgate</i> (January), <i>The Unfortunate General</i>
-(January), <i>2 Black Dog of Newgate</i> (February), and <i>A Woman
-Killed with Kindness</i> (March). The production of this last may,
-however, have been interfered with by Elizabeth’s death. Two plays of
-the series are extant, <i>A Woman Killed with Kindness</i>, printed in
-1607 and described in 1617 as a Queen’s play, and <i>1 Lady Jane</i>,
-which may be reasonably identified with <i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i>,
-also printed in 1607 as a Queen’s play, and by Dekker and Webster.
-Dr. Greg regards Mr. Fleay’s identification of <i>Albere Galles</i>
-with <i>Nobody and Somebody</i> as ‘reasonable’; but it appears to
-rest on little, except the fact that the latter was also printed as a
-Queen’s play (S. R. 12 March 1606) and the conjecture that the title
-of the former might<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span> be a corruption of <i>Archigallo</i>. Payments
-were made in respect of a few contemplated plays, which apparently
-remained incomplete at the end of the season. These were <i>2 Lady
-Jane</i> (Dekker), an unnamed tragedy by Chettle, an unnamed play by
-Middleton, and another unnamed play by Chettle and Heywood. The company
-also produced some plays of earlier date. <i>Sir John Oldcastle</i>
-was presumably transferred to them from the Admiral’s men, for Dekker
-had £2 10<i>s.</i> in respect of new additions to it in August and
-September. Heywood also had £1 in September for additions to a play
-called <i>Cutting Dick</i>, as to the origin of which nothing is known;
-and properties were bought in October for <i>Byron</i><a id="FNanchor_648" href="#Footnote_648" class="fnanchor">[648]</a> and for
-<i>Absalom</i>. Possibly the latter is identical with <i>The Three
-Brothers</i>. Worcester’s men did not perform at Court in 1602–3,
-but they must have expected a summons, as on 1 January they bought
-head-tires of one Mrs. Calle ‘for the corte’. Amongst their tradesmen
-were also Goodman Freshwater, who supplied ‘a canvas sewt and skenes’,
-apparently for a stage dog, and John Willett, mercer, on whose arrest
-John Duke found himself in the Clink at the end of the season. Their
-expenditure was at a fairly high rate, amounting to a total of £234
-11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> for the seven months. Unlike the Admiral’s men,
-they spent more on apparel and properties than on play-books. Some
-of their purchases were costly enough, ‘a grogren clocke, ij veluet
-gerkens, ij dubletes and ij hed tyres’ from Edward Alleyn for £20, ‘a
-manes gowne of branshed velluet &amp; a dublett’ from Christopher Beeston
-for £6, and ‘iiij clothe clockes layd with coper lace’ from Robert
-Shaw, formerly of the Admiral’s, for £16. On this last transaction they
-had to allow Henslowe £1 as interest on his money. A ‘flage of sylke’,
-no doubt for the theatre roof, cost them £1 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i><a id="FNanchor_649" href="#Footnote_649" class="fnanchor">[649]</a>
-In summing his account, Henslowe made various errors, whereby he robbed
-himself of £1 1<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i>, and presented a claim to the
-company for £140 1<i>s.</i> It may be inferred that they had already
-repaid him £93 12<i>s.</i> 3<i>d.</i>, but of this there is no record
-in the diary. He prepared an acknowledgement to be signed by all the
-members of the company, but the only signature actually attached is
-Blackwode’s.</p>
-
-<p>On 9 May 1603 Henslowe notes ‘Begininge to playe agayne by the Kynges
-licence &amp; layd out sense for my lord of Worsters men as folowethe’; but
-the only entry is one of £2 paid in earnest to Chettle and Day for a
-play of <i>Shore’s Wife</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span> If playing was actually resumed, it was
-not long before the plague drove the companies out of London again,
-and there is nothing more of Worcester’s men in the diary. Two visits
-from them are recorded at Leicester in the course of 1603, and two at
-Coventry and one at Barnstaple, whence they departed without playing,
-during 1602–3. Early in the new reign the company was taken into the
-patronage of Queen Anne.<a id="FNanchor_650" href="#Footnote_650" class="fnanchor">[650]</a> This change was probably effected by
-Christmas, and certainly by 19 February 1604, when John Duke obtained
-a warrant on account of plays performed before Prince Henry by ‘the
-Queenes Majesties players’ on the previous 2 and 13 January. The
-Queen’s men are named in the Privy Council letter permitting the
-resumption of playing on 9 April 1604, which indicates their house as
-the Curtain. A list of players is found amongst other ‘officers to
-the Queene’ receiving four and a half yards of red cloth apiece for
-the coronation procession of 15 March 1604.<a id="FNanchor_651" href="#Footnote_651" class="fnanchor">[651]</a> The names given are
-‘Christopher Beeston, Robert Lee, John Duke, Robert Palante, Richard
-Purkins, Thomas Haward, James Houlte, Thomas Swetherton, Thomas Grene,
-and Robert Beeston’. Evidently several leading members had left the
-company. Kempe was probably dead.<a id="FNanchor_652" href="#Footnote_652" class="fnanchor">[652]</a> Thare and Blackwood were on tour
-in Germany; Lowin seems to have joined the King’s men. Of Cattanes and
-Underell no more is known. The same ten names are found in a draft
-patent for a royal licence to the Queen’s men, of which the text
-follows:<a id="FNanchor_653" href="#Footnote_653" class="fnanchor">[653]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Iames, by the grace of God kynge of England, Scotland, Fraunce
-and Irelande, defender of the faith &amp;c: To all Iustices <i>of
-peace</i>, Maiors, Sherryfes, vicechancellours <i>of any our
-vniversities</i>, <i>Bailiffes</i> [Constables], headboroughes,
-[and other our officers] <i>Constables</i>, <i>and to all other
-our Officers</i>, <i>mynisters</i> and lov[e]inge subiectes
-<i>to whome it may appertaine</i> Greeting. Knowe yee that wee
-of our speciall grace, certaine knowledge, and mere motion haue
-lycensed and awthorised, and by these presentes doe lycence and
-awthorise Thomas Greene, Christopher<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span> Beeston, Thomas Hawood,
-Richard Pyrkins, Robert Pallant, Iohn Duke, Thomas Swynerton,
-I[e]ames Ho[u]lt, Robert Beeston, &amp; Robert Lee, servauntes vnto
-our deare<i>st</i> [and welbeloved] wyfe <i>the</i> Queene
-Anna, with the rest of there Associates, freely to vse and
-exercise the art and faculty of playinge Comedies, Tragedies,
-Histories, Enterludes, Morralls, Pastoralls, Stage plaies, and
-such other lyke as they haue already studied, or hereafter shall
-vse or stud[d]y, as well for the recreacion of our lovinge
-subiectes as for our solace and pleasure, when wee shall thinke
-good to see them, during our pleasure; And the said Comedies,
-Tragedies, Histories, Enterludes, Morralls, Pastoralls, Stage
-plaies, and such like, to shew and exercise publikly, when the
-infeccion of the plague shall decrease to the nomber of thirty
-weekly within <i>our Citie</i> of London and the liberties
-<i>therof</i>, aswell within there now vsuall Howsen, called the
-Curtayne, and the Bores head, within our County of Middlesex,
-[or] <i>as in</i> any other play howse not vsed by others, by
-the said <i>Thomas</i> Greene elected, or by him hereafter to
-be builte, and also within any Towne Halls, or Mouthalls, or
-other convenyent places, within the liberties and freedomes of
-any Cittie, vniversitie, Towne, or Boroughe whatsoeuer, within
-our said Realmes and domynyons: Willing and Commaundinge yowe
-and euerie of yowe, as you tender our pleasure, not only to
-permytt and suffer them [herein] <i>to vse and exercise the said
-art of playinge</i> without any your Lettes hinderaunces or
-molestacions, duringe our said pleasure, but also to be aydinge
-and assistinge vnto them, yf any wronge be to them offered, and
-to allow them such [former] curtesies, as hath <i>heretofore</i>
-bene given vnto any men of theire qualitie: [And also what
-further favour, any of our subiectes shall shew to theise our
-deare and loveinge wyfes servauntes, for our sake, wee shall
-take kyndly at your handes. Yeouen at&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;the&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;daye
-of In the&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;yere of our Raygne of England: &amp;c:]</p>
-
-<p><i>Gyuen &amp;c.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">[Endorsed] The Quenes Plaiers.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This draft is undated. But it was prepared during a plague, and located
-the Queen’s men at the Boar’s Head; and as they may reasonably be
-supposed to have exchanged the Boar’s Head for the Red Bull (q.v.)
-before the plague of 1606 began, it may be conjecturally assigned to
-that of 1603–4. Probably it never passed the Great Seal, for if it had
-there would have been no necessity, so far as one can judge, for a
-later patent of 15 April 1609, which is on the rolls, and which closely
-follows the earlier draft in its terms, except that it omits the
-reference to the plague, names the Red Bull instead of the Boar’s Head
-as one of the company’s regular houses, and adds a saving clause for
-the rights of the Master of the Revels. Here is the text:<a id="FNanchor_654" href="#Footnote_654" class="fnanchor">[654]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De concessione licentie Thome Greene et aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Iustices, Mayors,
-Sheriffes, Baylieffes, Constables, head-borrowes and other our
-Officers and lovinge Subiectes Greetinge. Knowe yee that wee of
-our especiall grace certayne knowledge and meere mocion have
-lycenced and aucthorised and by these presentes doe lycence and
-aucthorize Thomas Greene, Christofer Beeston, Thomas Haywood,
-Richard Pirkyns, Richard Pallant, Thomas Swinnerton, Iohn Duke,
-Robert Lee, Iames Haulte, and Roberte Beeston, Servantes to
-our moste deerely beloved wiefe Queene Anne, and the reste of
-theire Associates, to vse and exercise the arte and faculty of
-playinge Comedies, Tragedies, historyes, Enterludes, Moralles,
-Pastoralles, Stageplayes and suche other like, as they have
-already studied or heareafter shall vse or studye, aswell
-for the recreacion of our loving Subiectes as for our solace
-and pleasure when wee shall thinke good to see them, during
-our pleasure. And the said Comedies, Tragedies, histories,
-Enterludes, Moralles, Pastoralles, Stageplayes and suche like
-to shewe and exercise publiquely and openly to theire beste
-commoditye, aswell within theire nowe vsuall houses called the
-Redd Bull in Clarkenwell and the Curtayne in Hallowell, as
-alsoe within anye Towne halles, Mouthalles and other convenient
-places within the libertye and freedome of any other Citty,
-vniuersitye, Towne or Boroughe whatsoever within our Realmes and
-Domynions. Willing and Commaundinge you and every of you, as you
-tender our pleasure, not only to permitt and suffer them herein
-without any your lettes hinderances or molestacions during our
-said pleasure, but alsoe to be aydinge [and] assistinge vnto
-them, yf anye wronge be to them offered, and to allowe them
-suche former curtesies as hath byn given to men of theire place
-and qualitye, and alsoe what favoure you shall shewe to them
-for our sake wee shall take kyndly at your handes. Prouided
-alwaies and our will and pleasure is that all aucthoritye,
-power, priuiledges, and profyttes whatsoeuer belonginge and
-properly appertayninge to Master of Revelles in respecte of his
-Office and everye Cause, Article or graunte contayned within
-the lettres Patentes or Commission, which have byn heretofore
-graunted or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our deere
-Sister or by our selues to our welbeloued Servant Edmond Tylney
-Master of the Office of our said Revelles or to Sir George Bucke
-knighte or to eyther of them in possession or revercion, shalbe
-remayne and abyde entyer and full in effecte, force, estate and
-vertue as ample sorte as if this our Commission had never byn
-made. In witnes wherof &amp;c. Witnes our selfe at Westminster the
-fifteenth daye of Aprill.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">It will be observed that the documents quoted disclose no change in the
-composition of the Queen’s official servants<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span> between 1604 and 1609.
-But the question of <i>personnel</i> is not really quite so simple
-as this, since the members of a company under a trade agreement were
-not always the same as those named in the authority under which it
-performed. Before discussing this complication, it will be simplest
-first to set out separately the notices of the Queen’s men, which have
-been preserved in London and in provincial records respectively.</p>
-
-<p>Queen’s men played at Court on 30 December 1605, in Heywood’s <i>How
-to Learn of a Woman to Woo</i>, which is not extant. They played also
-on 27 December 1606. For both years their payee was, as in 1604, John
-Duke. During 1607 Dekker and Webster’s <i>Sir Thomas Wyatt</i> and
-Day, Wilkins, and Rowley’s <i>Travels of Three English Brothers</i>
-were printed with their name on the title-pages. The latter play,
-according to the entry of 29 June 1607 in the Stationers’ Register, was
-acted at the Curtain. But it is shown by a passage in <i>The Knight
-of the Burning Pestle</i> to have been also on the stage of the Red
-Bull. In this house Thomas Swinnerton, one of the men named in the
-patents, acquired an interest between 24 March 1605 and 23 March 1606,
-and all the evidence is in favour of a continuous sojourn of Queen’s
-men there until 1617. The first quarto of Heywood’s <i>A Woman Killed
-with Kindness</i>, also printed in 1607, does not bear their name, but
-it is on that of the ‘third edition’ of 1617. They are not named as
-playing at Court during the winter of 1607–8, but in the course of 1608
-Heywood’s <i>Rape of Lucrece</i> was printed, as played by them at the
-Red Bull. They gave five plays at Court in the winter of 1608–9, one on
-27 December 1609, three on 10 and one on 27 December 1610. Heywood’s
-<i>Golden Age</i> was printed, as played by them at the Red Bull, in
-1611. The Court records of 1611–12 are a little confused.<a id="FNanchor_655" href="#Footnote_655" class="fnanchor">[655]</a> But they
-appear to have played Cooke’s <i>City Gallant</i> on 27 December, his
-<i>Tu Quoque</i>, which is in fact the same play, on 2 February, to
-have joined with the King’s men in performances of Heywood’s <i>Silver
-Age</i> and <i>Rape of Lucrece</i> on 12 and 13 January, and to have
-played unnamed pieces on 21 and 23 January. From 1609 to 1612 their
-payee was Thomas Greene. Webster’s <i>White Devil</i> and Dekker’s
-<i>If It be not Good, the Devil is in It</i>, were printed as theirs in
-1612, the former with a laudation of the acting of ‘my freind Maister
-Perkins’, the latter as played at the Red Bull. They did not play
-at Court during the winter of 1612–13, but did on 24 December 1613
-and 5 January 1614. <i>Tu Quoque</i> was printed as theirs in 1614.
-In the winter of 1614–15 they gave three plays at Court. Heywood’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-<i>Four Prentices of London</i> was printed in 1615 as played by them
-at the Red Bull, and their name is also on <i>The Honest Lawyer</i>,
-registered on 14 August 1615 and printed in 1616. They gave four plays
-at Court during the winter of 1615–16. For all their Court plays from
-1613–16 Robert Lee was payee, but Ellis Worth replaces him for a
-Somerset House performance before Queen Anne on 17 December 1615. When
-they were called with other companies before the Privy Council on 29
-March 1615 to answer for playing in Lent, they were represented by Lee
-and Christopher Beeston. The records of the Middlesex justices contain
-a note of 4 October 1616 that Beeston and the rest of the players at
-the Red Bull were in arrears to the extent of £5 on an annual rate of
-£2 agreed to by them for the repair of the highways.</p>
-
-<p>Provincial visits of Queen’s men are recorded in November 1605 at
-Dover; in 1605 at Leicester; in 1605–6 at Bath, Coventry, Saffron
-Walden, and Weymouth; on 25 July 1606 at Ipswich; on 4 September 1606
-at Ludlow; in 1606 at York; in 1606–7 at Bath (twice), Coventry,
-Exeter, and Ipswich; on 14 August 1607 at Oxford; on 12 September 1607
-at Belvoir (Earl of Rutland’s);<a id="FNanchor_656" href="#Footnote_656" class="fnanchor">[656]</a> in 1607 at Barnstaple, Leicester,
-and Reading; in 1607–8 at Coventry, Oxford, Reading, and Shrewsbury;
-on 6 June and 26 September 1608 at Leicester;<a id="FNanchor_657" href="#Footnote_657" class="fnanchor">[657]</a> in 1608–9 at
-Coventry,<a id="FNanchor_658" href="#Footnote_658" class="fnanchor">[658]</a> Marlborough, and Shrewsbury; between 8 July and 9 August
-1609 at Dover; on 15 October 1609 at Norwich; in 1609 at Canterbury; in
-1609–10 at Shrewsbury and Stafford; about 23 March 1610 at Maidstone;
-on 2 November 1610 at Ipswich; on 31 December 1610 at Leicester; in
-1610–11 at Shrewsbury and Southampton; on 27 February 1611 (for a week)
-at Norwich; between 11 April and 9 May and between 29 August and 29
-September 1612 at Dover; on 14 June and 26 October 1612 at Leicester;
-in 1611–12 at Saffron Walden; in 1612–13 at Barnstaple, Coventry
-(perhaps twice), and Ipswich; on 18 February 1613 at Marlborough; on
-16 March 1613 at Leicester; between 13 April and 15 May 1613 at Dover;
-on 2 November 1613 at Marlborough; on 22 December 1613 at Leicester;
-in 1613–14 at Saffron Walden, Marlborough, Oxford, and Shrewsbury;
-on 27 April 1614 (for three days) at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span> Norwich;<a id="FNanchor_659" href="#Footnote_659" class="fnanchor">[659]</a> between 3 and
-29 September 1614 at Dover; in 1614–15 at Barnstaple and Doncaster
-(perhaps twice); on 15 April 1615 at Coventry; in April or May 1615 at
-Leicester; on 6 May 1615 at Norwich;<a id="FNanchor_660" href="#Footnote_660" class="fnanchor">[660]</a> on 16 October 1615 and again
-later in 1615 and on 22 February 1616 at Leicester;<a id="FNanchor_661" href="#Footnote_661" class="fnanchor">[661]</a> on 7 November
-1615 at Marlborough; in 1615–16 at Barnstaple, Dunwich (thrice),
-Southampton, and Weymouth; in January 1616 at Nottingham; between 20
-January and 17 February 1616 and between 11 May and 8 June at Dover; on
-17 February 1616 at Coventry; on 22 February 1616 at Leicester; between
-1 and 6 April (four days) and on 29 May 1616 at Norwich;<a id="FNanchor_662" href="#Footnote_662" class="fnanchor">[662]</a> on 26
-October 1616 at Marlborough; and on 6 February 1617 and again later in
-1617 at Leicester.<a id="FNanchor_663" href="#Footnote_663" class="fnanchor">[663]</a></p>
-
-<p>There were thus tours in each year, which sometimes extended over
-periods during which the London theatres must have been open. The
-Leicester notices of 1608, 1615, and 1617 suggest that more than
-one company was at work, and the explanation certainly is that some
-of the players named in the patent, instead of joining the London
-organization, had recourse to making up companies of their own for
-provincial purposes. Of this there is further evidence. The Southampton
-archives contain a copy of the following warrant from Queen Anne
-herself, dated on 7 March 1606:<a id="FNanchor_664" href="#Footnote_664" class="fnanchor">[664]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Warrant from the Queenes Majestie of her Players. Anna Regina.
-Anne by the grace of God Queene of England, Scottland, Fraunce,
-and Ireland. To all Justices of the Peace, Maiors, Sheriffs,
-Bayliffes, and all other his Majestes Officers and loving
-subiectes to whom yt shall or may appertaine greetinge, Know
-yee that of our speciall grace and favour, Wee are well pleased
-to authorize under our hand and signett the bearers hereof our
-sworne servauntes Robert Lee, Martin Statier and Roger Barfield
-with theyr fellowes and associates being our Commedians vppon
-theyr humble Suite unto us for theyr better mainetenaunce, Yf
-att annie time they should have occasion to travell into anie
-parte of his Majestes Dominions to playe Tragedyes, historyes,
-commedies and pastoralls as well in anie about the Cittye of
-London, and in all other cittyes vniversities and townes at all
-time anie times (the time of divine seruice onlye excepted)
-Theise are therefore to will and requier you uppon the sight
-hereofe quiettlye and favourably with your best favours, to
-permitt and suffer them, to use theyr sayd qualitye within your
-Jurisdiccions without anie of your molestacions or troubles, and
-also to affourd them your Townehalls and all other such places
-as att anie time have been used by men of theyr qualitye, That
-they maye be in the better readiness for our seruise when they
-shalbe thereunto commaunded, Nott doubtinge butt that our sayd
-servauntes shall find the more favour for our sake in your best
-assistaunce, Wherein you shall doe unto us acceptable pleasure.
-Given att the Court of Whitehall, the seaventh daye of Marche
-1605.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Of these three men, Lee, and Lee alone, appears in the London lists
-of 1603, 1604, and 1609. Of Barfield’s career nothing more is known.
-Martin Slater, whose name can be divined under that of Statier, had
-left the Admiral’s in 1597. He was probably in Scotland during 1599,
-and if so his patronage by Anne may be analogous to the patronage by
-James, which brought Laurence Fletcher’s name into the King’s men’s
-patent. In 1603 he was payee for Hertford’s men. Presumably the
-enterprise of 1606 did not last long, for in the spring of 1608 Slater
-became manager for the King’s Revels. His place in the provinces may
-have been taken by Thomas Swinnerton, who was leading a company of
-Queen’s men at Coventry in 1608–9, and whose departure from the London
-company is perhaps indicated by the fact that at about the same time
-he sold a share, which he had held in the house of the Red Bull.
-Swinnerton was travelling again in 1614–16 and using an exemplification
-of the patent of 1609. In 1616 he was accompanied by Robert Lee, who
-for two years before had been acting as payee for the London company.
-Lee came again with the exemplification to Norwich on 31 May 1617, and
-it was then noted to have been taken out on 7 January 1612. A few days
-later, on 4 June 1617, a copy was entered in the Norwich court books
-of a warrant by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span> Lord Chamberlain of 16 July 1616, condemning the
-use of such exemplifications, and specifying amongst others two taken
-out by Thomas Swinnerton and Martin Slater, ‘beinge two of the Queens
-Maiesties company of Playors hauing separated themselves from their
-said Company’.<a id="FNanchor_665" href="#Footnote_665" class="fnanchor">[665]</a> Slater had, therefore, returned to the provincial
-field, and there were now two travelling companies of Queen’s men. I
-take it that in 1617 the Lord Chamberlain succeeded in suppressing
-them, and that the Queen’s men who continued to appear in the provinces
-up to Anne’s death on 2 March 1619 were the London company.<a id="FNanchor_666" href="#Footnote_666" class="fnanchor">[666]</a> Lee
-joined the Queen’s Revels as reorganized under a licence of 31 October
-1617. Slater, about the same time, joined the Children of Bristol,
-for whom, with John Edmonds and Nathaniel Clay, he got letters of
-assistance in April 1618. In these all three are described as her
-Majesty’s servants. Swinnerton apparently succeeded in keeping on foot
-a company of his own, which visited Leicester in 1619.<a id="FNanchor_667" href="#Footnote_667" class="fnanchor">[667]</a> The Bristol
-company was in fact under Anne’s patronage, but Lee and Swinnerton,
-no less than Slater and Edmonds, remained technically the Queen’s
-servants, and are included with the London men in a list of the players
-who received mourning at her funeral on 13 May 1619.<a id="FNanchor_668" href="#Footnote_668" class="fnanchor">[668]</a> These were
-Robert Lee, Richard Perkins, Christopher Beeston, Robert Pallant,
-Thomas Heywood, James Holt, Thomas Swinnerton, Martin Slater, Ellis
-Wroth, John Comber, Thomas Basse, John Blaney, William Robinson, John
-Edmonds, Thomas Drewe, Gregory Sanderson, and John Garret.</p>
-
-<p>The list of seventeen names includes seven of the ten patentees of
-1609. I do not know what had become of John Duke and Robert Beeston.
-Thomas Greene had died in August 1612, having made on 25 July a will,
-amongst the witnesses to which were Christopher Beeston, Heywood,
-and Perkins. The disposal of his property led many years afterwards
-to a lawsuit, which gives valuable information as to both the
-<i>personnel</i> and the organization of the London company. After
-providing for his family and making some small legacies, including one
-to John Cumber, and 40<i>s.</i> to ‘my fellowes of the house of the
-Redd Bull, to buy gloves for them’, he left the residue to his widow
-and executrix, Susanna Greene, formerly wife of one Browne.<a id="FNanchor_669" href="#Footnote_669" class="fnanchor">[669]</a> In
-June 1613 she took a third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span> husband, James Baskervile. The following
-is her account in 1623 of certain transactions with the company.
-Shortly before Greene’s death had died George Pulham, a ‘half sharer’
-in the company, which is described as being in 1612 ‘the companie of
-the actors or players of the late queenes majestie Queene Anne, then
-vsuallie frequentinge and playinge att the signe of the Redd Bull in
-St. Johns Street, in Clerkenwell parishe, in the county of Middlesex’.
-His representatives received £40 from the company in respect of his
-half-share. This was under an agreement formerly made amongst the
-company ‘concerninge the part and share of euerie one of the sharers
-and half sharers of the said companie according to the rate and
-proporcion of their shares or half shares in that behalfe’. Under the
-same agreement Susanna Greene, whose husband was ‘one of the principall
-and cheif persons of the said companie, and a full adventurer, storer
-and sharer of in and amongst them’, claimed £80, together with £37
-laid out by him before his death in ‘diuers necessarie prouisions’
-for the company. In order to get satisfaction she had to appeal to
-Viscount Lisle, Chamberlain of the Queen’s Household, ‘who hadd a
-kind of gouernment and suruey ouer the said players’. It was arranged
-that Mrs. Greene should receive a half-share in the profits until the
-debt was paid. By the time, however, of her marriage with Baskervile,
-she had only received £6. In June 1615 negotiations took place
-between the Baskerviles and the company, who then included Worth,
-Perkins, and Christopher Hutchinson, <i>alias</i> Beeston, by which
-the Baskerviles agreed to invest £57 10<i>s.</i> in the enterprise
-and to accept in discharge of their claims a pension for their joint
-lives of 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> a day ‘for euerye of sixe daies in the
-weeke wherin they should play’. The company defaulted, and in June
-1616 a second settlement was made, whereby the Baskerviles invested
-another £38, a further pension of 2<i>s.</i> a day was established,
-and the life of Susan’s son, Francis Browne (or Baskervile), was
-substituted for her husband’s. The players were Christopher Beeston,
-Thomas Heywood, Ellis Worth, John Cumber, John Blaney, Francis Walpole,
-Robert Reynolds, William Robins, Thomas Drewe, and Emanuel Read.<a id="FNanchor_670" href="#Footnote_670" class="fnanchor">[670]</a>
-Again they defaulted, and moreover fell into arrear for the wages of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-another of Susan Baskervile’s sons, William Browne, who played with
-them as a hired man. A third settlement, reassuring the pensions,
-and substituting William Browne for Francis, who was now dead, was
-made on 3 June 1617, when the company were ‘now comme, or shortlie to
-comme from the said Playhowse called the Redd Bull to the Playhowse
-in Drurie Lane called the Cockpitt’; and to this the parties, so
-far as the company were concerned, were Beeston, Heywood, Worth,
-Cumber, Walpole, Blaney, Robins, and Drewe. Apparently Reynolds and
-Read, and also Perkins and Thomas Basse, although their names were
-recited in the deed, refused to seal. Some further light is thrown
-on this by allegations of Worth, Cumber, and Blaney, in opposition
-to those of Mrs. Baskervile in 1623. The company of 1617 contained
-some members ‘new come into’ it, ‘which were of other companyes at
-the tyme of graunting the first annuity’. The terms of the agreement
-were carefully looked into, and were found to bind the company to
-procure the subscription of any future new members to its terms. This
-was inconsistent with a proviso of 1616 that the pensions should only
-last so long as four of those then signing should play together; and
-therefore, while some of the company signed and gave bonds by way of
-security on an oral promise by Mrs. Baskervile that this proviso should
-in fact hold good, others refused to do so. These were the wiser, for
-in 1623, when Worth, Cumber, and Blaney were the only three of the 1617
-signatories who still held together, Mrs. Baskervile sued them on their
-bonds, and although they applied to Chancery for equitable enforcement
-of the alleged oral promise, Chancery held that the agreement, being
-made between players, was ‘vnfitt to be releeued or countenaunced in a
-courte of equitie’. In some other respects the players’ account of the
-transactions differs from Mrs. Baskervile’s, and in particular they
-alleged that the Baskerviles had secured their interest by bribing
-Beeston, to whom ‘your oratours and the rest of thier fellowes at
-that tyme and long before and since did put the managing of thier
-whole businesses and affaires belonging vnto them ioyntly as they were
-players in trust’, so that she knew well that whatever he promised
-the rest ‘would allowe of the same’. This Mrs. Baskervile repudiates
-as regards the bribe, and does not wholly accept as regards Beeston’s
-position in the company, although she admits that both before and
-after her husband’s death they ‘did putt much affiance in the said
-Huttchinson alias Beeston, concerninge the managing of their affaires’.</p>
-
-<p>I am afraid that Beeston’s character does not come<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span> altogether
-unstained out of another suit brought by one John Smith in the Court of
-Requests during 1619 for a sum of £46 5<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in respect
-of ‘tinsell stuffes and other stuffe’ delivered on Beeston’s order to
-Worth, Perkins, Cumber, and others at the Red Bull between 27 June
-1612 and 23 February 1617, since when they had ‘fallen at variance and
-strife amongst themselves and separated and devided themselves into
-other companies.’ He accuses these four men of conspiring to keep him
-out of payment. Worth, Perkins, and Cumber asserted that the liability
-was Beeston’s. The company had ‘required divers officers and that
-every of the said actors should take vpon them some place &amp; charge’.
-Beeston was charged with the provision of furniture and apparel, which
-needed ‘a thriueing man &amp; one that was of abilitie &amp; meanes’. He was
-to ‘defaulke outt of the colleccions and gatheringes which were made
-continually when-soeuer any playe was acted a certen some of money as a
-comon stock.’ to pay for purchases out of this, and to account to the
-company for the balance. No one else was privy to his transactions. The
-arrangement lasted for seven or eight years, and they believe that he
-‘much enritched himself and rendered a false account for expenditure
-of £400. He is now conspiring with Smith and hoping for a chance to
-‘exclayme on’ them. If he incurred debt, he had certainly taken funds
-to meet it. From the beginning he had ‘a greater care for his owne
-privatt gaine’. Now he has ‘of late given over his coate &amp; condicion &amp;
-separated and devided himself’ from the company, carrying away all the
-furniture and apparel. Beeston says that he has long been ill. On Queen
-Anne’s death he left the company and joined Prince Charles’s men. The
-Queen’s had ten sharers, and sometimes one, sometimes another, provided
-the clothes. He denies liability. Several witnesses, including William
-Freshwater, merchant tailor and ‘a workman to the said company’, spoke
-to Beeston’s liability.<a id="FNanchor_671" href="#Footnote_671" class="fnanchor">[671]</a> One John King says that the company
-allowed Beeston ‘one half of the profitt that came of the gallyryes’,
-and that they began to break up about three years ago. At a hearing on
-16 June 1620 Beeston got the case deferred on the ground that Emanuel
-Read, a material witness, was in Ireland until Michaelmas. Elizabeth,
-the wife of Richard Perkins, said that Read had been there for two or
-three years, was over at Easter, and was not expected again. Smith
-got in a blow at Beeston’s credit with an affidavit that he had said
-‘it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span> nothing for him to put in a false answere into the Court of
-Requestes, for that it was not punishable’. The result of the suit is
-unknown.</p>
-
-<p>We may perhaps reach the following conclusions as to the composition
-of the London company after the deaths in 1612 of Pulham, presumably
-a recent comer since 1609, and Greene. Their nucleus consisted of two
-of the patented men, Christopher Beeston and Heywood, who probably
-remained with them throughout. Of the other patentees, Swinnerton kept
-to the provinces. Lee had rejoined them from the provinces by 1613
-or 1614, and went back to the provinces about May 1616. Perkins was
-apparently not of their number in June 1616, but was in June 1617.
-Holt is not traceable; perhaps he also went to the provinces. Pallant
-joined the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1614 and had passed to Prince Charles’s
-by 1616. All these five men, however, appear with Beeston and Heywood
-as Anne’s servants at her funeral. Here too are Slater and Edmonds,
-then of the Bristol, and apparently never of the London company; also
-Worth, Cumber, Blaney, Drewe, and Robinson, presumably identical with
-Robins, all of whom had joined the London company by June 1616, Basse,
-formerly of the Lady Elizabeth’s, who joined it between June 1616
-and June 1617, and Gregory Sanderson and John Garret, who, if they
-belonged to the London company at all, must have joined it after June
-1617.<a id="FNanchor_672" href="#Footnote_672" class="fnanchor">[672]</a> The list does not contain the names of two men who belonged
-to the company in 1616 and 1617. One was Emanuel Read, who joined it
-from the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1613 or later; the other, Robert Reynolds,
-whose attachment to the company must have been rather loose, as he was
-travelling in Germany in July 1616 and again in 1618. Evidently, as the
-lawsuits suggest, the organization of the Queen’s men during its later
-years was rather unstable. Into its attempts to hold together after
-Anne’s death and the after-careers of its members, it is not necessary
-to go.</p>
-
-<p>In June 1617 the Queen’s were come, or shortly to come, from the Red
-Bull to the Cockpit. In fact they were at the Cockpit, then a new
-house, on 4 March 1617, when it was sacked by prentices in a Shrovetide
-riot.<a id="FNanchor_673" href="#Footnote_673" class="fnanchor">[673]</a> But they may have returned to the Red Bull for a time, while
-the Cockpit was being repaired, as they did again after they lost it
-on the separation from Christopher Beeston, who seems to have been its
-owner, in 1619.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xxii. THE DUKE OF LENNOX’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Ludovic Stuart, s. of Esmé, 1st Duke of Lennox; cousin and until
-1594 heir presumptive of James; <i>nat.</i> 29 Sept. 1574;
-succ. as 2nd Duke, 26 May 1583; Gentleman of Bedchamber, 1603;
-Earl of Richmond, 6 Oct. 1613; Lord Steward, Nov. 1615; Duke of
-Richmond, 17 Aug. 1623; o.s.p. 16 Feb. 1624.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The first notice of Lennox’s men is on 13 October 1604, when he gave
-an open warrant of assistance in their behalf addressed to mayors,
-justices, and other local officers, some of whom had apparently refused
-the company permission to play (App. D, no. cxxxvii). On 16 March
-1605 Francis Henslowe gave his uncle Philip a bond of £60 to observe
-articles of an agreement he had entered into with John Garland and
-Abraham Savere ‘his ffellowes, servantes to the most noble Prince the
-duke of Lennox’; and on 1 March 1605 Savere had given Francis Henslowe
-a power of attorney to recover £40 on a forfeited bond from John
-Garland of ‘the ould forde’, securing delivery of a warrant made to
-Savere by Lennox (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 62). Some other traces point
-to a connexion between Savere and Francis Henslowe, which was ended by
-the latter’s death in the middle of 1606 (Henslowe, ii. 277), and an
-undated loan of £7 by Philip Henslowe to his nephew ‘to goyne with owld
-Garlland and Symcockes and Saverey when they played in the duckes nam
-at ther laste goinge owt’ (Henslowe, i. 160) makes it possible to add
-one more to the list of the company. It does not seem to have played in
-London, but is traceable at Canterbury in 1603–4, Barnstaple, Coventry,
-and Norwich in 1604–5, and Coventry again in 1607–8. Both Garland and
-Henslowe had been Queen Elizabeth’s men, and it is possible that,
-when these men were left stranded by her death in 1603, they found a
-new patron in Lennox. John Garland had joined the Duke of York’s men
-by 1610, and it has been suggested that this company may have been a
-continuation of Lennox’s.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xxiii. THE DUKE OF YORK’S (PRINCE CHARLES’S) MEN<br />
-
-<span class="subhed"><i>The Duke of York’s Men (1608–12); The Prince’s Men (1612–16)</i></span></h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Charles, 2nd s. of James I; <i>nat.</i> 19 Nov. 1600; Duke of
-Albany, 23 Dec. 1600; Duke of York, 16 Jan. 1605; Prince of
-Wales, 3 Nov. 1616; afterwards (27 Mar. 1625) Charles I.</p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The documents bearing on the
-relations of the Duke of York’s men with Alleyn are printed
-by W. W. Greg in <i>Henslowe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span> Papers</i> (1907); the Bill and
-Answers in the equity suit of <i>Taylor v. Hemynges</i> (1612)
-by C. W. Wallace in <i>Globe Theatre Apparel</i> (p.p., 1909).]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>A company under the patronage of Prince Charles, then Duke of York,
-first makes its appearance during 1608, and in the provinces. A visit
-of ‘the younger princes’ men to Ipswich is recorded on 20 October.
-During 1608–9 the company was also at Bath, and it is at least possible
-that it was ‘the Princes players of the White Chapple London’ rewarded
-at Leicester in 1608. The Boar’s Head (q.v.) may have been roughly
-spoken of as in Whitechapel, and although there is no proof that the
-Duke of York’s men occupied it after the Queen’s moved to the Red Bull,
-there is nothing to connect them during the earlier years of their
-career with any of the better-known London houses. On 30 March 1610
-they received, like other London companies, a patent, of which the
-following are the terms:<a id="FNanchor_674" href="#Footnote_674" class="fnanchor">[674]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De licentia agendi Tragedias &amp;c. pro Johanne Garland &amp; aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Iustices, Mayors,
-Sheriffes, Baylies, Constables, hedboroughes and other our
-loveing subiectes and officers greetinge. Knowe ye that wee of
-our especyall grace, certen knowledge, and meere mocion haue
-lycensed and aucthorized, and by theis presentes doe lycence
-and authorise Iohn Garland, Willyam Rowley, Thomas Hobbes,
-Robert Dawes, Ioseph Taylor, Iohn Newton, and Gilbert Reason,
-alreadye sworne servauntes to our deere sonne the Duke of
-York and Rothesay, with the rest of their company, to vse and
-exercise the arte and quality of playing Comedyes, Tragedies,
-histories, Enterludes, Moralles, Pastoralles, Stagplayes, and
-such other like as they haue already studdied or hereafter
-shall studye or vse, aswell for the recreacion of our loveing
-subiectes, as for our solace and pleasure when wee shall thinke
-good to see them, and the said Enterludes or other to shewe
-and execise publiquely to their best aduantage and commoditie,
-aswell in and about our Cittye of London in such vsuall howses
-as themselues shall provide, as alsoe within anye Townehalles,
-Mootehalles, Guildhalles, Schoolehowses, or other convenient
-places within the lybertye and freedome of any other Cittye,
-vniversity, Towne, or Boroughe whatsoever within our Realmes and
-Domynions, willing and comaundinge you and everie of you, as
-you tender our pleasure, not onlye to permitt and suffer them
-herein without any your lettes, hindraunces, molestacions or
-disturbances during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be ayding
-and assisting vnto them, if any wronge be vnto them offered, and
-to allowe them such former curtesies as hath byne given to men
-of their place and quality, And alsoe what further favor you
-shall shewe them for our sake wee shall take yt kyndlye at your
-handes. Prouided alwaies and our will and pleasure is that all
-authority, power, priviledg,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span> and proffitt whatsoever belonging
-and properly apperteyninge to the Master of our Revelles in
-respect of his Office and everie article and graunt contayned
-within the lettres patentes or Commission, which haue byne
-heretofore graunted or directed by the late Queene Elizabeth our
-deere sister or by our selfe to our welbeloved servantes Edmond
-Tillney Master of the said Office of the said Revelles, or to
-Sir George Bucke knight, or to eyther of them, in possession or
-Revercion, shall remayne and abyde entire and in full force,
-estate and vertue and in as ample sort as if this our commission
-had never bene made. Witnes our selfe att Westminster the
-thirtith daye March.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">The only member of the Duke of York’s men, of whose previous history
-anything is known, is John Garland. He was of the Duke of Lennox’s men
-in 1605. Perhaps the whole company was taken over from the Duke of
-Lennox. Mr. Fleay says that the Duke of York’s men arose ‘immediately
-after the disappearance of the King’s Revels Children’,<a id="FNanchor_675" href="#Footnote_675" class="fnanchor">[675]</a> and
-appears to suggest a continuity between the two companies; but he
-must have overlooked the fact that the Duke of York’s were already
-performing in the provinces, while the King’s Revels were in all
-probability still at Whitefriars.<a id="FNanchor_676" href="#Footnote_676" class="fnanchor">[676]</a></p>
-
-<p>Some reconstruction doubtless took place about the date of the issue
-of the patent, for the pleadings in the equity suit of <i>Taylor v.
-Hemynges</i> in 1612 recites an agreement of 15 March 1610, which
-provided for the continuance of fellowship during three years and the
-forfeiture of the interest in a common stock of ‘apparrell goodes
-money and other thinges’ of any member, who left without the consent
-of the rest. It was made between Garland on the one side and Taylor,
-Rowley, Dawes, and Hobbes on the other, and these four gave Garland a
-bond of £200 as security. On 8 May the five bought some ‘olde clothes
-or apparrell which formerly weare players clothes or apparrell’ from
-John Heminges of the King’s men for £11, and gave a bond of £20 for
-payment. Apparently payment had not been made by Easter 1611, when
-Taylor ‘by the licence and leave of his said Master the Duke vpon some
-speciall reason ... did give over and leave to play in the company’.
-Under the agreement the apparel passed to his fellows, and according
-to Taylor they paid Heminges the £11 or otherwise satisfied him, and
-then ‘havinge conceaued some vndeserued displeasure’ against Taylor
-for leaving them, conspired with Heminges to defraud him of £20 on the
-bond. According to Heminges no payment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span> was made, and he sued Taylor
-as ‘the best able to paye and discharge the same’. Taylor was arrested
-and in February 1612 brought his suit in equity to stay the common law
-proceedings. The result is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>The company frequently played at Court, but, as it would seem, only
-before the younger members of the royal family. Their first appearance
-was before Charles and Elizabeth on 9 February 1610. In 1610–11 they
-were at Saffron Walden. They came before Charles and Elizabeth on 12
-and 20 December 1610 and 15 January 1611, and before Henry, Charles,
-and Elizabeth on 12 and 28 January and 13 and 24 February 1612. On
-this last occasion they played William Rowley’s <i>Hymen’s Holiday, or
-Cupid’s Vagaries</i>. After Henry’s death, on 7 November 1612, they
-became entitled to the designation of the Prince’s players. In 1612–13
-they were at Barnstaple and Ipswich. On 2 and 10 March 1613 they gave
-the two parts of <i>The Knaves</i>, perhaps by Rowley, before Charles,
-Elizabeth, and the Palsgrave. In 1613–14 they were at Barnstaple,
-Dover, Saffron Walden, and Coventry. They were not at Court for the
-winter of 1613–14. In November 1614 they were at Oxford, Leicester,
-and Nottingham. At the Christmas of 1614–15 they gave six plays before
-Charles, and on 11 February they were at Youghal in Ireland. Ten days
-later R. A.’s <i>The Valiant Welshman</i> was entered and in the
-course of the year published as theirs. Their leader seems to have
-been Rowley. He both wrote plays for them and acted as payee for all
-their court rewards from 1610 to 1614. In 1611 they lost Taylor and in
-1614 Dawes to the Lady Elizabeth’s men; and these transferences seem
-to have led to a temporary amalgamation of the two companies, which
-Mr. Fleay and Dr. Greg place in 1614, but for which their distinct
-appearances at Court in the following winter suggest 1615 as the more
-likely date.<a id="FNanchor_677" href="#Footnote_677" class="fnanchor">[677]</a> On 29 March 1615 William Rowley and John Newton were
-called with representatives of other companies before the Privy Council
-to answer for playing in Lent. No separate representation of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s is indicated by the list. In 1614–15 the Prince’s were
-at Norwich, Coventry, Winchester, and Barnstaple. In the winter of
-1615–16 they gave four plays before Prince Charles, and the payee was
-not Rowley, but Alexander Foster, formerly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span> of the Lady Elizabeth’s.
-Rosseter’s patent of 3 June 1615 for a second Blackfriars theatre
-contemplates its use by the Prince’s men and the Lady Elizabeth’s, as
-well as by the Queen’s Revels, and Field’s <i>Amends for Ladies</i>
-was actually played in the Blackfriars, probably in this house before
-it was suppressed, by the two first-named companies. After Henslowe’s
-death on 6 January 1616, the combination, whatever its nature, was
-probably broken up, and separate companies of Prince’s men and Lady
-Elizabeth’s men were again formed. But both of the original companies
-continued to be represented in one which remained at the Hope. This
-is shown by an agreement entered into with Alleyn and Meade on 20
-March 1616, and signed in the presence of Robert Daborne and others
-by William Rowley, Robert Pallant, Joseph Taylor, Robert Hamlen, John
-Newton, William Barksted, Thomas Hobbes, Antony Smith, William Penn,
-and Hugh Attwell.<a id="FNanchor_678" href="#Footnote_678" class="fnanchor">[678]</a> This recites that the signatories and others had
-given bonds to Henslowe and Meade for the repayment of sums lent them
-by Henslowe, for a stock of apparel worth £400, and for the fulfilment
-of certain Articles of Agreement; and that at their entreaty Alleyn
-had agreed to accept £200 in discharge of their full liabilities. They
-covenant to pay the £200 by making over to Alleyn one-fourth of the
-daily takings of the whole galleries at the Hope or any house in which
-they may play, and to carry out the Articles with Alleyn and Meade by
-so playing. Alleyn and Meade agree to cancel the bonds when the £200
-is paid, except any which may relate to private debts of any of the
-men to Henslowe, and also to make over to them any apparel which they
-had received from Henslowe, Alleyn, or Meade. The rights of Alleyn and
-Meade against any bondsmen not taking part in the new agreement are to
-remain unaffected. That the signatories to this document used the name
-of Prince Charles’s men seems pretty clear from the reappearance of
-several of their names in two later lists of the Prince’s men, one in
-Rowley and Middleton’s <i>Mask of Heroes</i> (1619), the other in the
-records of King James’s funeral on 20 May 1625.<a id="FNanchor_679" href="#Footnote_679" class="fnanchor">[679]</a> This last contains
-also the name of Gilbert Reason, who is not one of the signatories of
-1616, but was in that year travelling the provinces with an irregularly
-obtained exemplification of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span> the 1610 patent.<a id="FNanchor_680" href="#Footnote_680" class="fnanchor">[680]</a> An undated letter
-from Pallant, Rowley, Taylor, Newton, Hamlen, Attwell, and Smith to
-Alleyn, which may belong to some time in 1616 or 1617, shows that, in
-spite of the easy terms which the company seem to have received by the
-agreement, the subsequent relations were not altogether smooth. They
-write to excuse their removal from the Bankside, where they had stood
-the intemperate weather, until ‘more intemperate Mr. Meade thrust vs
-over, taking the day from vs w<sup>ch</sup> by course was ours’. They ask
-Alleyn to find them a house and in the meantime to lend them £40, on
-the security that ‘we haue to receiue from the court (w<sup>ch</sup> after
-Shrouetide wee meane to pursue w<sup>th</sup> best speede) a great summe of
-monie’, amounting to more than twice the loan desired.<a id="FNanchor_681" href="#Footnote_681" class="fnanchor">[681]</a> It is to be
-presumed that the ‘course’ to which they refer was some distribution of
-days between playing and bear-baiting. In 1619 the company was joined
-by Christopher Beeston, formerly of the Queen’s, and his house of the
-Cockpit became available for their use.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xxiv. THE LADY ELIZABETH’S MEN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Elizabeth, e. d. of James I; <i>nat. c.</i> 19 Aug. 1596; m.
-Frederick V, Elector Palatine (Palsgrave), 14 Feb. 1613; Queen
-of Bohemia, 7 Nov. 1619; known as Queen of Hearts; <i>ob.</i> 13
-Feb. 1662.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Nearly all the material is to
-be found among the extracts from the Dulwich MSS. printed by
-W. W. Greg in <i>Henslowe Papers</i> (1907) and summarized in
-Henslowe, ii. 137.]</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>This company seems to have come into existence in 1611 under the
-following patent of 27 March:<a id="FNanchor_682" href="#Footnote_682" class="fnanchor">[682]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De licencia speciali pro Iohanne Townsend &amp; Iosepho Moore &amp;
-aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of god &amp;c. To all Iustices, Maiors,
-Sheriffes, Bailiffes, Constables hedborroughes, and other our
-lovinge Subiectes and officers greetinge. Knowe ye that wee of
-our especiall grace, certayne knowledge, and meere mocon have
-licenced and authorised, and by these presente do licence and
-authorize Iohn Townsend and Joseph Moore, sworne servantes to
-our deere daughter the ladie Elizabeth, with the rest of theire
-Companie, to vse and exercise the Arte and qualitie of playinge
-Comedies, histories, Enterludes, Morralls, pastoralls, stage
-playes, and such other like as they haue alreadie studied or
-hereafter shall studie or vse, aswell for the recreacion of
-our lovinge Subiectes, as for our solace and pleasure when wee
-shall thinke good to see them, And the said enterludes or other
-to shewe and exercise publiquelie to their best commoditie
-in and about our Cittie of London in such vsuall howses as
-themselues<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span> shall prouide, And alsoe within anie Towne halles,
-mootehalles, Guyld-halles, Schoolehowses or other convenient
-places within the libertye and freedome of anie other Cittie,
-vniuersitie, Towne or Burroughe whatsoeuer within our Realmes
-and Domynions, willinge and comaundinge you and everie of you,
-as you tender our pleasure, not onelie to permitt and suffer
-them herein without any your lettes, hinderances, molestacions
-or disturbances during our said pleasure, but alsoe to be
-ayding and assistinge vnto them, if anie wronge be vnto them
-offred, And to allowe them such former curtesies as hath byne
-given to men of their place and qualitie, And alsoe what
-further fauour you shall shewe them for our sake wee shall
-take yt kindelie at your handes. Prouided alwayes and our will
-and pleasure is that all authoritie, power, priveledge, and
-profitt whatsoever belonginge or properlie apperteyning to the
-maister of the Revelles in respecte of his office and euerie
-Article and graunte conteyned within the letters Pattentes or
-Comission, which haue byne heretofore graunted or directed by
-the late queene Elizabeth our deere sister or by our selfe to
-our welbeloued Servantes Edwarde Tylney Maister of the saide
-Revells, or to Sir George Bucke knighte, or to eyther of them,
-in possession or reuercon, shall remayne and abide entire and
-in full force, effecte and vertue, and in as ample sorte as if
-this our Comission had neuer byne made In witnesse wherof &amp;c.
-Witnesse our selfe at Westminster the seaven and Twentith daye
-of Aprill.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">The company is first traceable in the country, at Bath during 1610–11
-and at Ipswich on 28 May 1611. The names of Moore and Townsend render
-possible its identification with an unnamed company, which on 29 August
-1611 gave duplicate bonds of £500 to Henslowe for the observance of
-certain articles of agreement of the same date. Unfortunately the
-articles themselves are not preserved, but it is likely that they
-contained an arrangement for the housing and financing of the company
-by Henslowe.<a id="FNanchor_683" href="#Footnote_683" class="fnanchor">[683]</a> The signatories to both bonds include John Townsend,
-Joseph Taylor, William Ecclestone, Thomas Hunt, John Rice, Robert
-Hamlen, Joseph Moore, William Carpenter, Thomas Basse, and Alexander
-Foster. To these one adds Giles Gary and William Barksted and the
-other Francis Waymus. The names recited in the bodies of the documents
-agree with the signatures, except that Gary appears in both. Several
-of these men now come into London theatrical history for the first
-time, but Gary is probably the Giles Cary who with Barksted played in
-<i>Epicoene</i> for the Queen’s Revels in 1609, Taylor came from the
-Duke of York’s, and Rice from the King’s. One Hunt, whose Christian
-name is unknown, was with the Admiral’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span> in 1601. Alexander Foster
-received payment on behalf of the Lady Elizabeth’s men for three plays
-given at Court during the Christmas of 1611–12. The first was on 19
-January 1612 before Elizabeth and Henry; the second was <i>The Proud
-Maid’s Tragedy</i>, on 25 February before James; and the third was on
-11 March, again before Elizabeth and Henry. In 1611–12 the company
-were at Dover and Coventry, and on 30 July 1612 at Leicester. On 20
-October they played before Elizabeth and the Palsgrave, shortly after
-the latter’s arrival in England, in the Cockpit. This was perhaps the
-play paid for out of the private funds of Elizabeth, as the result of
-a wager with Mr. Edward Sackville.<a id="FNanchor_684" href="#Footnote_684" class="fnanchor">[684]</a> During Christmas they played
-twice before Charles, Elizabeth, and the Palsgrave, showing Marston’s
-<i>The Dutch Courtesan</i> on 25 February and <i>Raymond Duke of
-Lyons</i> on 1 March. For 1612–13 Joseph Taylor was payee.</p>
-
-<p>The names of Taylor and Ecclestone are found in another document in
-the Dulwich collection, which pretty clearly belongs to the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, and which shows that about the spring of 1613 their
-business relations with Henslowe entered upon a somewhat troubled
-phase. This is shown by internal evidence to have been written in the
-course of 1615. It is here reproduced:<a id="FNanchor_685" href="#Footnote_685" class="fnanchor">[685]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center">Articles of [&emsp;&emsp;]uaunce against<br /> M[&emsp;&emsp;] Hinchlowe</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Imprimis in March 1612 vppon M<sup>r</sup>. Hynchlowes Joyninge Companes
-with M<sup>r</sup>. Rosseter the Companie borrowed 80<sup>[</sup>ll] of one M<sup>r</sup>.
-Griffin and the same was put into M<sup>r</sup>. Hinchlowes debt which
-made itt sixteene score poundes; whoe [a]fter the receipt of the
-same or most parte thereof in March 1613 hee broke the saide
-Comp[any a]gaine and Ceazed all the stocke, vnder Culler to
-satisfie what remayned due to [him]; yet perswaded M<sup>r</sup>. Griffyne
-afterwardes to arest the Companie for his 80<sup>ll</sup>, whoe are
-still in daunger for the same; Soe nowe there was in equitie due
-to the Companie <span style="float:right;">80<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item M<sup>r</sup>. Hinchlowe having lent one Taylor 30<sup>ll</sup> and 20<sup>ll</sup>
-to one Baxter fellowes of the Companie Cunninglie put theire
-said privat debts into the generall accompt by which meanes hee
-is in Conscience to allowe them <span style="float:right;">50<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item havinge the stock of Apparell in his handes to secure his
-debt he sould tenn poundes worth of ould apparrell out of the
-same without accomptinge or abatinge for the same; heare growes
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>due to the Companie <span style="float:right;">10<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Also vppon the departure of one Eglestone a ffellowe of the
-Companie hee recovered of him 14<sup>ll</sup> towardes his debt which is
-in Conscience likewise to bee allowed to the Companie <span style="float:right;">14<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">In March 1613 hee makes vpp a Companie and buies apparrell of
-one Rosseter to the value of 63<sup>ll</sup>, and valued the ould stocke
-that remayned in his handes at 63<sup>ll</sup>, likewise they vppon his
-word acceptinge the same at that rate, which being prized by
-M<sup>r</sup>. Daborne iustlie, betweene his partner Meade and him, Came
-but to 40<sup>ll</sup>: soe heare growes due to the Companie <span style="float:right;">23<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item hee agrees with the said Companie that they should enter
-bond to plaie with him for three yeares att such house and
-houses as hee shall appointe and to allowe him halfe galleries
-for the said house and houses, and the other halfe galleries
-towardes his debt of 126<sup>ll</sup>, and other such moneys as hee
-should laie out for playe apparrell duringe the space of the
-said 3 yeares, agreeinge with them in Consideration theareof to
-seale each of them a bond of 200<sup>ll</sup> to find them a Convenient
-house and houses, and to laie out such moneies as fower of the
-sharers should think fitt for theire vse in apparrell, which att
-the 3 yeares, being paid for, to be deliuered to the sharers;
-whoe accordinglie entered the said bondes; but M<sup>r</sup>. Henchlowe
-and M<sup>r</sup>. Mead deferred the same, an[d] in Conclusion vtterly
-denied to seale att all.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item M<sup>r</sup>. Hinchlowe havinge promised in Consideracion of the
-Companies lying still one daie in forteene for his baytinge to
-give them 50<sup>s</sup>, hee havinge denied to bee bound as aforesaid
-gave them onlie 40<sup>s</sup>, and for that M<sup>r</sup>. Feild would not Consent
-therevnto hee gave him soe much as his share out of 50<sup>ll</sup>
-would have Come vnto; by which meanes hee is dulie indebted to
-the Companie <span style="float:right;">x<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">In June followinge the said agreement, hee brought in M<sup>r</sup>.
-Pallant and short[l]ie after M<sup>r</sup>. Dawes into the said Companie,
-promisinge one 12<sup>s</sup> a weeke out of his part of the galleries,
-and the other 6<sup>s</sup> a weeke out of his parte of the galleries;
-and because M<sup>r</sup>. Feild was thought not to bee drawne therevnto,
-hee promissed him six shillinges weekelie alsoe; which in
-one moneth after vnwilling to beare soe greate a Charge, he
-Called the Companie together, and told them that this 24<sup>s</sup> was
-to bee Charged vppon them, threatninge those which would not
-Consent therevnto to breake the Companie and make vpp a newe
-without the[m]. Whearevppon knowinge hee was not bound, the
-three-quarters sharers advauncinge them selves to whole shares
-Consented therevnto, by which meanes they are out of purse
-30<sup>ll</sup>, and his parte of the galleries bettred twise as much
-<span style="float:right;">30<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item havinge 9 gatherers more then his due itt Comes to this
-yeare from the Companie <span style="float:right;">10<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Item the Companie paid for [Arra]s and other properties 40<sup>ll</sup>,
-which Mr. Henchlow deteyneth <span style="float:right;">40<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">In Februarie last 1614 perceav[ing]e the Companie drewe out of
-his debt and Called vppon him for his accompts hee brooke the
-Companie<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span> againe, by withdrawinge the hired men from them, and
-selles theire stocke (in his hands) for 400<sup>ll</sup>, givinge vnder
-his owne hand that hee had receaved towardes his debt <span style="float:right;">300<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Which with the iuste and Conscionable allowances before named
-made to the Companie, which Comes to ... 267<sup>ll</sup>, makes
-<span style="float:right;">567<sup>ll</sup>:</span></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Articles of oppression against M<sup>r</sup>. Hinchlowe.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Hee Chargeth the stocke with ... 600<sup>ll</sup>: and odd, towardes
-which hee hath receaved as aforesaid ... 567<sup>ll</sup> of vs; yet
-selles the stocke to strangers for fower hundred poundes, and
-makes vs no satisfacion.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Hee hath taken all boundes of our hired men in his owne name,
-whose wages though wee have truly paid yet att his pleasure hee
-hath taken them a waye, and turned them over to others to the
-breaking of our Companie.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">For lendinge of vj<sup>ll</sup> to p[ay] them theire wages, hee made vs
-enter bond to give him the profitt of a warraunt of tenn poundes
-due to vs att Court.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Alsoe hee hath taken right gould and silver lace of divers
-garmentes to his owne vse without accompt to vs or abatement.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Vppon everie breach of the Companie hee takes newe bondes for
-his stocke and our securitie for playinge with him; Soe that
-hee hath in his handes bondes of ours to the value of 5000<sup>ll</sup>
-and his stocke to; which hee denies to deliuer and threatens to
-oppresse us with.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Alsoe havinge apointed a man to the seeinge of his accomptes in
-byinge of Clothes (hee beinge to have vi<sup>s</sup> a weeke) hee takes
-the meanes away and turnes the man out.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">The reason of his often breakinge with vs hee gave in these
-wordes ‘Should these fellowes Come out of my debt, I should have
-noe rule with them’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Alsoe wee have paid him for plaie bookes 200<sup>ll</sup> or
-thereaboutes and yet hee denies to give vs the Coppies of any
-one of them.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Also within 3 yeares hee hath broken and dissmembred five
-Companies.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It is not quite possible to trace all the five breakings of companies
-referred to in the closing sentence; but the statement is sufficient
-to give a fairly clear outline of the history of the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men during the years which it covers, and, as it happens, there is a
-good deal of other evidence from which to supplement it. It appears
-that in March 1613 Henslowe joined companies with Rosseter; that is
-to say, that an amalgamation took place between the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men and the Children of the Queen’s Revels, who had been acting at
-the Whitefriars under the patent to Rosseter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span> and others of 4 January
-1610. One of these children was Robert Baxter, if he is the Baxter
-named in the Articles of Grievance as a fellow of the company with
-Taylor between March 1613 and March 1614.<a id="FNanchor_686" href="#Footnote_686" class="fnanchor">[686]</a> During the same period
-it appears that William Ecclestone left the company. He afterwards
-joined the King’s men. But, before he went, he took a part in <i>The
-Honest Man’s Fortune</i>, which is stated in the <i>Dyce MS.</i> to
-have been played in 1613, while its ‘principal actors’ are named in the
-1679 folio of Beaumont and Fletcher as ‘Nathan Field, Robert Benfield,
-Emanuel Read, Joseph Taylor, Will. Eglestone and Thomas Basse’. This
-particular combination seems to point clearly to the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men as the original producers of the play. A very similar cast is
-assigned in the same folio to <i>The Coxcomb</i>, namely, ‘Nathan
-Field, Joseph Taylor, Giles Gary, Emanuel Read, Richard Allen, Hugh
-Atawell, Robert Benfeild, and William Barcksted’; and I think that this
-also must belong to a performance by the Lady Elizabeth’s men about
-1613. <i>The Coxcomb</i> had certainly been played at Court by the
-Queen’s Revels in 1612, but it seems impossible that Taylor can then
-have been a member of that company.<a id="FNanchor_687" href="#Footnote_687" class="fnanchor">[687]</a> The new blood brought in from
-Rosseter’s company will, then, have included Field, Attwell, Richard
-Allen, Benfield, Reade, and perhaps Robert Baxter, of whom the first
-three had played in Jonson’s <i>Epicoene</i> for the Revels in 1609.
-When it is remembered that Cary and Barksted had been in the same cast,
-it will be realized that the Lady Elizabeth’s men, as constituted in
-1613, were very much the Queen’s Revels over again.</p>
-
-<p>I think there can be no doubt that the Lady Elizabeth’s men was the
-company principally referred to in the long series of letters from
-Robert Daborne to Henslowe, which runs from 17 April 1613 to 31 July
-1614.[688] Daborne had been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span> one of the patentees for the Queen’s
-Revels in 1609, and some letters apparently belonging to the same
-series show Field as interested, either as writer or actor, in some
-of the plays which Henslowe was purchasing from Daborne, with a view
-to reselling them to this company. Further confirmation is to be
-obtained for this view from the signature of Hugh Attwell as witness
-to one of Henslowe’s advances to Daborne,<a id="FNanchor_689" href="#Footnote_689" class="fnanchor">[689]</a> and from the mention
-of Benfield,<a id="FNanchor_690" href="#Footnote_690" class="fnanchor">[690]</a> of Pallant who, as will be seen, joined the company
-in 1614,<a id="FNanchor_691" href="#Footnote_691" class="fnanchor">[691]</a> and of <i>Eastward Ho!</i> which their repertory had
-inherited from that of the Queen’s Revels.<a id="FNanchor_692" href="#Footnote_692" class="fnanchor">[692]</a> That ‘Mr. Allin’
-was hearing Daborne’s plays with Henslowe in May 1613 need cause no
-difficulty.<a id="FNanchor_693" href="#Footnote_693" class="fnanchor">[693]</a> It is true that Edward Alleyn is not known to have
-had any relations with the Lady Elizabeth’s men, but John Alleyn, a
-nephew of Edward, is amongst Henslowe’s witnesses about this time,<a id="FNanchor_694" href="#Footnote_694" class="fnanchor">[694]</a>
-and Richard Allen, who may not have belonged to the same family, was
-himself one of the Lady Elizabeth’s men, and perhaps served as their
-literary adviser. The correspondence makes it possible to recover
-the names of a series of plays on which Daborne was engaged, either
-alone or in collaboration with others, during the period over which it
-extends, and all of which seem to have been primarily meant for the
-Lady Elizabeth’s men, although he occasionally professes, as an aid to
-his chaffering, to have an alternative market with the King’s men.<a id="FNanchor_695" href="#Footnote_695" class="fnanchor">[695]</a>
-From April to June 1613 he was writing a tragedy of <i>Machiavel
-and the Devil</i>, and this is probably the ‘new play’, of which he
-suggests the performance on Wednesday in August, to follow one of
-<i>Eastward Ho!</i> on the Monday.<a id="FNanchor_696" href="#Footnote_696" class="fnanchor">[696]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span> For this Henslowe covenanted
-to pay him £20. In June he was also completing <i>The Arraignment of
-London</i>, of which he had given an act to Cyril Tourneur to write;
-and to this <i>The Bellman of London</i>, for which he and a colleague,
-perhaps again Tourneur, asked no more than £12 and ‘the overplus of
-the second day’ in August, was probably a sequel.<a id="FNanchor_697" href="#Footnote_697" class="fnanchor">[697]</a> This may be
-the play which he had delivered to Henslowe about the beginning of
-December. About July he seems also to have been occupied upon a play
-in collaboration with Field, Fletcher, and Massinger. This is not
-named, and Mr. Fleay’s identification of it with <i>The Honest Man’s
-Fortune</i> is rather hazardous.<a id="FNanchor_698" href="#Footnote_698" class="fnanchor">[698]</a> In December he began <i>The
-Owl</i>, for which his price fell to £10; and on 11 March 1614 he
-had finished this, and was beginning <i>The She Saint</i> and asking
-‘but 12<sup>l</sup> a play till they be playd.’ The correspondence has a gap
-between the middle of August and the middle of October 1613. Probably
-the company were on tour; they are found at Coventry, Shrewsbury, and
-Marlborough in 1612–13, Canterbury on 4 July 1613, Dover between 12
-July and 7 August, and Leicester on 13 October. In the spring they had
-been at Bristol and Norwich. On 12 December they repeated one of their
-plays of the preceding winter, Marston’s <i>The Dutch Courtesan</i>,
-before Charles, and on 25 January 1614 gave <i>Eastward Ho!</i> which
-they had been playing in public during the summer, before James. Taylor
-was again their payee for this Christmas.</p>
-
-<p>The statement of grievances indicates another reconstruction
-of the company in March 1614. In this transaction, which apparently
-involved the buying out of Rosseter’s interest, Meade was in
-partnership with Henslowe, and Field was presumably in some position
-of authority on behalf of the players, as it is alleged that Henslowe
-bribed him, in order to obtain his assent to the modification of a
-covenant under which he was to make an allowance for a withdrawal of
-the theatre once a fortnight for baiting. The terms recited agree with
-those of an undated and mutilated agreement between Henslowe and Jacob
-Meade on one side and Field on behalf of an unnamed company of players
-on the other. The text of this follows:<a id="FNanchor_699" href="#Footnote_699" class="fnanchor">[699]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Articles of agreement made, concluded, and agreed vppon,
-and which are on the parte and behalfe of Phillipp Henslowe
-Esquier and Jacob Meade Waterman to be perfourmed, touchinge
-&amp; concerninge the Company of players which they haue lately
-raised, viz<sup>t</sup>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Imprimis the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob
-Meade doe for them, their executours and administratours,
-Covenante, promise, and graunt by theis presentes to and with
-Nathan Feilde gent., That they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and
-Jacob Meade or one of them shall and will duringe the space
-of Three yeares at all tymes (when noe restraynte of playinge
-shalbe) at their or some of their owne proper costes and charges
-fynde and provide a sufficient howse or howses for the saide
-Company to play in, And also shall and will at all tymes duringe
-the saide tearme disburse and lay out all suche somme &amp; sommes
-of monny, as ffower or ffive Shareres of the saide Company
-chosen by the saide Phillipp and Jacob shall thinck fittinge,
-for the furnishinge of the said Company with playinge apparrell
-towardes the settinge out of their newe playes, And further
-that the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade shall and will
-at all tymes duringe the saide tearme, when the saide Company
-shall play in or neare the Cittie of London, furnish the saide
-Company of players, aswell with suche stock of apparrell &amp; other
-properties as the said Phillipp Henslowe hath already bought, As
-also with suche other stock of apparrell as the saide Phillipp
-Henslowe and Jacob Meade shall hereafter provide and buy for
-the said Company duringe the saide tearme, And further shall
-and will at suche tyme and tymes duringe the saide tearme, as
-the saide Company of Players shall by meanes of any restraynte
-or sicknes goe into the Contrey, deliuer and furnish the saide
-Company with fitting apparrell out of both the saide stockes of
-apparrell. And further the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob
-Meade doe for them, their executours and administratours,
-convenante and graunt to and with the saide Nathan Feilde by
-theis presentes in manner and fourme followinge, that is to say,
-That they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade or one of
-them shall and will from tyme to tyme duringe the saide tearme
-disburse and lay out suche somme or sommes of monny as shalbe
-thought fittinge by ffower or ffive of the Shareres of the saide
-Company, to be chosen by the saide Phillipp &amp; Jacob or one of
-them, to be paide for any play which they shall buy or condicion
-or agree for; Soe alwaies as the saide Company doe and shall
-truly repaye vnto the saide Phillipp and Jacob, their executores
-or assignes, all suche somme &amp; sommes of monny, as they shall
-disburse for any play, vppon the second or third daie wheron the
-same play shalbe plaide by the saide Company, without fraude
-or longer delay; And further that the saide Phillipp Henslowe
-and Jacob Meade shall and will at all tymes, vppon request made
-by the Maior parte of the Sharers of the saide Company v[nder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-their] handes, remove and putt out of the saide Company any of
-the saide Company of playeres, if the saide Phillipp Henslowe
-and Jacob Meade shall fynde [the s]aide request to be iust and
-that ther be noe hope of conformety in the partie complayned
-of; And further that they the saide Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob
-Mea[de shall] and [will] at all tymes, vppon request made by
-the saide Company or the maior parte therof, pay vnto them all
-suche somes of monny as shall comme vnto their handes v[ppon
-&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; of] any forfectures for rehearsalles or suche
-like paymentes; And also shall and will, vppon the request of
-the said Company or the maior parte of the[m], sue [&emsp;&emsp;] ar[&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;] persons by whom any forfecture
-shalbe made as aforesaid, and after or vppon the recovery and
-receipte th[ero]f (their charges disbursed about the recovery
-[&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;b]einge first deducted and allowed) shall and
-will make satisfaccion of the remaynder therof vnto the said
-Company without fraude or guile.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Mr. Fleay and Dr. Greg think that at the time of this reconstruction
-the company was further strengthened by the incorporation of the Duke
-of York’s, now the Prince’s, men.<a id="FNanchor_700" href="#Footnote_700" class="fnanchor">[700]</a> This I doubt, as the Prince’s
-men continued to play at Court, as a company quite distinct from the
-Lady Elizabeth’s, during the winter of 1614–15. It is true that Robert
-Dawes, who had been one of the Duke of York’s in 1610, joined the Lady
-Elizabeth’s, but it was precisely one of the grievances that this man
-and Robert Pallant were introduced by Henslowe, by means of a financial
-adjustment unfavourable to the sharers, in June 1614. Pallant had
-passed through several companies, and is traceable with Queen Anne’s
-men in 1609. He was still technically a servant of the Queen at her
-death in 1619.<a id="FNanchor_701" href="#Footnote_701" class="fnanchor">[701]</a> A letter from Daborne on 28 March 1614 shows that
-he was then expecting an answer to some proposal made to Henslowe,
-which the latter had neglected.<a id="FNanchor_702" href="#Footnote_702" class="fnanchor">[702]</a> Articles between Robert Dawes and
-Henslowe and Meade are on record, and bear the date 7 April 1614.<a id="FNanchor_703" href="#Footnote_703" class="fnanchor">[703]</a>
-The following is the text:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Articles of Agreement,] made, concluded, and agreed uppon, and
-which are to be kept &amp; performed by Robert Dawes of London,
-Gent. unto and with Phillipp Henslowe Esq<sup>re</sup> and Jacob [Meade
-Waterman] in manner and forme followinge, that is to say</p>
-
-<p>Imprimis. The said Robert Dawes for him, his executors, and
-administrators doth covenante, promise, and graunt to and with
-the said Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors,
-administrators, and assynes, in manner and formme followinge,
-that is to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span> saie, that he the said Robert Dawes shall and will
-plaie with such company, as the said Phillipp Henslowe and
-Jacob Meade shall appoynte, for and during the tyme and space
-of three yeares from the date hereof for and at the rate of one
-whole share, accordinge to the custome of players; and that he
-the said Robert Dawes shall and will at all tymes during the
-said terme duly attend all suche rehearsall, which shall the
-night before the rehearsall be given publickly out; and if that
-he the saide Robert Dawes shall at any tyme faile to come at
-the hower appoynted, then he shall and will pay to the said
-Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors or assignes,
-Twelve pence; and if he come not before the saide rehearsall
-is ended, then the said Robert Dawes is contented to pay Twoe
-shillings; and further that if the said Robert Dawes shall not
-every daie, whereon any play is or ought to be played, be ready
-apparrelled and &mdash;&mdash; to begyn the play at the hower of three of
-the clock in the afternoone, unles by sixe of the same company
-he shall be lycenced to the contrary, that then he, the saide
-Robert Dawes, shall and will pay unto the said Phillipp and
-Jacob or their assignes Three [shillings]; and if that he, the
-saide Robert Dawes, happen to be overcome with drinck at the
-tyme when he [ought to] play, by the judgment of ffower of the
-said company, he shall and will pay Tenne shillings; and if he,
-[the said Robert Dawes], shall [faile to come] during any plaie,
-having noe lycence or just excuse of sicknes, he is contented
-to pay Twenty shillings; and further the said Robert Dawes,
-for him, his executors, and administrators, doth covenant and
-graunt to and with the said Phillipp Henslowe and Jacob Meade,
-their executors, administrators, and asignes, by these presents,
-that it shall and may be lawfull unto and for the said Phillipp
-Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors or assignes, during
-the terme aforesaid, to receave and take back to their own
-proper use the part of him, the said Robert Dawes, of and in one
-moyetie or halfe part of all suche moneyes, as shal be receaved
-at the Galleries &amp; tyring howse of such house or howses wherein
-he the saide Robert Dawes shall play, for and in consideration
-of the use of the same howse and howses; and likewis shall and
-may take and receave his other moyetie [.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.]
-the moneys receaved at the galleries and tiring howse dues,
-towards the pa[ying] to them, the saide Phillip Henslowe and
-Jacob Meade, of the some of one hundred twenty and fower pounds,
-being the value of the stock of apparell furnished by the saide
-company by the saide Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade [.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.] the one part of him the saide Robert Dawes or
-any other somes [.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.] to them for any apparell
-hereafter newly to be bought by the [said Phillip Henslowe
-and Jacob Meade, until the saide Phillip Henslowe and Jacob
-Meade] shall therby be fully satisfied, contented, and paid.
-And further the said Robert Dawes doth covenant, [promise, and
-graunt to and with the said Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade,
-that if he, the said Robert Dawes], shall at any time after the
-play is ended depart or goe out of the [howse] with any [of
-their] apparell on his body, or if the said Robert Dawes [shall
-carry away any propertie] belonging to the said company, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>
-shal be consentinge [or privy to any other of the said company
-going out of the howse with any of their apparell on his or
-their bodies, he, the said] Robert Dawes, shall and will forfeit
-and pay unto the said Phillip and Jacob, or their administrators
-or assignes, the some of ffortie pounds of lawfull [money of
-England] .&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;.&emsp;. and the said Robert Dawes, for
-him, his executors, and administrators doth [covenant promise
-and graunt to with the said] Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade,
-their executors, and administrators [and assigns] &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; that it shall and may be lawfull to and for the said
-Phillip Henslowe and Jacob Meade, their executors, and assignes,
-to have and use the playhows so appoynted [for the said company
-&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; one day of] every fower daies, the said daie
-to be chosen by the said Phillip and [Jacob] &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp;
-Monday in any week, on which day it shalbe lawful for the said
-Phillip [and Jacob, their administrators], and assignes, to bait
-their bears and bulls ther, and to use their accustomed sport
-and [games] &emsp;&emsp;&emsp;&emsp; and take to their owne use all
-suche somes of money, as thereby shall arise and be receaved</p>
-
-<p>And the saide Robert Dawes, his executors, administrators, and
-assignes, [do hereby covenant, promise, and graunt to and with
-the saide Phillip and Jacob,] allowing to the saide company
-daye the some of ffortie shillings money of England ... [In
-testimony] for every such whereof, I the saide Robert Dawes haue
-hereunto sett my hand and seal this [sev]enth daie of April 1614
-in the twelfth yeare [of the reign of our sovereign lord &amp;c.]</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p0">Robert Dawes.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">It must be mainly matter of conjecture at what theatres the Lady
-Elizabeth’s had played from 1611 to 1614. Possibly they may have
-begun at the Swan. Middleton’s <i>A Chaste Maid in Cheapside</i> was
-published as ‘often acted at the Swan on the Bankeside by the Lady
-Elizabeth her Seruants’, and although this publication was not until
-1630, it is rather tempting to identify the play with <i>The Proud
-Maid</i> of 1611–12. Probably the association of the company with
-Henslowe led to a transfer to the Rose; and after the joining of forces
-with Rosseter in March 1613, the Whitefriars must have been available
-for the combination. That there were alternatives open in 1613 is shown
-by two passages in Daborne’s letters.<a id="FNanchor_704" href="#Footnote_704" class="fnanchor">[704]</a> On 5 June he says that the
-company were expecting Henslowe to conclude ‘about thear comming over
-or goinge to Oxford’, and by ‘comming over’ may most naturally be
-understood crossing the Thames. On 9 December he claims that a book he
-is upon will ‘make as good a play for your publique howse as ever was
-playd’, and the inference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span> is that at the time Henslowe was interested
-in a ‘private’ as well as in a ‘public’ house. Certainly the Watermen’s
-complaint in the spring of 1614 indicates that there were then no plays
-on Bankside, and both the Swan and the Rose must therefore have been
-deserted. But by the autumn the Lady Elizabeth’s men were in the Clink,
-occupying the newly built Hope on the site of the old Bear-garden; and
-that the use of this theatre was contemplated in the agreements of the
-previous spring is shown both by the presence of Meade, who is not
-known to have been interested in any other house, as a party, and by
-the reservation of one day in fourteen for the purpose of baiting.<a id="FNanchor_705" href="#Footnote_705" class="fnanchor">[705]</a>
-It was at the Hope that William Fennor failed to appear to try his
-challenge with John Taylor on 7 October, and the Lady Elizabeth’s men
-were presumably the players&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And such a company (I’ll boldly say)</div>
- <div>That better (nor the like) ne’er played a play&mdash;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">who came to the rescue and saved the occasion from fiasco. And it was
-at the Hope and by the Lady Elizabeth’s men, as the Induction and the
-title-page show, that Jonson’s <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> was produced on
-31 October. There is a reference in the text of the play to Taylor’s
-adventure,<a id="FNanchor_706" href="#Footnote_706" class="fnanchor">[706]</a> and a compliment to Field, which puts him on a level
-with Burbadge of the King’s men.<a id="FNanchor_707" href="#Footnote_707" class="fnanchor">[707]</a> <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> was
-presented on the very next day before James at Court. This performance,
-for which Field was payee on 11 June, was the only one by the company
-during the winter festivities of 1614–15. In February 1615 there was
-a breach between Henslowe and the company, as a result of which the
-Articles of Grievance were drawn up. According to the Articles Henslowe
-‘brooke the companie’; but it is not quite clear what exactly took
-place. In some form the Lady Elizabeth’s men certainly continued to
-exist. They visited Nottingham in March 1615, and a letter from Lord
-Coke to the Mayor of Coventry shows that they also contemplated a
-visit to that town in the same month.<a id="FNanchor_708" href="#Footnote_708" class="fnanchor">[708]</a> My impression is that they
-subsequently patched up another reconstruction with Henslowe, and that
-on this occasion the process did entail some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span> kind of amalgamation
-with Prince Charles’s men. Field, however, probably now joined the
-King’s men. The Lady Elizabeth’s do not appear to have been separately
-represented when the Privy Council called the London companies before
-them for a breach of Lent on 29 March 1615. It is true that they
-may have been alone in not offending, but it is more probable that
-William Rowley and John Newton, who were summoned, answered for the
-amalgamation. The Prince’s men are recorded as playing at Court during
-the Christmas of 1615–16 and the Lady Elizabeth’s men are not. Yet
-the payee for their four plays, of which the dates are not specified,
-was Alexander Foster, who had been a Lady Elizabeth’s man and not
-a Prince’s man. But it is probable that both this amalgamation and
-the earlier one between the Lady Elizabeth’s and the Queen’s Revels,
-although effective as a business operation from Henslowe’s point of
-view, did not amount to a complete merging of identities, such as would
-entail a surrender of one or other of the official patents. Certainly
-the Lady Elizabeth’s, the Prince’s and the Revels were in some sense
-distinct, and yet in the closest relationship in 1615. So much is clear
-from Rosseter’s patent of 3 June to build in the Blackfriars, which
-contemplated that all three companies would share in the use of the new
-house. That the joint user extended also to plays is suggested by the
-title-page of Field’s <i>Amends for Ladies</i> (1618) which declares
-it to have been ‘acted at the Blacke-Fryers, both by the Princes
-Seruants and the Lady Elizabeths’. Perhaps this indicates alternative
-rather than combined playing. Whatever the arrangement, it was probably
-altered again on or before Henslowe’s death on 6 January 1616.<a id="FNanchor_709" href="#Footnote_709" class="fnanchor">[709]</a> A
-company containing many of the former Lady Elizabeth’s men remained at
-the Hope. But they went under Prince Charles’s patronage, and it is
-not until 1622, when we find them at Christopher Beeston’s house of
-the Cockpit or Phoenix, that we can be sure of the presence of Lady
-Elizabeth’s men in London once more.<a id="FNanchor_710" href="#Footnote_710" class="fnanchor">[710]</a> But they had held together
-in the provinces. Possibly the nucleus of the provincial company had
-been formed of men left out by the Henslowe-Rosseter negotiations of
-1613–14. They first appear at Norwich on 2 March 1614 under Nicholas
-Long, who in 1612 had been travelling with Queen’s Revels boys. They
-came again on 27 May 1615 with an exemplification of the 1611 patent
-dated 31 May 1613, and again on 5 June 1616 under John Townsend, and
-again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span> on 7 June 1617 under Henry Sebeck. In the same year Joseph
-Moore was acting as an agent of the Lord Chamberlain and Master of
-the Revels in clearing the provinces of irregularly licensed players,
-not improbably in the interests of the Lady Elizabeth’s themselves,
-whose original patent was now set free, through changes in London, for
-provincial use in place of a mere exemplification.<a id="FNanchor_711" href="#Footnote_711" class="fnanchor">[711]</a> The company
-is also traceable at Leicester, Coventry, Nottingham, Marlborough,
-and elsewhere from 1614,<a id="FNanchor_712" href="#Footnote_712" class="fnanchor">[712]</a> and on 11 July 1617 Townsend and Moore
-received a warrant for £30 in respect of three plays given before James
-during his journey to Scotland.<a id="FNanchor_713" href="#Footnote_713" class="fnanchor">[713]</a> On 20 March 1618 Townsend and
-Moore, with Alexander Foster and Francis Waymus, obtained a new licence
-under the royal signet.<a id="FNanchor_714" href="#Footnote_714" class="fnanchor">[714]</a> This authorized them to play in London,
-and their actual return there may have been earlier than 1622.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XIV<br />
-
-INTERNATIONAL COMPANIES</h3></div>
-
-
-<h5>i. ITALIAN PLAYERS IN ENGLAND</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The wanderings of the Italian
-companies in Italy itself and in France are recounted in A.
-D’Ancona, <i>Origini del Teatro Italiano</i> (ed. 2, 1891), and
-A. Baschet, <i>Les Comédiens italiens à la Cour de France</i>
-(1882), but without much knowledge of the few English records.
-W. Smith, <i>Italian and Elizabethan Comedy</i> (<i>M. P.</i>
-v. 555) and <i>The Commedia dell’ Arte</i> (1912), deals more
-fully with these. The literary influence of Italian comedy is
-discussed by L. L. Schücking, <i>Die stofflichen Beziehungen der
-englischen Komödie zur italienischen bis Lilly</i> (1901), and
-R. W. Bond, <i>Early Plays from the Italian</i> (1911).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The England of Elizabeth and James was a lender rather than a borrower
-of players. No records have been disinterred of French actors in this
-country between 1495 and 1629;<a id="FNanchor_715" href="#Footnote_715" class="fnanchor">[715]</a> and although there are a few of
-Italian actors, their visits seem to have been confined to a single
-brief period.<a id="FNanchor_716" href="#Footnote_716" class="fnanchor">[716]</a> The head-quarters of Italian comedy during the
-middle of the sixteenth century was at the Court of Mantua, and when
-Lord Buckhurst went as ambassador to congratulate Charles IX of France
-on his wedding, it was by Louis Gonzaga, Duke of Nevers and brother
-of the Duke of Mantua, that he was entertained on 4 March 1571 ‘with
-a comedie of Italians that for the good mirth and handling thereof
-deserved singular comendacion’.<a id="FNanchor_717" href="#Footnote_717" class="fnanchor">[717]</a> In the following year the Earl of
-Lincoln was at Paris from 8 to 22 June in order to conclude a treaty,
-and letters relate how he saw at the Louvre ‘an Italian playe, and
-dyvers vauters and leapers of dyvers sortes verie excellent’, and how
-later, when he visited the King at the Chateau de Madrid, ‘he had some
-pastyme showed him by Italian players, which I was at with hym’.<a id="FNanchor_718" href="#Footnote_718" class="fnanchor">[718]</a>
-It may perhaps have been encouragement from one or both of these
-nobles, which led an Italian company not long afterwards to make its
-way across the Channel. The first notice of it is at Nottingham<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span> in
-September 1573, when a reward was ‘gevin to the Italyans for serteyne
-pastymes that they shewed before Maister Meare and his brethren’.<a id="FNanchor_719" href="#Footnote_719" class="fnanchor">[719]</a>
-In 1574 the Revels Accounts include expenditure ‘for the Italyan
-players that ffollowed the progresse and made pastyme fyrst at Wynsor
-and afterwardes at Reading’. Elizabeth was at Windsor on 11 and 12
-July; on 15 July she removed to Reading and remained there to 22 July.
-At Windsor the Italians used ‘iij devells cotes and heades &amp; one olde
-mannes fries cote’; at Reading, where they performed on 15 July, the
-provisions included staves, hooks, and lambskins for shepherds, arrows
-for nymphs, a scythe for Saturn, and ‘horstayles for the wylde mannes
-garment’. Professor Feuillerat appears to suggest that they may have
-been playing Tasso’s <i>Aminta</i>, produced at Ferrara on 31 July
-1573. But there were other pastorals.<a id="FNanchor_720" href="#Footnote_720" class="fnanchor">[720]</a> The Italians are probably
-the comedians commended to the Lord Mayor on 22 July, and in November
-Thomas Norton calls special attention to ‘the unchaste, shamelesse and
-unnaturall tomblinge of the Italian weomen’. How long this company
-remained in England is unknown. There was an Italian acrobat at the
-Kenilworth festivities on 14 July 1575, but the description suggests
-that he was a solitary performer.<a id="FNanchor_721" href="#Footnote_721" class="fnanchor">[721]</a> The Treasurer of the Chamber
-paid ‘Alfruso Ferrabolle and the rest of the Italian players’ for
-a play at Court on 27 February 1576, to the consideration of which
-I shall return. In April 1577 there was an Italian play before the
-Council at Durham Place.<a id="FNanchor_722" href="#Footnote_722" class="fnanchor">[722]</a> Finally, on 13 January 1578, the Privy
-Council addressed a letter to the Lord Mayor, requiring him to permit
-‘one Drousiano, an Italian, a commediante and his companye’, to play
-until the first week of the coming Lent. I take it that the company
-was also at Court, since the Chamber Accounts for 1577–8 include an
-item ‘for a mattres hoopes and boardes with tressells for the Italian
-Tumblers’. The company to which the visit of 1573–4 was due cannot be
-identified with any certainty. Presumably it came through France, and
-ought to have left signs there. There seem to have been three Italian
-companies in France during 1571. The first, in February, was that of
-Giovanni Tabarin. The second, that seen by Lord Buckhurst in Paris,
-was the famous Compagnia de’ Gelosi, of which one Signora Vittoria, of
-Ferrara, known on the stage as Fioretta, was the prima donna. This,
-however, had returned to Milan by the spring of 1572 and its subsequent
-movements hardly render a visit to England in 1573 plausible. A third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>
-company, that of Alberto Ganassa, a Zanni or clown from Bergamo,
-reached Paris in the autumn of 1571.<a id="FNanchor_723" href="#Footnote_723" class="fnanchor">[723]</a> It was sent away by the
-Parlement on account of its high charges for admission, but returned
-in 1572 and played at the wedding of Henri of Navarre and Marguerite
-of Valois on 18 August. Nothing is heard of Ganassa in France after
-October 1572, but during the summer of 1574 he seems to have been in
-Madrid; so he also is not available for the English visit. It may
-very likely have been his company which the Earl of Lincoln saw. But
-it may also have been that led by Soldino of Florence and Anton Maria
-of Venice, which was performing ‘commedies et saults’ before Charles
-IX at Blois on 25 March 1572, and subsequently made its way to Paris.
-My authorities say nothing further about Soldino and Anton Maria, so
-we are at liberty to believe that Lincoln invited them to try their
-fortune across the sea.<a id="FNanchor_724" href="#Footnote_724" class="fnanchor">[724]</a></p>
-
-<p>The ‘Drousiano’ of 1578 offers less difficulty. He must have been
-Drusiano, son of Francisco Martinelli, of Mantua, who in after
-years won a considerable reputation, although less than that of his
-brother Tristano Martinelli, as Arlecchino in the <i>commedia dell’
-arte</i>.<a id="FNanchor_725" href="#Footnote_725" class="fnanchor">[725]</a> There is no other notice of him before 1580, when
-he subscribes himself as ‘marito di M<sup>a</sup> Angelica’, who appears to
-have been one Angelica Alberghini, and the company with which he was
-associated in 1578 is not known.<a id="FNanchor_726" href="#Footnote_726" class="fnanchor">[726]</a> But it may very well have been
-the Gelosi. This company paid in 1577 their second visit to France,
-upon the invitation of Henri III, and remained there at least until
-July. They seem to have been in Florence fairly early in 1578, but some
-or all of them may have found time for an English trip in the interval.
-Direct proof that Drusiano Martinelli ever belonged to the Gelosi is
-lacking. But they are the only Italian company known to have been in
-France in the summer of 1577, and players are not likely to have passed
-from Italy to England without leaving some traces of their presence in
-France.<a id="FNanchor_727" href="#Footnote_727" class="fnanchor">[727]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span></p>
-
-<p>The professional Italian actors of the second half of the sixteenth
-century played both the popular <i>commedia dell’ arte</i> and the
-literary <i>commedia erudita</i>, or <i>commedia sostenuta</i>. The
-former, with its more or less improvised dialogue upon scenarii,
-which revolved around the amorous and ridiculous adventures of the
-<i>zanni</i>, the <i>arlecchino</i>, the <i>dottore</i>, and other
-standing types, was probably best adapted to the methods of wandering
-mimes in an alien land.<a id="FNanchor_728" href="#Footnote_728" class="fnanchor">[728]</a> The latter was common to professionals
-and amateurs. And I suspect that the Court play of 27 February 1576,
-although it earned its reward from the Treasurer of the Chamber, was
-an amateur performance. The ‘Alfruso Ferrabolle’ of the account-book
-can hardly be other than a clerical perversion of the name of Alfonso
-Ferrabosco, the first of three generations of that name, father, son,
-and grandson, who contributed in turn to the gaiety of the English
-Court. The eldest Ferrabosco was certainly in this country by 1562
-when he was granted an annuity of 100 marks. His service terminated
-after various interruptions in 1578.<a id="FNanchor_729" href="#Footnote_729" class="fnanchor">[729]</a> He is doubtless the ‘Mr.
-Alphonse’ who took part in the preparation of a mask in June 1572.<a id="FNanchor_730" href="#Footnote_730" class="fnanchor">[730]</a>
-In connexion with the same mask, a reward was paid to one ‘Petrucio’,
-while for a later mask of 11 January 1579 ‘Patruchius Ubaldinas’ was
-employed to translate speeches into Italian and write them out fair
-in tables.<a id="FNanchor_731" href="#Footnote_731" class="fnanchor">[731]</a> This was Petruccio Ubaldini, another of Elizabeth’s
-Italian pensioners, who was both a literary man and an illuminator,
-and made his residence in England from 1562 to 1586.<a id="FNanchor_732" href="#Footnote_732" class="fnanchor">[732]</a> It is quite
-possible that the performance of 1576 may be referred to in the
-following undated letter from Ubaldini to the Queen, in which he makes
-mention of Ferrabosco.<a id="FNanchor_733" href="#Footnote_733" class="fnanchor">[733]</a> If so, it came off after all.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Sacra Serenissima Maiesta,</p>
-
-<p class="p0">Perché à i giorni passati io haveva promesso à M. Claudio
-Cavallerizzo, et à M. Alfonso Ferrabosco, d’esser contento di
-recitare ad una piacevol Comedia Italiana; per compiacere alla
-Maiesta Vostra; et non si trovando di poi altri, che tre ò
-quattro, che fusser contenti d’accettar tal carico; ho voluto
-che l’Altezza Vostra conosca da me stesso il pronto animo,
-ch’ io ho per la mia parté di servirla, et di compiacerla in
-ogni attioné, che me sia comandata ò da lei, ò in suo nomé,
-non solamente comé servitore giurato, ch’io gli sono; ma comé
-desiderosissimo di far conoscere, che la divotioné, ch’io
-porto allé sue Reali qualità, supera ogn’ altro rispetto;
-desiderandogli io contentezza, et felicità non meno, che
-qualunqué altro suo servitore gli desideri: la cui bontà Dio ci
-prosperi.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">Di Vostra Sacra Serenissima Maiesta.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Of Claudio Cavallerizzo I regret to say that I know nothing.</p>
-
-<p>A statement that Venetian actors were in England in 1608 rests upon a
-misreading of a record.<a id="FNanchor_734" href="#Footnote_734" class="fnanchor">[734]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>ii. ENGLISH PLAYERS IN SCOTLAND</h5>
-
-<p>The interlude players of Henry VII, under John English, accompanied the
-Princess Margaret to Scotland for her wedding with James IV in 1503,
-and ‘did their devoir’ before the Court at Edinburgh.<a id="FNanchor_735" href="#Footnote_735" class="fnanchor">[735]</a> It is the
-best part of a century before any similar adventure is recorded. In the
-interval came the Scottish reformation, which was no friend to courtly
-pageantry. Yet in Scotland, as elsewhere, Kirk discipline had to make
-some compromise with the drama. In 1574 the General Assembly, while
-utterly forbidding, not for the first time, ‘clerk playes, comedies or
-tragedies maid of ye cannonicall Scriptures’, went on to ordain ‘an
-article to be given in to sick as sitts upon ye policie yat for uther
-playes comedies tragedies and utheris profaine playes, as are not maid
-upon authentick pairtes of ye Scriptures, may be considerit before
-they be exponit publictlie and yat they be not played uppon ye Sabboth
-dayes’.<a id="FNanchor_736" href="#Footnote_736" class="fnanchor">[736]</a> It was once more a royal wedding that led to a histrionic
-courtesy between England and Scotland. In the autumn of 1589 James VI
-was expecting the arrival of his bride Anne of Denmark, a sensuous
-and spectacle-loving lady, who had already had experience of English
-actors at her father’s Court in 1586.<a id="FNanchor_737" href="#Footnote_737" class="fnanchor">[737]</a> And being then, two years
-after his mother’s execution, actively engaged in promoting friendly
-relations with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span> Elizabeth, he sent a request through one Roger Ashton
-to Lord Scrope, the Warden of the English West Marches, ‘for to have
-her Majesties players for to repayer into Scotland to his grace’. In
-reply Scrope wrote from Carlisle on 20 September to William Ashby, the
-English ambassador at Edinburgh, begging him to notify the King, that
-he had sent a servant to them, ‘wheir they were in the furthest parte
-of Langkeshire, whervpon they made their returne heather to Carliell,
-wher they are, and have stayed for the space of ten dayes’.<a id="FNanchor_738" href="#Footnote_738" class="fnanchor">[738]</a> After
-all, the Lapland witches and their winds delayed Anne’s crossing for
-some months, and James had himself to join her in Denmark. It is, I
-think, only a conjecture that the players whose ‘book’ was submitted on
-3 June 1589 for the licence of the Kirk Session at Perth, in accordance
-with the order of 1574, were Englishmen.<a id="FNanchor_739" href="#Footnote_739" class="fnanchor">[739]</a> But certainly ‘Inglis
-comedianis’ were in Scotland in 1594, probably for the baptism of Henry
-Frederick on 30 August, and received from James the generous gift of
-£333 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> out of ‘the composicioun of the escheit
-of ye laird of Kilcrewch and his complices’.<a id="FNanchor_740" href="#Footnote_740" class="fnanchor">[740]</a> Probably Laurence
-Fletcher was at the head of this expedition, for on 22 March 1595
-George Nicolson, the English agent at Edinburgh, wrote to Robert Bowes,
-treasurer of Berwick, that, ‘The King heard that Fletcher, the player,
-was hanged, and told him and Roger Aston so, in merry words, not
-believing it, saying very pleasantly that if it were true he would hang
-them also’.<a id="FNanchor_741" href="#Footnote_741" class="fnanchor">[741]</a> In any case, Fletcher appears to have been the leader
-of a company whose peregrinations in Scotland a few years later, much
-favoured by James, were also much embarrassed by the critical relations
-which then existed between the Sovereign and the Kirk. It is only a
-conjecture that this was the company which was refused leave to play at
-St. Andrews on 1 October 1598.<a id="FNanchor_742" href="#Footnote_742" class="fnanchor">[742]</a> But of greater troubles, which took
-place<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span> at Edinburgh a year later, we are very well informed. They are
-detailed from the Kirk point of view in the more or less contemporary
-chronicle of David Calderwood.<a id="FNanchor_743" href="#Footnote_743" class="fnanchor">[743]</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center"><i>The King Chargeth the Kirk of Edinburgh to Rescind an Act.</i></p>
-
-<p>Some English comedians came to this countrie in the moneth of
-October. After they had acted sindrie comedeis in presence of
-the King, they purchassed at last a warrant or precept to the
-bailliffes of Edinburgh, to gett them an hous within the toun.
-Upon Moonday, the 12<sup>th</sup> of November, they gave warning by
-trumpets and drummes through the streets of Edinburgh, to all
-that pleased, to come to the Blacke Friers’ Wynd to see the
-acting of their comedeis. The ministers of Edinburgh, fearing
-the profanitie that was to ensue, speciallie the profanatioun
-of the Sabbath day, convocated the foure sessiouns of the Kirk.
-An act was made by commoun consent, that none resort to these
-profane comedeis, for eshewing offence of God, and of evill
-exemple to others; and an ordinance was made, that everie
-minister sould intimat this act in their owne severall pulpits.
-They had indeid committed manie abusses, speciallie upon the
-Sabboth, at night before. The King taketh the act in evill part,
-as made purposelie to crosse his warrant, and caused summoun
-the ministers and foure sessiouns, <i>super inquirendis</i>,
-before the Secreit Counsell, They sent doun some in commissioun
-to the King, and desired the mater might be tryed privatlie,
-and offered, if they had offended, to repair the offence at
-his owne sight; and alledged they had the warrant of the synod
-presentlie sitting in the toun. The King would have the mater to
-come in publict. When they went doun, none was called upon but
-M<sup>r</sup>. Peter Hewat and Henrie Nisbit. After that they were heard,
-the sentence was givin out against all the rest unheard, and
-charge givin to the ministers and foure sessiouns to conveene,
-within three houres after, to rescind their former ordinance,
-and to the ministers, to intimat the contrarie of that which
-they intimated before. They craved to be heard. Loath was the
-King, yitt the counsell moved him to heare them. M<sup>r</sup>. Johne
-Hall was appointed to be their mouth. ‘We are summouned, Sir,’
-said M<sup>r</sup>. Johne, ‘and crave to understand to what end.’ ‘It is
-true’, said the King, ‘yee are summouned, and I have decerned
-alreadie.’ M<sup>r</sup>. Johne made no reply. M<sup>r</sup>. Robert Bruce said, ‘If
-it might stand with your good pleasure, we would know wherefore
-this hard sentence is past against us.’ ‘For contraveening of
-my warrant,’ said the King. ‘We have fulfilled your warrant,’
-said M<sup>r</sup>. Robert, ‘for your warrant craved no more but an hous
-to them, which they have gottin.’ ‘To what end, I pray you,
-sought I an hous,’ said the King, ‘but onlie that the people
-might resort to their comedeis?’ ‘Your warrant beareth not that
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>end,’ said M<sup>r</sup>. Robert, ‘and we have good reasoun to stay them
-from their playes, even by your owne acts of parliament.’ The
-King answered, ‘Yee are not the interpreters of my lawes.’ ‘And
-farther, the warrant was intimated but to one or two,’ said
-M<sup>r</sup>. Robert, and, therefore, desired the King to retreate the
-sentence. The King would alter nothing. ‘At the least, then,’
-said M<sup>r</sup>. Robert, ‘lett the paine strike upon us, and exeeme
-our people.’ The King bade him make away. So, in departing,
-M<sup>r</sup>. Robert turned, and said, ‘Sir, please you, nixt the regard
-we ow to God, we had a reverent respect to your Maiestie’s
-royall person, and person of your queene; for we heard that the
-comedians, in their playes, checked your royall person with
-secreit and indirect taunts and checkes; and there is not a man
-of honour in England would give such fellowes so much as their
-countenance’. So they departed.</p>
-
-<p>They were charged, at two houres, by sound of trumpet, the day
-following, at the publict Croce, about ten houres, to conveene
-themselves, and rescind the acts, or ellis to passe to the horne
-immediatly after. The foure sessiouns conveene in the East Kirk.
-They asked the ministers’ advice. The ministers willed them
-to advise with some advocats, seing the mater tuiched their
-estate so neere. M<sup>r</sup>. William Oliphant and M<sup>r</sup>. Johne Schairp,
-advocats, came to the foure sessiouns. The charge was read. The
-advocats gave their counsell to rescind the act, by reasoun the
-King’s charge did not allow slanderous and undecent comedeis;
-and farther, shewed unto them, that the sessiouns could doe
-nothing without their ministers, seing they were charged as
-weill as the sessiouns, and the mater could not passe in voting,
-but the moderator and they being present. They were called in,
-and after reasouning they came to voting. M<sup>r</sup>. Robert Bruce
-being first asked, answered ‘His Majestie is not minded to allow
-anie slanderous or offensive comedeis; but so it is that their
-comedeis are slanderous and offensive; therefore, the king,
-in effect, ratifieth our act. The rest of the ministers voted
-after the same maner. The elders, partlie for feare of their
-estats, partlie upon informatioun of the advocats, voted to the
-rescinding of the act. It was voted nixt, whether the ministers
-sould intimat the rescinding of the act? The most part voted
-they sould. The ministers assured them they would not. Henrie
-Nisbit, Archibald Johnstoun, Alexander Lindsey, and some others,
-tooke upon them to purchasse an exemptioun to the ministers.
-They returned with this answere, that his Majestie was content
-the mater sould be passed over lightlie, but he would have some
-mentioun made of the annulling of the act. They refuse. Their
-commissioners went the second tyme to the king, and returned
-with this answere, ‘Lett them nather speeke good nor evill in
-that mater, but leave it as dead.’ The ministers conveened apart
-to consult. M<sup>r</sup>. Robert Bruce said it behoved them ather to
-justifie the thing they had done, or ellis they could not goe to
-a pulpit. Some others said the like. Others said, Leave it to
-God, to doe as God would direct their hearts. So they dissolved.
-M<sup>r</sup>. Robert, and others that were of his minde, justified it
-the day following, in some small measure, and yitt were not
-querrelled.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span></p>
-
-<p>Several other documents confirm this narrative. The Privy Council
-register contains an order of 8 November for an officer at arms to call
-upon the sessions by proclamation to rescind their resolution and a
-further proclamation of 10 November reciting the submission made by the
-sessions.<a id="FNanchor_744" href="#Footnote_744" class="fnanchor">[744]</a> The Lord High Treasurer’s accounts contain payments to
-Walter Forsyth, the officer employed, as well as gifts to ‘ye Inglis
-comedianis’ of £43 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in October, of £40 in November
-‘to by tymber for ye preparatioun of ane house to thair pastyme’, and
-of a further £333 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in December.<a id="FNanchor_745" href="#Footnote_745" class="fnanchor">[745]</a> It is George
-Nicolson, in a letter of 12 November forwarding the proclamation of
-8 November to Sir Robert Cecil, who identifies the players for us as
-‘Fletcher and Mertyn with their company’.<a id="FNanchor_746" href="#Footnote_746" class="fnanchor">[746]</a> The bounty of James,
-although it must be borne in mind that the sums were reckoned in pounds
-Scots, probably left them disinclined to quit Edinburgh in a hurry.
-Another gift of £400 reached them through Roger Ashton in 1601;<a id="FNanchor_747" href="#Footnote_747" class="fnanchor">[747]</a>
-and on 9 October in the same year they visited Aberdeen with a letter
-of recommendation from the King, and with the style of his majesty’s
-servants, and the town council gave them £22 and spent £3 on their
-supper ‘that nicht thaye plaid to the towne’. Nay, more, another entry
-in the burgh register tells us that the players came in the train of
-‘Sir Francis Hospital of Haulszie, Knycht, Frenschman’, and one of
-those ‘admittit burgesses’ with the foreign visitor was ‘Laurence
-Fletcher, comediane to his Majesty’.<a id="FNanchor_748" href="#Footnote_748" class="fnanchor">[748]</a></p>
-
-<p>Laurence Fletcher’s name stands first in the English patent of 1603
-to the King’s men, and the inferences have been drawn that the
-company at Aberdeen was the Chamberlain’s men, that their visit was
-due to a proscription from London on account of their participation
-in the Essex ‘innovation’, that Shakespeare was with them, and that
-he picked up local colour, to the extent of ‘a blasted heath’ for
-<i>Macbeth</i>.<a id="FNanchor_749" href="#Footnote_749" class="fnanchor">[749]</a> To this it may be briefly replied that, as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-Chamberlain’s men were at Court as usual in the winter of 1602, any
-absence from London, which their unlucky performance of <i>Richard
-II</i> may have rendered discreet, can only have been of short
-duration; that the most plausible reading of the Scottish evidence is
-that Fletcher’s company were in the service of James as Court comedians
-from 1599 to 1601; and that there is nothing whatever to indicate
-that Fletcher ever belonged to the Chamberlain’s company at all. In
-fact, very little is known of him outside Scotland, although it is
-just possible that he may have been the object of two advances made
-by Henslowe to the Admiral’s men about October 1596, and described
-respectively as ‘lent vnto Martyne to feache Fleatcher’ and ‘lent the
-company to geue Fleatcher’.<a id="FNanchor_750" href="#Footnote_750" class="fnanchor">[750]</a> If Fletcher was the King’s man in
-Scotland, it was not unnatural that he should retain that status when
-James came to England; and it is very doubtful whether the insertion
-of his name in the patent in any way entailed his being taken into
-business relations with his ‘fellows’. I strongly suspect that his
-companion at Edinburgh, Martin, was put into a precisely similar
-position amongst Queen Anne’s men, for who can Martin be but Martin
-Slater, who is often, as in the passage quoted above, called Martin
-<i>tout court</i> in Henslowe’s <i>Diary</i>, and who certainly left
-the Admiral’s men in 1597?</p>
-
-
-<h5>iii. ENGLISH PLAYERS ON THE CONTINENT</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The earliest comprehensive study
-of the foreign travels of English actors is that of A. Cohn,
-<i>Shakespeare in Germany in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth
-Centuries</i> (1865). Much material has been collected, mostly
-since Cohn wrote, in a number of local histories and special
-studies, of which the most important are: C. M. Plümicke,
-<i>Entwurf einer Theatergeschichte von Berlin</i> (1781);
-D. C. von Rommel, <i>Geschichte von Hessen</i> (1820–38);
-J. E. Schlager, <i>Über das alte Wiener Hoftheater</i> in
-<i>Sitzungsberichte der phil.-hist. Classe der Kaiserlichen
-Akad. der Wissenschaften</i>, vi (1851), 147; M. Fürstenau,
-<i>Zur Geschichte der Musik und des Theaters am Hofe der
-Kurfürsten von Sachsen</i> (1861); E. Mentzel, <i>Geschichte
-der Schauspielkunst in Frankfurt am Main</i> (1882); O.
-Teuber, <i>Geschichte des Prager Theaters</i> (1883); J.
-Meissner, in <i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xix. 113 (Austria),
-and <i>Die englischen Comoedianten zur Zeit Shakespeares
-in Oesterreich</i> (1884); K. Trautmann in <i>Archiv für
-Litteraturgeschichte</i>, xii. 319 (Munich, Augsburg); xiii. 34
-(Suabia), 315 (Ulm); xiv. 113 (Nuremberg), 225 (Suabia); xv. 209
-(Ulm, Stuttgart, Tübingen); in <i>Zeitschrift für Vergleichende
-Litteraturgeschichte</i>, vii (Rothenburg); and in <i>Jahrbuch
-für Münchener Geschichte</i>, iii. 259; J. Crüger in <i>Archiv
-für Litteraturgeschichte</i>, xv. 113 (Strassburg); Duncker,
-<i>Landgraf Moritz von Hessen und die englischen Komödianten
-in Deutsche Rundschau</i>, xlviii (1886), 260; A. Cohn in
-<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 245 (Cologne); J. Bolte in
-<i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xxiii. 99 (Denmark and Sweden),
-and <i>Das Danziger Theater im<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span> 16. und 17. Jahrhundert</i>
-(1893); J. Wolter in <i>Zeitschrift des Bergischen
-Geschichtsvereins</i>, xxxii. 90 (Cologne); A. Wormstall in
-<i>Zeitschrift für vaterländische Geschichte und Altertumskunde
-Westfalens</i>, lvi (1898), 75 (Münster); G. Witkowzski in
-<i>Euphorion</i>, xv. 441 (Leipzig). A collection of records
-from the earlier of these and from more scattered sources is
-in K. Goedeke, <i>Grundriss der deutschen Dichtung aus den
-Quellen</i><sup>2</sup> (1886), ii. 524, and valuable summaries are given
-in W. Creizenach, <i>Schauspiele der englischen Komödianten</i>
-(1889), and E. Herz, <i>Englische Schauspieler und englisches
-Schauspiel zur Zeit Shakespeares in Deutschland</i> (1903). The
-excursus of F. G. Fleay in <i>Life and Work of Shakespeare</i>
-(1886), 307, is misleading. Additional material, which has
-become available since Herz wrote, is recorded by C. F. Meyer
-in <i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii. 196 (Wolgast), and
-C. Grabau in <i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xlv. 311 (Leipzig).
-Useful special studies are by C. Harris, <i>The English
-Comedians in Germany before the Thirty Years’ War: the Financial
-Side</i> (<i>Publ. of Modern Language Association</i>, xxii.
-446), A. Dessoff, <i>Über englische, italienische und spanische
-Dramen in den Spielverzeichnissen deutscher Wandertruppen</i>
-(1901, <i>Studien für vergleichende Litteraturgeschichte</i>,
-i), and on the problem of staging (cf. ch. xx) C. H.
-Kaulfuss-Diesch, <i>Die Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an der
-Wende des sechzehnten und siebzehnten Jahrhunderts</i> (1905).
-A collection of plays and jigs, in German, but belonging to
-the repertory of an English company, appeared as <i>Engelische
-Comedien und Tragedien</i> (1620); some of the plays have
-been edited by J. Tittmann, <i>Die Schauspiele der englischen
-Komödianten in Deutschland</i> (1880), and the jigs by J.
-Bolte, <i>Die Singspiele der englischen Komödianten und ihrer
-Nachfolger in Deutschland, Holland und Scandinavien</i> (1893).
-German plays written under English influences are to be found
-in J. Tittmann, <i>Die Schauspiele des Herzogs Heinrich Julius
-von Braunschweig</i> (1880), and A. von Keller, <i>Jacob Ayrers
-Dramen</i> (1865). Cohn prints, with translations, Ayrer’s
-<i>Sidea</i> and <i>Phaenicia, Julio and Hyppolita</i> and
-<i>Titus Andronicus</i> from the 1620 volume, and early German
-versions of <i>Hamlet</i> (<i>Der bestrafte Brudermord</i>) and
-<i>Romeo and Juliet</i> from manuscripts. The literary records
-and remains of the English players are fully discussed by
-Creizenach and Herz, and their relation to Ayrer by W. Wodick,
-<i>J. Ayrers Dramen in ihrem Verhältniss zur einheimischen
-Literatur und zum Schauspiel der englischen Komödianten</i>
-(1912).</p>
-
-<p class="smaller">The material for the Netherlands, some of which was gathered
-by Cohn, may be studied in J. A. Worp, <i>Geschiedenis van
-het Drama en van het Tooneel in Nederland</i> (1904–8), who
-also deals with the Dutch versions of English dramas. The
-contemporary stage conditions in France are best treated by E.
-Rigal, <i>Le Théâtre français avant la période classique</i>
-(1901), and those in Spain by H. A. Rennert, <i>The Spanish
-Stage in the Time of Lope de Vega</i> (1909), who uses the
-results of recent researches by C. Pérez Pastor, which have
-added much to the information furnished by C. Pellicer,
-<i>Tratado histórico sobre el origen y progresos de la Comedia y
-del Histrionismo en España</i> (1804).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Thomas Heywood records, about 1608, that ‘the King of Denmarke,
-father to him that now reigneth, entertained into his service a
-company of English comedians, commended unto him by the honourable
-the Earl of Leicester’.<a id="FNanchor_751" href="#Footnote_751" class="fnanchor">[751]</a> This King of Denmark was Frederick II
-(1559–88), father of Christian IV (1588–1648), and of Queen Anne of
-England. English<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span> ‘instrumentister’, Johann Krafftt, Johann Personn,
-Johann Kirck or Kirckmann, and Thomas Bull, were at the Danish Court
-as early as 1579–80, and in 1585 certain unnamed English played
-(<i>lechte</i>) in the courtyard of the town-hall at Elsinore, when
-the press of folk was such that the wall broke down. These may be
-the same men who played and vaulted at Leipzig on 19 July 1585, and
-are the earliest English players yet traced in Germany.<a id="FNanchor_752" href="#Footnote_752" class="fnanchor">[752]</a> But the
-particular comedians referred to by Heywood were probably another
-company who had accompanied Leicester to Holland, when he took the
-command of the English forces in 1585, and had given a show, half
-dramatic, half acrobatic, of <i>The Forces of Hercules</i> at Utrecht
-on 23 April 1586. Certainly Leicester had in his train one Will, a
-‘jesting plaier’, who is now usually identified with William Kempe,
-and in August and September 1586 the Household Accounts of the Danish
-Court record the presence of ‘Wilhelm Kempe instrumentist’, and of his
-boy Daniell Jonns. It is not clear what were the precise relations
-between Kempe and five other ‘instrumentister och springere’, Thomas
-Stiwens, Jurgenn Brienn, Thomas Koning, Thomas Pape, and Robert Persj,
-who were at Court from 17 June to 18 September 1586, and for whom the
-same accounts record a payment to Thomas Stiuens of six thalers a
-month apiece, at the end of that period. If he had, as is probable,
-been their fellow up to that point, he did not accompany them in
-their further peregrinations.<a id="FNanchor_753" href="#Footnote_753" class="fnanchor">[753]</a> These took them to the Court of
-Frederick’s nephew, Christian I, Elector of Saxony (1586–91), as a
-result of correspondence, still extant, between the sovereigns, in
-which the offer of salaries at the annual rate of 100 thalers overcame
-the reluctance of the Englishmen to face the perils of an unknown
-tongue. They started with an interpreter on 25 September, and shortly
-after their arrival at Waidenhain on 16 October received instructions
-from Christian to follow him with mourning clothes to Berlin, where
-he was then sojourning. Christian’s own capital was Dresden, and
-here they held a formal appointment in his service, under which they
-were bound to follow him in his travels, and to entertain him with
-performances after his banquets, and with music and ‘Springkunst’, and
-were entitled, beyond their pay, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span> board, livery, and travelling
-expenses, and a lodging allowance of forty thalers each. The Dresden
-archives give their names as Tomas Konigk, Tomas Stephan or Stephans,
-George Beyzandt, Tomas Papst, and Rupert Persten. Their departure from
-Court is recorded on 17 July 1587.<a id="FNanchor_754" href="#Footnote_754" class="fnanchor">[754]</a> In all these notices music and
-acrobatic feats are to the fore, but that the men were actors there can
-be no doubt, for two of them, Thomas Pope and George Bryan, reappear
-amongst Strange’s men, and thereafter as fellows of Shakespeare in the
-Chamberlain’s company. Of Stevens, King, and Percy no more is known.
-Kempe was abroad again, in Italy and Germany, during 1601, and returned
-to England on 2 September. It is not certain whether he took a company
-with him, or went as a solitary morris dancer. But it is noteworthy
-that on the following 26 November an English company, under one Johann
-Kemp, reached Münster, after a tour which had taken them to Amsterdam,
-Cologne, Redberg, and Steinfurt. They played in English, and had a
-clown who pattered in German between the acts.<a id="FNanchor_755" href="#Footnote_755" class="fnanchor">[755]</a></p>
-
-<p>The man, however, who did most to acclimatize the English actors in
-Germany was Robert Browne, who paid several visits to the country,
-and spent considerable periods there between 1590 and 1620. With him
-he took relays of actors, some of whom split off into independent
-associations, and account for most, although not all, of the groups of
-‘Engländer’ who became familiar figures at the Frankfort spring and
-autumn fairs and even in out-of-the-way corners of northern Europe. Of
-some of these groups the wanderings can be traced in outline, although
-the frequent failure of the archives to record individual names is
-responsible for many <i>lacunae</i>, which the conjectural ingenuity of
-literary historians has done its best to fill. Many of these anonymous
-performances I must pass over in silence.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Browne first appears as one of Worcester’s men, with Edward
-Alleyn, in 1583, and in 1589 these two, probably as Admiral’s men,
-still held a common stock of apparel with John Alleyn and Richard
-Jones.<a id="FNanchor_756" href="#Footnote_756" class="fnanchor">[756]</a> His career abroad begins with a visit to Leyden in October
-1590.<a id="FNanchor_757" href="#Footnote_757" class="fnanchor">[757]</a> This was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span> perhaps only tentative, for in February 1592 he
-was preparing to cross the seas again, and to this end obtained for
-himself, John Bradstreet, Thomas Sackville, and Richard Jones, the
-following passport to the States-General of the Netherlands from the
-Lord Admiral:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Messieurs, comme les présents porteurs, Robert Browne, Jehan
-Bradstriet, Thomas Saxfield, Richard Jones, ont deliberé de
-faire ung voyage en Allemagne, avec intention de passer par le
-païs de Zelande, Hollande et Frise, et allantz en leur dict
-voyage d’exercer leurs qualitez en faict de musique, agilitez et
-joeux de commedies, tragedies et histoires, pour s’entretenir
-et fournir à leurs despenses en leur dict voyage. Cestes
-sont partant vous requerir monstrer et prester toute faveur
-en voz païs et jurisdictions, et leur octroyer en ma faveur
-vostre ample passeport soubz le seel des Estatz, afin que les
-Bourgmestres des villes estantz soubs voz jurisdictions ne
-les empeschent en passant d’exercer leurs dictes qualitez par
-tout. Enquoy faisant, je vous demeureray à tous obligé, et me
-treuverez très appareillé à me revencher de vostre courtoisie en
-plus grand cas. De ma chambre à la court d’Angleterre ce x<sup>me</sup>
-jour de Febvrier 1591.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">Vostre tres affecsionné à vous fayre plaisir et sarvis,</p>
-<p class="r2 p0">C. Howard.<a id="FNanchor_758" href="#Footnote_758" class="fnanchor">[758]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p>Presumably the Lord Admiral gave this passport in his official
-capacity, as responsible for the high seas, and it is not necessary to
-infer that the travellers were in 1592 his servants.<a id="FNanchor_759" href="#Footnote_759" class="fnanchor">[759]</a></p>
-
-<p>There are not many clear notices of Browne and his company during
-this tour. They were at Arnhem, with a licence from Prince Maurice
-of Orange-Nassau, in 1592.<a id="FNanchor_760" href="#Footnote_760" class="fnanchor">[760]</a> Thereafter they may have gone into
-residence at some Court, Wolfenbüttel or another. They can hardly have
-been the English ‘comoedianten und springer’ who came to Nyköping in
-Sweden for the wedding of Duke Karl of Sweden and Princess Christina of
-Holstein on 28 August 1592<a id="FNanchor_761" href="#Footnote_761" class="fnanchor">[761]</a>; for it was only two days later that
-Browne approached the Frankfort magistrates for leave to play at the
-autumn fair, where they gave <i>Gammer Gurton’s Needle</i> and some of
-Marlowe’s plays.<a id="FNanchor_762" href="#Footnote_762" class="fnanchor">[762]</a> It was on this occasion that Fynes Moryson, the
-traveller, visited the fair and noted the great vogue of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span> English
-actors amongst the merchants.<a id="FNanchor_763" href="#Footnote_763" class="fnanchor">[763]</a> Englishmen played at Cologne in
-October and November 1592,<a id="FNanchor_764" href="#Footnote_764" class="fnanchor">[764]</a> and at Nuremberg in August 1593;<a id="FNanchor_765" href="#Footnote_765" class="fnanchor">[765]</a>
-but in view of the Nyköping company it can hardly be assumed that these
-were Browne and his fellows, and indeed the leader at Nuremberg is
-called ‘Ruberto Gruen’, which may, but on the other hand may not, be a
-blunder for Browne’s name. The Cologne players are anonymous. At any
-rate ‘Robert Braun, Thomas Sachsweil, Johan Bradenstreit und consorten’
-were all at Frankfort in August 1593,<a id="FNanchor_766" href="#Footnote_766" class="fnanchor">[766]</a> where they played scriptural
-dramas, including <i>Abraham and Lot</i> and <i>The Destruction of
-Sodom and Gomorrha</i>. Thereafter the company seems to have broken
-up. Richard Jones certainly went home before 2 September 1594, when
-he bought a gown ‘of pechecoler in grayne’ from Henslowe.<a id="FNanchor_767" href="#Footnote_767" class="fnanchor">[767]</a> He had
-doubtless already joined the Admiral’s men.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas Sackville and John Bradstreet probably went to Wolfenbüttel.
-This was the capital of Henry Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel
-(1589–1613), himself the author of plays, mostly printed during 1593
-and 1594, in which an English influence is perceptible. The Duke
-married Elisabeth, daughter of Frederick II of Denmark, and his wedding
-at Copenhagen in February 1590 was attended by his brother-in-law,
-afterwards James I of England. It is possible that his earliest play,
-<i>Susanna</i>, was written either for this occasion or for the
-repetition of his wedding ceremony at Wolfenbüttel. In this piece
-the jester, a conventional personage, bears the name ‘Johan Clant’,
-in the later plays ‘Johan Bouset’; and in the <i>Ehebrecherin</i>
-(1594) Bouset says, quite irrelevantly to his dramatic character, ‘Ich
-bin ein Englisch Mann’. Both names are in fact of English origin,
-from the words ‘clown’ and ‘posset’ respectively. Evidently the Duke
-must in some way have been in touch with the English stage at a date
-even earlier than Browne’s second German visit in 1592. It is not,
-therefore, necessary to conjecture, as has been conjectured, that
-Wolfenbüttel was the first objective of this visit.<a id="FNanchor_768" href="#Footnote_768" class="fnanchor">[768]</a> Unfortunately
-the Brunswick household accounts for 1590–1601 are missing, and
-with them all direct evidence of the first formation of his English
-company by the Duke has probably gone. The company existed by 1596,
-when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span> the ‘furstelige comoedianten och springers’ of the Duke paid a
-month’s visit to Copenhagen for the coronation of his brother-in-law,
-Christian IV of Denmark, on 29 August.<a id="FNanchor_769" href="#Footnote_769" class="fnanchor">[769]</a> In the following year we
-find ‘Jan Bosett und seine Gesellen’ at Nuremberg, ‘Thomas Sackfeil
-und Consorten’ at Augsburg in June, ‘Johann Busset’ and Jakob Behel
-at Strassburg in July and August, and ‘Thomas Sackville, John Bouset
-genannt’, Johann Breitenstrasse and Jacob Biel at the Frankfort autumn
-fair.<a id="FNanchor_770" href="#Footnote_770" class="fnanchor">[770]</a> The identity of this company with the Wolfenbüttel court
-comedians may perhaps be inferred from Sackville’s use of John Bouset
-as a stage name, and from a reference, in this same year 1597, to
-‘Thomas Sackefiel, princely servant at Wolfenbüttel’. Another member of
-the company may have been Edward Wakefiel, with whom Sackville, also in
-1597, had a brawl in a Brunswick tavern.<a id="FNanchor_771" href="#Footnote_771" class="fnanchor">[771]</a> No more is heard of them
-until 1601, when John Bouset was expected to join his old friend Robert
-Browne for the Frankfort Easter fair.<a id="FNanchor_772" href="#Footnote_772" class="fnanchor">[772]</a> The Brunswick household
-accounts are extant for 1602 and 1608, and from 1614 onwards. Thomas
-Sackville appears frequently. On 30 August 1602 he took a payment for
-the English comedians. Later references to him from 1 October 1602 to
-1617 are mainly in connexion with purchases for the ducal wardrobe. It
-seems clear that, while remaining a ducal servant, and possibly even an
-actor, he went into business and prospered therein.<a id="FNanchor_773" href="#Footnote_773" class="fnanchor">[773]</a> He is said to
-have been selling silk at Frankfort in 1604, and in 1608 Thomas Coryat,
-the Odcombian traveller and oddity, records:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The wealth that I sawe here was incredible. The goodliest
-shew of ware that I sawe in all Franckford, saving that of the
-Goldsmithes, was made by an Englishman one Thomas Sackfield a
-Dorsetshire man, once a servant of my father, who went out of
-England but in a meane estate, but after he had spent a few
-yeares at the Duke of Brunswicks Court, hee so inriched himselfe
-of late that his glittering shewe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span> of ware in Franckford dit
-farre excell all the Dutchmen, French, Italians, or whomsoever
-else.’<a id="FNanchor_774" href="#Footnote_774" class="fnanchor">[774]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>John Bradstreet’s name appears in 1604 with that of Sackville in the
-album of Johannes Cellarius of Nuremberg. He died in 1618 and Sackville
-in 1628, leaving a library of theology and English literature.
-Edward Wakefield reappears in the Brunswick accounts for 1602, not
-specifically as a player. But certainly the playing company continued
-to exist. The accounts mention it in 1608, and Thomas Heywood notes
-its existence about the same date. There were English players at
-Wolfenbüttel in May 1615 and at Brunswick in 1611 and 1617, but no
-names are recorded, and it can hardly be assumed that these were the
-original ducal company. Henry Julius himself died in 1613.<a id="FNanchor_775" href="#Footnote_775" class="fnanchor">[775]</a></p>
-
-<p>Robert Browne’s own movements are uncertain after the break-up of his
-company in 1593. He is not traceable for a year or so either in Germany
-or in England, where his wife and all her children and household died
-of plague in Shoreditch about August 1593.<a id="FNanchor_776" href="#Footnote_776" class="fnanchor">[776]</a> But sooner or later he
-found his way to Cassel. This was another of the literary courts of
-Germany, the capital of Maurice the Learned, Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel
-(1592–1627). Maurice himself wrote an ‘<i>Anglia</i> Comoedia’ and
-other plays in Terentian Latin, which were performed by the pupils of
-the <i>Collegium Mauritianum</i>, but are unfortunately not preserved.
-He also composed music and, like the Duke of Brunswick, gave a welcome
-to John Dowland on one of his several foreign tours.<a id="FNanchor_777" href="#Footnote_777" class="fnanchor">[777]</a> Possibly
-Dowland was one of the two lutenists who are recorded to have spent
-fifteen weeks at Cassel in 1594.<a id="FNanchor_778" href="#Footnote_778" class="fnanchor">[778]</a> In the following year there
-were performances by players and acrobats at Maurice’s castle of
-Wilhelmsburg at Schmalkalden, and in the same year Maurice wrote to
-his agent at Prague to give assistance to his comedians in the event
-of their visiting that city.<a id="FNanchor_779" href="#Footnote_779" class="fnanchor">[779]</a> To 1594 or 1595 may, therefore, be
-plausibly ascribed undated warrants by which Robert Browne and Philip
-Kiningsmann receive appointments from the Landgrave, undertaking to
-do him service with their company in vocal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span> and instrumental music
-and in plays to be supplied either by Maurice or by themselves, and
-not to leave Cassel without his permission.<a id="FNanchor_780" href="#Footnote_780" class="fnanchor">[780]</a> Certainly Browne
-was the Landgrave’s man by 16 April 1595, when a warrant was issued
-allowing the export of a consignment of bows and arrows which he had
-been sent over to bring from England to Cassel.<a id="FNanchor_781" href="#Footnote_781" class="fnanchor">[781]</a> The ‘fürstlich
-hessische Diener und Comoetianten’ were at Nuremberg on 5 July 1596,
-and a company under Philip Konigsman were at Strassburg in the
-following August.<a id="FNanchor_782" href="#Footnote_782" class="fnanchor">[782]</a> Festivities were now in preparation at Cassel
-for the christening of Maurice’s daughter, one of whose godmothers
-was Queen Elizabeth, on 24 August 1596. Brown and one John Webster
-were on duty at Cassel during the visit of the Earl of Lincoln, who
-came from England to stand proxy for Elizabeth.<a id="FNanchor_783" href="#Footnote_783" class="fnanchor">[783]</a> Payments to the
-English comedians and performances by them at Melsungen, Weissenstein,
-and Rothenburg, in the Landgrave’s territory, are recorded in the
-Cassel archives during 1597 and 1598. A proposed loan of them in 1597
-to Landgrave Louis of Marburg seems to have fallen through, but in
-1598 they left Cassel for the Court of the Palsgrave Frederic IV at
-Heidelberg, with a liberal <i>Abfertigung</i> or vail of 300 thalers
-and a travelling allowance of 20 thalers, which was entrusted to George
-Webster.<a id="FNanchor_784" href="#Footnote_784" class="fnanchor">[784]</a> From Heidelberg they went to Frankfort towards the end
-of 1599, but were refused leave to play, owing to the prevalence of
-plague.<a id="FNanchor_785" href="#Footnote_785" class="fnanchor">[785]</a> Robert Browne, Robert Kingman, and Robert Ledbetter were
-then of the company. Ledbetter must have recently joined them, as
-he is in the cast of <i>Frederick and Basilea</i> as played by the
-Admiral’s men in 1597. Frankfort having failed them, they fell back
-upon Strassburg, and here they seem to have remained until the spring
-of 1601.<a id="FNanchor_786" href="#Footnote_786" class="fnanchor">[786]</a> Browne was their leader at their arrival, but he then
-seems to have left them and returned to England, where he came to Court
-as manager of the Earl of Derby’s men during the winters of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span> 1599–1600
-and 1600–1.<a id="FNanchor_787" href="#Footnote_787" class="fnanchor">[787]</a> By Easter 1601, however, he had started on his fourth
-tour, and appeared once more at Frankfort, possibly in Kyd’s <i>Spanish
-Tragedy</i>. With him were Robert Kingmann and Robert Ledbetter, and
-they were expecting to be joined by ‘Johannen Buscheten und noch andere
-in unsere Companie gehörige Comödianten’. The old association of 1592
-between Robert Browne and Thomas Sackville was, therefore, still in
-some sense alive.<a id="FNanchor_788" href="#Footnote_788" class="fnanchor">[788]</a></p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, Maurice of Hesse had not been wholly without English
-actors, since Browne and his fellows left Cassel in 1598. It would
-seem that George Webster returned from Heidelberg, or perhaps from
-Strassburg, to his service. The ‘fürstlich-hessischen Komödianten und
-Musikanten’ were at Frankfort in March, at Nuremberg in April 1600,
-and at Frankfort again at Easter 1601. The names recorded are those of
-George Webster, John Hill or Hüll, Richard Machin, and at Nuremberg
-Bernhardt Sandt.<a id="FNanchor_789" href="#Footnote_789" class="fnanchor">[789]</a> Upon his second visit to Frankfort Webster would
-have met his old leader, now become his rival, Robert Browne. The
-Hessian company were for a third time at Frankfort in the autumn of
-1601.<a id="FNanchor_790" href="#Footnote_790" class="fnanchor">[790]</a> In the following year they left the Landgrave’s service,
-not altogether to the regret of some of his subjects, who resented a
-patronage of foreign arts at the cost of their pockets.<a id="FNanchor_791" href="#Footnote_791" class="fnanchor">[791]</a> Webster
-and Machin, with whom was then one Ralph Reeve, were still using their
-former master’s name when they visited Frankfort at Easter 1603.<a id="FNanchor_792" href="#Footnote_792" class="fnanchor">[792]</a>
-Thereafter they dropped it. Of Webster no more is heard. Machin is
-conjectured to have joined for a short time an English company in the
-service of Margrave Christian William, a younger son of the Elector
-Joachim Frederick of Brandenburg, which came to Frankfort for the
-Easter and autumn fairs of 1604.<a id="FNanchor_793" href="#Footnote_793" class="fnanchor">[793]</a> The Margrave was administrator of
-the diocese of Magdeburg, and kept his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span> Court at Halle. His company is
-traceable from 1604 to 1605, but I do not find any evidence of Machin’s
-connexion with it. In May 1605 he appeared at Strassburg, and there
-claimed as his credentials only his four years’ service with Maurice of
-Hesse.<a id="FNanchor_794" href="#Footnote_794" class="fnanchor">[794]</a> Shortly before, he had been at the Frankfort Easter fair
-with Reeve, and the two returned to Frankfort in the autumn, and again
-at Easter 1606.<a id="FNanchor_795" href="#Footnote_795" class="fnanchor">[795]</a></p>
-
-<p>Robert Browne, for some years after the opening of his fourth tour
-at Frankfort in the spring of 1601, does not appear to have attached
-himself to any particular Court. He is found at Frankfort, with Robert
-Jones, in September 1602, at Augsburg in the following November
-and December, at Nuremberg in February 1603, and at Frankfort for
-the Easter fair of the same year.<a id="FNanchor_796" href="#Footnote_796" class="fnanchor">[796]</a> With him were then, but it
-would seem only temporarily, Thomas Blackwood and John Thare, late
-of Worcester’s men, who had doubtless just come out from England,
-when Elizabeth’s illness and death closed the London theatres.<a id="FNanchor_797" href="#Footnote_797" class="fnanchor">[797]</a>
-He is probably the ‘alte Komödiant’, whose identity seems to have
-been thought sufficiently described by that term at Frankfort in the
-autumn of 1604.<a id="FNanchor_798" href="#Footnote_798" class="fnanchor">[798]</a> He returned to Frankfort on 26 May 1606, and
-was at Strassburg in the following June and July.<a id="FNanchor_799" href="#Footnote_799" class="fnanchor">[799]</a> Here he was
-accompanied by John Green. On this or some other visit to Strassburg,
-the company probably lost Robert Kingman, who, like Thomas Sackville,
-found business more profitable than strolling. He became a freeman
-of Strassburg in 1618, and in that year was able to befriend his old
-‘fellow’ Browne, and in 1626 other actors on their visits to the
-city.<a id="FNanchor_800" href="#Footnote_800" class="fnanchor">[800]</a> In the course of 1606 Browne seems to have entered the
-service of Maurice of Hesse, who in the previous year had built a
-permanent theatre, the <i>Ottonium</i>, at Cassel, and had now again an
-English company for the first time since 1602. This is to be inferred
-from an application for leave to play submitted to the Frankfort town
-council on 26 August 1606, and signed by ‘Robert Braun’, ‘Johann Grün’,
-and ‘Robert Ledbetter’ as ‘Fürstlich Hessische Comödianten’. Earlier<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-in August the same men had been at Ulm.<a id="FNanchor_801" href="#Footnote_801" class="fnanchor">[801]</a> They visited Nuremberg
-with a letter of recommendation from their lord in November, and then
-settled down at Cassel for the winter.<a id="FNanchor_802" href="#Footnote_802" class="fnanchor">[802]</a> But their service did not
-last long. On 1 March 1607 a household officer wrote to the Landgrave
-that the English found their salaries inadequate, and after performing
-the comedy of <i>The King of England and Scotland</i> had declared,
-either in jest or earnest, that it was their last play in Cassel.<a id="FNanchor_803" href="#Footnote_803" class="fnanchor">[803]</a>
-Probably they were in earnest. Browne and Green went to Frankfort, for
-the last time as the Hessian comedians, on 17 March.<a id="FNanchor_804" href="#Footnote_804" class="fnanchor">[804]</a> Browne’s
-name now disappears from German records for a decade. In 1610 he was a
-member of the Queen’s Revels syndicate in London, and on 11 April 1612
-he wrote a letter to Edward Alleyn from Clerkenwell.<a id="FNanchor_805" href="#Footnote_805" class="fnanchor">[805]</a> But whether
-Browne left them or not, the company held together for a while longer.
-Green was at Danzig and Elbing in the course of 1607.<a id="FNanchor_806" href="#Footnote_806" class="fnanchor">[806]</a> Thereafter
-it seems probable that he tried a bold flight, and penetrated to the
-heart of Catholic Germany in Austria. In November 1607 an English
-company was with the archducal court of Ferdinand and Maria Anna at
-Gräz in Styria. A performance by them of <i>The King of England and
-the Goldsmith’s Wife</i> is recorded.<a id="FNanchor_807" href="#Footnote_807" class="fnanchor">[807]</a> They followed Ferdinand to
-Passau, where they gave <i>The Prodigal Son</i> and <i>The Jew</i>,
-and possibly also to the Reichstag held in January 1608 at Regensburg.
-By 6 February they were back at Gräz, and a letter from Ferdinand’s
-sister, the Archduchess Maria Magdalena, then just betrothed to the
-Grand Duke Cosimo II of Florence, gives a lively account of their
-performances and of the assistance which they rendered in the revels
-danced at Court.<a id="FNanchor_808" href="#Footnote_808" class="fnanchor">[808]</a> Their repertory included <i>The Prodigal Son</i>,
-<i>A Proud Woman of Antwerp</i>, <i>Dr. Faustus</i>, <i>A Duke of
-Florence and a Nobleman’s Daughter</i>, <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>,
-<i>Fortunatus</i>, <i>The Jew</i>, <i>King Louis and King Frederick of
-Hungary</i>, <i>A King of Cyprus and a Duke of Venice</i>, <i>Dives
-and Lazarus</i>.<a id="FNanchor_809" href="#Footnote_809" class="fnanchor">[809]</a> It is not absolutely certain that the company
-referred to in these notices was Green’s. No name is in fact mentioned.
-But the probability suggested by the resemblance of the above<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-play-list to those of 1620 and 1626, with which Green was certainly
-connected, is confirmed by the existence of a German manuscript of
-<i>Nobody and Somebody</i> with a dedication by Green to Ferdinand’s
-brother the Archduke Maximilian, who was certainly present at the Gräz
-performances, and by a letter which tells us that a company visiting
-Austria in 1617 was the same as that which had played at Gräz in the
-lifetime of the Archduchess Maria, who died in 1608. Unfortunately
-the identification of this company of 1617 with Green’s is itself a
-matter of high probability, rather than of absolute certainty.<a id="FNanchor_810" href="#Footnote_810" class="fnanchor">[810]</a>
-The end of the visit to Gräz was marked by a duel in which one of the
-English actors, ‘the man with long red hair, who always played a little
-fiddle’, killed a Frenchman.<a id="FNanchor_811" href="#Footnote_811" class="fnanchor">[811]</a> Green now, like Browne, drops for
-some years out of the German records.</p>
-
-<p>The Court functions at Cassel surrendered by Browne in 1607 were
-resumed by his predecessors, in whose leadership Reeve had now
-succeeded Machin; and the appearance of the Hessian company is recorded
-at Frankfort during both the fairs of 1608 and 1609, the Easter fair of
-1610, the autumn fair of 1612, and the Easter fair of 1613. A proposed
-appearance for the coronation of the Emperor Mathias in June 1612
-was prohibited, because the mourning for his predecessor Rudolph II
-was not yet over.<a id="FNanchor_812" href="#Footnote_812" class="fnanchor">[812]</a> It is perhaps something of an assumption that
-the company was the same one throughout all these years. Reeve was
-in charge up to the autumn of 1609; after that no individual name is
-mentioned. The intervals between the fairs were presumably spent in the
-main at Cassel. In the summer of 1609 the company visited Stuttgart and
-Nuremberg and possibly other places, with a letter of recommendation
-from their lord.<a id="FNanchor_813" href="#Footnote_813" class="fnanchor">[813]</a> In the autumn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span> of the same year John Sigismund,
-Elector of Brandenburg (1608–19), who often entertained a company of
-his own, but appears to have been temporarily without one, wrote to
-Maurice to borrow them for the wedding of his brother at Berlin.<a id="FNanchor_814" href="#Footnote_814" class="fnanchor">[814]</a>
-In April 1610 they may not improbably, though there is no evidence of
-the fact, have followed Maurice to the Diet at Prague.<a id="FNanchor_815" href="#Footnote_815" class="fnanchor">[815]</a> In 1611
-they are said to have been at Darmstadt.<a id="FNanchor_816" href="#Footnote_816" class="fnanchor">[816]</a> They certainly played at
-the wedding of the Margrave Joachim Ernest, uncle of the Elector of
-Brandenburg, at Anspach in October 1612, and later in the same month
-paid a visit to Nuremberg.<a id="FNanchor_817" href="#Footnote_817" class="fnanchor">[817]</a> No more is heard of them, or of any
-other English actors in the service of Maurice of Hesse-Cassel, after
-1613.<a id="FNanchor_818" href="#Footnote_818" class="fnanchor">[818]</a> Reeve was a member of Rosseter’s syndicate for the building
-of the Porter’s Hall theatre at Blackfriars in 1615, and with him were
-associated Philip Kingman and Robert Jones, the last notices of whom in
-Germany are as ‘fellows’ of Robert Browne in 1596 and 1602 respectively.</p>
-
-<p>The appearance of Blackwood and Thare, late of Worcester’s men, in
-company with Browne at the Frankfort Easter fair of 1603, has already
-been noted. The only further record of either of them is of Thare
-at Ulm and Augsburg in the following December.<a id="FNanchor_819" href="#Footnote_819" class="fnanchor">[819]</a> But by a series
-of conjectures, to which I hesitate to subscribe, they have been
-identified with a company which came to Stuttgart in September 1603
-in the train of Lord Spencer and Sir William Dethick, ambassadors
-from England carrying the insignia of the Garter to Frederick Duke
-of Württemberg, and there gave a play of <i>Susanna</i><a id="FNanchor_820" href="#Footnote_820" class="fnanchor">[820]</a>; with
-a company which visited Nördlingen and other places in January 1604
-under the leadership of one Eichelin, apparently a German, but with a
-repertory which included a <i>Romeo and Juliet</i> and a <i>Pyramus and
-Thisbe</i><a id="FNanchor_821" href="#Footnote_821" class="fnanchor">[821]</a>; with a company<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span> which held letters of recommendation
-from the Duke of Würtemberg at Nuremberg in February 1604;<a id="FNanchor_822" href="#Footnote_822" class="fnanchor">[822]</a> and
-with a company which took a repertory closely resembling the Nördlingen
-one to Rothenburg in 1604 and 1606.<a id="FNanchor_823" href="#Footnote_823" class="fnanchor">[823]</a> This is all very ingenious
-guesswork.<a id="FNanchor_824" href="#Footnote_824" class="fnanchor">[824]</a></p>
-
-<p>All trace of John Green is lost for several years after 1608. An
-isolated notice at Utrecht in November 1613 suggests that he may
-have spent part of this interval in the Netherlands.<a id="FNanchor_825" href="#Footnote_825" class="fnanchor">[825]</a> A year or
-two later he returned to Germany. He was at Danzig in July 1615 and
-again, with Robert Reinolds, late of Queen Anne’s men, in July 1616,
-having paid an intermediate visit to Copenhagen.<a id="FNanchor_826" href="#Footnote_826" class="fnanchor">[826]</a> In 1617 he was
-at Prague for the coronation of the Archduke Ferdinand as King of
-Bohemia, and in July of the same year at Vienna.<a id="FNanchor_827" href="#Footnote_827" class="fnanchor">[827]</a> The comparative
-infrequency with which English actors visited Austrian territory
-perhaps justifies the assumption that his is the company mentioned in
-a letter of recommendation sent by Ferdinand’s brother, the Archduke
-Charles, at Neiss to the Bishop of Olmütz on 18 March 1617, as having
-played at Gräz before his mother the Archduchess Maria, who died in
-1608, and having recently spent some months at the Court of Poland in
-Warsaw.<a id="FNanchor_828" href="#Footnote_828" class="fnanchor">[828]</a> In 1618 Green’s old leader, the indefatigable veteran
-Robert Browne, came out with a new company on his fifth and last visit
-to the Continent. He is first noted at Nuremberg on 28 May.<a id="FNanchor_829" href="#Footnote_829" class="fnanchor">[829]</a> My
-impression is that the two men joined forces. Green’s name does not
-appear in the records for a couple of years. But Reinolds, who had been
-with him at Danzig in 1616, was with Browne at Strassburg<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span> in June and
-July 1618.<a id="FNanchor_830" href="#Footnote_830" class="fnanchor">[830]</a> Later in the year Browne was at the autumn fair at
-Frankfort.<a id="FNanchor_831" href="#Footnote_831" class="fnanchor">[831]</a> There is no definite mention of him during the next
-twelve months, but it is not improbable that the combined company was
-that which visited Rostock in May and Danzig in July 1619.<a id="FNanchor_832" href="#Footnote_832" class="fnanchor">[832]</a> At any
-rate Browne appeared at Cologne in October;<a id="FNanchor_833" href="#Footnote_833" class="fnanchor">[833]</a> and then went for the
-winter to Prague, where the Elector Palatine and the Lady Elizabeth of
-England, now King and Queen of Bohemia, had set up their Court.<a id="FNanchor_834" href="#Footnote_834" class="fnanchor">[834]</a>
-They were but a winter King and Queen. In 1620 the Thirty Years’ War
-broke out, and Germany had other things to think of than English
-mumming. Browne was at Nuremberg in February and at Frankfort for the
-Easter fair.<a id="FNanchor_835" href="#Footnote_835" class="fnanchor">[835]</a> That is the last we hear of him. But Green reached
-Cologne and Utrecht later in April, and was probably discreetly taking
-the company home.<a id="FNanchor_836" href="#Footnote_836" class="fnanchor">[836]</a> In 1626 he came out again with Robert Reinolds,
-who made a reputation as a clown under the name of Pickleherring.<a id="FNanchor_837" href="#Footnote_837" class="fnanchor">[837]</a>
-The details of this later tour lie beyond the scope of the present
-inquiry. Pickleherring is the clown-name also in a volume of
-<i>Engelische Comedien und Tragedien</i>, printed in 1620, which
-probably represents an attempt of Browne and Green to turn to profit
-with the printers their repertory of 1618–20, now rendered useless by
-their return to England.<a id="FNanchor_838" href="#Footnote_838" class="fnanchor">[838]</a> The plays contained in this volume, in
-addition to two farces and five jigs, in most of which Pickleherring
-appears, are <i>Esther and Haman</i>, <i>The Prodigal Son</i>,
-<i>Fortunatus</i>, <i>A King’s Son of England and a King’s Daughter of
-Scotland</i>, <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>, <i>Sidonia and Theagenes</i>,
-<i>Julio and Hyppolita</i>, and <i>Titus Andronicus</i>.<a id="FNanchor_839" href="#Footnote_839" class="fnanchor">[839]</a> The first
-five of these reappear in a list of plays forming the repertory of
-Green at Dresden during the visit of 1626 referred to above. If the
-titles can be trusted, two of the plays in this list had already been
-played by Browne at Frankfort and Cassel in 1601 and 1607, three by an
-unknown company, possibly that of Blackwood and Thare, at Nördlingen
-and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span> Rothenburg in 1604 and 1606, and eight by Green himself at
-Passau and Gräz in the winter of 1607–8.<a id="FNanchor_840" href="#Footnote_840" class="fnanchor">[840]</a> They number thirty in
-all, as follows: <i>Christabella</i>, <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>,<a id="FNanchor_841" href="#Footnote_841" class="fnanchor">[841]</a>
-<i>Amphitryo</i>,<a id="FNanchor_842" href="#Footnote_842" class="fnanchor">[842]</a> <i>The Duke of Florence</i>,<a id="FNanchor_843" href="#Footnote_843" class="fnanchor">[843]</a> <i>The
-King of Spain and the Portuguese Viceroy</i>,<a id="FNanchor_844" href="#Footnote_844" class="fnanchor">[844]</a> <i>Julius
-Caesar</i>, <i>Crysella</i>,<a id="FNanchor_845" href="#Footnote_845" class="fnanchor">[845]</a> <i>The Duke of Ferrara</i>,<a id="FNanchor_846" href="#Footnote_846" class="fnanchor">[846]</a>
-<i>Nobody and Somebody</i>,<a id="FNanchor_847" href="#Footnote_847" class="fnanchor">[847]</a> <i>The Kings of Denmark and
-Sweden</i>,<a id="FNanchor_848" href="#Footnote_848" class="fnanchor">[848]</a> <i>Hamlet</i>,<a id="FNanchor_849" href="#Footnote_849" class="fnanchor">[849]</a> <i>Orlando Furioso</i>,<a id="FNanchor_850" href="#Footnote_850" class="fnanchor">[850]</a>
-<i>The Kings of England and Scotland</i>,<a id="FNanchor_851" href="#Footnote_851" class="fnanchor">[851]</a> <i>Hieronymo the
-Spanish Marshal</i>,<a id="FNanchor_852" href="#Footnote_852" class="fnanchor">[852]</a> <i>Haman and Esther</i>,<a id="FNanchor_853" href="#Footnote_853" class="fnanchor">[853]</a> <i>The
-Martyr Dorothea</i>,<a id="FNanchor_854" href="#Footnote_854" class="fnanchor">[854]</a> <i>Doctor Faustus</i>,<a id="FNanchor_855" href="#Footnote_855" class="fnanchor">[855]</a> <i>The King
-of Arragon</i>,<a id="FNanchor_856" href="#Footnote_856" class="fnanchor">[856]</a> <i>Fortunatus</i>,<a id="FNanchor_857" href="#Footnote_857" class="fnanchor">[857]</a> <i>Joseph the Jew
-of Venice</i>,<a id="FNanchor_858" href="#Footnote_858" class="fnanchor">[858]</a> <i>The Clever Thief</i>,<a id="FNanchor_859" href="#Footnote_859" class="fnanchor">[859]</a> <i>The Duke of
-Venice</i>,<a id="FNanchor_860" href="#Footnote_860" class="fnanchor">[860]</a> <i>Barabbas Jew of Malta</i>, <i>The Dukes of Mantua
-and Verona</i>, <i>Old Proculus</i>, <i>Lear King of England</i>,
-<i>The Godfather</i>, <i>The Prodigal Son</i>,<a id="FNanchor_861" href="#Footnote_861" class="fnanchor">[861]</a> <i>The Count of
-Angiers</i>, <i>The Rich Man</i>.<a id="FNanchor_862" href="#Footnote_862" class="fnanchor">[862]</a></p>
-
-<p>The lists of 1620 and 1626 do not bear out Fleay’s assumption that the
-repertories they represent were wholly made up of plays taken out by
-Browne in 1592.<a id="FNanchor_863" href="#Footnote_863" class="fnanchor">[863]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span></p>
-
-<p>Another member of Browne’s last expedition can perhaps be identified.
-With him in 1592 had been Richard Jones, who afterwards became one
-of the Admiral’s men in 1594 and left that company in 1602. He was
-again associated with Browne in Rosseter’s Queen’s Revels syndicate of
-1610. The following undated letter to Edward Alleyn is preserved at
-Dulwich:<a id="FNanchor_864" href="#Footnote_864" class="fnanchor">[864]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>M<sup>r</sup> Allen, I commend my love and humble duty to you, geving you
-thankes for your great bounty bestoed vpon me in my sicknes,
-when I was in great want, God blese you for it, Sir, this it
-is, I am to go over beyond the seeas with M<sup>r</sup> Browne and the
-company, but not by his meanes, for he is put to half a shaer,
-and to stay hear, for they ar all against his goinge. Now good
-Sir, as you have ever byne my worthie frend, so healp me nowe.
-I have a sut of clothes and a cloke at pane for three pound,
-and if it shall pleas you to lend me so much to release them I
-shalbe bound to pray for you so longe as I leve, for if I go
-over and have no clothes, I shall not be esteemed of, and by
-godes help the first mony that I gett I will send it over vnto
-you, for hear I get nothinge, some tymes I have a shillinge a
-day, and some tymes nothinge, so that I leve in great poverty
-hear, and so I humbly take my leave, prainge to god I and my
-wiffe for your health and mistris Allenes, which god continew,</p>
-
-<p>
-Your poor frend to command
-Richard Jones.
-</p>
-
-<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>] Receved of master Allen the &emsp;&emsp; of
-February the somme of &emsp;&emsp; [<i>and by Alleyn</i>] M<sup>r</sup>
-Jones his letter wher on I lent hym 3<sup>l</sup>.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>This has generally been dated 1592. But Alleyn’s first recorded
-marriage was in October of that year, and the reference to Browne as
-not going with the company has always been a puzzle. I suspect that
-it was written in or near 1615, and that Jones was one of the actors
-who started in advance of Browne under John Green. That he did travel
-about this time is shown by two other letters to Alleyn about a lease
-of the Leopard’s Head in Shoreditch held by his wife.<a id="FNanchor_865" href="#Footnote_865" class="fnanchor">[865]</a> The first,
-from Jones himself, is not dated, but a mention of Henslowe shows that
-it was written before the latter’s death on 6 January 1616, or at
-least before Jones had heard of that event. The writer and his wife
-were then out of England. The second, from Harris Jones, was written
-from Danzig on 1 April 1620. Mrs. Jones was then expecting to join her
-husband, who was with ‘the prince’, whoever this may have been. If
-Jones had travelled with Browne’s men, he cut himself adrift from them
-on their return, for in 1622 he entered as a musician the service of
-Philip Julius,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span> Duke of Wolgast in Pomerania (1592–1625), who had twice
-visited England, and whose presence at more than one London theatre
-is recorded in 1602.<a id="FNanchor_866" href="#Footnote_866" class="fnanchor">[866]</a> Two petitions from Jones are in the Stettin
-archives.<a id="FNanchor_867" href="#Footnote_867" class="fnanchor">[867]</a> On 30 August 1623 he asked permission, with his fellows
-Johan Kostrassen and Robert Dulandt (Dowland?), to return from Wolgast
-to England. Behind them they appear to have left Richard Farnaby, son
-of the better-known composer Giles Farnaby.<a id="FNanchor_868" href="#Footnote_868" class="fnanchor">[868]</a> On 10 July 1624 Jones
-wrote to the Duke that his hopes of profitable employment under the
-Prince in England had been disappointed, and asked to be taken back
-into his service.</p>
-
-<p>All the groups of actors hitherto dealt with seem to have had their
-origin, more or less directly, in the untiring initiative of Robert
-Browne. There is, however, another tradition, almost as closely
-associated with the houses of Brandenburg and Saxony, as the former
-with those of Hesse-Cassel and Brunswick. Some give and take between
-Cassel and the Courts of some of the Brandenburg princes has from time
-to time been noted.<a id="FNanchor_869" href="#Footnote_869" class="fnanchor">[869]</a> But Berlin, where the successive Electors of
-Brandenburg, Joachim Frederick (1598–1608) and John Sigismund (1608–9),
-had their capital, was during a long period of years the head-quarters
-from which an Englishman, John Spencer, undertook extensive travels,
-both in Protestant and in Catholic Germany. Of Spencer’s stage-career
-in London, if he ever had one, nothing is known. Possibly he betook
-himself to the Brandenburg Court during the English plague-year
-of 1603. At any rate, comedians holding a recommendation given by
-the Elector on 10 August 1604 and confirmed by the Stadtholder of
-the Netherlands, Maurice Prince of Orange Nassau, in the following
-December, were at Leyden in January and The Hague in May 1605.<a id="FNanchor_870" href="#Footnote_870" class="fnanchor">[870]</a> It
-is reasonable to identify them with the company under John Spencer, who
-received a recommendation from the Electress Eleonora of Brandenburg to
-the Elector Christian II of Saxony (1591–1611) in the same year.<a id="FNanchor_871" href="#Footnote_871" class="fnanchor">[871]</a>
-At Dresden they possibly remained for some time, for although there are
-several anonymous appearances, including the famous ones at Gräz in the
-winter of 1607–8, which can be conjecturally assigned to them,<a id="FNanchor_872" href="#Footnote_872" class="fnanchor">[872]</a>
-they do not clearly emerge until April 1608, when a visit of the
-Electoral players of Saxony is recorded at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span> Cologne.<a id="FNanchor_873" href="#Footnote_873" class="fnanchor">[873]</a> Subsequently
-they waited upon Francis, Duke of Stettin and by him were recommended
-to the new Elector of Brandenburg, John Sigismund, who passed them on
-once more to the Elector of Saxony on 14 July 1609.<a id="FNanchor_874" href="#Footnote_874" class="fnanchor">[874]</a> Being in need
-of comedians for his brother’s wedding in the same year, he applied,
-as has been noted, for a loan of those of Maurice of Hesse.<a id="FNanchor_875" href="#Footnote_875" class="fnanchor">[875]</a>
-Dresden remained the head-quarters of Spencer’s men again during
-the next two years, but in 1611 they were back in John Sigismund’s
-service. Christian II of Saxony died in this year. In July and August
-they visited Danzig and Königsberg, and in October and November they
-attended the Elector to Ortelsburg and Königsberg for the ceremonies in
-connexion with the acknowledgement of him as heir to his father-in-law,
-Duke Albert Frederick of Prussia. On this occasion Spencer was at
-the head of not less than nineteen actors and sixteen musicians, and
-produced an elaborate Turkish ‘Triumph-comedy’.<a id="FNanchor_876" href="#Footnote_876" class="fnanchor">[876]</a> In April 1613
-Spencer left Berlin on a tour which was to take him to Dresden once
-more.<a id="FNanchor_877" href="#Footnote_877" class="fnanchor">[877]</a> The company were at Nuremberg in June, still using the name
-of the Elector of Brandenburg and playing <i>Philole and Mariana</i>,
-<i>Celinde and Sedea</i>, <i>The Fall of Troy</i>, <i>The Fall of
-Constantinople</i>, and <i>The Turk</i>.<a id="FNanchor_878" href="#Footnote_878" class="fnanchor">[878]</a> In July and August
-they were at Augsburg, and in September they returned to Nuremberg,
-now describing themselves as the Elector of Saxony’s company.<a id="FNanchor_879" href="#Footnote_879" class="fnanchor">[879]</a>
-This Elector was John George I (1611–56), the third of his house to
-entertain an English company. In October they played The <i>Fall of
-Constantinople</i> at the Reichstag held by the Emperor Mathias at
-Regensburg. Spencer was their leader, but they no longer claimed any
-courtly status.<a id="FNanchor_880" href="#Footnote_880" class="fnanchor">[880]</a> After an unsuccessful attempt to pay a third
-visit for the year to Nuremberg, they went to Rothenburg, and so to
-Heidelberg, whither the Elector Palatine Frederick V had just brought
-his English bride. Here they spent the winter, and left to attend the
-Frankfort fair of Easter 1614.<a id="FNanchor_881" href="#Footnote_881" class="fnanchor">[881]</a> In May their service with the
-Elector of Brandenburg, although<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span> now none of the most recent, helped
-them to get a footing in Strassburg, where they stayed until July and
-again played <i>The Fall of Constantinople</i>, as well as a play of
-<i>Government</i>.<a id="FNanchor_882" href="#Footnote_882" class="fnanchor">[882]</a> In August they were at Augsburg and possibly
-Ulm.<a id="FNanchor_883" href="#Footnote_883" class="fnanchor">[883]</a> In October they projected a return visit to Strassburg, but
-were rejected, ‘so dies Jar hie lang genug super multorum opinionem
-gewessen’.<a id="FNanchor_884" href="#Footnote_884" class="fnanchor">[884]</a> Possibly they fell back upon Stuttgart.<a id="FNanchor_885" href="#Footnote_885" class="fnanchor">[885]</a> In
-February 1615 they were in Cologne, and here a queer thing happened.
-The whole company, with Spencer’s wife and children, was converted
-to Catholicism by the eloquence of a Franciscan friar. The event is
-recorded in the town archives and also in a manuscript Franciscan
-chronicle preserved in the British Museum:<a id="FNanchor_886" href="#Footnote_886" class="fnanchor">[886]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Twentie fowre stage players arrive out of Ingland at Collen:
-all Inglish except one Germanian and one Dutchman. All
-Protestants. Betwixt those and father Francis Nugent disputation
-was begunne and protracted for the space of 7 or eight dayes
-consecutively; all of them meeting at one place together. The
-chiefe among them was one N. Spencer, a proper sufficient
-man. In fine, all and each of them beeing clearlie convinced,
-they yielded to the truth; but felt themselves so drie and
-roughharted that they knew not how to pass from the bewitching
-Babylonian harlot to their true mother the Catholic church, that
-always pure and virginal spouse of the lamb.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It need hardly be said that in so Catholic a city as Cologne this
-singular act of grace gave the performances of the English comedians an
-extraordinary vogue. In June and July 1615 Spencer was at Strassburg,
-in company with one Christopher Apileutter, who may have been the
-Germanian or the Dutchman of the Cologne notice.<a id="FNanchor_887" href="#Footnote_887" class="fnanchor">[887]</a> He attended the
-autumn fair at Frankfort, using an imperial patent, perhaps given him
-at Regensburg in 1613.<a id="FNanchor_888" href="#Footnote_888" class="fnanchor">[888]</a> During the winter of 1615–16 he was again
-in Cologne, still profiting by his conversion.<a id="FNanchor_889" href="#Footnote_889" class="fnanchor">[889]</a> This, however, had
-not made of him such a bigot, as to be unable to render acceptable
-duty in the Protestant courts where his earliest successes had been
-won. For a year his movements became obscure. But in August 1617 he
-was playing before the Elector of Saxony and the Emperor Matthias
-at Dresden.<a id="FNanchor_890" href="#Footnote_890" class="fnanchor">[890]</a> And in the following year he once more entered the
-Brandenburg service. During the interval which had elapsed since<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-1613, John Sigismund had entertained another company. Early in 1614 he
-engaged William, Abraham, and Jacob Pedel, Robert Arzschar, Behrendt
-Holzhew, and August Pflugbeil.<a id="FNanchor_891" href="#Footnote_891" class="fnanchor">[891]</a> The names hardly sound English; but
-Jacob Pedel is probably the Jacob Behel or Biel who was travelling with
-Sackville in 1597, William Pedel appeared as an English pantomimist at
-Leyden in November 1608, and Arzschar, whose correct name was doubtless
-Archer, is also described as an Englishman at Frankfort in the autumn
-of 1608.<a id="FNanchor_892" href="#Footnote_892" class="fnanchor">[892]</a> He was then in company with Heinrich Greum and Rudolph
-Beart. A Burchart Bierdt appeared as ‘Englischer Musicant’ at Cologne
-in December 1612.<a id="FNanchor_893" href="#Footnote_893" class="fnanchor">[893]</a> Archer perhaps came from Nuremberg. He was at
-Frankfort again in the autumn of 1610, and at the Reichstag held by
-the Emperor Matthias at Regensburg in September 1613.<a id="FNanchor_894" href="#Footnote_894" class="fnanchor">[894]</a> It must
-have been this new company under Archer which visited Wolfenbüttel in
-September 1614 and Danzig in 1615, styling themselves the Brandenburg
-comedians.<a id="FNanchor_895" href="#Footnote_895" class="fnanchor">[895]</a> The only names given at Danzig are Johann Friedrich
-Virnius and Bartholomeus Freyerbott, and in fact the Pedels, Holzhew,
-and Pflugbeil left Berlin at Easter 1615. Archer himself remained
-with the Elector until May 1616. The field, then, was clear at Berlin
-for the enterprise of Spencer. On 17 March 1618 John Sigismund made
-a payment ‘to one Stockfisch’ for bringing the English comedians
-from Elbing. Further payments to the English are recorded in the
-following November, and in June 1619 for plays at Königsberg and
-Balge in Prussia, of which the Elector had become Duke on the death
-of his father-in-law Albert Frederick in the preceding August.<a id="FNanchor_896" href="#Footnote_896" class="fnanchor">[896]</a>
-In July 1619 the Elector of Brandenburg’s comedians are heard of at
-Danzig.<a id="FNanchor_897" href="#Footnote_897" class="fnanchor">[897]</a> On 23 December 1619 John Sigismund himself died, and
-in 1620 Hans Stockfisch addressed an appeal for certain arrears of
-salary to Count Adam von Schwartzenberg, an officer at the court of
-the new Elector George William (1619–40), in which he claimed to have
-enjoyed the Count’s protection for more than fifteen years. In reply
-George William describes the petitioner as ‘den Englischen Junkher
-Hans Stockfisch, wie er sich nennet’.<a id="FNanchor_898" href="#Footnote_898" class="fnanchor">[898]</a> There can be little doubt
-that Hans Stockfisch was none other than John Spencer, for the period
-of fifteen years precisely takes us back to his first appearance as a
-Brandenburg comedian in 1605. His fish name corresponds<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span> to, and was
-perhaps motived by, that of Pickleherring adopted by Robert Reinolds
-of the chief rival English company about the same date. Both had their
-prototype in Sackville’s John Bouset.<a id="FNanchor_899" href="#Footnote_899" class="fnanchor">[899]</a> The Elector George William
-was no friend to actors, and to Spencer, as to others, the Thirty
-Years’ War closed many doors. In February 1623 he came to Nuremberg
-with Sebastian Schadleutner, but was not allowed to play.<a id="FNanchor_900" href="#Footnote_900" class="fnanchor">[900]</a> And that
-is the last that is heard of him.</p>
-
-<p>A few isolated records indicate the presence from time to time in
-northern Europe of players not yet mentioned, and not obviously
-connected either with the Browne or with the Spencer tradition. An
-English company under Peter de Prun of Brussels visited Nuremberg in
-April 1594. The name of the leader does not sound very English, and a
-company, not improbably the same, is described as ‘niederländische’ at
-Ulm in the following August. Heywood, however, speaks of an English
-company as in the pay of the Cardinal and Archduke Albert, Governor of
-the Spanish Netherlands, about 1608.<a id="FNanchor_901" href="#Footnote_901" class="fnanchor">[901]</a> Maurice of Orange-Nassau,
-Stadtholder of the Dutch Netherlands (1584–1625), who gave a
-recommendation to Spencer in 1605, had also an English company of his
-own, which visited Frankfort at Easter 1611, and then claimed to be
-strange in Germany.<a id="FNanchor_902" href="#Footnote_902" class="fnanchor">[902]</a> To Augsburg in June 1602 came Fabian Penton
-and his company;<a id="FNanchor_903" href="#Footnote_903" class="fnanchor">[903]</a> to Leyden in September 1604 John Woods and his
-company,<a id="FNanchor_904" href="#Footnote_904" class="fnanchor">[904]</a> and to Leipzig in April 1613 Hans Leberwurst with his
-boys.<a id="FNanchor_905" href="#Footnote_905" class="fnanchor">[905]</a> Of none of these is anything further known, nor of William
-Alexander Blank, a Scottish dancer, who performed at Cologne in April
-1605.<a id="FNanchor_906" href="#Footnote_906" class="fnanchor">[906]</a></p>
-
-<p>Traces of English players in southern Europe are few and far between.
-That Kempe’s travels of 1601 took him to Italy has already been
-noted.<a id="FNanchor_907" href="#Footnote_907" class="fnanchor">[907]</a> There were some English acrobats at Madrid in January
-1583.<a id="FNanchor_908" href="#Footnote_908" class="fnanchor">[908]</a> On 25 May 1598 the Confrères de la Passion leased their
-theatre in Paris,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span> the Hôtel de Bourgogne, to ‘Jehan Sehais comédien
-Anglois’, and on 4 June obtained judgement in the court of the
-Châtelet, ‘tant pour raison du susdit bail que pour le droit d’un écu
-par jour, jouant lesdits Anglais ailleurs qu’audit Hôtel’.<a id="FNanchor_909" href="#Footnote_909" class="fnanchor">[909]</a> I do
-not know whether I am justified in finding under the French disguise of
-‘Jehan Sehais’ the name of one John Shaa or Shaw, conceivably related
-to Robert Shaw of the Admiral’s men, who witnessed an advance by
-Henslowe to Dekker on 24 November 1599.<a id="FNanchor_910" href="#Footnote_910" class="fnanchor">[910]</a> In 1604 another English
-company was in France, and gave a performance on 18 September in the
-great hall at Fontainebleau, the effect of which upon the imagination
-of the future Louis XIV, then a child of four, is minutely described in
-the singular diary of his tutor and physician, Jean Héroard.<a id="FNanchor_911" href="#Footnote_911" class="fnanchor">[911]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Mené en la grande salle neuve ouïr une tragédie représentée par
-des Anglois; il les écoute avec froideur, gravité et patience
-jusques à ce qu’il fallut couper la tête à un des personnages.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>On 28 September, Louis was playing at being an actor, and on 29
-September, says Héroard:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Il dit qu’il veut jouer la comédie; “Monsieur,” dis-je,
-“comment direz-vous?” Il repond, “Tiph, toph,” en grossissant sa
-voix. À six heures et demie, soupé; il va en sa chambre, se fait
-habiller pour masquer, et dit: “Allons voir maman, nous sommes
-des comédiens.”’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Finally, on 3 October:</p>
-
-<p>
-‘Il dit, “Habillons-nous en comédiens,” on lui met son tablier coiffé
-sur la tête; il se prend à parler, disant: “Tiph, toph, milord” et
-marchant à grands pas.’
-</p>
-
-<p>It has been suggested on rather inadequate grounds that the play
-seen by Louis may have been <i>2 Henry IV</i>. Possibly the princely
-imagination had merely been smitten by some comic rough and
-tumble.<a id="FNanchor_912" href="#Footnote_912" class="fnanchor">[912]</a> But it is also conceivable that the theme may have been
-the execution of John Tiptoft, Earl of Worcester, at the restoration of
-Henry VI in 1470.<a id="FNanchor_913" href="#Footnote_913" class="fnanchor">[913]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span></p>
-
-<p>It would be rash to assume that these records of 1598 and 1604
-represent all the visits of English actors to France during the
-Elizabethan period; and it is not improbable that a search in the
-municipal archives of Picardy and Normandy, as thorough as that which
-has been carried out for Germany, might yield notable results. Some
-general evidence that tours in France did take place can be cited.
-John Green, dedicating his version of <i>Nobody and Somebody</i> to
-the Archduke Maximilian about 1608, says that he had been in that
-country.<a id="FNanchor_914" href="#Footnote_914" class="fnanchor">[914]</a> His, indeed, so far as dates go, might have been the
-company of 1604. And France, no less than Germany, is referred to as
-scoured by the English comedians about 1613.<a id="FNanchor_915" href="#Footnote_915" class="fnanchor">[915]</a></p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XV<br />
-
-ACTORS</h3></div>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;I include a few managers who
-were not necessarily themselves actors. The earlier studies of
-stage biography were mainly concerned with the Chamberlain’s
-and King’s men in the list of ‘The Names of the Principall
-Actors in all these Playes’, prefixed to the Shakespearian
-F<sub>1</sub> of 1623. The statements about them in [J. Roberts]
-<i>Answer to Mr. Pope’s Preface to Shakespeare</i> (1729) are
-conjectural and not, as sometimes supposed, traditional. A
-good deal was collected from wills and registers by E. Malone
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 182), G. Chalmers (ibid. iii. 464), and
-J. P. Collier, <i>Memoirs of the Principal Actors in the Plays
-of Shakespeare</i> (1846, <i>Sh. Soc.</i> revised edition in
-<i>H. E. D. P.</i> iii. 255), and is summarized by K. Elze,
-<i>William Shakespeare</i> (tr. 1888), 246. New ground was
-broken by F. G. Fleay, <i>On the Actor Lists, 1578–1642</i>
-(<i>R. Hist. Soc. Trans.</i> ix. 44), and in the list in
-<i>Chronicle History of the London Stage</i> (1890), 370. Here
-he criticizes Collier’s claim to have a list of 500 actors,
-as he cannot find ‘that any list at all was found among his
-papers’, and suggests that a forgery was planned. I am glad to
-have an opportunity for once of defending Collier, even if it
-is only against Fleay. The fifth report (1846) of the <i>Sh.
-Soc.</i> shows that ‘a volume of the original actors in plays
-by writers other than Shakespeare was in preparation, and
-<i>Bodl. MS.</i> 29445 contains a number of rough extracts made
-by Collier and P. Cunningham from London parochial registers,
-with a digest of these and other material, entitled ‘Old Actors.
-Collections for the Biography of, derived from Old Books &amp;
-MSS. Alphabetically arranged’. I have used this manuscript
-and cite it as ‘Bodl.’ or ‘B.’. The information is mainly
-from the registers of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, St. Andrew’s
-Wardrobe, St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch,
-St. Giles’, Cripplegate, and other churches. It appears to
-be reliable, except perhaps in one or two points. One would,
-of course, prefer to have the registers themselves in print,
-but with the exception of those of St. James’s, Clerkenwell
-(<i>Harl. Soc.</i>), and A. W. C. Hallen’s <i>Registers of St.
-Botolph’s, Bishopsgate</i>, the published London Registers, as
-shown by A. M. Burke, <i>Key to the Ancient Parish Registers
-of England and Wales</i> (1908), are precisely those of least
-theatrical interest. The Southwark registers in particular, and
-the other records of that parish, including the ‘token-books’
-or annual lists, street by street, of communicants, ought to
-be made available. Some notes from them are in W. Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i> (1877, Harrison, Part ii). Southwark marriages
-(1605–25) are in <i>Genealogist</i> (n. s. vi-ix). In these
-records ‘man’ clearly means ‘player’. Extracts from other
-registers may be found in parochial histories and elsewhere.
-Some from St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, are in J. P. Malcolm,
-<i>Londinium Redivivum</i> (1802–7), iii. 303, J. J. Baddeley,
-<i>St. Giles, Cripplegate</i> (1888), and W. Hunter’s
-<i>Addl. MS.</i> 24589. C. C. Stopes, <i>Burbage</i>, 139,
-gives a full collection from St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch. An
-interesting list of actors and their addresses <i>c.</i> 1623
-is in C. W. Wallace, <i>Gervase Markham, Dramatist</i> (1910,
-<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 345), cited as ‘J’. The citations ‘H’
-and ‘H. P’ are from Greg’s editions of Henslowe’s <i>Diary</i>
-and <i>Henslowe Papers</i>.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ABYNGDON, HENRY. Master of Chapel, 1455–78.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ADAMS, JOHN. Sussex’s, 1576; Queen’s, 1583, 1588. He possibly played
-the clown Adam in <i>A Looking Glass</i> and Oberon in <i>James
-IV.</i>. It would hardly be justifiable to conjecture that he lived to
-join Hunsdon’s and play Adam in <i>A. Y. L.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ALDERSON, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1509–13.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ALLEYN, EDWARD, was born on 1 September 1566 in the parish of St.
-Botolph, Bishopsgate.<a id="FNanchor_916" href="#Footnote_916" class="fnanchor">[916]</a> His father was Edward Alleyn of Willen,
-Bucks, Innholder and porter to the Queen, who died in 1570; his mother,
-Margaret Townley, for whom he claimed a descent from the Townleys of
-Lancashire which modern genealogists hesitate to credit, re-married
-with one John Browne, a haberdasher, between whom and other Brownes
-who appear in theatrical annals no connexion can be proved. Edward
-Alleyn is said by Fuller in his <i>Worthies</i> to have been ‘bred a
-stage player’. In formal deeds he is generally described as ‘yeoman’
-or ‘gentleman’, and once, in 1595, as ‘musician’.<a id="FNanchor_917" href="#Footnote_917" class="fnanchor">[917]</a> In January 1583
-he was one of Worcester’s players; at some later date he joined the
-Admiral’s men, and had as ‘fellow’ his brother John, with whom during
-1589–91 he was associated in purchases of apparel. On 22 October
-1592 he married Joan Woodward, step-daughter of Philip Henslowe,
-with whom he appears ever after in the closest business relations. A
-Dulwich tradition that he was already a widower probably rests on a
-mention of ‘Mistris Allene’ in an undated letter about a German tour
-by Richard Jones, which is commonly assigned to February 1592, but is
-more probably of later date.<a id="FNanchor_918" href="#Footnote_918" class="fnanchor">[918]</a> Alleyn is specifically described as
-the Admiral’s servant in the Privy Council letter of assistance to
-Strange’s men (q.v.), with whom he travelled during the plague of 1593.
-Some of the letters passing between him and his wife and father-in-law
-during this tour are preserved at Dulwich, and are full of interesting
-domestic details about his white waistcoat and his orange tawny
-woollen stockings, the pasturing of his horse, his spinach bed, and
-the furnishing of his house.<a id="FNanchor_919" href="#Footnote_919" class="fnanchor">[919]</a> His ‘tenants’ are mentioned and his
-‘sister Phillipes &amp; her husband’. He had by this time a high reputation
-as an actor, as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span> witnessed by Nashe in his <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> of
-1592, where he classes him with Tarlton, Knell, and Bentley, and says,
-‘Not Roscius nor Aesope, those admyred tragedians that haue liued euer
-since before Christ was borne, could euer performe more in action than
-famous Ned Allen’; and in his <i>Strange Newes</i> of the same year,
-where he says of Edmund Spenser that ‘his very name (as that of Ned
-Allen on the common stage) was able to make an ill matter good’.<a id="FNanchor_920" href="#Footnote_920" class="fnanchor">[920]</a>
-An undated letter at Dulwich, written to him by an admirer who signs
-himself W. P., offers a wager in which ‘Peele’s credit’ was also in
-some way concerned, and in which Alleyn was to have the choice of any
-one of Bentley’s or Knell’s plays, and promises that, even if he loses,
-‘we must and will saie Ned Allen still’.<a id="FNanchor_921" href="#Footnote_921" class="fnanchor">[921]</a> In 1594 <i>The Knack to
-know a Knave</i> is ascribed, quite exceptionally, on its title-page,
-not to the servants of a particular lord, but to ‘Ed. Allen and his
-Companie’. From 1594 to 1597 Alleyn was one of the Admiral’s men (q.v.)
-at the Rose. He then ‘leafte playnge’, but resumed at the request of
-the Queen, although apparently without becoming a full sharer of the
-company, when the Fortune (q.v.), which he had built for them, was
-opened in the autumn of 1600. He became a servant of Prince Henry with
-the rest of his fellows in 1604, and at the coronation procession on 15
-March appeared as the Genius of the City and delivered a ‘gratulatory
-speech’ to James ‘with excellent action and a well-tun’de, audible
-voyce’.<a id="FNanchor_922" href="#Footnote_922" class="fnanchor">[922]</a> Further testimonies to his talent are rendered by John
-Weever;<a id="FNanchor_923" href="#Footnote_923" class="fnanchor">[923]</a> by Ben Jonson, <i>Epigram</i> lxxxix (1616), who equals
-him to Aesop and Roscius, and himself to Cicero, who praised them; by
-Heywood, who says, ‘Among so many dead let me not forget one yet alive,
-in his time the most worthy, famous Maister Edward Allen’;<a id="FNanchor_924" href="#Footnote_924" class="fnanchor">[924]</a> and by
-Fuller, who says, ‘He was the Roscius of our age, so acting to the life
-that he made any part (especially a majestic one) to become him.’<a id="FNanchor_925" href="#Footnote_925" class="fnanchor">[925]</a>
-Of his parts are recorded Faustus,<a id="FNanchor_926" href="#Footnote_926" class="fnanchor">[926]</a> Tamburlaine, Barabas in <i>The
-Jew of Malta</i>,<a id="FNanchor_927" href="#Footnote_927" class="fnanchor">[927]</a> and Cutlack in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span> play of that name revived by
-the Admiral’s men in 1594 and now lost,<a id="FNanchor_928" href="#Footnote_928" class="fnanchor">[928]</a> while that of Orlando in
-Greene’s <i>Orlando Furioso</i> is amongst the papers at Dulwich.<a id="FNanchor_929" href="#Footnote_929" class="fnanchor">[929]</a>
-Heywood, writing about 1608, speaks of Alleyn’s playing in the past.
-He probably retired finally soon after the beginning of the new reign.
-In 1605 he valued his ‘share of aparell’ at £100; but his name is not
-in the patent to the Prince’s men of 30 April 1606, although as late
-as 1611 he still retained his personal rank as servant to the prince.
-It is difficult to give much credit to the legend that his withdrawal
-was due to remorse, or, as one version has it, to an apparition of
-the devil when he was playing Faustus.<a id="FNanchor_930" href="#Footnote_930" class="fnanchor">[930]</a> Certainly he continued
-to hold an interest in the Fortune, and conceivably in the Red Bull
-(q.v.) also. And certainly remorse did not prevent him from continuing
-to exercise the functions of Master of the Game of Paris Garden, a
-post which he acquired jointly with Henslowe in 1604, having already
-been interested in the Bear-garden itself since 1594. At this after it
-became the Hope (q.v.) he was still about 1617 entertaining players.
-But the time of his retirement synchronizes with the first beginnings
-of his foundation of a school and hospital by the name of the College
-of God’s Gift at Dulwich. By 1605 he was a wealthy man, with income
-from substantial investments in leasehold property as well as the
-profits from his enterprises, and on 25 October he took the first step
-in the purchase of the manor of Dulwich, which was completed by 1614 at
-a total cost of nearly £10,000. Here about 1613 he made his residence,
-moving from Southwark, where he had been churchwarden of St. Saviour’s
-in 1610. In 1613 also he began the building of the college, which was
-opened in 1617. Alleyn himself acted as manager and was in a position
-to spend upon the college and his own household some £1,700 a year. The
-endowment of the college included, besides house property in London,
-the freehold of the Fortune. Henslowe had died in January 1616 and
-his widow in the following year, and his papers passed to Alleyn and
-remain at Dulwich. Here, too, is Alleyn’s own diary for 1617–22, and
-this and his correspondence show him as a friend of persons of honour,
-and the patron of writers and the members of his own former profession.
-Alleyn’s wife Joan died on 28 June 1623 and on the following 3 December
-he married Constance, daughter of John Donne, dean of St. Paul’s,
-settling on her £1,500. A letter of 23 July 1624 indicates that he
-was then desirous of obtaining ‘sum further dignetie’. He died on 25
-November 1626.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ALLEYN, JOHN. Admiral’s, 1589–91. Edward Alleyn had an elder brother
-John, who was born in 1556–7, and is described as servant to Lord
-Sheffield and an Innholder in 1580, and as servant to the Lord<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-Admiral in 1589. He died about May 1596, being then of St. Andrew’s,
-Holborn, and left a widow Margaret and son John. Presumably he was the
-Admiral’s player. But there was also an Allen family of St. Botolph’s,
-Bishopsgate, one of whom, John, was a player. Here a John was baptized
-on 17 October 1570, a Lowin, son of John, baptized on 15 December 1588,
-a Joan buried on 13 May 1593, and a John on 18 May 1593. On 26 July
-1596 is this curious baptismal entry: ‘Bennett, reputed daughter of
-J<sup>no</sup> Allen, which J<sup>no</sup> went with S<sup>r</sup> Fr. Drake to the Indians in
-which time the child was got by a stage-player.’ Finally, on 18 October
-1597, ‘Jone uxor Joh<sup>is</sup> Allen player was buried with a still born
-child’ (H. ii. 239; Bodl.)</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ALLEYN, RICHARD. Queen’s, (?) 1594; Admiral’s, 1597–1600. His daughters
-Anna and Elizabeth were baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 13
-May 1599 and 17 May 1601 respectively. Here he is traceable in the
-token-books during 1583–1601, and was buried on 18 November 1601,
-leaving a widow (Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi; H. ii. 239; Bodl.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ALLEYN (ALLEN), RICHARD. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ANDREWE, HENRY. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ANDREWES, RICHARD. Worcester’s, 1583.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ANDROWES, GEORGE. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">APILEUTTER, CHRISTOPHER. Germany, 1615.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ARCHER, RICHARD. <i>Vide</i> <span class="smcap">Arkinstall</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ARCHER? (ARZSCHAR, ERTZER), ROBERT. Germany, 1608–16.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ARKINSTALL, JOHN. A common player of interludes under licence, with
-Richard Archer, Barker, and Anthony Ward as his fellows. He was at
-Hastings on 25 March 1603, and on 30 March laid an information of the
-proclamation of Lord Beauchamp as king by Lord Southampton (<i>Hist.
-MSS.</i> xii. 4. 126).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ARMIN, ROBERT, is said to have been apprentice to a goldsmith in
-Lombard Street, and to have been encouraged as a ‘wag’ by Tarlton
-(<i>ob.</i> 1588), who prophesied that he should ‘enjoy my clownes sute
-after me’. He ‘used to’ Tarlton’s plays, and in time became himself
-a player ‘and at this houre performes the same, where, at the Globe
-on the Banks side men may see him’.<a id="FNanchor_931" href="#Footnote_931" class="fnanchor">[931]</a> But his earliest reputation
-was as a writer. He wrote a preface to <i>A Brief Resolution of the
-Right Religion</i> (1590) and probably other things now unknown, for
-he is referred to as a son of Elderton in Nashe’s <i>Foure Letters
-Confuted</i> of 1592 (<i>Works</i>, i. 280). R. A. wrote verses to
-Robert Tofte’s <i>Alba</i> (1598), and R. A. compiled <i>England’s
-Parnassus</i> (1600); the latter is generally taken to be Robert
-Allot. The first dramatic company in which Armin can be traced is Lord
-Chandos’s men. In an epistle to Mary, widow of William Lord Chandos
-(1594–1602) prefixed to his kinsman Gilbert Dugdale’s <i>True Discourse
-of the Practises of Elizabeth Caldwell</i>, &amp;c. (1604), he says, ‘Your
-good honor knowes Pinck’s poor heart, who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">[300]</span> in all my services to your
-late deceased kind lord, never savoured of flatterie or fixion.’ In
-his <i>Foole upon Foole, or Six Sortes of Sottes</i> (1600) he tells
-an incident which took place at Pershore in Worcestershire, during a
-tour of ‘the Lord Shandoyes players’, at which he was himself present,
-not improbably playing the clown ‘Grumball’.<a id="FNanchor_932" href="#Footnote_932" class="fnanchor">[932]</a> By 1599, however, he
-had probably joined the Chamberlain’s men, for in the first edition
-of <i>Foole upon Foole</i> he describes himself as ‘Clonnico de
-Curtanio Snuffe’. In a later edition of 1605 this becomes ‘Clonnico
-del Mondo Snuffe’. Both issues are anonymous, but Armin put his name
-to an enlargement entitled <i>A Nest of Ninnies</i> (1608).<a id="FNanchor_933" href="#Footnote_933" class="fnanchor">[933]</a>
-‘Clunnyco de Curtanio Snuffe’ is also on the title-page of <i>Quips
-upon Questions</i> (1600), which must therefore be by Armin and not by
-J. Singer, whose autograph Collier (<i>Bibl. Cat.</i> ii. 203) said
-that he found on a copy. This is a book of quatrains on stage ‘themes’
-(cf. ch. xviii). It was written, as a reference to 28 December as on a
-Friday shows, in 1599. The author serves a master at Hackney (A ij).
-Later editions of 1601 and 1602 are said to have been in the Harley
-collection, and there is a reprint by F. Ouvry (1875). His name is
-in the 1603 licence for the King’s men and in the Coronation list of
-1604. In 1605 Augustine Phillips left him 20<i>s.</i> as his ‘fellow’.
-Collier’s statement that in the same year he and Kempe (q.v.) were
-in trouble for libelling aldermen cannot be verified. He is a King’s
-man on the title-page of his <i>Two Maids of Moreclacke</i> (1609),
-produced by the King’s Revels, and on the title-page and in the S. R.
-entry on 6 February 1609 of his <i>Phantasma, the Italian Tailor and
-his Boy</i>. This is a translation from Straparola and is dedicated
-to Lord and Lady Haddington. In it he claims to have been ‘writ down
-an ass in his time’ and refers to ‘his constableship’, from which it
-is inferred that he played Dogberry in <i>Much Ado about Nothing</i>.
-Fleay, <i>L. of S.</i> 300, finds a pun on ‘armine’ (= wretch) in
-<i>London Prodigal</i> (<i>c.</i> 1603), v. i. 179, and suggests that
-Armin played Matthew Flowerdale. There is a clown Robin in <i>Miseries
-of Enforced Marriage</i> (1607), and a clown Grumball in <i>If it be
-not Good</i> (1610–12), but this was a play of Anne’s men. He is in the
-actor-list of Jonson’s <i>Alchemist</i> (1610). An epigram on ‘honest
-gamesome Robert Armin’ is in John Davies of Hereford’s <i>Scourge
-of Folly</i> (S.R. 8 October 1610). He is not in the actor-list of
-Jonson’s <i>Catiline</i> (1611), nor has any later notice of him been
-found. That Armin is the R. A. whose play <i>The Valiant Welshman</i>
-was published in 1615 is only a conjecture. He is in the Folio list of
-actors in Shakespeare’s plays. It is possible that a woodcut on the
-title-page of the <i>Two Maids</i> (q.v.) gives his portrait.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ARTHUR, THOMAS. Interluders, 1528.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ATTEWELL (OTTEWELL, OTWELL), GEORGE. Strange’s, 1591; Queen’s, (?)
-1595. ‘M<sup>r</sup> Otwell’ lived in St. Saviour’s Close in 1599. He is perhaps
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">[301]</span>more likely than the following to be the author or singer of ‘M<sup>r</sup>
-Attowel’s Jigge: betweene Francis, a Gentleman; Richard, a farmer; and
-their wives’, printed in A. Clark, <i>Shirburn Ballads</i>, lxi (H. ii.
-240; B. 147).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ATTWELL (OTTEWELL), HUGH. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613;
-Charles’s, 1616–21; <i>ob.</i> 25 September 1621.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">AUGUSTEN (AGUSTEN), WILLIAM. A ‘player’, from whom Henslowe bought his
-‘boy’ Bristow in 1597 (H. ii. 240).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">AYNSWORTH, JOHN. A ‘player’ buried at St. Leonard’s 28 September 1581
-(B. 153).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BAKER, HARRY. Performer of Vertumnus in <i>Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament</i>, 1567.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BANASTER, GILBERT. Master of Chapel, 1478–83 (?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARFIELD, ROGER. Anne’s, 1606. His d. Isabell was baptized at St.
-Giles’s on 2 January 1611, and his d. Susan buried there on 3 July 1614
-(B. 157).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARKER. <i>Vide</i> <span class="smcap">Arkinstall</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARKSTED (BACKSTEAD), WILLIAM. King’s Revels (?), 1607; Revels, 1609;
-Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613; Charles’s, 1616; also a dramatist (cf.
-ch. xxiii) and a poet. His <i>Poems</i>, edited by A. B. Grosart as
-Part II of <i>Choice Rarities of Ancient English Poetry</i> (1876),
-were <i>Myrrha</i> (1607), which has commendatory verses by his kinsman
-Robert Glover and I. W., Lewes Machin, and William Bagnall, and
-<i>Hiren</i> (1611), which has sonnets to Henry Earl of Oxford, and
-Elizabeth Countess of Derby. On the title-page he describes himself as
-‘one of the servants of his Maiesties Revels’. The surmise of Fleay,
-i. 29, that this was repeated from an earlier edition of <i>c.</i>
-1607 now lost may receive some confirmation from the connexion of
-Machin with the King’s Revels; but it must also be remembered that the
-Whitefriars Revels’ company appears to be occasionally described as
-the King’s Revels in provincial records of <i>c.</i> 1611. A trivial
-anecdote of him is in J. Taylor, <i>Wit and Mirth</i> (1629).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARNE, WILLIAM. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARRY, DAVID (LORD). Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARTLE (?). Alexander Bartle, son of ‘&mdash;&mdash; a player’, was baptized at
-St. Saviour’s on 27 February 1603 (B. 165).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BARTON, ONESIPHORUS. A ‘player’, buried at St. Giles’s on 9 March 1608
-(B. 167).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BASSE, THOMAS. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613; Anne’s, 1617–19.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BAXTER, ROBERT. Chapel, 1601; Lady Elizabeth’s (?), 1613. Greg, <i>H.
-P.</i> 58, 87, however, thinks that the ‘Baxter’ of 1613, whose
-Christian name is not given, may be Barksted. Neither man is likely to
-have written the ‘Baxsters tragedy’ of 1602 (<i>H. P.</i> 58).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BAYLYE, THOMAS. Shrewsbury’s (provincial), 1581. J. Hunter,
-<i>Hallamshire</i> 80, and Murray, ii. 388, print from <i>College of
-Arms, Talbot MS.</i> G. f. 74, a Latin letter written by him to Thomas
-Bawdewin from Sheffield on 25 April 1581, in which he mentions a
-brother William, thanks him for a tragedy played by the company on St.
-George’s day, and begs him to procure ‘librum aliquem brevem, novum,
-iucundum, venustum, lepidum, hilarem, scurrosum, nebulosum,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">[302]</span> rabulosum,
-et omnimodis camificiis, latrociniis et lenociniis refertum ... qua
-in re dicunt quod Wilsonus quidam Leycestrii comitis servus (fidibus
-pollens) multum vult et potest facere’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BAYLYE. Paul’s chorister, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BEART, RUDOLF. Germany, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BEESTON, CHRISTOPHER, has been conjectured to be the ‘Kit’ who played
-a Lord and a Captain in <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> for Strange’s or
-the Admiral’s about 1590–1. The actor-list of <i>Every Man in his
-Humour</i> shows that he belonged to the Chamberlain’s men in 1598. He
-is not, however, named as a performer of Shakespeare’s plays in the
-Folio of 1623. Probably he was at one time the hired man of Augustine
-Phillips who left him 30<i>s.</i> as his ‘servant’ in 1605. By 1602 he
-had passed to Worcester’s men, and with this company, afterwards Queen
-Anne’s, he remained until it was reconstituted on the Queen’s death in
-1619, taking a prominent part in the management of the company, after
-the death of Thomas Greene in 1612. He seems to have built or acquired
-the Cockpit theatre, and to have successively housed there Queen
-Anne’s men (1617–19), Prince Charles’s men (1619–22), Lady Elizabeth’s
-men (1622–5), Queen Henrietta’s men (1625–37), and ‘the King’s and
-Queen’s young company’, also known as ‘Beeston’s boys’ (1637). By
-1639 he had been succeeded as ‘Governor’ of this company by his son
-William Beeston, and was doubtless dead. The Cockpit had passed by June
-1639 to ‘Mrs. Elizabeth Beeston, alias Hutcheson’.<a id="FNanchor_934" href="#Footnote_934" class="fnanchor">[934]</a> It appears
-from the lawsuit of 1623, in which Queen Anne’s men were concerned,
-that Christopher Beeston also bore the <i>alias</i> of Hutcheson or
-Hutchinson. But if Elizabeth was his widow, she must have been a second
-wife, for the records of the Middlesex justices for 1615–17 record
-several true bills for recusancy as brought against a wife Jane. In
-these records Beeston, whose <i>alias</i> is also given, is described
-as a gentleman or yeoman, and as ‘late of St. James-at-Clerkenwell’, or
-in one case ‘of Turmil streete’. In 1617 his house was burgled by Henry
-Baldwin and others.<a id="FNanchor_935" href="#Footnote_935" class="fnanchor">[935]</a> The registers of St. James’s, Clerkenwell,
-record the baptism of a daughter Anne on 15 September 1611, and the
-burial of a servant on 1 July 1615.<a id="FNanchor_936" href="#Footnote_936" class="fnanchor">[936]</a> But at an earlier date
-Beeston lived in St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, where his sons Augustine,
-Christopher, and Robert were baptized, and the first two buried between
-16 November 1604 and 15 July 1610. Robert also was buried there on 26
-December 1615, but Christopher was then described in the register as of
-Clerkenwell. Possibly he afterwards returned to Shoreditch, as Collier
-states that his name is traceable in the register up to 1637.<a id="FNanchor_937" href="#Footnote_937" class="fnanchor">[937]</a>
-His son William, also a suspected recusant, was living in Bishopsgate
-Without just before his death in 1682.<a id="FNanchor_938" href="#Footnote_938" class="fnanchor">[938]</a> An earlier William Beeston,
-with whom Christopher may have had some connexion, is the ‘Maister Apis
-Lapis’ and ‘Gentle M. William’, to whom Nashe addressed his <i>Strange
-Newes</i> (1592).<a id="FNanchor_939" href="#Footnote_939" class="fnanchor">[939]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">[303]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BEESTON, ROBERT. Anne’s, 1604, 1609.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BEESTON. A player at Barnstaple in 1560–1 (Murray, ii. 198).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BELT, T. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BENFIELD, ROBERT, is first named in the actor-lists of Beaumont and
-Fletcher’s <i>The Coxcomb</i> and <i>The Honest Man’s Fortune</i>,
-both of which probably represent performances by the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men in 1613. Subsequently he joined the King’s men, but at what date
-is uncertain. It may have been upon the death on 16 December 1614 of
-William Ostler, whom he succeeded in the part of Antonio in Webster’s
-<i>Duchess of Malfi</i>. He is in the actor-list of <i>The Knight of
-Malta</i> (1616–19) and in the patent of 1619. He seems to have been a
-member of the company to the end, as he signed the dedication of the
-Beaumont and Fletcher Folio in 1647. He is in the Folio list of actors
-in Shakespeare’s plays. Collier found some late records of his family
-(B. 181).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BENTLEY, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583. He is named by Heywood as before his
-time, lauded by Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (1592) (<i>Works</i>, i.
-215) with Tarlton, Alleyn, and Knell, coupled with Knell in the undated
-challenge to Alleyn (q.v.) to play one of their parts, and placed by
-Dekker in <i>A Knight’s Conjuring</i> (1607) in the company of the
-poets, Watson, Kyd, and Achelow, ‘tho he had ben a player molded out of
-their pennes, yet because he had been their louer and register to the
-muse, inimitable Bentley’. He may be the John Bentley whose poems are
-mentioned by Ritson, <i>Bibliographia Poetica</i> (1802), 129.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BIERDT, BURCHARD. Germany, 1612.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BILLINGESLY, JOHN. Payee for Westminster boys, 1572.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BIRCH, GEORGE. Interluders, 1538–59.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BIRCH, JOHN. Interluders, 1547–56.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BIRD, <i>alias</i> BORNE, WILLIAM. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s,
-1597; Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1622. Many personalia of
-his family and debts are recorded in Dulwich manuscripts and church
-registers (H. ii. 241; B. 204).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘BLACK DICK.’ Admiral’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BLACKWOOD, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1602–3; Germany, 1603–6(?). The
-conjecture of Fleay, i. 290, that an earlier German tour is referred to
-in <i>How to Choose a Good Wife from a Bad</i> (1602) is baseless (H.
-ii. 244).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BLANEY, JOHN. Revels, 1609; Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived near the Red Bull
-in St. John’s Street in 1623 (J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BLANK, WILLIAM ALEXANDER. A Scottish dancer in Germany, 1605.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BOONE, WILLIAM. A ‘player’ mentioned in books of St. Saviour’s,
-<i>c.</i> 1600 (Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi). Possibly an error for
-Borne.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BORNE, WILLIAM. <i>Vide</i> Birde.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BOWER, RICHARD. Master of Chapel, 1545–61, and possibly author of
-<i>Apius and Virginia</i> (1575); cf. ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BOWRINGE, GREGORY. Paul’s chorister, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BRADSHAW, RICHARD. Edward, Lord Dudley’s (provincial),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_304">[304]</span> 1595. He
-was Gabriel Spencer’s ‘man’ in 1598, and concerned in financial
-transactions with Henslowe during 1598–1601. He may be the same Richard
-Bradshaw who had a provincial company, with a licence to which his
-title was dubious, in 1630–33 (H. ii. 245; Murray, ii. 42, 106, 163).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BRADSTREET, JOHN. Germany, 1592–7, 1604. He <i>ob.</i> in 1618.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BRETTEN, WILLIAM. Chapel, &gt;1546.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BRISTOW, JAMES. Augusten’s boy, 1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602 (H. ii. 245).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROMEHAM. Paul’s, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE, EDWARD. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s, 1602. He was a witness
-for Henslowe in 1599 (H. ii. 246).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE, JOHN. Interluders, 1551–63.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE, JOHN. Revels (?), 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE, ROBERT. Worcester’s, 1583; Holland, 1590; Germany, 1592–3, 1594
-(?)-9; Derby’s, 1599–1601; Germany, 1601–7; Revels patentee, 1610;
-Germany, 1618–20. His wife and family died at Shoreditch in the plague
-of 1593, but a son Robert and daughter Elizabeth were baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 19 October 1595 and 2 December 1599. On 11 April 1612 he
-wrote to Alleyn from Clerkenwell (<i>H. P.</i>, 37, 63; B. 229; Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i>, xxvi).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE, WILLIAM. Anne’s, <i>c.</i> 1616.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BROWNE. It is not safe to identify the Browne whom Henslowe paid to
-‘feach’ for the Admiral’s in 1596 (H. i. 45), or the ‘old Browne’ who,
-as well as Edward, played in <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> for the Admiral’s in
-1602 (<i>H. P.</i> 148), or ‘Browne of the Boares head’ who, according
-to Alleyn’s wife on 21 Oct. 1603, ‘is dead &amp; dyed very pore, he went
-not into the countrye at all’ (<i>H. P.</i> 59). The last may be the
-man whose widow married Thomas Greene (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BRYAN, GEORGE, was one of the English company which visited Helsingör
-in Denmark and Dresden in Germany during 1586–7. He is one of the
-three actors distinguished as ‘Mr.’ in the plot of Tarlton’s <i>The
-Seven Deadly Sins</i> as played by Strange’s or the Admiral’s about
-1590–1, and is named in the Privy Council warrant for the travelling
-of Strange’s in 1593. He was payee for the Chamberlain’s men on 21
-December 1596, but is not in the <i>Every Man in his Humour</i>
-actor-list of 1598 or traceable at any later date amongst the
-Chamberlain’s or King’s men. Probably he left to take up duty as an
-ordinary Groom of the Chamber, as he is found holding this post at
-Elizabeth’s funeral in 1603 and still held it (<i>Chamber Accounts</i>)
-in 1611–13. His son George was baptized at St. Andrew’s Wardrobe on 17
-February 1600.<a id="FNanchor_940" href="#Footnote_940" class="fnanchor">[940]</a> He is in the Folio list of actors in Shakespeare’s
-plays.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BUCKE, PAUL. A ‘player’ whose d. Sara was buried on 23 July 1580 and
-his bastard son Paul buried on 23 July 1599 at St. Anne’s (B. 237). It
-is apparently his name which, for whatever reason, appears at the end
-of Wilson’s <i>Three Ladies of London</i> (1584). ‘Paule Bucke’s praier
-for Sir Humfrey Gilberte’ was entered in S. R. on 17 July 1578.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_305">[305]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BUGBY, JOHN. Grammar Master of Chapel, 1401.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BULL, JOHN. Chapel, 1572 (?)->1586.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BULL, THOMAS. Denmark, 1579–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BURBADGE, JAMES. The Shakespearo-centric tendencies of literary
-historians have led them to suggest a regional connexion between the
-dramatist and the family of his most famous interpreter.<a id="FNanchor_941" href="#Footnote_941" class="fnanchor">[941]</a> There
-was a Warwickshire family of Burbadge, of whom John was bailiff of
-Stratford-on-Avon in 1555, and Malone was thus led (<i>Var.</i> iii.
-187) to ‘suspect’ that James Burbadge was Shakespeare’s countryman.
-Collier (iii. 258) having learnt that the arms claimed by Cuthbert
-Burbadge at the London visitation of 1634, ‘crest, a boar’s head;
-and three boars’ heads on a shield’ (<i>Harleian Soc.</i> xv), were
-those of a Hertfordshire family, attempted the explanation that
-the two families ‘were in some way related’. He committed himself
-deeply by publishing in 1835 (<i>New Facts</i>, 32; cf. Ingleby,
-256) a forged letter from H. S. to Sir Thomas Egerton, containing
-the statement that Shakespeare and Richard Burbadge are ‘both of one
-countie, and indeede almost of one towne’. Burbadges are traceable in
-various parts of England, including Somerset, Oxfordshire, and Durham
-(Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 344; Stopes, 134, 243), and the conjecture
-has about as much value as Malone’s derivation of the name (<i>Var.</i>
-iii. 182) from ‘Borough-bridge’, or Chalmers’s from ‘Boar’s badge’.
-Nor is any connexion known between James Burbadge and various other
-Burbadges&mdash;Robert, John, and Edward&mdash;who appear in contemporary
-documents (Collier, iii. 282; Stopes, 152), although A. Wood (<i>Fasti
-Oxon.</i> i. 303) makes himself responsible for the statement that one
-John Burbadge, of Lincoln College, was nearly related to the actor.
-The name is indifferently spelt Burbadge, Burbage, or Burbege by
-contemporaries, but usually Burbadge in family signatures (Wallace, 61,
-63 ‘James Burbage’, 252; Collier, iii. 294; <i>Malone Soc. Coll.</i>
-ii. 69, 76). James sealed the Blackfriars indentures of 1596 with a
-griffin.</p>
-
-<p>James was about sixty on 16 February 1591 (Wallace, 61) and was
-therefore born in 1530–1. He was ‘by occupacion a joyner and reaping
-but a small lyving by the same, gave it over and became a commen player
-in playes’ (Wallace, 141). He was one of Leicester’s men in 1572, 1574,
-and 1576, and apparently continued a ‘fellow’ of this or some other
-company for a year or two after he established the Theatre in 1576
-(Wallace, 142). In this year he was a poor man, and of small credit,
-not worth above 100 marks (Wallace, 134, 141, 153), but he had enlisted
-the capital of John Brayne, whose sister Ellen he had married (Wallace,
-40, 139). His business history thereafter is bound up with that of the
-Theatre (q.v.) and of the Blackfriars, which he planned, but probably
-never used, during the last years of his life. Cuthbert Burbadge says
-of him (<i>Blackfriars Sharers Papers</i>, 1635)<span class="pagenum" id="Page_306">[306]</span> that he ‘was the
-first builder of playhowses, and was himselfe in his younger yeeres
-a player’. He was described as ‘joyner’ in the lease of the Theatre
-site in 1576, but in later years usually as ‘yeoman’ or ‘gentleman’.
-Presumably he went to live in Shoreditch in 1576, as entries for his
-family then begin in the registers of St. Leonard’s (Stopes, 139). They
-testify to the baptism (17 March 1576) of a daughter Alice, mentioned
-as Alice Walker in the will of Nicholas Tooley (q.v.) in 1623, and
-the burial (18 August 1582) of a daughter Joan. Another daughter,
-Helen, was buried at St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, on 15 December 1595
-(<i>Bodl.</i>). Besides Alice and Helen he had in 1588 (Wallace, 39)
-two sons, Cuthbert and Richard, who would both have been born before
-1576. James himself was buried at Shoreditch on 2 February 1597 and his
-widow on 8 May 1613. The registers generally give the family residence
-as ‘Halliwell Street’, and the ‘Halliwell’ which appears in 1597 and
-1601 is perhaps an accidental variant. But the lawsuits suggest that
-James had built himself a house in the old inner cloister yard of the
-priory, which lay a little north of Halliwell Street, if that is the
-same as Holywell Lane (Wallace, 232, 236). They also represent him as a
-man of violent temper and not over-honest, while an independent record
-(App. D, No. lxxiv) refers to him as ‘a stubburne fellow’. Before his
-death he seems to have made over his interest in the Blackfriars to his
-son Richard, while that in the Theatre had passed by redemption of a
-mortgage to Cuthbert (Wallace, 55, 73, 108, 145, 278).</p>
-
-<p>Cuthbert Burbadge, the elder son of James, was not an actor, although
-as holder of the leases of the Theatre and afterwards of the Globe
-(q.v.) he was concerned during the greater part of his life with
-theatrical management. On 16 February 1591 he was servant to Walter
-Cope, gentleman usher to Lord Burghley. He was then twenty-four, and
-must have been born in 1566–7. He was then probably living in the
-Strand (Stopes, 152), but the subsidy rolls for 1597 (Stopes, 195) show
-him as assessed at 10<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in Holywell Street, and the
-registers of St. Leonard’s have the records of his children, Walter
-(bapt. 22 June 1595), James (bur. 15 July 1597), and Elizabeth (bapt.
-30 December 1601). Of these only Elizabeth, the wife first of Amias
-Maxey and secondly of George Bingley, was alive in 1634 and her son
-Amias had been adopted by his grandfather. Cuthbert himself was buried
-at Shoreditch on 17 September 1636, and his widow Elizabeth, daughter
-of John Cox, on 1 October 1636 (Stopes, 134, 140). His friendship with
-members of the King’s company is commemorated by notices in the wills
-of William Sly (1608), Richard Cowley (1618), and Nicholas Tooley,
-who died in his house in 1623. Collier (iii. 285) identified him with
-Cuthbert Burby the stationer, but Burby was in fact the son of Edmund
-Burby of Beds., husbandman (Arber, ii. 127). Possibly, however, the
-families were related, since Burby’s name is given at least once in the
-Stationers’ Register (Arber, ii. 612) as ‘Burbidge’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BURBADGE, RICHARD, makes his first appearance, picturesquely enough,
-in the brawl at the Theatre which followed upon the Chancery<span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">[307]</span> Order
-of 13 November 1590, restoring a moiety of the profits of the house
-to the widow Brayne (cf. p. 392). John Alleyn deposed (Wallace, 101)
-that he ‘found the foresaid Ry. Burbage the yongest sone of the said
-James Burbage there, w<sup>t</sup> a broome staff in his hand, of whom when
-this deponente asked what sturre was there, he answered in laughing
-phrase hew they come for a moytie. But quod he (holding vppe the said
-broomes staff) I haue, I think, deliuered him a moytie with this &amp;
-sent them packing.’ Nicholas Bishop (Wallace, 98, 115), one of Mrs.
-Brayne’s agents, adds the confirmatory detail that ‘the said Ry.
-Burbage scornfully &amp; disdainfullye playing with this deponentes nose,
-sayd, that yf he delt in the matter, he wold beate him also, and did
-chalendge the field of him at that tyme’. Very possibly Richard was
-then playing with the Admiral’s men at the Theatre. His exact age
-is unknown, but he was younger than Cuthbert, born in 1566–7, and
-as Cuthbert, long after, spoke of the ‘35 yeeres paines, cost, and
-labour’ out of which his brother ‘made meanes to leave his wife and
-children some estate’ in 1619 (<i>Sharers Papers</i>), it may perhaps
-be inferred that his histrionic career began as early as 1584. The
-‘plot’ of <i>The Dead Man’s Fortune</i>, wherein the doubtful direction
-(cf. p. 125) ‘Burbage a messenger’ suggests that he played a minor
-part, may belong to a performance by the Admiral’s <i>c.</i> 1590.
-It is a little more difficult to suppose that at a date when the
-Queen’s men were still active the Admiral’s or Strange’s had already
-acquired Tarlton’s <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i>, in the ‘plot’ of which ‘R.
-Burbadg’ is cast for the important characters of Gorboduc and Terens.
-But perhaps it is even less probable that, after the breach of the
-Admiral’s with his father in 1591, he took part in the performances of
-the same play by the amalgamated Admiral’s and Strange’s men at the
-Rose in 1592. His name does not appear amongst those of the Strange’s
-men who were travelling in 1593. But when the amalgamation broke up,
-and the Chamberlain’s company was formed, with some of its elements
-as a nucleus, in 1594, he joined that company, and became a prominent
-member, often acting as its representative or payee, both before and
-after its metamorphosis into the King’s men, and to the end of his
-own life. His name is constant in its lists (cf. ch. xiii), and his
-personal relations with his fellows are reflected in the wills of
-Augustine Phillips in 1605, Shakespeare in 1616, and Nicholas Tooley,
-whose ‘master’ he had been, in 1623. It would appear that in the
-somewhat irregular disposition of James Burbadge’s theatrical interests
-the Blackfriars freehold fell primarily to Richard. The leases of 1608
-were made by him as lessor to his brother and other members of the
-King’s men’s syndicate as lessees. This, however, was doubtless a mere
-family arrangement, for Cuthbert spoke of the Blackfriars in 1635 as
-‘our inheritance’, and the two brothers shared in the supplementary
-transactions which rounded off the original purchase (cf. ch. xvii).
-At the Globe, on the other hand, Cuthbert and Richard held in common
-a moiety of the housekeepers’ interest under the lease from Nicholas
-Brend (cf. ch. xvi). They continued to live as close neighbours in
-Halliwell Street, Shoreditch, where they shared the misfortune of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">[308]</span>
-having their houses burgled in 1615 (Jeaffreson, ii. 108) and where the
-registers of St. Leonard’s (Stopes, 139) record Richard’s children:
-Richard (bur. 16 August 1607), Julia or Juliet (bapt. 2 January 1603,
-bur. 12 September 1608), Frances (bapt. 16 September and bur. 19
-September 1604), Anne (bapt. 8 August 1607), Winifred (bapt. 10 October
-1613, bur. 14 October 1616), a second Julia (bapt. 26 December 1614,
-bur. 15 August 1615), William (bapt. 6 November 1616), and a posthumous
-Sara (bapt. 5 August 1619, bur. 29 April 1625). ‘Richard Burbadge,
-player’ was himself buried on 16 March 1619. He had died, not as Camden
-records in his <i>Annals</i> on 9 March, but on 13 March, after making
-the day before a nuncupative will (Collier, iii. 293), witnessed by his
-brother and by Nicholas Tooley and Richard Robinson of the King’s men,
-in which he left his wife Winifred sole executrix. She subsequently
-married Richard Robinson, and was still alive, as was Burbadge’s son
-William, in 1635 (<i>Sharers Papers</i>). According to the gossip of
-the day he left ‘better than £300 land to his heirs’ (Collier, iii.
-297).</p>
-
-<p>Burbadge had a high reputation as a player, both in life and after
-death. A note of 13 March 1602 by John Manningham (<i>Diary</i>,
-39) records how his impersonation of Richard III touched the
-heart of a citizen’s wife, and how Shakespeare prevented him at a
-resultant assignation. John Davies of Hereford coupled him with
-Shakespeare in 1603 (<i>Microcosmos</i>) among players whom he loved
-‘for painting, poesie’, and in 1609 (<i>Civile Warres of Death and
-Fortune</i>) amongst those whom Fortune ‘guerdond not, to their
-desarts’. He is introduced <i>in propria persona</i> into <i>2 Return
-from Parnassus</i> (1602) and into Marston’s induction to <i>The
-Malcontent</i> (1604). Probably he is the ‘one man’ of the London stage
-with whom the player in <i>Ratseis Ghost</i> (1605; cf. ch. xviii)
-is advised ‘to play Hamlet for a wager’. Jonson, in <i>Bartholomew
-Fair</i> (1614), v. iii, makes Cokes ask the master of the puppets,
-‘which is your <i>Burbage</i> now?... your best <i>Actor</i>. Your
-<i>Field</i>?’ He was apparently the model for the <i>Character of an
-Actor</i> in the <i>Characters</i> of 1615 (App. C, No. lxi). And other
-evidences of his fame can be traced down to Restoration days in Richard
-Corbet’s <i>Iter Boreale</i>, in Sir Richard Baker’s <i>Chronicle</i>
-and <i>Theatrum Redivivum</i>, and in Richard Flecknoe’s <i>Short
-Discourse of the English Stage</i> and his <i>Euterpe Restored</i>
-(cf. Collier, iii. 279; Stopes, 121; <i>Shakespeare’s Centurie of
-Prayse</i>, N.S.S., 128, 250).</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after Burbadge’s death, on 20 May 1619, the Earl of Pembroke
-wrote to Lord Doncaster in Germany of a great supper given the same
-night by the Duke of Lennox to the French ambassador, and adds that
-the company were now at the play, ‘which I being tender-harted could
-not endure to see so soone after the loss of my old acquaintance
-Burbadg’ (E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1882), i. 103). Several
-epitaphs and elegies upon Burbadge are preserved. The shortest&mdash;‘Exit
-Burbadge’&mdash;was printed in Camden’s <i>Remaines</i> (1674), 541. Another
-is by Middleton (Collier, iii. 280, 296). A third, which begins</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Some skillfull limner helpe mee, yf not soe,</div>
- <div>Some sad tragedian, to expresse my woe,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">[309]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">has been the subject of much controversy (cf.
-Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 88; C. M. Ingleby, <i>The Elegy on
-Burbadge</i>, in <i>Shakespeare, the Man and the Book</i>, ii. 169). It
-exists in two versions, one of 86 lines, the other of 124 lines. Of the
-shorter version several undoubtedly genuine manuscripts are known, and
-it is probably only by accident that one of these omits ll. 2–5 of the
-following passage, which is given completely by all the rest:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Hee’s gone &amp; with him what a world are dead,</div>
- <div>Which he reuiud, to be reuiued soe.</div>
- <div>No more young Hamlett, ould Heironymoe.</div>
- <div>Kind Leer, the greued Moore, and more beside,</div>
- <div>That liued in him, haue now for ever dy’de.</div>
- <div>Oft haue I seene him leap into the graue,</div>
- <div>Suiting the person which he seem’d to haue</div>
- <div>Of a sadd louer with soe true an eye,</div>
- <div>That theer I would haue sworne, he meant to dye.</div>
- <div>Oft haue I seene him play this part in ieast,</div>
- <div>Soe liuely, that spectators, and the rest</div>
- <div>Of his sad crew, whilst he but seem’d to bleed,</div>
- <div>Amazed, thought euen then hee dyed in deed.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In the longer version ll. 2–5 are not only omitted, but
-are replaced by an interpolation of many lines, detailing a number
-of parts, some of which belonged to other companies than the King’s,
-and are not likely to have been played by Burbadge. No manuscript of
-this version is forthcoming, and there can be little doubt that the
-interpolation is due to Collier, who referred to the version in his
-<i>New Particulars</i> (1836), 27, and published it in his <i>Memoirs
-of the Actors</i> (1846), 52, professedly from a manuscript in the
-possession of Richard Heber. Of the shorter version I can add to what
-has been recorded by others that in <i>Stowe MS.</i> 962, f. 62<sup>v</sup>, I
-have found a copy of it, with the title ‘An Elegie on the death of
-the famous actor Rich: Burbage, who died 13 Martij A<sup>o</sup>. 1618’, and
-an ascription to ‘Jo ffletcher’. Other copies also give the date of
-Burbadge’s death, or refer, as do the opening lines themselves, to
-the fact that he was skilled not only as an actor but as a limner.
-John Davies testifies to this in the verses of 1603 already cited. The
-accounts of the Earl of Rutland for the birthday tilt of 1613 contain
-the entry, ‘31 Martij, To M<sup>r</sup>. Shakspeare in gold, about my Lordes
-impreso, 44<sup>s</sup>. To Richard Burbage for paynting and makyng yt, in gold,
-44<sup>s</sup>’; and those for the tilt of 1616, ‘25 Martij, 1616, paid given
-Richard Burbidg for my Lordes shelde and for the embleance, 4<sup>li</sup>
-18<sup>s</sup>’ (<i>H. M. C. Rutland MSS.</i> iv. 494, 508). The gallery at
-Dulwich contains a picture presented by William Cartwright, which is
-described in his catalogue as ‘a womans head on a boord done by M<sup>r</sup>.
-Burbige y<sup>e</sup> actor’. The inveterate tendency of mankind to guess has led
-to suggestions that he may have painted the portrait of himself in the
-same gallery, the Chandos portrait of Shakespeare, or the original of
-the Droeshout print.</p>
-
-<p>One other record of Burbadge, apart from his company, may be noted. On
-31 May 1610 he was employed by the City, with his fellow James Rice,
-to deliver a speech to Prince Henry at a water-pageant on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">[310]</span> the Thames
-(cf. ch. iv). Presumably he represented Amphion, ‘a grave and judicious
-Prophet-like personage’, and Rice Corinea.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">BURGES, ROBERT. A ‘player’ buried at St. Bennet’s, Gracechurch, 14
-April 1559 (B. 251).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CANDLER, JAMES. Leader of a company at Ipswich, 1569–70 (<i>Hist.
-MSS.</i> ix. 1. 248).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CARIE (GARY), GILES. Revels, 1609; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1613.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CARLETON, NICHOLAS. Paul’s, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CARPENTER, WILLIAM. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611; Charles’s, 1619, 1625. He
-was apparently porter at the Marshalsea in 1623 (J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CARTWRIGHT, WILLIAM. Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1598–1622 (H. ii. 247). He
-lived at the upper end of White Cross Street in 1623 (J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CASTLE, THOMAS. A ‘player’, whose son Nicholas and daughter Hester were
-baptized at St. Giles’s on 9 October 1608 and 15 April 1610 (B. 262).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CATTANES. Worcester’s, 1602 (H. ii. 248).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CAVALLERIZZO, CLAUDIO. Italians, 1576 (?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CHAPPELL, JOHN. Chapel, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CHESSON, THOMAS. Oxford’s (?), 1580.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLARK, SILL. Prince’s, 1603&lt; &gt;1641.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLARKE, ROBERT. A ‘player’ whose son Ezekiel was buried at St. Giles’s,
-7 November 1617 (B. 268).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLARKE, THOMAS. Leicester’s, 1572.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLAY, NATHANIEL. Anne’s, 1618; Chamber of Bristol, 1618.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLEMENT, WILLIAM. London player, 1550 (App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CLIFTON, THOMAS. Kidnapped for Chapel, 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COBORNE, EDWARD. A ‘player’ whose son John was baptized at St. Giles’s
-on 23 Nov. 1616. Of other family entries, 1613–25, some are for
-Edward Coborne ‘gentleman’ (<i>Bodl.</i>). He may be identical with
-<span class="smcap">Colbrand</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COKE, RICHARD. Interluders, 1547–56.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COLBRAND, EDWARD. Palsgrave’s, 1610–13.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COLE. Paul’s, 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COLMAN, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CONDELL, HENRY, has been conjectured to be the ‘Harry’ cast for Ferrex
-and a Lord in the ‘plot’ of <i>The Seven Deadly Sins</i>, as played
-by Strange’s or the Admiral’s about 1590–1. The first definite notice
-of him is in the cast of Jonson’s <i>Every Man in his Humour</i>, as
-played by the Chamberlain’s men in 1598. Thereafter he appears in all
-formal lists of the Chamberlain’s and King’s men, up to the Caroline
-patent of 1625, including the list in the First Folio of 1623, of
-which, with Heminges, he acted as editor. He is also in all the
-casts up to <i>The Humourous Lieutenant</i> (<i>c.</i> 1619). About
-this date he presumably ceased to play; his part of the Cardinal in
-<i>The Duchess of Malfi</i> had passed to Richard Robinson by 1623.
-The fact that he took this part somewhat discredits the conjecture of
-John Roberts (<i>Answer to Pope</i>, 1729) that he was a comedian;
-nor can the statement of the same writer that he was a printer be
-verified. He is staged with other members of the company in Marston’s
-<i>Malcontent</i> (1604), and appears<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">[311]</span> as ‘Henry Condye’ in the verses
-on the burning of the Globe in 1613. He is assigned 26<i>s.</i>
-8<i>d.</i> to buy a ring as Shakespeare’s ‘fellowe’ in his will of
-1616, and appears also as a legatee in the will of Augustine Phillips
-in 1605, as trustee in that of Alexander Cooke in 1614, as executor
-and joint residuary legatee in that of Nicholas Tooley in 1623, under
-which also his wife and his daughter Elizabeth receive legacies,
-and as executor in that of John Underwood in 1625. By 1599 he was
-married and apparently settled in St. Mary Aldermanbury, where he held
-various parochial offices during 1606–21, and the register records his
-children: Elizabeth (bapt. 27 February 1599, bur. 11 April 1599), Anne
-(bapt. 4 April 1601, bur. 16 July 1610), Richard (bapt. 18 April 1602),
-Elizabeth (bapt. 14 April 1603, bur. 22 April 1603), Elizabeth (bapt.
-26 October 1606), Mary (bapt. 30 January 1608, bur. from Hoxton at St.
-Leonard’s, Shoreditch, 24 March 1608), Henry (bapt. 6 May 1610, bur.
-4 March 1630), William (bapt. 26 May 1611), Edward (bapt. 22 August
-1614, bur. 23 August 1614).<a id="FNanchor_942" href="#Footnote_942" class="fnanchor">[942]</a> Subsequently he had a ‘country house’
-at Fulham, at which on 10 September 1625 a pamphlet written by certain
-players on their travels during the plague, as a reply to Dekker’s
-<i>A Rod for Run-awayes</i>, under the title of <i>The Run-awayes
-Answer</i>, was addressed to him, with an expression of gratitude for
-a ‘free and noble farewell’ which he had given the writers. At Fulham,
-too, on 13 December 1627, he made his will, leaving to his widow
-Elizabeth, his sons Henry and William, and his daughter Elizabeth,
-wife of Herbert Finch, much household property at Aldermanbury and
-elsewhere in London, including ‘rents and profits’ by ‘leases and
-terms of years’ of ‘messuages houses and places’ in Blackfriars and on
-the Bankside, which were to pass for a time to William and ultimately
-to the widow.<a id="FNanchor_943" href="#Footnote_943" class="fnanchor">[943]</a> Condell had not been an original sharer in the
-house of the Globe, but by 1612 had acquired an interest jointly with
-Heminges; of the Blackfriars house he was an original sharer in 1608.
-<i>The Sharers Papers</i> of 1635 indicate that Mrs. Condell had held
-four-sixteenths of the Globe and one-eighth of the Blackfriars, but
-had transferred two-sixteenths of the Globe when Taylor and Lowin were
-admitted as sharers. A minor legacy in Condell’s will is to his old
-servant, Elizabeth Wheaton, of her ‘place or priviledge’ in the Globe
-and Blackfriars. Heminges and Cuthbert Burbadge are named as overseers.
-Condell was buried on 29 December 1627, and his widow on 3 October
-1635, both at St. Mary Aldermanbury.<a id="FNanchor_944" href="#Footnote_944" class="fnanchor">[944]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COOKE, ALEXANDER, has been conjectured to be the ‘Sander’ who is cast
-in the ‘plot’ of <i>The Seven Deadly Sins</i> as played by Strange’s
-or the Admiral’s about 1590–1, for the parts of Videna in <i>Envy</i>
-and Progne in <i>Lechery</i>. But, as far as this goes, he might just
-as well be the ‘San.’ who took the part of a player in <i>Taming
-of a Shrew</i> (1594), ind. 1, which was a Pembroke’s play. Malone
-‘presumes’, with some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">[312]</span> rashness, that he performed ‘all the principal
-female characters’ in Shakespeare’s plays.<a id="FNanchor_945" href="#Footnote_945" class="fnanchor">[945]</a> It must be doubtful
-whether he was on the stage as early as 1592. He is traceable as
-a member of the King’s men in the casts of <i>Sejanus</i> (1603),
-<i>Volpone</i> (1605), <i>Alchemist</i> (1610), <i>Catiline</i> (1611),
-and <i>The Captain</i> (1612–13). The fact that in the first two
-of these his name occurs at the end of the lists has been somewhat
-hazardously accepted as an indication that he played women’s parts. He
-is also in the First Folio list of performers in Shakespeare’s plays.
-Augustine Phillips left him a legacy as his ‘fellow’ in 1605.</p>
-
-<p>‘Mr. Cooke and his wife’ commend themselves to Alleyn in his wife’s
-letter of 21 October 1603.<a id="FNanchor_946" href="#Footnote_946" class="fnanchor">[946]</a> The token-books of St. Saviour’s,
-Southwark, show an Alexander Cooke in Hill’s Rents during 1604, 1607,
-1609, and 1610; and the parish register, recording the baptism of
-Francis Cooke, son of Alexander, ‘a player’, on 27 October 1605, makes
-an identification possible. There were three more children, Rebecca
-(bapt. 11 October 1607), Alice (bapt. 3 November 1611), Alexander
-(bapt. 20 March 1614). This last was posthumous; the register records
-Alexander Cooke’s burial on 25 February 1614.<a id="FNanchor_947" href="#Footnote_947" class="fnanchor">[947]</a> His will, dated
-3 January 1614, leaves £50 each to Francis, Rebecca, and the unborn
-child, and the residue to his wife.<a id="FNanchor_948" href="#Footnote_948" class="fnanchor">[948]</a> He owned £50 ‘which is in the
-hand of my fellowes, as my share of the stock’. He appoints ‘my master
-Hemings’, to whom he had presumably been apprenticed, and Condell
-trustees for his children, and mentions brothers Ellis and John, of
-whom the latter is conjectured by Collier to be the author of Greene’s
-<i>Tu Quoque</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COOKE, EDWARD. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COOKE, LIONEL. Queen’s, 1583, 1588.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COOKE, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1583.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COOKE, WILLIAM. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CORNISH, JOHN. Gentleman of Chapel, and pageant-master at wedding of
-Arthur in 1501.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CORNISH, KIT. A ‘ghost-name’ in Chapel records.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CORNISH, WILLIAM. Master of Song School, Westminster, 1479–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CORNISH, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1509–23. Conceivably identical with
-the last, and in any case probably of the same family.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">COWLEY, RICHARD, was of Strange’s men in 1593. He had played minor
-parts with that company or the Admiral’s in <i>The Seven Deadly
-Sins</i> of 1590–1, and is mentioned in Alleyn’s correspondence as
-travelling with the company. He joined the Chamberlain’s men, probably
-on their formation in 1594, and was payee for the company in 1601. The
-stage-directions to the Quarto (1600) and Folio texts of <i>Much Ado
-about Nothing</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV</span>. ii, show that he played Verges. He is
-in the 1603 and 1604 lists of the King’s men, and received a legacy
-from Augustine Phillips as his ‘fellow’ in 1605, but does not appear
-to have been a sharer in the houses of the Globe or Blackfriars. He is
-in the Folio list of performers in Shakespeare’s plays. He dwelt in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">[313]</span>
-Holywell, or for a short period in Alleyn’s Rents, both in the parish
-of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, whose register records his children,
-Robert (bapt. 8 March 1596, bur. (?) 20 March 1597), Cuthbert (bapt.
-8 May 1597), Richard (bapt. 29 April 1598, bur. 26 February 1603),
-Elizabeth (bapt. 2 February 1602), as well as the funeral of his wife
-Elizabeth on 28 September 1616, and his own on 12 March 1619.<a id="FNanchor_949" href="#Footnote_949" class="fnanchor">[949]</a> His
-will, dated on 13 January 1618, appoints his daughter Elizabeth Birch
-executrix and is witnessed by Heminges, Cuthbert Burbadge, Shank, and
-Thomas Ravenscroft, perhaps the madrigalist.<a id="FNanchor_950" href="#Footnote_950" class="fnanchor">[950]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CRANE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CRANE, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1523–45.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CROSSE, SAMUEL, is named amongst the performers of Shakespeare’s plays
-in the First Folio, but in no list of the Chamberlain’s or King’s men.
-Probably, therefore, he belongs to the very beginning of Shakespeare’s
-career, and is to be identified with the Crosse named by Heywood
-amongst famous actors of a generation before his time.<a id="FNanchor_951" href="#Footnote_951" class="fnanchor">[951]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CUMBER, JOHN. Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived in Aldermanbury in 1623, and
-died in that year (J. 347; Fleay, 279).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CURTEYS, JAMES. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">CUTLER, JAMES. Chapel, &gt; 1605.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DABORNE, ROBERT. Revels patentee, 1610, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DANIEL, JOHN. Chamber of Bristol patentee, 1615–17.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DANIEL, SAMUEL. Allower of Revels’ plays, 1604, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DARLOWE. Admiral’s, &gt;1590.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DAVIES, HUGH. Admiral’s (?), 1601 (H. ii. 255).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DAWES, ROBERT. Duke of York’s, 1610; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1614.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DAY, JOHN. Admiral’s (?), <i>c.</i> 1600. John, son of John Day,
-‘player’, was baptized at St. Saviour’s, 3 June 1604 (B. 308; cf. ch.
-xxiii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DAY, THOMAS. Chapel, 1601, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DOB. Admiral’s, 1598–1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DOWNTON (DOWTON, DOUTON (?), DOWTEN, DOWGHTON, DENYGTEN, DOUBTON),
-THOMAS. Strange’s, 1593; Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1594–<i>c.</i>
-1618. The St. Saviour’s registers record various family events,
-including the baptism of Christopher, son of Thomas Dowton ‘musycyon’
-on 27 December 1592 and that of Thomas Dowton ‘baseborne, the supposed
-son of Thomas Dowton, a player’, 25 May 1600. He apparently married a
-vintner’s widow on 15 February 1618, became a vintner, and was still
-alive on 18 August 1622 (B. 316; H. ii. 262, 265). Dr. Greg regards him
-as one of the Dutton family.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DRAKE, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DRAYTON, MICHAEL. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DREWE, BARTHOLOMEW. A ‘player’, whose son George was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 12 November 1614 (B. 314).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DREWE, THOMAS. Anne’s, 1616–19.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DROM, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1601.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">[314]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DRUSIANO. <i>Vide</i> <span class="smcap">Martinelli</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DUKE, JOHN. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Chamberlain’s, 1598;
-Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–9. Four children were baptized at St.
-Leonard’s, where he lived in Holywell Street, from July 1604 to January
-1609 (H. ii. 265; Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xxxi).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DULANDT (DOWLAND?), ROBERT. Musician in Germany, 1623.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DUTTON, EDWARD. Admiral’s, 1597, with a boy ‘Dick’. Children of his
-were baptized at St. Saviour’s during 1600–2 (B. 326).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DUTTON, JOHN. Warwick’s, 1575–6; Oxford’s, 1580; Queen’s, 1583,
-1588–91. Lincoln’s Inn paid him for musicians in 1567–8 (Walker, i.
-362). There are family records of a John Dutton at St. Botolph’s, who
-is called ‘player’ in the entry of a daughter Elizabeth’s baptism of 3
-July 1586 (B. 328).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">DUTTON, LAURENCE. Lane’s, 1571–2; Clinton’s, 1572–5; Warwick’s, 1575–6;
-Oxford’s, 1580; Queen’s, 1589–91. It is curious that a John and a
-Laurence Dutton also appear as Court Messengers. I find a payment on
-23 May 1578 to John for carrying letters to Antwerp (<i>Pipe Office,
-Chamber Declared Account</i> 541, m. 211<sup>v</sup>), and Laurence was paid for
-‘sondry jorneys’ in 1561–2 (ibid. m. 39) and was during 1576–82 one
-of the regular Messengers of the Chamber in attendance on the Privy
-Council (Dasent, ix. 223, x. 223, 228, xi. 437, xii. 23, xiii. 135,
-392, etc.). The ‘Edward’ Dutton of the last entry may be an error. In
-1592 the Council (xxii. 493) recommended John the son of Laurence who
-had ‘of long tyme served her Majestie’ as Messenger, for admission as
-a Queen’s Scholar at Westminster. But this Laurence can hardly have
-been the actor, for he was acting as Messenger on 20 May 1580, while
-the affray for which Laurence the actor had been committed to the
-Marshalsea on 13 April was still uninquired into. Somewhat earlier a
-Thomas Dutton was employed as a post between Edward VI’s Council and
-Thomas Gresham in Antwerp, and was Gresham’s agent in Hamburg, c.
-1571 (Burgon, <i>Gresham</i>, i. 109; ii. 421). It is easier again to
-conjecture than to prove a connexion between the actors and the house
-of Dutton, which had a hereditary jurisdiction over minstrelsy in
-Cheshire (cf. ch. ix), although in this the names John and Laurence
-both appear. It is perhaps an accident that two of the recorded
-visits of the Queen’s men to Lord Derby’s northern seats in 1588–90
-synchronize with visits by a Mr. Dutton (Murray, ii. 296).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ECCLESTONE, WILLIAM, appears as a King’s man in the casts of <i>The
-Alchemist</i> (1610) and <i>Catiline</i> (1611). Mr. Fleay’s statement
-that he joined the company from the Queen’s Revels in 1609 rests upon
-a confusion with Field.<a id="FNanchor_952" href="#Footnote_952" class="fnanchor">[952]</a> In 1611 he became a member of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, but left them in 1613 after playing in <i>The Honest
-Man’s Fortune</i> during that year. He returned to the King’s, and his
-name is found in the official lists of the company for 1619 and 1621
-and in most of the casts of their plays, from <i>Bonduca</i> in 1613–14
-to <i>The Spanish Curate</i> in 1622, as well as in the First Folio
-list of performers in Shakespeare’s plays. Nicholas Tooley forgave him
-a debt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">[315]</span> in his will of 3 June 1623. As he is not in the Caroline patent
-of 1625, he had probably died or retired by that date. He may be the
-W. E. who writes commendatory verses to <i>The Wild-goose Chase</i>
-in 1652. If he is also the ‘William Eglestone’ whose marriage to Anne
-Jacob is recorded in the register of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 20
-February 1603, he lived to be an old man.<a id="FNanchor_953" href="#Footnote_953" class="fnanchor">[953]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EDMONDS, JOHN. Globe lessee, 1612; Chamber of Bristol, 1618–19. The
-St. Saviour’s registers record the marriage of a John Edmonds to
-Margaret Goodyere on 22 February 1600 and the baptism of children of
-John Edmonds, ‘player’, from 6 January 1605 to 17 July 1615 (B. 334).
-Probably the two are not identical and the player is the John Edmans
-who seems to have married his fellow-legatee, Mary Clarke, of the will
-of Thomas Pope (q.v.) in 1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EDWARDES, RICHARD. Master of Chapel, 1561–6, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EICHELIN. Germany, 1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ELDERTON, WILLIAM. One Elderton, dressed as a fool, played the part of
-one of the Lord of Misrule’s sons in George Ferrers’s Christmas revel
-of 1552–3 (Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 120; cf. <i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, i. 407). Conjecture may identify him with the Elderton
-who brought the Eton boys to Court on 6 January 1573 and the William
-Elderton who brought the Westminster boys on 1 January 1574, and with
-the rhyming William Elderton, some of whose ballads are preserved and
-reprinted in Collier, <i>Old Ballads from Early Printed Copies</i>
-(1842, <i>Percy Soc.</i>), 25, 45; H. Huth, <i>Ancient Ballads and
-Broadsides</i> (1867, <i>Philobiblon Soc.</i>); and H. L. Collman,
-<i>Ballads and Broadsides</i> (1912, <i>Roxburghe Club</i>); or
-recorded, with ballads against him, in the Stationers’ Register (Arber,
-i. 179, 180, 181, 199, 384, 403, 439; ii. 338, 363, 369, 388, 396,
-399; cf. v. lxxvi), while his ‘ale-crammed nose’ and ‘rymes lying a
-steepe in ale’ are subject for much humour among the pamphleteers
-(Lyly, iii. 398; Nashe, i. 197, 256, 280; iii. 123, 133, 177, 354).
-Stowe (<i>Survey</i>, i. 272) makes him an attorney in the sheriff’s
-courts at the Guildhall about 1568, but he can hardly be the ‘master
-Elderton’ who sat as a justice at the Guildhall in a coining case of
-1562 (Machyn, 290). He appears to have been dead by 1592 (Harvey, i.
-163; Nashe, i. 280). A recent paper on Elderton by H. E. Rollins is in
-<i>S. P.</i> xvii (1920), 199.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ENGLISH, JOHN. Interluders, 1494–1531.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EVANS, HENRY. Blackfriars lessee, 1583, 1600–8; payee for Oxford’s,
-1584; manager of Chapel, 1600–3. He was a scrivener, and overseer to
-the will of Sebastian Westcott, Master of Paul’s, in 1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EVANS, THOMAS. Blackfriars lessee, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">EVESEED, HENRY. Chapel, &gt;1585.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FARNABY, RICHARD. Musician in Germany, 1623.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FARRANT, RICHARD. Master of Children of Windsor, 1564–80; Acting Master
-of Chapel and Blackfriars lessee, 1576–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FERRABOSCO, ALFONSO. Italians, 1576, and Court musician (cf. ch. ii).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">[316]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FETHERSTON, WILLIAM. Of Danby, Yorks., unlicensed player, 1612 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FIDGE, WILLIAM. H. R. Plomer (3 <i>Library</i>, ix. 252) cites from a
-Canterbury record of 1571, ‘William Fidge and Whetstone owe the said
-[Robert] Bettes [a painter] for their portions in buying of certen
-playebookes 35<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>’</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FIELD, NATHAN, was the son of John Field, preacher and castigator of
-the stage (cf. App. C, No. xxxi), and was baptized at St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, on 17 October 1587 (Collier, iii. 425). His name is
-always spelt Nathan in formal contemporary documents, although he was
-familiarly known as Nat or Nid. But he appears in many reputable modern
-works of learning as Nathaniel. This error perhaps originated with the
-compilers of the 1679 Folio of Beaumont and Fletcher, who in four out
-of the six actor-lists in which his name is found used the form Nathan
-and in two (<i>Loyal Subject</i> and <i>Mad Lover</i>) Nathanael. It
-was certainly encouraged by a muddle of Collier, who finding in the
-Cripplegate registers that another son of John Field had been baptized
-Nathaniel on 13 June 1581, and not realizing that a cranky theological
-father might quite well use the names as distinct, thought it necessary
-to assume that this Nathaniel had died before 1587. As a matter of
-fact, he survived, was apprenticed to a stationer at Michaelmas 1596,
-took up his freedom on 3 June 1611, and between 1624 and 1627 published
-some books, including two sermons by a third brother, Theophilus
-Field, Bishop of Llandaff (McKerrow, <i>Dict.</i> 101). I need hardly
-linger over the suggestion that Nathan Field lived a double life as
-actor and bookseller. At this time of the apprenticeship he was not
-yet nine years old, and he was still a scholar of St. Paul’s Grammar
-School when, not earlier than 1600, he was impressed by Nathaniel
-Giles and his deputies to serve as one of the Children of the Chapel
-(<i>Clifton v. Robinson</i> in Fleay, 128). His education was not
-entirely interrupted, for he fell into the hands of Ben Jonson, who
-told Drummond in 1619 that ‘Nid Field was his schollar, and he had read
-to him the Satyres of Horace, and some Epigrames of Martiall’ (Laing,
-11). Field remained a member of the Chapel and the Queen’s Revels
-throughout the vicissitudes of the company from 1600 to 1613. He is in
-the actor-lists of <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> (1600), <i>The Poetaster</i>
-(1601), and <i>Epicoene</i> (1609), and presumably played Humfrey in
-<i>K. B. P.</i> (1607).<a id="FNanchor_954" href="#Footnote_954" class="fnanchor">[954]</a> With his fellows he became absorbed into
-the Lady Elizabeth’s in March 1613, contracted with Henslowe and Meade
-on behalf of this company (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 23), acted as their
-payee in 1615, and appears in the actor-lists of <i>The Coxcomb</i>,
-<i>The Honest Man’s Fortune</i>, and <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614), in
-the text of which Jonson compliments him (v. 3) as follows:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Cokes.</i> Which is your <i>Burbage</i> now?</div>
- <div class="ph"><i>Lanterne.</i> What meane you by that, Sir?</div>
- <div class="ph"><i>Cokes.</i> Your best Actor. Your <i>Field</i>?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">He seems to have been suspected by the company of
-taking bribes from Henslowe to connive at transactions contrary to
-their interest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">[317]</span> (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 88). Certainly he was in
-financial straits and on more than one occasion appealed to Henslowe
-to secure his release from an arrest (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 66, 67).
-Perhaps it was as a result of this friction with his fellows that
-he abandoned their amalgamation with Prince Charles’s men in 1615.
-Instead he joined, at or about this date, the King’s men, and appears
-as one in the actor-lists of <i>The Loyal Subject</i>, <i>The Knight
-of Malta</i>, <i>The Queen of Corinth</i>, and <i>The Mad Lover</i>.
-It must, I think, have been by a slip that Cuthbert Burbadge, in the
-<i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635, spoke of him as joining the King’s
-with Ostler and Underwood in 1608 or 1609. It seems probable that
-Field brought with him to the King’s a share of the plays which had
-formed the repertory of the joint Lady Elizabeth’s and Queen’s Revels,
-including Chapman’s <i>Bussy D’Ambois</i>, in which a King’s prologue
-vaunts his success as Bussy. He did not stay with the company very
-long, for though he is in the patent of 27 March and the livery list of
-19 May 1619, he is replaced by John Rice in the livery list of 7 April
-1621. And as he does not appear and Rice does appear amongst the actors
-named in the stage-directions to <i>Sir John von Olden Barnevelt</i>
-in August 1619, it is probable that he had left in the course of the
-summer (<i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 395). If so, his departure synchronizes
-with a scandal which attached itself to his name. His moral character
-was hardly becoming to the son of a preacher. More than one manuscript
-commonplace book (e. g. <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 47, f. 49, which appears
-from the spelling of the name to be a late copy) contains an epigram
-with some such heading as <i>On Nathaniell Feild suspected for too
-much familiarity with his M<sup>ris</sup> Lady May</i>. And on 5 June 1619
-Sir William Trumbull wrote from Brussels to Lord Hay (E. J. L. Scott
-in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1882), i. 103) that he was told that the Earl of
-Argyll had paid for the nursing of a child, ‘which the world sayes is
-daughter to my lady and N. Feild the Player’. Lady Argyll was Anne,
-daughter of Sir William Cornwallis of Brome. Field’s later life is
-obscure. There is an unimportant jest about him in John Taylor’s <i>Wit
-and Mirth</i> (1629). He was married to a wife Anne, and had children
-baptized and buried at St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, during 1619–25. If
-another epigram, printed by Collier, iii. 437, can be trusted, he very
-properly suffered from jealousy. In relevant register entries the
-name is given as Nathan. The Blackfriars registers give children both
-of Nathan and of Nathaniel Field, and on 20 February 1633 occurs the
-burial of Nathaniel Field, whom, if the entry does not indicate that
-the confusion of persons had already begun, we are bound to take to be
-the bookseller. There is no reason why both brothers should not have
-resided in Blackfriars.</p>
-
-<p>Field was dramatist, as well as actor. In addition to the two plays
-published under his single name, he collaborated with Massinger in
-<i>The Fatal Dowry</i>, which was a King’s play and not likely,
-therefore, to fall outside the dates 1616–19. And as the Henslowe
-correspondence (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 65, 84) show him as
-collaborating also with Fletcher, Massinger, and Daborne for the Lady
-Elizabeth’s, he has been conjectured as a possible sharer in the
-authorship of several of the plays of the Beaumont and Fletcher series.
-He also, about the time of his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">[318]</span> joining the King’s, wrote a defence of
-the stage, in the form of a remonstrance to Mr. Sutton, a preacher of
-St. Mary Overies (App. C, No. lxiii). A portrait of Field is at Dulwich.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FLETCHER, LAWRENCE. Scotland, 1595, 1599, 1601; Admiral’s (?), 1596;
-King’s, 1603. Although included as a King’s man in the royal patent,
-there is no reason to suppose that Fletcher ever joined the company
-acting at the Globe; the absence of his name from the actor-list in the
-Shakespeare F<sub>1</sub> of 1623 is strong evidence that he did not. He lived
-in St. Saviour’s, where he had a homonym, a victualler, who survived
-him. One of the two is shown by the token-books as housed in Hunt’s
-Rents, Maid Lane, during 1605–7; probably this was the actor, who was
-buried on 12 September 1608. The description ‘Lawrence Fletcher, a man:
-in the church’ of the register is amplified in a fee-book to ‘Lawrence
-Fletcher, a player, the King’s servant, buried in the church, with an
-afternoon’s knell of the great bell, 20s.’ (Collier, <i>Memoirs of the
-Actors</i><sup>1</sup>, x; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FLOWER. Admiral’s (?), <i>c.</i> 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FOSTER, ALEXANDER. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1618; Charles’s, 1616.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FREYERBOTT, BARTHOLOMEUS. Germany, 1615.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FRITH, MOLL. It appears to be suggested in the Epilogue to <i>The
-Roaring Girl</i> (cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Dekker) that this lady was to
-appear in person on the Fortune stage, <i>c.</i> 1610.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">FROST, JOHN. Chapel, 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GARLAND, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588; Lennox’s, 1605; Duke of York’s,
-1610. He appears to have dwelt in 1605 at ‘the ould forde’ (H. ii. 267).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GARLICK. In I. H., <i>This World’s Folly</i> (1615), an actor of this
-name is apparently said to have personated himself on the Fortune
-stage, ‘behung with chaynes of Garlicke’ (App. C, No. lix); cf. Dekker,
-<i>If This be not a Good Play</i> (1610–12), sc. x (ed. Pearson, iii.
-325), ‘Fortune fauours no body but Garlicke, nor Garlike neither now,
-yet she has strong reason to loue it; for tho Garlicke made her smell
-abhominably in the nostrills of the gallants, yet she had smelt and
-stuncke worse but for garlike’; H. Parrot, <i>Laquei Ridiculosi</i>
-(1613), Epig. 131, ‘<i>Greene’s Tu Quoque</i> and those Garlicke Jigs’;
-in Tailor, <i>Hog Hath Lost his Pearl</i> (1614, ed. Dodsley<sup>4</sup>, p.
-434), a jig will draw more whores ‘than e’er Garlic had’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GARRET, JOHN. Anne’s, 1619.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GEDION. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘GERRY.’ King’s Revels, 1607.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GEW. A blind player, referred to in <i>1 Ant. Mellida</i> (1599), ind.
-142, ‘’t had been a right part for Proteus or Gew. Ho! blind Gew would
-ha’ done ’t rarely, rarely’; E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i> (1598),
-<i>Sat.</i> v, ‘One that for ape tricks can put Gue to schoole’, and
-<i>Epig.</i> xi, ‘Gue, hang thy selfe for woe, since gentlemen Are now
-grown cunning in thy apishness’; Jonson, <i>Epig.</i> cxxix, ‘Thou dost
-out-zany Cokely, Pod; nay, Gue.’ Pod was a puppet-showman.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GIBBS. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">[319]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GIBSON, RICHARD. Interluders, 1494–1508; afterwards Yeoman of the
-Revels.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GILBURNE, SAMUEL, is recorded in the First Folio list of performers
-in Shakespeare’s plays. All that is known of him beyond this is that
-Augustine Phillips left him as his ‘late apprentice’ in his will
-of 1605 the sum of 40<i>s.</i>, various garments, and a bass viol.
-Collier’s inference that he could play on the viol is a fairly harmless
-example of biographical conjecture.<a id="FNanchor_955" href="#Footnote_955" class="fnanchor">[955]</a> The identification of him with
-the ‘b[oy?] Sam’ of the ‘plot’ of <i>The Dead Man’s Fortune</i>, a play
-probably belonging to the Admiral’s, and of a date not later than 1591,
-is more dangerous.<a id="FNanchor_956" href="#Footnote_956" class="fnanchor">[956]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GILES, NATHANIEL. Master of Windsor Choir, 1595–1634; Master of Chapel,
-1597–1634.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GILES, THOMAS. Master of Paul’s, 1585–1590 &lt;; Instructor in Music to
-Henry, 1606, and Charles, 1613.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GOODALE, BAPTISTE. ‘Ghost-name’ (?) in Queen’s list (1589) forged by
-Collier, <i>New Facts</i>, ii.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GOODALE, THOMAS. Berkeley’s, 1581; Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Chamberlain’s
-(?) at date of <i>Sir Thomas More</i> (cf. ch. xxiv). If he is the
-Thomas Goodale, mercer, who entered with John Alleyn and Robert
-Lee into a bond to Edward Alleyn on 18 May 1593 (H. ii. 295, from
-<i>Dulwich MS.</i> iv. 29), he was not improbably connected with the
-Admiral’s &gt;1590.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GOUGHE or GOFFE, ROBERT, was probably the ‘R. Go.’ entered in the
-‘plot’ of <i>The Seven Deadly Sins</i>, as playing Aspasia in
-<i>Sloth</i> for the Admiral’s or Strange’s men about 1590–1. Probably
-he belonged at an early date to the King’s men. He is a legatee in
-Thomas Pope’s will of 22 July 1603, and witnessed that of Augustine
-Phillips on 4 May 1605, in which Phillips names a sister Elizabeth
-Goughe, doubtless the Elizabeth &mdash;&mdash; recorded in the register of St.
-Saviour’s, Southwark, as marrying Robert Gough on 13 February 1603. The
-token-books of St. Saviour’s indicate Gough’s residence in Hill’s Rents
-during 1604, Samson’s Rents during 1605 and 1606, and Austin’s Rents
-in 1612–22; and the registers, which generally call him a ‘player’,
-record his children Elizabeth (bapt. 30 May 1605), Nicholas (bapt.
-24 November 1608), Dorothy (bapt. 10 February 1611, bur. 12 January
-1613), Alexander (bapt. 7 August 1614), and his own burial on 19
-February 1624.<a id="FNanchor_957" href="#Footnote_957" class="fnanchor">[957]</a> His son Alexander became in his turn a player. A
-stage-direction to l. 1723 of <i>The Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> (1611)
-shows that he played Memphonius. He also played Leidenberch in <i>Sir
-John von Olden Barnevelt</i> in 1619, and appears in the official lists
-of the King’s men for 1619 and 1621 and in the First Folio list of
-performers in Shakespeare’s plays.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GOUGHE, THOMAS. Lane’s, 1572.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GRACE, FRANCIS. Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1610–22. He lived at George Alley,
-Golden Lane, in 1623 (J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GRAUNGER, JOHN. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">[320]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GREAVES, JOHN. Lane’s, 1572.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GREEN, JOHN. Germany, 1608; France, &gt;1608; Holland, 1613; Germany,
-1615–20, 1626. On his verses and portrait, 1608, cf. ch. xxiv, s.v.
-<i>Nobody and Somebody</i>. He may have been brother of the following.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GREENE, THOMAS. Anne’s, 1604–12. In R. Braithwaite, <i>Remains after
-Death</i> (1618) are four epigrams on him, one of which says that he
-‘new come from sea, made but one face and dide’. A couplet on his
-death, signed W. R., is in Cooke’s <i>Greene’s Tu Quoque</i>. I. H.,
-<i>World’s Folly</i> (1615), mentions his performance of a baboon (cf.
-App. C, No. lix). He was of St. James’s, Clerkenwell, in 1612, when
-he made his will (Fleay, 192), naming his wife Susan, daughter Honor,
-sons-in-law (i.e. stepsons) Robert and William Browne, daughters-in-law
-Susanna, Elizabeth, and Anne Browne, brothers John and Jeffery Greene,
-and sister Elizabeth Barrett. A conjecture that he was of Stratford
-origin has no foundation (Lee, 54).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GREUM, HENRY. Germany, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GRIFFEN. Admiral’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GRIGORIE, JACK. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GRYMES, THOMAS. Chapel, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GUNNELL, RICHARD. Palsgrave’s, 1613–22. Family notes appear in the
-registers of St. Giles’s, 1614–30 (B. 409).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GYLLOME, FOKE. Player (?) to Alexander Houghton, 1581 (cf. ch. ix, p.
-280).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">GYRKE, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HALLAWAIE, ‘the younger’. Paul’s, 1580.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAMLEN (HAMLETT), ROBERT. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611–13; Charles’s, 1616,
-1625.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAMMOND, JOHN. Interluders, 1494.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAMOND. Worcester’s, 1565.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HARRISON, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose daughter Suzanna by wife Anne was
-baptized at St. Helen’s on 10 January 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HARRISON, WILLIAM. Worcester’s, 1583.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HARVEY. Chamberlain’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAWKINS, ALEXANDER. Blackfriars lessee, 1601; Revels patentee, 1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAYNE, WILLIAM. Head Master of Merchant Taylors’, 1599–1625.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HAYSELL, GEORGE. Worcester’s, 1583. For a possible notice of the same
-man, cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. <i>Misogonus</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HEARNE, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HELLE, JOHN. Admiral’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HEMINGES, JOHN, whose name is variously spelt, appearing, for example,
-as ‘Heminge’ in his signature to the dedication of the First Folio
-of Shakespeare’s plays, and as ‘Hemmings’ in the actor-list in the
-same volume, is known to have had a wife Rebecca, and may fairly be
-identified with the ‘John Hemminge, gent.’ of St. Mary Cornhill,
-who was married on 10 March 1588 to Rebecca Knell, widow, relict of
-William Knell, gent., late of St. Mary Aldermanbury. In the same parish
-William Knell had married Rebecca Edwards on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">[321]</span> 30 January 1586, and an
-older William Knell had been buried on 24 September 1578.<a id="FNanchor_958" href="#Footnote_958" class="fnanchor">[958]</a> One
-of these was not improbably the early actor celebrated by Heywood.
-Malone found a family of Heming at Shottery, and conjectured that of
-this family John was born at some date earlier than the opening of
-the Stratford-on-Avon register in 1558.<a id="FNanchor_959" href="#Footnote_959" class="fnanchor">[959]</a> But this is rendered
-improbable by a confirmation of arms in 1629 to ‘John Hemings of London
-Gent. of long tyme Servant to Queen Elizabeth of happie Memory, also
-to King James hir Royal Successor and to King Charles his Sonne’,
-in which he is described as ‘Sonne and Heire of George Hemings of
-Draytwiche in the Countye of Worcester Gent.’<a id="FNanchor_960" href="#Footnote_960" class="fnanchor">[960]</a> There seems little
-reason to doubt that this John Hemings is the player. He very probably
-began his theatrical career with the Queen’s company, to which also
-Knell had belonged. By May 1593, however, he had joined Strange’s
-men, from whom he passed to the Chamberlain’s men, probably on the
-original formation in 1594. Of this company, afterwards the King’s
-men, he remained a member to the end of his career. He appears in all
-the official lists of the company up to 1629, and regularly acted as
-their payee for Court performances, generally with a colleague from
-1596 to 1601, and thereafter alone. This and his prominence in the
-negotiations of the company and the lawsuits arising out of them,
-suggest that he acted as their business manager. As an actor he appears
-in all the casts up to <i>Catiline</i> in 1611, but not thereafter;
-possibly he may have resigned acting, and devoted himself to business.
-The unreliable John Roberts, <i>Answer to Pope</i> (1729), conjectures
-that he was a ‘tragedian’. Malone had seen a statement in some tract of
-which he had forgotten the title, that he was the original performer
-of Falstaff.<a id="FNanchor_961" href="#Footnote_961" class="fnanchor">[961]</a> The lines on the burning of the Globe in 1613 thus
-describe him:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then with swolne eyes, like druncken Flemminges,</div>
- <div>Distressed stood old stuttering Heminges.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">He is ‘old Master Hemings’ in Jonson’s <i>Masque of
-Christmas</i> (1616). He lent his ‘boy’ John Rice (q.v.) to the
-Merchant Taylors for their entertainment of James on 16 July 1607, and
-another ‘boy’ for Chapman’s mask of 1613. He is named as a legatee and
-overseer in the will of Augustine Phillips in 1605, and as executor in
-the event of the widow’s re-marriage; also as a trustee in the will of
-Alexander Cooke, who calls him his ‘master’, in 1614; as a witness in
-that of Richard Cowley in 1618; as a legatee in that of Shakespeare
-in 1616; and as a legatee and overseer in those of Underwood in 1624
-and of Condell in 1627. He was appointed a trustee for Shakespeare’s
-Blackfriars property in 1613,<a id="FNanchor_962" href="#Footnote_962" class="fnanchor">[962]</a> and acted with Condell as editor
-of the First Folio of the plays in 1623. This fact is probably the
-origin of the statement of Roberts that he was engaged with Condell in
-business as a printer. He filled various parochial posts from 1608 to
-1619 in St. Mary’s, Aldermanbury, and the registers contain records of
-the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">[322]</span> following children: Alice (bapt. 10 November 1590, married John
-Atkins 11 February 1612), Mary (bapt. 26 May 1592, bur. 9 August 1592),
-Judith (bapt. 29 August 1593), Thomasine (bapt. 15 January 1595), Joan
-(bapt. 2 May 1596), John (bapt. 12 August 1599), Beavis (bapt. 24 May
-1601), William (bapt. 3 October 1602), George (bapt. 12 Feb. 1604),
-Rebecca (bapt. 4 February 1605), Elizabeth (bapt. 6 March 1608), Mary
-(bapt. 21 June 1611, bur. 23 July 1611).<a id="FNanchor_963" href="#Footnote_963" class="fnanchor">[963]</a> In the same parish ‘John
-Heminge, player’ was himself buried on 12 October 1630, beside his
-wife Rebecca, who preceded him on 2 September 1619. He is registered
-as a ‘stranger’ and was therefore probably residing elsewhere. In his
-will, made on 9 October, he describes himself as ‘citizen and grocer
-of London’, appoints his son William executor and trustee for his
-unmarried and unadvanced children, and Cuthbert Burbadge and ‘Mr.
-Rice’, possibly the actor, overseers, and leaves legacies to his
-daughters Rebecca, wife of Captain William Smith, Margaret, wife of Mr.
-Thomas Sheppard, who is not mentioned in the register, Elizabeth, and
-Mrs. Merefield, and to his son-in-law Atkins ‘and his now wife’, and
-his grandchild Richard Atkins. He also leaves 10<i>s.</i> for a ring
-‘unto every of my fellows and sharers, his majesties servants.<a id="FNanchor_964" href="#Footnote_964" class="fnanchor">[964]</a>
-William Heminges went to Westminster and Christ Church, and became a
-playwright.<a id="FNanchor_965" href="#Footnote_965" class="fnanchor">[965]</a> Unnamed in the will is Thomasine, who may have been
-dead, but certainly had quarrelled seriously with her father. She had
-married William Ostler of the King’s men in 1611 and her son Beaumont
-was baptized at St. Mary’s, Aldermanbury, on 18 May 1612. Ostler died
-intestate on 16 December 1614 in possession of shares in the leases
-both of the Globe and the Blackfriars. These passed of right to
-Thomasine as his administratrix, and formed all the provision left for
-her maintenance and her husband’s debts. The leases, however, passed
-into the hands of Heminges, who retained them and asserted that Ostler
-had created a trust, of which Thomasine declared that she knew nothing.
-On 20 September 1615 she entered a bill in Chancery against her father,
-and subpœnaed him to appear during the coming Michaelmas term. On 26
-September Heminges promised that if she would withdraw her suit, and
-would also ‘doe her dutie’ to him and to her mother Rebecca, he would
-satisfy her to the value of the shares. Thomasine states that on the
-same day kneeling and in tears she made her submission at her father’s
-house in Aldermanbury. She also stayed her suit, but Heminges, although
-called upon to fulfil his promise on 5 October, failed to do so, and
-on 9 October Thomasine brought a common law action against him for
-damages to the amount of £600, which she estimated to be the value of
-the shares.<a id="FNanchor_966" href="#Footnote_966" class="fnanchor">[966]</a> The issue of the case is unknown, but it would seem
-probable from the <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635 that Heminges succeeded
-in retaining the shares, and that at his death they passed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">[323]</span> to his son
-William. Professor Wallace states that in 1616 Thomasine Ostler was
-involved in another lawsuit with Walter Raleigh, son of Sir Walter,
-and obtained a verdict of £250 against him for insult and slander.
-One way and another, Heminges seems to have acquired a considerable
-financial interest in the Globe and Blackfriars. He had an original
-seventh of a moiety of the Globe lease in 1599, and an original seventh
-of the Blackfriars lease in 1608. But as executor to Phillips (q.v.)
-and otherwise he had opportunities of adding to these holdings. The
-<i>Sharers Papers</i> show that at his death he had four sixteenths of
-the Globe and probably two eighths of the Blackfriars; and these, or
-some of them, he had enjoyed ‘thirty yeeres without any molestacion,
-beeing the most of the sayd yeeres both player and houskeeper, and
-after hee gave over playing diverse yeeres’. In <i>Witter v. Heminges
-and Condell</i> he is described as being in 1619 of ‘greate lyveinge
-wealth and power’.<a id="FNanchor_967" href="#Footnote_967" class="fnanchor">[967]</a> The play-house shares seem to have been the
-chief part of the property left by his will. They passed to William
-Heminges as his executor. He seems to have gradually disposed of them,
-first selling one share in the Globe by arrangement with the company to
-Taylor and Lowin, and later, by transactions which some of his fellows
-resented, one share in each house to John Shank during 1633 for £156,
-and the remaining shares also to John Shank during 1634, for £350. He
-was then in difficulties, and Shank disbursed additional small sums
-to him in prison. It was these sales to Shank which brought about the
-petition to the Lord Chamberlain recorded in the <i>Sharers Papers</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HENSLOWE, FRANCIS. Queen’s, 1594; Lennox’s, 1605. He was son of Richard
-and nephew of Philip Henslowe, and various entries in the diary and
-other Dulwich MSS. record his imprisonments, more than once on criminal
-charges, his employment during 1593–4 in his uncle’s pawnbroking, and
-his loans, one of which on 1 June 1595 was of £9 ‘to laye downe for his
-hallfe share with the company which he dothe playe with all’ (H. i. 6),
-conceivably, as Dr. Greg suggests, some company other than the Queen’s,
-in which he had already acquired a half share in 1594. He dwelt in
-the Clink in 1594, took a house called the Upper Ground on Bankside
-in 1597, and was of St. George’s, Southwark, in 1606, in which year,
-between 30 March and 6 October, both he and his wife died (H. ii. 277).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HENSLOWE, PHILIP. Owner of Rose, Fortune, Hope, and perhaps lessee of
-Whitefriars; cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HERIOT, HENRY. Interluders, 1547–52.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HEYWOOD, JOHN. For his possible connexion with Paul’s, cf. ch. xii,
-s.v. Chapel.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HEYWOOD, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1598; Worcester’s Anne’s, 1602–19, and
-dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HINSTOCK, ROBERT. Interluders, 1538–51.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOBBES, THOMAS. Charles’s, 1610, 1616–25. He lived at the upper end of
-Shoreditch in 1623 (J. 348).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">[324]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOLE, RICHARD. Interluders, 1526–30.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOLLAND, J. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOLT, JAMES. Anne’s, 1604–19.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOLT, JOHN. A ‘momer’, who helped the Westminster boys in 1561,
-probably identical with the Yeoman of the Revels of that name (cf. ch.
-iii), who helped them in 1564–5.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOLZHEW, BEHRENDT. Germany, 1614–15.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOVELL, WILLIAM. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HOWARD, THOMAS. A ‘player’ named in St. Saviour’s records <i>c.</i>
-1600 (Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUDSON, RICHARD. Weaver of Hutton Bushell, Yorks, unlicensed player,
-1612 (cf. ch. ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HÜLL, JOHN. Germany, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUNNIS, JOHN. A ‘ghost-name’ by an error for the following.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUNNIS, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1566–97, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUNT (HONTE), THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1599, 1602; Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611 (H.
-ii. 285).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUNTLEY, DICK. Actor in <i>Summer’s Last Will and Testament</i>
-(<i>vide</i> l. 14).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">HUSE, RICHARD. Paul’s chorister, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">IVY, NICHOLAS. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JEFFES, ANTHONY. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597;
-Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1597–&gt;1613. Anthony, son of Richard Jeffes,
-baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 14 December 1578, may be the
-same who married Faith Jones there on 19 February 1601. Children of
-Anthony Jeffes ‘player’ are recorded in the registers of St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, from 11 June 1602 to 1 May 1609; in later entries from 30
-May 1610 to 30 October 1616, Anthony is called ‘brewer’ (H. ii. 286;
-<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JEFFES, HUMPHREY. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597;
-Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1616&lt;. He was buried at St.
-Giles’s, 21 August 1618. A daughter Mary was baptized at St. Saviour’s,
-25 January 1601 (H. ii. 287; Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xxx).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JOHNSON, WILLIAM. Leicester’s, 1572–4; Queen’s, 1583, 1587–8. The
-baptismal entries at St. Giles’s include on 10 February 1587 ‘Comedia,
-baseborne daughter of Alice Bowker, and, as she saithe, the father’s
-name is William Johnson, one of the Queen’s plaiers’, and the burials
-on 3 March 1593 ‘Comedia, daughter of William Johnson, player’. Is
-he the William Johnson, vintner, who was trustee of Shakespeare’s
-Blackfriars property 1613–18 (Lee, 459, 493)?</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JONES, RICHARD. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s (?), &gt;1589; Germany,
-1592–3; Admiral’s, 1594–6; Pembroke’s, 1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602;
-Revels patentee, 1610; Germany (?), 1615; Germany, 1620, 1622–4. His
-wife Harris inherited a lease of the Leopard’s Head in Shoreditch from
-her father in 1620. A Richard Jones is traceable in the Southwark
-token-books from 1588 to 1607 and may or may not be the same who
-married Anne Jube there on 14 February 1602 (H. ii. 288; <i>H. P.</i>
-94; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JONES, ROBERT. Germany, 1602; Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">[325]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JONNS, DANIEL. Denmark, 1586.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JONSON, BENJAMIN. Pembroke’s (?), 1597; Chamberlain’s (?), <i>c.</i>
-1598; and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JUBY, EDWARD. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1594–1618, Fortune
-lessee, 1618. An Edward Juby is traceable during 1598 to 1619 in the
-token-books of St. Saviour’s, Southwark. In the last year he is marked
-‘dead’, and his burial was registered on 20 November 1618. In 1610 and
-1614 he filled parish offices. He may fairly be identified with the
-‘player’ whose children occur in the registers from 3 June 1599 to 15
-September 1614. His widow Francis held his share of the Fortune lease
-in 1622 (H. ii. 290; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JUBY, RICHARD. Admiral’s, 1602. His son Richard was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s, Southwark, on 1 May 1602 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JUBY, WILLIAM (?). Admiral’s, 1599–1602 (H. ii. 290).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">JUGLER, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KEMP, JOHN. Germany, 1601.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KEMPE, WILLIAM, cannot be securely identified or connected with any
-one of various homonyms who have been traced in <i>D. N. B.</i> and
-elsewhere.<a id="FNanchor_968" href="#Footnote_968" class="fnanchor">[968]</a> He probably emerges as one of Leicester’s men in the
-Low Countries during 1585–6 and thence made his way to Denmark. He
-was in London and had already won a comic reputation by 1590 when the
-dedication of <i>An Almond for a Parrat</i> (Nashe, iii. 341), ‘To that
-most Comicall and conceited Caualeire Monsieur du Kempe, Jestmonger
-and Vice-gerent generall to the Ghost of Dicke Tarlton,’ tells how
-the anonymous author, possibly Nashe, had been asked by ‘that famous
-Francatrip’ Harlicken’ at Bergamo in the previous summer, whether
-he knew ‘any such Parabolano here in London as Signior Chiarlatano
-Kempino’ of whose ‘pleasance’ Harlicken had heard ‘report’. In <i>Four
-Letters Confuted</i> (1592) Nashe says of an action of Harvey’s, ‘Will
-Kempe, I mistrust it will fall to thy lot for a merriment, one of these
-dayes’ (i. 287). An example of Kempe’s merriments is to be found in sc.
-xii of <i>A Knack to Know a Knave</i> (1594) played by Strange’s men,
-to whom Kempe belonged by 1593. He was also famous for his jigs. Four
-of these are entered in the Stationers’ Register during 1591–5 (cf. ch.
-xviii) but are not preserved, and ‘Kemps jiggs’ is the heading to some
-music collected by John Dowland and preserved in <i>Camb. Univ. Libr.
-MS.</i> Dd. ii. 11 (cf. Halliwell, <i>MS. Rarities</i>, 8). Marston
-(iii. 372), <i>Scourge of Villainy</i> (1598), sat. xi. 30, ‘the orbs
-celestial Will dance Kempe’s jig,’ and E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i>
-(1598), sat. v, ‘Whores, bedles, bawdes, and sergeants filthily Chaunt
-Kemps Jigge, or the Burgonians tragedy,’ show his vogue.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">[326]</span> In 1594–5 he
-was one of the recently constituted Chamberlain’s men and the intrusion
-of his name into stage-directions to <i>R. J.</i> iv. 5. 102 (Q<sub>2</sub>)
-and <i>M. Ado</i>, iv. 2, shows that he played Peter in the one play
-and Dogberry in the other. Oddly enough, one of his speeches (iv. 2.
-4) in <i>M. Ado</i> is assigned to ‘Andrew’, possibly a generic name
-for a clown or ‘merry-Andrew’. He is in the actor-list of <i>Every Man
-in his Humour</i> (1598) but not in that of <i>Every Man out of his
-Humour</i> (1599), and this fact, together with his sale of his share
-in the Globe soon after the lease of 21 February 1599 was signed,
-points to his leaving the company. ‘Would I had one of Kemps shooes
-to throw after you,’ says a speaker in <i>E. M. O.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> v
-(q.v.). This may be an allusion to some clownery by Kempe, perhaps in
-a performance with some other company at the Curtain in the autumn of
-1599 after the Chamberlain’s left that house; or, less probably, to
-Kempe’s famous morris-dance for a wager from London to Norwich, at the
-end of which he hung his buskins in the Guildhall, for this began on
-11 February 1600 and ended on 11 March, the year being fixed by the
-mayoralty (1599–1600) of Roger Weld at Norwich. Another allusion to
-‘Kemps morice’ is in <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i> (1600), i. 45.
-Dudley Carleton wrote to John Chamberlain on 13 October 1600 (<i>S.
-P. D. Eliz.</i> cclxxv. 93) that on his way from Witham to Englefield
-‘we met a company of mad wenches, whereof M<sup>rs</sup>. Mary Wroughton and
-young Stafford were ringleaders, who travelled from house to house, and
-to some places where they were little known, attended with a concert
-of musicians, as if they had undertaken the like adventure as Kemp
-did from London to Norwich’. Kempe’s own account of his adventure was
-entered in the Stationers’ Register as ‘Kemps morris to Norwiche’ on
-22 April 1600 (Arber, iii. 160). In the Epistle to Anne Fitton, whom,
-possibly by confusion with her sister Mary, he describes as maid of
-honour to Elizabeth, he refers to unentered ballads on the subject,
-and when he says that ‘I haue daunst my selfe out of the world’ is
-not improbably jesting on his departure from the Globe. At the end he
-foreshadows crossing to Calais, which he no doubt did. A John Kemp,
-who was in charge of a touring company, which had been in Holland and
-reached Münster by November 1601, may have been a relative. But William
-Kempe had returned to England, after visiting Italy as well as Germany,
-on 2 September 1601, as is shown by the following interpolation in
-a diary of one William Smith of Abingdon, in <i>Sloane MS.</i> 414,
-f. 56 (wrongly cited by Halliwell, <i>Ludus Coventriae</i> 410, as
-<i>Sloane MS.</i> 392, f. 401; cf. F. J. Furnivall in <i>N.S.S. Trans.
-1880–6</i>, 65):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Sep. 2. Kemp, mimus quidam, qui peregrinationem quandam in
-Germaniam et Italiam instituerat, post multos errores, et
-infortunia sua, reversus: multa refert de Anthonio Sherley,
-equite aurato, quem Romae (legatum Persicum agentem) convenerat.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Possibly Kempe rejoined the Chamberlain’s for a while.
-In <i>3 Parnassus</i> (? January 1602), iv. 3, he is introduced as a
-fellow of Burbadge and Shakespeare, and greeted with allusions to his
-‘dancing the morrice ouer the Alpes’ and ‘the Emperour of Germany’.
-But on 10 March<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">[327]</span> 1602 he had a loan from Henslowe, and during the
-winter of 1602–3 he was certainly one of Worcester’s men. The dates
-do not lend support to the suggestion of Fleay, ii. 20, that he had
-already in 1599–1600 been at the Rose with Pembroke’s men. After the
-end of Elizabeth’s reign he is not traceable, and he is mentioned as
-dead in Heywood, <i>Apology</i> (<i>c.</i> 1608), and dead or retired
-in Dekker, <i>Gull’s Hornbook</i> (1609), 11, ‘Tarlton, Kemp, nor
-Singer, nor all the litter of fools that now come drawling behind them,
-never played the clown more naturally.’ A William Kempe is recorded in
-token-books of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, as living in Samson’s Rents in
-1595, 1596, 1598, and 1599, in Langley’s New Rents in 1602, and later
-near the old play-house (Collier, iii. 351, and <i>Bodl.</i>; Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i>, xxvi). Collier, but not Rendle, gives the date ‘1605’
-for the last entry, probably with a view to supporting his notice of
-Kempe, as playing with Armin at the Blackfriars (q.v.) in 1605, which
-is doubtless a fabrication. On the other hand, though the date is
-plausible, the notice of ‘Kempe a man’ as buried at St. Saviour’s on
-2 November 1603 (Rendle, xxvii) is not so worded as to be absolutely
-conclusive. The name was a common one, and Collier, <i>Actors</i>,
-xxxvi, gives notices of it from other parishes. In T. Weelkes, <i>Ayres
-on Phantasticke Sprites</i> (1608), it is said of Kempe that ‘into
-France He took pains to skip it’. His visit to Venice and meeting with
-Sherley are dramatized in <i>Travels of Three English Brothers</i>
-(1607) and apparently misdated after the <i>Englands Joy</i> of
-November 1602. Finally, an epitaph upon him is in R. Braithwaite,
-<i>Remains after Death</i> (1618), sig. <span class="allsmcap">F</span> 8<sup>v</sup>, which suggests
-that he died not long after his morris.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KENDALL, THOMAS. Blackfriars manager, 1602; Revels patentee, 1604. He
-died in 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KENDALL, WILLIAM. Admiral’s, 1597–8; Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, &gt;1614. His
-son John was baptized at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 5 January 1615
-(<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KEYSAR, ROBERT. Revels manager, 1606–10 (?); Blackfriars lessee,
-1606–8. To him was written the epistle to <i>K. B. P.</i></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KING, ARTHUR. Berkeley’s, 1581.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KING, THOMAS. Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KINGMAN (KINGSMAN), PHILIP. Germany, 1596; Porter’s Hall patentee,
-1615. ‘M<sup>r</sup> Kyngman the elder’ was a witness for Henslowe on 16 April
-1599 (H. i. 205).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KINGSMAN, ROBERT. Germany, 1599, 1601; afterwards a tradesman in
-Strassburg, 1606 (?), 1618, 1626.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KIRCK (KIRCKMANN), JOHN. Denmark, 1579–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KIRKHAM, EDWARD. Chapel manager, 1602; Revels patentee, 1604–6. He is
-probably the Yeoman of the Revels (cf. ch. iii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KITE, JOHN. Gentleman of Chapel, 1508; afterwards Abp. of Armagh.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KNAGGES, RICHARD. Of Moorsham, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KNELL, WILLIAM (?). Queen’s, &gt;1588. A Rebecca, widow of William Knell,
-married John Heminges (q.v.), 10 March 1588.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">[328]</span> Heywood notes Knell as
-before his time. Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (1592, <i>Works</i>, i.
-215), names him with Tarlton, Alleyn, and Bentley, and he is coupled
-with Bentley in the undated challenge to Alleyn (q.v.) to play one of
-their parts.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KNIGHT, ROBERT. Paul’s chorister, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KOSTRESSEN, JOHAN, musician. Germany, 1623.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">KRAFFT, JOHN. Denmark, 1579–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LANEHAM, JOHN. Leicester’s, 1572–4; Queen’s, 1583, 1588–91. Heywood
-notes him as before his time. Was he related to Robert Laneham, Keeper
-of the Council Chamber door, who described the Kenilworth entertainment
-(cf. ch. xxiv) in 1575?</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LANMAN, HENRY. Owner of Curtain, 1581–92. Adams, 80, suggests,
-apparently from the similarity of the names, that he was a brother of
-John Laneham.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LEBERWURST, HANS. Germany, 1613.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LEDBETTER, ROBERT. Admiral’s, 1597; Germany, 1599, 1601, 1606.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LEE, ROBERT. Admiral’s (?), &gt;1591; Anne’s, 1604–19; Revels Company,
-1622. He had a business transaction with Edward and John Alleyn and
-Thomas Goodale (q.v.) in 1593. He lived in Clerkenwell Close in 1623
-(H. ii. 294; J. 347; Murray, i. 198).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LEEKE, DAVID. Possibly an actor at Canterbury, c. 1571 (<i>3
-Library</i>, ix. 253).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LEVESON, ROBERT. Oxford’s, 1580.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LISTER, EDWARD. Weaver of Allerston, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612
-(cf. ch. ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LONG, NICHOLAS. Revels (provincial) manager, 1612, 1617; Lady
-Elizabeth’s, 1614–15. For his later career, cf. Murray, i. 192, 361;
-ii. 101. He was buried at St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, on 21 January 1622
-(<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LOVEKYN, ARTHUR. Chapel, 1509–13.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LOWIN, JOHN, was a member of Worcester’s company during their season of
-1602–3 with Henslowe at the Rose. On 12 March 1603 Henslowe lent him
-money to go into the country with the company, but during the course
-of the year he must have transferred his services to the King’s men,
-presumably as a hireling, since, although in the cast of <i>Sejanus</i>
-(1603) and the Induction to <i>Malcontent</i> (1604) he is not in the
-official lists of 1603 and 1604. A portrait of him in the Ashmolean
-Museum at Oxford, has the inscription ‘1640, Aetat. 64’, and he may
-therefore be identified with the John, son of Richard Lowen, baptized
-at St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, on 9 December 1576. If so, his father
-seems to have been a carpenter, and he had a sister Susan and a brother
-William.<a id="FNanchor_969" href="#Footnote_969" class="fnanchor">[969]</a> He remained through a long life with the King’s men,
-appearing in most of the casts, in the actor-list of the First Folio,
-and in the official lists from 1619 onwards. He played Bosola in
-<i>The Duchess of Malfi</i>. A pamphlet entitled <i>Conclusions upon
-Dances</i> (1607) has a dedication to Lord Denny, dated 23 November
-1606, and signed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">[329]</span> ‘I. L. <i>Roscio</i>’. Collier claims to have
-found in a copy of this the note ‘By Jhon Lowin. Witnesseth Tho. D.
-1610’.<a id="FNanchor_970" href="#Footnote_970" class="fnanchor">[970]</a> A John Lowen married Joan Hall, widow, by licence, in St.
-Botolph’s, Bishopsgate, on 29 October 1607.<a id="FNanchor_971" href="#Footnote_971" class="fnanchor">[971]</a> Shortly afterwards a
-John Lowin was paying a poor-rate of 2<i>d.</i> weekly in the liberty
-of the Clink. The Southwark token-books attest his residence ‘near the
-play-house’ and in other parts of the parish at various dates from
-1601 to 1642.<a id="FNanchor_972" href="#Footnote_972" class="fnanchor">[972]</a> He was overseer of Paris Garden in 1617–18.<a id="FNanchor_973" href="#Footnote_973" class="fnanchor">[973]</a>
-But in 1623 he lived in Lambeth (J. 348). He is named as a legatee
-and overseer in the will of his ‘fellow’ John Underwood in 1624. It
-appears from the <i>Sharers Papers</i> that he had no interest in the
-play-houses until after the death of Heminges in 1630, when he was
-admitted to purchase two sixteenths of the Globe and one eighth of
-the Blackfriars. From this time onwards he seems to have shared the
-business responsibilities of the company with Joseph Taylor. He was
-also prominent as an actor.<a id="FNanchor_974" href="#Footnote_974" class="fnanchor">[974]</a> Wright enumerates amongst his parts
-Shakespeare’s Falstaff; but when Roberts adds Hamlet and Henry VIII,
-he is presumably guessing that Lowin was ‘fat and scant of breath’.
-He may have been the original Henry VIII, for Downes reports that
-Betterton was instructed in the part by Sir William Davenant, ‘who had
-it from old Mr. Lowen, that had his instructions from Mr. Shakespeare
-himself’.<a id="FNanchor_975" href="#Footnote_975" class="fnanchor">[975]</a> Wright tells us that at the outbreak of civil war he
-was ‘superannuated’, and ‘in his latter days kept an inn (the Three
-Pigeons) at Brentford, where he dyed very old (for he was an actor of
-eminent note in the reign of King James the First), and his poverty
-was as great as his age’.<a id="FNanchor_976" href="#Footnote_976" class="fnanchor">[976]</a> He signed with Taylor the dedication
-to Fletcher’s <i>The Wild-goose Chase</i> in 1652, the publication
-of which was an attempt to relieve their necessities. A ‘John Lewin’
-who left a widow Martha, was buried at St. Martin’s-in-the-Fields on
-18 March 1659, and a ‘John Lowen’ at St. Paul’s, Covent Garden, on 16
-March 1669.<a id="FNanchor_977" href="#Footnote_977" class="fnanchor">[977]</a> Probably a G. Lowin who played Barnaveldt’s daughter
-to Lowin’s Barnaveldt in 1619 was his son.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">LYLY, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1583; Oxford’s payee, 1584; and
-dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MACHIN, RICHARD. Germany, 1600–3, 1605–6.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MAGETT, STEPHEN. Admiral’s tireman, 1596, 1599 (?) (H. ii. 295).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARBECK, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARSHALL, CHARLES. Palsgrave’s (provincial), 1616.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARSTON, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1603–8, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARTINELLI (?), ANGELICA. Italians, &gt;1598.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARTINELLI, DRUSIANO. Italians, 1578.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARTON, THOMAS. Chapel, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MARTYN, WILLIAM. Payee for a company at Ipswich, 20 February 1572
-(Murray, ii. 290).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">[330]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MASON, JOHN. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MASSEY (MASSYE), CHARLES. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–&gt;1635
-(?); Fortune lessee, 1618–&gt;1635; and dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii). He is
-probably the Charles Marcy or Mercy, variously described as ‘player’,
-‘gentleman’, and ‘yeoman’ in the registers of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate,
-from 30 December 1610 to 20 July 1625. He died before 6 December 1635,
-leaving a widow Elianor, and had a cousin Ned Collins (H. ii. 296;
-<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MAXE, ROBERT. Chapel, 1509–&gt;1513.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MAY, EDWARD. Interluders, 1494–1503.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MAY, NATHAN. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615. Possibly the name, as
-given in Murray, ii. 340, may be a mistake for Clay (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MAYLER, GEORGE. Interluders, 1525–40.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MEADE, JACOB. Keeper of the Bears, by 1599, and partner with Henslowe
-in the Bear Garden and Hope. He was buried at St. Saviour’s on 9 July
-1624 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MELYONEK, JOHN. Master of Chapel (?), 1483–5.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MERYELL, HENRY. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MILS (MYLLES), TOBIAS. Queen’s, 1583. Heywood notes him as before his
-time. He was buried as ‘one of the Queenes Maiesties players’ at St.
-Olave’s, Southwark, on 11 July 1585, and his sons William and Toby
-were baptized on 3 January 1584 and 5 September 1585 (<i>Bodl.</i>).
-Probably, therefore, ‘one Myles, one of my lord of Summersettes
-players’, whose testimony to the value of Bath waters for the gout is
-cited in a hydropathic treatise of 1557 (Collier, i. 139), was of an
-older generation. Somerset was beheaded on 22 January 1552. Robert
-Cecil had a Secretary Milles, whose son Tobias was buried at Chelsea on
-9 April 1599 (R. Davies, <i>Chelsea Old Church</i>, 296).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MOON, PETER. Payee for a company of players at Ipswich, 1562 (Murray,
-ii. 287).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MOORE, JOSEPH. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611; 1616–29. He lived at the Harrow
-in Barbican in 1623 (Murray, i. 252; J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MOTTERAM, JOHN. Chapel, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MUFFORD, JOHN. Beauchamp’s, 10 June 1590 (Murray, ii. 337).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MULCASTER (MONCASTER), RICHARD. Head Master of Merchant Taylors,
-1561–86; of St. Paul’s Grammar School, 1596–1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">MUNDAY, ANTONY. A player before 1582, according to a contemporary
-pamphlet, possibly with Oxford’s, whose ‘servant’ he was in 1580, and
-dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NASION. Paul’s chorister, &gt;1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘NED.’ Musician (?) in <i>Summer’s Last Will and Testament, prol.</i> 7.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘NED.’ Strange’s (?), 1590–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NETHE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NETHERSALL, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NEWARK, WILLIAM. Master of Chapel, 1493–1509.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NEWMAN, JOHN. Blackfriars lessee, 1581–3.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NEWTON, JOHN. Charles’s, 1610, 1616, 1619, 1625.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘NICK.’ Admiral’s, 1601–3. See also <span class="smcap">Tooley</span>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">[331]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NILL, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose daughter Alice was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 13 August 1601 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NORWOOD. Paul’s, 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">NYCOWLLES, ROBERT. A ‘player’ who witnessed a loan to Francis Henslowe
-on 1 June 1595 (H. i. 6).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">OFFLEY, THOMAS. Paul’s, <i>c.</i> 1522.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">OSTLER, WILLIAM, began his career as a boy actor in the Chapel
-company. He took a part in Jonson’s <i>Poetaster</i> in 1601. From
-the <i>Sharers Papers</i> we learn that on growing up he was, like
-Field and Underwood, ‘taken to strengthen the King’s service’.<a id="FNanchor_978" href="#Footnote_978" class="fnanchor">[978]</a> He
-first appears amongst the King’s men in the cast of Jonson’s <i>The
-Alchemist</i> in 1610, and played also in <i>Catiline</i>, <i>The
-Captain</i>, <i>The Duchess of Malfi</i>, in which he took the part of
-Antonio, <i>Valentinian</i>, and <i>Bonduca</i>. The following epigram
-in John Davies, <i>Scourge of Folly</i> (<i>c.</i> 1611), attests his
-fame and his participation in some forgotten brawl:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h5><i>To the Roscius of these Times, Mr. W. Ostler.</i></h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Ostler, thou took’st a knock thou would’st have giv’n,</div>
- <div class="i1">Neere sent thee to thy latest home: but O!</div>
- <div>Where was thine action, when thy crown was riv’n,</div>
- <div class="i1">Sole King of Actors! then wast idle? No:</div>
- <div>Thou hadst it, for thou would’st bee doing? Thus</div>
- <div>Good actors deeds are oft most dangerous;</div>
- <div class="i1">But if thou plaist thy dying part as well</div>
- <div class="i1">As thy stage parts, thou hast no part in hell.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Ostler married Thomasine, daughter of John Heminges, in 1611. His son
-Beaumont was baptized at St. Mary’s, Aldermanbury, on 18 May 1612.<a id="FNanchor_979" href="#Footnote_979" class="fnanchor">[979]</a>
-He acquired shares in the Blackfriars on 20 May 1611, and the Globe on
-20 February 1612, and died on 16 December 1614, leaving his shares a
-subject for litigation between his widow and Heminges (q.v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PAGE, OLIVER. A London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PALLANT, ROBERT. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–19;
-Lady Elizabeth’s, 1614; Charles’s, 1616; King’s, 1619, unless, indeed,
-the R. Pallant who played the female part of Cariola in <i>Duchess
-of Malfi</i> was of a younger generation. This is not unlikely,
-for while the St. Saviour’s registers record the burial of Robert
-Pallant, ‘a man,’ on 4 September 1619, the token-books give the name
-in 1621 as well as in 1612 and 1616. Ephraim and Hanburye, sons of
-Robert Pallant ‘player’, were baptized there on 1 January 1611 and
-3 July 1614 respectively. There were others earlier. Pallant wrote
-commendatory verses for Heywood’s <i>Apology</i> (1612), and is noted
-as visiting Henslowe on his death-bed on 6 January 1616 (H. ii. 20,
-300; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PANT, THOMAS. Unlicensed player, 1607–10 (cf. ch. ix, p. 304).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PARR, WILLIAM. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1602–20.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PARROWE (PARLOWE), RICHARD. Interluders, 1538–45.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PARSELEY, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_332">[332]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PARSONS, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1597, 1602 (H. ii. 301).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PATESON, WILLIAM. Worcester’s, 1584.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PAVY. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PAVY, SALATHIEL (SALMON). Chapel, 1600–3. An epitaph on him is in
-Jonson’s <i>Epigrams</i> (1616), cxx, which gives his age at death,
-after three years of playing, as 13. He was ‘apprentice to one Peerce’,
-when he was pressed for the Chapel. This is not likely to have been the
-Master of Paul’s, from whom it would have been rash to take a boy.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PAYNE, ROBERT. Revels patentee, 1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEACOCKE, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEARCE (PIERS), EDWARD. Gentleman of Chapel, 1589; Master of Paul’s,
-1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEDEL, ABRAHAM. Germany, 1614–15; Palsgrave’s, 1623. He lived at George
-Alley in Golden Lane in 1623 (J. 348, 350).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEDEL (BEHEL, BIEL), JACOB. Germany, 1597, 1614–15.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEDEL, WILLIAM. Holland, 1608; Germany, 1614–15. Children of a William
-Peadle, variously described as ‘tumbler’ and ‘gentleman’, were baptized
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, in 1610, 1617, and 1629 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PENN, WILLIAM. Revels, 1609; Charles’s, 1616, 1625. He lived at George
-Alley, Golden Lane, in 1623 and had children baptized and buried at St.
-Giles’s, Cripplegate, in 1636 (J. 347; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PENTON, FABIAN. Germany, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PEPEREL, GILES. Possibly an actor in the <i>Bugbears</i> of John
-Jeffere (cf. ch. xxiii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERKIN, JOHN. Leicester’s, 1572–4. Is he the Parkins who assisted
-George Ferrers as Lord of Misrule in 1552–3 (Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and
-Mary</i>, 120)?</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERKINS, RICHARD. Worcester’s-Anne’s, 1602–19; for his later history,
-cf. Murray, i. 198, 200, 266. He wrote commendatory verses for
-Heywood’s <i>Apology</i> (1612), and Webster praises his acting in
-<i>The White Devil</i> (1612) in a note at the end of the print. His
-portrait is at Dulwich. He lived at the upper end of St. John’s Street
-in 1623 (H. ii. 301; J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERRY, WILLIAM. Licensee for 2 King’s Revels, 1615; Queen’s Revels
-manager, 1617.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERSJ (PERSTEN), ROBERT (RUPERT). Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERSONN, JOHANN. Denmark, 1579–80.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERY, ROBERT. Chapel, 1529–31.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PERY, WILLIAM. Chapel, 1530.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘PETER’ (?). King’s. At <i>Taming of the Shrew</i>, iv. 4. 68, F<sub>1</sub>
-has the s.d. ‘Enter Peter’, apparently a servant of Tranio, who does
-not speak.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PFLUGBEIL, AUGUST. Germany, 1614–15.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PHILIP, ROBERT. Chapel, 1514.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PHILLIPPE, ROBERT. A ‘momer’, buried at St. Leonard’s, on 9 April 1559
-(Collier, <i>Actors</i>, 79). He might be identical with the foregoing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_333">[333]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PHILLIPS, AUGUSTINE, is included in the 1593 list of Strange’s men,
-and played for them or the Admiral’s in <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i>
-about 1590–1 as ‘Mr. Phillipps’. Probably he joined the Chamberlain’s
-men on their formation in 1594. He appears in the actor-lists of
-1598 and 1599, was one of the original Globe shareholders of 1599,
-and on 18 February 1601 gave evidence as to the performance of
-<i>Richard II</i> by the company before the Essex rising. He is
-also in the official lists of the King’s men in 1603 and 1604, in
-the actor-list of <i>Sejanus</i> in 1603, and in that of the First
-Folio of Shakespeare’s plays. ‘Phillips his gygg of the slyppers’ was
-entered in the Stationers’ Register on 26 May 1595 (cf. p. 552). It
-has been conjectured that Phillips was a brother-in-law of Alleyn,
-to whom Henslowe wrote on 28 September 1593, ‘Your sister Phillipes
-&amp; her husband hath leced two or thre owt of ther howsse, yt they in
-good health &amp; doth hartily comend them unto you.’ If so, his wife was
-probably Elizabeth Woodward. But it is also possible that the family in
-question was that of one Edward Phillipes, who was also in relations
-with Henslowe and Alleyn.<a id="FNanchor_980" href="#Footnote_980" class="fnanchor">[980]</a> An Augustine Phillipps buried at St.
-Saviour’s, Southwark, in 1592, was probably a relative of the actor,
-whose children the register of the same parish records as Magdalen
-(bapt. 29 September 1594), Rebecca (bapt. 11 July 1596), and Austen or
-Augustine (bapt. 29 November 1601, bur. 1 July 1604). The father is
-designated <i>histrio</i>, ‘player,’ or ‘player of interludes’. The
-parish token-books show that he dwelt in Horseshoe Court during 1593
-and 1595, thereafter near the Swan in Paris Garden, in Montagu Close
-during 1601, in ‘Bradshaw’s Rents’ during 1602, and in Horseshoe Court
-again during 1604.<a id="FNanchor_981" href="#Footnote_981" class="fnanchor">[981]</a> But by 4 May 1605, when he made his will,
-he was of Mortlake, Surrey, where he had a house and land of which
-he had lately purchased the lease.<a id="FNanchor_982" href="#Footnote_982" class="fnanchor">[982]</a> Doubtless he had prospered.
-A note of heraldic irregularities delivered by William Smith, Rouge
-dragon, to the Earl of Northampton as commissioner for the Earl Marshal
-states that ‘Phillipps the player had graven in a gold ring the armes
-of S<sup>r</sup> W<sup>m</sup> Phillipp, Lord Bardolph, with the said L. Bardolph’s cote
-quartred, which I shewed to M<sup>r</sup>. York at a small gravers shopp in
-Foster Lane’.<a id="FNanchor_983" href="#Footnote_983" class="fnanchor">[983]</a> The will mentions Phillips’s wife, whose name was
-not Elizabeth but Anne, his daughters Magdalen, Rebecca, Anne, and
-Elizabeth, his mother Agnes Bennett, his brothers William and James
-Webb, his sister Margery Borne, and her sons Miles and Philipps, and
-his sister Elizabeth Gough. Elizabeth had been married at St. Saviour’s
-in 1603, to Robert Gough (q.v.) of the King’s men, who witnesses the
-will.<a id="FNanchor_984" href="#Footnote_984" class="fnanchor">[984]</a> Margery Borne may have been the wife of William Borne
-<i>alias</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_334">[334]</span> Bird (q.v.) of the Prince’s men. Presumably the Webbs
-were his brothers-in-law, in which case his wife was obviously not a
-Woodward. There are legacies of £5 to ‘the hyred men of the company
-which I am of’, of 30<i>s.</i> pieces to his ‘fellows’ William
-Shakespeare and Henry Condell, and his ‘servant’ Christopher Beeston,
-of 20<i>s.</i> pieces to his ‘fellows’ Laurence Fletcher, Robert Armin,
-Richard Cowley, Alexander Cook and Nicholas Tooley, of silver bowls
-to John Heminges, Richard Burbadge, and William Sly, and of £20 to
-Timothy Whithorne. Samuel Gilburne, ‘my late apprentice’ is to have
-40<i>s.</i> and ‘my mouse colloured velvit hose and a white taffety
-dublet, a blacke taffety sute, my purple cloke, sword, and dagger, and
-my base viall’. James Sands ‘my apprentice’ is to have 40<i>s.</i> and
-‘a citterne, a bandore and a lute’. The widow is appointed executrix,
-but if she re-marries she is to have ‘no parte or porcion of my goods
-or chattells’, and is to be replaced by the overseers of the will,
-Heminges, Richard Burbadge, Sly, and Whithorne. After proving the will
-on 13 May 1605, the widow did in fact re-marry, with John Witter, and
-it was proved again by John Heminges on 16 May 1607. His share in
-the Globe was subsequently the subject of litigation.<a id="FNanchor_985" href="#Footnote_985" class="fnanchor">[985]</a> Heywood
-(<i>c.</i> 1608) praises his deserts with those of other dead actors.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PICKERING, JAMES. Mason of Bowlby, Yorks, unlicensed player, 1612 (cf.
-ch. ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PLUMMER, JOHN. Master of Chapel, 1444–55.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">POKELEY, RICHARD. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">POLE. Gate-keeper at Paul’s, 1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">POPE, THOMAS, was one of the English players, who visited Denmark and
-Germany in 1586 and 1587. He is in the 1593 list of Strange’s men and
-played as ‘Mr. Pope’ for them or the Admiral’s in <i>2 Deadly Sins</i>
-about 1590–1. He joined the Chamberlain’s men, probably on their
-foundation in 1594, was joint payee for them with Heminge from 1597–9,
-and appears in the actor-lists of 1598 and 1599. On 30 August 1598,
-William Bird borrowed 10<i>s.</i> of Henslowe, ‘to folowe the sewt
-agenst Thomas Poope’.<a id="FNanchor_986" href="#Footnote_986" class="fnanchor">[986]</a> In 1600 he is mentioned, with Singer of the
-Admiral’s, by Samuel Rowlands in <i>The Letting of Humour’s Blood in
-the Head-Vein</i>, sat. iv:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i7">What meanes Singer then,</div>
- <div>And Pope, the clowne, to speak so boorish, when</div>
- <div>They counterfaite the clownes upon the Stage?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">He had an original fifth share of a moiety of the Globe, increased to a
-fourth on the retirement of Kempe. But he does not appear in the lists
-of the King’s men, and had therefore probably retired by 1603. On 22
-July of that year he made his will, which was proved on 13 February
-1604.<a id="FNanchor_987" href="#Footnote_987" class="fnanchor">[987]</a> He leaves his interests in the Globe and Curtain to Mary
-Clark, <i>alias</i> Wood, and Thomas Bromley, and legacies to Robert
-Gough and John Edmans. He mentions the house in Southwark,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">[335]</span> in which he
-dwelt, held with other tenements of the late Francis Langley; also his
-brothers John and William Pope, and his mother Agnes Webbe. This hardly
-justifies Collier in connecting him with the Webbes of Snitterfield,
-Shakespeare’s kin. Bazell Nicholl, scrivener, and John Wrench, are
-left executors. As in 1612 a sixth of the Globe was in the hands of
-Basil Nicoll and John and Mary Edmonds, it is probable that John
-Edmonds married Mary Clark. It appears from the Southwark token-books
-that one Pope lived in Blamer’s Rents during 1593, in Wrench’s Rents
-during 1595, and in Mr. Langley’s New Rents during 1596, 1598, 1600,
-and 1602.<a id="FNanchor_988" href="#Footnote_988" class="fnanchor">[988]</a> Dr. Greg thinks that Thomas Pope, rather than a Morgan
-Pope who also had interests in Southwark, was the ‘Mr. Pope’ with whom
-Henslowe had an interview on 25 June 1603, ‘at the scryveners shope
-wher he lisse’, concerning the renewal of the lease of the Rose.<a id="FNanchor_989" href="#Footnote_989" class="fnanchor">[989]</a>
-But Thomas Pope clearly lived in his own house. Collier (<i>Actors</i>,
-xxxvi) gives a marriage of a Thomas Pope and Elizabeth Baly at St.
-Botolph’s on 20 December 1584, but the indications of the will do not
-suggest a married man. William Smith complains that ‘Pope the player
-would have no other armes but the armes of Sir Thomas Pope, Chancelor
-of y<sup>e</sup> Augmentations’.<a id="FNanchor_990" href="#Footnote_990" class="fnanchor">[990]</a> Heywood mentions the ‘deserts’ of Pope in
-his <i>Apology</i>. He is included in the actor-list of the First Folio
-Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">POWLTON, THOMAS. Worcester’s, 1584.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PRICE, JOHN. Musician in Germany, 1609.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PRICE (PRYOR?), RICHARD. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1600 (?), 1610,
-1613, 1622. He lived in White Cross Street in 1623, and records of his
-children are in the registers of St. Giles, Cripplegate, from 1620
-to 1627, where he is variously entered as ‘gentleman’, ‘yeoman’, and
-‘player’ (J. 348; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PROCTOR. Admiral’s, 1599.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PRUN, PETER DE. Germany, 1594. He was of Brussels.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PUDSEY, EDWARD. Germany, 1626. He was presumably the owner of the
-manuscript note-book from which extracts are given in R. Savage,
-<i>Stratford-upon-Avon Notebooks</i> (1888), i; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v.
-Chapman, <i>Blind Beggar of Alexandria</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PULHAM, GEORGE. Anne’s, 1612.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PYE, JOHN. A ‘momer’, whose son Samuel was baptized at St. Leonard’s,
-Shoreditch, on 28 May 1559 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PYK (PIK, PYGE, PIGGE), JOHN. Strange’s, 1593; Admiral’s, 1597–9 (H.
-ii. 303).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">PYKMAN, PHILIP. Chapel, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RADSTONE, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RASTALL, WILLIAM. Chapel manager, 1602. He died in 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RAWLYNS, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">READE, EMANUEL. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1613; Anne’s, 1613 (?)-17.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">READING, WILLIAM. Interluders, 1559–63 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">REASON, GILBERT. Charles’s, 1610, 1616, 1625.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">[336]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">REDFORD, JOHN. Master of Paul’s, <i>c.</i> 1540, and dramatist (cf.
-<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 454).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">REEVE, RALPH. Germany, 1603–9; Revels manager (provincial), 1611;
-Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">REYNOLDS, ROBERT. Anne’s, 1616–17; Germany, 1616, 1618–20, 1626. He
-was known in Germany by the clown-name Pickleherring. He and his wife
-Jane were indicted for non-attendance at church in 1616 and 1617
-(Jeaffreson, ii. 120, 127).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RICE, JOHN, was ‘boy’ to Heminges when he delivered a speech in
-Merchant Taylors’ hall on 16 July 1607, and must have been still
-with the King’s men when he took part as Corinea with Burbadge in
-the water-pageant of 31 May 1610. He became one of the original Lady
-Elizabeth’s men in 1611, and seems to have joined the King’s men
-again in 1619. The Southwark token-books indicate a John Rice as a
-resident in 1615, 1619, 1621, and 1623, with an ‘uxor’ in 1621, and
-another record names John Rice ‘of the Bankside’ amongst players in
-1623.<a id="FNanchor_991" href="#Footnote_991" class="fnanchor">[991]</a> He is not in the official list of May of that year, but
-played in <i>Sir John van Olden Barnavelt</i> about August, and is in
-the official list of 1621. He is traceable up to the list of 1625, but
-is not in that of 1629. It is not improbable that he retired, and went
-into Orders, for Heminges, in his will of 1630, leaves 20<i>s.</i>
-to ‘John Rice, clerk, of St. Saviour’s in Southwark’, and also names
-‘Mr. Rice’ as overseer. Rice is in the actor-list of the First Folio
-Shakespeare.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘ROBIN.’ Chapel, 1518.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROBINS (ROBINSON), WILLIAM. Anne’s, 1616–19. He lived on Clerkenwell
-Hill in 1623 (J. 348).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROBINSON, JAMES. Chapel manager, 1600.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROBINSON, RICHARD, first appears in the <i>Catiline</i> actor-list of
-the King’s men in 1611, and as playing the Lady in a stage direction
-(l. 1929) to <i>The Second Maiden’s Tragedy</i> of the same year. In
-<i>The Devil is an Ass</i> (1616), ii. 8. 64, Merecroft describes
-‘Dicke Robinson’ as a lad, and as masquerading ‘drest like a lawyer’s
-wife’. I think it not impossible that he was a son of James Robinson,
-who was a member of the Children of the Chapel syndicate in 1600. If
-so, he may have been a Blackfriars boy. He played in <i>Bonduca</i>
-(<i>c.</i> 1613), is in the 1619 patent to the King’s men, and in
-the actor-list of the First Folio Shakespeare, and is traceable as a
-King’s man up to the Beaumont and Fletcher Folio of 1647. He may have
-married Richard Burbadge’s widow, who held shares in the Globe and
-Blackfriars as Mrs. Robinson in 1635. He owed Tooley £29 13<i>s.</i>
-when the latter made his will in 1623. According to Wright he was a
-comedian. The same author states that he took up arms for the King,
-and was killed by Major Harrison at the taking of Basing House, on
-14 October 1645. A contemporary report of this event by Hugh Peters
-confirms the death of ‘Robinson, the player, who, a little before the
-storm, was known to be mocking and scorning the Parliament’. There
-were, however, other actors named Robinson, and probably this was one
-of them. If<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">[337]</span> Richard had been killed in 1645, he could not have signed
-the dedication of the Beaumont and Fletcher plays in 1647. Moreover,
-the register of St. Anne’s, Blackfriars, records the burial of ‘Richard
-Robinson, a player’ on 23 March 1648.<a id="FNanchor_992" href="#Footnote_992" class="fnanchor">[992]</a> He seems to have lived at
-the upper end of Shoreditch in 1623 (J. 347).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROBINSON, THOMAS. Germany, 1626.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROLL (ROE), JOHN. Interluders, 1530. He died in 1539.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RONNER, JOHN. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROSE. Henry’s, 1612, where his wife became (?) a gatherer (<i>H. P.</i>
-63).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROSSETER, PHILIP. Whitefriars lessee, 1609–15; Revels patentee, 1610;
-Porter’s Hall patentee, 1615; Revels manager, 1617. He was one of the
-royal lutenists from Midsummer 1604 to Easter 1623, and published <i>A
-Booke of Ayres</i> (1601) with Campion, who left him his property in
-1620. He died on 5 May 1623 (<i>D. N. B.</i>; <i>Chamber Accounts</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROSSILL. Chamberlain’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROWLEY, SAMUEL. Admiral’s-Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1597–1624 (?), and
-dramatist (cf. ch. xxiii; H. ii. 307).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROWLEY, THOMAS. Admiral’s, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">ROWLEY, WILLIAM. Charles’s, 1610–19; King’s, 1623–5. But he remained
-technically a Prince’s man until the death of James in 1625 (Murray, i.
-162, 172, table).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RUSSELL, JOHN. Gatherer for Palsgrave’s, <i>c.</i> 1617 (<i>H. P.</i>
-28, 29, 85).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">RUTTER, WILLIAM. Interluders, 1503.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SACKVILLE, THOMAS. Germany, 1592–3, 1597–1602. He used the clown-name
-Johannes Bouset, was a merchant in Frankfort, 1604–17, and died in 1628.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘SAM.’ Admiral’s, &gt;1591.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SANDERSON, GREGORY. Anne’s, 1617–19.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SANDS, JAMES. King’s, 1605; Anne’s, <i>c.</i> 1617? He received
-legacies from Augustine Phillips (q.v.), to whom he was apprentice, in
-1605 and from William Sly (q.v.) in 1608. A James Sands appears in the
-Southwark token-books in 1596, 1598, and 1612 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SANDT, BERNHARDT. Germany, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SAUNDERS, WILLIAM. Chapel, &gt;1517.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SAUSS, EVERHART. Netherlands, 1592.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SAVAGE, JEROME. Warwick’s, 1575–9.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SAVEREY, ABRAHAM. Lennox’s, 1605.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SCHADLEUTNER, SEBASTIAN. Germany, 1623.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SCARLETT, JOHN. A ‘player’ whose son Richard was baptized at St.
-Giles’s on 1 September, and buried on 19 September 1605 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SCARLETT, RICHARD. A ‘player’, buried on 23 April 1609 at St. Giles’s,
-where his daughter Susan had been baptized on 11 February 1607 and his
-wife Marie buried on 12 February 1607. Several Scarletts were royal
-trumpeters&mdash;Edward, William, and William the younger in 1483, John in
-1509, Arthur in 1559–1603, John in 1677–9 (<i>Bodl.</i>; <i>Chamber
-Accounts</i>; Lafontaine, 1, 3, 325, 341).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">[338]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SCOTT, JOHN. Interluders, 1503–28.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SEBECK, HENRY. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1617.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SEHAIS, JEHAN. France, 1598. Possibly the John Shaa, who witnessed
-an Admiral’s payment to Dekker, 24 November 1599 (H. i. 114). ‘John’
-appears for ‘Robert’ Shaw, probably by an error, in a play warrant of
-1600 as given in the P. C. Acts (cf. App. B).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHAKESPEARE, EDMOND. The burials at St. Saviour’s include, on 31
-December 1607, ‘Edmond Shakespeare, a player: in the church,’ which is
-expanded in a fee-book as ‘Edmund Shakespeare, a player, buried in the
-church, with a forenoone knell of the great bell, 20<i>s.</i> (Collier,
-<i>Actors</i>, xiv). Presumably this is the brother of William.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHAKESPEARE, EDWARD. The baptisms at St. Giles’s include, on 12 August
-1607, ‘Edward, sonne of Edward Schackspeere, Player: base borne’
-(Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xv; J. Hunter in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 24589, f.
-24).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHAKESPEARE, WILLIAM. Strange’s, 1592; Pembroke’s (?), 1593; Sussex’s
-(?), 1594; Chamberlain’s-King’s, 1594–1616; and dramatist.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHAKSHAFTE, WILLIAM. Player (?) to Alexander Houghton, 1581 (cf. ch.
-ix, p. 280).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHANBROOKE, JOHN. A ‘player’ buried on 17 Sept. 1618 at St. Giles’s,
-where his children appear in the registers from 10 June 1610 to 4 June
-1618 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHANK, JOHN, or SHANKS, for the name is variously spelt, describes
-himself to Lord Chamberlain Pembroke in the <i>Sharers Papers</i> of
-1635 as ‘beeing an old man in this quality, who in his youth first
-served your noble father, and after that the late Queene Elizabeth,
-then King James, and now his royall Majestye’.<a id="FNanchor_993" href="#Footnote_993" class="fnanchor">[993]</a> Presumably the
-Pembroke’s company in question was that of 1597–1600, and the Queen
-Elizabeth’s men the travelling company of the latter years of the
-reign. Shank’s account of his own career may be amplified from the
-records of his name in the 1610 list of Prince Henry’s men and in
-the patent issued to the same company when they became the Elector
-Palatine’s men in 1613. He lived in Rochester Yard, Southwark, in
-1605, but the register of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, shows him later in
-Golden Lane, and records several baptisms and burials of his children
-between 1610 and 1629.<a id="FNanchor_994" href="#Footnote_994" class="fnanchor">[994]</a> He had joined the King’s men between 1613
-and 1619, as his name is in the patent of the latter year. It recurs in
-the official lists of the company up to 1629, but occasionally only in
-actor-lists up to 1631, including that of the First Folio Shakespeare.
-Amongst his ‘boyes’ or apprentices were Thomas Pollard, John Thompson,
-John Honiman, and Thomas Holcome. Thompson cost him £40; for other boys
-he had spent by 1635 as much as £200. After the death of John Heminges,
-Shank bought from his son William, surreptitiously, as his fellows
-averred, two shares in the Blackfriars and three in the Globe, for a
-total sum of £506. It was these transactions, which took place between
-1633 and 1635, that led to the petition of Benfield, Swanston, and
-Pollard to the Lord Chamberlain recorded in the <i>Sharers Papers</i>.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">[339]</span>
-As a result Shank was directed to transfer one share in each house
-to the petitioners. He, however, complained that he could not get
-satisfactory terms from them, and that they restrained him from the
-stage. The Cripplegate register records Shank’s burial on 27 January
-1636.<a id="FNanchor_995" href="#Footnote_995" class="fnanchor">[995]</a> James Wright calls him a ‘comedian’,<a id="FNanchor_996" href="#Footnote_996" class="fnanchor">[996]</a> and the following
-verses, signed W. Turner, and quoted by Collier from Turner’s <i>Dish
-of Stuff, or a Gallimaufry</i>, may perhaps be taken as confirming
-this<a id="FNanchor_997" href="#Footnote_997" class="fnanchor">[997]</a>:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That’s the fat fool of the Curtain,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the lean fool of the Bull:</div>
- <div>Since Shancke did leave to sing his rhimes,</div>
- <div class="i1">He is counted but a gull:</div>
- <div>The players on the Bankside,</div>
- <div class="i1">The round Globe and the Swan,</div>
- <div>Will teach you idle tricks of love,</div>
- <div class="i1">But the Bull will play the man.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The verses are dated 1662, but the theatres named
-indicate a much earlier date.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHAW (SHAA, autograph), ROBERT. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s,
-1597; Admiral’s, 1597–1602. John, son of Robert Shaw, ‘player’, was
-baptized on 10 April 1603, at St. Saviour’s, and Robert Shaw, ‘a man’,
-buried on 12 September 1603 (H. ii. 309; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHEALDEN. A ‘player’, who witnessed a loan for Henslowe on 24 August
-1594 (H. i. 76).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHEPARD. Paul’s door-keeper, 1582.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SHEPPARD, WILLIAM. A ‘player’, whose son Robert by his wife Johane was
-baptized at St. Helen’s, 26 November 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIBTHORPE, EDWARD. Whitefriars lessee, 1608.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIMPSON, CHRISTOPHER. Shoemaker of Egton, Yorks, recusant and
-unlicensed player in 1610–12 (cf. ch. ix, p. 305).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIMPSON, CUTHBERT. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616
-(<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIMPSON, JOHN. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616
-(<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIMPSON, RICHARD. Of Egton, recusant and unlicensed player, 1616
-(<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SIMPSON, ROBERT. Shoemaker of Staythes, Yorks, recusant and unlicensed
-player, 1612, 1616 (<i>ibid.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SINCLER (SINKLO, SINCKLO), JOHN. Strange’s (?), 1590–1; Pembroke’s (?),
-1592–3; Chamberlain’s, 1594 (?)-1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SINGER, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588; Admiral’s, 1594–1603. He became
-an ordinary Groom of the Chamber in 1603. A John Singer in 1571 owed
-money to a Canterbury citizen, who had also debts from players (H.
-R. Plomer in <i>3 Library</i>, ix. 253). Children of John Singer,
-‘player’, appear in the St. Saviour’s register from 1 August 1597 to
-5 October 1609, and his name is in the token-books from 1596 to 1602
-(<i>Bodl.</i>). The <i>Quips upon Questions</i> (1600) of Armin (q. v.)
-has been ascribed to Singer in error. Rowlands couples him as a clown
-with Pope (q. v.) in 1600, and Dekker, <i>Gull’s Horn Book</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">[340]</span> (1609),
-says, ‘Tarlton, Kemp, nor Singer, nor all the litter of fooles that now
-come drawling behind them, never played the clowns more naturally than
-the arrantest sot of you all shall’. Heywood praised him as dead in the
-same year (H. ii. 310).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SKINNER, RICHARD. Interluders, 1547–58.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SLATER (SLAUGHTER), MARTIN. Admiral’s, 1594–7; Scotland, 1599;
-Hertford’s, 1603; Anne’s, 1606; King’s Revels manager, 1608; Chamber
-of Bristol, 1618–19. He is sometimes recorded by his Christian name
-only. He had a wife on 22 July 1604, and is described as a citizen and
-ironmonger in 1608. His name is in the Southwark token-books from 1595
-to 1602, and Martin Slawter, ‘a servant’, was buried there on 4 August
-1625 (H. ii. 310; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SLAUGHTER, WILLIAM. ‘Ghost-name’ evolved by Mr. Fleay for a supposed
-Queen’s man.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SLEE (SLYE), JOHN. Queen Jane’s, &gt;1537; Interluders, 1539–40.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SLY, WILLIAM, was doubtless of Strange’s men or the Admiral’s about
-1590–1, when he played in <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i>. On 11 October
-1594 Henslowe sold him ‘a jewell of gowld seat with a whitte safer’ for
-8<i>s.</i> to be paid for at the rate of 1<i>s.</i> weekly.<a id="FNanchor_998" href="#Footnote_998" class="fnanchor">[998]</a> But
-apparently he never paid more than 6<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> An inventory
-of garments belonging to the Admiral’s men on 13 March 1598 includes
-‘Perowes sewt, which W<sup>m</sup> Sley were’.<a id="FNanchor_999" href="#Footnote_999" class="fnanchor">[999]</a> Presumably this had come from
-Strange’s men, as Sly is never traceable as a member of the Admiral’s
-company. Probably he joined the Chamberlain’s men on their formation
-in 1594. He is in all the lists of this company from 1598 to 1605, and
-in the Induction to <i>The Malcontent</i> (1604). He is also in the
-actor-list of the First Folio Shakespeare. The fact that ‘Christopher
-Sly, old Sly’s son of Burton Heath’ is the name given to the beggar in
-<i>The Taming of the Shrew</i> (<i>c.</i> 1594), led Collier to suggest
-that he migrated from Warwickshire about the same time as Shakespeare.
-But the beggar in <i>A Shrew</i> is already Sly, and the name occurs in
-various parts of London. The Southwark token-books show a William Sly
-in Norman’s Rents during 1588, in Horseshoe Court during 1593, and in
-Rose Alley during 1595 and 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1000" href="#Footnote_1000" class="fnanchor">[1000]</a> In 1605 he was named as one of
-the overseers and residuary executors, with a legacy, in the will of
-Augustine Phillips. The register of St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, records
-the baptism on 24 September and the burial on 4 October 1606 of John,
-base-born son of William Sly, player, by Margaret Chambers; and the
-register of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, records his own burial on 16
-August 1608, from Halliwell Street. His nuncupative will was made on 4
-August 1608. He left legacies to Cuthbert Burbadge, and James Sandes,
-and the rest of his property to Robert and Cecily Browne and their
-daughter Jane. Robert is to have his part of the Globe, and Cecily
-is appointed executrix. The will was witnessed by several illiterate
-women, and disputed by a relative named William Sly, but proved on
-24 August.<a id="FNanchor_1001" href="#Footnote_1001" class="fnanchor">[1001]</a> He was not one of the original shareholders in the
-Globe, but was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">[341]</span> admitted to a share in 1605 or later. On 9 August 1608,
-between the date of his will and that of his death, he was granted a
-lease of a seventh share in the Blackfriars, and this his executrix
-afterwards surrendered to Richard Burbadge.<a id="FNanchor_1002" href="#Footnote_1002" class="fnanchor">[1002]</a> Heywood names Sly
-(<i>c.</i> 1608) amongst other dead players, whose ‘deserts’ he
-commemorates.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SMITH, ANTONY. Charles’s, 1616, 1625.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SMITH, JOHN. Interluders, <i>c.</i> 1547–80. Is he the John Smith who
-assisted George Ferrers as Lord of Misrule in 1552–3 (Feuillerat,
-<i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 120)?</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SMITH, JOHN. Revels, 1609.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SMYGHT, WILLIAM. A ‘player’ who witnessed a loan from Philip to Francis
-Henslowe on 1 June 1595 (H. i. 6; ii. 312).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SOMERSET, GEORGE. Admiral’s, 1601–2. See also <span class="smcap">John Wilson</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SOUTHEY, THOMAS. Interluders, 1547–56.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SOUTHYN, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SPENCER, GABRIEL. Chamberlain’s (?), 1597; Pembroke’s, 1597; Admiral’s,
-1598. He was slain by Ben Jonson (cf. ch. xxiii) on 22 September 1598,
-and was buried on the next day but one at St. Leonard’s, where the
-register records him as from Hogge Lane (Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xxii).
-On 3 December 1596 a coroner’s inquest found that he had himself slain
-James Feake with a rapier in the house of Richard East, barber, in St.
-Leonard’s (Jeaffreson, i. xlv, 234). Henslowe sometimes describes him
-merely as ‘Gabriel’, and under this name Heywood praises him (H. ii.
-312).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SPENCER, JOHN. Germany, 1605–23. He was known by the clown-name of Hans
-Stockfisch.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SQUIRE, LAWRENCE. Master of Chapel, 1486–93.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">STEVENS, THOMAS. Denmark-Germany, 1586–7.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">STOKEDALE, EDMUND. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">STRATFORD, WILLIAM. Henry’s-Palsgrave’s, 1610–23. He lived at the upper
-end of White Cross Street in 1623. His children appear in the St.
-Giles’s register in that year, and he was buried as a ‘player’ there on
-27 August 1625 (J. 348, 350; <i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">STROWDEWIKE, EDMUND. Interluders, 1559–68.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SUDBURY, THOMAS. Interluders, 1530.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SUTTON, ROBERT. A London player in 1550 (cf. App. D, No. v).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SWANSTON, ELIARD. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1622; King’s, 1624–42 (Murray, i.
-172, 255).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SWINNERTON (SWETHERTON), THOMAS. Anne’s, 1604–19; for his later career
-cf. Murray, ii. 101, 105.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SYFERWESTE, RICHARD. Worcester’s (?), 1602 (H. ii. 314).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SYMCOCKES. Lennox’s, 1605.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">SYMONS, JOHN. A tumbler. Strange’s, 1583; Oxford’s, 1585; Strange’s,
-1586–8 (?); Queen’s, 1588 (?)-9.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TAILOR, ROBERT. Admiral’s, 1601–2.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">[342]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TARBUCK, JOHN. Revels patentee, 1610.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TARLTON, RICHARD, first appears in the ‘Q<sup>d</sup> Richard Tarlton’ at the
-end of a ballad called <i>A very lamentable and wofull discours of the
-fierce fluds ... the 5. of October, 1570</i> (Arber, i. 440).<a id="FNanchor_1003" href="#Footnote_1003" class="fnanchor">[1003]</a>
-This is preserved (Halliwell, 126; Collier, <i>Old Ballads</i>, 78;
-H. L. Collman, <i>Ballads and Broadsides</i>, 265). The Stationers’
-Registers also record in 1576 ‘a newe booke in Englishe verse intituled
-Tarltons Toyes’ (Arber, ii. 306), in 1578 ‘Tarltons Tragical Treatises
-conteyninge sundrie discourses and pretie conceiptes bothe in prose
-and verse’ (Arber, ii. 323), and in 1579 ‘Tarltons devise upon this
-unlooked for great snowe’ (Arber, ii. 346); but these are all lost.
-<i>Tarltons Jigge of a horse loade of Fooles</i> (Halliwell, xx)
-should, if it is genuine, date from about 1579, as the jest at the
-Puritan fool ‘Goose son’ is obviously aimed at Stephen Gosson; but
-it reads to me like a fake, and Halliwell took it from a manuscript
-belonging to Collier, who had already quoted it in his tainted <i>New
-Facts</i>, 18. It is improbable that Richard is the ‘one Tarlton’ whose
-house in Paris Garden is included in a list of suspected papist resorts
-sent by Richard Frith to Alderman Martin at some date not earlier than
-1585 (Wright, <i>Eliz.</i> ii. 250). The first mention of him is by
-Gabriel Harvey (cf. p. 4) in 1579, when he had already acquired some
-reputation. He became an original member of the Queen’s men (q. v.) in
-1583, and remained their principal comedian until his death in 1588.
-For this company he wrote <i>The Seven Deadly Sins</i> (q. v.) in 1585.
-Music for some of his jigs is in existence (Halliwell, <i>Cambridge
-Manuscript Rarities</i>, 8) and his facility as a jester made him,
-until he pushed it too far, a <i>persona grata</i> in Elizabeth’s
-presence. Bohun, 352, says that the Queen admitted ‘Tarleton, a famous
-comedian, and a pleasant talker, and other such like men, to divert
-her with stories of the town and the common jests or accidents, but
-so that they kept within the bounds of modesty and chastity’. He
-adds, ‘Tarleton, who was then the best comedian in England, had made
-a pleasant play, and when it was acting before the Queen, he pointed
-at Sir Walter Raleigh and said “See, the Knave commands the Queen”,
-for which he was corrected by a frown from the Queen; yet he had the
-confidence to add that he was of too much and too intolerable a power;
-and going on with the same liberty, he reflected on the overgreat
-power and riches of the Earl of Leicester, which was so universally
-applauded by all that were present, that she thought best to bear
-these reflections with a seeming unconcernedness. But yet she was so
-offended, that she forbad Tarleton and all her jesters from coming
-near her table, being inwardly displeased with this impudent and
-unseasonable liberty.’ An anecdote of Tarlton ‘playing the God Luz
-with a flitch of bacon at his back’, fighting the Queen’s little dog
-Perrico de Faldes with sword and long staff, and exchanging chaff with
-the Earl of Sussex (Halliwell, <i>Death-bed</i>, 30, from <i>S. P.
-Dom. Eliz.</i> ccxv, 89) might have some point<span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">[343]</span> if Luz was a take-off
-of Leicester. On 27 October 1587 Tarlton was allowed as a Master of
-Fence, and is described as an ‘ordenary grome off her majestes chamber’
-(<i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530, f. 6). The same description recurs in his
-will, which was signed on 3 September 1588, the actual day of his
-burial at St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, from Halliwell Street. He left
-his property to his son Philip, as whose guardians he appointed his
-mother Katharine, then a widow, his friend Robert Adams, and his fellow
-of the Queen’s men, William Johnson. One of the witnesses, Charles
-Barnard, was his sister’s husband. This will was disputed by Katharine
-Tarlton, who brought a bill in Chancery, alleging that after signing
-it and making over property worth £700 to Adams, Tarlton repented,
-tried in vain to recall the will, and made another. A rejoinder by
-Adams accuses Katharine of acting under the influence of another
-son-in-law, Thomas Lee, a butcher, and describes how Adams was called
-to Tarlton’s death-bed in the house of one Emma Ball in Shoreditch,
-‘of a very bad reputacion’. Some colour is given to his mother’s
-complaint by a death-bed petition from Tarlton to Walsingham, begging
-his protection for Philip, who was Sidney’s godson, against ‘a sly
-fellow, on Addames’ (<i>S. P. Dom. Eliz.</i> ccxv. 90). There is no
-mention of Tarlton’s wife; the boy was six years old. Robert Adams was
-apparently a lawyer, and to be distinguished from John Adams of the
-Queen’s men, who is referred to as a fellow of Tarlton’s by the stage
-keeper in <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (Induction 38), ‘I kept the Stage in
-Master <i>Tarletons</i> time, I thanke my starres. Ho! and that man
-had liu’d to haue play’d in <i>Bartholmew Fayre</i>, you should ha’
-seene him ha’ come in, and ha’ beene coozened i’ the Cloath-quarter, so
-finely. And <i>Adams</i>, the Rogue, ha’ leap’d and caper’d vpon him,
-and ha’ dealt his vermine about, as though they had cost him nothing.’
-After Tarlton’s death, several pamphlets, ascribed to him or otherwise
-exploiting his popularity, came to the press; in 1588 ‘a ballad
-intituled Tarltons Farewell’ (Arber, ii. 500); in 1589 ‘a sorowfull
-newe sonnette, intituled Tarltons Recantacon uppon this theame gyven
-him by a gentleman at the Bel savage without Ludgate (nowe or ells
-never) beinge the laste theame he songe’ (Arber, ii. 526); in 1589
-‘Tarltons repentance of his farewell to his frendes in his sicknes a
-little before his deathe’ (Arber, ii. 531); in 1590 ‘a pleasant dyttye
-dialogue wise betwene Tarltons ghost and Robyn Good Fellowe’ (Arber,
-ii. 559). These are lost, unless, indeed, <i>Tarltons Farewell</i>
-is identical with ‘A pretie new ballad, entituled Willie and Peggie,
-to the tune of Tarlton’s Carroll’, printed in <i>Archiv.</i> cxiv.
-341, and A. Clark, <i>Shirburn Ballads</i>, 351, from <i>Rawl. Poet.
-MS.</i> 185, f. 10. This ends ‘qd. Richard Tarlton’, but it is in fact
-a lament over the death of Tarlton under the name of Willie, as is
-clearly shown by lines 23 ‘None would be wery to see him one stage’,
-41 ‘A groome of her chamber my Willie was made’, 55 ‘To singe them
-their themes he never denied’. These verses support the theory, based
-upon a contemporary note in a copy of Spenser (cf. <i>6 N. Q.</i> xi.
-417; Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 394), that Tarlton is the ‘pleasant
-Willy’ mourned as dead in the <i>Tears of the Muses</i> (1591), 208,
-and if he is also the Yorick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">[344]</span> of <i>Hamlet</i>, v. 1. 201, he was
-sufficiently honoured. Another ballad in the same manuscript on the
-Armada (<i>Archiv.</i> cxiv. 344; <i>Ballads from MS.</i> ii. 92)
-also claims to be to the tune of Tarlton’s ‘carroll’; the ‘Carroll’
-itself is unknown. ‘<i>Tarltons Newes out of Purgatorie. Onelye such
-a jest as his Jigge, fit for Gentlemen to laugh at an houre, &amp;c.
-Published by an old companion of his, Robin Goodfellow</i>’ (n.d.,
-but entered in S. R. 26 June 1590; Arber, ii. 553) is a volume of
-<i>novelle</i>, put into the mouth of Tarlton’s ghost. The writer
-describes him as ‘only superficially seene in learning, having no
-more but a bare insight into the Latin tung’, and physically as ‘one
-attired in russet, with a buttond cap on his head, a great bag by his
-side, and a strong bat in his hand’. Similarly, Henry Chettle, who put
-into his mouth a defence of plays forming a section of <i>Kind-hartes
-Dreame</i> (1592; cf. App. C, No. xlix), knew him in a dream ‘by his
-sute of russet, his buttond cap, his taber, his standing on the toe,
-and other tricks’. <i>The Cobler of Caunterburie or an Invective
-against Tarltons Newes out of Purgatorie</i> (1590) is also a volume
-of <i>novelle</i>, and has practically nothing about Tarlton. On the
-other hand, <i>Tarltons Jests</i> at least claims to be biographical,
-although its material, like that of Peele’s <i>Jests</i>, largely
-consists of the flotsam and jetsam of all the jest-books. The earliest
-extant edition is of 1611. But it was transferred from one publisher
-to another in 1609 (Arber, iii. 402), the second of its three parts,
-which mentions the Globe (Halliwell, 23), was entered in S. R. on 4
-August 1600 (Arber, iii. 168), and probably therefore the first part
-was already in print in the sixteenth century. It speaks of Tarlton
-as a Queen’s man (Halliwell, 13, 27, 29, 30, 33), as playing at the
-Bull in Bishopsgate (13, 24), where he did both the clown and the
-judge in ‘Henry the Fifth’ (<i>The Famous Victories</i>) to Knell’s
-Harry, the Curtain (16), and the Bell in Gracechurch Street (24), as
-singing themes (16, 27, 28, 40), and as jesting in clown’s apparel in
-the royal presence or in the Great Chamber at Court (7, 8). It also
-tells us, for what the statements are worth, that his father lived
-at Ilford (40), that he had a wife Kate of light character (17, 19),
-that he kept the Saba tavern in Gracechurch Street, where he was
-scavenger of the ward (15, 21, 22), and an ordinary in Paternoster
-Row (21, 26), and that he had a squint (12) and a flat nose (28). A
-woodcut on the title-page confirms these peculiarities of feature,
-and represents a short, broad-faced, cunning-looking man, with curly
-hair, an elaborate moustache and a starved beard, wearing a cap, and
-a bag or moneybox slung at his side, and playing on a tabor and a
-pipe. This appears to be taken from a drawing by John Scottowe in an
-initial letter to some verses on Tarlton’s death in <i>Harl. MS.</i>
-3885, f. 19. Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (1592, <i>Works</i>, i.
-188), gives us a hint of his stage methods in describing how at a
-provincial performance, as the Queen’s men ‘were now entring into
-their first merriment (as they call it) the people began exceedingly
-to laugh, when <i>Tarlton</i> first peeped out his head’, and how a
-‘cholericke wise Iustice’ laid his staff about their pates, ‘in that
-they, being but Farmers &amp; poore countrey Hyndes, would presume to
-laugh at the Queenes men, and make no more account of her cloath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">[345]</span>
-in his presence’. According to Fuller (<i>Worthies</i>, iii. 139)
-Tarlton was born at Condover in Shropshire, and kept his father’s swine
-there, until a servant of the Earl of Leicester, struck with his witty
-replies, brought him to Court. On the other hand, in the <i>Three Lords
-and Three Ladies of London</i> (1590), by his fellow Robert Wilson,
-Simplicity produces his picture, and says he was ‘a prentice in his
-youth of this honorable city: ... when he was yoong he was leaning to
-the trade ... waterbearing: I wis he hath tossed a tankard in Cornehil
-er now’ (sign. <span class="allsmcap">C</span><sup>v</sup>). Halliwell (xxx) has collected a large
-number of allusions to Tarleton and his humours, lasting well into
-the middle of the seventeenth century. Taverns were named after him,
-and one is said to have still stood in Southwark in 1798. Much of the
-action of W. Percy’s <i>Cuck-Queanes and Cuckolds Errants</i> (q. v.)
-takes place at the Tarlton Inn, Colchester, of which he is said to have
-been the ‘quondam controller and induperator’. Tarlton himself speaks
-the prologue to the play. George Wilson, <i>The Commendation of Cockes
-and Cock-fighting</i> (1607), records that on 4 May 1602 there fought
-at Norwich ‘a cocke called Tarleton, who was so intituled, because he
-alwayes came to the fight like a drummer, making a thundering noyse
-with his winges, which cocke fought many batels with mighty and fierce
-adversaries’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TAWYER, WILLIAM. At <i>M. N. D.</i> v. 1. 128, F<sub>1</sub> has the s. d.
-‘Tawyer with a Trumpet before them’. The St. Saviour’s burials give in
-June 1625, ‘William Tawier, M<sup>r</sup> Heminges man’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TAYLOR, JOHN. Choir Master at St. Mary’s, Woolnoth, 1557; at
-Westminster, 1561–7.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TAYLOR, JOSEPH, is conjectured by Collier to be the Joseph Taylor
-who was baptized at St. Andrew’s by the Wardrobe in Blackfriars on 6
-February 1586, the Joseph Taylor who married Elizabeth Ingle, widow,
-at St. Saviour’s, Southwark, on 2 May 1610, and the Joseph Taylor who
-is shown by the Southwark token-books as dwelling in ‘M<sup>r</sup> Langley’s
-new rents, near the play-house’ during 1607, in Austen’s Rents during
-1612 and 1615, as ‘gone’ in 1617, and as dwelling ‘near the play-house’
-in 1623 and 1629, ‘on the Bankside’ in 1631, and in Gravel Lane
-during 1633. ‘Joseph Taylor, player,’ is entered in the St. Saviour’s
-registers as the father of Elsabeth (bapt. 12 July 1612), Dixsye and
-Joseph (bapt. 21 July 1614), Jone (bapt. 11 January 1616), Robert
-(bapt. 1 June 1617), and Anne (bapt. 24 August 1623).<a id="FNanchor_1004" href="#Footnote_1004" class="fnanchor">[1004]</a> On the
-other hand, a Joseph Taylor, not improbably a player, was living in
-Bishopsgate near the Spittle in 1623 (J. 347). He was a member of the
-Duke of York’s company in 1610, but left them without the consent of
-his fellows for the Lady Elizabeth’s in 1611, and thereby involved
-himself during the same year in a lawsuit with John Heminges.<a id="FNanchor_1005" href="#Footnote_1005" class="fnanchor">[1005]</a> He
-is in the actor-lists of <i>The Honest Man’s Fortune</i> (1613) and
-of <i>The Coxcomb</i>, as played by the Lady Elizabeth’s men about
-the same date, and is also named in the text of their <i>Bartholomew
-Fair</i> (1614). There seems to have been some sort of amalgamation
-between the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">[346]</span> Duke of York’s, now Prince Charles’s, and the Lady
-Elizabeth’s in 1615, and when this terminated in the following year,
-Taylor became again a member of the Prince’s company. He was still with
-them between 6 January and 2 February 1619, when he appeared as Dr.
-Almanac in Middleton and Rowley’s <i>Mask of Heroes</i>, but on 19 May
-1619 he appears in a livery warrant issued for the King’s men. As he is
-not in their patent of the previous 27 March, it is to be supposed that
-he joined them to replace Burbadge, who had died on 13 March.<a id="FNanchor_1006" href="#Footnote_1006" class="fnanchor">[1006]</a>
-The rest of his stage career was spent with the King’s men. He
-succeeded Burbadge in several of his characters, including Ferdinand
-in the <i>Duchess of Malfi</i> and Hamlet, although the incidence of
-dates must cast some doubt upon the statement of Downes that he was
-instructed in the part ‘by the Author M<sup>r</sup> Shakespear’.<a id="FNanchor_1007" href="#Footnote_1007" class="fnanchor">[1007]</a> Wright
-says that he played it ‘incomparably well’, and praises him also
-as Iago in <i>Othello</i>, Truewit in <i>Epicoene</i>, and Face in
-<i>The Alchemist</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1008" href="#Footnote_1008" class="fnanchor">[1008]</a> He is included in the First Folio list of
-performers in Shakespeare’s plays. In 1623 Nicholas Tooley left him
-£10 to pay a debt for which Tooley had become his surety. With Lowin
-he seems to have assumed the leadership of the company in succession
-to Heminges and Condell, and after Heminges’s death in 1630 he was
-admitted to two shares in the ‘house’ of the Globe and one in that of
-the Blackfriars, which he still held in 1635. About 1637 he petitioned
-for a waiter’s place in the Custom House of London,<a id="FNanchor_1009" href="#Footnote_1009" class="fnanchor">[1009]</a> and on 11
-November 1639 he obtained the post of Yeoman of the Revels, probably
-through the influence of Sir Henry Herbert, with whom he had been
-in frequent contact as representative of his company.<a id="FNanchor_1010" href="#Footnote_1010" class="fnanchor">[1010]</a> After
-the closing of the theatres he joined his fellows of the King’s men
-in publishing the First Folio of Beaumont and Fletcher’s plays in
-1647, and for his benefit and Lowin’s <i>The Wild-goose Chase</i> was
-added in 1652. He died at Richmond and was there buried on 4 November
-1652.<a id="FNanchor_1011" href="#Footnote_1011" class="fnanchor">[1011]</a> The ascription to his brush of the ‘Chandos’ portrait of
-Shakespeare is now discredited.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">THARE (THAYER), JOHN. Worcester’s, 1602–3; Germany, 1603–6 (?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TILBERY, JOHN. Chapel, 1405.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOMSONE, JOHN. A ‘player’ who borrowed 5<i>s.</i> from Henslowe on 22
-December 1598 (H. i. 40).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOOLEY, NICHOLAS, appears in the 1619 patent to the King’s men, but
-not in that of 1603. He probably joined the company about 1605, as he
-received a legacy under the will of Phillips on 4 May as his ‘fellow’.
-He is not in the actor-list of <i>Volpone</i> in that year, but is
-in most of the later actor-lists from <i>The Alchemist</i> (1610)
-to <i>The Spanish Curate</i> (1622), and in that of the First Folio
-Shakespeare. In 1619 he witnessed Richard Burbadge’s will. He made
-his own will as Nicholas Tooley, Gentleman, on 3 June 1623. After
-legacies to charity, to the families of ‘my good friend Mr. Cuthbert
-Burbadge (in whose house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_347">[347]</span> I do now lodge)’, of ‘my late Mr. Richard
-Burbadge deceased’, and of ‘my good friend Mr. Henry Condell’, and to
-Joseph Taylor, and remissions of debt to John Underwood and William
-Ecclestone, but not to Richard Robinson, he ends by making Burbadge
-and Condell his executors and residuary legatees. By a codicil of the
-same date, signed as Nicholas Wilkinson <i>alias</i> Tooley, he guards
-against any danger of invalidity due to his failure to use the name
-of Wilkinson.<a id="FNanchor_1012" href="#Footnote_1012" class="fnanchor">[1012]</a> Presumably, therefore, Wilkinson, and not Tooley,
-was his original name. The name of Tooley was fairly common in London,
-and more than one Nicholas Wilkinson has been traced. He may have
-been the Nicholas, son of Charles Wilkinson, baptized at St. Anne’s,
-Blackfriars, on 3 February 1575.<a href="#Footnote_1013" class="fnanchor">[1013]</a> There seems no reason to connect
-him with a Nicholas Tooley found on the Warwickshire muster-book in
-1569.<a id="FNanchor_1013" href="#Footnote_1013" class="fnanchor">[1013]</a> His reference to Richard Burbadge as
-his ‘master’ suggests that he was his apprentice. It is tempting, but
-arbitrary, to identify him with the ‘Nick’ who played with Strange’s
-men in <i>2 Seven Deadly Sins</i> about 1592, or the ‘Nycke’ who
-tumbled before Elizabeth for the Admiral’s in 1601 and is commended
-by Joan to Edward Alleyn on 21 October 1603.<a id="FNanchor_1014" href="#Footnote_1014" class="fnanchor">[1014]</a> The register of
-St. Giles’s, Cripplegate, records the burial of ‘Nicholas Tooley,
-gentleman, from the house of Cuthbert Burbidge, gentleman’, on 5 June
-1623.<a id="FNanchor_1015" href="#Footnote_1015" class="fnanchor">[1015]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOTTNELL, HARRY. A ‘player’ whose daughter Joan was baptized at St.
-Saviour’s on 20 March 1591 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOWNE, JOHN. Queen’s, 1583, 1588, 1594–7. Greg (H. ii. 315) rather
-arbitrarily suggests that Henslowe’s note of him as a witness to a loan
-to Francis Henslowe of the Queen’s on 8 May 1593 (H. i. 4) is by an
-error for Thomas (q. v.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOWNE, THOMAS. Admiral’s-Henry’s, 1594–1610. His name is in a s. d. to
-<i>1 Honest Whore</i> (1604). Alleyn’s papers record a widow Agnes.
-Towne’s name is in the Southwark token-books during 1600–7, and Thomas
-Towne ‘a man’ was buried on 9 August 1612. Towne’s will of 4 July 1612
-names his wife, whom he calls Ann, and his brother John, of Dunwich
-in Suffolk (‘if he be still living’) and leaves £3 to his fellows
-Borne, Downton, Juby, Rowley, Massey, and Humphrey Jeffes, ‘to make
-them a supper when it shall please them to call for it’ (H. ii. 316;
-<i>Bodl.</i>, citing will in P. C. C.).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOWNSEND, JOHN. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1616–32 (?); for his later
-career, cf. Murray, i. 252–60; ii. 8.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TOY. The performer of Will Summer in <i>Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament</i>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TREVELL, WILLIAM. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, 1621.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TRUSSELL, ALVERY. Chapel, 1600–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">TUNSTALL (DONSTALL, DONSTONE), JAMES. Worcester’s, 1583; Admiral’s,
-1590–1, 1594–7. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i> (1598), refers to him in
-conjunction with Alleyn (q. v.). The variation in his name is made
-more, rather than less, puzzling by the baptism at St. Botolph’s of
-Dunstone Tunstall on 20 August 1572 (H. ii. 261).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_348">[348]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">UBALDINI, PETRUCCIO. Italians, 1576 (?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">UNDERELL. Worcester’s, 1602. A Thomas Underell was a royal trumpeter in
-1609–24 (<i>Chamber Accounts</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">UNDERWOOD, JOHN, was a Chapel boy in the year 1601, and continued at
-Blackfriars until, as the <i>Sharers Papers</i> state, on growing up
-to be a man, he was taken to strengthen the King’s service. This was
-in 1608 or a little later. He is not in the Queen’s Revels actor-list
-of <i>Epicoene</i> (1609), and is in the King’s men’s actor-list of
-<i>The Alchemist</i> (1610), and thereafter in the official lists and
-most of the actor-lists of the company, including that of the First
-Folio Shakespeare, up to 1624. Tooley in his will of 1623 forgave him
-a debt. His own will was made on 4 October 1624 and has a codicil
-appended on 10 October, doubtless from his oral directions, but after
-his death. He describes himself as ‘of the parish of Saint Bartholomew
-the Less, in London, gent.’, and leaves his shares in the Blackfriars,
-Globe, and Curtain to his executors, of whom Henry Condell is one, in
-trust for his five children, all under twenty-one&mdash;John, Elizabeth,
-Burbage, Thomas, and Isabel. The executors and his ‘fellowes’, Mr. John
-Heminges and John Lowin, who are appointed overseers, have 11s. each
-for rings.<a id="FNanchor_1016" href="#Footnote_1016" class="fnanchor">[1016]</a> The baptism of his son John on 27 December 1610 is in
-the register of Saint Bartholomew the Less, West Smithfield.<a id="FNanchor_1017" href="#Footnote_1017" class="fnanchor">[1017]</a> The
-trust was still unexpired at Condell’s death in 1627, and was handed on
-by him to his wife. The <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635 show one share in
-the Blackfriars still in the hands of an Underwood; but apparently a
-third of it had been parted with about 1632 to Eliart Swanston.<a id="FNanchor_1018" href="#Footnote_1018" class="fnanchor">[1018]</a></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">VINCENT. Strange’s (?), 1590–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">VIRNIUS, JOHANN FRIEDRICH. Germany, 1615.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WAKEFIELD, EDWARD. Germany, 1597, 1602.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WALPOLE, FRANCIS. Anne’s, 1616–17.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WARD, ANTHONY. Vide <span class="smcap">Arkinstall</span>.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WAYMUS (WAMBUS), FRANCIS. Lady Elizabeth’s, 1611, 1617–24.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WEBSTER, GEORGE. Germany, 1598, 1600–3.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WEBSTER, JOHN. Germany, 1596. Is he identical with the dramatist?</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WESTCOTT, SEBASTIAN. Master of Paul’s, 1557–82. He is sometimes
-described by his Christian name alone.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WHETSTONE, <i>c.</i> 1571. Cf. s.v. <span class="smcap">Fidge</span>. Plomer suggests
-that he might be George Whetstone (cf. ch. xxiii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WHITELOCKE, JAMES, afterwards Sir James. Merchant Taylors, 1575–86.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WILDER, PHILIP VAN. Gentleman of the Privy Chamber and lutenist,
-commissioned to raise a royal company of young minstrels in 1550; cf.
-ch. xii, s.v. Chapel.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘WILL.’ Strange’s, 1590–1.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">‘WILL.’ Admiral’s, 1597.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WILLIAMS, JOHN. Chapel, 1509.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_349">[349]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WILSON, JOHN. In <i>Much Ado</i>, ii. 3. 38, for the ‘Enter Balthaser
-with musicke’ of Q<sub>1</sub>, F<sub>1</sub> has ‘Enter ... Iacke Wilson’, who
-therefore, at some date before 1623, sang ‘Sigh no more, ladies!’
-He is probably the son of Nicholas Wilson, ‘minstrel’, baptized at
-St. Bartholomew’s the Less on 24 April 1585. He had an elder brother
-Adam, and buried a wife Joan on 17 July 1624, and an unnamed son on
-3 September 1624 at St. Giles’s from the house of George Sommerset,
-musician (Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xviii). He seems to have become a
-city ‘wait’ about 1622 and to have still held his post in 1641, and
-has been confused (Collier in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, ii. 33; E. F.
-Rimbault, <i>Who was Jacke Wilson?</i>, 1846) with another John Wilson,
-born in 1595, a royal lutenist and musician of distinction (cf. <i>D.
-N. B.</i>). One or other of them was concerned with a performance of
-<i>M. N. D.</i> in the house of John Williams, Bishop of Lincoln, on 27
-September 1631, which gave offence to the Puritans (Murray, ii. 148).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WILSON, ROBERT, was one of Leicester’s men in 1572, 1574, and 1581.
-A reference in Gabriel Harvey’s correspondence of 1579 suggests that
-he was conspicuous amongst the actors of the day, and Lodge’s praise
-about the same date in the <i>Defence of Plays</i> of his <i>Shorte and
-Sweete</i>, ‘the practice of a good scholler,’ shows that he was also
-a playwright. This piece Lodge compares with Gosson’s <i>Catiline’s
-Conspiracies</i>, and it may have been on the same theme. Further
-evidence of his reputation is in the letter of 1581 from T. Baylye (q.
-v.). In 1583 he joined the Queen’s men, and is described by Howes in
-his account of the formation of that company as a ‘rare’ man ‘for a
-quicke, delicate, refined, extemporall witt’. He is not in the Queen’s
-list of 1588. This may not be quite complete; on the other hand he
-may by then have left the company. I see no solid foundation for the
-conjectures of Fleay, ii. 279, that he was the player of <i>Greenes
-Groatsworth of Wit</i> (cf. App. C, No. xlviii) who penned the
-<i>Moral of Man’s Wit</i> and the <i>Dialogue of Dives</i>, that he
-wrote <i>Fair Em</i>, that he left the Queen’s for Strange’s in 1590
-and thereby incurred Greene’s hostility, that he is the Roscius of
-Nashe’s <i>Menaphon</i> epistle, that he died of the plague in 1593.
-It is extremely unlikely that he died in 1593, for in his <i>Palladis
-Tamia</i> of 1598, after lauding Tarlton as famous for ‘extemporall
-verse’, Meres continues, ‘And so is now our wittie Wilson, who for
-learning and extemporall witte in this facultie is without compare or
-compeere, as to his great and eternall commendations he manifested
-in his chalenge at the Swanne on the Banke side.’ The common use by
-Meres and Howes of the phrase ‘extemporall witte’ renders it almost
-impossible to suppose that they are not speaking of the same man. It is
-true that, in the <i>Apology for Actors</i>, Heywood, whose knowledge
-of the stage must have gone back at least to 1594, classes Wilson with
-the older generation of actors, whom he never saw, as being before his
-time, and I take it the explanation is that, at or before the virtual
-break-up of the Queen’s men in the plague of 1592–3, Wilson gave up
-acting, and devoted himself to writing, and occasional extemporizing on
-themes. He is generally supposed to be the R. W. of <i>The Three Ladies
-of London</i> (1584) and <i>The Three Lords of London</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">[350]</span> (1590), and
-the ‘Robert Wilson, Gent.’ of <i>The Cobbler’s Prophecy</i> (1594).
-The ‘Gent.’ is hardly an insuperable obstacle to identifying him with
-the ‘Robert Wilson, yoman (a player)’, who was buried at St. Giles’s,
-Cripplegate, on 20 November 1600 (Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xviii). A
-Wilson is in the suspected Admiral’s cast of <i>c.</i> January 1600.
-But now comes the real difficulty. Meres, also in the <i>Palladis
-Tamia</i> and without any indication that he has another man in mind,
-includes ‘Wilson’ in a group of ‘the best for comedy amongst vs’, which
-is composed of the principal writers for the Admiral’s in 1598, and
-amongst these writers, as shown by Henslowe’s papers, was a Robert
-Wilson, who collaborated in eleven plays during 1598, and in three
-more during 1599 and 1600. He is last mentioned in a letter of 14 June
-1600. This is generally taken to be a younger man than the Queen’s
-player, possibly a Robert Wilson who was baptized at St. Botolph’s,
-Bishopsgate, on 22 September 1579, and married Mary Eaton there on 24
-June 1606, possibly the Robert Wilson (not described as ‘a player and
-the younger’ as Collier suggests in <i>Bodl.</i>) whose son Robert was
-baptized at St. Leonard’s on 15 January 1601 (Stopes, <i>Burbage</i>,
-141), possibly the Robert Wilson whose burial is recorded at St.
-Bartholomew’s the Less on 21 October 1610. On the whole, I am inclined
-to think that, in view of the character of Meres’ references, of the
-use of Catiline as a play-theme both about 1580 and in 1598 (cf. ch.
-xxiii), and of the sudden disappearance of Wilson from Henslowe’s diary
-in the year of the ‘player’s’ death, the balance of evidence is in
-favour of one playwright rather than two. The undefined share of the
-Admiral’s man in the extant <i>1 Sir John Oldcastle</i> does not really
-afford a basis for stylistic comparison with the more old-fashioned
-manners of the 1584–94 plays. There is nothing to show that the
-Bishopsgate man had any connexion with the stage, still less that he
-was a son of the Queen’s player, as has been suggested.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WINTER, RICHARD. Possibly an actor at Canterbury, <i>c.</i> 1571 (<i>3
-Library</i>, ix. 253).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WODERAM, RICHARD. Oxford’s, 1586–7 (?).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WOODFORD, THOMAS. Whitefriars lessee, 1608, 1621.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WOODS, JOHN. Holland, 1604.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WORTH, ELLIS. Anne’s, 1615–19; for his later career, cf. Murray, i.
-198, 218. He is described as ‘gentleman’ in the register of St. Giles’s
-at the baptism of his daughter Jane on 19 July 1613, and as ‘player’ at
-that of his son Elizeus on 12 March 1629 (<i>Bodl.</i>).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">WYLKYNSON, JOHN. A London ‘coriour’, who maintained players in his
-house in 1549 (cf. App. D, No. ii).</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">YOUNG, JOHN. Queen Jane’s, &gt;1537; Interluders, 1539–53 (?). He seems to
-have been still alive in 1569–70.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">[351]</span></p>
-
-<h2>BOOK IV<br />
-
-THE PLAY-HOUSES</h2>
-</div>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The world the stage, the prologue tears,</div>
- <div>The acts vain hope and varied fears:</div>
- <div>The scene shuts up with loss of breath,</div>
- <div>And leaves no epilogue but death.</div>
- <div class="right smcap">Henry King.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">[353]</span></p>
-<h3>XVI<br />
-
-INTRODUCTION: THE PUBLIC THEATRES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Some notes in the <i>Gentleman’s
-Magazine</i> for 1813–16 by Eu. Hood [Joseph Haslewood] are
-reprinted in <i>The Gentleman’s Magazine Library</i>, xv (1904),
-86, and in <i>Roxburghe Revels</i> (ed. J. Maidment, 1837). J.
-P. Collier, <i>History of English Dramatic Poetry</i>, iii.
-79, has <i>An Account of the Old Theatres of London</i>, and
-chronological sections on the subject are in F. G. Fleay, <i>A
-Chronicle History of the London Stage</i> (1890). T. F. Ordish,
-<i>Early London Theatres</i> (1894), covers the Shoreditch
-and Bankside theatres ‘in the Fields’ other than the Globe;
-a companion volume on the urban houses has never appeared.
-The Bankside houses are also dealt with by W. Rendle, <i>The
-Bankside, Southwark, and the Globe</i> (1877), being Appendix I
-to F. J. Furnivall, <i>Harrison’s Description of England</i>,
-Part II (<i>N. Sh. Soc.</i>), and in <i>Old Southwark and
-its People</i> (1878) and <i>The Play-houses at Bankside in
-the Time of Shakespeare</i> (<i>Walford’s Antiquarian</i>,
-1885, vii. 207, 274; viii. 55). J. Q. Adams, <i>Shakespearean
-Play-houses</i> (1917), is a comprehensive and valuable work,
-which reached me when this chapter was practically complete. I
-am glad to find that our results so generally agree. The chief
-London maps have been reproduced by the <i>London Topographical
-Society</i> and on a smaller scale by G. E. Mitton, <i>Maps of
-Old London</i> (1908). Some are also given as illustrations
-in G. P. Baker, <i>The Development of Shakespeare as a
-Dramatist</i> (1907). They are classified by W. Martin, <i>A
-Study of Early Map-Views of London</i> in <i>The Antiquary</i>,
-xlv (1909), 337, 406, and their evidence for the Bankside
-analysed by the same writer, with partial reproductions, in
-<i>The Site of the Globe Play-house of Shakespeare</i> (1910,
-<i>Surrey Archaeological Collections</i>, xxiii. 149).</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of the maps as to the position of the theatres
-is obscured, partly by uncertainties as to the dates and
-authorships both of the engravings and of the surveys on which
-they were based, and partly by the pictorial character of the
-topography. They are not strict plans in two dimensions, such
-as modern cartographers produce, but either drawings in full
-perspective, or bird’s-eye views in diminished perspective.
-The imaginary standpoint is always on the south, and the
-pictorial aspect is emphasized in the foreground, with the
-result that, while the Bankside theatres, but not those north
-of the river, are generally indicated, this is rarely with a
-precision which renders it possible to locate them in relation
-to the thoroughfares amongst which they stand. This is more
-particularly the case since, while the general grouping of
-buildings, gardens, and trees appears, from a comparison of one
-view with another, to be faithfully given, it is probable that
-the details are often both conventionally represented and out
-of scale. The following classification is mainly borrowed from
-Dr. Martin: (<i>a</i>) Pre-Reformation representations of London
-throwing no light on the theatres; (<i>b</i>) <i>Wyngaerde</i>,
-a pictorial drawing (<i>c.</i> 1543–50) by A. Van der Wyngaerde
-(<i>L. T. Soc.</i> i; Mitton, i); (<i>c</i>) <i>Höfnagel</i>, a
-plan with little perspective by G. Höfnagel, from a survey of
-<i>c.</i> 1554–7 (cf. A. Marks in <i>Athenaeum</i> for 31 March
-1906), published<span class="pagenum" id="Page_354">[354]</span> (1572) with the title <i>Londinum Feracissimi
-Angliae Regni Metropolis</i> in G. Braun and F. Hohenburg,
-<i>Civitates Orbis Terrarum</i> (L. T. Soc. ii; Mitton, iv);
-(<i>d</i>) <i>Agas</i>, an engraving with more perspective,
-but generally similar to that of Höfnagel and possibly from
-the same survey, but drawn after 1561, and assigned by G.
-Vertue, who reproduced it (1737), to Ralph Agas (L. T. Soc.
-xvii; Mitton, ii); (<i>e</i>) <i>Smith</i>, a coloured drawing
-by William Smith, possibly based on Höfnagel or Agas, in <i>B.
-M. Sloane MS.</i> 2596, reproduced in H. B. Wheatley and E.
-W. Ashbee, <i>W. Smith</i>, <i>The Particular Description of
-England, 1588</i> (1879), and in G. P. Baker, <i>The Development
-of Shakespeare as a Dramatist</i> (1907), 18; (<i>f</i>)
-<i>Bankside Views</i>, small representations of the same
-general character as (<i>c</i>), (<i>d</i>), and (<i>e</i>),
-used as backgrounds to pictures and described by W. Martin in
-<i>Antiquary</i>, xlv. 408; (<i>g</i>) <i>Norden</i>, engravings
-in slight perspective of ‘London’ and ‘Westminster’ by P. Van
-den Keere in J. Norden, <i>Speculum Britanniae</i> (1593), from
-survey of about the same date (L. T. Soc. vii; Mitton, v, vi;
-Furnivall, <i>Harrison’s Description of England</i>, Part I,
-with notes on p. lxxxix by H. B. Wheatley, reprinted by L. T.
-Soc. in <i>Record</i>, ii); (<i>h</i>) <i>Delaram Group</i>,
-perspective views as backgrounds to portrait (<i>c.</i> 1616)
-of James I by F. Delaram (1620), reproduced by W. Martin in
-<i>Surrey A. Colls.</i> xxiii. 186, and other portraits probably
-based on some original of <i>c.</i> 1603; (<i>i</i>) <i>Hondius
-Group</i>, (i) drawing by P. D. Hondius (1610) in J. Speed,
-<i>Theatre of the Empire of Great Britain</i> (1611), as inset
-to map of Britain (<i>L. T. Record</i>, ii, with notes by T.
-F. Ordish; Baker, <i>f. p.</i>), (ii) engraving on title-page
-of R. Baker, <i>Chronicle</i> (1643), reproduced by Martin
-in <i>Surrey A. Colls.</i> xxiii. 187, (iii) engraving on
-title-page of H. Holland, <i>Herwologia Anglica</i> (1620), (iv)
-engraving of triumphal arch at coronation entry of James I by W.
-Kip in S. Harrison (cf. ch. xxiv), <i>The Arches of Triumph</i>
-(1604), all perhaps based on the same original or survey;
-(<i>k</i>) <i>Visscher</i>, engraving in perspective by Nikolaus
-Janssen Visscher (1616), ‘Amstelodami, ex officina Judoci
-Hondii’, with mutilated text from Camden’s <i>Britannia</i>,
-reproduced from unique copy in Brit. Mus. (L. T. Soc. iv, with
-notes by T. F. Ordish in <i>L. T. Record</i>, vi; also W.
-Martin in <i>Surrey A. Colls.</i> xxiii. 188, and in Ordish,
-<i>Shakespeare’s London</i>, <i>f. p.</i> and elsewhere);
-(<i>l</i>) <i>Merian Group</i>, (i) engraving in perspective by
-M. Merian in J. L. Gottfried, <i>Neuwe Archontologia Cosmica</i>
-(1638), 290, reproduced by Martin, 191, and Adams, 256, and
-copied in (ii) <i>f. p.</i> to James Howell, <i>Londinopolis</i>
-(1657), reproduced by Baker, 154, and (iii) R. Wilkinson,
-<i>Londina Illustrata</i> (1819); (<i>m</i>) <i>‘Ryther’
-Group</i>, (i) engraving in very slight perspective from drawing
-unfinished as regards the Bankside in Crace Collection, No. 32,
-without date, imprint, or indication of authorship, reproduced
-by W. J. Loftie, <i>History of London</i>, ii. 282, C. L.
-Kingsford, <i>Chronicles of London</i>, (1905) <i>f. p.</i>,
-and Baker, 36, 125, 135, and ascribed to Augustine Ryther in
-1604, but probably of about 1636–45 (cf. <i>4 N. Q.</i> ix.
-95; <i>6 N. Q.</i> xii. 361, 393; <i>7 N. Q.</i> iii. 110; vi.
-297; vii. 498) in view of (ii) another version in Crace Coll.,
-No. 31, with the Bankside complete, bearing the imprint of
-‘Cornelis Danckerts grauer of maps’ in Amsterdam (<i>c.</i>
-1631–56), and possibly by Hollar, who worked for Danckerts, and
-was in England 1636–45, (iii) map by T. Porter (<i>c.</i> 1666),
-based on (i) with later additions (reproduced L. T. Soc. v);
-(<i>n</i>) <i>Hollar</i>, engraving in perspective by W. Hollar
-(in London 1635–43), published by Cornelius Danckerts in 1647
-(L. T. Soc. xix; section by Martin in <i>Surrey A. Colls.</i>
-xxiii. 194); (<i>o</i>) <i>Faithorne and Newcourt</i>, engraving
-in conventional perspective by William Faithorne from drawing
-by Richard Newcourt, published in 1658 (L. T. Soc. xviii;
-Mitton, vii). Of the various maps of post-conflagration London
-the most useful are that of Leeke and Hollar (<i>c.</i> 1666),
-of which a section is reproduced<span class="pagenum" id="Page_355">[355]</span> by Martin in <i>Surrey A.
-Colls.</i> xxiii. 191, and those of John Ogilby and W. Morgan
-(1677, Mitton, viii), John Ogilby and W. Morgan (1682, L. T.
-Soc. xv), and John Rocque (1746, L. T. Soc. xxxiv, xxxv, xxxvii;
-Mitton, ix; section in Martin, <i>ut supra</i>, 197). Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i>, has attempted to indicate the sites of the
-Bankside theatres upon a reconstructed map based on Rocque, and
-Martin in <i>Surrey A. Colls.</i> xxiii. 155, 202, gives parts
-of the Bankside area as it now stands from the Ordnance Survey
-map (1896) and a plan of the Anchor Brewery (1909).]</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<h4>A. INTRODUCTION</h4>
-
-<p>The detailed notices, which will form the greater part of this chapter,
-may with advantage be prefaced with some general observations upon
-the historical sequence of the theatres and their distribution at
-different periods over the London area. The earlier Tudor London
-knew no theatre, in the sense of a building specially planned and
-maintained for public dramatic performances, although Yarmouth had its
-‘game-house’ by 1538, and a <i>theatrum</i> at Exeter was the scene
-of satirical farces far back in the fourteenth century. The miracle
-plays, not in London processional, were given in the open air, and
-probably on temporary scaffolds. Similar stages may sometimes have
-been used for the interludes, but these were ordinarily represented
-in the winter-time, and sought the kindly shelter of a hall.<a id="FNanchor_1019" href="#Footnote_1019" class="fnanchor">[1019]</a> In
-the provision of specialized buildings, the drama appears to have been
-anticipated by the ruder sport of baiting. Höfnagel’s pre-Elizabethan
-map already shows on the Southwark side of the river the two rings,
-with open centres and roofed seats for spectators, which are repeated
-later on by Agas and by Smith. They stand in yards or gardens lined
-with dog-kennels. One is lettered ‘The Bowll bayting’, the other
-‘The beare bayting’. When the first Elizabethan theatres were built
-in 1576, it was the hall on the one hand, and the ring on the other,
-which determined the general structure of the two types of auditorium
-that came simultaneously into being.<a id="FNanchor_1020" href="#Footnote_1020" class="fnanchor">[1020]</a> The ‘private’ house, roofed
-and lit, and with its seats arranged in tiers along three sides of a
-long room, and the ‘public’ house, generally circular, with covered
-stage and galleries, and a central yard or ‘pit’ open to the day,
-co-existed for more than half a century, and finally merged in the
-post-Restoration type<span class="pagenum" id="Page_356">[356]</span> of theatre which has come down to our own day.
-The distinction between ‘private’ and ‘public’ is an unessential one,
-depending probably upon some difference in the methods of paying for
-admission necessitated by the regulations of the City or the Privy
-Council.<a id="FNanchor_1021" href="#Footnote_1021" class="fnanchor">[1021]</a> The performances in all the houses were public in the
-ordinary sense. There was, however, another important factor, besides
-the baiting ring, which greatly affected the structure of the open-air
-theatre. This was the inn-yard. Long before 1576, interludes had been
-given in public, as well as in the private halls of the great, and even
-the need for some kind of permanent, or quasi-permanent, installation
-had been felt. No doubt there were halls in London which could be
-hired. The keeper of the Carpenters’ Hall in Shoreditch was prosecuted
-towards the end of Henry VIII’s reign for procuring a Protestant
-interlude ‘to be openly played’.<a id="FNanchor_1022" href="#Footnote_1022" class="fnanchor">[1022]</a> Fees for the letting of Trinity
-Hall for plays occur among the ‘casuall recepts’ of the churchwardens
-of St. Botolph without Aldersgate in 1566–7.<a id="FNanchor_1023" href="#Footnote_1023" class="fnanchor">[1023]</a> A jest-book of
-1567 records a play at Northumberland Place.<a id="FNanchor_1024" href="#Footnote_1024" class="fnanchor">[1024]</a> But an even more
-convenient hospitality was afforded by the great court-yards of the
-City inns, where there was sack and bottle-ale to hand, and, as the
-Puritans averred, chambers ready for deeds of darkness to be done, when
-the play was over.<a id="FNanchor_1025" href="#Footnote_1025" class="fnanchor">[1025]</a> In these yards, approached by archways under
-the inn buildings from one or more streets, and surrounded by galleries
-with external staircases giving access to the upper floors, an audience
-could quickly gather, behold at their ease, and escape payment with
-difficulty. The actors could be accommodated with a tiring-room on the
-ground floor, and perform as on a natural stage between the pillars
-supporting the galleries. An upper gallery could be used to vary the
-scene. The first performances in London inns upon record were at the
-Saracen’s Head, Islington, and the Boar’s Head, Aldgate, both in
-1557.<a id="FNanchor_1026" href="#Footnote_1026" class="fnanchor">[1026]</a> By the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign the use of them was
-normal. Plays ‘in hostels and taverns’ were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_357">[357]</span> specified for prohibition
-by the proclamation of April 1559, and the City regulations of 1574 are
-clearly aimed at the control of the ‘greate innes, havinge chambers
-and secrete places adjoyninge to their open stagies and gallyries’,
-and impose obligations for the sake of good order upon innkeepers
-and tavern-keepers in the forefront of those regarded as likely to
-harbour plays.<a id="FNanchor_1027" href="#Footnote_1027" class="fnanchor">[1027]</a> It is not reading too much between the lines to
-suggest that the owners of particular houses specially laid themselves
-out to secure the attraction of public entertainments, entered into
-regular contracts with players, and probably even undertook structural
-alterations which in fact converted their yards into little less
-than permanent theatres.<a id="FNanchor_1028" href="#Footnote_1028" class="fnanchor">[1028]</a> We have, indeed, the record of a
-trade dispute about the workmanship of play-scaffolds at the Red
-Lion in Stepney as far back as 1567. The Red Lion stood outside the
-jurisdiction of the City. Within it, and so far as we can judge, much
-more important in the history of the stage were the Bell and the Cross
-Keys, both in Gracechurch Street, the Bull in Bishopsgate Street,
-and the Bel Savage on Ludgate Hill. No one of these four is in fact
-mentioned by name as a play-house earlier than 1575, and although they
-must have been hard hit by the regulations of 1574, it is clear that
-they did not go altogether out of use, especially during the winter,
-when climatic conditions rendered the suburbs unattractive, for another
-twenty years. Stockwood, in 1578, speaks of six or eight ‘ordinarie
-places’ where plays were then performed.<a id="FNanchor_1029" href="#Footnote_1029" class="fnanchor">[1029]</a> Nevertheless the action
-of the City, and the enterprise of James Burbadge, whose descendants
-claimed for him the honour of being ‘the first builder of playhowses’,
-led to a shifting of the dramatic focus. The Theatre and the Curtain,
-both built in or about 1576, stood in ‘the fields’ to the north of
-London proper, and were perhaps soon followed by Newington Butts on
-the south side of the river, beyond St. George’s Fields; while the
-Blackfriars, adapted in the same year (1576) by Richard Farrant to
-house the performances of children, occupied an old monastic building
-in the precinct of a ‘liberty’ which, although within the walls, was
-largely exempt from the jurisdiction of the Corporation. This became
-the home of the Children of the Chapel, while the Paul’s boys played
-in their own ‘song-school’, either<span class="pagenum" id="Page_358">[358]</span> the church of St. Gregory or some
-other building in the neighbourhood of St. Paul’s. How long this
-arrangement had existed, or whether any company of children had played
-in public at all before the date of Farrant’s experiment, we do not
-know. From 1576 onwards, it is the Theatre and the Curtain which have
-to bear the brunt of the Puritan attack, and the luxury of these, as
-compared with the primitive accommodation of the inn-yards, arouses
-a special indignation. ‘The sumptuous Theatre houses, a continual
-monument of Londons prodigalitie and folly’, wails Thomas White in
-1577. Stockwood in 1578 discommends ‘the gorgeous playing place erected
-in the fieldes’; and William Harrison, perhaps about the same time,
-finds it ‘an evident token of a wicked time when plaiers wexe so riche
-that they can build such houses’.<a id="FNanchor_1030" href="#Footnote_1030" class="fnanchor">[1030]</a> Presently the theatres became
-notable amongst the sights which foreign travellers must see in London.
-Lupold von Wedel in 1584 says nothing of them, although he records the
-baiting and its rings.<a id="FNanchor_1031" href="#Footnote_1031" class="fnanchor">[1031]</a> But they are noticed in the following year
-by Samuel Kiechel, a merchant of Ulm, who writes:<a id="FNanchor_1032" href="#Footnote_1032" class="fnanchor">[1032]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Comedies are given daily. It is particularly mirthful to
-behold, when the Queen’s comedians act, but annoying to a
-foreigner who does not know the language, that he understands
-nothing. There are some peculiar houses, which are so made as to
-have about three galleries over one another, inasmuch as a great
-number of people always enters to see such an entertainment. It
-may well be that they take as much as from 50 to 60 dollars [£10
-to £12] at once, especially when they act anything new, which
-has not been given before, and double prices are charged. This
-goes on nearly every day in the week; even though performances
-are forbidden on Friday and Saturday, it is not observed.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Theatre and the London inns were still the chief playing-places,
-when at some date between 1576 and 1596 William Lambarde illustrated
-his account of the pilgrimages<span class="pagenum" id="Page_359">[359]</span> to Boxley, by explaining that those who
-visited the shrine did not get off scot-free&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘no more than such as goe to Parisgardein, the Bell Sauage, or
-Theatre, to beholde Beare baiting, Enterludes, or Fence play,
-can account of any pleasant spectacle, unlesse they first pay
-one pennie at the gate, another at the entrie of the Scaffolde,
-and the thirde for a quiet standing.’<a id="FNanchor_1033" href="#Footnote_1033" class="fnanchor">[1033]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Paris Garden was the generic name given to the successive
-places for bear-baiting which lay on the Surrey side of the river, not
-in Southwark proper, which was in the jurisdiction of the City, but
-in the Liberty of the Clink, which stretched in a westerly direction
-along the Bankside, or still farther to the west, in the Manor of Paris
-Garden itself. In Surrey, no less than in London, plays had established
-themselves at an early date. A performance was going on in Southwark,
-while the priests of St. Saviour’s sang <i>Dirige</i> for Henry VIII’s
-soul in 1547.<a id="FNanchor_1034" href="#Footnote_1034" class="fnanchor">[1034]</a> The Privy Council ordered the Surrey justices to
-suppress plays in the Borough and the adjoining places during 1578; and
-it seems probable that a regular play-house had been built south of
-the river at a date not much later than that of the Theatre itself. It
-stood far back behind Southwark, in the village of Newington, divided
-from the river by St. George’s Fields. The distance and the bad roads
-were against it; and it was not until the Rose was built in the Clink
-about 1587, that the Bankside became a serious rival to the ‘fields’
-in the north as the home of theatres. The Swan, in Paris Garden, was
-built in 1595. Newington is too far to the south to appear in the maps,
-but Norden’s map of 1593 shows two round buildings, standing between
-Bankside and an unnamed road, which may safely be identified with that
-called Maiden Lane. One is lettered ‘The Beare howse’, the other, more
-to the east and the south, ‘The play howse’; and this must clearly be
-the Rose.</p>
-
-<p>In 1596 the City appear to have at last obtained the assent of the
-Privy Council to the complete exclusion of plays from the area of
-their jurisdiction. This is probably the proceeding described, with
-no precise indication of date, in the following passage from Richard
-Rawlidge’s <i>A Monster Lately Found out and Discovered, or the
-Scourging of Tipplers</i> (1628):<a id="FNanchor_1035" href="#Footnote_1035" class="fnanchor">[1035]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘<i>London</i> hath within the memory of man lost much of hir
-pristine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_360">[360]</span> lustre, ... by being ... filled with ... sinnes,
-which ... are ... maintained, in Play-houses, Ale-houses,
-Bawdy-houses, Dising-houses, ... All which houses, and traps
-for Gentlemen, and others, of such Receipt, were formerly taken
-notice of by many Citizens, and well disposed graue Gentlemen
-... wherevpon some of the pious magistrates made humble suit
-to the late Queene Elizabeth of ever-liuing memorie, and her
-priuy Counsaile, and obteined leaue from her Majesty to thrust
-those Players out of the Citty and to pull downe the Dicing
-houses: which accordingly was affected, and the Play-houses
-in <i>Gracious street</i>, <i>Bishops-gate-street</i>,
-nigh <i>Paules</i>, that on <i>Ludgate</i> hill, the
-<i>White-Friars</i> were put down, and other lewd houses quite
-supprest within the Liberties, by the care of those religious
-senators, ... and surely had all their successors followed
-their worthy stepps, sinne would not at this day haue beene so
-powerfull, and raigning as it is.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The play-houses in Gracious or Gracechurch Street, Bishopsgate Street,
-and Ludgate Hill were presumably the Bell and the Cross Keys, the
-Bull, and the Bel Savage. By the house ‘nigh Paul’s’ Rawlidge possibly
-meant the choir song-school; but in fact there had been no plays by
-the Paul’s boys since 1590. If there was really a Whitefriars house
-at so early a date, this is the only notice preserved of it. It may
-be suspected that Rawlidge confused it with the Blackfriars, which
-James Burbadge was apparently prevented, upon representations by the
-City, from reopening in 1596. The claim of the City to exercise any
-control over the old religious precincts of the Blackfriars and the
-Whitefriars was a doubtful one; and although they ultimately secured
-jurisdiction, they were not able to prevent the so-called ‘private’
-theatres from establishing themselves in these ‘liberties’.<a id="FNanchor_1036" href="#Footnote_1036" class="fnanchor">[1036]</a> With
-these exceptions, however, and possibly that of the Boar’s Head, which
-seems to have been used for a few years after 1602, but was more likely
-just outside the bars, 1596 probably saw the last of playing within the
-actual gates of the City.</p>
-
-<p>Londoners had now to look wholly to the suburbs for their dramatic
-entertainment. Prince Lewis of Anhalt-Cöthen found four theatres
-in 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1037" href="#Footnote_1037" class="fnanchor">[1037]</a> These were doubtless the Theatre and the Curtain on
-the north and the Rose and the Swan on the south of the river. The
-Newington house was still used in 1594, but even before that had long
-been out of fashion. It was probably also about 1596 that John<span class="pagenum" id="Page_361">[361]</span> de
-Witt wrote his <i>Observations Londinenses</i>. He too mentioned the
-four theatres, together with the baiting house, and was particularly
-struck by the newest, and as he avers, the largest and fairest of
-them, the Swan, of the interior of which he attached a rough sketch to
-his manuscript. This manuscript is lost, but fortunately an extract
-survives, copied into a commonplace book by Arend van Buchell of
-Utrecht. The following is the complete text:<a id="FNanchor_1038" href="#Footnote_1038" class="fnanchor">[1038]</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smcap center">Ex Observationibus Londinensibus Johannis de Witt.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">De phano D. Pauli. Huic Paulino phano adheret locus ab
-asservandis sacratioribus vestimentis Sacristi dictus, omnino
-observatione dignus,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_362">[362]</span> quippe quo <span class="allsmcap">DIANAE</span> delubrum fuisse
-ferunt. Sacellum est rotundum, hemyphericum, concameratum,
-cuius structura Romanam antiquitatem referre videtur. Aiunt
-cum fundamenta templi iacerentur effossam ante huius aediculae
-fores innumeram cervinorum capitum copiam; inde colligi Dianae
-sacrificia (cui cervis litabatur) ibi olim peracta esse eique
-hanc aedem sacratam fuisse; in eodem phano sunt epitaphia et
-sepulcra varia praeter ea quae alio loco a me notata sunt,
-Guilelmi Herberti Penbrochiae comitis Walliae praesidis qui
-obijt A<sup>o</sup> aetat. lxiii Christi vero 1569.</p>
-
-<p>Ibidem in aede Westmonasteriensi sunt monumenta cum suis
-elogiis: Guill. Thynne armigeri ex antiqua Bottevillorum
-familia, Joannis Thynne fratris qui obijt 14 Martii 1584, item
-Joannis Bourgh Duisburgi gubernatoris A<sup>o</sup> 1596.</p>
-
-<p>Amphiteatra Londinij sunt iv visendae pulcritudinis quae a
-diversis intersigniis diuersa nomina sortiuntur: in iis varia
-quotidie scaena populo exhibetur. Horum duo excellentiora vltra
-Tamisim ad meridiam sita sunt, a suspensis signis <span class="allsmcap">ROSA</span>
-et Cygnus nominata: Alia duo extra vrbem ad septentrionem
-sunt, viâ quâ itur per Episcopalem portam vulgariter Biscopgat
-nuncupatam. Est etiam quintum, sed dispari [vsu?] et structura,
-bestiarum concertationi destinatum, in quo multi vrsi, tauri,
-et stupendae magnitudinis canes, discretis caueis &amp; septis
-aluntur, qui [<i>drawing occupies rest of page</i>] ad pugnam
-adseruantur, iocundissimum hominibus spectaculum praebentes.
-Theatrorum autem omnium prestantissimum est et amplissimum id
-cuius intersignium est cygnus (vulgo te theatre off te cijn [off
-te swan]),<a id="FNanchor_1039" href="#Footnote_1039" class="fnanchor">[1039]</a> quippe quod tres mille homines in sedilibus
-admittat, constructum ex coaceruato lapide pyrritide (quorum
-ingens in Britannia copia est) ligneis suffultum columnis quae
-ob illitum marmoreum colorem, nasutissimos quoque fallere
-possent. Cuius quidem formam quod Romani operis vmbram videatur
-exprimere supra adpinxi.</p>
-
-<p>Narrabat idem se vidisse in Brittannia apud Abrahamum de
-lyndeley [?] mercatorem Alberti Dureri omnia opera cartacea
-elegantissima et absolutissima.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The account of Paul Hentzner, who was in London from 31 August to
-8 September 1598, lays less stress upon the theatres than upon the
-baiting, and is not altogether consistent with that of de Witt as to
-the structure of the Swan, which was the nearest house to the moorings
-of the royal barge at the west end of Paris Garden.<a id="FNanchor_1040" href="#Footnote_1040" class="fnanchor">[1040]</a> Hentzner
-writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Sunt porro Londini extra Urbem Theatra aliquot, in quibus
-Histriones Angli Comoedias &amp; Tragoedias singulis fere diebus, in
-magna hominum frequentia agunt, quas variis etiam saltationibus,
-suavissima adhibita musica, magno cum populi applausu finire
-solent.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_363">[363]</span> Non longe ab uno horum theatrorum, quae omnia lignea
-sunt, ad Thamesim navis est regia, quae duo egregia habet
-conclavia, fenestris perlucidis, picturis &amp; sculpturis eleganter
-exornata, in sicco &amp; quidem sub tecto collocata, propterea, ut a
-pluviis &amp; coeli injuria immunis sit.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Hentzner then describes the baiting.<a id="FNanchor_1041" href="#Footnote_1041" class="fnanchor">[1041]</a> He concludes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Utuntur in hisce spectaculis sicut &amp; alibi, ubicunque locorum
-sint Angli, herba Nicotiana, quam Americano idiomate Tabacam
-nuncupant (Paetum alii dicunt) hoc modo frequentissime; Fistulae
-in hunc finem ex argilia factae, orificio posteriori, dictam
-herbam probe exiccatam, ita ut in pulverem facile redigi possit,
-immittunt, &amp; igne admoto accendunt, unde fumus ab anteriori
-parte ore attrahitur, qui per nares rursum, tanquam per
-infurnibulum exit, &amp; phlegma ac capitis defluxiones magna copia
-secum educit. Circumferuntur insuper in hisce theatris varii
-fructus venales, ut poma, pyra, nuces &amp; pro ratione temporis,
-etiam vinum &amp; cerevisia.’<a id="FNanchor_1042" href="#Footnote_1042" class="fnanchor">[1042]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It is perhaps natural that foreign visitors should be
-more struck by the English theatres at a time when the English stage
-was serving as a model to northern Europe, than was the case with a
-native chronicler of grave and slightly Puritanic tendencies. John
-Stowe, when he published his <i>Survey of London</i> in 1598, had
-nothing to say of the Bankside houses, and but little of those in
-Middlesex. After writing of the miracle plays, he says:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Of late time in place of those Stage playes, hath beene vsed
-Comedies, Tragedies, Enterludes, and Histories, both true and
-fayned: For the acting whereof certaine publike places as the
-Theater, the Curtine, &amp;c., haue been erected’ [<i>in margin</i>,
-‘Theater and Curten for Comedies &amp; other shewes’].<a id="FNanchor_1043" href="#Footnote_1043" class="fnanchor">[1043]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In another place, at the end of a description of
-Holywell, he adds:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘And neare therevnto are builded two publique houses for the
-acting and shewe of Comedies, Tragedies, and Histories, for
-recreation. Whereof the one is called the Courtein, the other
-the Theatre: both standing on the South-west side towards the
-field.’<a id="FNanchor_1044" href="#Footnote_1044" class="fnanchor">[1044]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Even these scanty references were pruned in the second
-edition of 1603, after the Theatre had disappeared at the end of 1598
-and the Chamberlain’s men had left the Curtain.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_364">[364]</span> And of the Globe,
-built during the earlier half of 1599, to which they migrated, Stowe
-takes no notice. The Globe, however, appears, although unnamed,
-together with two other theatres, of which one must be the Curtain,
-in the next foreign account, a very full one by Thomas Platter of
-Basle, who was in England from 18 September to 20 October 1599.<a id="FNanchor_1045" href="#Footnote_1045" class="fnanchor">[1045]</a>
-I translate the passage, of which sufficient use has not been made by
-historians of the stage:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_365">[365]</span></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘After dinner on the 21st of September, at about two o’clock,
-I went with my companions over the water, and in the strewn
-roof-house saw the tragedy of the first Emperor Julius with
-at least fifteen characters very well acted. At the end of
-the comedy they danced according to their custom with extreme
-elegance. Two in men’s clothes and two in women’s gave this
-performance, in wonderful combination with each other. On
-another occasion, I also saw after dinner a comedy, not far from
-our inn, in the suburb; if I remember right, in Bishopsgate.
-Here they represented various nations, with whom on each
-occasion an Englishman fought for his daughter, and overcame
-them all except the German, who won the daughter in fight. He
-then sat down with him, and gave him and his servant strong
-drink, so that they both got drunk, and the servant threw his
-shoe at his master’s head and they both fell asleep. Meanwhile
-the Englishman went into the tent, robbed the German of his
-gains, and thus he outwitted the German also. At the end they
-danced very elegantly both in English and in Irish fashion.
-And thus every day at two o’clock in the afternoon in the city
-of London two and sometimes three comedies are performed,
-at separate places, wherewith folk make merry together, and
-whichever does best gets the greatest audience. The places are
-so built, that they play on a raised platform, and every one
-can well see it all. There are, however, separate galleries and
-there one stands more comfortably and moreover can sit, but one
-pays more for it. Thus anyone who remains on the level standing
-pays only one English penny: but if he wants to sit, he is let
-in at a further door, and there he gives another penny. If he
-desires to sit on a cushion in the most comfortable place of
-all, where he not only sees everything well, but can also be
-seen, then he gives yet another English penny at another door.
-And in the pauses of the comedy food and drink are carried round
-amongst the people, and one can thus refresh himself at his own
-cost.</p>
-
-<p>‘The comedians are most expensively and elegantly apparelled,
-since it is customary in England, when distinguished gentlemen
-or knights die, for nearly the finest of their clothes to be
-made over and given to their servants, and as it is not proper
-for them to wear such clothes but only to imitate them, they
-give them to the comedians to purchase for a small sum.</p>
-
-<p>‘What they can thus produce daily by way of mirth in the
-comedies, every one knows well, who has happened to see them
-acting or playing.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Platter then describes the Cockpit and the baiting. He concludes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘With such and many other pastimes besides the English spend
-their time; in the comedies they learn what is going on in other
-lands, and this happens without alarm, husband and wife together
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_366">[366]</span> a familiar place, since for the most part the English do not
-much use to travel, but are content ever to learn of foreign
-matters at home, and ever to take their pastime.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">A year later than Platter, another traveller thus
-describes a visit to the Bankside:<a id="FNanchor_1046" href="#Footnote_1046" class="fnanchor">[1046]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘1600 die Lunae 3 Julii. Audivimus comoediam Anglicam; theatrum
-ad morem antiquorum Romanorum constructum ex lignis, ita
-formatum ut omnibus ex partibus spectatores commodatissime
-singula videre possint. In reditu transivimus pontem magnificis
-aedificiis ornatum e quibus uni adhuc affixa cernuntur capita
-quorundam comitum et nobilium, qui laesae Majestatis rei
-supplicio affecti sunt.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>When Lewis of Anhalt and de Witt wrote, there were four theatres,
-exclusive of the City inn-yards, which were probably already closed.
-Platter found two, and sometimes three, performances being given daily.
-This agrees with the evidence available from other sources. After the
-scandal of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i> in 1597, the Privy Council decreed
-a limitation of the London companies to two, the Chamberlain’s men and
-the Admiral’s. The former played at the Curtain until 1599, when they
-destroyed the Theatre and built the Globe. The latter played at the
-Rose until 1600, when they migrated to the newly built Fortune. But
-it is clear that the ordinance of the Privy Council was not strictly
-observed. An intruding company was playing in February 1598, either
-at the Theatre or the Swan. Platter’s three houses in 1599 included
-the Curtain, together presumably with the Globe and the Rose. When the
-Council sanctioned the opening of the Fortune in 1600, they understood
-that the Curtain was to be ‘either ruinated or applied to some other
-good use’, but it was still the scene of plays in 1601. Finally, in
-the spring of 1602 Elizabeth ordered the Council to tolerate a third
-company, that of the Earl of Worcester, Master of the Horse. This
-was then playing at the Boar’s Head, a short-lived house of which
-practically nothing is known; in the autumn it moved to the Rose. The
-Swan possibly went out of use, except for the occasional performances
-of acrobats and fencers, or of amateurs. On the other hand, Lord
-Hertford’s men were in London during the winter of 1602–3, in addition
-to the three privileged companies, and they must have practised
-somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>To the above must be added, for the closing years of Elizabeth’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_367">[367]</span>
-reign, the ‘private’ houses; Paul’s reopened in the winter of 1599,
-the Blackfriars in that of 1600. Of these Platter knows nothing, but
-Duke Philip Julius of Stettin-Pomerania, in the autumn of 1602, in
-addition to performances at the Fortune and another theatre, saw also,
-doubtless at the Blackfriars, the <i>Kinder-comoedia</i>. The following
-is an extract from the diary of the visit kept by the duke’s secretary,
-Frederic Gerschow:<a id="FNanchor_1047" href="#Footnote_1047" class="fnanchor">[1047]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘13 [September] On the thirteenth a comedy was played, of
-the taking of Stuhl-Weissenberg, firstly by the Turks, and
-thereafter back again by the Christians.</p>
-
-<p>14. In the afternoon was played a tragicomedy of Samson and the
-half tribe of Benjamin.’<a id="FNanchor_1048" href="#Footnote_1048" class="fnanchor">[1048]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">On 16 September the duke and his retinue saw the baiting.
-On 18 September they visited the Blackfriars, and Gerschow wrote an
-account of the organization of the Children of the Chapel and of the
-nature of their performances.<a id="FNanchor_1049" href="#Footnote_1049" class="fnanchor">[1049]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Globe and the Fortune continued in regular use, as the houses of
-the King’s men, and the Prince’s men respectively, during the new
-reign, and endured to the closing of the theatres in 1642. Each was
-destroyed by fire and rebuilt; the former in 1613, the latter in 1621.
-Queen Anne’s men at first used the Boar’s Head and the Curtain, but
-migrated from the Boar’s Head to the Red Bull, which had been built by
-1606. This became their principal house, and they cannot be shown to
-have used the Curtain after 1609. These were the only companies of men
-players in London during 1603–8, and the Globe, the Fortune, and the
-Red Bull are obviously the ‘three houses’ whose rivalry is referred to
-by Dekker in the following passage from his <i>Raven’s Almanack</i> of
-1608:<a id="FNanchor_1050" href="#Footnote_1050" class="fnanchor">[1050]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Another ciuill warre doe I finde wil fal betweene players, who
-albeit at the beginning of this fatall yeare, they salute one
-another like sworne brothers, yet before the middle of it, shall
-they wish one anothers throate cut for two pence. The contention
-of the two houses, (the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_368">[368]</span> gods bee thanked) was appeased long
-agoe, but a deadly warre betweene the three houses will I feare
-burst out like thunder and lightning. For it is thought that
-Flag will be aduanced (as it were in mortall defiance against
-Flag), numbers of people will also bee mustred and fall to one
-side or other, the drums and trumpets must be sounded, partes
-will then (euen by the chiefest players) bee taken: words will
-passe to and fro: speeches cannot so bee put vp, handes will
-walke, an alarum be giuen, fortune must fauour some, or els they
-are neuer able to stand: the whole world must sticke to others,
-or else al the water in the theames wil not serue to carrie
-those away that will bee put to flight, and a third faction must
-fight like wilde Buls against Lyons, or else it will be in vaine
-to march vp into the field.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">There were, however, more than three London companies
-about 1608. M. de la Boderie tells us how one fell into disgrace during
-that year, and how four others subscribed to buy off the consequent
-inhibition of plays.<a id="FNanchor_1051" href="#Footnote_1051" class="fnanchor">[1051]</a> The reconciliation is simple. Dekker has in
-mind only the ‘public’ and not the ‘private’ houses. Of these Paul’s
-was closed in 1606; it was made worth its Master’s while not to reopen
-it. The Blackfriars was used by the successive boy companies, known
-generically as the Queen’s Revels, until 1608 or 1609, when it passed
-to the King’s men, who thereafter maintained it as a winter house, to
-supplement the Globe. The Queen’s Revels then moved to the Whitefriars,
-a private house built at some time before 1608, and occupied in that
-year by the ephemeral company of the King’s Revels.</p>
-
-<p>An increase in the number of adult companies now made fresh demands
-upon theatrical house-room. It is presumably the Duke of York’s men
-who were described at Leicester in 1608 as ‘the Princes players
-of the White Chapple, London’. The description suggests that they
-used the Boar’s Head, but if so, nothing more is heard of it, and
-it is conceivable that they soon succeeded to the Curtain. The Lady
-Elizabeth’s, who came into existence in 1611, are traceable at
-the Swan, which Henslowe may have taken over to succeed the Rose,
-disused, if not pulled down, by 1606. The following lines are in John
-Heath’s <i>Two Centuries of Epigrammes</i> (1610), but may of course,
-especially as the Red Bull is not named,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_369">[369]</span> date back to the period when
-the Curtain was still in the hands of the Queen’s men:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Momus would act the fooles part in a play,</div>
- <div>And cause he would be exquisite that way,</div>
- <div>Hies me to London, where no day can passe</div>
- <div>But that some play-house still his presence has;</div>
- <div>Now at the Globe with a judicious eye</div>
- <div>Into the Vice’s action doth he prie.</div>
- <div>Next to the Fortune, where it is a chaunce</div>
- <div>But he marks something worth his cognisance.</div>
- <div>Then to the Curtaine, where, as at the rest,</div>
- <div>He notes that action downe that likes him best.<a id="FNanchor_1052" href="#Footnote_1052" class="fnanchor">[1052]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">A foreign traveller again gives us help. The relation of the visit of
-Prince Lewis Frederick of Württemberg in 1610 merely records that he
-went to the Globe, and Justus Zingerling, who was in London at about
-the same date, has the briefest note of the existence of ‘theatra
-comoedorum et in quibus ursi et tauri cum canibus committuntur’.<a id="FNanchor_1053" href="#Footnote_1053" class="fnanchor">[1053]</a>
-But the itinerary of Prince Otto of Hesse-Cassel in the following year
-is more expansive. The compiler writes:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘In London there are seven theatres, where daily, except on
-Sundays, comedies are performed, whereof the most important is
-the Globe, which lies over the water. The theatre, where the
-children play, is on the hither side of the water; they play
-at three o’clock, but only from Michaelmas to Easter. Here it
-only costs half a shilling to enter, but for the other places
-at least half a crown. These play only with lights, and are the
-best company in London.’<a id="FNanchor_1054" href="#Footnote_1054" class="fnanchor">[1054]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_370">[370]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">In addition to the Globe and the Whitefriars, the tale of seven
-theatres is probably made up by the Blackfriars, the Fortune, the Red
-Bull, the Curtain, and the Swan.</p>
-
-<p>Henslowe’s correspondence with Daborne shows that he still had a
-‘publique howse’, probably the Swan, in December 1613, and also that
-in June of that year his company was only just thinking of ‘comming
-over’ for a summer season, presumably from the Whitefriars, as he had
-recently carried out an amalgamation between the Lady Elizabeth’s
-men and the Queen’s Revels.<a id="FNanchor_1055" href="#Footnote_1055" class="fnanchor">[1055]</a> In the following year occurred an
-episode which curiously emphasizes the constant shifting of the focus
-of theatrical interest during the whole of the period with which we
-are concerned. Originally stageland was in the heart of the City
-itself. With the building of the first theatres, it was transferred
-to the Fields of the northern suburbs. During the last decade of the
-sixteenth century the Fields in their turn gave way to the Bankside.
-The Rose, the Swan, and the Globe successively made their appearance,
-and the vestry of Southwark began to echo the earlier outcry of the
-City against the iniquities of players, until their mouths were stopped
-with tithes. But the transpontine period proved a brief one. Hardly was
-the Globe up, before Alleyn’s choice of a site for the Fortune set the
-fashion veering again, and opened up a new theatrical region in the
-western suburbs. This was convenient for the Court and the great houses
-along the Strand and for the lawyers in the Temple and at Westminster,
-as well as for the City proper, and its tradition has endured until
-quite recent years. The Red Bull and the Whitefriars followed in the
-same area. On the other hand, the Rose had vanished, and the King’s
-men, although they did not desert the Globe, acknowledged the change
-of venue by taking up their winter quarters in the Blackfriars hard
-by. One result was that men who had ridden to the Fields and been
-ferried to the Bankside, now walked or drove in their coaches to the
-theatre door. During the spring of 1614 things were probably at their
-worst. Both the Globe, after its fire, and the Hope were still in the
-builder’s hands, and if the Lady Elizabeth’s lingered again at the
-Whitefriars, there can have been no plays across the water at all.
-The watermen, who twenty years before had exercised the influence
-of their patron, the Lord Admiral, to induce the Privy Council to
-revoke an inhibition on the Bankside houses, sent up a bitter cry
-of protest. John Taylor, the ‘water-poet’, whom they chose as their
-spokesman, tells the story.<a id="FNanchor_1056" href="#Footnote_1056" class="fnanchor">[1056]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_371">[371]</span> A petition to the King was prepared,
-to the effect that no play-house might be permitted ‘in London or in
-Middlesex, within four miles of the City on that side of the Thames’,
-and with this Taylor pursued James to Theobalds, Newmarket, and
-Royston. It recited the service done by watermen in the navy during the
-Armada invasion of 1588 and in such expeditions as those of Essex in
-1596 and 1597. And it proceeded:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Afterwards the players began to play on the Bankside and to
-leave playing in London and Middlesex (for the most part),
-then there went such great concourse of people by water that
-the small number of watermen remaining at home were not able
-to carry them, by reason of the court, the terms, the players,
-and other employments, so that we were enforced and encouraged
-(hoping that this golden stirring would have lasted ever) to
-take and entertain men and boys.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It was calculated that the number of watermen and their
-dependants between Windsor and Gravesend had now by 1614 reached 40,000:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The cause of the greater half of which multitude hath been
-the players playing on the Bankside, for I have known three
-companies besides the bear-baiting, at once there; to wit, the
-Globe, the Rose, and the Swan. And it is an infallible truth
-that, had they never played there, it had been better for
-watermen by the one half of their living, for the company is
-increased more than half by their means of playing there in
-former times.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Foreign employment had now come to an end:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘And the players have all (except the King’s men) left their
-usuall residency on the Bankside, and do play in Middlesex far
-remote from the Thames, so that every day in the week they do
-draw unto them three or four thousand people, that were used to
-spend their monies by water.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Such, Taylor assures us, was the effect of the petition. It was
-referred by James to ‘his commissioners for suits’, that is to say, the
-Court of Requests, composed of Sir Julius Caesar, Sir Thomas Parry, Sir
-Francis Bacon, Sir Henry Montagu, Sir Walter Cope, George Calvert, and
-Baron Sotherton. The King’s men exhibited a counter-petition, and the
-case came on for hearing.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Sir Francis Bacon very worthily said that so far as the public
-weal was to be regarded before pastimes, or a serviceable
-decaying multitude<span class="pagenum" id="Page_372">[372]</span> before a handful of particular men, or
-profit before pleasure, so far was our suit to be preferred
-before theirs.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The players appealed to the Earl of Somerset, who became Lord
-Chamberlain and in that capacity their official protector on 10 July
-1614, but he proved well affected towards the watermen. The hearing was
-adjourned and never resumed, owing to the death of Cope on 31 July,
-the promotion of Caesar to the Mastership of the Rolls on 1 October,
-and the consequent dissolution of the commission. Ill feeling broke
-out between Taylor and his fellows the watermen, who declared that
-he met the players at supper at the Cardinal’s Hat on Bankside, and
-took bribes of them to let the suit fall. Taylor, therefore, wrote his
-pamphlet to vindicate his position.<a id="FNanchor_1057" href="#Footnote_1057" class="fnanchor">[1057]</a> The completion of the new
-Globe and the Hope during the progress of the dispute had probably
-eased matters temporarily for the watermen, but the growing tendency
-of things theatrical towards Middlesex was not permanently checked.
-Some of the minor companies used the Hope until 1617, and then left
-it to the bears again. The Globe survived, but will be found to have
-occupied during the Caroline period a distinctly secondary position
-to the Blackfriars in the economy of the King’s men. For this there
-was another reason besides the geographical superiority of Middlesex
-over Surrey. The acquisition of the Blackfriars, even though only for
-winter purposes, in 1608 was an acknowledgement of the advantages for
-adult companies of the ‘private’ or roofed type of theatre, hitherto
-used only by boys. Once these advantages were realized, the doom of
-the old ‘ring’ type, with its central opening, was written. Probably
-the Hope was the only new house constructed on these lines after 1608,
-and obviously the Hope required free ventilation to get rid of the
-stink of bears and dogs. In 1615 Philip Rosseter and others obtained
-sanction for the conversion of Porter’s Hall in the Blackfriars into
-a theatre. This was to be used by children as well as adults, and was
-probably roofed. It was pulled down again by what seems a somewhat
-arbitrary decision in 1617. About the same time, the roofed Cockpit in
-Drury Lane was converted into a theatre, under the name of the Phoenix,
-for the occupation of the Queen’s men, who migrated to it from the Red
-Bull. Whether or not the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_373">[373]</span> Fortune was given a roof at the rebuilding
-of 1623, or the Red Bull at somewhat the same time, is uncertain; but
-at any rate the Salisbury Court theatre, built near the Whitefriars
-in 1629, perhaps to replace the old Whitefriars theatre, was a roofed
-house.<a id="FNanchor_1058" href="#Footnote_1058" class="fnanchor">[1058]</a> This was the last new theatre built before the civil
-wars. The Blackfriars, the Cockpit, and Salisbury Court were the most
-important of the Caroline stages, and in the post-Restoration houses,
-although these were on a larger scale than the ‘private’ houses of the
-past, the roofed model was invariably adopted.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after the completion of Salisbury Court, Edmund Howes, who had
-already edited the fourth edition of John Stowe’s <i>Annales</i> in
-1615, was again revising the text for the fifth edition of 1631, and
-took occasion to append to his account of the burnings of the Globe
-and the Fortune the following summary of theatrical enterprise since
-1569:<a id="FNanchor_1059" href="#Footnote_1059" class="fnanchor">[1059]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘In the yeere one thousand sixe hundred twenty nine, there was
-builded a new faire Play-house, neere the white Fryers. And this
-is the seauenteenth Stage, or common Play-house, which hath
-beene new made within the space of threescore yeeres within
-London and the Suburbs, <i>viz.</i></p>
-
-<p>‘Fiue Innes, or common Osteryes turned to Play-houses, one
-<i>Cockpit</i>, S. <i>Paules</i> singing Schoole, one in the
-<i>Black-fryers</i>, and one in the <i>White-fryers</i>, which
-was built last of all, in the yeare one thousand sixe hundred
-twenty nine, all the rest not named, were erected only for
-common Play-houses, besides the new built Beare garden, which
-was built as well for playes, and Fencers prizes, as Bull
-bayting; besides, one in former time at <i>Newington</i> Buts;
-Before the space of threescore yeares aboue-sayd, I neither
-knew, heard, nor read, of any such Theaters, set Stages, or
-Play-houses, as haue beene purposely built within mans memory.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This passage serves as a fair summary of the detailed
-investigations set out in this chapter. Howes only allows one house
-to the Blackfriars and one to the Whitefriars, and must therefore be
-leaving out of account the abortive Porter’s Hall house,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_374">[374]</span> and treating
-Salisbury Court as a continuation of the earlier Whitefriars. The Hope
-and Newington Butts are afterthoughts, and make his seventeen into
-nineteen. We can identify his five inns as the Bull, the Bell, the
-Cross Keys, the Bel Savage, and probably the Red Lion, although this
-just antedates his period of sixty years; while his balance of eight
-unnamed common play-houses must be the Theatre, the Curtain, the Rose,
-the Swan, the Globe, the Fortune, the Boar’s Head, and the Red Bull.</p>
-
-<p>Prynne, in his <i>Histriomastix</i> (1633), records six ‘divels
-chappels’ as then in use, and these are doubtless the six houses, the
-Blackfriars, Globe, Cockpit, Salisbury Court, Fortune, and Red Bull,
-which are also noted by the Restoration writers on the stage, John
-Downes and James Wright, as surviving up to the cataclysm of the civil
-wars.<a id="FNanchor_1060" href="#Footnote_1060" class="fnanchor">[1060]</a></p>
-
-<p>Somewhat more confused and vague in their datings are the reminiscences
-about 1660 of the Marquis of Newcastle in his letter of advice to
-Prince Charles, under the head of ‘Devertismentes for your Ma<sup>tie</sup>
-People’:<a id="FNanchor_1061" href="#Footnote_1061" class="fnanchor">[1061]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Firste for London Paris Garden will holde good for the meaner
-People.</p>
-
-<p>‘Then for severall Playe Houses as ther weare five att leaste In
-my Time,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>‘Black-Friers, the Cock-Pitt, Salsburye Courte, the Fortune,
-&amp; the Redd Bull,&mdash;Ther weare the Boyes thatt played at
-Black-Friers, &amp; Paules, &amp; then the Kinges Players played att the
-Globe&mdash;which is nowe calde the Phenixe [!]&mdash;Some Played, att
-the Bores heade, &amp; att the Curtin In the feildes &amp; some att the
-Hope whiche Is the Beare Garden, and some at White Friers,&mdash;Butt
-five or Sixe Playe Houses Is enough for all sortes off Peoples
-divertion &amp; pleasure In thatt kinde.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The marquis is the only one of the chroniclers who
-definitely records the Boar’s Head.</p>
-
-<p>A manuscript continuation of Stowe’s <i>Annales</i>, found in a copy
-of the 1631 edition, narrates the havoc wrought by Puritans and
-ground-landlords:<a id="FNanchor_1062" href="#Footnote_1062" class="fnanchor">[1062]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Play Houses. The Globe play house on the Banks side in
-Southwarke, was burnt downe to the ground, in the yeare 1612.
-And now built vp againe in the yeare 1613, at the great charge
-of King Iames, and many Noble men and others. And now pulled
-downe to the ground, by Sir Matthew Brand, On Munday the 15 of
-April 1644, to make tenements in the room of it.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Blacke Friers players play-house in Blacke Friers, London,
-which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_375">[375]</span> had stood many yeares, was pulled downe to the ground on
-Munday the 6 day of August 1655, and tennements built in the
-rome.</p>
-
-<p>‘The play house in Salsbury Court, in Fleetstreete, was pulled
-downe by a company of souldiers, set on by the sectuaries of
-these sad times, on Saturday the 24 day of March 1649.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Phenix in Druery Lane, was pulled downe also this day,
-being Saterday the 24 day of March 1649, by the same souldiers.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Fortune Play-house betweene White Crosse streete and
-Golding Lane was burnd downe to the ground in the yeare 1618.
-And built againe with brick worke on the outside in the yeare
-1622. And now pulled downe on the inside by the souldiers this
-1649.</p>
-
-<p>‘The Hope, on the Banks side in Southwarke, commonly called
-the Beare Garden, a Play House for Stage Playes on Mundayes,
-Wedensdayes, Fridayes, and Saterdayes, and for the baiting of
-the Beares on Tuesdayes and Thursdayes, the stage being made
-to take vp and downe when they please. It was built in the
-year 1610, and now pulled downe to make tennementes, by Thomas
-Walker, a peticoate maker in Cannon Streete, on Tuesday the 25
-day of March 1656. Seuen of M<sup>r</sup>. Godfries beares, by the command
-of Thomas Pride, then hie Sheriefe of Surry, were then shot to
-death, on Saterday the 9 day of February 1655, by a company of
-souldiers.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Downes and Wright do not mention the Hope, as they were
-not discussing baiting. On the other hand, the annalist says nothing
-of the fate of the Red Bull, which in fact appears to have escaped
-destruction, to have been occasionally used for ‘drolls’ during the
-Commonwealth, and to have served once more, with the Cockpit and
-Salisbury Court, the demolition of which was probably limited to the
-interior fittings, for the first entertainments of the Restoration.
-The building of Vere Street in 1660, Lincoln’s Inn Fields in 1661, and
-Drury Lane in 1663 made them obsolete.<a id="FNanchor_1063" href="#Footnote_1063" class="fnanchor">[1063]</a></p>
-
-<p>These records leave ambiguous the fate of the Curtain and the Swan. The
-Curtain is traceable in occasional use up to about 1627, and is figured
-as a roundish building in the ‘Ryther’ maps, which are probably of a
-decade later.<a id="FNanchor_1064" href="#Footnote_1064" class="fnanchor">[1064]</a> It cannot, therefore, have vanished long before
-the civil wars, and was the most long-lived of all the theatres. It
-may, of course, have been rebuilt, later than its original foundation
-in 1576, but as to this there is no evidence. The ‘Ryther’ maps also
-show the Fortune. No other maps give any of the theatres on the north
-of the river. Of the Bankside houses, the Swan is shown by a decagonal
-ground-plan, with the inscription ‘Old Play house’, in the Paris Garden
-Manor survey of 1627.<a id="FNanchor_1065" href="#Footnote_1065" class="fnanchor">[1065]</a> And it is described as still existing side
-by side with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_376">[376]</span> the Globe and the Hope, but clearly also as derelict, in
-the following passage from <i>Holland’s Leaguer</i> (1632):</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Especially, and aboue all the rest, she was most taken with
-the report of three famous <i>Amphytheators</i>, which stood
-so neere scituated, that her eye might take view of them from
-the lowest <i>Turret</i>, one was the <i>Continent of the
-World</i>, because halfe the yeere a World of <i>Beauties</i>,
-and braue <i>Spirits</i> resorted vnto it; the other was a
-building of excellent <i>Hope</i>, and though <i>wild beasts</i>
-and <i>Gladiators</i> did most possesse it, yet the Gallants
-that came to behold those combats, though they were of a mixt
-Society, yet were many Noble worthies amongst them; the last
-which stood, and as it were shak’d handes with this Fortresse,
-beeing in times past as famous as any of the other, was now
-fallen to decay, and like a dying <i>Swanne</i>, hanging downe
-her head, seemed to sing her owne dierge.’<a id="FNanchor_1066" href="#Footnote_1066" class="fnanchor">[1066]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I turn now to the maps of the Bankside, which, had they been datable,
-and drawn with cartographical precision, ought not only to have
-furnished valuable evidence as to the duration of the theatres, but
-also to have indicated accurately the position of each amongst the
-streets and lanes of the district. Neither condition is, however,
-fulfilled. Even where the date of an engraving is known, the date of
-the survey on which it was based can, as a rule, be only approximately
-determined. And the constant intrusion of pictorial elements, which
-gives the maps the character of perspective views rather than of
-plans, is naturally emphasized on the Bankside, which has to serve as
-a foreground to the design. The main topographical features which have
-to be borne in mind are simple, and can easily be related to those in
-John Rocque’s map of 1746, as interpreted by Strype’s <i>Survey</i>
-of 1720, or in a modern Ordnance map. The whole region concerned lies
-roughly between the southern approaches to London and Blackfriars
-Bridges. It underwent a good deal of development during one period,
-especially in the area of the Clink, a liberty lying between Southwark
-on the east and another liberty of Paris Garden on the west, and
-affording a convenient suburban resort outside the jurisdiction of
-the City. Stowe’s account of the neighbourhood in 1598 is perhaps a
-little misleading. He describes no more than the Bankside proper, ‘a
-continuall building of tenements’ on the riverside, extending about
-half a mile west of London Bridge. Here he places, from west to east,
-the bear gardens, the former stews, the prison of the Clink, Winchester
-House, and the church of St. Mary Overie in Southwark.<a id="FNanchor_1067" href="#Footnote_1067" class="fnanchor">[1067]</a> This
-agrees pretty well with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_377">[377]</span> the maps of Agas (<i>c.</i> 1561) and Norden
-(1593), except that there was already a group of houses falling outside
-Stowe’s purview, which stood on the river near Paris Garden Stairs and
-practically continued the Bankside westwards. But there was also, which
-Stowe does not mention, a marshy <i>hinterland</i> to the Bankside,
-of ponds and gardens, among which Agas, and still more Norden, show
-a good many scattered houses. By the end of the century there was a
-fairly definite north to south street known as Deadman’s Place, which
-debouched from the east end of the Bankside, and from which in its turn
-struck out one called Maid or Maiden Lane, which went in an irregular
-line westwards over the marshes, and was finally joined by two
-divergent ways, Love Lane and Gravel (afterwards Holland) Lane, to the
-Paris Garden group of houses. Thus was formed a rough parallelogram,
-half a mile long, and from 200 to 350 feet deep, within or near which
-all the theatrical sites are placed by the maps. In Norden’s map of
-1593, both the Bear House and the Play House, which must be the Rose,
-stand considerably to the west of Deadman’s Place. The Bear House is
-the most westerly of the two, and is about halfway between the Bankside
-houses on the north and Maid Lane on the south. The Rose is a good
-deal nearer Maid Lane. In the Delaram views (1603–20) there are three
-flagged, but unnamed, structures. One which stands well back from
-the river and, after allowing for the view-point, appears slightly
-the most easterly of the three, is cylindrical; the upper half is
-alone windowed, and has a smaller diameter than the lower half. It is
-placed amongst trees and meadows. There is nothing which obviously
-indicates Maid Lane.<a id="FNanchor_1068" href="#Footnote_1068" class="fnanchor">[1068]</a> The two other buildings stand much nearer
-the river’s edge, amongst houses; they are angled, probably octagonal,
-and not cylindrical. The ‘Hondius’ views repeat the cylindrical
-building and the most westerly of the two angled buildings much in
-the same relative position; the intermediate one has disappeared. It
-seems obvious that the cylindrical building must be the Globe, and
-the other two the Bear Garden, afterwards the Hope, to the west, and
-the Rose, left out of the ‘Hondius’ group, because it disappeared in
-1605, in the centre. The Delaram and ‘Hondius’ views do not extend
-far enough west to include the Swan. It is shown by Visscher in 1616,
-and named. So are the Bear Garden and the Globe, both of which appear
-as angled buildings, octagonal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_378">[378]</span> or hexagonal, about equidistant from
-the Bankside houses, and north of Maid Lane, the angle of which next
-Deadman’s Place is shown.<a id="FNanchor_1069" href="#Footnote_1069" class="fnanchor">[1069]</a> As the change from a cylindrical to an
-angled representation of the Globe coincides with the rebuilding of the
-house in 1614, we may perhaps infer that the structural form is not a
-mere cartographic convention.<a id="FNanchor_1070" href="#Footnote_1070" class="fnanchor">[1070]</a> It is rather singular that in the
-Merian maps (<i>circa</i> 1638) there are four houses again, including
-the Swan, well to the west. This, with two of the three houses in the
-eastern group, is named by the engraver. A third unnamed house stands
-between the Globe on the east and the Bear Garden on the west, which is
-approximately where the Rose used to stand. It is distinctly nearer the
-river than the other two, but all three are north of Maid Lane, from
-which the Bear Garden is slightly more remote than the Globe.<a id="FNanchor_1071" href="#Footnote_1071" class="fnanchor">[1071]</a> If
-the Rose had actually a second term of existence, it was probably only
-a brief one.<a id="FNanchor_1072" href="#Footnote_1072" class="fnanchor">[1072]</a> The fullest of the Ryther maps (<i>c.</i> 1636–45)
-has two angled buildings, one to the west, rather nearer to Bankside
-than to Maid Lane; the other to the east, and south of Maid Lane,
-standing in an angle between that and a track running from north-west
-to south-east. There are no names, but obviously the eastern house is
-the Globe, and the western the Hope, and indeed the dogs can be made
-out. The track joining Maid Lane may be Globe Alley. The Hollar view of
-1647 shows two cylindrical, not angled, buildings. One lettered ‘The
-Globe’ is on the extreme brink of the river; the other, to the east and
-south of it, is lettered ‘Beere bayting’. Faithorne and Newcourt, in
-1658, give no theatres proper, but only a ring marked ‘Beare garden’.
-Finally, Leeke and Hollar about 1666 give a single unnamed roundish
-theatre, south of Maid Lane. Presumably it is the Globe, but copied
-from a survey of earlier date, as the Globe had been pulled down for
-tenements in 1644.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, the maps are disappointing guides. It seems<span class="pagenum" id="Page_379">[379]</span> more
-probable than has quite been recognized, that the singular two-storied
-structure shown by Hondius and Delaram really represents the earlier,
-the Shakespearian, Globe. And the representation of a fourth house by
-Merian, even if he did not know its name, gives support to the view
-that the Rose may have had some kind of existence at a later date than
-the Sewers records indicate. But as regards the alinement, the distance
-from the river, and the relation to Maid Lane, of the three houses in
-the Clink, it is clear that no consistent story is told. The general
-impression one gets is that the Hope stood farthest to the west, then
-the Rose, and then the Globe; and that the Rose stood nearest to the
-river, then the Hope, and then the Globe. Nor is this inconsistent with
-documentary evidence, which in particular indicates that the parcel of
-land, on which the latest of the Bear Gardens was built, was contiguous
-on the west to that known as ‘the little Rose’.<a id="FNanchor_1073" href="#Footnote_1073" class="fnanchor">[1073]</a> Bear Garden and
-Rose Alley, running side by side from the Bankside into Maid Lane
-or Park Street, are traceable in eighteenth-century maps and in the
-modern Ordnance map.<a id="FNanchor_1074" href="#Footnote_1074" class="fnanchor">[1074]</a> Did one judge by the maps alone, one would
-probably, in spite of the dissenting testimony of ‘Ryther’ and of Leeke
-and Hollar, come to the conclusion that the Globe stood to the north
-of Maid Lane. The balance of other evidence points unmistakably in the
-other direction.<a id="FNanchor_1075" href="#Footnote_1075" class="fnanchor">[1075]</a></p>
-
-
-<h4>B. THE PUBLIC THEATRES</h4>
-
-<table summary="theatres">
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">i.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Red Lion Inn.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bull Inn.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bell Inn.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">iv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Bel Savage Inn.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">v.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Cross Keys Inn.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Theatre.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">vii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Curtain.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">viii.</td>
- <td class="cht">Newington Butts.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">ix.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Rose.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">x.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Swan.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xi.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Globe.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Fortune.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xiii.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Boar’s Head.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xiv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Red Bull.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xv.</td>
- <td class="cht">The Hope.</td>
- </tr>
-
- <tr>
- <td class="chn">xvi.</td>
- <td class="cht">Porter’s Hall.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<p>i. THE RED LION INN</p>
-
-<p>The following record appears in the court books of the Carpenters’
-Company:<a id="FNanchor_1076" href="#Footnote_1076" class="fnanchor">[1076]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="hangingindent">Courte holden the xv<sup>th</sup> daie of Julie 1567,
-Annoque Regni Reginae Eliz. nono by M<sup>r</sup> William Ruddoke, M<sup>r</sup>
-Richard More, Henrye Whreste &amp; Richard Smarte wardeins, &amp; M<sup>r</sup>
-Bradshawe.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Memorandum that at courte holden the daie &amp; yeare
-abovesayd that, whear certaine varyaunce, discord &amp; debate was
-betwene Wyllyam<span class="pagenum" id="Page_380">[380]</span> Sylvester carpenter on thone partie &amp; John
-Brayne grocer on thother partie, yt is agreed, concluded &amp;
-fullie determyned by the saide parties, by the assent &amp; consent
-of them bothe, with the advise of the M<sup>r</sup> &amp; wardeins abovesayd
-that Willyam Buttermore, John Lyffe, Willyam Snellinge &amp; Richard
-Kyrbye, Carpenters, shall with expedicon goe &amp; peruse suche
-defaultes as are &amp; by them shalbe found of in &amp; aboute suche
-skaffoldes, as he the said Willyam hathe mad at the house called
-the Red Lyon in the parishe of Stebinyhuthe, &amp; the said Willyam
-Sillvester shall repaire &amp; amend the same with their advize
-substancyallie, as they shall thinke good. And that the said
-John Brayne, on Satterdaie next ensuenge the date above written,
-shall paye to the sayd Willyam Sylvester the some of eight
-poundes, tenne shillinges, lawfull money of England, &amp; that
-after the playe, which is called the storye of Sampson, be once
-plaied at the place aforesaid the said John shall deliver to
-the said Willyam such bondes as are now in his custodie for the
-performaunce of the bargaine. In witnesse whereof both parties
-hereunto hathe sett their handes.</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p0">by me John Brayne grocer.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">[Sylvester’s mark.]</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">This is the only notice of the Red Lion playing-inn which
-has been preserved, but John Brayne, grocer, is doubtless the same who
-financed his brother-in-law, James Burbadge, in the far more important
-enterprise of the Theatre in 1576. Stebunheth or Stepney was a parish
-in Middlesex, lying to the east of the City, beyond Whitechapel, and,
-although near enough to be in a sense a suburb, was outside the civic
-jurisdiction.</p>
-
-
-<h5>ii. THE BULL INN</h5>
-
-<p>The first notice of the Bull is on 7 June 1575 when the playing of a
-‘prize’ there is recorded in the register of the School of Defence.
-It appears to have been the most popular of all localities for this
-purpose and there are fourteen similar notices of its use in the
-register, ending with one on 3 July 1590.<a id="FNanchor_1077" href="#Footnote_1077" class="fnanchor">[1077]</a> Florio refers to it
-as a place for plays in 1578.<a id="FNanchor_1078" href="#Footnote_1078" class="fnanchor">[1078]</a> Stephen Gosson in his <i>Schoole
-of Abuse</i> (1579) exempts from his ordinary condemnation of plays
-<i>The Jew</i> and <i>Ptolemy</i> ‘shown at the Bull’.<a id="FNanchor_1079" href="#Footnote_1079" class="fnanchor">[1079]</a> On 1
-July 1582 the Earl of Warwick asked permission from the Lord Mayor
-for his servant John David to play his provost prizes at ‘the Bull
-in Bishopsgatestrete or some other conuenient place to be assigned
-within the liberties of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_381">[381]</span> London’. This was refused, much to Warwick’s
-annoyance, on the ground that an inn was a place ‘somewhat to close
-for infection’, and David appointed to play ‘in an open place of the
-Leaden hall’.<a id="FNanchor_1080" href="#Footnote_1080" class="fnanchor">[1080]</a> The Bull, with the Bell, was assigned by a civic
-order of 28 November 1583 to the Queen’s men for their first winter
-season. Tarlton and the Queen’s men are said in the <i>Jests</i> to
-have played ‘oftentimes’ at ‘the Bull in Bishops-gate-street’, and
-here their play of <i>The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth</i>,
-with Tarlton in the parts of the judge and the clown and Knell in that
-of Henry, was given.<a id="FNanchor_1081" href="#Footnote_1081" class="fnanchor">[1081]</a> This must, of course, have been between
-1583 and Tarlton’s death in 1588. In 1592 the translator of <i>The
-Spaniard’s Monarchie</i> disclaims any ‘title fetched from the Bull
-within Bishopsgate, as a figge for a Spaniard’. I do not know whether
-any old play underlying the Admiral’s (q.v.) <i>Spanish Fig</i> of
-1601–2 can be referred to. The house was still in use during 1594, for
-in April or May of that year Anthony Bacon settled in Bishopsgate, to
-the vexation of his mother, ‘on account of its neighbourhood to the
-Bull Inn, where plays and interludes were continually acted, and would,
-she imagined, corrupt his servants’.<a id="FNanchor_1082" href="#Footnote_1082" class="fnanchor">[1082]</a> Richard Flecknoe mentions
-the Bull in Bishopsgate Street, with the Cross-Keys, as one of the inns
-turned into theatres at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign, as
-was ‘at this day to be seen’ in 1664.<a id="FNanchor_1083" href="#Footnote_1083" class="fnanchor">[1083]</a> The site was at No. 91 on
-the west of Bishopsgate Street, and is shown in Hatton’s map of 1708,
-and the Ordnance Survey maps of 1848–51 and 1875.</p>
-
-
-<h5>iii. THE BELL INN</h5>
-
-<p>This inn existed in 1560, for on 12 June of that year ‘the wyff of the
-Bell in Gracyous-strett’ was carted as a bawd and whore.<a id="FNanchor_1084" href="#Footnote_1084" class="fnanchor">[1084]</a> Plays
-must have been used there in 1576–7, in the Revels Account for which
-year an item of 10<i>d.</i> is included ‘ffor the cariadge of the
-partes of y<sup>e</sup> well counterfeit from the Bell in Gracious strete to St.
-Iohns to be performed for the play of Cutwell’.<a id="FNanchor_1085" href="#Footnote_1085" class="fnanchor">[1085]</a> With the Bull,
-it was assigned to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_382">[382]</span> Queen’s men by a civic order of 28 November
-1583 for their first winter season. <i>Tarlton’s Jests</i> also mention
-Tarlton and ‘his fellowes’, probably the Queen’s men, as performing at
-the Bell ‘by’ the Cross Keys which was also in Gracious Street, and
-this must have been before Tarlton’s death in 1588.<a id="FNanchor_1086" href="#Footnote_1086" class="fnanchor">[1086]</a> Both houses
-may be included in Rawlidge’s reference to play-houses in Gracious
-street and elsewhere ‘put down’ by the City in Elizabeth’s time. I
-suppose that the site is that of Bell Yard at No. 12 on the west of
-Gracechurch Street.<a id="FNanchor_1087" href="#Footnote_1087" class="fnanchor">[1087]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>iv. THE BEL SAVAGE INN</h5>
-
-<p>The Bel Savage is named as an early London play-house in the 1596
-edition of Lambarde’s <i>Perambulation of Kent</i>. This inn, of
-which the name is still preserved on Ludgate Hill, where it stood
-until 1873 (Harben, 63), must be distinguished from another in
-Gracechurch Street once kept by Tarlton, which in his time was known
-as the Saba.<a id="FNanchor_1088" href="#Footnote_1088" class="fnanchor">[1088]</a> The origin of the name is obscure; a deed of 1452
-refers to an ‘inn ... called Savages Inn, otherwise called the Bell
-on the Hoop, in the parishe of St. Bride in Fleet Street’ (<i>L. T.
-R.</i> ii. 71). Probably therefore the notion of the Belle Sauvage
-is a later perversion. Gascoigne, in the prologue to his <i>Glass
-of Government</i> (1575), repudiates the ‘worthie jests’ and ‘vain
-delights’ of ‘Bellsavage fair’.<a id="FNanchor_1089" href="#Footnote_1089" class="fnanchor">[1089]</a> Gosson, in 1579, excepts from
-his general condemnation of plays ‘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’.<a id="FNanchor_1090" href="#Footnote_1090" class="fnanchor">[1090]</a> A play-house
-‘on Ludgate Hill’ is included by Rawlidge in his list of those ‘put
-down’ in Elizabeth’s time. Probably the Queen’s men were acting at the
-Bel Savage in 1588, for after the death of Tarlton in that year was
-published ‘a sorowfull newe sonnette, intituled Tarltons Recantacion
-uppon this theame gyven him by a gentleman at the Belsavage without
-Ludgate (nowe or els never) beinge the laste theame he songe’.<a id="FNanchor_1091" href="#Footnote_1091" class="fnanchor">[1091]</a>
-Prynne’s reference to <i>Dr. Faustus</i> (q.v.) at the Bel Savage
-suggests that at some time the Admiral’s also played there. It was also
-occasionally used for the playing of ‘prizes’; the earliest recorded
-date in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_383">[383]</span> the Register of the School of Defence being in 1575–7 and the
-latest on 31 January 1589.<a id="FNanchor_1092" href="#Footnote_1092" class="fnanchor">[1092]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>v. THE CROSS KEYS INN</h5>
-
-<p>This inn may have been the play-house, or one of the play-houses,
-‘in Gracious Street’ said by Rawlidge to have been ‘put down’ under
-Elizabeth. The first notice of it dates from 23 June 1579, on which day
-James Burbadge was arrested at the suit of John Hynde for £5 1<i>s.</i>
-1<i>d.</i>, ‘as he came down Gracious Street towards the Cross Keys
-there to a play’. The house is described as the dwelling-house of
-Richard Ibotson, citizen and brewer of London.<a id="FNanchor_1093" href="#Footnote_1093" class="fnanchor">[1093]</a> It was in use as
-a place of popular amusement during the life of Tarlton, who died in
-1588, for one of the Jests relates how he came from the Bell, where he
-was playing to ‘the Crosse-Keyes in Gracious streete’ to see Banks’s
-performing horse there.<a id="FNanchor_1094" href="#Footnote_1094" class="fnanchor">[1094]</a> A company can first be definitely
-located at it in 1589, on 5 November of which year Lord Strange’s men,
-as reported by Lord Mayor Hart to Burghley, disobeyed an admonition
-to forbear playing, and ‘went to the Crosse Keys and played that
-afternoon’. In 1594 Strange’s men were absorbed in Lord Hunsdon’s, and
-on 8 October 1594 Hunsdon wrote to the Lord Mayor to obtain toleration
-for ‘my nowe companie of players’ who had been accustomed ‘to plaie
-this winter time within the citye at the Crosse Kayes in Gracious
-street’.<a id="FNanchor_1095" href="#Footnote_1095" class="fnanchor">[1095]</a> How long Shakespeare’s fellows continued to use the
-Cross Keys as a winter house is unknown; presumably it ceased to be
-available in 1596. The adaptation of the inn as a theatre was still
-visible at the Restoration, and is assigned by Richard Flecknoe to
-‘about the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign’. The site is shown in
-Ogilby and Morgan’s map of 1677 and the Ordnance Survey map of 1848–51:
-it is on the west of Gracechurch Street.</p>
-
-
-<h5>vi. THE THEATRE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Material is available in the
-records of four litigations: (a) <i>Peckham v. Allen</i> (Wards
-and Liveries, 1589) as to the title to the site; (b) <i>Burbadge
-v. Ames et al.</i> (Coram Rege, 1596–9) and <i>Earl of Rutland
-v. Allen and Burbadge</i> (Exchequer, 1599–1602) as to the title
-to a neighbouring plot; (c) <i>Burbadge v. Brayne</i> (Chancery,
-1588–95).</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_384">[384]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>Brayne</i> (afterwards <i>Miles</i>) <i>v. Burbadge</i>
-(Chancery, 1590–5), and <i>Miles v. Burbadge</i> (Requests,
-1597), as to the profits of the house; (d) <i>Allen v.
-Street</i> (Coram Rege, 1600), <i>Burbadge v. Allen</i>
-(Requests, 1600), <i>Allen v. Burbadge</i> (Queen’s Bench,
-1601–2), and <i>Allen v. Burbadge et al.</i> (Star Chamber,
-1601–2), as to the removal of the fabric. A few documents from
-these, some of which he supposed to relate to the Blackfriars,
-were printed by Collier in <i>Memoirs of the Actors</i> (1846
-and <i>H. E. D. P.</i> iii. 257) and in <i>Original History of
-the Theatre in Shoreditch</i> (1849, <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iv.
-63). A large number were used by Halliwell-Phillipps for his
-excursus on <i>The Theatre and Curtain</i> (<i>Outlines</i>,
-i. 345), and in C. C. Stopes, <i>Burbage and Shakespeare’s
-Stage</i> (1913), where abstracts of (a) and (b) may be
-consulted. The full texts of (c) and (d) are printed in C.
-W. Wallace, <i>The First London Theatre, Materials for a
-History</i> (1913, <i>Nebraska University Studies</i>, xiii. 1).
-The exact locality of the site has been carefully investigated
-by W. W. Braines in <i>Holywell Priory and the Site of the
-Theatre, Shoreditch</i> (1915, <i>Indication of Houses of
-Historical Interest in London</i>, xliii), and again in <i>The
-Site of the Theatre, Shoreditch</i> (1917, <i>L. T. R.</i> xi.
-1).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The following statement as to the beginnings of theatrical enterprise
-in London is made by Cuthbert Burbadge and his family in the so-called
-<i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635:<a id="FNanchor_1096" href="#Footnote_1096" class="fnanchor">[1096]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The father of us, Cutbert and Richard Burbage, was the first
-builder of playehowses, and was himselfe in his younger yeeres
-a player. The Theater hee built with many hundred poundes taken
-up at interest. The players that lived in those first times had
-onely the profitts arising from the dores, but now the players
-receave all the commings in at the dores to themselves and halfe
-the galleries from the houskepers. Hee built this house upon
-leased ground, by which meanes the landlord and hee had a great
-suite in law, and, by his death, the like troubles fell on us,
-his sonnes; wee then bethought us of altering from thence, and
-at like expence built the Globe.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The accuracy of this is fully borne out by the records
-of the various legal proceedings in connexion with the Theatre, which
-a painful investigation has exhumed, and the topographical indications
-furnished by the evidence in some of these have made it possible
-to locate with some precision the site of London’s first regular
-play-house.</p>
-
-<p>The Theatre stood in the Liberty of Halliwell or Holywell, part of the
-Middlesex parish of St. Leonard’s, Shoreditch, immediately outside
-the Bishopsgate entrance to the City.<a id="FNanchor_1097" href="#Footnote_1097" class="fnanchor">[1097]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_385">[385]</span> The name of the Liberty
-was derived from an ancient holy well, which has now disappeared, and
-its status from the fact that it had been the property of a priory of
-Benedictine nuns. The buildings of the priory lay between Shoreditch
-High Street, leading north from Bishopsgate, on the east and the open
-Finsbury fields on the west. Its southern gate was in a lane leading
-from the High Street to the Fields, then and still known as Holywell
-Lane or Street, on the south of which lay the Prioress’s pasture
-called the Curtain. Part of this south end of the liberty, lying on
-both sides of Holywell Lane, had been leased in 1537 and 1538 to the
-Earls of Rutland, who continued to hold it from the Crown after the
-dissolution in 1539, and obtained a renewed lease in 1584.<a id="FNanchor_1098" href="#Footnote_1098" class="fnanchor">[1098]</a> The
-rest of the property, including the main conventual buildings, was
-sold in 1544 to one Henry Webb, whose daughter Susan and her husband
-Sir George Peckham sold it in 1555 to Christopher Bumsted, and he in
-the same year to Christopher Allen and his son Giles. The alienation
-of 1555 was challenged as illegal by Susan Peckham’s heirs in 1582,
-and ultimately, but not until about thirty years later, they appear
-to have made good their claim.<a id="FNanchor_1099" href="#Footnote_1099" class="fnanchor">[1099]</a> In the meantime Giles Allen had
-leased a part of the property, which became the site of the Theatre,
-to James Burbadge on 13 April 1576.<a id="FNanchor_1100" href="#Footnote_1100" class="fnanchor">[1100]</a> This was bounded to the
-north by the wall of Allen’s own garden, probably corresponding to the
-main cloister of the convent, on the east or south-east by the Earl
-of Rutland’s holding, and on the west by a ditch dividing it from the
-open Finsbury fields. Within the ditch and divided from it by a strip
-of void ground, was the old brick wall of the precinct. On the extreme
-south was a bit of void ground lying between an Oat Barn occupied by
-Rutland and another Great Barn included in the lease. The Oat Barn and
-the void ground were in fact debatable property claimed both by Allen
-and Rutland. North of the Great Barn, and immediately to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_386">[386]</span> east of
-the precinct wall was more void and garden ground; farther to the east
-the ‘inner court yarde’ of the convent. This held tenements backing
-upon Allen’s garden to the north, and others, including a mill-house,
-backing on the garden ground to the west. In this yard was a well,
-probably the eponymous ‘Holywell’, which fed a horsepond by Rutland’s
-stable on the south-east, and then drained away through the debatable
-ground to the Finsbury ditch.<a id="FNanchor_1101" href="#Footnote_1101" class="fnanchor">[1101]</a> Since Burbadge’s barn is known to
-have been shored up to the Theatre, it is evident that this must have
-been constructed in the void and garden ground between the tenements
-and the precinct wall, and as there was no right of way through
-Rutland’s holding from Holywell Lane, an entrance was made through
-the wall direct from Finsbury fields. The Theatre itself, indeed, was
-sometimes loosely spoken of as ‘in the fields’.<a id="FNanchor_1102" href="#Footnote_1102" class="fnanchor">[1102]</a> Working from
-later title-deeds of the locality, Mr. Braines has successfully located
-the precise site of the building in the angle now formed by Curtain
-Road, which occupies the strip of void ground between the precinct wall
-and Finsbury ditch, and New Inn Yard, which occupies a strip of the
-‘debateable ground’ and a strip also of the site of the Great Barn.
-The site is now part of the premises of the Curtain Road Elementary
-School.<a id="FNanchor_1103" href="#Footnote_1103" class="fnanchor">[1103]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_387">[387]</span></p>
-
-<p>Burbadge’s lease was for a term of twenty-one years from Lady Day 1576.
-He was to pay a fine of £20 and an annual rent of £14. He covenanted
-to spend £200 within the first ten years in improving the existing
-buildings, and in return Allen covenanted to make a new lease for
-twenty-one years at any time within the first ten years, and also
-to allow the tenant at any time within the term of either lease ‘to
-take down such building as should within the sayd tenne yeeres be
-erected on the sayd voyde growndes for a theater or playinge place’.
-It was also agreed that Allen and his wife and family ‘vpon lawfull
-request therfore made’ should be entitled ‘to enter or come into
-the premisses and their in some one of the vpper romes to have such
-convenient place to sett or stande to se such playes as shalbe ther
-played freely without any thinge therefore payeinge soe that the sayd
-Gyles hys wyfe and familie doe com and take ther places before they
-shalbe taken vpp by any others’. Burbadge, a joiner as well as a
-player, had probably the technical qualifications for his enterprise.
-But he was a man of small means, not worth above 100 marks, and had no
-credit.<a id="FNanchor_1104" href="#Footnote_1104" class="fnanchor">[1104]</a> He found a partner in his brother-in-law, John Brayne,
-a well-to-do grocer of Bucklersbury, who had already been connected
-with a play-house speculation at the Red Lion inn. The association
-proved a calamitous one, and its history can only be traced through
-the dubious <i>ex parte</i> statements of later litigation. Burbadge,
-in an unfortunately mutilated document, appears to have alleged that
-Brayne acquired an interest by means of a promise, which he afterwards
-evaded, to leave it to his sister’s children.<a id="FNanchor_1105" href="#Footnote_1105" class="fnanchor">[1105]</a> Robert Miles,
-of the George Inn, Whitechapel, a friend of Brayne, who supported
-and ultimately inherited the case of his widow, told a different
-story.<a id="FNanchor_1106" href="#Footnote_1106" class="fnanchor">[1106]</a> He had heard Burbadge ‘earnestlie insynuate’ Brayne to
-join in the transaction, as one which ‘wold grow to ther contynual
-great profitt and commodytie’. Brayne was ‘verye loth to deale in
-the matter’, and complained later to Miles that it was ‘his vtter
-vndoing’, and that he would never have touched it, but for the ‘swete
-and contynuall’ persuasions of Burbadge. His brother-in-law had assured
-him that the cost of erecting the play-house would not exceed £200,
-and after it had already cost £500, urged that ‘it was no matter’,
-and that the profits ‘wold shortlie quyte the cost vnto them bothe’.
-Obviously Brayne was out for profits, and had to take his risks. But if
-the account of Miles is to be trusted, he had also definite grievances
-against his partner. Burbadge’s small contribution to the outlay was
-partly made<span class="pagenum" id="Page_388">[388]</span> in material, for which he overcharged at the rate of
-sixpence for a groat’s worth. When funds ran short, Brayne and his
-wife worked as labourers on the structure, while Burbadge, if he set
-his hand to a job, took the regular rate of wages for it. And there
-is some corroboration of a more serious charge of ‘indyrect dealing’,
-after the house was opened, about the ‘collecting of the money for
-the gallories’.<a id="FNanchor_1107" href="#Footnote_1107" class="fnanchor">[1107]</a> Miles alleged that during a space of two years
-Burbadge used a secret key made by one Braye, a smith in Shoreditch,
-to filch from ‘the commen box where the money gathered at the said
-playes was putt in’, thus cheating ‘his fellowes the players’ as well
-as Brayne. He would also ‘thrust some of the money devident betwene him
-and his said ffellowes in his bosome or other where about his bodye’.
-The Theatre was in use by 1 August 1577, as it is mentioned by name
-in the Privy Council inhibition of that date.<a id="FNanchor_1108" href="#Footnote_1108" class="fnanchor">[1108]</a> But it was opened
-before the work was completed, and the last stages were paid for out of
-the profits.<a id="FNanchor_1109" href="#Footnote_1109" class="fnanchor">[1109]</a> Moreover, in addition to what Brayne and Burbadge
-could find, money had to be raised on mortgage, with the result that
-Brayne never got full security for his interest in the undertaking.
-He was not a party to the original lease, thinking that if a joint
-lease were entered into, the survivor would take all.<a id="FNanchor_1110" href="#Footnote_1110" class="fnanchor">[1110]</a> When a
-draft assurance of a moiety of the profits to him was prepared on 9
-August 1577, it could not be executed because the lease was at pawn,
-and ultimately, on 22 May 1578, Burbadge gave him a bond of £400 to
-assure in due course.<a id="FNanchor_1111" href="#Footnote_1111" class="fnanchor">[1111]</a> An assurance was, however, never made. The
-friction between the partners led to violent disputes. On one occasion,
-after high words in a scrivener’s shop, ‘Burbage did there strike him
-with his fist and so they went together by the eares in somuch that
-this deponent could herdly part them’.<a id="FNanchor_1112" href="#Footnote_1112" class="fnanchor">[1112]</a> On 12 July 1578 they
-submitted their differences to arbitrators, who decided that, with
-the exception of 10<i>s.</i> weekly for Brayne’s housekeeping and 8s.
-for Burbadge’s out of the profits of ‘such playes as should be playd
-there vpon Sundaies’, the first charge upon the rents and profits of
-the property should be the repayment of debts due upon the theatre.
-Thereafter Brayne should take them ‘till he shuld be answered suche
-somes of money which he had lade out for and vpon the same Theatre
-more then the said Burbage had done’. And when this claim too was
-discharged, the rents and profits should ‘go in devydent equallye
-betwene them’. Should it be necessary to raise<span class="pagenum" id="Page_389">[389]</span> money on mortgage,
-it should be a joint mortgage, and its redemption would then come in
-as the first claim on the rents and profits. Burbadge gave Brayne
-a further bond of £200 for the keeping of this award.<a id="FNanchor_1113" href="#Footnote_1113" class="fnanchor">[1113]</a> On 26
-September 1579 a mortgage was in fact entered into for a loan of £125
-from John Hyde, grocer, to be repaid in a year. The amount, however,
-was not forthcoming, and although Hyde made an arrangement to take
-£5 a week out of the profits, he only got it for four or five weeks.
-In June 1582 he arrested Burbadge and got £20 out of him. Shortly
-afterwards he claimed forfeiture of the lease, and as Burbadge warned
-him that Brayne ‘wold catch what he cold’, appointed one of his own
-servants with Burbadge ‘to gather vp v<sup>li</sup> wekely during the tyme
-of playes’. In this way he got back another £20 or £30. There was,
-however, still at least £30 outstanding when Brayne died in August
-1586.<a id="FNanchor_1114" href="#Footnote_1114" class="fnanchor">[1114]</a> His widow Margaret claimed a moiety of the interest under
-the lease as his heir. At first, we hear, Burbadge allowed her ‘half
-of the profittes of the gallaries’, but only so long as she could lay
-out money ‘to the necessary vse of the said playe howsse’, and when
-she had so spent £30, he said that he must take all the profits until
-the debts were paid, made her gather as a servant, and finally thrust
-her out altogether.<a id="FNanchor_1115" href="#Footnote_1115" class="fnanchor">[1115]</a> Meanwhile Hyde was getting impatient for
-his money. He had promised Mrs. Brayne that, if he were satisfied,
-he would reassure the lease to her and Burbadge jointly, but not to
-either party separately. But now he said that he must convey it to
-whichever would pay him first, and being approached through Walter
-Cope, the master of Burbadge’s son Cuthbert, he did in fact, on some
-promise that Mrs. Brayne should not be wronged, take his £30 and make
-over the lease to Cuthbert Burbadge on 7 June 1589.<a id="FNanchor_1116" href="#Footnote_1116" class="fnanchor">[1116]</a> Henceforward
-Cuthbert, and not his father, was the ostensible tenant of the
-property. This transaction stimulated Mrs. Brayne to assert her claims.
-About a year before the Burbadges had brought an action against her
-in Chancery, apparently in the hope of enforcing the alleged promise
-of Brayne to leave his interest to his sister’s children; and she now
-retorted with a counteraction against James and Cuthbert, in which
-she claimed to have an assignment of a moiety of the lease.<a id="FNanchor_1117" href="#Footnote_1117" class="fnanchor">[1117]</a>
-Her chief<span class="pagenum" id="Page_390">[390]</span> witness was the Robert Miles on whose statements this
-narrative has already drawn. He was not of unimpeachable reputation.
-His long association with Brayne had ended in a quarrel. Brayne had
-‘charged Miles with his deathe, by certaine stripes geven him by
-Miles’. The widow had accused him before the coroner and procured his
-indictment as ‘a comon barreter’. Afterwards they had become friends,
-and he was now maintaining Mrs. Brayne in her suit.<a id="FNanchor_1118" href="#Footnote_1118" class="fnanchor">[1118]</a> Much of his
-evidence, however, received corroboration from his son Ralph, from
-William Nicoll, a notary who had prepared the deeds connected with
-the partnership, and from Edward Collins, who had acquired Brayne’s
-grocery business in Bucklersbury. Burbadge, on the other hand, relied
-largely on one Henry Bett, who had had an opportunity of perusing Mrs.
-Brayne’s papers, and had then transferred his services to the other
-side. We cannot perhaps assume that all the evidence in the cross-suits
-is preserved. So far as what we have goes, there seems to have been
-no attempt on Burbadge’s part to defend himself against the charge of
-indirect dealing during the early years of partnership. Nor were the
-main facts as to the history of the lease much in dispute. The chief
-issue was as to Mrs. Brayne’s equitable claim to an interest in it,
-and this of course turned largely on the state of the account between
-Brayne and Burbadge at the death of the former. Miles asserted that
-the expenditure on the building of the Theatre in cash and credit had
-been practically all Brayne’s, that he had started as a rich man, but
-had had to sell his lease and stock in Bucklersbury and pawn his own
-wardrobe and his wife’s to get the work finished, that he was ruined,
-and that Mrs. Brayne was now ‘vtterlye vndone’ by the suit, and owed
-500 marks to her friends.<a id="FNanchor_1119" href="#Footnote_1119" class="fnanchor">[1119]</a> On the other side it was claimed that
-Brayne’s wealth, variously reputed at from £500 to £1,000, had been
-exaggerated, that he was already involved when he took the Theatre in
-hand, and that his downfall was largely due to unfortunate investments
-outside the partnership, especially in a soap-making business carried
-on with Miles at the George, where in fact Burbadge had incurred losses
-in helping him.<a id="FNanchor_1120" href="#Footnote_1120" class="fnanchor">[1120]</a> Bett, moreover, said that, while Brayne ‘would
-never plainlie declare’ what his profits on the Theatre had been, ‘yt
-seemed by his taulke, that he had gayned and receyved a grete deale of
-monye, more than he had disbursed’.<a id="FNanchor_1121" href="#Footnote_1121" class="fnanchor">[1121]</a> The actual figures produced
-in the course<span class="pagenum" id="Page_391">[391]</span> of the case, which are sufficient to enable us to arrive
-at a fair estimate of the main position, do not quite bear out this
-suggestion. Towards the original outlay Burbadge seems to have found
-about £50; Brayne as much and £239 more, which he claimed as due to him
-from the partnership. In addition there were outside debts outstanding
-at the time of his death to the amount of at least £220. Something,
-moreover, had already been spent out of takings before 1586 in payments
-on Hyde’s mortgage. So that we may perhaps reasonably accept the total
-cost of the building as being somewhere about the 1,000 marks (£666) at
-which common repute estimated it.<a id="FNanchor_1122" href="#Footnote_1122" class="fnanchor">[1122]</a> A certain amount of building
-material, worth perhaps 100 marks, was still in hand. All that Brayne
-could be shown to have received as against his considerable outlay was
-a sum of £135 1<i>s.</i>, for which his receipt was produced. What
-Burbadge had received it is difficult to say. A comparison of various
-estimates suggests that after Brayne’s death it may have been between
-£100 and £200 a year.<a id="FNanchor_1123" href="#Footnote_1123" class="fnanchor">[1123]</a> On the other hand, he had paid off the debt
-of £220 which Brayne had left outstanding. And throughout he had been
-responsible, without aid from Brayne, for certain outgoings independent
-of the structure of the Theatre, for which he was entitled to claim
-credit. He had paid £230 in rent and laid out at least £220 in putting
-the tenements in order, as well as at least £30 early in 1592 on the
-repair of the Theatre itself.<a id="FNanchor_1124" href="#Footnote_1124" class="fnanchor">[1124]</a></p>
-
-<p>The fortunes of the case in Chancery were various. In 1590 the
-Court seemed inclined to grant a sequestration of half the profits;
-but instead made an order that the arbitrament of 1578 should be
-observed.<a id="FNanchor_1125" href="#Footnote_1125" class="fnanchor">[1125]</a> On the strength of this Mrs. Brayne and Miles came
-to the Theatre on more than one occasion, and claimed to appoint
-collectors, including one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_392">[392]</span> Nicholas Bishop, who was asked to stand
-‘at the door that goeth vppe to the gallaries of the said Theater to
-take and receyve for the vse of the said Margarett half the money that
-shuld be gyven to come vppe into the said gallaries at that door’. They
-were, however, refused access, and on 16 November 1590 there was a row
-royal, of which independent witness was borne by John Alleyn, of the
-Admiral’s men, who were then playing at the Theatre. James Burbadge,
-‘looking out at a wyndoe vpon them’, joined his wife in reviling them
-as a murdering knave and whore, and expressed his contempt for the
-order of Chancery; Cuthbert, who came home in the middle of the fray,
-backed him up; while Richard Burbadge, the youngest son, snatched up a
-broom-staff, and as he afterwards boasted, paid Robert Miles his moiety
-with a beating. He also threatened Nicholas Bishop, ‘scornfully and
-disdainfullye playing with this deponentes nose’. James said that at
-their next coming his sons should provide pistols charged with powder
-and hempseed to shoot them in the legs.<a id="FNanchor_1126" href="#Footnote_1126" class="fnanchor">[1126]</a> Both Cuthbert and James
-were summoned on 28 November for contempt before the court, which
-instead of dealing with this charge proceeded to take the whole case
-into further consideration.<a id="FNanchor_1127" href="#Footnote_1127" class="fnanchor">[1127]</a> This was something of a triumph for
-Burbadge, who continued to resist the order, and repeated with oaths
-that twenty contempts and as many injunctions would not force him to
-give up his property. This was heard by John Alleyn in the Theatre yard
-about May 1591, and about eight days later ‘in the Attyring housse or
-place where the players make them ready’, on the occasion of a dispute
-with the Admiral’s men about some of ‘the dyvydent money between him
-and them’ which he had detained, Burbadge was equally irreverent before
-Alleyn and James Tunstall about the Lord Admiral himself, saying ‘by
-a great othe, that he cared not for iij of the best lordes of them
-all’.<a id="FNanchor_1128" href="#Footnote_1128" class="fnanchor">[1128]</a> Margaret Brayne died in 1593, leaving her estate to Miles,
-who thus became a principal in the suit.<a id="FNanchor_1129" href="#Footnote_1129" class="fnanchor">[1129]</a> And on 28 May 1595 the
-court<span class="pagenum" id="Page_393">[393]</span> came to the decision that it could not entertain the case, until
-Miles had endeavoured to obtain relief at common law, by suing on the
-two bonds which Burbadge had given to Brayne in 1578.<a id="FNanchor_1130" href="#Footnote_1130" class="fnanchor">[1130]</a> He does not
-seem to have thought it worth while to do this, probably because he
-saw very little chance of recovering money from James Burbadge, while
-Cuthbert, who now held the lease, was not a party to the bonds.<a id="FNanchor_1131" href="#Footnote_1131" class="fnanchor">[1131]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is the personality of Burbadge rather than the conduct of the
-Theatre that these details illumine. But we may gather that the
-building was constructed mainly of timber with some ironwork, that it
-had a tiring-house and galleries, one at least of which was divided
-into upper rooms, where spectators could sit as well as stand, and
-that money was taken by appointed gatherers, placed in locked boxes,
-and subsequently shared out amongst those entitled to it.<a id="FNanchor_1132" href="#Footnote_1132" class="fnanchor">[1132]</a> From
-other sources it appears that 1<i>d.</i> was charged for admission
-to the building and 1<i>d.</i> or 2<i>d.</i> more for a place in the
-galleries.<a id="FNanchor_1133" href="#Footnote_1133" class="fnanchor">[1133]</a> Apparently the players took the entrance fee and the
-owners of the house the whole or an agreed proportion of the gallery
-money. In the winter of 1585 an interesting arrangement was entered
-into between Burbadge and Brayne on the one hand and Henry Lanman,
-owner of the neighbouring Curtain, on the other, by which during a
-period of seven years the Curtain was taken ‘as an Esore’ to the
-Theatre, and the profits of both houses pooled and equally divided
-between the two parties. This arrangement was still operative in
-1592.<a id="FNanchor_1134" href="#Footnote_1134" class="fnanchor">[1134]</a> Kiechel tells us that the number of galleries was three,
-and De Witt that the shape was that of an ‘amphitheatrum’.<a id="FNanchor_1135" href="#Footnote_1135" class="fnanchor">[1135]</a> It is
-impossible to trace with any certainty the successive occupation of the
-Theatre by various companies of players or to reconstruct the list of
-plays produced upon the boards. Its occupants were Burbadge’s ‘fellows’
-at the time of his frauds of 1576–8, and may reasonably be identified
-with Leicester’s, of whom he was certainly one in 1574.<a id="FNanchor_1136" href="#Footnote_1136" class="fnanchor">[1136]</a> Stephen
-Gosson tells us in 1579 that amongst plays then ‘vsually<span class="pagenum" id="Page_394">[394]</span> brought in
-to the Theater’, were <i>The Blacksmith’s Daughter</i> and his own
-<i>Catiline’s Conspiracies</i>, and in 1582 assigns to the same house
-Lodge’s, if it was Lodge’s, <i>Play of Plays and Pastimes</i> given
-on the last 23 February, the play of <i>The Fabii</i> and possibly
-the history of <i>Caesar and Pompey</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1137" href="#Footnote_1137" class="fnanchor">[1137]</a> Presumably <i>The
-Fabii</i> is <i>The Four Sons of Fabius</i>, presented by Warwick’s
-men at Court on 1 January 1580. Warwick’s men had therefore probably
-replaced Leicester’s at the Theatre, and it was the same men, then
-in the service of the Earl of Oxford, who were concerned in a riot
-at the Theatre on 10 April 1580.<a id="FNanchor_1138" href="#Footnote_1138" class="fnanchor">[1138]</a> In 1582 came the controversy
-between Edmund Peckham and Giles Allen about the freehold of the
-Theatre site, as a result of which Burbadge was ‘disturbed and trobled
-in his possession’, and ‘the players for sooke the said Theater to
-his great losse’.<a id="FNanchor_1139" href="#Footnote_1139" class="fnanchor">[1139]</a> So there was probably another change at this
-time. And in 1583 there was a complete reshuffling of all the London
-companies on the formation of the Queen’s men. Professor Wallace, who
-is primarily considering that part of the evidence which he has himself
-discovered, says that the Queen’s did not act at the Theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1140" href="#Footnote_1140" class="fnanchor">[1140]</a> But
-most certainly they did. It is true that, when an inhibition against
-the Theatre and Curtain was obtained on 14 June 1584, the owner of the
-Theatre, ‘a stubburne fellow’, described himself as Lord Hunsdon’s man.
-Nevertheless the only companies named as concerned are the Queen’s and
-Arundel’s, and Burbadge may not himself have been then acting.<a id="FNanchor_1141" href="#Footnote_1141" class="fnanchor">[1141]</a>
-And as to the presence of the Queen’s in the Theatre at some date there
-is no doubt. Tarlton is not traceable in any other company than the
-Queen’s, and it was at the Theatre that Tarlton made jests of Richard
-Harvey’s <i>Astrological Discourse upon the Conjunction of Saturn and
-Jupiter</i>, published in 1583.<a id="FNanchor_1142" href="#Footnote_1142" class="fnanchor">[1142]</a> The Queen’s certainly did not
-confine themselves to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_395">[395]</span> the Theatre; but that they were there again
-in 1589 may be inferred from a mock testament of Martin Marprelate
-in <i>Martins Month’s Mind</i>, in which he is made to admit that
-he learned his twittle tattles ... at the Theater of Lanam and his
-fellows’. A marginal note in the same pamphlet indicates that it was at
-the Theatre that the ‘Maygame’ representing the ‘launcing and worming’
-of Martin was staged, and there is other evidence that Laneham, then
-one of the Queen’s men, was one of the players who took a part in
-the ribald controversy.<a id="FNanchor_1143" href="#Footnote_1143" class="fnanchor">[1143]</a> Gabriel Harvey’s scoff at Lyly as ‘the
-Foolemaster of the Theatre’ may perhaps indicate his authorship of
-plays for the house. In 1590–1 it is clear that the Admiral’s men,
-probably already associated with Strange’s, were at the Theatre, and
-their quarrel with Burbadge doubtless led them to cross the river and
-join Henslowe at the Rose. After the reconstitution of the companies
-in 1594, James Burbadge’s son Richard became a leading member of the
-Chamberlain’s men, and it is probable that, when this company left the
-Rose about the middle of June, it was to the Theatre that they went.
-Here <i>Hamlet</i>, which certainly belonged to them, was being acted
-in 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1144" href="#Footnote_1144" class="fnanchor">[1144]</a> It must be added that the Theatre was not strictly
-reserved for the purposes of the legitimate drama. It was built for
-‘activities’, amongst other things, according to Stowe, and prizes of
-the School of Defence were played at it between 1578 and 1585.<a id="FNanchor_1145" href="#Footnote_1145" class="fnanchor">[1145]</a> On
-22 February 1582, there took place at the Theatre ‘a scurvie play set
-oot al by one virgin, which there proved a fyemarten without voice, so
-that we stayed not the matter’.<a id="FNanchor_1146" href="#Footnote_1146" class="fnanchor">[1146]</a></p>
-
-<p>It was a natural consequence of the success of Burbadge’s new departure
-that the Theatre and its immediate successor, the Curtain, had to bear
-the brunt of the Puritan denunciations of the stage. These incidentally
-bore witness to the costly elaborateness of the new accommodation
-provided for the players.<a id="FNanchor_1147" href="#Footnote_1147" class="fnanchor">[1147]</a> Apart from the moral corruption<span class="pagenum" id="Page_396">[396]</span> upon
-which the Puritans laid most stress, there is some evidence that the
-position of the Theatre, with a great space of open ground before it,
-made it a natural focus for the disorderly elements of society. As
-early as 5 October 1577, just after the resumption of plays for the
-autumn, the Mayor and Recorder Fleetwood were listening to ‘a brabell
-betwene John Wotton and the Leuetenuntes sonne of the one parte, and
-certain ffreholders of Shordyche, for a matter at the Theater’. There
-was serious trouble in the course of 1584. Fleetwood wrote to Burghley
-how on 8 June, ‘very nere the Theatre or Curten, at the tyme of the
-playes, there laye a prentice sleping upon the grasse and one Challes
-<i>alias</i> Grostock dyd turne upon the too upon the belly of the same
-prentice; whereupon the apprentice start up, and after wordes they
-fell to playne bloues’; and how on 10 June, ‘one Browne, a serving man
-in a blew coat, a shifting fellowe, having a perrelous witt of his
-owne, entending a spoile if he cold have browght it to passe, did at
-Theatre doore querell with certen poore boyes, handicraft prentises,
-and strooke some of theym; and lastlie he with his sword wondend and
-maymed one of the boyes upon the left hand; whereupon there assembled
-nere a ml. people’.<a id="FNanchor_1148" href="#Footnote_1148" class="fnanchor">[1148]</a> Unscrupulous characters might find congenial
-companions in the throng. Somewhere in 1594 a diamond, which had gone
-astray from the loot of a Spanish vessel, was shown in Finsbury Fields
-by a mariner<span class="pagenum" id="Page_397">[397]</span> to certain goldsmiths, who said that they had met him
-by chance at a play in the Theatre at Shoreditch.<a id="FNanchor_1149" href="#Footnote_1149" class="fnanchor">[1149]</a> But James
-Burbadge had obtained for himself a tactical advantage by building
-outside the jurisdiction of the City and within that, less organized
-or more easy-going, of the Middlesex magistrates. The Corporation were
-powerless, except in so far as, directly by persuasion, or indirectly
-by invoking the Privy Council, they could stir the county bench to
-action. They lost no opportunity, which brawls or plague afforded, of
-attempting this.<a id="FNanchor_1150" href="#Footnote_1150" class="fnanchor">[1150]</a> An exceptionally troublous year was 1580. It
-began with an indictment of John Brayne and James Burbadge ‘yeomen’ of
-Shoreditch, at the Middlesex sessions, for bringing unlawful assemblies
-together on 21 February and other days ‘<i>ad audienda et spectanda
-quaedam colloquia sive interluda vocata</i> playes or interludes’ by
-them and others ‘<i>exercitata et practicata</i>’ at the Theatre in
-Holywell, with the result of affrays and tumults leading to a breach
-of the peace.<a id="FNanchor_1151" href="#Footnote_1151" class="fnanchor">[1151]</a> On 6 April was the great earthquake, which threw
-down chimneys in Shoreditch, and according to one account ‘shaked not
-only the scenical Theatre, but the great stage and theatre of the whole
-land’.<a id="FNanchor_1152" href="#Footnote_1152" class="fnanchor">[1152]</a> Four days later was the riot between Lord Oxford’s men and
-the Inns of Court, and the two events gave the Lord Mayor an excellent
-opportunity of pointing out to the Council that the players of plays
-which were used at the Theatre were ‘a very superfluous sort of men’
-and of securing a suspension of performances until after Michaelmas.
-The riot of 8 June 1584 similarly led to the inhibition by the Council
-and Fleetwood already noticed, although it is clear that this was not
-so permanent as the City probably hoped, when the authority for ‘the
-suppressing and pulling downe of the Theatre and Curten’ reached them.
-Matters came to a crisis again in 1597 with the production of <i>The
-Isle of Dogs</i> on the Bankside, and an appeal of the City on 28 July
-was answered on the same day by mandates of the Council, of which one
-was addressed to the Middlesex justices, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_398">[398]</span> directed them to send for
-the owners of the Theatre and Curtain, and enjoin them to ‘plucke downe
-quite the stages, gallories and roomes that are made for people to
-stand in, and so to deface the same as they maie not be ymploied agayne
-to suche use’.<a id="FNanchor_1153" href="#Footnote_1153" class="fnanchor">[1153]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is unlikely that the Theatre was ever opened again. It is certain
-that the Chamberlain’s men had moved to the Curtain before the end of
-1597, and the abandonment of the old house is referred to unmistakably
-enough in a satire published in 1598.<a id="FNanchor_1154" href="#Footnote_1154" class="fnanchor">[1154]</a> The explanation is to be
-found in the relations of the Burbadges to their ground landlord,
-Giles Allen. The following account is taken in the main from Cuthbert
-Burbadge’s allegations in litigation of 1600. On 1 November 1585,
-shortly before the termination of the first ten years of the lease,
-James Burbadge, as he was entitled to do, presented Allen with a draft
-of a new twenty-one years’ lease. This Allen evaded signing, apparently
-alleging that it was not in verbatim agreement with the old lease, and
-probably also that some of Burbadge’s covenants under the old lease
-had remained unfulfilled.<a id="FNanchor_1155" href="#Footnote_1155" class="fnanchor">[1155]</a> By way of precaution, Burbadge thought
-it desirable to put on record in his account-book some evidence that
-he had spent the £200 in improving the tenements, upon which his right
-to remove the structure of the Theatre depended. He called in expert
-craftsmen, and took two ‘views’, one on 20 November 1585, another,
-after some further work had been done, on 18 July 1586. The first
-estimate was £220, the second £240. This last was later confirmed by
-a third view taken in connexion with the Brayne litigation in July
-1591.<a id="FNanchor_1156" href="#Footnote_1156" class="fnanchor">[1156]</a> The money had been spent, partly on ordinary repairs,
-partly on converting the old barn into tenements, partly on putting up
-two new houses, one of which was for Burbadge’s own occupation.<a id="FNanchor_1157" href="#Footnote_1157" class="fnanchor">[1157]</a>
-The matter of the new lease now slumbered until the expiration of the
-old one on 13 April 1597 drew near. In 1596 negotiations took place
-between landlord and tenant, and a compromise was mooted, by which
-the new lease was to be granted, but for an increased rent of £24
-instead of £14. Allen afterwards asserted and Cuthbert Burbadge denied
-that there was a proviso that after five years the building should be
-converted to some other use<span class="pagenum" id="Page_399">[399]</span> than that of a play-house.<a id="FNanchor_1158" href="#Footnote_1158" class="fnanchor">[1158]</a> Cuthbert
-continued the negotiations after James Burbadge’s death in February
-1597, but they finally broke down, and for a year or so the tenancy
-was only on sufferance.<a id="FNanchor_1159" href="#Footnote_1159" class="fnanchor">[1159]</a> Finally, in the autumn of 1598, when
-Cuthbert had agreed to demands which he thought extortionate, Allen
-refused to accept his brother Richard as security, and all hope of a
-settlement disappeared.<a id="FNanchor_1160" href="#Footnote_1160" class="fnanchor">[1160]</a> Cuthbert now resolved to avail himself
-of the covenant of the expired lease, under which the tenant was
-entitled to pull down and remove the Theatre. This he began to do, in
-spite of a protest from Allen’s representative, on 28 December 1598,
-with the concurrence of his mother and brother, and the financial
-aid of one William Smith of Waltham Cross.<a id="FNanchor_1161" href="#Footnote_1161" class="fnanchor">[1161]</a> The work was still
-in progress on 20 January 1599, when Burbadge’s agent, Peter Street,
-carpenter, entered the close with ten or twelve men, and carried the
-timber to the other side of the river for use in the erection of the
-Globe. For this act Allen brought an action of trespass against Street
-in the Queen’s Bench, alleging that he had trampled down grass in
-the close to the value of 40<i>s.</i>, and claiming damages for £800
-in all, of which £700 represented his estimate of the value of the
-Theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1162" href="#Footnote_1162" class="fnanchor">[1162]</a> Burbadge applied to the Court of Requests to stop the
-common law suit, alleging in effect that he was equitably entitled to
-act upon the covenant, even though the lease had expired, on account of
-the unreasonable refusal of Allen to grant the new lease when applied
-for, under the terms of the old one, in 1585.<a id="FNanchor_1163" href="#Footnote_1163" class="fnanchor">[1163]</a> The issue really
-turned upon whether this refusal was reasonable. Allen said that
-James Burbadge had been a troublesome tenant, that he had converted
-the barn into eleven tenements, whose inhabitants became a nuisance
-to the parish by begging for their 20<i>s.</i> rents, that he had not
-repaired the building but only shored it up, that he had not spent the
-stipulated £200, and that £30 rent was in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_400">[400]</span> arrear at the time of the
-application of 1585 and was still unpaid.<a id="FNanchor_1164" href="#Footnote_1164" class="fnanchor">[1164]</a> Probably these last two
-were the only allegations to which the court attached importance. Allen
-claimed that he had no remedy against James Burbadge’s estate, for he
-had made deeds of gift to his sons of his property, and his widow and
-administratrix was without funds. Burbadge, however, produced evidence
-of the estimates of 1585 and 1586, and suggested that his father had a
-counter-claim against the rent in the expense to which he had been put
-in maintaining his possession at the time of Peckham’s claim to the
-freehold. On 18 October 1600 the Court decided in his favour.<a id="FNanchor_1165" href="#Footnote_1165" class="fnanchor">[1165]</a>
-Allen brought a Queen’s Bench action against him in 1601 for breach of
-agreement, and in 1601 complained to the Star Chamber of perjury on the
-part of the expert witnesses and other wrongs done him in the course of
-the earlier proceedings; but, although the conclusions of these suits
-are not on record, it is not likely that he succeeded in obtaining a
-favourable decision.<a id="FNanchor_1166" href="#Footnote_1166" class="fnanchor">[1166]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>vii. THE CURTAIN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Some rather scanty material is
-brought together by T. E. Tomlins, <i>Origin of the Curtain
-Theatre and Mistakes regarding it</i> in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>,
-i. 29, and Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>The Theatre and Curtain</i>
-(<i>Outlines</i>, i. 345).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Curtain is included with the Theatre in Stowe’s general description
-of Holywell as ‘standing on the South-west side towards the field’.
-That it was somewhat south of the Theatre is indicated by a reference
-to it in 1601 as in Moorfields, a name given to the open fields lying
-south of and adjacent to Finsbury Fields. But, although it stood in
-the parish of Shoreditch and the liberty of Holywell, it was not, like
-the Theatre, actually within the precinct of the dissolved priory.
-<i>Curtina</i> is glossed by Ducange as ‘<i>minor curtis, seu rustica
-area, quae muris cingitur</i>’, and the description is sufficiently met
-by the piece of land lying outside the southern gate of the priory, and
-on the other side of Holywell Lane into which that gate opened.<a id="FNanchor_1167" href="#Footnote_1167" class="fnanchor">[1167]</a>
-A priory lease to the Earl<span class="pagenum" id="Page_401">[401]</span> of Rutland of his town house in 1538
-described it as ‘<i>infra muros et portas eiusdem monasterii</i>’, and
-part of the holding consisted of stables and a hay-loft ‘<i>scituata
-et existentia extra portas eiusdem monasterii prope pasturam dictae
-Priorissae vocatam</i> the Curtene’. Post-dissolution conveyances refer
-to a ‘house, tenement or lodge’ called the Curtain, and to a parcel of
-ground, enclosed with a wall on the west and north, called the Curtain
-close, which lay south of the Earl of Rutland’s house, and on which
-by 1581 stood various tenements, which were described as ‘sett, lyeng
-and being in Halliwell Lane’. The property in question formed part of
-the possessions of Sir Thomas Leigh of Hoxton at his death in 1543 and
-had formerly been conveyed to him by Lord Wriothesley. Through Leigh’s
-daughter Katharine it passed to her husband Lord Mountjoy. On 20
-February 1567 it was sold for £40 to Maurice Long and his son William,
-being then in the occupation of one Wilkingeson and Robert Manne. On
-23 August 1571 Maurice Long conveyed it for £200 to Sir William Allen,
-then Lord Mayor, possibly by way of mortgage in connexion with building
-speculations, since on 18 March 1581 it was in the hands of William
-Long, who then sold it to Thomas Herbert. There had evidently been an
-increase in the number of tenements on the site, and Thomas Wilkinson,
-Thomas Wilkins, Robert Medley, Richard Hicks, Henry Lanman, and Robert
-Manne are named as tenants.<a id="FNanchor_1168" href="#Footnote_1168" class="fnanchor">[1168]</a> As Henry Lanman or Laneman had the
-profits of the theatre in 1585, there can be little doubt that it stood
-on part of the land dealt with in the conveyances. Halliwell-Phillipps
-thinks that it must have been situated ‘in or near the place which
-is marked as Curtain Court in Chassereau’s plan of Shoreditch,
-1745’,<a id="FNanchor_1169" href="#Footnote_1169" class="fnanchor">[1169]</a> and is now known as Gloucester Street. If so, it was very
-near the boundary between Holywell and Moorfields, much along the line
-of which now runs Curtain Road. But it must be remembered that Curtain
-Court may also have taken its name from the ‘house, tenement or lodge’
-which already existed in 1567 and is mentioned as the Curtain House in
-the Shoreditch registers as late as 1639; and certainly in Ryther’s map
-(<i>c.</i> 1636–45) the theatre, though still bordering on Moorfields,
-is shown a good deal farther,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_402">[402]</span> both to the east and the south, than the
-point indicated by Halliwell-Phillipps.<a id="FNanchor_1170" href="#Footnote_1170" class="fnanchor">[1170]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Burbadges claimed that James was the first builder of play-houses,
-but the Curtain must have followed very soon after the Theatre. It is
-not mentioned by name with its predecessor in the Privy Council order
-of 1 August 1577, but is in Northbrooke’s treatise of the following
-December. Up to 1597 its history is little more than a pendant to that
-of the Theatre, with which it is generally coupled in the Puritan
-attacks and in the occasional interferences of authority. From 1585 to
-1592, indeed, it was used as an ‘easer’ to the Theatre, and the profits
-of the two houses were pooled under an arrangement between Henry
-Lanman and the Burbadges.<a id="FNanchor_1171" href="#Footnote_1171" class="fnanchor">[1171]</a> The companies who occupied the Curtain
-can for the most part only be guessed at.<a id="FNanchor_1172" href="#Footnote_1172" class="fnanchor">[1172]</a> At the time of the
-inhibition of 14 June 1584 it was probably occupied by Lord Arundel’s
-men. Tarlton appeared at it, but not necessarily after the formation
-of the Queen’s company.<a id="FNanchor_1173" href="#Footnote_1173" class="fnanchor">[1173]</a> Prizes of the School of Defence were
-occasionally played at it from 1579 to 1583.<a id="FNanchor_1174" href="#Footnote_1174" class="fnanchor">[1174]</a> Unlike the Theatre,
-the Curtain was certainly reopened after the inhibition of 1597. It is
-likely that the Chamberlain’s men repaired to it in October of that
-year, and remained at it until the Globe was ready in 1599. The same
-satirist, who tells us that the Theatre was closed in 1598, tells us
-that the Rose, which was continuously occupied by the Admiral’s men,
-and the Curtain were open;<a id="FNanchor_1175" href="#Footnote_1175" class="fnanchor">[1175]</a> and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_403">[403]</span> a clue to the actors at it is
-given by Marston’s reference to ‘Curtain plaudities’ in the closest
-connexion with <i>Romeo and Juliet</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1176" href="#Footnote_1176" class="fnanchor">[1176]</a> In 1600 Robert Armin, of
-the Chamberlain’s men, published his <i>Fool upon Fool</i>, in which he
-called himself ‘Clonnico de Curtanio Snuffe’. In the 1605 edition he
-changed the name to ‘Clonnico del Mondo Snuffe’. The direct connexion
-of the Chamberlain’s men with the Curtain probably ended on the opening
-of the Globe. But a share in it belonged to Thomas Pope, when he made
-his will on 22 July 1603, and another to John Underwood, when he made
-his on 4 October 1624. Both were of the Chamberlain’s men, although
-Underwood cannot have joined them until about 1608.</p>
-
-<p>The Curtain did not go entirely out of use when the Chamberlain’s left
-it. It must have been the theatre near Bishopsgate at which Thomas
-Platter saw a play in September or October 1599.<a id="FNanchor_1177" href="#Footnote_1177" class="fnanchor">[1177]</a> It is possible
-that Kempe (q.v.) was then playing there. In March 1600 one William
-Hawkins, barber, of St. Giles’s without Cripplegate was charged at the
-Middlesex Sessions with taking a purse and £1 6<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> at
-the Curtain, and Richard Fletcher, pewterer, of Norwich, was bound over
-to give evidence.<a id="FNanchor_1178" href="#Footnote_1178" class="fnanchor">[1178]</a></p>
-
-<p>On 22 June 1600, when the Privy Council gave authority for the opening
-of the Fortune, they were given to understand by the Master of the
-Revels that it would replace the Curtain, which was therefore to be
-‘ruinated or applied to some other good use’. This arrangement seems to
-suggest that the Curtain was in some way under the control of Alleyn or
-Henslowe. It was, however, departed from, and apparently with the tacit
-consent of the Council, as although they had occasion on 10 May 1601 to
-instruct the Middlesex justices to suppress a libellous play produced
-at ‘the Curtaine in Moorefeilds’, they did not take, as they might
-have done, the point that no play ought to have been produced there
-at all. On 31 December they were again insisting on the limitation of
-the theatres in use to two; and on 31 March 1602 they again<span class="pagenum" id="Page_404">[404]</span> departed
-from their own principles by licensing Oxford’s and Worcester’s men to
-play at the Boar’s Head. Henceforward three companies of men players
-were regularly tolerated, and when a draft licence was prepared for
-Worcester’s, or as they had then become Queen Anne’s, men early in the
-following year the Curtain and the Boar’s Head were named as ‘there now
-usuall howsen’. The Curtain is also specified for them in the Council’s
-warrant for the resumption of plays on 9 April 1604. About 1606 they
-also took into use the Red Bull, and thereafter but little is heard
-of the Curtain. The Queen’s men, however, played Day, Wilkins, and
-Rowley’s <i>The Travels of Three English Brothers</i> there at some
-time before its entry on 29 June 1607. It was still theirs in April
-1609, but may perhaps soon have passed to the Duke of York’s men. It
-is mentioned, with the Globe and Fortune, in Heath’s <i>Epigrams</i>
-of 1610, and plays heard ‘at <i>Curtaine</i>, or at Bull’ and ‘a
-Curtaine Iigge’ are objects of ridicule in Wither’s <i>Abuses Stript
-and Whipt</i> of 1613.<a id="FNanchor_1179" href="#Footnote_1179" class="fnanchor">[1179]</a> It was used by an amateur company for a
-performance of Wentworth Smith’s <i>Hector of Germany</i> in 1615, and
-it is obscurely referred to in I. H.’s <i>This World’s Folly</i> of the
-same year.<a id="FNanchor_1180" href="#Footnote_1180" class="fnanchor">[1180]</a> Malone gathered from Sir Henry Herbert’s office-book
-that it was used by Prince Charles’s men in 1622, and soon thereafter
-only by prize-fighters. It was still in use in 1624, and still standing
-in 1627.<a id="FNanchor_1181" href="#Footnote_1181" class="fnanchor">[1181]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>viii. NEWINGTON BUTTS</h5>
-
-<p>A theatre, of which the history is very obscure, but which may have
-been built soon after the Theatre and Curtain, stood at Newington, a
-village one mile from London Bridge, divided from the Bankside by St.
-George’s Fields, and reachable by the road which continued Southwark
-High Street.<a id="FNanchor_1182" href="#Footnote_1182" class="fnanchor">[1182]</a> Here there were butts for the practice of archery.
-Plays at Newington Butts, outside the City jurisdiction, are first
-mentioned in a Privy Council letter of 13 May 1580 to the Surrey
-justices. A similar letter of 11 May 1586 speaks more precisely of
-‘the theater or anie other places about Newington’. A third letter,
-undated, but probably belonging to 1591 or 1592, recites an order
-of the Council restraining<span class="pagenum" id="Page_405">[405]</span> Strange’s men from playing at the Rose,
-and enjoining them to play three days a week at Newington Butts, and
-rescinds it, ‘by reason of the tediousness of the way, and that of long
-time plays have not there been used on working days’.<a id="FNanchor_1183" href="#Footnote_1183" class="fnanchor">[1183]</a> Possibly
-the theatre had come into Henslowe’s hands, for his diary records that
-it was at Newington that the combined companies of the Admiral’s and
-Chamberlain’s men began their first season after the plague of 1592–4,
-apparently playing there from 5 to 15 June 1594, and then going their
-separate ways to the Rose and the Theatre respectively. The theatre is
-mentioned in the list given by Howes in 1631.<a id="FNanchor_1184" href="#Footnote_1184" class="fnanchor">[1184]</a> It is said to have
-been ‘only a memory’ by 1599.<a id="FNanchor_1185" href="#Footnote_1185" class="fnanchor">[1185]</a> A bad pun is called a ‘Newington
-conceit’ in 1612.<a id="FNanchor_1186" href="#Footnote_1186" class="fnanchor">[1186]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>ix. THE ROSE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;All the more important documents
-are printed or calendared from the <i>Dulwich MSS.</i> with
-a valuable commentary in Greg, <i>Henslowe’s Diary</i> and
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, and in Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>
-and <i>Henslowe’s Diary</i>.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Rose owed its name to the fact that it stood in what had been, as
-recently as 1547–8, a rose garden.<a id="FNanchor_1187" href="#Footnote_1187" class="fnanchor">[1187]</a> On 3 December 1552 Thomasyn,
-widow of Ralph Symonds, fishmonger, granted to trustees, for her own
-use during life and thereafter to the charitable uses of the parish of
-St. Mildred, Bread Street, her ‘messuage or tennement then called the
-little rose with twoe gardens’ formerly in St. Margaret’s and then in
-St. Saviour’s, Southwark. St. Mildred’s still has a plan of the estate,
-which extended to about three roods.<a id="FNanchor_1188" href="#Footnote_1188" class="fnanchor">[1188]</a> A ‘tenement called the Rose’
-is referred to in a recital of a lease of Henry VIII’s reign as the
-eastern boundary of other tenements, by name the Barge, the Bell, and
-the Cock, which lay ‘vppon the banke called Stewes’ in St. Margaret’s,
-afterwards St. Saviour’s, parish, between the highway next the Thames
-on the north and Maiden Lane on the south.<a id="FNanchor_1189" href="#Footnote_1189" class="fnanchor">[1189]</a> It is located by
-Mr. Rendle just to the east of the still existing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_406">[406]</span> Rose Alley. The
-site therefore lay in the Liberty of the Clink midway between those
-afterwards occupied by the Globe on the east and the Hope on the
-west. On 20 November 1574 the parish let the property for thirty-one
-years at £7 annually to William Griffin, vintner. Griffin assigned
-it on 11 December 1579 to Robert Withens, vintner, and Withens on 24
-March 1585 to Henslowe.<a id="FNanchor_1190" href="#Footnote_1190" class="fnanchor">[1190]</a> There was as yet no theatre. The first
-mention of one as in contemplation is in an agreement of 10 January
-1587 between Henslowe and one John Cholmley, citizen and grocer of
-London, for partnership during the next eight years and three months,
-should both parties live so long, in a garden plot ninety-four feet
-square on the Bankside in the parish of St. Saviour’s, Southwark, and
-‘a playe howse now in framinge and shortly to be ereckted and sett vppe
-vpone the same’. Under this Henslowe undertook to have ‘the saide play
-house with all furniture thervnto belonginge’ set up ‘with as muche
-expedicion as maye be’ by John Grigges, carpenter, to pay all rents due
-on the premisses, and to repair the bridges and wharves belonging to
-them before the following Michaelmas. Cholmley undertook to bear his
-share of any further cost of maintaining the premises, and also to pay
-Henslowe the sum of £816 in quarterly instalments. In consideration of
-this, he was to take half of all such profits as ‘shall arysse grow be
-colectted gathered or become due for the saide parcell of grounde and
-playe howse when and after yt shalbe ereckted and sett vpe by reason of
-any playe or playes, that shalbe showen or played there or otherwysse
-howsoever’. The partners are jointly to appoint ‘players to vse
-exersyse &amp; playe in the saide playe howse’, and collect sums themselves
-or by deputy of all persons coming to the performances ‘excepte yt
-please any of the saide partyes to suffer theire frendes to go in for
-nothinge’. Cholmley is also to have the sole right of selling food or
-drink on the premises and a small house already in his tenure on the
-south of the plot close to Maiden Lane, ‘to keepe victualinge in’ or
-for any other purpose, and with a right of ingress from Thames side by
-Rose Alley.<a id="FNanchor_1191" href="#Footnote_1191" class="fnanchor">[1191]</a> The deed does not name the property, but it cannot
-be doubted that it refers to a part of the Little Rose. Presumably the
-theatre was to be built on a garden at the back of the holding, and the
-existing tenement on Bankside was not to be interfered with. Henslowe
-had ‘Rosse rentes’ of a residential character in 1602 or 1603.<a id="FNanchor_1192" href="#Footnote_1192" class="fnanchor">[1192]</a>
-Norden’s map (1593) puts the Rose farther from the river than the Bear
-Garden. The Delaram and Merian drawings,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_407">[407]</span> on the other hand, put it
-very near the river, and these, although of less authority than Norden,
-are followed in Mr. Rendle’s plan. Probably Norden’s Bear Garden was
-an older one than that which afterwards became the Hope.<a id="FNanchor_1193" href="#Footnote_1193" class="fnanchor">[1193]</a> The
-provision as to the wharfs and bridges seems to indicate an intention
-to open the Rose at Michaelmas 1587, and I see no reason to doubt
-that it was in fact ready for occupation by about that date. On 29
-October the Privy Council called the attention of the Surrey justices
-to complaints from Southwark of breaches of the rule against plays on
-Sunday, ‘especiallie within the Libertie of the Clincke and in the
-parish of St. Saviour’s in Southwarke’. There may, of course, have been
-plays at inns in the Clink, but it is more natural to take the protest
-as one against the newly opened Rose. No other regular theatre existed
-in the Clink at this time. That the Rose was built by 1588 appears from
-a record of the Sewer Commission for Surrey.<a id="FNanchor_1194" href="#Footnote_1194" class="fnanchor">[1194]</a> It is not in Smith’s
-plan of 1588, but this may easily not have been quite up to date.</p>
-
-<p>The next that is heard of the Rose is probably in 1592.<a id="FNanchor_1195" href="#Footnote_1195" class="fnanchor">[1195]</a> In March
-and April of that year Henslowe, who had recently taken his famous
-‘diary’ into use as a financial memorandum book, noted in it some
-building expenditure, and a little later set out ‘a note of suche
-carges as I haue layd owt a bowte my playe howsse in the yeare of our
-lord 1592’.<a id="FNanchor_1196" href="#Footnote_1196" class="fnanchor">[1196]</a> Henslowe is not known to have owned Newington Butts,
-or any other theatre except the Rose, and it is reasonable to assume
-that this is what he meant by ‘my playe howsse’. The work probably
-began in or before January, as an entry halfway through the list is
-dated on 6 February. It entailed the purchase of a barge and a certain
-amount of breaking up and paling and wharfing. Henslowe appears to have
-done the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_408">[408]</span> work himself and not by contract. He bought a mast, turned
-balusters, boards and laths, in part from the carpenter Grigges who is
-named in the agreement with Cholmley, and in part from a ‘timber man’
-called Lee. He bought bolts, hinges, and nails from the ironmonger at
-the Fryingpan in Southwark and from one Brader. He bought lime, sand,
-chalk, and bricks. He paid wages to carpenters, workmen, and labourers,
-and employed painters and a thatcher. The exact nature and extent of
-the work are not specified, but it included the painting of the stage,
-the ceiling of ‘my lords rome’, and ‘the rome ouer the tyerhowsse’, and
-the ‘makeinge the penthowsse shed at the tyeringe howsse doore’. It has
-sometimes been supposed that the Rose never got built in 1587, and that
-these are the accounts, or part of them, for the original construction.
-This seems to me most unlikely. The total expense, with the exception
-of a small number of items lost by the mutilation of a page, only
-amounted to about £108. This could not cover more than repairs. On
-the other hand, these were clearly substantial repairs, and the fact
-that they were needed suggests that the building cannot have been a
-very new one. The lapse of five years since 1587 would, however, be
-consistent with the necessity for them. Almost simultaneously with the
-earliest dated entries in the building account, begins on 19 February
-1592 the record of performances by Lord Strange’s men, which continues
-to the following 22 June. If these were at the Rose, the paint on the
-stage can hardly have been dry in time for them, unless, as Dr. Greg
-suggests, the payments made in March and April were for work done a
-little earlier. That it was at the Rose that Strange’s men played
-seems indicated by the Privy Council order, reciting the restraint of
-this company ‘from playinge at the Rose on the Banckside’, which it
-is difficult to assign to any year but 1591 or 1592.<a id="FNanchor_1197" href="#Footnote_1197" class="fnanchor">[1197]</a> It is a
-little curious that nothing more is heard of John Cholmley, and I think
-the natural inference is that he was dead and that the partnership
-had thereby, in accordance with the terms of the agreement, been
-automatically dissolved.<a id="FNanchor_1198" href="#Footnote_1198" class="fnanchor">[1198]</a></p>
-
-<p>The assumption, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that until
-he acquired a share in the Fortune Henslowe had no proprietary interest
-in any other theatre must explain the assignment to the Rose of all
-the playing recorded in the diary between 1592 and the autumn of 1600,
-with the exception of the few performances definitely stated to have
-been at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_409">[409]</span> Newington Butts. The further conjecture must, I think, be
-accepted that the season begun by the Admiral’s and Chamberlain’s men
-at Newington Butts in the summer of 1594 was transferred, so far as the
-Admiral’s men were concerned, to the Rose after 15 June. If so, the
-Rose housed Strange’s men again from 29 December 1592 to 1 February
-1593, Sussex’s from 26 December 1593 to 6 February 1594, the Queen’s
-and Sussex’s together from 1 to 9 April 1594, and the Admiral’s from 14
-to 16 May 1594, and then regularly from the following June until their
-transference to the Fortune in 1600. The only actual mentions of the
-theatre by name in the diary during this period are in the agreements
-of 1597 between Henslowe and the players Jones and Borne, in which
-Henslowe specifies ‘the Rosse’ as ‘my howsse’ in which they are to
-play. It was no doubt in use when Guilpin’s <i>Skialetheia</i> (S. R.
-8 September 1598) was written.<a id="FNanchor_1199" href="#Footnote_1199" class="fnanchor">[1199]</a> In the Lenten interval of 1595
-Henslowe made ‘A nott of what I haue layd owt abowt my playhowsse ffor
-payntynge &amp; doinge it abowt with ealme bordes &amp; other repracyones’. The
-expenditure reached a total of £108 19<i>s.</i>, which was much about
-the same as that of 1592, and was supplemented in the following June
-by a further £7 2<i>s.</i> for carpenters’ work, including ‘mackinge
-the throne in the heuenes’.<a id="FNanchor_1200" href="#Footnote_1200" class="fnanchor">[1200]</a> The accounts of 1592 and 1595 suggest
-that the building was of wood and plaster on a brick foundation, and
-this is consistent with Hentzner’s statement of 1598. Part of it, at
-least, was thatched. If the maps can be trusted, it was octagonal. In
-1600 Henslowe had to find new occupants for the Rose. He records that
-Pembroke’s men began to play there on 28 October, but only enters two
-unprofitable performances. Possibly the Privy Council, who had decreed
-in the previous July a limitation of houses to one on each side of the
-river, interfered. But this limitation was certainly not permanent.
-There is a receipt for a play bought for Worcester’s men ‘at the Rose’,
-and they probably used the house during the term of their account with
-Henslowe between August 1602 and May 1603. Subsequently they moved
-to the Curtain and Boar’s Head. Henslowe’s lease of the site was due
-to expire at the end of 1605, and this explains to some extent the
-following entry in the diary:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The 25 of June 1603 I talked with M<sup>r</sup>. Pope at the scryveners
-shope wher he lisse consernynge the tackynge of the leace a new
-of the littell Roosse &amp; he showed me a wrytynge betwext the
-pareshe &amp; hime seallfe which was to paye twenty pownd a yeare
-rent &amp; to bestowe a hundred marckes vpon billdinge which I sayd
-I wold rather pulle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_410">[410]</span> downe the playehowse then I wold do so &amp; he
-beade me do &amp; sayd he gaue me leaue &amp; wold beare me owt for yt
-wasse in him to do yt.’<a id="FNanchor_1201" href="#Footnote_1201" class="fnanchor">[1201]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is impossible to say whether ‘Mr. Pope’ was Thomas Pope of the
-King’s men at the neighbouring Globe, or Morgan Pope, who was formerly
-interested in the Bear House, or some other Pope; nor is it clear how
-he was in a position to authorize Henslowe to pull down the theatre.
-Dr. Greg draws the natural inference from the wording that he may have
-given his consent as a prospective lessee of the property.<a id="FNanchor_1202" href="#Footnote_1202" class="fnanchor">[1202]</a> In
-any case the Rose was not pulled down until two or three years later.
-The Sewers records show that in January 1604 not Philip but Francis
-Henslowe was amerced 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for it, which may mean that
-Lennox’s men were playing there; that on 4 October 1605 Philip Henslowe
-was amerced, but return was made that it was ‘out of his hands’; that
-on 14 February 1606 Edward Box, of Bread Street, London, was amerced
-for it; and that on 25 April 1606 Box was amerced for the site of ‘the
-late play-house in Maid lane’.<a id="FNanchor_1203" href="#Footnote_1203" class="fnanchor">[1203]</a></p>
-
-<p>There is no record of plays at the Rose after 1603.<a id="FNanchor_1204" href="#Footnote_1204" class="fnanchor">[1204]</a> It is in
-the Delaram engravings, but not in any later views except those of
-the Merian group, where it appears, flagged but unnamed, on the river
-edge.<a id="FNanchor_1205" href="#Footnote_1205" class="fnanchor">[1205]</a> Nor is it mentioned with the Hope, Globe, and Swan in
-<i>Holland’s Leaguer</i> (1632). The explanation may perhaps be that
-the Merian engraver followed some out-of-date authority, such as
-Delaram, which had got the house farther north than Norden puts it, and
-as it had long ceased to exist, did not know its name. On the other
-hand, it is also just conceivable that for a short period the Rose, or
-some other building at the north end of the Rose site, had a renewed
-life as a place of public entertainment. Alleyn was paying ‘tithe dwe
-for the Rose’ in 1622.<a id="FNanchor_1206" href="#Footnote_1206" class="fnanchor">[1206]</a> And Malone cites Herbert’s ‘office-book’
-for a statement that after 1620 the Swan and the Rose were ‘used
-occasionally for the exhibition of prize-fighters’.<a id="FNanchor_1207" href="#Footnote_1207" class="fnanchor">[1207]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_411">[411]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>x. THE SWAN</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;John de Witt’s description
-and plan are published in K. T. Gaedertz, <i>Zur Kenntnis
-der altenglischen Bühne</i> (1888), and more exactly by H.
-B. Wheatley in <i>On a Contemporary Drawing of the Swan
-Theatre</i>, 1596 (<i>N. S. S. Trans. 1887–92</i>, 215). They
-are discussed by H. Logemann in <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 117, by
-W. Archer in <i>The Universal Review</i> for June 1888, by W.
-Rendle in <i>7 N. Q.</i> vi. 221, by J. Le G. Brereton, <i>De
-Witt at the Swan</i> (1916, <i>Sh.-Homage</i>, 204), by myself
-in a paper on <i>The Stage of the Globe</i> in <i>The Stratford
-Town Shakespeare</i>, x. 351, and in most recent treatises
-on Elizabethan staging; cf. chh. xviii, xx. Earlier material
-is collected by W. Rendle in <i>The Play-houses at Bankside
-in the Time of Shakespeare</i> (<i>Antiquarian Magazine and
-Bibliographer</i>, 1885, vii. 207). The facts as to Langley’s
-purchase and the pleadings and order in the suit of <i>Shawe
-et al. v. Langley</i> before the Court of Requests in 1597–8
-(cited as <i>S. v. L.</i>) are given by C. W. Wallace, <i>The
-Swan Theatre and the Earl of Pembroke’s Servants</i> (1911,
-<i>E. S.</i> xliii. 340). T. S. Graves, <i>A Note on the Swan
-Theatre</i> (<i>M. P.</i> ix. 431), discusses the light thrown
-on the internal arrangements of the Swan by the accounts of
-<i>England’s Joy</i> in 1602.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Swan stood in the Liberty and Manor of Paris Garden, at the western
-end of the Bankside. This manor, from which the royal ‘game’ of
-bear-baiting took its traditional appellation, had come into the hands
-of the Crown as part of the possessions of the dissolved monastery
-of Bermondsey. It was granted in 1578 to nominees of Henry, Lord
-Hunsdon, conveyed by them to the Cure family, and sold for £850 on 24
-May 1589 by Thomas Cure the younger to Francis Langley, a citizen and
-goldsmith of London. Langley, who was brother-in-law to Sir Anthony
-Ashley, one of the clerks to the Privy Council, held the office of
-Alnager and Searcher of Cloth, to which he had been appointed by
-the Corporation on the recommendation of the Privy Council and Sir
-Francis Walsingham in December 1582.<a id="FNanchor_1208" href="#Footnote_1208" class="fnanchor">[1208]</a> The site of the theatre can
-be precisely identified from a plan of the manor dated in 1627, but
-based on a survey of 1 November 1624.<a id="FNanchor_1209" href="#Footnote_1209" class="fnanchor">[1209]</a> It was in the north-east
-corner of the demesne, east of the manor-house, twenty-six poles due
-south of Paris Garden stairs, and immediately west of a lane leading
-to a house called Copt Hall. The outline shown is that of a double
-circle, or perhaps dodecahedron, divided into twelve compartments,
-with a small porch or tiring-house towards the road. The exact date
-of building is unknown. On 3 November 1594 the Lord Mayor wrote to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_412">[412]</span>
-Burghley that Langley ‘intendeth to erect a niew stage or Theater
-(as they call it) for the exercising of playes vpon the Banck side’,
-and detailed the usual civic objections to the stage as arguments in
-favour of the suppression of the project.<a id="FNanchor_1210" href="#Footnote_1210" class="fnanchor">[1210]</a> It is probable that
-Burghley refused to intervene and that Langley proceeded at once with
-the erection of the Swan, which may then have been ready for use in
-1595. It is impossible, without the Swan, to make up the tale of four
-‘spielhäuser’ seen by the Prince of Anhalt in 1596 (360). To 1596
-again is assigned, although with probability rather than certainty,
-the visit of John de Witt, who not only names but also describes and
-delineates the Swan.<a id="FNanchor_1211" href="#Footnote_1211" class="fnanchor">[1211]</a> In any case the Swan had already been in
-use by players before February 1597, when Langley entered into an
-arrangement for its occupation by Lord Pembroke’s men.<a id="FNanchor_1212" href="#Footnote_1212" class="fnanchor">[1212]</a> The terms
-of the lease provided that he should make the house ready and furnish
-apparel, which he alleged cost him £300, and should get his return for
-this expenditure out of the company’s moiety of the gallery takings,
-in addition of course to the other moiety which in accordance with
-theatrical custom went to him as rent.<a id="FNanchor_1213" href="#Footnote_1213" class="fnanchor">[1213]</a> The enterprise was rudely
-interrupted by the production of <i>The Isle of Dogs</i> at the Swan
-itself, and the restraint of 28 July 1597 which was the result. The
-leading members of Pembroke’s company joined or rejoined the Admiral’s
-at the Rose, and became involved in litigation with Langley on account
-of their breach of covenant.<a id="FNanchor_1214" href="#Footnote_1214" class="fnanchor">[1214]</a> For a time Langley succeeded in
-keeping a company together, and the Swan remained open.<a id="FNanchor_1215" href="#Footnote_1215" class="fnanchor">[1215]</a> It was
-perhaps the intention of the Privy Council order of 19 February 1598,
-against an intrusive ‘third company’ which was competing with the
-Chamberlain’s and the Admiral’s, to close it.<a id="FNanchor_1216" href="#Footnote_1216" class="fnanchor">[1216]</a> If so, Langley may
-still for a time have found means of evasion, since on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_413">[413]</span> following
-1 May the vestry of St. Saviour’s were viewing new buildings of his,
-and at the same time negotiating with Henslowe and Meade for money for
-the poor ‘in regarde of theire playe-houses’.<a id="FNanchor_1217" href="#Footnote_1217" class="fnanchor">[1217]</a> During the next few
-years, however, such notices as we get of the Swan, while showing that
-it was still in existence and available for occasional entertainments,
-carry no evidence of any use by a regular company. Francis Meres, in
-his <i>Palladis Tamia</i> of 1598, tells us that it was the scene of
-a challenge in ‘extemporall’ versifying by Robert Wilson.<a id="FNanchor_1218" href="#Footnote_1218" class="fnanchor">[1218]</a> It
-was one of the wooden theatres which were seen by Hentzner in the
-same year, and no doubt the one near which he describes the royal
-barge as lying.<a id="FNanchor_1219" href="#Footnote_1219" class="fnanchor">[1219]</a> On 15 May 1600 the Council sanctioned its use
-for feats of activity by Peter Bromvill.<a id="FNanchor_1220" href="#Footnote_1220" class="fnanchor">[1220]</a> On 7 February 1602 it
-was occupied by fencers, and while two of these, by names Turner and
-Dun, were playing their prizes upon its stage, Dun was unfortunate
-enough to receive a mortal wound in the eye.<a id="FNanchor_1221" href="#Footnote_1221" class="fnanchor">[1221]</a> On 6 November 1602
-it was chosen by Richard Vennar for his impudent mystification of
-<i>England’s Joy</i>. The accounts of this transaction show that it was
-fitted with ‘hangings, curtains, chairs, and stools’, and capable of
-scenic effects, such as the appearance of a throne of blessed souls in
-heaven and of black and damned souls with fireworks from beneath the
-stage.<a id="FNanchor_1222" href="#Footnote_1222" class="fnanchor">[1222]</a> Meanwhile Langley had died in 1601 and in January 1602
-the Paris Garden estate was sold to Hugh Browker, a protonotary of
-the Court of Common Pleas, in whose family it remained to 1655.<a id="FNanchor_1223" href="#Footnote_1223" class="fnanchor">[1223]</a>
-About 1611 it was once more taken into use for plays. <i>The Roaring
-Girl</i> (1611), itself a Fortune play, has an allusion to a knight
-who ‘lost his purse at the last new play i’ the Swan’,<a id="FNanchor_1224" href="#Footnote_1224" class="fnanchor">[1224]</a> and the
-accounts of the overseers of Paris Garden contain entries of receipts
-from ‘the play house’ or ‘the Swan’ in each April from 1611 to
-1615.<a id="FNanchor_1225" href="#Footnote_1225" class="fnanchor">[1225]</a> The last entry is of so small an amount that it probably
-only covered a fraction of a year, and I think the inference is that
-the Swan was disused on the opening of the Hope in 1614.<a id="FNanchor_1226" href="#Footnote_1226" class="fnanchor">[1226]</a> If so,
-it had probably been taken over by Henslowe for the use of the Lady
-Elizabeth’s men, who came into existence in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_414">[414]</span> 1611, and whose <i>Chaste
-Maid in Cheapside</i> was published in 1630 as ‘often acted at the Swan
-on the Bankeside’. The Hope itself was modelled structurally upon the
-Swan. Its measurements were the same, and it had similar partitions
-between the rooms and external staircases. Its heavens, however,
-were to be supported without the help of posts from the stage, since
-this had to be removable on days of bear-baiting. It is obviously
-illegitimate to infer from this specification that the stage of the
-Swan, which was not used for bear-baiting, was also removable. The
-accounts of the overseers show one more payment from the ‘players’ in
-1621, which perhaps supports the statement contained in one of Malone’s
-notes from Sir Henry Herbert’s office-book, that after 1620 the Swan
-was ‘used occasionally for the exhibition of prize-fighters’.<a id="FNanchor_1227" href="#Footnote_1227" class="fnanchor">[1227]</a>
-The theatre is marked ‘Old Play-house’ in the manor map of 1627. The
-last notice of it is in <i>Holland’s Leaguer</i> (1632) as a famous
-amphitheatre, which was ‘now fallen to decay, and like a dying swanne
-hanging downe her head seemed to sing her own dierge’.<a id="FNanchor_1228" href="#Footnote_1228" class="fnanchor">[1228]</a></p>
-
-<p>Many of the maps of the Bankside do not extend far enough west to
-take in the Swan. It is named and shown as an octagonal or decagonal
-building by Visscher (1616) and in maps of the Merian group (1638), but
-not by Hollar (1647).</p>
-
-
-<h5>xi. THE GLOBE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The devolution of the Globe
-shares can be traced in the documents of three lawsuits:
-(<i>a</i>) <i>Ostler v. Heminges</i>, in the Court of King’s
-Bench in 1616 (<i>Coram Rege Roll</i> 1454, 13 Jac. I,
-Hilary Term, m. 692), described by C. W. Wallace in <i>The
-Times</i> of 2 and 4 Oct. 1909, and in part privately printed
-by him in <i>Advance Sheets from Shakespeare, the Globe,
-and Blackfriars</i> (1909), here cited as <i>O. v. H.</i>;
-(<i>b</i>) <i>Witter v. Heminges and Condell</i>, in the Court
-of Requests (1619–20), described by C. W. Wallace in <i>The
-Century</i> of Aug. 1910, and printed by him in <i>Nebraska
-University Studies</i>, x (1910), 261, here cited as <i>W.
-v. H.</i>; and (<i>c</i>) the proceedings before the Lord
-Chamberlain in 1635 known as the <i>Sharers Papers</i>,
-and printed by Halliwell-Phillipps in <i>Outlines</i>, i.
-312. Professor Wallace’s descriptive articles require some
-corrections from the texts of his documents. Much evidence
-bearing upon the site of the theatre was collected by W. Rendle
-in <i>The Bankside, Southwark, and the Globe Play-house</i>
-(1877), printed by the N. S. S. as an appendix to Harrison,
-pt. ii (cited as Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>), in <i>Walford’s
-Antiquarian</i>, viii (1885), 209, and in <i>The Anchor
-Brewery</i> (1888, <i>Inns of Old Southwark</i>, 56), by
-G. Hubbard in <i>Journal of the Royal Institute of British
-Architects</i>, 3rd series, xvii. 26, and <i>London and
-Middlesex Arch. Soc. Trans.</i> n. s. ii (1912), pt. iii,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_415">[415]</span>
-and most fully by W. Martin in <i>Surrey Archaeological
-Collections</i>, xxiii (1910), 149. Some additional facts,
-from records of the Sewers Commission for Kent and Surrey in
-the possession of the London County Council, and from deeds
-concerning the Brend estate, were published by Dr. Wallace
-in <i>The Times</i> of 30 April and 1 May 1914, and led to
-discussion by Dr. Martin, Mr. Hubbard, and others in <i>11 N.
-Q.</i> x. 209, 290, 335; xi. 447; xii. 10, 50, 70, 121, 143,
-161, 201, 224, 264, 289, 347, and by W. W. Braines in <i>The
-Site of the Globe Play-house</i> (1921). A paper by the present
-writer on <i>The Stage of the Globe</i> is in the <i>Stratford
-Town Shakespeare</i>, x. 351.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In the building of the Globe use was made of the materials of the
-old Theatre (q.v.) which, according to <i>Allen v. Burbadge</i>
-(1602), the Burbadges, with Peter Street and others, pulled down on
-28 December 1598, carried ‘all the wood and timber therof unto the
-Banckside in the parishe of St. Marye Overyes, and there erected a newe
-playehowse with the sayd timber and woode’.<a id="FNanchor_1229" href="#Footnote_1229" class="fnanchor">[1229]</a> An earlier account
-gives the date of the audacious proceeding as 20 January 1599. The
-formal lease of the new site from the freeholder, Nicholas Brend of
-West Molesey, was executed on 21 February 1599. No doubt Street, who
-had assisted in the transfer, was the builder and had finished his
-job when on 8 January 1600 he contracted with Henslowe and Alleyn to
-put up the Fortune (q.v.) on the model, with certain modifications,
-of ‘the late erected plaiehowse on the Banck in the saide parishe of
-St. Saviours called the Globe’. This contract allowed twenty-eight
-weeks for the work. Probably the Globe took about the same time, for
-it is described as ‘de novo edificata’ in the inquisition on the
-property left by the lessor’s father, Thomas Brend, which is dated
-on 16 May 1599.<a id="FNanchor_1230" href="#Footnote_1230" class="fnanchor">[1230]</a> It may not then have been quite finished, but
-it was doubtless ready for the occupation of the Chamberlain’s men
-by the beginning of the autumn season of 1599. One of the earliest
-plays there produced by them was Shakespeare’s <i>Julius Caesar</i>
-which on 21 September Thomas Platter crossed the water to see ‘in dem
-streüwinen Dachhaus’.<a id="FNanchor_1231" href="#Footnote_1231" class="fnanchor">[1231]</a> Whether the Globe or its predecessor the
-Curtain was the ‘wooden O’ of <i>Henry V</i>, 1, prol. 13, must be more
-doubtful, as the prologue to Act V of the same play contemplates the
-triumphant return of Essex from Ireland, and in fact Essex left England
-on 27 March and returned, not triumphant, on 28 September 1599.<a id="FNanchor_1232" href="#Footnote_1232" class="fnanchor">[1232]</a>
-Jonson refers to ‘this faire-fild Globe’ as the scene of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_416">[416]</span> his <i>Every
-Man Out of his Humour</i>, produced in the autumn of 1600.<a id="FNanchor_1233" href="#Footnote_1233" class="fnanchor">[1233]</a> The
-Privy Council order of the previous 22 June, which enacts that there
-shall be one allowed house only ‘in Surrey in that place which is
-commonlie called the Banckside or there aboutes’, goes on to recite
-that the Chamberlain’s men had chosen the Globe to be that one. The
-allowance of the house ‘in Surrey called the Globe’ is confirmed by
-the Privy Council letter of 27 December 1601. The order of 9 April
-1604 authorizes the opening after the plague of ‘the Globe scituate
-in Maiden Lane on the Banckside in the Countie of Surrey’. This order
-evidently contemplates that the King’s men will use the house, which
-was assigned to them by name as ‘theire nowe vsual howse called the
-Globe within our County of Surrey’ by the terms of the patent of 19
-May 1603. The precedent is followed in the later patents of 1619 and
-1625, and there is nothing to indicate that any other company than the
-Chamberlain’s or King’s men ever performed, even temporarily, at the
-theatre.</p>
-
-<p>The Globe was held by a syndicate, composed mainly of members of
-the company, on a leasehold tenure. The site, which had been garden
-ground, was described in the original lease with some minuteness as
-follows:<a id="FNanchor_1234" href="#Footnote_1234" class="fnanchor">[1234]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">‘totam illam parcellam fundi nuper praeantea inclusam &amp; factam
-in quatuor separalia gardina nuper in tenuris &amp; occupacionibus
-Thomae Burt &amp; Isbrand Morris diers &amp; Lactantii Roper Salter
-civis Londoniae continentem in longitudine ab oriente vsque
-occidentem ducentos &amp; viginti pedes assisae vel eo circiter
-iacentem &amp; adiungentem viae sive venellae ibidem ex vno
-latere &amp; abbuttantem super peciam terrae vocatam the Parke
-super boream &amp; super gardinum tunc vel nuper in tenura siue
-occupacione cuiusdam Johannis Cornishe versus occidentem &amp;
-super aliud gardinum tunc vel nuper in tenura sive occupacione
-cuiusdam Johannis Knowles versus orientem cum omnibus domibus
-aedificiis structuris vijs easiamentis commoditatibus &amp;
-pertinentiis adinde spectantibus vel aliquo modo pertinentibus
-quae dicta praemissa sunt scituata iacentia &amp; existentia infra
-parochiam sancti Salvatoris in Southwarke in Comitatu Surria
-aceciam totam illam parcellam terrae nuper praeantea inclusam
-&amp; factam in tria separalia gardina vnde duo eorundem nuper in
-tenura sive occupacione cuiusdam Johannis Robertes carpenter
-ac aliud nuper in occupacione cuiusdam Thomas Ditcher civis &amp;
-mercatoris scissoris Londoniae scituatam iacentem &amp; existentem
-in parochia praedicta in praedicto comitatu Surria continentem
-in longitudine ab oriente ad occidentem per estimacionem centum
-quinquaginta &amp; sex pedes assisae vel eo circiter &amp; in latitudine
-a borea ad austrum centum pedes assisae per estimacionem vel eo
-circiter iacentem &amp; adiungentem super alio latere viae<span class="pagenum" id="Page_417">[417]</span> sive
-venellae praedictae &amp; abbuttantem super gardinum ibidem tunc vel
-nuper praeantea in occupacione Willelmi Sellers versus orientem
-&amp; super vnum aliud gardinum ibidem tunc vel nuper praeantea
-in tenura Johannis Burgram sadler versus occidentem &amp; super
-venellam ibidem vocatam Mayden lane versus austrum cum omnibus
-domibus aedificijs structuris vijs easiamentis commoditatibus &amp;
-pertinentiis ultimis recitatis praemissis seu alicui parti vel
-parcellae inde spectantibus seu aliquo modo pertinentibus simul
-cum libero ingressu egressu &amp; regressu &amp; passagio ... per &amp;
-trans praedictam viam sive venellam iacentem &amp; existentem inter
-praemissa praedicta.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The lease was granted for a term of thirty-one years from Christmas
-1598 to Christmas 1629, and conveyed the property in two equal
-moieties, the one to Cuthbert and Richard Burbadge and the other to
-William Shakespeare, Augustine Phillips, Thomas Pope, John Heminges,
-and William Kempe.<a id="FNanchor_1235" href="#Footnote_1235" class="fnanchor">[1235]</a> With the exception of Cuthbert Burbadge these
-were all members of the Chamberlain’s company. Each moiety was charged
-with a ground-rent of £7 5<i>s.</i> There is nothing to show how the
-funds for building were found. ‘Wee’, said the Burbadges in 1635,
-‘at like expence built the Globe, with more summes of money taken up
-at interest, which lay heavy on us many yeeres; and to ourselves wee
-joyned those deserveing men, Shakspere, Hemings, Condall, Philips, and
-others, partners in the profittes of that they call the House, but
-makeing the leases for twenty-one yeeres hath beene the destruction of
-ourselves and others, for they dyeing at the expiration of three or
-four yeeres of their lease, the subsequent yeeres became dissolved to
-strangers, as by marrying with their widdowes and the like by their
-children.’<a id="FNanchor_1236" href="#Footnote_1236" class="fnanchor">[1236]</a> This is, however, not a strictly accurate account
-of what took place in 1599, for Condell was not one of the original
-‘housekeepers’, and the original lease was for thirty-one, not
-twenty-one, years. In any case, the Burbadges contributed the woodwork
-of the Theatre.</p>
-
-<p>Between the execution of the lease and the completion of the
-play-house, Shakespeare and his four fellows assigned their moiety to
-William Levison and Thomas Savage, who ‘reassigned to euerye of them
-seuerally a fift parte of the said moitie’, so that after the building
-each of the five had a ‘ioynt tenancie’ with the other four in a moiety
-of the ground and galleries, and was also ‘tenant in common’ during the
-term of the lease.<a id="FNanchor_1237" href="#Footnote_1237" class="fnanchor">[1237]</a> Professor Wallace explains that ‘the purpose
-of a joint-tenancy was to prevent the breaking up and scattering of an
-estate into fractions by keeping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_418">[418]</span> the property always in the hands of
-the members, or the longest survivors, or survivor, of them all, thus
-not allowing it to descend to heirs’. The legal distinction is no doubt
-sound, but we shall find that, whatever the intention of the assignment
-and reassignment may have been, the Globe shares did in fact descend
-to heirs, and that a good deal of trouble and litigation was thereby
-caused.<a id="FNanchor_1238" href="#Footnote_1238" class="fnanchor">[1238]</a></p>
-
-<p>Shortly after the house was built Kempe, no doubt on his withdrawal
-from the company, assigned his interest to Shakespeare, Heminges, and
-Phillips, who by further assignments to and from one Thomas Cressey
-brought in Pope, with the result that each of the four now held a
-fourth part of the moiety.<a id="FNanchor_1239" href="#Footnote_1239" class="fnanchor">[1239]</a> Pope died before 13 February 1604 and
-left his interest to Mary Clark, <i>alias</i> Wood, and Thomas Bromley.
-Mary Clark must have married John Edmonds, another legatee under the
-will, for in 1612 an interest corresponding to Pope’s was held by
-John and Mary Edmonds and Basil Nicoll.<a id="FNanchor_1240" href="#Footnote_1240" class="fnanchor">[1240]</a> Nicoll, who was Pope’s
-executor, was presumably acting as trustee for Thomas Bromley. Edmonds,
-though an actor, belonged not to the King’s men, but was a Queen’s
-man by 1618. One-eighth of the house, therefore, was alienated from
-the company in 1604. A further alienation, which proved particularly
-troublesome in its results, took place on the death of Phillips in May
-1605. The exact facts became a matter of legal dispute. But it appears
-that Phillips’ interest passed first to his widow Anne as executrix,
-and, when her marriage in the course of 1606 to the spendthrift John
-Witter became known, to Heminges, who succeeded her as executor under
-the terms of the will. In this capacity Heminges leased an interest
-to the Witters on 14 February 1611 for a term of eighteen years from
-Christmas 1610.<a id="FNanchor_1241" href="#Footnote_1241" class="fnanchor">[1241]</a> This interest was not a fourth, but only a sixth
-of the moiety, since at some date between the death of Phillips and
-that of Sly on 16 August 1608 the moiety had been redivided to allow of
-the introduction of Henry Condell and William Sly into the syndicate
-of housekeepers.<a id="FNanchor_1242" href="#Footnote_1242" class="fnanchor">[1242]</a> A similar transaction took place on 20 February
-1612, when Basil Nicoll and John and Mary Edmonds, then holding
-one-sixth of the moiety, Shakespeare and Witter, each also holding
-one-sixth, and Heminges and Condell, holding three-sixths, joined to
-convey one-seventh of the moiety to William Ostler.<a id="FNanchor_1243" href="#Footnote_1243" class="fnanchor">[1243]</a> It must,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_419">[419]</span> I
-think, be assumed that Heminges and Condell had together purchased the
-share left by Sly to his son Robert.</p>
-
-<p>The acquisition of the Blackfriars by the King’s men in 1608 did not,
-at first at least, detract from the importance of the Globe as the
-leading London theatre. It is so accepted by foreign visitors in 1610
-and again in 1611.<a id="FNanchor_1244" href="#Footnote_1244" class="fnanchor">[1244]</a></p>
-
-<p>On 29 June 1613 the house was ‘casually burnt downe and consumed with
-fier’.<a id="FNanchor_1245" href="#Footnote_1245" class="fnanchor">[1245]</a> The event was important enough to find a record in Howes’
-continuation of Stowe’s <i>Annales</i>:<a id="FNanchor_1246" href="#Footnote_1246" class="fnanchor">[1246]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Upon S. Peters day last, the play-house or Theater, called the
-Globe, upon the Banckside near London, by negligent discharging
-of a peal of ordinance, close to the south-side thereof, the
-thatch took fire, and the wind sodainly disperst the flame round
-about, and in a very short space the whole building was quite
-consumed, and no man hurt; the house being filled with people to
-behold the play, viz. of Henry the Eighth. And the next spring
-it was new builded in far fairer manner than before.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Many other contemporary accounts exist. Thus Thomas
-Lorkin wrote to Sir Thomas Puckering on 30 June:<a id="FNanchor_1247" href="#Footnote_1247" class="fnanchor">[1247]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘No longer since than yesterday, while Burbage’s company were
-acting at the Globe the play of Henry VIII, and there shooting
-off certain chambers in way of triumph, the fire catched and
-fastened upon the thatch of the house, and there burned so
-furiously, as it consumed the whole house, all in less than two
-hours, the people having enough to do to save themselves.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">On 2 July Sir Henry Wotton wrote to his nephew Sir Edmund
-Bacon:<a id="FNanchor_1248" href="#Footnote_1248" class="fnanchor">[1248]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Now, to let matters of state sleep, I will entertain you at the
-present with what has happened this week at the Bank’s side.
-The King’s players had a new play, called <i>All is True</i>,
-representing some principal pieces of the reign of Henry VIII,
-which was set forth with many extraordinary circumstances
-of pomp and majesty, even to the matting of the stage; the
-Knights of the Order with their Georges and garters, the Guards
-with their embroidered coats, and the like: sufficient in
-truth within a while to make greatness very familiar, if not
-ridiculous. Now, King Henry making a masque at the Cardinal
-Wolsey’s house, and certain chambers being shot off at his
-entry, some<span class="pagenum" id="Page_420">[420]</span> of the paper, or other stuff, wherewith one of them
-was stopped, did light on the thatch, where being thought at
-first but an idle smoke, and their eyes more attentive to the
-show, it kindled inwardly, and ran round like a train, consuming
-within less than an hour the whole house to the very grounds.
-This was the fatal period of that virtuous fabric, wherein
-yet nothing did perish but wood and straw, and a few forsaken
-cloaks; only one man had his breeches set on fire, that would
-perhaps have broiled him, if he had not by the benefit of a
-provident wit put it out with bottle ale.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">On 8 July John Chamberlain wrote to Sir Ralph Winwood:<a id="FNanchor_1249" href="#Footnote_1249" class="fnanchor">[1249]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The burning of the Globe, or play-house, on the Bankside, on
-St. Peter’s day, cannot escape you; which fell out by a peal of
-chambers (that I know not upon what occasion were to be used in
-the play), the tamplin or stopple of one of them lighting in the
-thatch that covered the house, burn’d it down to the ground in
-less than two hours, with a dwelling-house adjoining, and it was
-a great marvaile and fair grace of God, that the people had so
-little harm, having but two narrow doors to get out.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Nor was poetic chronicles of the disaster lacking. On the day after the
-fire took place, two ballads about it were entered in the Stationers’
-Register.<a id="FNanchor_1250" href="#Footnote_1250" class="fnanchor">[1250]</a> Neither is known in print, but the use of the word
-‘doleful’ suggests that one of them, of which the author was William
-Parrat, is probably identical with the following set of verses,
-preserved in manuscript:<a id="FNanchor_1251" href="#Footnote_1251" class="fnanchor">[1251]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <h5><i>A Sonnett upon the pittiful burneing of the Globe playhowse in
-London.</i></h5>
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now sitt the downe, Melpomene,</div>
- <div class="i1">Wrapt in a sea-cole robe,</div>
- <div>And tell the dolefull tragedie,</div>
- <div class="i1">That late was playd at Globe;</div>
- <div>For noe man that can singe and saye</div>
- <div>[But ?] was scard on St. Peters daye.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, pittifull sorrow, and yett all this is true.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_421">[421]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>All yow that please to understand,</div>
- <div class="i1">Come listen to my storye,</div>
- <div>To see Death with his rakeing brand</div>
- <div class="i1">Mongst such an auditorye;</div>
- <div>Regarding neither Cardinalls might,</div>
- <div>Nor yett the rugged face of Henry the Eight.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>This fearfull fire beganne above,</div>
- <div class="i1">A wonder strange and true,</div>
- <div>And to the stage-howse did remove,</div>
- <div class="i1">As round as taylors clewe;</div>
- <div>And burnt downe both beame and snagg,</div>
- <div>And did not spare the silken flagg.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Out runne the knightes, out runne the lordes,</div>
- <div class="i1">And there was great adoe;</div>
- <div>Some lost their hattes, and some their swordes;</div>
- <div class="i1">Then out runne Burbidge too;</div>
- <div>The reprobates, though druncke on Munday,</div>
- <div>Prayd for the Foole and Henry Condye.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The perrywigges and drumme-heades frye,</div>
- <div class="i1">Like to a butter firkin;</div>
- <div>A wofull burneing did betide</div>
- <div class="i1">To many a good buffe jerkin.</div>
- <div>Then with swolne eyes, like druncken Flemminges,</div>
- <div>Distressed stood old stuttering Heminges.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No shower his raine did there downe force</div>
- <div class="i1">In all that Sunn-shine weather,</div>
- <div>To save that great renowned howse;</div>
- <div class="i1">Nor thou, O ale-howse, neither.</div>
- <div>Had itt begunne belowe, sans doubte,</div>
- <div>Their wives for feare had pissed itt out.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Bee warned, yow stage-strutters all,</div>
- <div class="i1">Least yow againe be catched,</div>
- <div>And such a burneing doe befall,</div>
- <div class="i1">As to them whose howse was thatched;</div>
- <div>Forbeare your whoreing, breeding biles,</div>
- <div>And laye up that expence for tiles.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, &amp;c.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_422">[422]</span></div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Goe drawe yow a petition,</div>
- <div class="i1">And doe yow not abhorr itt,</div>
- <div>And gett, with low submission,</div>
- <div class="i1">A licence to begg for itt</div>
- <div>In churches, sans churchwardens checkes,</div>
- <div>In Surrey and in Midlesex.</div>
- <div class="i2">Oh sorrow, pittifull sorrow, and yett all this is true.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>John Taylor, the water-poet, has his epigram on the theme:<a id="FNanchor_1252" href="#Footnote_1252" class="fnanchor">[1252]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As gold is better that’s in fier try’d,</div>
- <div class="i1">So is the Bankside <i>Globe</i>, that late was burn’d;</div>
- <div>For where before it had a thatched hide,</div>
- <div class="i1">Now to a stately theator ’tis turn’d:</div>
- <div>Which is an emblem, that great things are won</div>
- <div>By those that dare through greatest dangers run.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Ben Jonson, in his <i>Execration upon Vulcan</i>, writes as if he had
-been an eye-witness:<a id="FNanchor_1253" href="#Footnote_1253" class="fnanchor">[1253]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Well fare the wise men yet, on the Bank side,</div>
- <div>My friends the watermen! they could provide</div>
- <div>Against thy fury, when to serve their needs,</div>
- <div>They made a Vulcan of a sheaf of reeds,</div>
- <div>Whom they durst handle in their holiday coats,</div>
- <div>And safely trust to dress, not burn their boats.</div>
- <div>But O those reeds! thy mere disdain of them</div>
- <div>Made thee beget that cruel stratagem,</div>
- <div>Which some are pleased to style but thy mad prank,</div>
- <div>Against the Globe, the glory of the Bank:</div>
- <div>Which, though it were the fort of the whole parish,</div>
- <div>Flanked with a ditch, and forced out of a marish,</div>
- <div>I saw with two poor chambers taken in,</div>
- <div>And razed; ere thought could urge this might have been!</div>
- <div>See the World’s ruins! nothing but the piles</div>
- <div>Left, and wit since to cover it with tiles.</div>
- <div>The Brethren they straight nosed it out for news,</div>
- <div>’Twas verily some relict of the Stews;</div>
- <div>And this a sparkle of that fire let loose,</div>
- <div>That was raked up in the Winchestrian goose,</div>
- <div>Bred on the Bank in time of Popery,</div>
- <div>When Venus there maintained the mystery.</div>
- <div>But others fell with that conceit by the ears,</div>
- <div>And cried it was a threatning to the bears,</div>
- <div>And that accursed ground, the Paris-garden:</div>
- <div>‘Nay,’ sighed a sister, ‘Venus’ nun, Kate Arden,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_423">[423]</span></div>
- <div>Kindled the fire!’ But then, did one return,</div>
- <div>No fool would his own harvest spoil or burn!</div>
- <div>If that were so, thou rather wouldst advance</div>
- <div>The place that was thy wife’s inheritance.</div>
- <div>‘Oh no,’ cried all, ‘Fortune, for being a whore,</div>
- <div>Scaped not his justice any jot the more:</div>
- <div>He burnt that idol of the Revels too.</div>
- <div>Nay, let Whitehall with revels have to do,</div>
- <div>Though but in dances, it shall know his power;</div>
- <div>There was a judgement shewn too in an hour.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The Puritans did in fact draw such morals as Jonson satirized. Prynne,
-for example, finds the hand of God in ‘the sudden feareful burning,
-even to the ground, both of the Globe and Fortune play-houses, no man
-perceiving how these fires came’.<a id="FNanchor_1254" href="#Footnote_1254" class="fnanchor">[1254]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Globe was at once rebuilt. It was open again by 30 June 1614,
-when John Chamberlain wrote to Alice Carleton that he had called
-upon her sister Williams, and found her ‘gone to the new Globe, to a
-play. Indeed’, he says, ‘I hear much speech of this new play-house,
-which is said to be the fairest that ever was in England, so that if
-I live but seven years longer, I may chance to take a journey to see
-it’.<a id="FNanchor_1255" href="#Footnote_1255" class="fnanchor">[1255]</a> The manuscript continuator of Stowe, describing the end
-of the theatre, says that the rebuilding was ‘at the great charge
-of King Iames, and many Noble men and others’.<a id="FNanchor_1256" href="#Footnote_1256" class="fnanchor">[1256]</a> The lawsuit
-documents contain no indication that any part of the burden fell upon
-any one but the ‘housekeepers’, who being bound under their lease to
-‘mainteyne and repaire’ the house, resolved to ‘reedifie the same’.
-The first estimate of cost seems to have been about £700 to £800, for
-a levy of ‘50<sup>li</sup> or 60<sup>li</sup>’ was called upon each seventh share
-of the moiety.<a id="FNanchor_1257" href="#Footnote_1257" class="fnanchor">[1257]</a> Witter was unable to meet this demand, and as
-he was also behindhand with his share of the ground-rent and other
-payments, Heminges resumed possession of the seventh and gave half of
-it ‘gratis’ to Henry Condell. By this time it had been ascertained that
-the re-edifying would be ‘a verie greate charge’, and Heminges claims
-that the re-edifying of Witter’s ‘parte’ had in fact cost himself and
-Condell ‘about the somme of cxx<sup>li</sup>’.<a id="FNanchor_1258" href="#Footnote_1258" class="fnanchor">[1258]</a> This would mean a total
-cost of about £1,680.<a id="FNanchor_1259" href="#Footnote_1259" class="fnanchor">[1259]</a> Heminges appears to have taken a sub-lease<span class="pagenum" id="Page_424">[424]</span>
-at 20<i>s.</i> a year from his partners of two small parcels of the
-land in 1615, and to have built on them a house, probably a taphouse,
-as a private enterprise.<a id="FNanchor_1260" href="#Footnote_1260" class="fnanchor">[1260]</a></p>
-
-<p>Ostler died in December 1614, and Heminges took possession of his
-interest and drew the profits until October 1615, when his daughter
-Thomasina, Ostler’s widow, brought an action against him for them, the
-result of which is unknown.<a id="FNanchor_1261" href="#Footnote_1261" class="fnanchor">[1261]</a> Shakespeare died in April 1616, and
-his interest, if not previously alienated, would have passed under
-his will, with other ‘leases’ to John and Susanna Hall.<a id="FNanchor_1262" href="#Footnote_1262" class="fnanchor">[1262]</a> At some
-time earlier than April 1619, probably when he joined the company
-about 1616, Field was admitted to be a housekeeper, and the moiety
-was then divided into eighths instead of sevenths.<a id="FNanchor_1263" href="#Footnote_1263" class="fnanchor">[1263]</a> In April
-1619 Witter brought an action against Heminges and Condell in the
-Court of Requests, to recover the interest which he had forfeited at
-the time of the rebuilding. He estimated the present annual value of
-the seventh, which he had held, at £30 to £40, and in the course of
-the proceedings expressed his willingness either to pay a rent of £13
-6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> for the half of that seventh which Heminges had
-not passed over to Condell, or, alternatively, to take the profits of
-the houses on the site, other than the theatre, and in return for those
-to become responsible for the whole of the ground-rents due under the
-principal leases. The defence consisted in a denial of Witter’s claim
-to benefit under the will of Augustine Phillips, and an assertion that,
-after Heminges had allowed him to draw considerable sums in respect of
-the share, he had deserted his wife, at whose death Heminges ‘out of
-charitie was at the charges of the buryeing of her’. The depositions of
-the witnesses, who included Thomas Woodford and one James Knasborough,
-are unfortunately missing. Ultimately Witter failed to proceed with
-his case, and on 29 November 1620 the Court gave judgement for the
-defendants.</p>
-
-<p>In October 1624 died John Underwood and left a share in the Globe in
-trust for his children to Condell and others as his executors. It must
-be supposed that he had succeeded to Field’s eighth, when the latter
-left the King’s men in 1619. Condell himself died in December 1627
-and left his interest to his son William until he should have made
-£300 out of it, and thereafter to his widow. Heminges died in October
-1630, and his interest passed to his son William as his executor.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_425">[425]</span>
-During the last years of their lives Heminges and Condell, following
-out the policy of absorption which has already been illustrated,
-appear to have acquired in one way or another the whole of the shares
-formerly held by Shakespeare, by Basil Nicoll and John Edmonds as
-successors of Sly, and by Underwood. This fact emerges from the records
-known as the <i>Sharers Papers</i>, which start with a petition from
-Robert Benfield, Eliard Swanston, and Thomas Pollard, then important
-members of the King’s company, to the Lord Chamberlain in 1635, to
-be admitted to shares as ‘housekeepers’ in the profits of the Globe
-and the Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_1264" href="#Footnote_1264" class="fnanchor">[1264]</a> The allegations show that the Globe had
-been ‘formerly’ divided into sixteen shares, of which eight were
-held by Cuthbert Burbadge and Richard Burbadge’s widow Winifred, now
-Mrs. Robinson, in her own right and that of her son William, four by
-Mrs. Condell, and four by William Heminges. Afterwards Joseph Taylor
-and John Lowin were allowed to acquire shares, and later still the
-remaining Heminges interest was ‘surreptitiously’ purchased by John
-Shank. At the date of the petition, therefore, the Burbadges held
-seven shares, Mrs. Condell two, Shank three, and Taylor and Lowin two
-each. The case furnishes valuable information as to the organization
-of the theatre, and as to the division of outgoing and profits between
-the housekeepers and the actors as such. It is pretty evident that
-by 1635 the Globe took a secondary place to the Blackfriars in the
-economy of the King’s men.<a id="FNanchor_1265" href="#Footnote_1265" class="fnanchor">[1265]</a> Shank admitted that he had bought
-a two years’ term of one Globe share in 1633 and a one year’s term
-of two more in 1634, together with interests in the Blackfriars, and
-seems to have thought that the £506 which he gave was full value for
-the purchases.<a id="FNanchor_1266" href="#Footnote_1266" class="fnanchor">[1266]</a> The Burbadges protested against being called upon
-to part with any part of their property to ‘men soe soone shott up’
-and not having the ‘antiquity and desert’, which had customarily been
-looked for in housekeepers. In support of their plea they recalled
-the early services of their father in the building of theatres and
-the claims of their family to profit by ‘the great desert of Richard
-Burbadge for his quality of playing’. They suggested that ‘makeing
-the leases for twenty-one yeeres’ to their fellows, whose widows<span class="pagenum" id="Page_426">[426]</span> or
-children subsequently alienated the profits from the company, had been
-their ‘destruction’. The Lord Chamberlain, however, directed that
-the Burbadges should transfer two shares and Shank one to the three
-petitioners, ‘at the usual and accustomed rates, and according to the
-proportion of the time and benefit they are to injoy’. This the order
-states, in the case of the Globe, as five years. Probably there is an
-error here. The terms bought by Shank were to expire in 1635, but at
-the time of the petition a suit was pending in the Court of Requests
-for the confirmation of a ‘lease paroll’ from Sir Matthew Brend for
-a further nine years from 25 March 1635. The original lease of 1599
-from Nicholas Brend was for thirty-one years and would have expired in
-1629. But on 26 October 1613, when the rebuilding of the theatre was
-in hand, a fresh lease extending the term to 1635 had been granted by
-Sir John Bodley as trustee for Nicholas’s son Matthew, who was then a
-minor. Not content with this, the syndicate had procured a promise of
-a further extension to 1644 from young Matthew himself, which he now
-repudiated.<a id="FNanchor_1267" href="#Footnote_1267" class="fnanchor">[1267]</a> I think that Bodley must have taken the opportunity
-in 1613 to raise the ground-rent from £14 10<i>s.</i> to £20. A draft
-for a return of new and divided houses, made for the Earl Marshal in
-1634, has the following entry:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The Globe play-house nere Maid lane built by the company of
-players, with the dwelling-house thereto adjoyninge, built with
-timber, about 20 yeares past, upon an old foundation, worth
-14<sup>li</sup> to 20<sup>li</sup> per ann., and one house there adjoyning
-built about the same tyme with timber, in the possession of
-W<sup>m</sup> Millet, gent., worth per ann. 4<sup>li</sup> [<i>In margin</i>,
-Play-house &amp; house, S<sup>r</sup> Mathew Brend’s inheritance].’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">A corrected return of 1637 runs:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The Globe play-house nere Maide lane built by the Company
-of Players with timber about 20 yeares past uppon an old
-foundacion, worth 20<sup>li</sup> per ann. beinge the inheritance of S<sup>r</sup>
-Mathew Brand, K<sup>nt</sup>.’<a id="FNanchor_1268" href="#Footnote_1268" class="fnanchor">[1268]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The petitioners in the <i>Sharers Papers</i> declare that up to Lady
-Day 1635 the rent for the Globe and Blackfriars together was not above
-£65. The original rent of the Blackfriars was £40, but this also may
-have been put up on the expiration of the first lease in 1629. The
-Court of Requests finally confirmed the extension of the lease to
-1644, apparently at a still further<span class="pagenum" id="Page_427">[427]</span> increased rent of £55, as Shank
-states the combined rent of the two houses as £100. The Globe was
-‘pulled downe to the ground, by Sir Matthew Brand, on Munday the 15
-of April 1644, to make tenements in the room of it’; that is to say,
-immediately upon the expiration of the nine years’ term from Lady Day
-1635 contemplated in the <i>Sharers Papers</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1269" href="#Footnote_1269" class="fnanchor">[1269]</a></p>
-
-<p>The precise locality of the Globe has been matter of controversy. The
-various contemporary documents already quoted place it beyond doubt in
-Surrey, and ‘on the Bankside’, a term which must certainly be taken to
-cover, not merely the row of houses looking directly upon the river,
-but also the whole of the western part of Southwark lying behind and
-south of these. With somewhat greater minuteness, the parish of St.
-Mary Overies is specified in the lawsuit of <i>Allen v. Burbadge</i>,
-and the parish of St. Saviour’s in the Fortune contract. There is no
-inconsistency here. The two ancient parishes of St. Mary Magdalen
-and St. Margaret on the Hill were amalgamated under the name of St.
-Saviour’s at the Reformation.<a id="FNanchor_1270" href="#Footnote_1270" class="fnanchor">[1270]</a> I do not know that the ancient
-boundaries are upon record. The Rose stood in what had been St.
-Margaret’s, and one would therefore expect to find the Globe nearer
-than the Rose to the old priory church of St. Mary’s. In the Privy
-Council order of 1604 the situation is described as ‘in Maiden lane’,
-and in the return to the Earl Marshal of 1637 as ‘nere Maide lane’.
-But, apart from the difference between ‘in’ and ‘nere’, Maiden Lane
-is a fairly long thoroughfare, and so far as these indications are
-concerned, the Globe may have been either to the north or the south of
-it. Local tradition, as elaborated by Southwark antiquaries, has been
-inclined to put it to the south, within the area occupied by what was
-formerly Thrale’s and is now Barclay and Perkins’s Anchor Brewery, of
-which Maiden Lane, now Park Street, forms the northern boundary. The
-main reason for this is the inclusion within the brewery of the course
-of a passage known as Globe Alley, which ran west from Deadman’s Place
-in a parallel line to Maiden Lane for about 360 feet and then turned
-northwards for another 100 feet until it debouched into the Lane. So
-far as measurements go, Globe Alley might be the <i>venella</i> of the
-1599 lease. The name first appears in the St. Saviour’s token book
-for 1614, where it is applied to houses formerly described as Brand’s
-Rents, and from 1613 onwards as Sir John Bodley’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_428">[428]</span> Rents.<a id="FNanchor_1271" href="#Footnote_1271" class="fnanchor">[1271]</a> Land
-south of Maiden Lane certainly formed part of the Brend estate, and
-a plot of it conveyed by Sir Matthew Brend to one Hilary Memprise in
-1626 was bounded on the south by a sewer dividing it from the Bishop
-of Winchester’s park, and on the north by ‘the alley or way leading to
-the Gloabe Play-house commonly called Gloabe Alley’.<a id="FNanchor_1272" href="#Footnote_1272" class="fnanchor">[1272]</a> A century
-later, property acquired for the brewery in 1732 is similarly described
-as ‘fronting a certain alley or passage called Globe Alley, in antient
-times leading from Deadman’s Place to the Globe Play-house’.<a id="FNanchor_1273" href="#Footnote_1273" class="fnanchor">[1273]</a></p>
-
-<p>It was certainly a belief in the Thrale family that the site of the
-theatre itself had passed into their hands. Mrs. Piozzi, Johnson’s
-friend, who married Henry Thrale in 1763, left the following
-autobiographical note of her residence in Southwark between that date
-and her husband’s death in 1781:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘For a long time, then&mdash;or I thought it such&mdash;my fate was bound
-up with the old Globe Theatre, upon the Bankside, Southwark;
-the alley it had occupied having been purchased and thrown down
-by M<sup>r</sup> Thrale to make an opening before the windows of our
-dwelling-house. When it lay desolate in a black heap of rubbish,
-my Mother, one day, in a joke, called it the Ruins of Palmyra;
-and after that they laid it down in a grass-plot. Palmyra was
-the name it went by, I suppose, among the clerks and servants of
-the brewhouse.... But there were really curious remains of the
-old Globe Play-house, which though hexagonal in form without,
-was round within.’<a id="FNanchor_1274" href="#Footnote_1274" class="fnanchor">[1274]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Dr. Martin seems to think that the lady’s recollection was confused and
-that the garden called Palmyra stood on the east of Deadman’s Place
-opposite to Globe Alley. But, according to Concanen and Morgan it was
-‘on the opposite side of the street’ to the brewery.<a id="FNanchor_1275" href="#Footnote_1275" class="fnanchor">[1275]</a> However
-this may be, there are other notices which show that, however complete
-the demolition of 1644, the theatre or part of it was still regarded
-by tradition as standing a hundred years later amongst the tenements
-by which it was replaced.<a id="FNanchor_1276" href="#Footnote_1276" class="fnanchor">[1276]</a> In 1787 the brewery was purchased
-by Barclay and Perkins, and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_429">[429]</span> conveyance recites amongst other
-property a plot of ground between Globe Alley and a common sewer, from
-which had been cleared in 1767 some ‘ruinous and decayed’ tenements
-formerly occupied in 1715 by John Knowles and others.<a id="FNanchor_1277" href="#Footnote_1277" class="fnanchor">[1277]</a> This is
-probably the clearance referred to by Mrs. Piozzi. Under Acts of 1786
-and 1812 Globe Alley was closed, and it is now covered over within the
-brewery precinct. Horwood’s map of 1799 shows the eastern end already
-obliterated. The western end is called Globe Walk, and to the north of
-it is Globe Court, perhaps representing the space cleared in 1767.</p>
-
-<p>On the assumption that the theatre stood in Globe Alley, there has
-been divergence of opinion as to the precise part of the Alley in
-which it stood. Mr. Rendle fixed on a spot on the north side, about
-80 or 100 feet from the Deadman’s Place end.<a id="FNanchor_1278" href="#Footnote_1278" class="fnanchor">[1278]</a> To this he was
-guided, partly by a further local tradition, according to which the
-site was occupied successively by a meeting-house and a windmill, and
-partly by an argument derived from the entries in the St. Saviour’s
-token-book for 1621.<a id="FNanchor_1279" href="#Footnote_1279" class="fnanchor">[1279]</a> Here, under the heading ‘Sir John Bodley’s
-Rentes’ are recorded in succession about ten names. Then<span class="pagenum" id="Page_430">[430]</span> comes a new
-heading, differently written, ‘Gloab Alley’, then two more names, then
-in the margin of the page the word ‘Gloabe’. This Mr. Rendle took
-to mean that the Globe was about twelve houses from the east end of
-the alley. If this is an indication of the site of the Globe at all,
-which is a mere conjecture, I should myself draw the inference that it
-stood, not twelve, but two houses from the end of the alley, and that
-a part, if not the whole, of Bodley’s Rents was outside the alley. And
-why should the enumerator be supposed to have worked from the east,
-rather than from the north end of the alley? Dr. Martin, in fact,
-turns Mr. Rendle’s argument round in this way, and uses the token-book
-to support a theory which places the theatre south of Globe Alley,
-just at the angle where it turns to the north, and 360 feet, instead
-of Mr. Rendle’s 80 or 100 feet, west of Deadman’s Place.<a id="FNanchor_1280" href="#Footnote_1280" class="fnanchor">[1280]</a> Here
-it appears to be located in a borough history of 1795;<a id="FNanchor_1281" href="#Footnote_1281" class="fnanchor">[1281]</a> and is
-certainly located in more than one early nineteenth-century plan.<a id="FNanchor_1282" href="#Footnote_1282" class="fnanchor">[1282]</a>
-Dr. Martin has attempted to obtain confirmation of this siting from an
-investigation of the brewery title-deeds. From 1727 onwards the history
-of the angle site is clear. In that year it was transferred, subject
-to a mortgage, by Timothy Cason and his wife Elizabeth, heiress of the
-Brend estate, to certain parishioners of St. Saviour’s. Upon it was
-built the parish workhouse referred to by Concanen and Morgan. This
-stood just at the outer south-west angle of Globe Alley, which Dr.
-Martin conceives to have been occupied by the theatre. In 1774 a new
-workhouse was built, and the site of the old one bought by the Thrales.
-It was conveyed with the rest of the brewery to Barclay and Perkins
-in 1787, and was then described as the ground ‘on which lately stood
-all that great shop or workhouse formerly used for a meeting-house’.
-Dr. Martin thinks that this forgotten meeting-house may have been
-confused in local tradition with that further to the east along<span class="pagenum" id="Page_431">[431]</span> Globe
-Alley.<a id="FNanchor_1283" href="#Footnote_1283" class="fnanchor">[1283]</a> Dr. Martin suggests that the property transferred by
-the Casons in 1727 is to be identified with that described in a deed
-executed by the same persons in 1706, of which a copy is also to be
-found amongst the brewery title-deeds, as consisting of tenements built
-‘where the late play-house called the Globe stood and upon the ground
-thereunto belonging’. If this were so, he would of course have proved
-his point. The deed of 1706 seems to have been a family settlement
-covering various fragments of Brend property in Southwark, which had
-only just been brought together in the hands of Elizabeth Cason. The
-Globe site had been settled by Sir Matthew Brend in 1624 upon his
-wife Frances as a jointure. She died in 1673, and it then passed as
-a jointure to Judith, wife of Sir Matthew’s son Thomas and mother of
-Elizabeth, under a deed of 1655 in which the reference to ‘the late
-play-house called the Globe’, repeated in that of 1706, first occurs.
-Judith Brend had died in 1706.</p>
-
-<p>As a matter of fact, it is almost impossible to reconcile the Southwark
-tradition that the Globe stood on the south of Maiden Lane, either
-in Mr. Rendle’s or in Dr. Martin’s interpretation of it, with more
-than one bit of evidence which we owe to the research of Professor
-Wallace. The first of these is the lease of 1599 itself, as recited in
-the pleadings of <i>Ostler v. Heminges</i>. This states quite clearly
-that the leased plot abutted on a piece of land called the Park ‘super
-boream’ and on Maiden Lane ‘versus austrum’, and it is difficult to
-take very seriously either the Latinity which makes ‘versus austrum’
-mean that the leased plot was on the south, or the suggestion that the
-draughtsman was working carelessly from a plan which had the south
-instead of the north of the plot at the top of the sheet, and got
-the points of his compass wrong.<a id="FNanchor_1284" href="#Footnote_1284" class="fnanchor">[1284]</a> I daresay that such things do
-sometimes happen in conveyancer’s offices, but it is hardly legitimate
-to call them in aid as a canon of interpretation. No doubt it is
-tempting to identify the piece of land called the Park with the Bishop
-of Winchester’s park, which lay at a reasonable distance to the south
-and not to the north of Maiden Lane, but after all this must once have
-extended nearly up to the Bankside, since Maiden Lane itself is known
-to have been cut out of it, and it is not at all improbable that some
-little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_432">[432]</span> strip of land retained the name.<a id="FNanchor_1285" href="#Footnote_1285" class="fnanchor">[1285]</a> It can only have been
-a very little one. The lease describes the Globe site as consisting
-of two plots lying apparently on opposite sides of a way or alley
-(<i>venella</i>) by which access was obtainable to them. One of these,
-that next the Park, had been the gardens of Thomas Burt, Isbrand
-Morris, and Lactantius Roper. It was 220 feet in length and lay between
-the garden of John Knowles on the east and John Cornish on the west.
-The southern plot, bounded by Maiden Lane on the south, had similarly
-been the gardens of John Roberts and Thomas Ditcher. This was only 156
-feet long and 100 feet deep, and lay between the gardens of William
-Sellers to the east and John Burgram to the west. Now the whole space
-between Maiden Lane and the Thames is only from 200 to 350 feet at
-various points, so that there could not have been room for much of a
-‘park’ between the Globe site and the Bankside houses.</p>
-
-<p>The evidence of the lease is confirmed in various ways by the records
-of presentments made by the Commissioners of Sewers for Kent and Surrey
-against negligent occupiers in this marshy neighbourhood. The most
-important entry is one of 14 February 1606:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘It is ordered that Burbidge and Heminges and others, the owners
-of the Play-house called the Globe in Maid-Lane shall before the
-xx<sup>th</sup> day of Aprill next pull vp and take cleane out of the
-Sewar the props or postes which stand vnder their bridge on the
-north side of Mayd-lane vpon paine to forfeit xx<sup>s</sup>.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This is endorsed ‘done’, but another order of the same day requiring
-the same men to ‘well and sufficientlye pyle boorde and fill vp viij
-poles more or lesse of theire wharfe against theire said Play-house’
-needed a repetition on 25 April before it received attention.<a id="FNanchor_1286" href="#Footnote_1286" class="fnanchor">[1286]</a>
-Earlier records, before the Globe came into existence, relate to some
-of the garden-holders named in the lease. A plot of John Bingham or
-Burgram abutted on a Maiden Lane sewer in 1596, and this is probably
-identical with the ‘common sewer leading from Sellors gardin to the
-beare garden’, which William Sellers and others were ordered to cleanse
-on 5 December 1595. Certainly the bear garden was to the north and
-not the south of Maiden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_433">[433]</span> Lane. There was also a sewer bordering upon
-the park, and on this Jasper Morris and Thomas Burt had encroached in
-1593.<a id="FNanchor_1287" href="#Footnote_1287" class="fnanchor">[1287]</a></p>
-
-<p>The old maps, as usual, do not give much help when it comes to a pinch,
-although the balance of their authority, for what it is worth, seems to
-me to be in favour of a northern site.<a id="FNanchor_1288" href="#Footnote_1288" class="fnanchor">[1288]</a> Mr. Hubbard, calculating
-from Visscher’s map, would put the Globe on the site of the present
-Central Wharf, 15 feet south of the Bankside houses and 136 feet west
-of Bank End, and therefore not very near Maiden Lane at all.<a id="FNanchor_1289" href="#Footnote_1289" class="fnanchor">[1289]</a> I do
-not think that he sufficiently recognizes the imperfections of the maps
-from a surveyor’s point of view. I doubt whether more is to be got out
-of them than that the Globe stood more to the east and probably more to
-the south than either the Hope or the Rose.<a id="FNanchor_1290" href="#Footnote_1290" class="fnanchor">[1290]</a></p>
-
-<p>The foregoing paragraphs show the state of the controversy when the
-body of this chapter was written. Since then Mr. Braines has taken
-up the investigation where it was left by Dr. Martin, with the help
-of the brewery title-deeds and many other documents bearing on the
-distribution of tenements in Maiden Lane and Globe Alley over more than
-a century. It now seems clear that, in view of the known history of
-properties north of Maiden Lane, there is no room for the Globe plot
-there, that this plot did pass from the Casons to the workhouse and
-ultimately the brewery, and that it did lie at Dr. Martin’s angle site,
-being indeed precisely located on the map by Concanen and Morgan’s
-description of 1795. We must therefore assume that the points of the
-compass were, as Dr. Martin conjectured, inverted in the lease of
-1599, east with west and north with south, and that the Globe company
-maintained a bridge over the sewer on the opposite side of Maiden Lane
-to the theatre, for the convenience of visitors coming down Horseshoe
-Alley from the river. The <i>venella</i> of 1599 must have been a
-westward extension of Globe Alley, afterwards disused.</p>
-
-<p>Some notion of the structural character of the Globe may be gleaned
-from the builder’s contract for the Fortune in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_434">[434]</span> 1600.<a id="FNanchor_1291" href="#Footnote_1291" class="fnanchor">[1291]</a> The Globe
-was then the last new thing in theatres, and in entering into his
-agreement for the Fortune with Peter Street, the builder of both
-houses, Henslowe was careful to specify that the Globe should be taken
-as the model, alike as regards the arrangement of the galleries and
-staircases, the contrivances and fashioning of the stage, and all
-other minor points not particularly indicated. The only alterations of
-design set out in the agreement were that the scantlings or standard
-measurements of the timber should be rather stouter than those of the
-Globe, and that the main posts of the stage and auditorium should
-be shaped square and carved with figures of satyrs. It is probable,
-however, that a more important difference is passed without notice.
-The Fortune was rectangular; the Globe was almost certainly round.
-The reference to a circular house in <i>Henry V</i> and <i>A Warning
-for Fair Women</i>, both plays of about 1599, may indeed belong to
-the Curtain rather than the Globe, but there are similar references
-in <i>E. M. O.</i> (1599) and in <i>The Merry Devil of Edmonton</i>
-(1608), which are certainly Globe plays, and there seems no reason
-to doubt that the Globe is represented by the cylindrical buildings,
-windowless below, windowed and of narrower diameter above, which
-are shown in the maps of the Hondius group and in the background of
-Delaram’s portrait of James I.<a id="FNanchor_1292" href="#Footnote_1292" class="fnanchor">[1292]</a> A few details are furnished by the
-various narratives of the fire of 1613. The roof was thatched, whence
-arose the accident. The walls were of timber, for nothing was burnt
-but wood and straw. The building was ‘flanked with a ditch, and forced
-out of a marish’. It had a stage-house ‘round as taylors clewe’, and
-carried a silken flag. There were two narrow doors, and hard by stood
-an alehouse. The new Globe built after the fire was tiled for greater
-safety. In other respects there was probably no great change. The
-building is described in 1634 as of timber, upon an old foundation.
-The maps, if they can be trusted, figure it as polygonal, rather than
-strictly round. No doubt it was round inside; an ‘amphytheator’, it is
-called in <i>Holland’s Leaguer</i>. The <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635
-mention the tiring-house door, at which money was taken. James Wright
-tells us that it was a summer house, large and partly open to the
-weather, and that the acting was always by daylight. Malone conjectured
-that the name ‘Globe’ was taken from the sign, ‘which was a figure
-of Hercules supporting the Globe, under which was written <i>Totus
-mundus agit histrionem</i>’.<a id="FNanchor_1293" href="#Footnote_1293" class="fnanchor">[1293]</a> I do not know where he got this
-information.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_435">[435]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xii. THE FORTUNE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Most of the documents are at
-Dulwich, and are printed in full or in abstract by W. W. Greg
-in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, and by J. P. Collier in <i>Alleyn
-Memoirs</i> and <i>Alleyn Papers</i>. The <i>Register</i> of
-the Privy Council adds a few of importance. Valuable summaries
-of the history of the theatre are given by W. W. Greg,
-<i>Henslowe’s Diary</i>, ii. 56, and W. Young, <i>History of
-Dulwich College</i> (1889), ii. 257. <i>The Catalogue of the
-Manuscripts and Muniments at Dulwich</i> (1881–1903) by G. F.
-Warner and F. B. Bickley is also useful.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The settlement of the Chamberlain’s men in 1599 at the Globe, hard by
-the Rose, on Bankside, probably led Henslowe and Alleyn to plan during
-the same year a countermove, by the transference of the Admiral’s
-men to a new theatrical locality in the rapidly growing districts on
-the north-west boundary of the City. The Rose, although not built
-fifteen years, was in decay, and the swamps of the Bankside had not,
-especially in bad weather, proved attractive to visitors. The new
-centre might be expected to serve in summer and winter alike, and,
-while in a place ‘remote and exempt’ from the City jurisdiction, would
-be convenient for the well-to-do population, which was establishing
-itself in the western suburbs, along the main roads of Holborn and the
-Strand. The Fortune on the north, and the Blackfriars, opened about
-the same time on the south, delimited a region which has remained
-almost to our own day the head-quarters of the stage. The actual site
-selected lay just outside Cripplegate between Golding or Golden Lane
-and Whitecross Street, in the county of Middlesex, the lordship or
-liberty of Finsbury, and the parish of St. Giles without Cripplegate.
-The title-deeds at Dulwich make it possible to trace the history of
-the property or part of it back to the reign of Henry VIII, but for
-the present purpose it is sufficient to begin with 11 July 1584, the
-date of a lease by Daniel Gill, son of William Gill, gardener, to
-Patrick Brewe, goldsmith, of five tenements on the east side of Golding
-Lane and one on the west side of Whitecross Street at a rent of £12 a
-year. This lease Brewe assigned to Alleyn on 22 December 1599, for a
-sum of £240. Subsequently, in 1610, Alleyn bought up a reversionary
-lease for £100, and also, after troublesome negotiations with the
-numerous descendants of Daniel Gill, the freehold of the property for
-£340.<a id="FNanchor_1294" href="#Footnote_1294" class="fnanchor">[1294]</a> This purchase, however, and probably also the original
-lease, included a good deal more than the actual plot on which the
-theatre was built. The deed of sale recites six tenements on the east
-of Golden Lane and six on the west of Whitecross Street. It is pretty
-clear,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_436">[436]</span> from the boundaries described, as compared with those in a
-temporary assignment by Alleyn of the lease, that the property dealt
-with in 1584 and in 1610 was the same, and it is natural to conclude
-that Alleyn had himself added to the number of tenements.<a id="FNanchor_1295" href="#Footnote_1295" class="fnanchor">[1295]</a> This
-is confirmed by a note of Alleyn’s that, in addition to building the
-play-house, he spent £120 ‘for other priuat buildings of myn owne’. One
-such building adjoined the south side of the play-house in 1601.<a id="FNanchor_1296" href="#Footnote_1296" class="fnanchor">[1296]</a>
-Alleyn’s note gives the cost of the play-house itself as £520, making
-up with the private buildings and the purchase of leasehold, reversion,
-and freehold, a total expenditure of £1,320.<a id="FNanchor_1297" href="#Footnote_1297" class="fnanchor">[1297]</a> The contract for
-building the framework was taken by Peter Street, carpenter, at £440,
-which presumably left Alleyn £80 for the painting and other decorative
-work excluded from the contract. The following is the text of the
-contract, which is preserved at Dulwich:<a id="FNanchor_1298" href="#Footnote_1298" class="fnanchor">[1298]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘This Indenture made the Eighte daie of Januarye 1599, and in
-the Twoe and Fortyth yeare of the Reigne of our sovereigne Ladie
-Elizabeth, by the grace of god Queene of Englande, Fraunce
-and Irelande, defender of the Faythe, &amp;c. betwene Phillipp
-Henslowe and Edwarde Allen of the parishe of S<sup>te</sup> Saviours
-in Southwark in the Countie of Surrey, gentlemen, on thone
-parte, and Peeter Streete, Cittizen and Carpenter of London,
-on thother parte witnesseth That whereas the saide Phillipp
-Henslowe &amp; Edward Allen, the daie of the date hereof, haue
-bargayned, compounded &amp; agreed with the saide Peter Streete
-ffor the erectinge, buildinge &amp; settinge upp of a new howse
-and Stadge for a Plaiehouse in and vppon a certeine plott or
-parcell of grounde appoynted oute for that purpose, scytuate
-and beinge nere Goldinge lane in the parishe of S<sup>te</sup> Giles
-withoute Cripplegate of London, to be by him the saide Peeter
-Streete or somme other sufficyent woorkmen of his provideinge
-and appoyntemente and att his propper costes &amp; chardges, for
-the consideracion hereafter in theis presentes expressed, made,
-erected, builded and sett upp in manner &amp; forme followinge (that
-is to saie); The frame of the saide howse to be sett square and
-to conteine ffowerscore foote of lawfull assize everye waie
-square withoutt and fiftie fiue foote of like assize square
-everye waie within, with a good suer and stronge foundacion
-of pyles, brick, lyme and sand bothe without &amp; within, to be
-wroughte one foote of assize att the leiste aboue the grounde;
-And the saide fframe to conteine three Stories in heighth,
-the first or lower Storie to conteine Twelue foote of lawfull
-assize in heighth, the second Storie Eleaven foote of lawfull
-assize in heigth, and the third or vpper Storie to conteine
-Nyne foote of lawfull assize in height; All which Stories
-shall conteine Twelue foote and a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_437">[437]</span> halfe of lawfull assize in
-breadth througheoute, besides a juttey forwardes in either
-of the saide twoe vpper Stories of Tenne ynches of lawfull
-assize, with ffower convenient divisions for gentlemens roomes,
-and other sufficient and convenient divisions for Twoe pennie
-roomes, with necessarie seates to be placed and sett, aswell
-in those roomes as througheoute all the rest of the galleries
-of the saide howse, and with suchelike steares, conveyances &amp;
-divisions withoute &amp; within, as are made &amp; contryved in and to
-the late erected Plaiehowse on the Banck in the saide parishe
-of S<sup>te</sup> Saviours called the Globe; With a Stadge and Tyreinge
-howse to be made, erected &amp; settupp within the saide fframe,
-with a shadowe or cover over the saide Stadge, which Stadge
-shalbe placed &amp; sett, as alsoe the stearecases of the saide
-fframe, in suche sorte as is prefigured in a plott thereof
-drawen, and which Stadge shall conteine in length Fortie and
-Three foote of lawfull assize and in breadth to extende to the
-middle of the yarde of the saide howse; The same Stadge to be
-paled in belowe with good, stronge and sufficyent newe oken
-bourdes, and likewise the lower Storie of the saide fframe
-withinside, and the same lower storie to be alsoe laide over
-and fenced with stronge yron pykes; And the saide Stadge to
-be in all other proporcions contryved and fashioned like vnto
-the Stadge of the saide Plaie howse called the Globe; With
-convenient windowes and lightes glazed to the saide Tyreinge
-howse; And the saide fframe, Stadge and Stearecases to be
-covered with Tyle, and to haue a sufficient gutter of lead to
-carrie &amp; convey the water frome the coveringe of the saide
-Stadge to fall backwardes; And also all the saide fframe and
-the Stairecases thereof to be sufficyently enclosed withoute
-with lathe, lyme &amp; haire, and the gentlemens roomes and Twoe
-pennie roomes to be seeled with lathe, lyme &amp; haire, and all
-the fflowers of the saide Galleries, Stories and Stadge to
-be bourded with good &amp; sufficyent newe deale bourdes of the
-whole thicknes, wheare need shalbe; And the saide howse and
-other thinges beforemencioned to be made &amp; doen to be in all
-other contrivitions, conveyances, fashions, thinge and thinges
-effected, finished and doen accordinge to the manner and
-fashion of the saide howse called the Globe, saveinge only that
-all the princypall and maine postes of the saide fframe and
-Stadge forwarde shalbe square and wroughte palasterwise, with
-carved proporcions called Satiers to be placed &amp; sett on the
-topp of every of the same postes, and saveinge alsoe that the
-said Peeter Streete shall not be chardged with anie manner of
-pay[ntin]ge in or aboute the saide fframe howse or Stadge or
-anie parte thereof, nor rendringe the walls within, nor seeling
-anie more or other roomes then the gentlemens roomes, Twoe
-pennie roomes and Stadge before remembred. Nowe theiruppon the
-saide Peeter Streete dothe covenant, promise and graunte ffor
-himself, his executours and administratours, to and with the
-saide Phillipp Henslowe and Edward Allen and either of them,
-and thexecutours and administratours of them and either of
-them, by theis presentes in manner &amp; forme followeinge (that
-is to saie); That he the saide Peeter Streete, his executours
-or assignes, shall &amp; will att his or their owne propper costes
-&amp; chardges well,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_438">[438]</span> woorkmanlike &amp; substancyallie make, erect,
-sett upp and fully finishe in and by all thinges, accordinge
-to the true meaninge of theis presentes, with good, stronge
-and substancyall newe tymber and other necessarie stuff, all
-the saide fframe and other woorkes whatsoever in and vppon
-the saide plott or parcell of grounde (beinge not by anie
-aucthoretie restrayned, and haveinge ingres, egres &amp; regres to
-doe the same) before the ffyue &amp; twentith daie of Julie next
-commeinge after the date hereof; And shall alsoe at his or
-theire like costes and chardges provide and finde all manner
-of woorkmen, tymber, joystes, rafters, boordes, dores, boltes,
-hinges, brick, tyle, lathe, lyme, haire, sande, nailes, lade,
-iron, glasse, woorkmanshipp and other thinges whatsoever, which
-shalbe needefull, convenyent &amp; necessarie for the saide fframe
-&amp; woorkes &amp; euerie parte thereof; And shall alsoe make all the
-saide fframe in every poynte for Scantlinges lardger and bigger
-in assize then the Scantlinges of the timber of the saide newe
-erected howse called the Globe; And alsoe that he the saide
-Peeter Streete shall furthwith, aswell by himself as by suche
-other and soemanie woorkmen as shalbe convenient &amp; necessarie,
-enter into and vppon the saide buildinges and woorkes, and shall
-in reasonable manner proceede therein withoute anie wilfull
-detraccion vntill the same shalbe fully effected and finished.
-In consideracion of all which buildinges and of all stuff &amp;
-woorkemanshipp thereto belonginge, the saide Phillipp Henslowe
-&amp; Edward Allen and either of them, ffor themselues, theire, and
-either of theire executours &amp; administratours, doe joynctlie
-&amp; seuerallie covenante &amp; graunte to &amp; with the saide Peeter
-Streete, his executours &amp; administratours by theis presentes,
-that they the saide Phillipp Henslowe &amp; Edward Allen or one of
-them, or the executours administratours or assignes of them or
-one of them, shall &amp; will well &amp; truelie paie or cawse to be
-paide vnto the saide Peeter Streete, his executours or assignes,
-att the place aforesaid appoynted for the erectinge of the saide
-fframe, the full somme of Fower hundred &amp; Fortie Poundes of
-lawfull money of Englande in manner &amp; forme followeinge (that
-is to saie), att suche tyme and when as the Tymber-woork of
-the saide fframe shalbe rayzed &amp; sett upp by the saide Peeter
-Streete his executours or assignes, or within seaven daies
-then next followeinge, Twoe hundred &amp; Twentie poundes, and
-att suche time and when as the saide fframe &amp; woorkes shalbe
-fullie effected &amp; ffynished as is aforesaide, or within seaven
-daies then next followeinge, thother Twoe hundred and Twentie
-poundes, withoute fraude or coven. Prouided allwaies, and it
-is agreed betwene the saide parties, that whatsoever somme or
-sommes of money the saide Phillipp Henslowe &amp; Edward Allen or
-either of them, or the executours or assignes of them or either
-of them, shall lend or deliver vnto the saide Peter Streete his
-executours or assignes, or anie other by his appoyntemente or
-consent, ffor or concerninge the saide woorkes or anie parte
-thereof or anie stuff thereto belonginge, before the raizeinge
-&amp; settinge upp of the saide fframe, shalbe reputed, accepted,
-taken &amp; accoumpted in parte of the firste paymente aforesaid
-of the saide some of Fower hundred &amp; Fortie poundes, and all
-suche somme &amp; sommes of money,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_439">[439]</span> as they or anie of them shall
-as aforesaid lend or deliver betwene the razeinge of the
-saide fframe &amp; finishinge thereof and of all the rest of the
-saide woorkes, shalbe reputed, accepted, taken &amp; accoumpted
-in parte of the laste pamente aforesaid of the same somme
-of Fower hundred &amp; Fortie poundes, anie thinge abouesaid to
-the contrary notwithstandinge. In witnes whereof the parties
-abouesaid to theis presente Indentures Interchaungeably haue
-sett theire handes and seales. Yeoven the daie and yeare ffirste
-abouewritten.</p>
-
-<p class="center">P S</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Sealed and deliuered by the saide Peter Streete in
-the presence of me William Harris Pub[lic] Scr[ivener] And me
-Frauncis Smyth appr[entice] to the said Scr[ivener]</p>
-
-<p>[<i>Endorsed</i>:] Peater Streat ffor The Building of the
-Fortune.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The constant references in the terms of the contract to the model
-of the Globe, while bearing testimony to the stimulus which the
-building of the Globe had given to theatrical competition, leaves
-some uncertainty as to many details of planning, and it is matter
-for regret that the ‘plot’ of the stage and staircases furnished to
-the builder has not itself been preserved. We learn, however, that
-the house was a square one, 80 feet each way by outside and 55 feet
-by inside measurement; that the stage was 43 feet wide and projected
-into the middle of the yard; that the framework was of wood, on a
-foundation of brick and piles, and with an outer coating of plaster;
-that the framework and stage were boarded within and strengthened
-with iron pikes; that there were three galleries rising to a total
-height of 32 feet, and that sections of these were partitioned off and
-ceiled as ‘gentlemens rooms’, of which there were four, and ‘two-penny
-rooms’; that the tiring-house had glazed windows; that there was a
-‘shadowe or cover’ over the stage, and that this, with the galleries
-and staircases, were tiled and supplied with lead gutters to carry off
-the rain-water. Two divergences from the Globe model are specified:
-the timber work is to be stouter, and the principal posts of the frame
-work and stage are to be square and carved with satyrs. An ingenious
-attempt has been made by Mr. William Archer and Mr. W. H. Godfrey to
-reconstruct the plan of the theatre from these and other indications,
-with a liberal allowance of conjecture.<a id="FNanchor_1299" href="#Footnote_1299" class="fnanchor">[1299]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_440">[440]</span> It will be observed
-that Henslowe, as well as Alleyn, was a party to the contract; but
-it is pretty clear from Alleyn’s note already referred to that he
-found the money, and although Henslowe did in fact become his partner
-in the enterprise, this was under a lease of 4 April 1601, whereby
-he took over a moiety of the play-house and its profits for a term
-of twenty-four years from the previous 25 March at an annual rent
-of £8.<a id="FNanchor_1300" href="#Footnote_1300" class="fnanchor">[1300]</a> This lease did not include Alleyn’s private tenements,
-but it did include some enclosed ‘growndes’ on the north and west of
-the house, and a passage 30 feet long by 14 feet wide running east
-from the south-west angle of the building ‘from one doore of the said
-house to an other’. It is, I think, to be inferred from this that the
-main approach to the earlier Fortune theatre was from the Golden Lane
-side. The contract with Street is dated on 8 January 1600 and provides
-for the completion of the work by the following 25 July, and for the
-payment of the price in two instalments, one when the framework was
-up and the other upon completion. In fact, however, the acquittances
-by Street and others, endorsed upon the Dulwich indenture, show that
-Henslowe acted as a kind of banker for the transaction, and made
-advances from time to time to Street, or to pay workmen or purchase
-materials, all of which were debited against the amounts payable
-under the contract. Work seems to have begun before 17 January. By
-20 March Henslowe had paid £180 and by 4 May £240. It is therefore a
-little puzzling to find a payment ‘at the eand of the fowndations’
-on 8 May. About £53 more was paid before 10 June, making nearly £300
-in all by that date. The last entry is one of 4s. to Street ‘to
-pasify him’, which suggests that some dispute had taken place. Here
-the acquittances stop, but Henslowe’s <i>Diary</i> indicates that he
-was frequently dining in company with Street from 13 June to August
-8, and probably the work was completed about the latter date.<a id="FNanchor_1301" href="#Footnote_1301" class="fnanchor">[1301]</a>
-Alleyn had had to face some opposition in carrying out his project.
-He began by arming himself with the authority of his ‘lord’, the Earl
-of Nottingham, who wrote in his favour to the Middlesex justices on
-12 January 1600, explaining the reasons for leaving the Bankside and
-the general convenience of the new locality, and citing the Queen’s
-‘special regarde of fauor’ towards the company as a reason why the
-justices should allow his servant to build ‘w<sup>th</sup>out anie yo<sup>r</sup> lett
-or molestation’. This action did not prove sufficient to avert a local
-protest. Lord Willoughby and others complained<span class="pagenum" id="Page_441">[441]</span> to the Council, who
-on 9 March wrote to the Middlesex justices informing them that the
-erection of a new play-house, ‘wherof ther are to manie allreadie
-not farr from that place’, would greatly displease the Queen, and
-commanding the project to be ‘staied’. Alleyn, however, was secure
-in the royal favour. He also, by offering a weekly contribution to
-the relief of the poor, succeeded in obtaining a certificate from the
-petty officials and other inhabitants of Finsbury of their consent to
-the toleration of the house; and on 8 April the Council wrote again to
-the justices, withdrawing their previous inhibition and laying special
-stress on Elizabeth’s desire that Alleyn personally should revive his
-services as a player, ‘wheareof, of late he hath made discontynuance’.
-The letter also referred to the fact that another house was pulled
-down instead of the Fortune, and a formal Privy Council order of 22
-June, laying down that there shall in future be one house in Middlesex
-for the Admiral’s men, and one on the Bankside for the Chamberlain’s,
-makes it clear that the condemned theatre was the Curtain.<a id="FNanchor_1302" href="#Footnote_1302" class="fnanchor">[1302]</a>
-Nevertheless, it is certain that neither the Curtain nor the Rose was
-in fact plucked down at this date.</p>
-
-<p>The Fortune was opened in the autumn of 1600 by the Admiral’s men,
-probably with Dekker’s <i>1 Fortune’s Tennis</i>, and its theatrical
-history is closely bound up with that of the same company, who occupied
-it continuously, as the Admiral’s to 1603, then as Prince Henry’s
-men to his death in 1612, and finally as the Palsgrave’s men. It is
-only necessary to deal here with matters that directly concern the
-building. That it became something of a centre of disturbance in the
-peaceful suburbs of the north-west is shown by various entries in the
-records of the Middlesex Bench. On 26 February 1611, two butchers,
-Ralph Brewyn and John Lynsey, were charged with abusing gentlemen
-there. On 1 October 1612, the justices regarded it as the resort of
-cutpurses, and were thereby led to suppress the jigs at the end of
-plays, which especially attracted such persons. In 1613 a true bill
-was found against Richard Bradley for stabbing Nicholas Bedney there
-on 5 June.<a id="FNanchor_1303" href="#Footnote_1303" class="fnanchor">[1303]</a> The upkeep of the structure was expensive. A note
-in Alleyn’s hand of sums laid out upon the play-house during the
-seven years 1602–8 shows an average amount of about £120. Only £4
-2<i>s.</i> was spent during 1603, for the greater part of which year
-the theatres were closed, but £232 1<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in 1604.<a id="FNanchor_1304" href="#Footnote_1304" class="fnanchor">[1304]</a>
-No doubt<span class="pagenum" id="Page_442">[442]</span> wooden buildings, open to the weather, perished rapidly. It
-is not unreasonable to suppose that the relations between the company
-and their landlords were much what they had been at the Rose; that
-is to say that the latter took half the gallery receipts and bore
-repairs, while the former took the rest of the receipts and met all
-other outgoings. An unexecuted draft lease to Thomas Downton of 1608
-indicates that Alleyn and Henslowe then had it in mind to bind the
-company more closely to the theatre, by dividing a quarter of their
-interest amongst the eight members of the company.<a id="FNanchor_1305" href="#Footnote_1305" class="fnanchor">[1305]</a> Possibly the
-plan was carried out. In asking a loan from Alleyn on a date apparently
-earlier than August 1613, Charles Massye, who was one of the eight, not
-only offers repayment out of his ‘gallery mony’ and ‘house mony’, but
-also the assignment of ‘that lyttell moete I have in the play housses’
-as a security.<a id="FNanchor_1306" href="#Footnote_1306" class="fnanchor">[1306]</a> Certainly the company took over the house after
-Henslowe’s death on 6 January 1616. His share in the building passed
-to his widow, who contemplated a sale of it to Gregory Franklyn, Drew
-Stapley, and John Hamond.<a id="FNanchor_1307" href="#Footnote_1307" class="fnanchor">[1307]</a> But the deed remained unexecuted at her
-death in 1617, and the whole property was now once more in Alleyn’s
-hands. On 31 October 1618 he leased it to the company for £200 a year,
-to be reduced to £120 at his death. With it went a taphouse occupied by
-Mark Brigham, the rent of a two-room tenement held by John Russell, and
-a strip of impaled ground 123 feet by 17 feet, lying next the passage
-on the south.<a id="FNanchor_1308" href="#Footnote_1308" class="fnanchor">[1308]</a> This is perhaps the garden in which, according to
-John Chamberlain, the players, ‘not to be overcome with courtesy’,
-banqueted the Spanish ambassador when he visited the theatre on 16 July
-1621.<a id="FNanchor_1309" href="#Footnote_1309" class="fnanchor">[1309]</a> John Russell is presumably the same whose appointment by
-Alleyn as a ‘gatherer’ lead to a protest from William Bird on behalf
-of the company.<a id="FNanchor_1310" href="#Footnote_1310" class="fnanchor">[1310]</a> A few months after the ambassador’s visit, John
-Chamberlain records the destruction of the Fortune on 9 December
-1621:<a id="FNanchor_1311" href="#Footnote_1311" class="fnanchor">[1311]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘On Sonday night here was a great fire at the Fortune in
-Golden-Lane, the fayrest play-house in this towne. It was quite
-burnt downe in two howres, &amp; all their apparell &amp; play-bookes
-lost, wherby those poore companions are quite undone.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Alleyn also notes the event in his diary.<a id="FNanchor_1312" href="#Footnote_1312" class="fnanchor">[1312]</a> On 20 May
-1622 he formed a syndicate, and leased to it the site at a rent of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_443">[443]</span>
-£128 6<i>s.</i>, under an obligation to build a new theatre at a cost
-of £1,000.<a id="FNanchor_1313" href="#Footnote_1313" class="fnanchor">[1313]</a> This, ‘a large round brick building’, was erected in
-the following year.<a id="FNanchor_1314" href="#Footnote_1314" class="fnanchor">[1314]</a> The site conveyed covered a space of almost
-exactly 130 feet square, and on it had stood, besides the buildings
-named in the lease of 1618, other tenements, in one of which William
-Bird himself lived. Mr. Lawrence has suggested that the new Fortune may
-have been a roofed-in house, but his evidence is hardly sufficient to
-outweigh the explicit statement of Wright that it ‘lay partly open to
-the weather, and there they always acted by daylight’.<a id="FNanchor_1315" href="#Footnote_1315" class="fnanchor">[1315]</a> This can
-hardly refer only to the earlier building. The Fortune was dismantled
-in 1649 and ‘totally demolished’ by 1662, and the façade still extant
-in 1819 cannot therefore have belonged to it, although it may have
-belonged to a Restoration ‘nursery’ for young actors, possibly upon the
-same site.<a id="FNanchor_1316" href="#Footnote_1316" class="fnanchor">[1316]</a> No acting seems to have taken place at the Fortune
-after 1649.<a id="FNanchor_1317" href="#Footnote_1317" class="fnanchor">[1317]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>xiii. THE BOAR’S HEAD</h5>
-
-<p>There appear to have been at least six city inns under this sign.<a id="FNanchor_1318" href="#Footnote_1318" class="fnanchor">[1318]</a>
-The most famous was that on the south side of Great Eastcheap, in
-St. Michael’s, which seems to have been regarded in the middle of
-the sixteenth century as the traditional locality of the tavern
-scenes in <i>Henry IV</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1319" href="#Footnote_1319" class="fnanchor">[1319]</a> This inn was in the occupation of
-Joan Broke, widow, in 1537, and in that of Thomas Wright, vintner,
-about 1588.<a id="FNanchor_1320" href="#Footnote_1320" class="fnanchor">[1320]</a> Another Boar’s Head stood ‘without’ Aldgate, in the
-extra-mural Portsoken ward, which lay between that gate and the bars
-with which the liberties of the City terminated at Hog Lane.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_444">[444]</span> Here,
-according to Stowe, there were ‘certaine faire Innes for receipt of
-trauellers repayring to the Citie’.<a id="FNanchor_1321" href="#Footnote_1321" class="fnanchor">[1321]</a> At the Aldgate inn had been
-produced in 1557 a ‘lewd’ play called <i>The Sackful of Newes</i>,
-which provoked the interference of Mary’s Privy Council.<a id="FNanchor_1322" href="#Footnote_1322" class="fnanchor">[1322]</a> But it
-seems to me exceedingly improbable that either this or the Eastcheap
-inn was converted into the play-house, of which we have brief and
-tantalizing records in the seventeenth century. Both were within the
-City jurisdiction, where the licensing of play-houses seems to have
-definitely terminated in 1596. It is true that a Privy Council letter
-of 31 March 1602, which directs that the combined company of Oxford’s
-and Worcester’s men shall be allowed to play at the Boar’s Head, is
-addressed to the Lord Mayor.<a id="FNanchor_1323" href="#Footnote_1323" class="fnanchor">[1323]</a> But so are other letters of the
-same type, the object of which is to limit plays to a small number of
-houses outside the liberties, and to restrain them elsewhere over the
-whole area of the City and the suburbs.<a id="FNanchor_1324" href="#Footnote_1324" class="fnanchor">[1324]</a> And when, a year or two
-later, Worcester’s men became Queen Anne’s, and a draft patent was
-drawn up to confirm their right to play in the Curtain and the Boar’s
-Head, both houses are described, not as in the City, but as ‘within
-our County of Middlesex’.<a id="FNanchor_1325" href="#Footnote_1325" class="fnanchor">[1325]</a> Presumably Anne’s men left the Boar’s
-Head when the Red Bull became available for their use in 1606, and Mr.
-Adams has explained a mention, which had long puzzled me, of the Duke
-of York’s men as ‘the Prince’s Players of Whitechapel’ in 1608 by the
-suggestion that they succeeded to the vacant theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1326" href="#Footnote_1326" class="fnanchor">[1326]</a> If this is
-so, I think it affords further evidence for the theory that the Boar’s
-Head, although it may have taken its name from the Aldgate inn, was
-not itself that inn, and probably not a converted inn at all, but lay
-just outside and not just inside the City bars. For, although part of
-the street between Aldgate and Whitechapel is sometimes called, as in
-Ogilby’s map of 1677 and Rocque’s of 1746, ‘Whitechapel Street’, yet
-Whitechapel proper lay outside the liberties, farther to the east<span class="pagenum" id="Page_445">[445]</span>
-along the Mile End Road.<a id="FNanchor_1327" href="#Footnote_1327" class="fnanchor">[1327]</a> The only other contemporary record of
-the Boar’s Head is a letter to Edward Alleyn from his wife Joan on 21
-October 1603, in which she says, ‘All the companyes be come hoame &amp;
-well for ought we knowe, but that Browne of the Boares head is dead
-&amp; dyed very pore, he went not into the countrye at all’.<a id="FNanchor_1328" href="#Footnote_1328" class="fnanchor">[1328]</a> This
-Browne cannot be identified, and it is perhaps idle to conjecture
-that he may have been related to Robert Browne, and that it may have
-been at the Boar’s Head that the latter played with Derby’s men in
-1599–1601. The Boar’s Head seems to have been generally forgotten by
-the Restoration, but is recalled by the Marquis of Newcastle <i>c.</i>
-1660.<a id="FNanchor_1329" href="#Footnote_1329" class="fnanchor">[1329]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>xiv. THE RED BULL</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The records of the suit of
-<i>Woodford v. Holland</i> (1613) were printed by J. Greenstreet
-in the <i>Athenaeum</i> for 28 Nov. 1885 from <i>Court of
-Requests Books</i>, xxvi, ff. 780, 890, and cxxviii, and
-therefrom by Fleay, 194; and more fully with those of the later
-suit of 1619 (misdated 1620) by C. W. Wallace in <i>Nebraska
-University Studies</i>, ix. 291 (cited as <i>W. v. H.</i>).
-Collier, i. 374, mentions evidence on the same transactions
-as ‘in the Audit Office’, and misnames the complainant John
-Woodward.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Our chief knowledge of the early history of the Red Bull is derived
-from disputes before the Court of Requests in 1613 and 1619 between
-Thomas Woodford and Aaron Holland. It appears that Holland held a
-lease of the site, which was at the upper end of St. John Street in
-the parish of St. James, Clerkenwell, from Anne, widow and executrix
-of Christopher Bedingfield, and had there built a play-house. The
-indication of a Red Bull Yard in Ogilby and Morgan’s map of 1677 to
-the west of St. John Street, and just north of the angle which it
-forms with Clerkenwell Green, no doubt defines the locality with some
-precision.<a id="FNanchor_1330" href="#Footnote_1330" class="fnanchor">[1330]</a> In <i>3 Jac. I</i>, that is, at some date between 24
-March 1605 and 23 March 1606, he assigned one-seventh of the house to
-Thomas Swynnerton, ‘with a gatherers place thereto belonging’. This
-Swynnerton transferred for £50 to Philip Stone.<a id="FNanchor_1331" href="#Footnote_1331" class="fnanchor">[1331]</a> It was subject
-to a rent of £2 10<i>s.</i>, and Holland gave<span class="pagenum" id="Page_446">[446]</span> Stone an indenture in
-February 1609, which was alleged not to constitute a proper lease. In
-1612–13 Stone sold his seventh for £50 to Woodford, who took profits
-for a quarter, and then entrusted his interest to Holland, instructing
-his servant Anthony Payne to pay the rent. He alleged that Holland
-persuaded Payne to be behindhand with the rent, and withheld the
-profits, estimated at £30 a year. He therefore brought his action a
-little before May 1613. The Court called upon Holland to show cause why
-he should not account for the arrears of profits, and for 1<i>s.</i>
-6<i>d.</i> a week due to the gatherer’s place.<a id="FNanchor_1332" href="#Footnote_1332" class="fnanchor">[1332]</a> Holland replied,
-and the issues were referred to the arbitration of counsel, including
-Woodford’s ‘demaund of the eighteenth penny and the eighteenth part of
-such moneys &amp; other comodities as should be collected or receaued ...
-for the profittes of the galleries or other places in or belonging to
-the play howse’.<a id="FNanchor_1333" href="#Footnote_1333" class="fnanchor">[1333]</a> Counsel made an arrangement, but did not agree
-in their reports of its terms, and the Court ordered Holland to give
-Woodford an indenture similar to that given to Stone.<a id="FNanchor_1334" href="#Footnote_1334" class="fnanchor">[1334]</a> Holland
-got a writ of prohibition from the King’s Bench, always jealous of
-the jurisdiction of the Court of Requests, on 6 November 1613, and
-Woodford began a suit against Holland in Stone’s name for not making a
-proper indenture in 1609. This, he says, Stone conspired with Holland
-to withdraw. In 1619 he brought another action for his profits before
-the Court of Requests, in which Holland describes him as ‘Woodford,
-<i>alias</i> Simball’, but the result is unknown.</p>
-
-<p>The Red Bull, then, was built not later and probably not much earlier
-than 1606, a little before the first recorded mention of it in the
-following passage from <i>The Knight of the Burning Pestle</i>, which
-was almost certainly produced in the winter of 1607:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p><i>‘Citizen.</i> Why so sir, go and fetch me him then, and let
-the Sophy of Persia come and christen him a childe.</p>
-
-<p><i>‘Boy.</i> Beleeue me sir, that will not doe so well, ’tis
-stale, it has beene had before at the red Bull.’<a id="FNanchor_1335" href="#Footnote_1335" class="fnanchor">[1335]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The allusion is to an incident in the last scene of Day, Rowley, and
-Wilkins’ <i>Travels of the Three Brothers</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1336" href="#Footnote_1336" class="fnanchor">[1336]</a> This, according<span class="pagenum" id="Page_447">[447]</span>
-to the entry in the Stationers’ Register on 29 June 1607, was played
-at the Curtain, and according to its title-page of 1607 by the Queen’s
-men. But there is no reason why it should not also have been played
-at the Red Bull, since both houses are specified as occupied by the
-Queen’s men in their patent of 15 April 1609. In their earlier draft
-patent of about 1603–4, the Boar’s Head and Curtain are named, and in
-a Privy Council letter of 9 April 1604 the Curtain only. Presumably,
-therefore, the Red Bull was taken into use by the Queen’s men, of whom
-Swynnerton was one, as soon as it was built at some date between 1604
-and 1606. The Red Bull is one of the three houses whose contention
-is predicted in Dekker’s <i>Raven’s Almanack</i> of 1608, and Dekker
-refers to it again in his <i>Work for Armourers</i>, written during the
-plague of 1609, when the bear garden was open and the theatres closed.
-He says, ‘The pide <i>Bul</i> heere keepes a tossing and a roaring,
-when the <i>Red Bull</i> dares not stir’.<a id="FNanchor_1337" href="#Footnote_1337" class="fnanchor">[1337]</a> Its existence caused
-trouble from time to time to the Middlesex justices. At the end of May
-1610, William Tedcastle, yeoman, and John Fryne, Edward Brian, Edward
-Purfett, and Thomas Williams, felt-makers, were called upon to give
-recognisances to answer for a ‘notable outrage at the play-house called
-the Red Bull’; and on 3 March 1614 Alexander Fulsis was bailed out on
-a charge of picking Robert Sweet’s pocket of a purse and £3 at this
-theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1338" href="#Footnote_1338" class="fnanchor">[1338]</a> Further references to it are to be found in Wither’s
-<i>Abuses Stript and Whipt</i> (1613), in Tomkis’s <i>Albumazar</i>
-(1615), and in Gayton’s <i>Pleasant Notes on Don Quixot</i>
-(1654).<a id="FNanchor_1339" href="#Footnote_1339" class="fnanchor">[1339]</a></p>
-
-<p>An entry in Alleyn’s <i>Diary</i> for 1617 has been supposed to
-indicate that he had an interest in the Red Bull. To me it only
-suggests that he sold the actors there a play.<a id="FNanchor_1340" href="#Footnote_1340" class="fnanchor">[1340]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_448">[448]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Queen’s men most likely occupied the Red Bull at least until
-1617 when, as shown by the lawsuit of 1623, they were on the point
-of moving to the Cockpit in Drury Lane. Plays of theirs were printed
-as acted there in 1608, 1611, 1612, and 1615. <i>Swetnam the Woman
-Hater Arraigned by Women</i>, printed in 1620, was also played there,
-before Anne’s death in 1619. In 1637 Thomas Heywood, formerly one of
-the Queen’s men, included in his <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>,
-a Prologue and Epilogue, to which he prefixed the note ‘A young witty
-lad playing the part of Richard the third: at the Red Bull: the Author
-because hee was interessed in the play to incourage him, wrot him this
-Prologue and Epilogue’.<a id="FNanchor_1341" href="#Footnote_1341" class="fnanchor">[1341]</a> This was probably, and certainly if the
-play was Shakespeare’s, some quite exceptional performance. Similarly
-the ‘companie of young men of this citie’, who are stated on the
-title-page of Wentworth Smith’s <i>Hector of Germany</i> (1615) to have
-acted it at the Red Bull and Curtain, must be supposed to have used
-these theatres by some arrangement with the Queen’s men.</p>
-
-<p>The Red Bull afterwards passed to other companies, continued in use up
-to, and even occasionally during, the Commonwealth, and had a revived
-life after the Restoration to 1663.<a id="FNanchor_1342" href="#Footnote_1342" class="fnanchor">[1342]</a> Before 1633, and probably
-before 1625, it had been re-edified and enlarged.<a id="FNanchor_1343" href="#Footnote_1343" class="fnanchor">[1343]</a> Mr. Lawrence
-suggests that at this time it became a roofed house, which it seems
-certainly to have been after the Restoration.<a id="FNanchor_1344" href="#Footnote_1344" class="fnanchor">[1344]</a> But it is difficult
-to get away from Wright’s explicit statement that it ‘lay partly open
-to the weather, and there they always acted by daylight’.<a id="FNanchor_1345" href="#Footnote_1345" class="fnanchor">[1345]</a> Nor
-need the quite modern identification of it with the roofed interior
-depicted in <i>The Wits</i> rest upon anything but an incidental
-reference to the house in the text of the pamphlet.<a id="FNanchor_1346" href="#Footnote_1346" class="fnanchor">[1346]</a> Nothing is
-known as to the shape or galleries of the Red Bull.</p>
-
-
-<h5>xv. THE HOPE</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The Dulwich papers relating to
-the connexion of Henslowe and Alleyn with the bear-baiting
-and the Hope are to be found with a commentary in Greg,
-<i>Henslowe’s Diary</i> and <i>Henslowe Papers</i>. Valuable
-material on the Bankside localities is in W. Rendle, <i>The
-Bankside, Southwark, and the Globe</i>, 1877 (Appendix I to
-Furnivall, <i>Harrison’s Description of England</i>, Part II,
-with a reconstructed map of the Bankside and a 1627 plan of
-Paris Garden), <i>Old Southwark and its People</i> (1878),<span class="pagenum" id="Page_449">[449]</span>
-<i>The Play-houses at Bankside in the Time of Shakespeare</i>
-(1885, <i>Walford’s Antiquarian</i>, vii. 207, 274; viii. 55),
-<i>Paris Garden and Blackfriars</i> (1887, <i>7 N. Q.</i> iii.
-241, 343, 442). Some notes of Eu. Hood [Joseph Haslewood]
-in 1813 and A. J. K[empe] in 1833 are reprinted in <i>The
-Gentleman’s Magazine Library</i>, xv (1904), 74, 117. Other
-writings on Paris Garden are by W. H. Overall (1869) in <i>Proc.
-Soc. Antiq.</i> 2nd series, iv. 195, J. Meymott, <i>The Manor of
-Old Paris Garden</i> (1881), P. Norman, <i>The Accounts of the
-Overseers of the Poor of Paris Garden, Southwark, 1608–1671</i>
-(1901) in <i>Surrey Arch. Colls.</i> xvi. 55. Since I wrote this
-chapter, C. L. Kingsford (1920, <i>Arch.</i> lxx. 155) has added
-valuable material.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It is convenient, in connexion with the Hope, to deal with the
-whole rather troublesome question of the Bankside Bear Gardens.
-The <i>ursarius</i> or bearward was a recognized type of mediaeval
-<i>mimus</i>, and the rewards in which his welcome found expression
-are a recurring item in many a series of municipal or domestic
-accounts. Thus, to take one example only, the corporation of
-Shrewsbury entertained between 1483 and 1542 the <i>ursinarii</i>,
-<i>ursuarii</i>, or <i>ursiatores</i> of the King, the Dukes of
-Norfolk and Suffolk, the Marquises of Dorset and Exeter, the Earl
-of Derby, and the town of Norwich.<a id="FNanchor_1347" href="#Footnote_1347" class="fnanchor">[1347]</a> On more than one occasion
-the payment is said to be <i>pro agitacione bestiarum suarum</i>.
-The phrase is perhaps not free from ambiguity. The dancing bear was,
-until quite recently, a familiar sight in provincial England, and I
-have seen one even on the sophisticated slopes of Notting Hill. And
-illuminations dating back as far as the tenth century bear evidence to
-the antiquity of his somewhat grotesque <i>tripudium</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1348" href="#Footnote_1348" class="fnanchor">[1348]</a> But in
-the robust days of our forefathers there was an even more attractive
-way of agitating bears. The traditional victim of an English baiting
-was no doubt the bull. A Southwark map of 1542 shows a ‘Bolrynge’ in
-the middle of the High Street and a neighbouring alley still bore
-the name in 1561.<a id="FNanchor_1349" href="#Footnote_1349" class="fnanchor">[1349]</a> The maps of Höfnagel (<i>c.</i> 1560) and
-Agas (<i>c.</i> 1570) show another ring, marked ‘The bolle bayting’
-and with a very palpable bull inside it, upon the Bankside, not far
-from where the Hope must afterwards have stood.<a id="FNanchor_1350" href="#Footnote_1350" class="fnanchor">[1350]</a> But the bear
-was also baited in London, at least from the twelfth century.<a id="FNanchor_1351" href="#Footnote_1351" class="fnanchor">[1351]</a>
-Erasmus is often cited as declaring that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_450">[450]</span> in the reign of Henry VIII
-‘herds’ of the animal were kept for the purpose. This is an error.
-Erasmus wrote of dancing bears; but I am afraid it must be assumed
-that the chief function of the bearward attached to the Tudor Royal
-Household was to provide exhibitions of the more brutal, noisy, and
-occasionally dangerous sport.<a id="FNanchor_1352" href="#Footnote_1352" class="fnanchor">[1352]</a> A regular office is traceable back
-to 1484, when Richard III in the first year of his reign appointed
-his bearward John Browne to be ‘Maister, Guyder and Ruler of all our
-Beres and Apes’.<a id="FNanchor_1353" href="#Footnote_1353" class="fnanchor">[1353]</a> It was still a part of the establishment of
-the Royal Household under Elizabeth. A patent of 2 June 1573 to Ralph
-Bowes describes it as ‘the room or office of Cheif Master Overseer and
-Ruler of all and singular our game pastymes and sportes, that is to
-saie of all and everie our beares bulles and mastyve dogges’, and names
-as Bowes’s predecessors Cuthbert Vaughan and Sir Richard Long.<a id="FNanchor_1354" href="#Footnote_1354" class="fnanchor">[1354]</a>
-The grant was of the nature of a commission, authorizing the holder,
-personally or by deputy, to ‘take up’ or press animals for the royal
-service, and giving him the sole right of baiting the Queen’s bears,
-to the exclusion of any other officer or under officer appertaining
-to the bears, not specially licensed or appointed by him. The Master
-was presumably expected to make his profit out of the privileges
-granted, for the patent did not assign him any fee, such as the under
-officers, known as the Keepers of Bears and Mastiffs, enjoyed at the
-hands of the Treasurer of the Chamber.<a id="FNanchor_1355" href="#Footnote_1355" class="fnanchor">[1355]</a> But he received a reward,
-similar to those given to players, of £5 through the Treasurer on the
-Council’s warrant, when the baiting was shown before the Queen. These
-rewards are generally expressed as ‘for the Game of Paris Garden’
-or ‘to the Master of her Majesty’s Game at Paris Garden’; and Bowes
-must have joined sons or other<span class="pagenum" id="Page_451">[451]</span> relatives with him as deputies, since
-Edward Bowes and Thomas Bowes were often payees instead of Ralph Bowes
-during his term of office.<a id="FNanchor_1356" href="#Footnote_1356" class="fnanchor">[1356]</a> Towards the end of Bowes’s life it
-would seem that Henslowe and Alleyn, who had been baiting bears on
-the Bankside as licensees since 1594, were in negotiation to obtain
-the Mastership.<a id="FNanchor_1357" href="#Footnote_1357" class="fnanchor">[1357]</a> Probably the first idea was to buy a surrender
-of the office from Bowes, since the Dulwich manuscripts contain an
-unexecuted draft of a patent to Henslowe, following the terms of
-that to Bowes himself and reciting such a surrender.<a id="FNanchor_1358" href="#Footnote_1358" class="fnanchor">[1358]</a> I should
-suppose this negotiation to be that in connexion with which Henslowe
-spent £2 15<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> during 1597 upon visits to Sir Julius
-Caesar, Master of Requests, and other Court officials, and in a fee
-to the Clerk of the Signet. The expenditure is entered in the diary
-as incurred ‘a bowt the changinge of ower comysion’.<a id="FNanchor_1359" href="#Footnote_1359" class="fnanchor">[1359]</a> But before
-a surrender was effected it would seem that Henslowe had had to turn
-his thoughts to a succession. In this he was disappointed. On 4 June
-1598 he wrote to Alleyn that Bowes was very sick and expected to die,
-and that he much feared he should lose all. Neither Caesar nor the
-Lord Admiral had done anything for him, and although he had received
-help from Lady Edmondes and Mr. Langworth, he now learnt that the
-reversion of the Mastership was already promised by the Queen to one
-Mr. Dorrington, a pensioner.<a id="FNanchor_1360" href="#Footnote_1360" class="fnanchor">[1360]</a> Bowes did in effect die very shortly
-after, and on 11 August 1598 John Dorrington received his patent for
-the Mastership.<a id="FNanchor_1361" href="#Footnote_1361" class="fnanchor">[1361]</a> To this was joined the office of Keeper of the
-Bandogs and Mastiffs, with a fee of 10<i>d.</i> a day for exercising
-this office and keeping twenty mastiff bitches, and a further fee of
-4<i>d.</i> for a deputy.<a id="FNanchor_1362" href="#Footnote_1362" class="fnanchor">[1362]</a> It is not unlikely that John Dorrington<span class="pagenum" id="Page_452">[452]</span>
-was related to the Richard Darrington who had held this keepership with
-the same fees, amounting to £21 5<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i> a year, in 1571.
-Another keepership, that of the Bears, was held in 1599 by Jacob Meade,
-who was closely associated with Henslowe and Alleyn in the management
-of the Bear garden.<a id="FNanchor_1363" href="#Footnote_1363" class="fnanchor">[1363]</a> Dorrington’s grant was confirmed by James
-I on 14 July 1603, and on 23 July he was knighted.<a id="FNanchor_1364" href="#Footnote_1364" class="fnanchor">[1364]</a> About this
-time Henslowe and Alleyn, who were paying Dorrington £40 a year for
-licence to bait,<a id="FNanchor_1365" href="#Footnote_1365" class="fnanchor">[1365]</a> must have contemplated fresh negotiations for
-a transfer of the patent, for the draft in the Dulwich manuscripts,
-originally drawn up about 1597, has been altered by Henslowe so as
-to adapt it to the new reign and to a surrender by Dorrington.<a id="FNanchor_1366" href="#Footnote_1366" class="fnanchor">[1366]</a>
-But once again they were unsuccessful, for Dorrington died, and on 20
-July 1604 the Mastership was granted to one of the invading Scots,
-Sir William Stuart.<a id="FNanchor_1367" href="#Footnote_1367" class="fnanchor">[1367]</a> From him, however, Henslowe and Alleyn
-did succeed in obtaining an assignment, and a draft patent as joint
-Masters and Keepers, with the fees of 10<i>d.</i> and 4<i>d.</i>, is
-dated 24 November 1604. They had, indeed, been rather in Stuart’s
-hands, for he had refused either to give them a licence or to take
-over their house and bears, and they had to pay for the surrender at
-what they considered the high rate of £450.<a id="FNanchor_1368" href="#Footnote_1368" class="fnanchor">[1368]</a> This we learn from
-a petition of about 1607, in which they appealed to the King for an
-increase in the daily fee by 2<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, in view of their
-losses through restraints and the deaths of bears, and of their heavy
-expenses, amounting to £200 a month, whereby their privilege, which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_453">[453]</span>
-was once worth £100 a year, could now not be let at all.<a id="FNanchor_1369" href="#Footnote_1369" class="fnanchor">[1369]</a> It is
-doubtful whether they got any relief. They had a new patent on 24
-November 1608;<a id="FNanchor_1370" href="#Footnote_1370" class="fnanchor">[1370]</a> but about 1612 they sent up another petition in
-very similar terms. A grant of £42 10<i>s.</i> and 12<i>d.</i> a day
-had, indeed, been made them in March 1611 for keeping a lion and two
-white bears. But this was probably menagerie work and quite apart from
-the baiting. They continued as joint Masters until Henslowe’s death in
-1616, when the whole office passed to Alleyn in survivorship.<a id="FNanchor_1371" href="#Footnote_1371" class="fnanchor">[1371]</a></p>
-
-<p>When baiting seemed desirable to the soul of the sovereign, the ‘game’
-was generally brought to the Court, wherever the Court might happen to
-be.<a id="FNanchor_1372" href="#Footnote_1372" class="fnanchor">[1372]</a> The rewards of the Treasurer of the Chamber were most often
-for attendances in the Christmas holidays or at Whitsuntide. But the
-game might be called for at any time to add lustre to the entertainment
-of an ambassador or other distinguished visitor to Court. Thus on 25
-May 1559 French ambassadors dined with Elizabeth, ‘and after dener to
-bear and bull baytyng, and the Quens grace and the embassadurs stod in
-the galere lokyng of the pastym tyll vj at nyght’.<a id="FNanchor_1373" href="#Footnote_1373" class="fnanchor">[1373]</a> Later French
-embassies of 1561, 1572, 1581, and 1599, and a Danish embassy of 1586
-were similarly honoured.<a id="FNanchor_1374" href="#Footnote_1374" class="fnanchor">[1374]</a> The custom continued during the next
-reign. On 19 August 1604 there was a grand banquet at Whitehall for
-Juan Fernandez de Velasco, Constable of Castile, on the completion of
-peace between England and Spain, and thereafter a ball, and after the
-ball ‘all then took<span class="pagenum" id="Page_454">[454]</span> their places at the windows of the room which
-looked out upon a square, where a platform was raised, and a vast
-crowd had assembled to see the King’s bears fight with greyhounds.
-This afforded great amusement. Presently a bull, tied to the end of a
-rope, was fiercely baited by dogs.’<a id="FNanchor_1375" href="#Footnote_1375" class="fnanchor">[1375]</a> James had introduced a new
-and dangerous element into the sport by using the lions which were
-kept in the Tower, and this also became the scene of baitings. On 5
-March 1607 the Treasurer of the Chamber paid Henslowe and Alleyn no
-less than £30, partly for attendances with the game at Greenwich during
-the visit of the King of Denmark and at Whitehall during that of the
-Prince de Joinville, and partly for baiting of the lions in the Tower
-on three several occasions.<a id="FNanchor_1376" href="#Footnote_1376" class="fnanchor">[1376]</a> Stowe gives detailed descriptions
-of lion-baitings in 1604, 1605, 1609, and 1610, of which the first
-is interesting, because it was under the personal superintendence of
-Edward Alleyn, ‘now sworne the Princes man and Maister of the Beare
-Garden’.<a id="FNanchor_1377" href="#Footnote_1377" class="fnanchor">[1377]</a></p>
-
-<p>But the profit of the thing, from the point of view of the Master of
-the Game, was not so much in the attendances at Court, as in the public
-baitings, which he and those holding licences from him were privileged
-to give with the bears and dogs, ‘taken up’ by virtue of the commission
-or bought at their own expense, during such times as these were not
-required for the royal service. These public spectacles were held at
-what was known as the Bear Garden, under conditions much resembling
-those of a theatre. They played a considerable part in the life of
-London; literature is full of allusions to them; and they are described
-with more or less detail in the narratives of many travellers from
-abroad. An early account is that from the Spanish of a secretary to
-the Duke of Najera, who visited Henry VIII in 1544.<a id="FNanchor_1378" href="#Footnote_1378" class="fnanchor">[1378]</a> He describes
-the bears as baited daily, with three or four dogs to each bear, in an
-enclosure where they were tied with ropes, and adds:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Into the same place they brought a pony with an ape fastened on
-its back, and to see the animal kicking amongst the dogs, with
-the screams of the ape, beholding the curs hanging from the ears
-and neck of the pony, is very laughable.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In 1559 the same French ambassadors, who saw the baiting
-at Whitehall, were taken on the following day to Paris Garden, and
-‘ther was boyth bare and bull baytyng, and the capten with a c. of the
-gard to kepe rowme for them to see the baytyng’.<a id="FNanchor_1379" href="#Footnote_1379" class="fnanchor">[1379]</a> The next notice
-of any value is that of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_455">[455]</span> Lupold von Wedel, who was at Southwark on 23
-August 1584.<a id="FNanchor_1380" href="#Footnote_1380" class="fnanchor">[1380]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘There is a round building three stories high, in which are
-kept about a hundred large English dogs, with separate wooden
-kennels for each of them. These dogs were made to fight singly
-with three bears, the second bear being larger than the first
-and the third larger than the second. After this a horse was
-brought in and chased by the dogs, and at last a bull, who
-defended himself bravely. The next was that a number of men
-and women came forward from a separate compartment, dancing,
-conversing and fighting with each other: also a man who threw
-some white bread among the crowd, that scrambled for it. Right
-over the middle of the place a rose was fixed, this rose being
-set on fire by a rocket: suddenly lots of apples and pears fell
-out of it down upon the people standing below. Whilst the people
-were scrambling for the apples, some rockets were made to fall
-down upon them out of the rose, which caused a great fright but
-amused the spectators. After this, rockets and other fireworks
-came flying out of all corners, and that was the end of the
-play.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It is interesting to observe that the baiting proper
-was supplemented with fireworks and an entertainment, which must have
-been of the nature of a jig.<a id="FNanchor_1381" href="#Footnote_1381" class="fnanchor">[1381]</a> The visit of Frederick, Duke of
-Württemberg, on 1 September 1592, is also recorded by his secretary,
-who says:<a id="FNanchor_1382" href="#Footnote_1382" class="fnanchor">[1382]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘His Highness was shown in London the English dogs, of which
-there were about 120, all kept in the same enclosure, but each
-in a separate kennel. In order to gratify his Highness, and at
-his desire, two bears and a bull were baited; at such times you
-can perceive the breed and mettle of the dogs, for although they
-receive serious injuries from the bears, are caught by the horns
-of the bull, and tossed into the air so as frequently to fall
-down again upon the horns, they do not give in, so that one is
-obliged to pull them back by their tails, and force open their
-jaws. Four dogs at once were set on the bull; they, however,
-could not gain any advantage over him, for he so artfully
-contrived to ward off their attacks that they could not well get
-at him; on the contrary, the bull served them very scurvily by
-striking and butting at them.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_456">[456]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p-left">De Witt briefly notices the ‘amphitheatrum’ of the Bear Garden in 1596.
-He says:<a id="FNanchor_1383" href="#Footnote_1383" class="fnanchor">[1383]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Est etiam quintum sed dispari [vsu?] et structura, bestiarum
-concertationi destinatum, in quo multi vrsi, tauri, et stupendae
-magnitudinis canes discretis caueis et septis aluntur, qui
-ad pugnam adseruantur, iocundissimum hominibus spectaculum
-praebentes.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Hentzner, who visited London in the autumn of 1598, says:<a id="FNanchor_1384" href="#Footnote_1384" class="fnanchor">[1384]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Est et alius postea locus Theatri quoque formam habens,
-Ursorum &amp; Taurorum venationibus destinatus, qui à postica parte
-alligati à magnis illis canibus &amp; molossis Anglicis, quos lingua
-vernacula Docken appellant, mire exagitantur, ita tamen, ut
-saepe canes isti ab Ursis vel Tauris, dentibus arrepti, vel
-cornibus impetiti, de vita periclitari, aliquando etiam animam
-exhalare soleant, quibus sic vel sauciis vel lassis statim
-substituuntur alii recentes &amp; magis alacres. Accedit aliquando
-in fine hujus spectaculi Ursi plane excaecati flagellatio, ubi
-quinque, vel sex, in circulo constituti, Ursum flagellis misere
-excipiunt, qui licet alligatus auffugere nequeat, alacriter
-tamen se defendit, circumstantes, &amp; nimium appropinquantes, nisi
-recte &amp; provide sibi caveant, prosternit, ac flagella e manibus
-cadentium eripit atque confringit.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>To 1599 belongs the account of Thomas Platter of Basle:<a id="FNanchor_1385" href="#Footnote_1385" class="fnanchor">[1385]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The London bearbaitings usually take place every Sunday and
-Wednesday, across the water. The play house is built in circular
-form; above are a number of seated galleries; the ground space
-under the open sky is unoccupied. In the midst of this a great
-bear is fastened to a stake by a long rope. When we came down
-the stairs, we went behind the play house, and saw the English
-dogs, of which there were about 120 chained up, each in his
-separate kennel, in a yard.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Platter also describes the actual baiting of the bull
-and bear and of the blind bear, much as did his predecessors. On 7
-September 1601 the Duc de Biron was taken to the Bear Garden, as
-one of the sights of London, by no less a cicerone than Sir Walter
-Raleigh.<a id="FNanchor_1386" href="#Footnote_1386" class="fnanchor">[1386]</a> A visit of 16 September 1602 is described in the diary
-of Philip Julius, Duke of Stettin in Pomerania.<a id="FNanchor_1387" href="#Footnote_1387" class="fnanchor">[1387]</a> The vogue of the
-Bear Garden amongst foreigners<span class="pagenum" id="Page_457">[457]</span> evidently lasted into James’s reign,
-but the notices are briefer. Lewis Frederick of Württemberg, saw on 26
-April 1610 the baiting both of bears and bulls ‘and monkeys that ride
-on horseback’;<a id="FNanchor_1388" href="#Footnote_1388" class="fnanchor">[1388]</a> and Justus Zingerling of Thuringia, who was in
-London about the same year, mentions the ‘<i>theatra comoedorum</i>,
-in which bears and bulls fight with dogs’.<a id="FNanchor_1389" href="#Footnote_1389" class="fnanchor">[1389]</a> Even more summary
-is the reference in an itinerary of Prince Otto von Hesse-Cassel in
-1611.<a id="FNanchor_1390" href="#Footnote_1390" class="fnanchor">[1390]</a> But the extracts given sufficiently describe the nature
-of the sport, and show that bulls continued to be baited up to a
-late date, as well as bears, and that the serious business of the
-spectacle was diversified by regular humorous episodes, such as the
-monkey on horseback and the whipping of the blind bear. He, by the
-way, was called Harry Hunks, and is named by Sir John Davies in his
-<i>Epigrams</i><a id="FNanchor_1391" href="#Footnote_1391" class="fnanchor">[1391]</a> of <i>c.</i> 1594, in company with the Sackerson
-who gave rise to a boast on the part of Master Slender,<a id="FNanchor_1392" href="#Footnote_1392" class="fnanchor">[1392]</a> and at a
-later date by Dekker<a id="FNanchor_1393" href="#Footnote_1393" class="fnanchor">[1393]</a> and Henry Peacham.<a id="FNanchor_1394" href="#Footnote_1394" class="fnanchor">[1394]</a> Two other famous
-bears were Ned Whiting and George Stone. Both are alluded to in Ben
-Jonson’s <i>Epicoene</i> (1609),<a id="FNanchor_1395" href="#Footnote_1395" class="fnanchor">[1395]</a> and the latter also in <i>The
-Puritan</i> (1607).<a id="FNanchor_1396" href="#Footnote_1396" class="fnanchor">[1396]</a> The death of the ‘goodlye<span class="pagenum" id="Page_458">[458]</span> beare’ George
-Stone at a baiting before the King of Denmark in 1606 is lamented in
-the petition of Henslowe and Alleyn to the King for increased fees
-already described. One other interesting notice of the sport may be
-added from the Dulwich collection, and that is an advertisement or
-‘bill’ of the entertainment, which runs as follows:</p>
-
-
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Tomorrowe beinge Thursdaie shalbe seen at the Beargardin on the
-banckside a greate mach plaid by the gamstirs of Essex who hath
-chalenged all comers what soeuer to plaie v dogges at the single
-beare for v pounds and also to wearie a bull dead at the stake
-and for your better content shall haue plasant sport with the
-horse and ape and whiping of the blind beare. Viuat Rex.’<a id="FNanchor_1397" href="#Footnote_1397" class="fnanchor">[1397]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Where then was the Bear Garden? This is a point upon which the foreign
-visitors are not very explicit. From them we could infer little more
-than that it was transpontine. It has already been pointed out that
-in official documents, at any rate those of a less formal character
-than a patent under the great seal, the Mastership is described
-as the Mastership of the Game of, or at, Paris Garden. With this
-common parlance agrees.<a id="FNanchor_1398" href="#Footnote_1398" class="fnanchor">[1398]</a> In the allusions of the pamphleteers
-and poets, from the middle of the sixteenth to the middle of the
-seventeenth century, Paris or Parish Garden is regularly the place of
-baiting.<a id="FNanchor_1399" href="#Footnote_1399" class="fnanchor">[1399]</a> ‘The Beare-garden, commonly called Paris Garden’, says
-Stowe, speaking of 1583.<a id="FNanchor_1400" href="#Footnote_1400" class="fnanchor">[1400]</a> At Paris Garden, or as it is sometimes
-corruptly spelt, ‘Pallas Garden’, Henslowe and Alleyn have their office
-as Masters<a id="FNanchor_1401" href="#Footnote_1401" class="fnanchor">[1401]</a> in 1607, and near it Alleyn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_459">[459]</span> is living in 1609. Now
-the Liberty and Manor of Paris Garden is a quite well defined part of
-the Bankside. It lay at the extreme west end, bordering upon Lambeth
-Marsh, with the Clink upon its east. In it stood from about 1595 the
-most westerly of the theatres, the Swan.<a id="FNanchor_1402" href="#Footnote_1402" class="fnanchor">[1402]</a> Historians of Southwark
-are fond of suggesting that it had been the abode of the bears from
-an almost immemorial antiquity, and follow a late edition of Blount’s
-seventeenth-century <i>Glossographia</i> in connecting it with the
-<i>domus</i> of a certain Robert de Parys, near which the butchers
-of London were ordered to throw their garbage in 1393.<a id="FNanchor_1403" href="#Footnote_1403" class="fnanchor">[1403]</a> I think
-the idea is that the garbage was found useful for feeding the bears.
-This theory I believe to be as much a myth as Taylor the water-poet’s
-derivation of the name from Paris, son of Priam. Parish, rather than
-Paris Garden, seems, in fact, to be the earlier form, although there
-is nothing in the history of the place that very particularly explains
-it.<a id="FNanchor_1404" href="#Footnote_1404" class="fnanchor">[1404]</a> Many residents in London were of course ‘de Parys’ in the
-fourteenth century, and the <i>domus</i> of the Robert in question, who
-lived some time after the first mention of ‘Parish’ Garden, was pretty
-clearly on the City and not the Surrey side of the river.<a id="FNanchor_1405" href="#Footnote_1405" class="fnanchor">[1405]</a> It is,
-however, the case that before the Civil War the Butchers’ Company had
-been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_460">[460]</span> accustomed to send their offal by a beadle to ‘two barrow houses,
-conveniently placed on the river side, for the provision and feeding
-of the King’s Game of Bears’, and were directed to resume the practice
-after the Restoration; and possibly this is what misled Blount.<a id="FNanchor_1406" href="#Footnote_1406" class="fnanchor">[1406]</a>
-Obviously, however, what the butchers did in the seventeenth century
-is no proof of what they did in the fourteenth. And, in fact, the
-ordinance of 1393 is explicit in its direction that the offal is
-ultimately to be, not devoured by bears, but cast into mid-stream.</p>
-
-<p>There is in fact nothing, so far as I know, to locate the royal Game on
-the Bankside at all until the middle of the sixteenth century, when it
-was already hard by the stews in the Liberty of the Clink, and still
-less, except the persistence of the name, to locate it definitely in
-the Liberty of Paris Garden.<a id="FNanchor_1407" href="#Footnote_1407" class="fnanchor">[1407]</a> The notice which brings Paris Garden
-nearest is in Foxe’s <i>Book of Martyrs</i>, which contains an account
-of an adventure of one Ralph Morice, secretary to Cranmer, who was
-foolish enough to take a book of his master’s, containing criticisms
-of the Six Articles, in a wherry from Westminster Bridge to Paul’s
-Wharf. It chanced that Henry VIII ‘was then in his barge with a great
-number of barges and boats about him, then baiting of bears in the
-water, over against the Bank’. The waterman stopped to see the fun, and
-the bear broke loose, and climbed into the wherry, which upset. The
-dangerous book fell into the Thames and was picked up by the bearward,
-who was the Lady Elizabeth’s bearward and ‘an arrant Papist’. It was
-only through the good offices of Cromwell that Morice escaped serious
-trouble. This was about July 1539.<a id="FNanchor_1408" href="#Footnote_1408" class="fnanchor">[1408]</a> Certainly it was the custom
-from an early date to moor the King’s barge off Paris Garden.<a id="FNanchor_1409" href="#Footnote_1409" class="fnanchor">[1409]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_461">[461]</span>
-The spot was marked later by the Old Barge Stairs, which stood at
-the west end of that part of the Bank lying in front of the Garden,
-just as Paris Garden Stairs stood at its east end. But the barge was
-not necessarily at its moorings when Henry was baiting from it. Mr.
-Ordish suggests that it was the common use of Paris Garden Stairs by
-visitors to the baiting, which led to the name being transferred to
-the Bear Garden itself, without any one troubling to inquire very
-minutely whether it stood a little to the east or a little to the west
-of the landing.<a id="FNanchor_1410" href="#Footnote_1410" class="fnanchor">[1410]</a> On the whole, however, I regard it as reasonably
-probable that there was at one time a Bear Garden in the Liberty,
-which fixed the traditional name for the sport, even after it had been
-transferred farther along the Bank.<a id="FNanchor_1411" href="#Footnote_1411" class="fnanchor">[1411]</a> It may, perhaps, be a slight
-confirmation of this view that the 1627 survey of Paris Garden shows a
-space, apparently laid out as a garden and arranged as a circle within
-a square, which may represent the site. It stands nearly opposite Paris
-Garden Stairs in a triangular bit of ground between Holland Street
-and the lane leading to Copt Hall. This seems to have been rather a
-desolate region in Elizabeth’s reign, at any rate when you got beyond
-the row of houses which lined the bank.<a id="FNanchor_1412" href="#Footnote_1412" class="fnanchor">[1412]</a> If there was a Bear
-Garden there, it had clearly been abandoned some little time before
-1546, as the Stews were then ‘the accustomed place’. Somewhat later,
-the maps of Höfnagel (<i>c.</i> 1560) and Agas (<i>c.</i> 1570) show,
-in addition to the Bull ring already mentioned, another ring marked
-‘The Beare bayting’, standing immediately west of it, and like it in
-the Clink.<a id="FNanchor_1413" href="#Footnote_1413" class="fnanchor">[1413]</a> The animals at the stake are discernible in the rings,
-and to the south of each stretches a yard with a pond in the middle and
-kennelled dogs along the sides. It is in the Clink, too, that Norden
-in 1593 shows<span class="pagenum" id="Page_462">[462]</span> ‘The Beare howse’, a little west and north of ‘The play
-howse’, which is the Rose. This evidence is consistent with what little
-is upon written record about the locality of the Bear Gardens. The most
-important document is a deposition of John Taylor, not the water-poet,
-in a suit of 1620:<a id="FNanchor_1414" href="#Footnote_1414" class="fnanchor">[1414]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘He saith that he remembreth that the game of bear-bayting hath
-been kept in fower severall places (vizt.) at Mason Steares on
-the bankside; neere Maid-lane by the corner of the Pyke Garden;
-at the beare garden which was parcell of the possession of
-William Payne; and the place where they are now kept.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Taylor was then an old man of seventy-seven and his
-memory would easily go back to the time of the early maps. To his
-testimony may be added that of Stowe, who says in his <i>Survey of
-London</i> (1598):<a id="FNanchor_1415" href="#Footnote_1415" class="fnanchor">[1415]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Now to returne to the West banke, there be two Beare gardens,
-the olde and new places, wherein be kept Beares, Buls and other
-beastes to be bayted. As also Mastiues in severall kenels,
-nourished to baite them. These Beares and other Beasts are there
-bayted in plottes of ground, scaffolded about for the Beholders
-to stand safe. Next on this banke was sometime the Bordello or
-stewes.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>In his <i>Annales</i> Stowe records the fall of ‘the old and under
-propped scaffolds round about the Beare-garden, commonly called
-Paris garden’, and the consequent death of eight persons, at 4 p.m.
-on Sunday, 13 January 1583. It was, he says, ‘a friendly warning to
-such as more delight themselves in the cruelty of beasts, than in the
-works of mercy, the fruits of a true professed faith, which ought to
-be the Sabbath day’s exercise’.<a id="FNanchor_1416" href="#Footnote_1416" class="fnanchor">[1416]</a> Dr. Dee also noted the accident
-in his diary, and it was reported to Burghley on the next day by the
-Lord Mayor and on 19 January by Recorder Fleetwood.<a id="FNanchor_1417" href="#Footnote_1417" class="fnanchor">[1417]</a> Both of
-these adopt the view expressed by Stowe that it must be regarded as
-divine punishment for the violation of the Sabbath, and Fleetwood
-refers to ‘a booke sett downe vpon the same matter’, which may be
-John Field’s <i>Godly Exhortation by Occasion of the late Judgment of
-God showed at Paris Garden</i>. The shrewd irony of Sir Thomas More,
-upon a similar event,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_463">[463]</span> when it was the church that fell, many years
-before at Beverley, found little echo in the mind of the Elizabethan
-Puritan.<a id="FNanchor_1418" href="#Footnote_1418" class="fnanchor">[1418]</a> A further letter from the Lord Mayor to the Privy
-Council on 3 July 1583 states that by then the Paris Garden scaffolds
-were ‘new builded’.<a id="FNanchor_1419" href="#Footnote_1419" class="fnanchor">[1419]</a></p>
-
-<p>I find it very difficult to say which of the numerous bear gardens
-mentioned by Taylor and Stowe was in use at any given time. Mr. Rendle
-thought that Taylor’s first two, that at Mason Stairs and that at the
-corner of the Pike Garden, were the two shown as ‘The bolle bayting’
-and ‘The Bearebayting’ by Agas.<a id="FNanchor_1420" href="#Footnote_1420" class="fnanchor">[1420]</a> If so, they are quite out of
-scale. This is likely, since they are drawn large enough to show the
-animals. They are shown east and west of each other. Rendle puts the
-Pike Garden due south of Mason Stairs, but it clearly extended more to
-the east in 1587. In any case both these earlier sites were farther
-to the west of the Clink than the Hope. Where then was the place on
-William Payne’s ground? Mr. Rendle, after a careful comparison of
-Rocque’s map of 1746 and other later maps, puts it at ‘the north
-courtelage in the lane known as the Bear Garden’ and the Hope at the
-south courtelage in the same lane.<a id="FNanchor_1421" href="#Footnote_1421" class="fnanchor">[1421]</a> I take him to mean that the
-Bear Garden on Payne’s ground was that in use until 1613, and that
-the Hope was built a little to the south of it. The terms of the
-contract with Katherens, however, suggest that the same or practically
-the same site was used. Mr. Rendle adds that ‘William Payne’s place
-next the Thames can be traced back into the possession of John Allen,
-until it came down to Edward Alleyn, and was sold by him at a large
-profit to Henslowe; the same for which Morgan Pope in 1586 paid to
-the Vestry of St. Saviour’s “6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> by the year for
-tithes”.’<a id="FNanchor_1422" href="#Footnote_1422" class="fnanchor">[1422]</a> This I cannot quite follow. There seem to have been
-two properties standing respectively next and next but one on the
-west to the ‘little Rose’. Next the Rose stood messuages called The
-Barge, Bell and Cock.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_464">[464]</span> They were leased by the Bishop of Winchester to
-William Payne in 1540. His widow Joan Payne assigned them to John White
-and John Malthouse on 1 August 1582, and White’s moiety was assigned
-to Malthouse on 5 February 1589.<a id="FNanchor_1423" href="#Footnote_1423" class="fnanchor">[1423]</a> From him Henslowe bought the
-lease in 1593–4.<a id="FNanchor_1424" href="#Footnote_1424" class="fnanchor">[1424]</a> The tenements upon it were in his hands as ‘Mr.
-Malthowes rentes’ in 1603 and Alleyn was living in one of them.<a id="FNanchor_1425" href="#Footnote_1425" class="fnanchor">[1425]</a>
-And the lease of the Barge, Bell and Cock passed to Alleyn and was
-assigned by his will towards the settlement of his second or third
-wife, Constance, daughter of Dean Donne.’<a id="FNanchor_1426" href="#Footnote_1426" class="fnanchor">[1426]</a> To the west of this
-property in 1540 was a tenement once held by the prioress of Stratford.
-This passed to the Crown, and then to Thomas and Isabella Keyes under
-a Crown lease which was in Henslowe’s hands by 1597. Some notes of
-deeds&mdash;leases, deputations, bonds&mdash;concerning the Bear Garden were left
-by Alleyn. Four of the deeds have since been found by Mr. Kingsford
-in the Record Office. It appears that, before Henslowe, both Pope and
-Burnaby had some of the Keyes land on a sub-lease, and that Burnaby
-probably had the Keyes lease itself. Payne carried on baiting in a ring
-just south of the Barge. The site was called Orchard Court in 1620,
-and stood north of the Hope. This agrees with the relation suggested
-by Mr. Rendle between the two courtelages’. The object of the suit of
-1620 was to determine whether the Hope also stood upon episcopal, or
-upon Crown land. Taylor’s testimony was ambiguous. But it follows that
-the transfer southwards must have been due to a tenant who held under
-both leases. It was suggested in 1620 that Pope rebuilt the scaffold
-standings round the ring as galleries with a larger circuit. This was
-doubtless after the ruin of 1583. Nothing is said of a change of site
-at this time. Moreover, both Pope and Burnaby seem to have used the
-site of the Hope and its bull-house as a dog-yard. Probably, therefore,
-the change was made by Henslowe and Alleyn.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_465">[465]</span> Alleyn left a record of
-‘what the Bear garden cost me for my owne part in December 1594’. He
-paid £200 to Burnaby, perhaps only for a joint interest with Henslowe
-or Jacob Meade, and £250 for the ‘patten’, that is, I suppose, the
-Mastership bought from Sir William Stuart in 1604. He held his interest
-for sixteen years and received £60 a year, and then sold it to ‘my
-father Hinchloe’ for £580 in February 1611.<a id="FNanchor_1427" href="#Footnote_1427" class="fnanchor">[1427]</a> There must have been
-considerable outgoings on the structure during this period. Another
-memorandum in Alleyn’s hand shows an expenditure of £486 4<i>s.</i>
-10<i>d.</i> during 1602–5, and a further expenditure during 1606–8 of
-£360 ‘p<sup>d</sup>. for ye building of the howses’.<a id="FNanchor_1428" href="#Footnote_1428" class="fnanchor">[1428]</a> This last doubtless
-refers in part, not to the baiting ring itself, but to a tavern and
-office built on ‘the foreside of the messuage or tenemente called the
-Beare garden, next the river of Thames in the parish of St. Saviors’,
-for which there exists a contract of 2 June 1606 between Henslowe and
-Alleyn and Peter Street the carpenter.<a id="FNanchor_1429" href="#Footnote_1429" class="fnanchor">[1429]</a> But this only cost £65,
-and it seems to me most likely that the Bear Garden was rebuilt on the
-southern site at the same time. Further light is thrown on the profits
-of the Bear Garden by a note in Henslowe’s diary that the receipts at
-it for the three days next after Christmas 1608 were £4, £6, and £3
-14<i>s.</i>, which may be compared with the average of £1 18<i>s.</i>
-3<i>d.</i> received from the Fortune during the same three days.<a id="FNanchor_1430" href="#Footnote_1430" class="fnanchor">[1430]</a>
-It may be added that Crowley notes the ‘bearwardes vaile’ somewhat
-ambiguously as ½<i>d.</i>, 1<i>d.</i>, or 2<i>d.</i>,<a id="FNanchor_1431" href="#Footnote_1431" class="fnanchor">[1431]</a> and that
-Lambarde in 1596 includes Paris Garden with the Theatre and Bel Savage
-as a place where you must pay ‘one pennie at the gate, another at the
-entrie of the scaffolde, and the thirde for a quiet standinge’.<a id="FNanchor_1432" href="#Footnote_1432" class="fnanchor">[1432]</a></p>
-
-<p>Yet another building enterprise was undertaken in 1613, by which time
-an interest in the property had certainly been leased to Jacob Meade.
-On 29 August a contract was entered into between Henslowe and Meade and
-Gilbert Katherens, carpenter, for the pulling down of the Bear Garden
-and the erection before the following 30 November<span class="pagenum" id="Page_466">[466]</span> on or near the same
-site of a play-house on the model of the Swan, but with a movable
-stage, so as to enable the building to be used also for baitings. I
-reproduce the document here from Dr. Greg’s text:<a id="FNanchor_1433" href="#Footnote_1433" class="fnanchor">[1433]</a></p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Articles, Covenauntes, grauntes, and agreementes, Concluded and
-agreed vppon this Nyne and Twenteithe daie of Auguste, Anno
-Domini 1613, Betwene Phillipe Henslowe of the parishe of S<sup>t</sup>
-Saviour in Sowthworke within the countye of Surrey, Esquire,
-and Jacobe Maide of the parishe of S<sup>t</sup> Olaves in Sowthworke
-aforesaide, waterman, of thone partie, And Gilbert Katherens of
-the saide parishe of S<sup>t</sup> Saviour in Sowthworke, Carpenter, on
-thother partie, As followeth, That is to saie&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Inprimis the saide Gilbert Katherens for him, his executours,
-administratours, and assignes, dothe convenaunt, promise, and
-graunt to and with the saide Phillipe Henslowe and Jacobe Maide
-and either of them, thexecutors, administratours, &amp; assigns of
-them and either of them, by theise presentes in manner and forme
-following: That he the saied Gilbert Katherens, his executours,
-administratours, or assignes shall and will, at his or theire
-owne proper costes and charges, vppon or before the last daie of
-November next ensuinge the daie of the date of theise presentes
-above written, not onlie take downe or pull downe all that same
-place or house wherin Beares and Bulls haue been heretofore
-vsuallie bayted, and also one other house or staple wherin Bulls
-and horsses did vsuallie stande, sett, lyinge, and beinge vppon
-or neere the Banksyde in the saide parishe of S<sup>t</sup> Saviour in
-Sowthworke, comonlie called or knowne by the name of the Beare
-garden, but shall also at his or theire owne proper costes and
-charges vppon or before the saide laste daie of November newly
-erect, builde, and sett vpp one other same place or Plaiehouse
-fitt &amp; convenient in all thinges, bothe for players to playe
-in, and for the game of Beares and Bulls to be bayted in the
-same, and also a fitt and convenient Tyre house and a stage to
-be carryed or taken awaie, and to stande vppon tressells good,
-substanciall, and sufficient for the carryinge and bearinge of
-suche a stage; And shall new builde, erect, and sett vp againe
-the saide plaie house or game place neere or vppon the saide
-place, where the saide game place did heretofore stande; And to
-builde the same of suche large compasse, fforme, widenes, and
-height as the Plaie house called the Swan in the libertie of
-Parris garden in the saide parishe of S<sup>t</sup> Saviour now is; And
-shall also builde two stearecasses without and adioyninge to the
-saide Playe house in suche convenient places, as shalbe moste
-fitt and convenient for the same to stande vppon, and of such
-largnes and height as the stearecasses of the saide playehouse
-called the Swan nowe are or bee; And shall also builde the
-Heavens all over the saide stage, to be borne or carryed without
-any postes or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_467">[467]</span> supporters to be fixed or sett vppon the saide
-stage, and all gutters of leade needfull for the carryage of
-all suche raine water as shall fall vppon the same; And shall
-also make two Boxes in the lowermost storie fitt and decent for
-gentlemen to sitt in; And shall make the particions betwne the
-Rommes as they are at the saide Plaie house called the Swan;
-And to make turned cullumes vppon and over the stage; And shall
-make the principalls and fore fronte of the saide Plaie house of
-good and sufficient oken tymber, and no furr tymber to be putt
-or vsed in the lower most, or midell stories, except the vpright
-postes on the backparte of the saide stories (all the byndinge
-joystes to be of oken tymber); The inner principall postes of
-the first storie to be twelve footes in height and tenn ynches
-square, the inner principall postes in the midell storie to be
-eight ynches square, the inner most postes in the vpper storie
-to be seaven ynches square; The prick postes in the first storie
-to be eight ynches square, in the seconde storie seaven ynches
-square, and in the vpper most storie six ynches square; Also
-the brest sommers in the lower moste storie to be nyne ynches
-depe, and seaven ynches in thicknes, and in the midell storie to
-be eight ynches depe and six ynches in thicknes; The byndinge
-jostes of the firste storie to be nyne and eight ynches in
-depthe and thicknes, and in the midell storie to be viij and
-vij ynches in depthe and thicknes. Item to make a good, sure,
-and sufficient foundacion of brickes for the saide Play house
-or game place, and to make it xiij<sup>teene</sup> ynches at the leaste
-above the grounde. Item to new builde, erect, and sett vpp the
-saide Bull house and stable with good and sufficient scantlinge
-tymber, plankes, and bordes, and particions of that largnes and
-fittnes as shalbe sufficient to kepe and holde six bulls and
-three horsses or geldinges, with rackes and mangers to the same,
-and also a lofte or storie over the saide house as nowe it is.
-And shall also at his &amp; theire owne proper costes and charges
-new tyle with Englishe tyles all the vpper rooffe of the saide
-Plaie house, game place, and Bull house or stable, and shall
-fynde and paie for at his like proper costes and charges for
-all the lyme, heare, sande, brickes, tyles, lathes, nayles,
-workemanshipe and all other thinges needfull and necessarie for
-the full finishinge of the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and
-stable; And the saide Plaiehouse or game place to be made in
-althinges and in suche forme and fashion, as the saide plaie
-house called the Swan (the scantling of the tymbers, tyles,
-and foundacion as ys aforesaide without fraude or coven). And
-the saide Phillipe Henslow and Jacobe Maide and either of
-them for them, thexecutors, administratours, and assignes of
-them and either of them, doe covenant and graunt to and with
-the saide Gilbert Katherens, his executours, administratours,
-and assignes in manner and forme followinge (That is to saie)
-That he the saide Gilbert or his assignes shall or maie haue,
-and take to his or theire vse and behoofe, not onlie all the
-tymber, benches, seates, slates, tyles, brickes, and all other
-thinges belonginge to the saide Game place &amp; Bull house or
-stable, and also all suche olde tymber whiche the saide Phillipe
-Henslow hathe latelie bought, beinge of an old house in Thames
-street, London, whereof moste parte is now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_468">[468]</span> lyinge in the yarde
-or backsyde of the saide Beare-garden; And also to satisfie
-and paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens, his executors,
-administratours, or assignes for the doinge and finishinges of
-the workes and buildinges aforesaid the somme of Three Hundered
-and three score poundes of good and lawffull monie of England,
-in manner and forme followinge (That is to saie) In hande at
-thensealinge and delivery hereof, Three score pounds which
-the saide Gilbert acknowlegeth him selfe by theise presentes
-to haue receaued; And more over to paie every weeke weeklie,
-duringe the firste six weekes, vnto the saide Gilbert or his
-assignes, when he shall sett workemen to worke vppon or about
-the buildinge of the premisses the somme of Tenne poundes of
-lawffull monie of Englande to paie them there wages (yf theire
-wages dothe amount vnto somuche monie); And when the saide plaie
-house, Bull house, and stable are reared, then to make vpp the
-saide wages one hundered poundes of lawffull monie of England,
-and to be paide to the saide Gilbert or his assignes; And when
-the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and stable are Reared,
-tyled, walled, then to paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens
-or his assignes one other hundered poundes of lawffull monie
-of England; And when the saide Plaie house, Bull house, and
-stable are fullie finished, builded, and done in manner and
-forme aforesaide, then to paie vnto the saide Gilbert Katherens
-or his assignes one other hundred Poundes of lawffull monie of
-England in full satisfacion and payment of the saide somme of
-CCClx<sup>li</sup>. And to all and singuler the covenantes, grauntes,
-articles, and agreementes above in theise presentes contayned,
-whiche on the parte and behalfe of the saide Gilbert Katherens,
-his executours, administratours, or assignes are ought to be
-observed, performed, fulfilled, and done, the saide Gilbert
-Katherens byndeth himselfe, his executours, administratours, and
-assignes vnto the saide Phillipe Henslowe and Jacob Maide and to
-either of them, thexecutours, administratours, and assignes of
-them or either of them, by theise presentes. In witnes whereof
-the saide Gilbert Katherens hath herevnto sett his hande and
-seale, the daie and yere firste above written</p>
-
-<p class="right">The mark G K of Gilbert Katherens</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">Sealed and Delivered in the presence of</p>
-
-<p class="p-left">witnes Moyses Bowler<br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.8em">Edwarde Griffin</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The execution of the contract must have been delayed,
-for the rebuilt Bear Garden is fairly to be identified with the Hope,
-of which no mention is made in the petition of the spring of 1614
-described by Taylor in <i>The True Cause of the Watermen’s Suit</i>,
-although it had certainly come into use by the following autumn.<a id="FNanchor_1434" href="#Footnote_1434" class="fnanchor">[1434]</a>
-Here was arranged for 7 October a trial of wit between this same Taylor
-and the shifty rhymer William<span class="pagenum" id="Page_469">[469]</span> Fennor.<a id="FNanchor_1435" href="#Footnote_1435" class="fnanchor">[1435]</a> The latter failed to turn
-up, and Taylor, who, according to his own account, had advertised ‘this
-Bear Garden banquet of dainty conceits’ and collected a great audience,
-was left ‘in a greater puzzell then the blinde beare in the midst of
-all her whip-broth’. After acting part of what he had intended, he
-resigned the stage to the regular company:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Then came the players, and they play’d an act,</div>
- <div>Which greatly from my action did detract,</div>
- <div>For ’tis not possible for any one</div>
- <div>To play against a company alone,</div>
- <div>And such a company (I’ll boldly say)</div>
- <div>That better (nor the like) e’r played a play.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This company was no doubt the Lady Elizabeth’s, as
-reconstituted in the previous March under an agreement with Nathaniel
-Field on their behalf, of which a mutilated copy exists. To it Meade
-was a party, and there is nothing to establish a connexion between
-Meade and any other theatre than the Hope.<a id="FNanchor_1436" href="#Footnote_1436" class="fnanchor">[1436]</a> Jonson names the
-Lady Elizabeth’s men as the actors of <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>, and
-in the Induction thereto, after a dialogue between the Stage-keeper,
-who is taunted with ‘gathering up the broken apples for the beares
-within’, and the Book-holder, a Scrivener reads ‘Articles of Agreement,
-indented, between the Spectators or Hearers, at the Hope on the
-Bankeside, in the County of Surrey on the one party; and the Author
-of Bartholmew Fayre in the said place, and County on the other party:
-the one and thirtieth day of Octob. 1614’. According to Jonson the
-locality was suitable for a play on Bartholomew Fair, for it was ‘as
-durty as <i>Smithfield</i>, and as stinking euery whit’.<a id="FNanchor_1437" href="#Footnote_1437" class="fnanchor">[1437]</a> There
-were disputes between Henslowe and the company, partly arising out of
-an arrangement that they should ‘lie still’ one day a fortnight for the
-baiting, and the combination broke up. Some of its members, apparently
-then Prince Charles’s men, are found after Henslowe’s death signing an
-agreement with Alleyn and Meade to play at the Hope, and to set aside
-a fourth of the gallery takings towards a sum of £200 to be accepted
-in discharge of their debt to Henslowe.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_470">[470]</span> Alleyn had of course resumed
-his part proprietorship of the house as executor and ultimate heir to
-Henslowe. Meade probably took actual charge of the theatre, and there
-is an undated letter from Prince Charles’s men to Alleyn, written
-possibly in 1617, in which they explain their removal from the Bankside
-as due to the intemperate action of his partner in taking from them
-the day which by course was theirs. I suppose that this dispute also
-was due to the competition of baiting with the plays. In 1619 some
-disputes between Alleyn and Meade had to be settled by arbitration,
-and from Alleyn’s memoranda in connexion with these it appears that
-Meade was his deputy under his patent as Master of the Game, and had
-also a lease from him of the house at £100 a year.<a id="FNanchor_1438" href="#Footnote_1438" class="fnanchor">[1438]</a> The Hope is
-mentioned from time to time, chiefly as a place of baiting, up to the
-civil wars.<a id="FNanchor_1439" href="#Footnote_1439" class="fnanchor">[1439]</a> It is one of the three Bankside theatres alluded
-to in <i>Holland’s Leaguer</i> (1632), where it is described as ‘a
-building of excellent hope’ for players, wild beasts, and gladiators.
-Bear-baiting was suppressed by the House of Commons in 1642,<a id="FNanchor_1440" href="#Footnote_1440" class="fnanchor">[1440]</a>
-and the house was dismantled in 1656. The manuscript continuation of
-Stowe’s <i>Annales</i> describes its end and the slaughter of the
-bears, but gives the date of its erection erroneously as 1610 instead
-of 1613.<a id="FNanchor_1441" href="#Footnote_1441" class="fnanchor">[1441]</a></p>
-
-<p>After the Restoration the Bear Garden was restored, and a lane called
-Bear Gardens, running from Bankside to New Park Street, and a sign
-therein of The White Bear still mark its name.<a id="FNanchor_1442" href="#Footnote_1442" class="fnanchor">[1442]</a> Its site is pretty
-well defined in the seventeenth-century maps as to the west of the
-Globe and, where that is shown, the Rose, and generally as a little
-nearer Maid Lane than the latter. This is consistent with a notice in
-the Sewers records for 5 December 1595 of a sewer which ran to the Bear
-Garden from a garden known to have lain a little farther east along
-Maid Lane than the Globe.<a id="FNanchor_1443" href="#Footnote_1443" class="fnanchor">[1443]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_471">[471]</span></p>
-
-<p>The traditional day for baiting was Sunday. Crowley in 1550 describes
-it as taking place on ‘euerye Sondaye’.<a id="FNanchor_1444" href="#Footnote_1444" class="fnanchor">[1444]</a> Naturally this did not
-pass without Puritan comment, to which point was given by the fall
-of Paris Garden on a Sunday in 1583.<a id="FNanchor_1445" href="#Footnote_1445" class="fnanchor">[1445]</a> A general prohibition of
-shows on Sunday seems to have followed, from which it is not likely
-that bear-baiting was excepted. It may be inferred that Thursday
-was substituted, for a Privy Council order of 25 July 1591 called
-attention, not only to a neglect of the rule as to Sunday, but also
-to the fact that every day ‘the players do use to recite their plays
-to the great hurt and destruction of the game of bear-baiting and
-like pastimes, which are maintained for Her Majesty’s pleasure if
-occasion require’, and forbade plays both on Sunday and on Thursday,
-on which day ‘those other games usually have been always accustomed
-and practised’.<a id="FNanchor_1446" href="#Footnote_1446" class="fnanchor">[1446]</a> Henslowe’s diary seems to show that up to 1597
-he kept the Sunday prohibition and disregarded the Thursday one,
-which is a little odd, as he was interested in the Bear Garden.
-But a proclamation of 7 May 1603 on the accession of James repeats
-the warning that there was neglect of the Sabbath, and renews the
-prohibition both for baiting and for plays.<a id="FNanchor_1447" href="#Footnote_1447" class="fnanchor">[1447]</a> Henslowe and Alleyn
-in their petition of about 1607 for increased fees lay stress on this
-restraint as a main factor in their alleged loss.<a id="FNanchor_1448" href="#Footnote_1448" class="fnanchor">[1448]</a> It seems from
-the notes of Stowe’s manuscript <i>continuator</i> that during the
-first half of the seventeenth century Tuesday and Thursday became the
-regular baiting days.<a id="FNanchor_1449" href="#Footnote_1449" class="fnanchor">[1449]</a> But the agreements made by Henslowe and
-Meade with the Lady Elizabeth’s men in 1614 profess only to reserve one
-day in fourteen for this purpose, of which apparently notice was to be
-given on the previous Monday.<a id="FNanchor_1450" href="#Footnote_1450" class="fnanchor">[1450]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_472">[472]</span></p>
-
-
-<h5>xvi. PORTER’S HALL</h5>
-
-<p>Authority was given for the erection of a new theatre by the following
-patent of 3 June 1615:<a id="FNanchor_1451" href="#Footnote_1451" class="fnanchor">[1451]</a></p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">De concessione regard Phillippo Rosseter et aliis.</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="p-left">Iames by the grace of God &amp;c. To all Maiors, Sheriffes,
-Iustices of peace, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes, and
-to all other our Officers, Ministers, and loving Subiectes,
-to whome these presentes shall come, greeting. Whereas wee by
-our letteres Patentes sealed with our great seale of England
-bearing date the ffourth day of Ianuary in the seaventh yeare
-of our Raigne of England Fraunce and Ireland and of Scotland
-the three and ffortieth for the consideracions in the same
-letteres patentes expressed did appoint and authorise Phillipp
-Rosseter and certaine others from tyme to tyme to provide,
-keepe, and bring vppe a convenient nomber of children, and them
-to practise and exercise in the quallitie of playing by the
-name of the children of the Revelles to the Queene, within the
-white ffryers in the Suburbs of our Cittie of London, or in any
-other convenient place where they the said Phillipp Rosseter
-and the rest of his partners should thinke fitting for that
-purpose, As in and by the said letteres patentes more at large
-appeareth, And whereas the said Phillipp Rosseter and the rest
-of his said partners have ever since trayned vppe and practised
-a convenient nomber of children of the Revelles for the purpose
-aforesaid in a Messuage or mansion house being parcell of
-the late dissolved Monastery called the white ffryers neere
-Fleetestreete in London, which the said Phillipp Rosseter did
-lately hold for terme of certaine yeres expired, And whereas the
-said Phillipp Rosseter, together with Phillipp Kingman, Robert
-Iones, and Raphe Reeve, to continue the said service for the
-keeping and bringing vppe of the children for the solace and
-pleasure of our said most deere wife, and the better to practise
-and exercise them in the quallitie of playing by the name of
-children of the Revelles to the Queene, have latelie taken in
-lease and farme divers buildinges, Cellers, sollars, chambers,
-and yardes for the building of a Play-house therevpon for the
-better practising and exercise of the said children of the
-Revelles, All which premisses are scituate and being within the
-Precinct of the Blacke ffryers neere Puddlewharfe in the Suburbs
-of London, called by the name of the lady Saunders house, or
-otherwise Porters hall, and now in the occupation of the said
-Robert Iones. Nowe knowe yee that wee of our especiall grace,
-certaine knowledge, and meere mocion have given and graunted,
-And by theise presentes for vs, our heires, and successors,
-doe give and graunte lycense and authoritie vnto the said
-Phillipp Rosseter, Phillipp Kingman, Robert Iones, and Raphe
-Reeve, at their proper costes and charges to erect, build, and
-sett vppe in and vppon the said premisses before mencioned one
-convenient<span class="pagenum" id="Page_473">[473]</span> Play-house for the said children of the Revelles,
-the same Play-house to be vsed by the Children of the Revelles
-for the tyme being of the Queenes Maiestie, and for the Princes
-Players, and for the ladie Elizabeths Players, soe tollerated or
-lawfully lycensed to play exercise and practise them therein,
-Any lawe, Statute, Act of Parliament, restraint, or other matter
-or thing whatsoever to the contrary notwithstanding. Willing and
-commaunding you and every of you our said Maiors, Sheriffes,
-Iustices of peace, Bayliffes, Constables, headboroughes and
-all other our officers and ministers for the tyme being, as
-yee tender our pleasure, to permitt and suffer them therein,
-without any your lettes, hinderance, molestacion, or disturbance
-whatsoever. In witnes whereof, &amp;c. Witnes our selfe at
-Westminster the third day of Iune.</p>
-
-<p class="r1 p0">per breve de priuato sigillo &amp;c.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<p class="p-left">The statements made in the patent as to the objects of
-the promoters can be confirmed from other sources. We know that the
-lease of the Whitefriars expired at the end of 1614, that there had
-been an amalgamation of the Queen’s Revels and the Lady Elizabeth’s men
-in 1613, and that in all probability this arrangement was extended to
-bring in Prince Charles’s men during 1615. Unfortunately for Rosseter
-and his associates, the patent had hardly been granted before it was
-called in question. Presumably the inhabitants of the Blackfriars,
-who had already one theatre in their midst, thought that that one was
-enough. At any rate the Corporation approached the Privy Council, and
-alleged divers inconveniences, in particular the fact that the theatre,
-which was described as ‘in Puddle Wharfe’, would ‘adjoine so neere
-vnto’ the church of St. Anne’s as to disturb the congregation.<a id="FNanchor_1452" href="#Footnote_1452" class="fnanchor">[1452]</a>
-The Council referred the patent to the Lord Chief Justice, Sir Edward
-Coke, no friend of players, or of the royal prerogative which expressed
-itself in patents; and when he found a technical flaw, in that the
-Blackfriars, having been brought within the City jurisdiction by the
-charter of 1608, was not strictly within ‘the suburbs’, ordered on
-26 September 1615 that the building, which had already been begun,
-should be discontinued. Nevertheless, the work must have gone so far
-as to permit of the production of plays, for the title-page of Field’s
-<i>Amends for Ladies</i> (1618) testifies that it was acted ‘at the
-Blacke-Fryers both by the Princes Servants and the Lady Elizabeths’.
-Moreover, on 27 January 1617 the Privy Council wrote again to the Lord
-Mayor, enjoining him to see to the suppression of a play-house in the
-Blackfriars ‘neere vnto his Majestyes Wardrobe’, which is said to be
-‘allmost if not fully finished’.<a id="FNanchor_1453" href="#Footnote_1453" class="fnanchor">[1453]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_474">[474]</span></p>
-
-<p>It does not appear possible to say exactly where in the Blackfriars’
-precinct the Porter’s Hall once occupied by Lady Saunders stood. It
-was certainly not the porter’s lodge at the north-west corner of the
-great cloister, for this was still in 1615, as it had been since 1554,
-part of the Cobham house. One Ninian Sawnders, a vintner, took a lease
-of the chancel of the old conventual church from Sir Thomas Cawarden
-in 1553, and this would have been close to St. Anne’s, which stood at
-the north-east corner of the great cloister. But Ninian died in 1553
-and never got knighted. On the other hand, the rooms on the south
-side of the great cloister, generally described as Lygon’s lodgings,
-had been in the tenure of one Nicholas Saunders shortly before their
-sale by Sir George More to John Freeman and others in 1609. Nicholas
-Saunders is said to have been knighted in 1603.<a id="FNanchor_1454" href="#Footnote_1454" class="fnanchor">[1454]</a> These lodgings
-adjoined More’s own mansion house, and might at some time have served
-as a lodge for his porter.<a id="FNanchor_1455" href="#Footnote_1455" class="fnanchor">[1455]</a> But I do not feel that they would very
-naturally be described either as ‘near’ or ‘in’ Puddle Wharf, or as
-‘near’ the Wardrobe. These indications suggest some building approached
-either from Puddle Wharf proper or from the hill, afterwards known as
-St. Andrew’s Hill, which ran up from it to the Wardrobe, outside the
-eastern wall of the Priory precinct. The Cawarden estate did not extend
-to this wall, and the Saunders family may quite well, in addition to
-Lygon’s lodgings, have had a house, either on the site of the old
-convent gardens, or higher up the hill on the Blackwell estate, near
-where Shakespeare’s house stood, and near also to St. Anne’s. Perhaps
-there had been a porter’s lodge on the east of the old prior’s house.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_475">[475]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XVII<br />
-
-THE PRIVATE THEATRES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<h5>i. THE BLACKFRIARS</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;Many documents bearing upon the
-history of the theatre are preserved at Loseley, and the most
-important are collected by Professor A. Feuillerat in vol. ii
-of the <i>Malone Society’s Collections</i> (1913). A few had
-been already printed or described by A. J. Kempe in <i>The
-Loseley Manuscripts</i> (1835), by J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps
-in <i>Outlines</i>, i. 299, by J. C. Jeaffreson in the 7th
-<i>Report of the Hist. MSS. Commission</i> (1879), by Professor
-Feuillerat himself in <i>Shakespeare-Jahrbuch</i>, xlviii
-(1912), 81, and by C. W. Wallace, with extracts from others,
-in <i>The Evolution of the English Drama up to Shakespeare</i>
-(1912, cited as Wallace, i). In the same book and in <i>The
-Children of the Chapel at Blackfriars</i> (1908, cited as
-Wallace, ii), Professor Wallace prints or extracts documents
-from other sources, chiefly lawsuits in the Court of Requests
-and elsewhere, which supplement those discovered by J.
-Greenstreet and printed in F. G. Fleay, <i>Chronicle History
-of the London Stage</i> (1890). The references to the theatre
-in J. P. Collier, <i>History of English Dramatic Poetry</i>
-(1837 and 1879), are seriously contaminated by forgeries.
-Some material for the general history of the precinct is
-furnished in the various editions of John Stowe, <i>Survey of
-London</i> (1598, 1603, ed. Munday, 1618, ed. Strype, 1720, ed.
-Kingsford, 1908), in W. Dugdale, <i>Monasticon</i> (1817–30),
-by M. Reddan in the <i>Victoria History of London</i>, i. 498,
-and in the <i>Athenaeum</i> (1886), ii. 91. A. W. Clapham,
-<i>On the Topography of the Dominican Priory of London</i>
-(<i>Archaeologia</i>, lxiii. 57), gives a valuable account of
-the history and church of the convent, but had not the advantage
-of knowing the Loseley documents, and completely distorts the
-plan of the domestic buildings and the theatre. An account by
-J. Q. Adams is in <i>S. P.</i> xiv (1917), 64. The status of
-the liberty is discussed by V. C. Gildersleeve, <i>Government
-Regulation of the Elizabethan Drama</i>, 143.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The Dominicans, also called the ‘preaching’ or ‘black’ friars, came
-to England in 1221. Their first house was in Holborn.<a id="FNanchor_1456" href="#Footnote_1456" class="fnanchor">[1456]</a> In 1275
-they acquired a site on the sloping ground between St. Paul’s and the
-river, just to the east of Fleet ditch, and obtained leave to divert
-the walls of the City so as to furnish a north and north-west boundary
-to their precinct. Here grew up a very famous convent, the motherhouse
-of all the Dominican settlements in the country. It received favours
-from several sovereigns, notably from Edward I and his Queen Eleanor,
-who were regarded as its founders; and in return held its great
-buildings available for national purposes. In 1322–3 it furnished a
-depository for state records. It housed divers parliaments, at first
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_476">[476]</span> its church and later in a great chamber which will be of singular
-interest to us, and from as early as 1311 was often found a convenient
-meeting-place for the Privy Council. In 1522 it was the lodging of the
-Emperor Charles V, and a wooden bridge and gallery were carried over
-the Fleet, to facilitate communications with his train in Bridewell
-palace. In 1529 its parliament chamber was the scene of the legatine
-sittings which tried the case of divorce between the same Emperor’s
-niece Katharine and the conscience-stricken Henry VIII.<a id="FNanchor_1457" href="#Footnote_1457" class="fnanchor">[1457]</a></p>
-
-<p>By this time the friars had ceased to be a power in the land. Those
-of the convent had numbered seventy in 1315; there were no more than
-sixteen or seventeen in 1538.<a id="FNanchor_1458" href="#Footnote_1458" class="fnanchor">[1458]</a> Parts of the buildings, now
-all too spacious, were let out as residences. It was, perhaps, the
-neighbourhood of the Wardrobe, whose Master had an official residence
-contiguous to the east wall of the precinct, which made the Blackfriars
-a favourite locality for those about the Court. A list of ‘them that
-hath lodgings within the Blak Freers’, which was drawn up in 1522,
-probably in connexion with the imperial visit, contains the names of
-Lord Zouch of Harringworth, Lord Cobham, Sir William Kingston, then
-carver and afterwards comptroller of the household, Sir Henry Wyatt,
-afterwards treasurer of the chamber, Sir William Parr, Sir Thomas
-Cheyne, afterwards warden of the Cinque ports and treasurer of the
-household, Jane, widow of Sir Richard Guildford, formerly master of
-the horse, and Christopher More, a clerk of the exchequer.<a id="FNanchor_1459" href="#Footnote_1459" class="fnanchor">[1459]</a> It
-is to be feared that some of these tenants cast a covetous eye upon
-the fee-simple of their dwellings, and that it was not all zeal for
-church reform which made Lord Cobham, for example, write to Sir Thomas
-Wyatt, the poet and son of Sir Henry, on 7 October 1538, ‘No news,
-but I trust there shall not be a friar left in England before you
-return’.<a id="FNanchor_1460" href="#Footnote_1460" class="fnanchor">[1460]</a> Cobham and his friends had not long to wait. The deed
-by which the friars surrendered their property into the hands of the
-King is dated 12 November 1538. The annual income, derived from the
-rented premises, was reckoned as £104 15<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i>, but of
-course this in no way represents the capital value of the site and
-buildings.<a id="FNanchor_1461" href="#Footnote_1461" class="fnanchor">[1461]</a> The partition of spoils, under the supervision of
-the Court of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_477">[477]</span> Augmentations, followed in due course. Cobham got his
-house, although not immediately, at nine years’ purchase; and between
-1540 and 1550 some sixteen other parcels of the estate, many of them
-very substantial, were similarly alienated.<a id="FNanchor_1462" href="#Footnote_1462" class="fnanchor">[1462]</a> Finally, on 12 March
-1550, during the liberal distribution of crown lands for which the
-authority of Henry VIII was alleged by his executors in the Privy
-Council, a comprehensive grant was made of all that still remained
-unalienated in the precinct to Sir Thomas Cawarden, the Master of the
-Revels, whose office had for some years past been established within
-its walls. Apparently Cawarden paid nothing for it, but on the other
-hand the King owed him a good deal for moneys spent in the service of
-the Revels.<a id="FNanchor_1463" href="#Footnote_1463" class="fnanchor">[1463]</a></p>
-
-<p>The Blackfriars long remained an anomaly in the local government of
-London. Like all monastic establishments, the friars had maintained
-extensive privileges within their own precinct. Nightly their porter
-had shut their four gates upon the city. They had done their own
-paving. The Lord Mayor had claimed a jurisdiction, but if this was
-admitted, it was only in cases of felony. The ordinary functions of
-civil magistracy had been exercised, when called for, by Sir William
-Kingston and other important tenants.<a id="FNanchor_1464" href="#Footnote_1464" class="fnanchor">[1464]</a> Naturally there had been
-friction from time to time with the Corporation, and on the surrender
-the latter, like the tenants, hoped that their opportunity was come.
-They addressed a petition to Henry, in which they expressed their
-gratification that he had ‘extirped and extinct the orders of Freers
-to the great exaltacion of Crystes doctryne and the abolucion of
-Antecriste theyr first founder and begynner’, and asked for a grant of
-the church and the whole precinct of the Blackfriars, together with
-those of the three other London friaries, to be used for the special
-benefit of non-parishioners and of those infected by pestilence.<a id="FNanchor_1465" href="#Footnote_1465" class="fnanchor">[1465]</a>
-Henry, however, had not gone to the trouble of obtaining a surrender
-merely to inflate the powers and the revenues of a municipality. He
-is reported to have replied that ‘he was as well hable to keep the
-liberties as the Friers were’, and to have handed the keys to Sir
-John Portinari, one of his gentlemen pensioners, who dwelt in the
-precinct.<a id="FNanchor_1466" href="#Footnote_1466" class="fnanchor">[1466]</a> The Blackfriars, therefore,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_478">[478]</span> continued to be an exempt
-place or ‘liberty’, an enclave within the walls of the City, but not
-part of it, and with a somewhat loose and ill-defined organization
-of its own. The inhabitants agreed together and appointed a porter
-and a scavenger. A constable was appointed for them by the justices
-of the verge.<a id="FNanchor_1467" href="#Footnote_1467" class="fnanchor">[1467]</a> The precinct was constituted an ecclesiastical
-parish, known as St. Anne’s after a chapel which had once served its
-inhabitants; and was provided with a church.<a id="FNanchor_1468" href="#Footnote_1468" class="fnanchor">[1468]</a> Petty offences
-were tried, and any exceptional affairs managed, as might have been
-done in a rural parish, by the justices, and it was to these that
-any administrative orders thought necessary by the Privy Council
-were ordinarily addressed.<a id="FNanchor_1469" href="#Footnote_1469" class="fnanchor">[1469]</a> It perhaps goes without saying that
-the City were not content with a single rebuff. They attempted to
-interfere at the time of a riot in 1551, and were snubbed by the Privy
-Council.<a id="FNanchor_1470" href="#Footnote_1470" class="fnanchor">[1470]</a> Under Mary they promoted legislation with a view to
-annexing the liberties, but without success.<a id="FNanchor_1471" href="#Footnote_1471" class="fnanchor">[1471]</a> In 1562 a sheriff,
-who entered the liberty to enforce a proclamation, was shut in by the
-prompt action of the constable, and faced with an inhibition which
-one of the justices hurried to obtain from a privy councillor.<a id="FNanchor_1472" href="#Footnote_1472" class="fnanchor">[1472]</a>
-The city remained persistent. In 1574 the Council had again to
-intervene.<a id="FNanchor_1473" href="#Footnote_1473" class="fnanchor">[1473]</a> In 1578 a controversy arose as to the right of the
-City to dispose of the goods of felons and other escheats. It was
-referred to two chief justices, who made a report to the effect that,
-while the inhabitants of both the Blackfriars and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_479">[479]</span> the Whitefriars
-enjoyed certain immunities from civic levies and liabilities,
-nevertheless the soil of the precincts lay within the City, and the
-City was entitled to exercise jurisdiction therein. It may be doubted
-whether effect was given to this opinion.<a id="FNanchor_1474" href="#Footnote_1474" class="fnanchor">[1474]</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1587 the Council ordered another inquiry, in order to ascertain
-the precise nature of the Queen’s title in the Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_1475" href="#Footnote_1475" class="fnanchor">[1475]</a>
-There had been a petition for redress of inconveniences from the
-inhabitants.<a id="FNanchor_1476" href="#Footnote_1476" class="fnanchor">[1476]</a> About the same time the chief landowner, Sir William
-More, appears to have suggested that the liberty should be converted
-into a manor, and manorial rights conferred upon him.<a id="FNanchor_1477" href="#Footnote_1477" class="fnanchor">[1477]</a> These are
-signs that residence in a liberty hard by a thronging population had
-disclosed a seamy side. Undesirable persons were bound to throng to a
-district where the Lord Mayor’s writ did not run. An open space, for
-example, filled with immemorial trees planted by the friars, had been
-ruined to house alleys for bowling and other unlawful games.<a id="FNanchor_1478" href="#Footnote_1478" class="fnanchor">[1478]</a>
-Doubtless there were those who resented the fact that the attempt of
-the City to discourage interludes had been met by the establishment of
-a Blackfriars theatre in 1576, which lasted until 1584. It appears to
-have been a protest from the inhabitants which led the Privy Council
-to forbid the public theatre contemplated by James Burbage in 1596,
-although some years later they winked at the opening of the building
-as a private house. In 1596 the church fell down, and in appointing a
-commission to apportion the responsibility for repairs, the council
-also instructed them to consider the government of the liberty, ‘which
-being grown more populus than heretofore and without any certaine and
-knowen officer to keepe good orders there, needeth to be reformed in
-that behalfe’.<a id="FNanchor_1479" href="#Footnote_1479" class="fnanchor">[1479]</a> The nature of the commission’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_480">[480]</span> findings is not
-upon record, but that the ultimate solution lay in the incorporation
-of the liberty in the City could hardly be doubtful. As far back as
-1589 the Council had found it convenient to use the Lord Mayor as
-an agent for securing a proper contribution from the Blackfriars
-towards a levy. From 1597 onwards they showed an increased tendency to
-make similar use of an administrative machinery far more completely
-organized than that of the justices of the peace. In that year the Lord
-Mayor was instructed to make a collection in aid of the Blackfriars
-church repairs. In 1600 it again fell to him to assess the share of
-the liberty in a levy of men and money. In 1601 it is he who is called
-upon to suppress plays in Blackfriars during Lent.<a id="FNanchor_1480" href="#Footnote_1480" class="fnanchor">[1480]</a> The final step
-was, however, deferred until 20 September 1608, when the new Jacobean
-charter formally extended the jurisdiction of the city to various
-liberties, including both the Blackfriars and the Whitefriars, with
-certain exemptions as regards assessments and the tenure of offices,
-but with none as regards responsibility for petty offences and the
-keeping of the peace.<a id="FNanchor_1481" href="#Footnote_1481" class="fnanchor">[1481]</a></p>
-
-<p>I have anticipated, in order to get the question of jurisdiction out
-of the way. I must now return to the topography. Sir Thomas Cawarden
-died on 29 August 1559. He had no son, and his executors, Lady Cawarden
-and Sir William More, personally took over the Blackfriars estate in
-survivorship, as part of the settlement of his affairs.<a id="FNanchor_1482" href="#Footnote_1482" class="fnanchor">[1482]</a> Lady
-Cawarden’s death on 20 February 1560 left More sole owner. He retained
-the property until his own death in 1601, and the muniment room of his
-house at Loseley near Guildford contains innumerable documents relating
-to the business transactions in which it involved him, together with
-some of earlier date which he inherited from Cawarden. The researches
-of Professor Feuillerat in these archives render it possible to
-reconstruct with some minuteness the arrangement of the Blackfriars
-and its buildings at the time of the surrender, to trace many of the
-changes of the next half-century, and, as part of the process, to
-indicate pretty definitely the locality<span class="pagenum" id="Page_481">[481]</span> and nature of the structures
-which were turned to theatrical uses.</p>
-
-<p>The precinct covered a space of about five acres.<a id="FNanchor_1483" href="#Footnote_1483" class="fnanchor">[1483]</a> In shape it was
-a rough parallelogram, wider at the north than at the south. The great
-gate was towards the east end of the north boundary. It was reached
-by a short entry on the south of Bowier Row, now Ludgate Hill, just
-east of Ludgate. This seems to have been called Gate Street. It is now
-the north end of Pilgrim Street.<a id="FNanchor_1484" href="#Footnote_1484" class="fnanchor">[1484]</a> From here the boundary was the
-city wall, westwards for about 450 ft. to the Fleet ditch, and then
-southwards for about 800 ft. along the east side of the ditch. There
-were towers at intervals. One of these stood about 200 ft. down from
-the angle, and immediately south of this was the bridge over the Fleet
-towards Bridewell. The south and east boundaries were also walled.
-Between the south wall and the river ran Castle Lane, which was not
-within the precinct.<a id="FNanchor_1485" href="#Footnote_1485" class="fnanchor">[1485]</a> A gate in the south wall gave access across
-the lane to the Blackfriars ‘bridge’ or ‘stairs’, a common landing
-place, originally built by the Prior of St. John’s, from whom, in some
-way not clear to me, the Friars held their estate.<a id="FNanchor_1486" href="#Footnote_1486" class="fnanchor">[1486]</a> The south-east
-angle of the precinct was near Puddle Wharf, and from here the boundary
-ran up the west side of St. Andrew’s Hill to Carter Lane, bending out
-eastwards near the top, where the buildings of the Wardrobe joined it
-by an arch over the roadway, was then driven in sharply westwards by
-the end of Carter Lane, which was butt up against a turngate in the
-friars’ wall, and finally ran in an irregularly diagonal line from the
-junction of Creed and Carter Lanes north-west to the great gate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_482">[482]</span> again.
-Internally the precinct was unequally divided by an irregular highway
-which ran north and south, from the great gate to the Blackfriars
-stairs. This started out of Gate Street as High Street, and lower down
-became Water Lane.<a id="FNanchor_1487" href="#Footnote_1487" class="fnanchor">[1487]</a> All the conventual buildings lay on the east
-of the highway. Here was the larger division of the precinct, measuring
-about 450 ft. from east to west. The western division, measuring about
-150 ft., contained only a few houses and gardens. Across it ran from
-Bridewell Bridge to Water Lane a strip of unoccupied land, containing
-nothing but a ruined gallery, probably part of the provision made
-for the accommodation of Charles V in 1522. One of Cawarden’s first
-acts, when he got his property, was to make a new road, with tenements
-and gardens to the south of it, along this strip. It became known as
-Bridewell Lane, and is represented by the present Union Street.<a id="FNanchor_1488" href="#Footnote_1488" class="fnanchor">[1488]</a>
-It must have joined Water Lane just south of a little place or
-<i>parvis</i> which lay in front of the west porch of the church and
-the adjoining entrance to the cloister. The <i>parvis</i> contained one
-or two houses and shops, and formed part of the continuous thoroughfare
-from north to south, communicating by gateways with High Street and
-Water Lane.<a id="FNanchor_1489" href="#Footnote_1489" class="fnanchor">[1489]</a> The conventual church itself divided the eastern
-portion of the precinct from west to east, extending not quite so
-far east as the present Friar Street. It was 220 ft. long and 66 ft.
-wide, and had two aisles and a chancel, which, as usual in conventual
-churches, was as long as the nave. There was a square porch tower over
-the west end. Over the junction of nave and chancel stood a belfry,
-visible in Wyngaerde’s drawing of <i>c.</i> 1543–50, and to the north
-of the chancel a chapel, probably the quasi-parochial chapel of St.
-Anne, and a vestry.<a id="FNanchor_1490" href="#Footnote_1490" class="fnanchor">[1490]</a> Beyond these was the churchyard.<a id="FNanchor_1491" href="#Footnote_1491" class="fnanchor">[1491]</a> This
-was 300 ft. long by 90 ft. deep,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_483">[483]</span> and occupied about two-thirds of the
-space between the High Street on the west, the church on the south,
-and the north-eastern boundary of the precinct. A group of houses
-stood between it and the great gate towards Ludgate, and three others
-separated it from the High Street at the south west corner.<a id="FNanchor_1492" href="#Footnote_1492" class="fnanchor">[1492]</a> One
-of these, built up against the church and the High Street gateway, was
-a recluse’s cell or Ankerhouse.<a id="FNanchor_1493" href="#Footnote_1493" class="fnanchor">[1493]</a> Cawarden cut a new road across
-the churchyard, 20 ft. north of the site of the chancel and just north
-of the Ankerhouse and the High Street gate. This continued Carter Lane,
-the turngate at the end of which was converted into a gate practicable
-for carts, and with Bridewell Lane provided a thoroughfare across the
-Blackfriars from east to west in addition to that from north to south.
-That part of the existing Carter Lane, west of Creed Lane, which was
-formerly known as Shoemakers’ Row, doubtless represents Cawarden’s new
-way.[1494]</p>
-
-<p>On the south of the nave stood the great cloister, entered by a
-porter’s lodge in its north-west corner. It was 110 ft. square. Its
-eastern alley was probably in a line with a way across the church under
-the belfry to a door into the churchyard, and this line, preserved by
-Cawarden in order to provide access to the cloister from his new way,
-is represented by the existing Church Entry.<a id="FNanchor_1495" href="#Footnote_1495" class="fnanchor">[1495]</a> The north side of
-the cloister was formed by the wall of the nave. Behind the other three
-sides were ranged the domestic buildings of the convent. On the east
-were the ample Prior’s lodging, which stretched back over the space
-south of the chancel, and farther to the south the Convent garden,
-covering an acre. Over part of this lodging and over the cloister alley
-itself was the east dorter of the friars, communicating direct with
-the church by a stairway.<a id="FNanchor_1496" href="#Footnote_1496" class="fnanchor">[1496]</a> The east side of the cloister also
-contained the Chapter-house, which probably stood in the middle, and to
-the south of this a school-house.<a id="FNanchor_1497" href="#Footnote_1497" class="fnanchor">[1497]</a> Behind the south-east corner
-were the provincial’s lodging, a store-house, the common jakes, and
-another garden, known as the hill garden.<a id="FNanchor_1498" href="#Footnote_1498" class="fnanchor">[1498]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_484">[484]</span> Another dorter stood
-over the south cloister alley and over some ground-floor buildings of
-uncertain use, which divided this alley from an inner cloister, flanked
-on the east by the library, and in part on the west by the infirmary,
-behind which were the bakehouse, brewhouse, and stables. The western
-end of the south alley of the main cloister formed a lavabo, and was
-apparently sunk to a lower level than the rest.<a id="FNanchor_1499" href="#Footnote_1499" class="fnanchor">[1499]</a> Down the western
-side of both cloisters extended a continuous range of buildings, the
-details of which will require subsequent examination. These formed two
-main blocks. The northern, flanking the main cloister, contained the
-buttery and parts of the guest-house and porter’s lodge; the southern,
-flanking the inner cloister, was devoted to the refectory, the lower
-end of which, owing to the slope of the hill, seems to have stood over
-the infirmary. The irregular outline of Water Lane, jutting a good deal
-to the west after it emerged from the <i>parvis</i> in front of the
-church porch, left a space of some 84 ft. at its widest between this
-range of buildings and the lane itself. The guest-house and porter’s
-lodge extended back into this space; it also held the convent kitchen
-and other subsidiary buildings.<a id="FNanchor_1500" href="#Footnote_1500" class="fnanchor">[1500]</a></p>
-
-<p>When Cawarden got his grant in 1550, a great deal of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_485">[485]</span> property had
-already been disposed of.[1501] Except for the strip where he laid
-out Bridewell Lane and two small garden plots, nothing was left for
-him in the western division of the precinct. To the north the group
-of houses between the churchyard and the great gate had gone. To
-the south, Cobham had taken the rooms over the porter’s lodge, with
-a closet window looking into the church, and he and one Sir George
-Harper had divided the rest of the guest-house block&mdash;‘fayer great
-edifices’, says Cawarden&mdash;that lay behind.[1502] Sir Francis Bryan had
-taken the Prior’s lodging and the convent garden, and from him they
-had passed to the Bishop of Ely and then to one William Blackwell.
-Lady Kingston had taken the inner cloister, with part of the south
-dorter and the rooms beneath it, the library, the infirmary, the
-brewhouse, bakehouse, and stables. Others had taken the school-house,
-some more of the south dorter, the provincial’s lodging, the jakes,
-the store-house, and the hill garden, and these ultimately passed to
-Lady Grey. Sir Thomas Cheyne, the Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports, had
-taken some of the buildings west of the frater. Everything farther
-south, down towards the river, had also been alienated. What was left
-for Cawarden consisted mainly of the church itself and the churchyard,
-the ankerhouse, the great cloister, the chapter-house, the east dorter,
-the porter’s lodge and buttery block, with all the rooms over these
-except Cobham’s, the frater, the kitchen, and such buildings standing
-between the frater and Water Lane, as did not belong to Cheyne.<a id="FNanchor_1503" href="#Footnote_1503" class="fnanchor">[1503]</a>
-Much trouble was caused to Cawarden’s successors by uncertainty as to
-the extent of Cheyne’s claim.[1504] No doubt the grant constituted
-Cawarden the chief landowner in the district, but he complained that
-hardly any of his property was ‘mansionable’, and even at the time of
-his death he had only brought the annual value up to £70.<a id="FNanchor_1505" href="#Footnote_1505" class="fnanchor">[1505]</a> The
-survey taken for the purposes of the grant puts it at no more than £19.
-On the other hand, the value of the stone and timber and other material
-of the buildings is estimated in the same survey at £879 3<i>s.</i>
-4<i>d.</i>, including an item of £709 11<i>s.</i> 0<i>d.</i> for lead
-alone. Evidently it was from the site-value and the judicious erection
-of new buildings and conversion of old ones, with the aid of this
-material, into ‘mansionable’ property, that Cawarden’s profit was to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_486">[486]</span>
-come. A convinced Protestant, he looked upon the church as a quarry. He
-pulled it down, with the exception of the south wall of the nave, which
-was to serve him as a garden wall, and the porch which he turned into a
-tenement. Other tenements were built on the site, and the rest of it,
-with so much of the churchyard as was not required for the new road,
-was let off. One of the tenants appears to have made tennis-courts on
-the site of the chancel. The demolition included St. Anne’s Chapel.
-This had been closed during Henry’s reign and used as a store-house
-for the Offices of Tents and Revels. For a while the inhabitants were
-allowed to worship in a room under an old gallery, presumably that
-which became the site of Bridewell Lane; but now this passed into
-Cawarden’s hands and he evicted them. When they plucked up heart, under
-Mary, to protest, he first offered them a site in the churchyard and
-a roof if they would be at the expense of building, and ultimately
-gave them an upper room, apparently at the north end of the east
-dorter. This fell down in 1597, and was rebuilt by the parishioners,
-who finally bought it, with a piece of the site of the old conventual
-church as a churchyard, from Sir George More in 1607–8.<a id="FNanchor_1506" href="#Footnote_1506" class="fnanchor">[1506]</a> Cawarden
-effected an adjustment of boundaries on the east of the cloister with
-the Bishop of Ely.<a id="FNanchor_1507" href="#Footnote_1507" class="fnanchor">[1507]</a> He then proceeded to build dwelling rooms
-along the south and east sides of the cloister.<a id="FNanchor_1508" href="#Footnote_1508" class="fnanchor">[1508]</a> They must have
-been fairly shallow, for they left him a great square garden, but
-no doubt the recess of the chapter-house permitted increased depth
-towards the east. Under the west wing of the new building, adjoining
-the buttery, was a great vaulted room, 57 ft. by 25, which must, I
-think, have been the lavabo of the friars.[1509] East of this was a
-set of rooms capable of use as a separate dwelling, which came to be
-known as Lygon’s lodgings.<a id="FNanchor_1510" href="#Footnote_1510" class="fnanchor">[1510]</a> The rest formed the capital mansion
-of the property, the ‘great house’, and was clearly intended for
-Cawarden’s own residence. It seems to have been sometimes let and
-sometimes occupied by Sir William More.<a id="FNanchor_1511" href="#Footnote_1511" class="fnanchor">[1511]</a> The great garden must
-have been pleasant enough, with the north and west<span class="pagenum" id="Page_487">[487]</span> cloister alleys
-left standing, and a tinkling conduit in the west end, filled by a pipe
-from Clerkenwell.<a id="FNanchor_1512" href="#Footnote_1512" class="fnanchor">[1512]</a></p>
-
-<p>The important part of the Blackfriars, from the point of view of
-theatrical topography, is the range of buildings on the western side of
-the two cloisters, parallel to Water Lane. The two blocks constituting
-this range, or so much of them as passed to Cawarden, are referred to
-in the surveys of 1548 and 1550 as the ‘olde butterie’ and the ‘vpper
-ffrater’.<a id="FNanchor_1513" href="#Footnote_1513" class="fnanchor">[1513]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_488">[488]</span> From the details given in these surveys and in the
-leases and other documents preserved at Loseley, it is possible to form
-a very fair notion of their structure and uses. The chief rooms in
-both blocks were upon an upper floor. The northern block was 110 ft.
-in length from north to south and 36 ft. in width. The upper rooms,
-however, were only 26 ft. wide, as 10 ft. was taken up by a high stone
-gallery which ran along the west of the building, and was perhaps
-connected with the wooden gallery leading to the Fleet.<a id="FNanchor_1514" href="#Footnote_1514" class="fnanchor">[1514]</a> These
-rooms were four in number. That to the north, 21 ft. long, belonged to
-Cobham, and had a closet window looking into the church upon the south
-wall of which, for 20 ft. of its width, the block abutted.<a id="FNanchor_1515" href="#Footnote_1515" class="fnanchor">[1515]</a> Then
-came two central rooms, a large and a small one, measuring together 52
-ft. in length, and then a southern one, which with an entry measured
-47 ft.<a id="FNanchor_1516" href="#Footnote_1516" class="fnanchor">[1516]</a> The surveys treat the three rooms which fell to Cawarden
-as a single ‘hall place’. All four rooms had probably formed part of
-the guest-house of the convent, and had lodged Charles V. The ground
-floor held low rooms pierced at intervals by entries and with cellars
-underneath them. The chief entry or gate-house was at the southern
-end and served Cawarden’s mansion house when that was built.<a id="FNanchor_1517" href="#Footnote_1517" class="fnanchor">[1517]</a>
-North of this came the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_489">[489]</span> buttery proper and a pantry, occupying with a
-small entry connecting them 29 ft.;<a id="FNanchor_1518" href="#Footnote_1518" class="fnanchor">[1518]</a> then another stepped entry
-into the cloister serving afterwards as Cawarden’s garden gate;<a id="FNanchor_1519" href="#Footnote_1519" class="fnanchor">[1519]</a>
-then probably more rooms under the two central upper rooms; then a
-staircase to Cobham’s upper room;<a id="FNanchor_1520" href="#Footnote_1520" class="fnanchor">[1520]</a> and finally rooms belonging to
-the porter’s lodge, which were 21 ft. in length. This lodge extended
-backwards towards Water Lane, and over and around it were other
-rooms of Cobham’s and yet others forming the house of Sir George
-Harper.<a id="FNanchor_1521" href="#Footnote_1521" class="fnanchor">[1521]</a> Some or all of these had also probably been part of the
-guest-house. Together with a garden of Cobham’s, they occupied rather
-less than half the space between the northern block and Water Lane.
-South of them, and included in Cawarden’s grant, were the convent
-kitchen with a room over it, and the kitchen yard, forming a space 84
-ft. wide, and in length 74 ft. at the buttery end and 68 ft. at the
-lane end.</p>
-
-<p>The northern block, being 110 ft. long, extended right down to the
-southern line of the cloister, which was 110 ft. square. Here it
-abutted upon the southern block. This was 52 ft. wide. The length
-of the upper frater is given in the surveys as 107 ft., and in two
-of More’s leases as 110 ft.<a id="FNanchor_1522" href="#Footnote_1522" class="fnanchor">[1522]</a> The latter figure is probably the
-right one.<a id="FNanchor_1523" href="#Footnote_1523" class="fnanchor">[1523]</a> The north end of this block contained a ‘great
-stair’, which gave access both to the frater and to the guest-house,
-and was itself convenient of approach both from the gate-house entry
-and from the lavabo at the south-west angle of the cloister. Probably
-this end was built in the form of a tower, as there were rooms on
-and over the staircase and over the adjoining Duchy Chamber, and
-garrets over those.<a id="FNanchor_1524" href="#Footnote_1524" class="fnanchor">[1524]</a> There was a garret also over the south end
-of the northern block.<a id="FNanchor_1525" href="#Footnote_1525" class="fnanchor">[1525]</a> It is doubtful whether anything stood
-over the main portion of the southern block.<a id="FNanchor_1526" href="#Footnote_1526" class="fnanchor">[1526]</a> This had a flat
-leaded roof, whereas the northern block, as its lead is not mentioned
-in the survey, probably had a gabled and tiled roof. Apart from the
-staircase tower,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_490">[490]</span> the upper floor of the southern block consisted of
-the ‘upper’ frater or refectory, a spacious apartment, which had been
-used for Parliaments and the legatine trial of Henry VIII’s divorce
-case, and was sometimes known as ‘the Parliament chamber’.<a id="FNanchor_1527" href="#Footnote_1527" class="fnanchor">[1527]</a> The
-ground floor is a little more difficult. The survey of 1548 assigns to
-it a ‘blind’, that is, I suppose, a windowless, or at any rate dark,
-parlour, which came next the buttery block, and a hall, to which the
-parlour served as an entry.<a id="FNanchor_1528" href="#Footnote_1528" class="fnanchor">[1528]</a> These are said to be ‘vnder the seide
-frater of the same lengethe and breddethe’. This might naturally be
-taken to mean that they were, together, of the same size as the frater
-above. In fact it must, I think, mean that they were of the same size
-as each other, for we know from another source that the south end of
-the frater was over a room not belonging to Cawarden at all but to
-Lady Kingston, and itself standing over the infirmary, which, owing
-to the fall of the ground, formed at that end a lower story of the
-block.<a id="FNanchor_1529" href="#Footnote_1529" class="fnanchor">[1529]</a> The survey does not say what the sizes of the parlour and
-hall were, but a later document suggests that together they underlay
-over two-thirds of the frater and occupied a space of 74 ft. from north
-to south and 52 ft. from east to west.<a id="FNanchor_1530" href="#Footnote_1530" class="fnanchor">[1530]</a> Under Cawarden’s part of
-the southern block were cellars. To the west lay what was known as the
-Duchy Chamber, probably from some official use in connexion with the
-Duchy of Lancaster. This was a two-story building, 50 ft. long by 16
-ft. wide, jutting out at right angles to the extreme north end of the
-frater. South of it was a house, apparently belonging to Sir Thomas
-Cheyne and occupied by Sir John Portinari, which touched the frater
-at one end, and at the other had a parlour, interposed between the
-end of the Duchy Chamber and Water Lane, and bounded on the north, as
-the Duchy Chamber itself must have been, by the kitchen yard. South
-of this again were a little chamber and a kitchen, with an entry from
-Water Lane, probably between Portinari’s parlour and another house
-belonging to Cheyne.<a id="FNanchor_1531" href="#Footnote_1531" class="fnanchor">[1531]</a> The little chamber and kitchen were used
-in conjunction with the hall under the upper frater. This hall, which
-was paved and stood ‘handsome to’ the buttery, had also been a frater,
-serving as a breakfast room for the friars, and in the little<span class="pagenum" id="Page_491">[491]</span> chamber
-had lived their butler.<a id="FNanchor_1532" href="#Footnote_1532" class="fnanchor">[1532]</a> Now it is noted in the surveys that Sir
-Thomas Cheyne had laid claim to the paved hall, the ‘blind’ parlour,
-the little chamber, and the kitchen, and it seems very doubtful whether
-they were covered by the specifications of Cawarden’s grant.<a id="FNanchor_1533" href="#Footnote_1533" class="fnanchor">[1533]</a> He
-succeeded, however, in occupying them; and the inevitable lawsuit was
-left for his successor.</p>
-
-<p>Cawarden had had the buttery, frater, kitchen, and Duchy chamber
-on lease since 4 April 1548.<a id="FNanchor_1534" href="#Footnote_1534" class="fnanchor">[1534]</a> Some of these, as well as other
-conventual buildings, he had occupied from a still earlier date in
-his capacity as Master of the Tents and Revels. For these offices the
-propinquity of the Wardrobe rendered the Blackfriars very convenient.
-Already in 1511 temporary use had been made of some room in the
-precinct to prepare a pageant in for a joust at Westminster.<a id="FNanchor_1535" href="#Footnote_1535" class="fnanchor">[1535]</a>
-Before Cawarden became Master, the regular store-house of the Revels
-office had been at Warwick Inn.<a id="FNanchor_1536" href="#Footnote_1536" class="fnanchor">[1536]</a> The transfer to Blackfriars
-was not completed until February 1547, but it perhaps began earlier,
-since the papers of the Court of Augmentations contain receipts by
-John Barnard, for sums spent by the King’s surveyor on ‘the reparayng
-and amendyng of the Blacke Fryers in London store howse for the seyd
-tentes and revelles’ during 1545.<a id="FNanchor_1537" href="#Footnote_1537" class="fnanchor">[1537]</a> The Chapel of St. Anne had
-been requisitioned with other houses ‘to laye in tentes, maskes and
-revels’ before the end of Henry VIII’s reign.<a id="FNanchor_1538" href="#Footnote_1538" class="fnanchor">[1538]</a> As to the exact
-location of the Tents there is some interesting, although conflicting,
-evidence. An order of the Augmentations in 1550 allowed Sir Thomas
-Cheyne £5 a year for the use of his great room by the Tents from
-25 March 1545 onwards.<a id="FNanchor_1539" href="#Footnote_1539" class="fnanchor">[1539]</a> The room intended was undeniably the
-paved hall or breakfast room under the frater, but Sir William More
-maintained in 1572 that the payment by the Augmentations was an
-irregular one, and that the paved hall had never been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_492">[492]</span> used for the
-Revels and was never in fact Cheyne’s.<a id="FNanchor_1540" href="#Footnote_1540" class="fnanchor">[1540]</a> Sir John Portinari gave
-evidence that for some time after the surrender of the convent it had
-remained empty, and that he had himself kept the keys until Cawarden
-took possession of it in 1550. Cawarden then invited him to a supper
-and a play in the hall.<a id="FNanchor_1541" href="#Footnote_1541" class="fnanchor">[1541]</a> The Revels seem to have had the use of
-the upper frater or parliament chamber during Henry VIII’s reign.<a id="FNanchor_1542" href="#Footnote_1542" class="fnanchor">[1542]</a>
-But the surveys of 1548 and 1550 locate them to the north of this, in
-the southernmost of the four halls of the old guest-house. The two
-central halls, together with the convent kitchen, had been tenanted as
-far back as 1539 by successive Lords Cobham, to whose house they were
-adjacent.<a id="FNanchor_1543" href="#Footnote_1543" class="fnanchor">[1543]</a> In 1554, however, Cawarden sold the two rooms to George
-Lord Cobham, together with the porter’s lodge, which underlay his
-original holding, and received as part of his consideration a release
-from any claim which Cobham may have had to the kitchen yard and to
-the property granted to Cawarden on the west side of Water Lane.<a id="FNanchor_1544" href="#Footnote_1544" class="fnanchor">[1544]</a>
-With the upper rooms transferred to Cobham went ‘appurtenances’, which
-probably included the corresponding ground-floor rooms, as these are
-not traceable in More’s possession and apparently formed part of the
-Cobham estate when that was disposed of in the next century.<a id="FNanchor_1545" href="#Footnote_1545" class="fnanchor">[1545]</a>
-The porter’s lodge was all on the ground floor. It had a frontage of
-21 ft. on the cloister and ran back for 47 ft. towards Water Lane.
-At the time of Cawarden’s grant in 1550 it had been occupied by John
-Barnard, clerk comptroller of the Tents and Revels, but he had died in
-the same year.<a id="FNanchor_1546" href="#Footnote_1546" class="fnanchor">[1546]</a> Naturally it was convenient for the officers of
-the Revels to live in the Blackfriars. John Holt, the yeoman, had a
-house to the north of the churchyard. Thomas Philipps, the clerk, had
-the ‘little chamber’ west of the frater. The paved hall served him as
-a wood store, and from time to time some of Cawarden’s servants lay
-there. About 1552 Cawarden moved Philipps to the Ankerhouse, and put
-into the little chamber the deputy clerk, Thomas Blagrave,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_493">[493]</span> who found
-it too small, and rented an adjoining chamber from Cheyne.<a id="FNanchor_1547" href="#Footnote_1547" class="fnanchor">[1547]</a> The
-paved hall was then let, with other neighbouring rooms on more than
-one floor, to one Woodman, who kept an ordinary in the hall and did a
-good deal of damage to the property.<a id="FNanchor_1548" href="#Footnote_1548" class="fnanchor">[1548]</a> Meanwhile, the Revels had
-apparently been moved from this first-floor hall where they lay in
-1550, for when this hall is recited as the south boundary of Cobham’s
-purchase in 1554, it is described as a house in the tenure of Sir John
-Cheke or his assigns.<a id="FNanchor_1549" href="#Footnote_1549" class="fnanchor">[1549]</a> So long as the Tents and Revels continued
-to be housed in Crown property, the offices had of course nothing
-to pay for rent. But after 1550 Cawarden, as naturally, claimed an
-allowance for rent, and in 1555 he was permitted to charge six years’
-arrears from Michaelmas 1549 at the rate of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-a year each for the official residences of the comptroller, clerk,
-and yeoman, £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for his own, £6 13<i>s.</i>
-4<i>d.</i> for the office of the tents, and £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for the ‘store and woorke howses of the revelles’. In the accounts
-for 1555–9 similar charges recur annually, but the allowance for
-Cawarden’s own house is raised to £10 and that for the houses of the
-other officers to £5 each; and the £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for the
-Revels office is specified as being ‘for the rente of fyve greate
-roomes within the Blackefryers for the woorke and store howses of the
-Revelles’.<a id="FNanchor_1550" href="#Footnote_1550" class="fnanchor">[1550]</a> About 1560 the store-house was certainly not the hall
-over the buttery, but the great vaulted room in the south-west corner
-of the cloister, which had been the lavabo of the friars.<a id="FNanchor_1551" href="#Footnote_1551" class="fnanchor">[1551]</a> On the
-other hand, Sir John Cheke’s tenure of his house had ceased and the
-vacated rooms had become available for workhouses. This is evident
-from the terms of a lease of the same rooms to Sir Henry Neville,
-executed on 10 June 1560, just after the Revels had been removed to
-St. John’s.<a id="FNanchor_1552" href="#Footnote_1552" class="fnanchor">[1552]</a> Cawarden had died on the previous 29 August, and the
-lease was one of the first dealings of William More with the property.
-The principal rooms leased were precisely four in number. They had
-been ‘lately called or knowen by the name of Mr. Chekes lodginge and
-sythence vsed by Sir Thomas Cawarden knight deceased for the office
-of the Quenes Maiesties Revelles’. They were bounded on the north by
-Lord Cobham’s house, on the east by the houses of More and of Sir
-Henry Jerningham, who was Lady Kingston’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_494">[494]</span> son and heir, and on the
-west by another house of More’s in the occupation of Richard Frith,
-and by the way leading to More’s house and garden and a piece of void
-ground. Under them and leased with them were the buttery and pantry;
-and the lease also covered a cellar and a ‘greate rome in manner of a
-grete seller having a chimpney’ which I suppose to have been the late
-Revels store-house. The upstairs rooms were approximately 157 ft. long,
-27 ft. wide at the north end, and 22 ft. wide at the south end.<a id="FNanchor_1553" href="#Footnote_1553" class="fnanchor">[1553]</a>
-The length agrees approximately with the sum of the lengths of the
-upper frater and of the hall over the buttery not included in Cobham’s
-purchase of 1554; and it was evidently from these that Neville’s
-holding was taken. But the head of the staircase must have interfered
-with his width in the middle, and it will be observed that, while he
-had the full width of the northern block, he had less than half the
-full width (52 ft.) of the frater. Evidently Cawarden had partitioned
-the frater to make it ‘mansionable’, and in particular had divided it
-into two tenements by a partition from north to south. Neville’s was
-the eastern division. The western division and the rooms at the top of
-the staircase tower were in the tenure of Richard Frith, who had taken
-a twenty-four years’ lease from Cawarden in April 1555 and had obtained
-a renewal from More on 24 December 1559. Here, in 1561, Frith kept a
-dancing-school.<a id="FNanchor_1554" href="#Footnote_1554" class="fnanchor">[1554]</a> Neville’s lease also gave him a share in More’s
-water-supply, a strip of the void ground, formerly the convent kitchen
-yard, between the northern block and Water Lane, and a right of way
-to the buttery and pantry through the rest of that ground, which was
-reserved to More. Neville’s strip lay just south of Cobham’s garden
-wall. That reserved by More was partly taken up by ways to his garden
-and gate-house entries. In the space between these was erected in 1561
-a public conduit, which received the water-supply after it left More’s
-tap, and passed it on to the Earl of Pembroke’s house at Baynard’s
-Castle. Here also stood a tennis ground, tenanted with a cellar under
-the northern block by Frith.<a id="FNanchor_1555" href="#Footnote_1555" class="fnanchor">[1555]</a> The gate-house entry, or at least
-the way to it, served Frith’s house, as well as More’s own. Near it
-were certain rooms, reserved for More’s use or that of his servant John
-Horley, which may have been constructed out of the ‘blind’ parlour.
-The great stairs in the tower between the two blocks were probably
-assigned to Frith. They were not included in Neville’s lease, and he
-was specifically debarred from any right of access through More’s
-house<span class="pagenum" id="Page_495">[495]</span> or garden except by More’s licence. It was probably contemplated
-that he would build stairs to the upper floor for himself, and this is
-perhaps why More exacted no fine on the execution of the lease.<a id="FNanchor_1556" href="#Footnote_1556" class="fnanchor">[1556]</a>
-At any rate Neville did build stairs on the west of the house, placing
-them not in his own strip of yard but in More’s, with his water-cock in
-a little room at the stair foot. The pale of Frith’s tennis court was
-altered to allow of access between it and Neville’s stairs from More’s
-garden entry to his gate-house entry.<a id="FNanchor_1557" href="#Footnote_1557" class="fnanchor">[1557]</a> In his own strip Neville
-built a kitchen and another set of stairs behind it which must have led
-into the extreme north end of his house, as the site of the kitchen
-underlay, not Neville’s own rooms, but those purchased by Cobham in
-1554. The rest of the strip served as a woodyard, and had a privy
-in it. Presumably the original convent kitchen acquired by Cawarden
-had been pulled down. Within the house Neville put up partitions,
-turning his four rooms into six, of which it may be inferred that
-two lay in the northern block and four in the southern, and adorning
-one of these latter with wainscoting most of the way round, and with
-a great round portal.<a id="FNanchor_1558" href="#Footnote_1558" class="fnanchor">[1558]</a> About Lady Day 1568 More bought back
-the lease from Neville for £100, doubtless in consideration of the
-improvements.<a id="FNanchor_1559" href="#Footnote_1559" class="fnanchor">[1559]</a> For a time it seems to have been occupied by the
-Silk Dyers Company.<a id="FNanchor_1560" href="#Footnote_1560" class="fnanchor">[1560]</a> On 6 February 1571 it was let to William Lord
-Cobham, the terms of whose lease closely resemble those of Neville’s,
-but record the changes made during his predecessor’s tenancy.<a id="FNanchor_1561" href="#Footnote_1561" class="fnanchor">[1561]</a>
-Cobham gave up the house in 1576, and on 27 August of that year Neville
-wrote to More to recommend a new applicant for the tenancy, his friend
-Richard Farrant. With it came an application from Farrant himself.
-Apparently his tenancy entailed the removal of an Italian, who may have
-been one of the silk dyers, and he desired to be allowed to take down
-one of the partitions. On 17 September he wrote to ask that a small
-room, 6 ft. by 4½ ft., occupied by More’s man Bradshaw might be added
-to his holding.<a id="FNanchor_1562" href="#Footnote_1562" class="fnanchor">[1562]</a> His lease was executed on 20 December.<a id="FNanchor_1563" href="#Footnote_1563" class="fnanchor">[1563]</a> It
-gives him all the rooms which Neville had had, with the exception of
-the former Revels store-house, which is now described as ‘that great
-rome nowe vsed for a wasshynge howse’; and it adds the little room
-specially asked for, which had been contrived by throwing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_496">[496]</span> together a
-privy and a coal-house. Richard Farrant was Master of the Children of
-Windsor Chapel, and deputy to William Hunnis as Master of the Children
-of the Chapel Royal, and his object in taking the house was to have a
-room in which the children could give public representations for profit
-of the plays which they were afterwards to perform at Court. He carried
-out his plan, and so the old frater of the friars, once the parliament
-chamber of the realm, became the first Blackfriars theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1564" href="#Footnote_1564" class="fnanchor">[1564]</a></p>
-
-<p>More, according to his own account, was not best pleased at the use
-made of his house. He complained that Farrant, after pretending that
-he only meant to teach the children in it, had made it a ‘continuall
-howse for plays’ to the offence of the precinct, and to fit it for
-the purpose had pulled down and defaced Neville’s partitions, spoiled
-the windows, and brought the house to great ruin. He had also sublet
-certain portions, and, as he was not entitled to do this under his
-lease without licence, More claimed the forfeiture of the lease. At
-this moment, on 30 November 1580, Farrant died, leaving the house to
-his widow Anne. For some months there were no plays in the theatre.
-Then Hunnis resolved to carry on Farrant’s enterprise himself, and on
-a recommendation from the Earl of Leicester More appears to have given
-at least a tacit consent to a sub-letting by Anne to Hunnis and one
-John Newman on 20 December 1581. They were to do repairs and pay her
-£6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> in rent more than the £14 due to More. An
-unfortunate slip of the scrivener’s pen cut Mrs. Farrant’s profit down
-to £6 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> They also gave bonds of £100 each for the
-due fulfilment of their covenants, and according to Newman’s statement
-to More, paid £30 down. According to Mrs. Farrant they neglected their
-repairs and were extremely irregular with their rent, so that she was
-put to great shifts in order to satisfy Sir William<span class="pagenum" id="Page_497">[497]</span> More, disposing of
-a small reversion given her by the Queen, pawning her plate and jewels,
-selling a dozen of gold buttons here and a set of viols there, and
-borrowing of powerful friends such as Lord Cobham or Henry Sackford,
-the Master of the Tents. Meanwhile Hunnis and Newman disposed of
-their interest to one Henry Evans, a scrivener, and More, incensed at
-this, took definite steps in the spring of 1583 to recover his house
-by executing a fresh lease to one of his men, Thomas Smallpiece, and
-setting Smallpiece to sue for the ejectment of Evans. The latter tried
-to elude him by a further transfer of the sub-lease to the Earl of
-Oxford, who passed it on to John Lyly, the poet; and thus, says More,
-the title was ‘posted over from one to another from me’ contrary to the
-conditions of the original lease. Doubtless Hunnis, Lyly, and Evans
-were all working together under the Earl’s patronage, for a company
-under Oxford’s name was taken to Court by Lyly in the winter of 1583–4
-and by Evans in the winter of 1584–5, and it seems pretty clear that
-in 1583–4, at any rate, it was in fact made up of boys from the Chapel
-and Paul’s.<a id="FNanchor_1565" href="#Footnote_1565" class="fnanchor">[1565]</a> More, however, pursued his point, and about Easter
-1584 recovered legal possession of his house. Some months before,
-Anne Farrant, in despair, had appealed to Sir Francis Walsingham, and
-had also brought actions at common law against Hunnis and Newman for
-the forfeiture of their bonds. They applied to the Court of Requests
-to take over the case, and there is no formal record of the outcome.
-But in January 1587 Mrs. Farrant was again complaining to the Privy
-Council, and Sir John Wolley was asked to bring about a settlement
-between her and More, who was his father-in-law.<a id="FNanchor_1566" href="#Footnote_1566" class="fnanchor">[1566]</a></p>
-
-<p>So ends the story of the first Blackfriars theatre. The premises which
-it had occupied came into the hands of Henry Lord Hunsdon, who was also
-about the same time tenant of More’s mansion house and garden.<a id="FNanchor_1567" href="#Footnote_1567" class="fnanchor">[1567]</a>
-It would seem that Lord Oxford and Lyly had passed on to Hunsdon their
-sub-leases from the Farrants and that, even when he recovered<span class="pagenum" id="Page_498">[498]</span> legal
-possession from the court, More did not care to interfere with this
-arrangement. But there was evidently some friction. The sub-leases were
-due to expire in 1590 or 1591, and in April 1586 More refused to renew
-them. His excuse was that ‘The howses yow had of Lyllye I determyne
-that assone as theye bothe shall cum into my handes to kepe them to the
-onelye vse of me and mye chylderne’. In acknowledging this decision,
-Hunsdon complained that the pipe of water belonging to one of the
-houses had been diverted to serve that of Lord Cobham. In 1590 he made
-a fresh attempt to secure a renewal. More at first drafted a letter of
-consent, but then changed his mind and told Hunsdon that he needed the
-houses for his daughter Lady Wolley and for himself on his visits to
-London. Hunsdon had suffered annoyance because the tenant of the next
-house ‘having the vse of the leades, either by negligence or otherwise,
-suffereth the boyes to cutt upp the lead with knifes or to boore yt
-through with bodkyns wherby the rayne cometh throwghe’.<a id="FNanchor_1568" href="#Footnote_1568" class="fnanchor">[1568]</a> This
-allusion, together with that to the pipe of water, makes it clear that
-Hunsdon’s houses included the rooms covered by Neville’s lease of 1560,
-in which the right of dancing-master Frith to use the leads over the
-southern block is expressly safeguarded. I think it is probable that
-the two houses are merely the southern and northern sections of the
-Farrant holding, separately sublet to Hunsdon. It is known that Farrant
-himself, while in occupation of the theatre, had let off certain rooms.
-More’s wish to retain the property for family reasons did not long
-outlast its immediate purpose of decently covering a refusal to the
-Lord Chamberlain. Frith’s tenancy also came to an end, and for some
-period between 1590 and 1596 the rooms formerly constituting the upper
-frater were reunited in the occupation of William de Laune, a doctor
-of physic. The rooms to the north of them, after his appointment as
-Chamberlain of the Exchequer on 23 November 1591, were used by More for
-the purposes of the Pipe Office.<a id="FNanchor_1569" href="#Footnote_1569" class="fnanchor">[1569]</a> The buttery and pantry beneath
-were probably also relet in 1591.<a id="FNanchor_1570" href="#Footnote_1570" class="fnanchor">[1570]</a></p>
-
-<p>I must now turn to the history of the ‘paved hall’ and ‘blind parlour’
-under the upper frater and the little chamber and kitchen to the west
-of these, all of which, when Cawarden<span class="pagenum" id="Page_499">[499]</span> obtained possession in 1550,
-were under the shadow of a claim by Sir Thomas Cheyne. Blagrave’s
-occupation of the little chamber terminated when the Revels Office
-moved to St. John’s in 1560, and on 10 December 1564 More drafted a
-lease of it to one Laurence Bywater, who had in fact been in occupation
-since 1560.<a id="FNanchor_1571" href="#Footnote_1571" class="fnanchor">[1571]</a> It is described as consisting of a hall, a chamber
-above, a little room below, a kitchen, a yard, ‘a long entrie coming
-in ouer the yard bourded and railed’, and a vault or cellar. The
-paved hall had been let by 1572 to William Joyner, who used it as a
-fencing-school. In this year Cheyne’s claim was renewed by one Henry
-Pole and his wife Margaret, who was the widow of Cheyne’s eldest son.
-The rooms chiefly in dispute were the paved hall and Bywater’s house,
-but the Poles seem also to have claimed rooms in the tenures of Richard
-Frith and Thomas Hale.<a id="FNanchor_1572" href="#Footnote_1572" class="fnanchor">[1572]</a> It may be conjectured that these were the
-rooms constructed out of the blind parlour. On the other hand More
-made a counter-claim, probably not very serious, to Pole tenements in
-the occupation of Christopher Fenton, Thomas Austen, and John Lewes.
-Incidentally, it appears that Cawarden had not succeeded in removing
-all signs of papistry from the Blackfriars, for Bywater’s house is
-throughout described in the interrogatories taken as the little house
-having chalices and singing cakes painted in the window. The matter
-was referred to arbitration.<a id="FNanchor_1573" href="#Footnote_1573" class="fnanchor">[1573]</a> Pole’s case rested entirely on the
-question of fact as to what the holding of Cheyne and his predecessors
-actually comprised in 1540, since the grant named no boundaries but
-merely gave Cheyne the houses and lands then in his own occupation and
-formerly in those of Jasper Fylole and of Thomas Ferebye and William
-Lylgrave. Pole produced some witnesses who declared that before the
-surrender by the friars one Purpointe had dwelt in Bywater’s house and
-kept a tavern in the fencing-school, and that subsequently Ferebye and
-Lylgrave had occupied these premises. They could not say that Cheyne
-himself had ever had possession of them, but Pole was able to cite the
-order of the Court of Augmentation in 1550 allowing Cheyne rent for his
-large room as a store-house for the tents. In More’s view this rent
-was paid under a misunderstanding, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_500">[500]</span> seems to have suggested
-that the only houses occupied by Cheyne and his predecessors were
-that afterwards occupied by Portinari and one ‘new built’ by Cheyne,
-in which apparently Lord Henry Seymour was living at the time of the
-suit. Moreover, he produced a number of witnesses, including Bywater,
-Blagrave, Thomas Hale, groom of the Tents, Portinari himself, and
-Elizabeth Baxter, widow of the former porter of the friars, who agreed
-in deposing that the friars had never let these rooms, which were
-essential as a breakfast room and a butler’s lodging to their daily
-life, and gave a perfectly consistent account of the various uses of
-them after the surrender by Cawarden, Woodman, Phillips, Blagrave, and
-Bywater, which have already been indicated in this narrative. It does
-not transpire that More confided to the arbitrators the suspicious
-references to Cheyne’s claim in the surveys of 1548 and 1550. However
-this may be, their decision was in his favour on the substantial issue.
-The Poles were required to acknowledge his right to Bywater’s house and
-the paved hall, as well as to the tenements of Frith and Hale. More, on
-the other hand, was to abandon his claim to the tenements of Fenton,
-Austen, and Lewes, and by way of compromise was to execute a lease of
-Bywater’s house to the Poles at a nominal rent for fifty years or the
-term of their lives. This he accordingly did. Nothing more is heard
-of any of the premises involved until July 1584, just after More had
-succeeded in putting an end to Lyly’s theatrical enterprise. By this
-date both Bywater and Joyner had gone, and their places had been taken
-by another fencing-master, an Italian, Rocco Bonetti by name.<a id="FNanchor_1574" href="#Footnote_1574" class="fnanchor">[1574]</a>
-Bonetti had acquired from Margaret Pole, now a widow, her life-interest
-in the butler’s lodging. He had also taken over from Lyly two leases,
-one of the fencing-school, the other of a house, the property of
-More, immediately west of the butler’s lodging.<a id="FNanchor_1575" href="#Footnote_1575" class="fnanchor">[1575]</a> The latter he
-had repaired at some cost. He had even been rash enough to put up
-additional buildings on More’s land. And he had not paid his workmen,
-to whom he owed £200. The butler’s lodging is described as being in
-great decay. But this also, or its site, he appears to have enlarged,
-at the expense of his neighbouring tenement on the west. He feared the
-expiration of his interests, and got his friends, of whom were Lord
-Willoughby, Sir John North, and Sir Walter Raleigh, to approach More
-for an extension of tenure. As regards the western house, More seems to
-have consented,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_501">[501]</span> after much reluctance in view of Bonetti’s indebted
-condition, to a lease for seven years in 1586.<a id="FNanchor_1576" href="#Footnote_1576" class="fnanchor">[1576]</a> As regards the
-butler’s lodging, he was mainly interested in the reversion after Mrs.
-Pole’s death, and of this reversion he granted Bonetti a ten years’
-term by a lease of 20 March 1585.<a id="FNanchor_1577" href="#Footnote_1577" class="fnanchor">[1577]</a> The holding is described in
-much the same terms as those used in Bywater’s lease of 1564. The
-measurements, however, are also given. The length from north to south
-was 25 ft. 2 in., and the width from east to west 22 ft. 6 in. But 4
-ft. 6 in. of the length and 2 ft. of the width were not covered by Mrs.
-Pole’s lease, and were taken, probably by an encroachment which the
-lease was intended to regularize, from More’s tenement to the west.
-For the sake of greater accuracy, the measurements and boundaries of
-this western tenement are given. It was 33 ft. from north to south and
-39 ft. 8 in. from east to west. It was bounded on the north by More’s
-yard, on the south and west by a house of Mrs. Pole’s, on the south by
-the way to Sir George Carey’s house, and on the east by More’s house in
-Bonetti’s tenure, that is to say the house which is the subject of the
-lease.<a id="FNanchor_1578" href="#Footnote_1578" class="fnanchor">[1578]</a></p>
-
-<p>Sir George Carey was the eldest son of Lord Hunsdon, and himself
-became Lord Hunsdon on 22 July 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1579" href="#Footnote_1579" class="fnanchor">[1579]</a> He is not traceable in the
-Blackfriars before 1585, but continued to reside there until his death
-in 1603. The way to his house corresponds in position with the way to
-Lady Kingston’s house of the 1548 survey, and he had pretty clearly
-acquired some or all of her property, including the infirmary under
-the upper frater.<a id="FNanchor_1580" href="#Footnote_1580" class="fnanchor">[1580]</a> The way must have followed a line from Water
-Lane, much the same as that of the present Printing House Lane. The
-fencing-school was accessible from it by a door next to Carey’s.<a id="FNanchor_1581" href="#Footnote_1581" class="fnanchor">[1581]</a>
-Certain other data of the early surveys are a little difficult to
-reconcile with those of the later documents. The surveys indicate three
-parallel rows of buildings, of a comparatively insignificant character,
-extending over a space roughly 80 ft. square between the frater<span class="pagenum" id="Page_502">[502]</span> block
-and Water Lane. The north row consisted of the two-storied Duchy
-Chamber, a narrow building 50 ft. by 17 ft., and the parlour of Sir
-John Portinari’s house. These had a frontage on the kitchen yard.
-South of them came the rest of Portinari’s house, and south of this
-the little chamber, 26 ft. long by 10 ft. wide, the little kitchen, 23
-ft. long by 22 ft. wide, and an entry to the latter, 30 ft. long by
-17 ft. wide, which I suppose to have debouched upon Water Lane. The
-little chamber and kitchen had their frontage on the way leading to
-Lady Kingston’s. The house referred to as Cheyne’s in the 1550 survey
-is probably that occupied by Portinari. But Cheyne must also have had
-other property in the same neighbourhood, which the surveys do not
-mention. There was the house, probably that described as ‘new built’ in
-1572, which he occupied himself, and which afterwards passed to Lord
-Henry Seymour.<a id="FNanchor_1582" href="#Footnote_1582" class="fnanchor">[1582]</a> And there were the three tenements which More
-claimed, but did not secure in 1572. These premises were leased as a
-whole by the Poles to Christopher Fenton on 31 May 1571, and appear to
-have been gradually cut up into smaller holdings. By 1610 there were
-four tenants and by 1614 five. They bounded More’s property, and must
-have lain in the angle of Water Lane and the way to Lady Kingston’s,
-just south of the entry to the little kitchen.<a id="FNanchor_1583" href="#Footnote_1583" class="fnanchor">[1583]</a></p>
-
-<p>The little chamber of 1548 is undoubtedly the butler’s lodging leased
-to Bywater in 1564 and to Bonetti in 1585, which was a subject of the
-lawsuit in 1572. But whereas it measured 26 ft. by 10 ft. in 1548, it
-measured 22 ft. 6 in. by 25 ft. 2 in. in 1585, and the enumeration of
-rooms in the two leases show that, although Bonetti may have built a
-small additional room upon a bit of land filched from More, there had
-been no substantial change since 1564. Further, while in 1548 it was
-bounded on the north by Portinari’s holding, it was reached in 1564 by
-a railed and boarded entry across its yard, and documents of 1596 and
-1601 make it clear that this entry terminated in a small porch opening
-on the kitchen yard.<a id="FNanchor_1584" href="#Footnote_1584" class="fnanchor">[1584]</a> Similarly the little kitchen, 23 ft. by 22
-ft., of 1548 had been replaced in 1584 by a house 33 ft. by 39 ft. 8
-in., and of this also Portinari’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_503">[503]</span> house had ceased to be the boundary,
-and a yard of More’s had been substituted. Finally, More’s successor,
-Sir George More, was in a position in 1603 to sell to one John Tice a
-strip of land bounded by Tice’s house on the south, Water Lane on the
-west, and the kitchen yard on the north and east, which must have been
-just about where Portinari’s parlour stood at the time of the 1548
-survey.<a id="FNanchor_1585" href="#Footnote_1585" class="fnanchor">[1585]</a> I am now approaching the region of conjecture, but there
-is only one way of accounting for the facts. More must have acquired
-and pulled down Portinari’s house, and thus not only let light and
-air into the somewhat congested district west of the frater, but also
-left room for extensions in the rear of the little houses fronting on
-the way to Lady Kingston’s. The extension of the little chamber he had
-probably himself undertaken before 1564. It did not interfere with the
-chalices and singing cakes in the window, or prevent the house from
-being in decay in 1585. In 1572 it could be seen that the house had
-been covered with lead, but presumably was so no longer.<a id="FNanchor_1586" href="#Footnote_1586" class="fnanchor">[1586]</a> The
-extension of the little kitchen seems to have been an enterprise of
-Bonetti, of which More reaped the profits. The rest of the space gained
-was utilized for the fencing-school kitchen, for a staircase behind the
-Duchy Chamber, and for certain yards, all of which were in existence in
-1596.<a id="FNanchor_1587" href="#Footnote_1587" class="fnanchor">[1587]</a> It is just possible that More also pulled down the west end
-of the Duchy Chamber.</p>
-
-<p>By 1596 both the fencing-school and the butler’s lodging had passed
-from the occupation of Bonetti. One Thomas Bruskett had the former and
-one John Favour the latter. This is the year of James Burbadge’s great
-enterprise of the second Blackfriars theatre. Our first intimation of
-it is from Lord Hunsdon, in a letter to More of 9 January 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1588" href="#Footnote_1588" class="fnanchor">[1588]</a>
-He has heard that More has parted with part of his house for a
-play-house, and makes an offer for ‘your other howse, which once I had
-also’. The deed of sale by More to James Burbadge is dated 4 February
-1596.<a id="FNanchor_1589" href="#Footnote_1589" class="fnanchor">[1589]</a> The purchase money was £600. The rooms transferred are
-carefully described, but only a few of the measurements and boundaries
-are given. There were seven great upper rooms, ‘sometyme being one<span class="pagenum" id="Page_504">[504]</span>
-greate and entire room’, enclosed with great stone walls, and reached
-by a great pair of winding stairs from the great yard next the Pipe
-Office. Other stone stairs reached leads above. These rooms had been
-lately in the tenure of William de Laune, doctor of physic. Beneath
-them, or beneath an entry between them and the Pipe Office, lay a
-vault, of which Burbadge was to have the use only, by a ‘stoole and
-tonnell’ contrived in the thickness of his north wall.<a id="FNanchor_1590" href="#Footnote_1590" class="fnanchor">[1590]</a> Under some
-part of De Laune’s seven rooms, and included in the sale, lay also
-rooms 52 ft. long and 37 ft. wide, known as the ‘midle romes’ or ‘midle
-stories’. These extended south to Sir George Carey’s house, and were
-reached from a lane leading thereto, by a door next to Carey’s gate.
-They had been in the tenure of Rocco Bonetti and were now in that of
-Thomas Bruskett, together with a kitchen adjoining, and two cellars
-reached by stairs from the kitchen, and lying under the north end of
-the middle rooms. Bruskett had one of these, and the other was occupied
-by John Favor, who dwelt in the house held for the term of her life by
-Mrs. Pole. This house did not go to Burbadge, but he had one of two
-small yards of which Favor had the other, between Mrs. Pole’s house and
-the cellars. This yard was occupied by Peter Johnson, and Burbadge also
-took four rooms tenanted by Johnson, and surrounded by his yard on the
-south, Mrs. Pole’s entry on the west, and the great yard next the Pipe
-Office on the north. Two of these were under De Laune’s late rooms. The
-other two were under rooms, to the west of the north end of De Laune’s,
-which were occupied by Charles Bradshaw, possibly the Bradshaw whose
-room was begged by Farrant in 1576. Bradshaw also occupied a little
-buttery, an entry and passage from the seven rooms, and a little room
-for wood and coals. This lay over the buttery, on the west side of a
-staircase leading to two rooms or lofts, one of which was over the east
-and north of Bradshaw’s rooms and the other over the entry between the
-seven rooms and the Pipe Office. These were in the occupation of Edward
-Merry, who also had a room or garret over them reached by a further
-staircase. A staircase also led from Peter Johnson’s yard to Bradshaw’s
-rooms. Both Bradshaw’s and Merry’s rooms were included in Burbadge’s
-purchase, which was completed by a small yard and privy on the north
-side of Pipe Office yard, east of Water Lane, south of Cobham’s house,
-and west of a house of More’s also occupied by Cobham. Burbadge was
-also to have the right of depositing coal and other goods <span class="pagenum" id="Page_505">[505]</span>for a
-reasonable time in the old kitchen yard, now called ‘the greate yarde
-next the Pipe Office’, provided he did not interfere with access to the
-Pipe Office itself, or to More’s garden or other parts of his premises.
-The description seems complicated, as one reads the deed, but I think
-that the disposition of the rooms is fairly intelligible.<a id="FNanchor_1591" href="#Footnote_1591" class="fnanchor">[1591]</a> The
-seven upper rooms, once a single great room, can only represent the
-whole of the old parliament chamber or upper frater, formerly divided
-into two distinct holdings. This, as we know, abutted across the
-staircase upon the hall in the northern block which had formed part of
-Farrant’s holding and which More had converted into the Pipe Office
-in 1591.<a id="FNanchor_1592" href="#Footnote_1592" class="fnanchor">[1592]</a> The middle rooms, together with the two easternmost of
-Johnson’s rooms, must together represent the space of the paved hall
-and blind parlour. There is no reason to suppose that Burbadge bought
-from More, or that More ever possessed, anything beyond this space
-on the ground floor of the frater block; and if the hall and parlour
-were, as I have suggested, of equal size, the total space passing to
-Burbadge on this floor was 74 ft. from north to south and 52 ft. from
-east to west. The rest of the floor had been Lady Kingston’s and passed
-to Sir George Carey.<a id="FNanchor_1593" href="#Footnote_1593" class="fnanchor">[1593]</a> Johnson’s other two rooms and Bradshaw’s
-rooms above them, lying to the west of the north end of the seven great
-rooms, must be the two floors of the Duchy Chamber. The yards behind
-them were rendered possible by the clearance of Portinari’s house.
-Bradshaw’s two smaller rooms were on the staircase tower, and Merry’s
-rooms and garret were partly at the top of this staircase and partly
-above the Duchy Chamber.</p>
-
-<p class="center p2">DIAGRAMS OF BLACKFRIARS</p>
-
-<p class="center">1596</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_504b">
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_504b.jpg"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 center">A. LOWER STORY</p>
- </div>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_504c">
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_504c.jpg"
- alt="" />
- <p class="p0 center">B. UPPER STORY</p>
- </div>
-
-<p>The property purchased by Burbadge was extended at various dates after
-his death in February 1597 by his sons Cuthbert and Richard. On 26 June
-1601 they bought for £95 from Sir George More the reversion of the
-butler’s lodging, subject to the life-interest of Mrs. Pole and to the
-ten years’ lease after her death, which had in the interval since 1585
-passed from Rocco Bonetti to Thomas Bruskett.<a id="FNanchor_1594" href="#Footnote_1594" class="fnanchor">[1594]</a> On 30 May 1610 they
-purchased two-thirds of the interests of the heirs of Mrs. Pole and of
-a mortgagee in the houses formerly held by Christopher Fenton, and on
-7 July 1614 also purchased the remaining interest. These houses cost
-them in all £170.<a id="FNanchor_1595" href="#Footnote_1595" class="fnanchor">[1595]</a> If, as is not unlikely, they also purchased<span class="pagenum" id="Page_506">[506]</span>
-at some time the house which in 1585 stood on the site of the little
-kitchen of 1548, and the bit of land sold to John Tice in 1603, the
-whole of the plot between the frater on the east, Water Lane on the
-west, the kitchen yard on the north, and the way to Lord Hunsdon’s
-house on the south, will have passed into their hands. There is no
-indication that they ever acquired any part of Lord Hunsdon’s house.
-This was apparently occupied by the French ambassador in 1623, when
-one of its upper rooms, used as a chapel, fell, and many persons were
-killed. Camden in his notes for Jacobean annals confused this room with
-the theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1596" href="#Footnote_1596" class="fnanchor">[1596]</a> About 1629 the King’s printers, Robert Barker and
-John Bill, secured Hunsdon House for their press, and it remained the
-King’s printing house until the Great Fire.<a id="FNanchor_1597" href="#Footnote_1597" class="fnanchor">[1597]</a> On 19 December 1612
-the Burbadges obtained from the Cobham estate a piece of land for the
-enlargement of the yard near the Pipe Office, which was serving twenty
-years later to turn coaches in.<a id="FNanchor_1598" href="#Footnote_1598" class="fnanchor">[1598]</a></p>
-
-<p>To make an end for the present of topography, the fortunes of the
-property to the north of the Burbadge purchases may be briefly traced.
-Sir William More died in 1601 and his son and successor, Sir George,
-had no need for a Pipe Office. The rooms were therefore leased,
-with others, on 23 April 1601 to Sir Jerome Bowes at a rent of £14
-6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> ‘and certein glasses’.<a id="FNanchor_1599" href="#Footnote_1599" class="fnanchor">[1599]</a> I think that the
-other rooms included the old lavatory of the friars, once a Revels
-store-house and thereafter a wash-house for More’s mansion, and that it
-was in this room that Bowes established the glass-house which became an
-important industry of the Blackfriars.<a id="FNanchor_1600" href="#Footnote_1600" class="fnanchor">[1600]</a> On 19 June 1609 Sir George
-More sold this property, subject to Bowes’s lease, together with the
-mansion house, the great garden and all that remained to him within
-the great cloister, to a syndicate,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_507">[507]</span> whose members in 1611 divided the
-purchase amongst themselves.<a id="FNanchor_1601" href="#Footnote_1601" class="fnanchor">[1601]</a> The former Pipe Office, now called
-the gate-house, with its yard, part of the glass-house, and a strip of
-the garden 23 ft. 10 in. wide passed to William Banister. Banister’s
-son Thomas sold them in 1616 to Gideon De Laune and De Laune in 1617
-to Jacob Hardratt. Then Hardratt rebuilt the property and in 1619 sold
-back to De Laune a tenement which extended 43 ft. from north to south,
-and 24 ft. westwards from ‘the great gate near the play-house’ to the
-tenement occupied by a widow Basil. It had a small garden on the east,
-lying south of another garden belonging to De Laune.<a id="FNanchor_1602" href="#Footnote_1602" class="fnanchor">[1602]</a> The length
-of 43 ft. exceeds by 6 ft., the width of an entry, that of the Pipe
-Office rooms, the site of which De Laune’s tenement no doubt occupied.</p>
-
-<p>The big sale of 1609 did not include the kitchen and kitchen stairs
-built by Sir Henry Neville about 1560, or the wood yard which enclosed
-them. A bit of this yard had been included in Burbadge’s purchase of
-1596. The rest of the property, with the water supply, had been bought
-on 11 March 1601, by Henry Lord Cobham, whose house it underlay.<a id="FNanchor_1603" href="#Footnote_1603" class="fnanchor">[1603]</a>
-It had in fact been held by his father as far back as 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1604" href="#Footnote_1604" class="fnanchor">[1604]</a> In
-1603 Cobham was attainted. His Blackfriars property was forfeited to
-the Crown, but regranted to his widow, Lady Kildare, and for some
-years remained in the hands of trustees for her and her daughter Lady
-Howard.<a id="FNanchor_1605" href="#Footnote_1605" class="fnanchor">[1605]</a> In 1612 an additional bit of the wood yard was sold,
-as already stated, to the Burbadges. Finally, in 1632 the estate was
-conveyed to the Company of Apothecaries, in whose hands it has since
-remained.<a id="FNanchor_1606" href="#Footnote_1606" class="fnanchor">[1606]</a> They must also have acquired the house of Gideon De
-Laune, who was one of their founders, and therefore their present
-premises, in their extent of 116 ft. from north to south, exactly
-replace the ‘northern block’ of buildings which stood to the west of
-the main Blackfriars cloister, when Sir Thomas Cawarden took possession
-of it in 1550.</p>
-
-<p>James Burbadge was not destined to see the success of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_508">[508]</span> his adventure.
-After all, he was prevented from establishing his theatre in 1596.
-Play-houses had just been suppressed in the City, and a number of the
-more important inhabitants of the Blackfriars disliked the idea of one
-being opened in their select residential precinct, where no common
-play-house had yet been seen. Farrant’s theatre, nominally intended
-for the private practice of the Chapel boys, was presumably regarded
-as not falling within the category of common play-houses. A petition
-was sent to the Privy Council, amongst the signatories to which were
-Burbadge’s neighbour, Sir George Carey, now Lord Hunsdon, Elizabeth
-Lady Russell, who lived a little farther up Water Lane, and Richard
-Field, the printer of Shakespeare’s poems.<a id="FNanchor_1607" href="#Footnote_1607" class="fnanchor">[1607]</a> The extant copy of
-the petition is not dated, but later references assign it to November
-1596, and inform us that as a result the Privy Council forbade the use
-of the house.<a id="FNanchor_1608" href="#Footnote_1608" class="fnanchor">[1608]</a> On James Burbadge’s death in February 1597 the
-Blackfriars property passed to his son Richard.<a id="FNanchor_1609" href="#Footnote_1609" class="fnanchor">[1609]</a> It is not known
-what use he made of it before 1600, but in that year the resumption
-of plays by the Chapel children under Nathaniel Giles gave him an
-opportunity of following Farrant’s example, and letting the theatre for
-what were practically public performances ‘vnder the name of a private
-howse’.<a id="FNanchor_1610" href="#Footnote_1610" class="fnanchor">[1610]</a> With Giles were associated one James Robinson and Henry
-Evans, who had already been concerned in the enterprise of John Lyly
-and the Earl of Oxford; and it was to Evans that, on 2 September 1600,
-Burbadge leased ‘the great hall or roome, with the roomes over the
-same, scituate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_509">[509]</span> within the precinct of the black Friours’, for a term
-of twenty-one years from Michaelmas 1600, at a rent of £40,<a id="FNanchor_1611" href="#Footnote_1611" class="fnanchor">[1611]</a> while
-Evans and his son-in-law Alexander Hawkins gave a joint bond in £400
-as collateral security for due payment. Evans set up a company, which
-under various names, and throughout shifting financial managements,
-maintained a substantial continuity of existence, and occupied the
-Blackfriars for a period of eight years. Its fortunes are dealt with
-in detail elsewhere.<a id="FNanchor_1612" href="#Footnote_1612" class="fnanchor">[1612]</a> Only those points directly bearing upon
-the theatre as such need now be noted. In October 1601, when Evans
-was negotiating a partnership with Edward Kirkham, William Rastall,
-and Thomas Kendall, he apparently undertook to transfer his lease to
-Hawkins in trust to reassign a moiety of the interest under it to
-these partners.<a id="FNanchor_1613" href="#Footnote_1613" class="fnanchor">[1613]</a> No reassignment, however, was in fact made.
-Evans carried out some repairs in December 1603, and trouble arose
-with his partners because he severed the school-house and chamber over
-the same from the great hall and used them as private apartments to
-dine and sup in.<a id="FNanchor_1614" href="#Footnote_1614" class="fnanchor">[1614]</a> When the playing companies were hard hit by the
-plague of 1603–4, Evans began to treat with Burbadge for a surrender
-of the lease.<a id="FNanchor_1615" href="#Footnote_1615" class="fnanchor">[1615]</a> This came to nothing at the time, but in August
-1608, when the Revels company was in disgrace for playing Chapman’s
-<i>Byron</i> and Kirkham had declared a desire to make an end of the
-speculation, the suggestion was revived, and the surrender, probably
-with the assent of Hawkins, actually took place.<a id="FNanchor_1616" href="#Footnote_1616" class="fnanchor">[1616]</a> As part of his
-consideration, Evans, through a nominee, was admitted by Burbadge into
-a new syndicate, of which the other members were Burbadge himself and
-his brother Cuthbert, and some of the leading players of the King’s
-company, by whom it was intended that the Blackfriars should now be
-used.<a id="FNanchor_1617" href="#Footnote_1617" class="fnanchor">[1617]</a> The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_510">[510]</span> King’s men probably entered upon their occupation of
-the theatre in the autumn of 1609, and thereafter used it alternatively
-with the Globe, as their winter house, up to the end of their career
-in 1642.<a id="FNanchor_1618" href="#Footnote_1618" class="fnanchor">[1618]</a> The new syndicate consisted of seven partners, who may
-be called ‘housekeepers’, in accordance with the terminology found in
-use in 1635, in order to distinguish them from the ‘sharers’ in the
-acting profits of the company.<a id="FNanchor_1619" href="#Footnote_1619" class="fnanchor">[1619]</a> On 9 August 1608 Richard Burbadge
-executed six leases, each conveying a seventh part of the play-house
-for a term of twenty-one years from the previous midsummer, and
-entailing the payment of a seventh part of the rent of £40. The six
-lessees were his brother Cuthbert, John Heminges, William Shakespeare,
-Henry Condell, William Sly, and Thomas Evans. The remaining interest
-he no doubt retained himself. Sly, however, died five days later, and
-his share was surrendered by his executrix, and divided amongst the
-other partners. On 25 August 1611 it was transferred to William Ostler.
-After his death on 16 December 1614 it should have passed to his widow,
-Thomasina, but her father John Heminges retained it, and in 1629 she
-estimated that he had thus defrauded her of profits at the rate of £20
-a year.<a id="FNanchor_1620" href="#Footnote_1620" class="fnanchor">[1620]</a> At some date later than 1611 John Underwood must have
-been admitted to a share, for he owned one at his death in 1624. The
-original leases terminated in 1629. Probably new ones were then entered
-into, for by 1633 we find that the rent had been increased to £50, and
-in 1635 that the interest of the housekeepers had still four years to
-run, and that it was divided not into seven, but into eight parts.
-Cuthbert Burbadge and the widows of Richard Burbadge and Henry Condell
-still represented the original holders. Two parts had been bought in
-1633 and 1634 from Heminges’s son by John Shank. One part was still
-held in the name of Underwood, but a third of it was apparently in
-the hands of Eillart Swanston. John Lowin and Joseph Taylor had each
-a part. As a result of the dispute the Lord Chamberlain ordered a new
-partition under which Shank resigned one share to be divided between
-Swanston, Thomas Pollard, and Robert Benfield.<a id="FNanchor_1621" href="#Footnote_1621" class="fnanchor">[1621]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_511">[511]</span></p>
-
-<p>The occupation of the Blackfriars by the King’s men was not wholly
-peaceful. The beginning of their tenure almost exactly coincided with
-the grant of the new charter by which the jurisdiction of the City was
-extended to the precinct.<a id="FNanchor_1622" href="#Footnote_1622" class="fnanchor">[1622]</a> It was not, however, until 1619 that
-an attempt was made to invoke this jurisdiction against them. In that
-year the officials of the precinct and the church of St. Anne’s, backed
-up by a few of the inhabitants, sent a petition to the Corporation,
-in which they recited the inconveniences due to a play-house in their
-midst, recalled the action taken by the Privy Council in 1596, as well
-as the Star Chamber order of 1600 limiting the London play-houses to
-two, and begged that conformity to the wishes of the Council might be
-enforced. The Corporation made an order for the suppression of the
-Blackfriars on 21 January 1619.<a id="FNanchor_1623" href="#Footnote_1623" class="fnanchor">[1623]</a> It clearly remained inoperative,
-but explains why the King’s men thought it desirable to obtain a fresh
-patent, dated on 27 March 1619, in which their right to play at ‘their
-private house scituate in the precinctes of the Blackfriers’, as well
-as at the Globe, was explicitly stated.<a id="FNanchor_1624" href="#Footnote_1624" class="fnanchor">[1624]</a> They had to face another
-attack in 1631. Their opponents on this occasion approached Laud, then
-Bishop of London.<a id="FNanchor_1625" href="#Footnote_1625" class="fnanchor">[1625]</a> After some delay Laud seems to have brought the
-matter before the Privy Council. The idea was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_512">[512]</span> mooted of buying the
-players out and on 9 October 1633 a commission of Middlesex justices
-was appointed to report as to the value of their interests.<a id="FNanchor_1626" href="#Footnote_1626" class="fnanchor">[1626]</a> These
-were estimated by the players at £21,990, and by the commissioners at
-£2,900. The only offer towards a compensation fund was one of £100 from
-the parish of St. Anne’s.<a id="FNanchor_1627" href="#Footnote_1627" class="fnanchor">[1627]</a> Evidently the proposal was allowed to
-drop. On 20 November 1633, the Privy Council made an order forbidding
-coaches to stand in Ludgate or St. Paul’s Churchyard while the
-performances were going on, but even this regulation was practically
-cancelled by an amending order made at a meeting presided over by the
-King in person on 29 December.<a id="FNanchor_1628" href="#Footnote_1628" class="fnanchor">[1628]</a></p>
-
-<p>It is rather disappointing that the numerous documents bearing upon
-the occupation of the Blackfriars between 1600 and 1608 should throw
-so little light upon the way in which James Burbadge adapted his
-purchase ‘with great charge and troble’ to the purposes of a theatre.
-The lease of 1600 did not cover the whole of the property, but only a
-‘great hall or roome, with the roomes over the same’. Presumably this
-was the case also with the leases of 1608, since the rent was the same
-as in 1600. The rest of the premises, with those purchased later by
-the younger Burbadges, may be represented by the four tenements valued
-at £75 a year in 1633, and the ‘piece of void ground to turn coaches’
-valued at £6 was doubtless the fragment of the old kitchen yard north
-of the approach. The Kirkham lawsuits tell us that one or two rooms
-were reserved for the residence of Evans in 1602 and that during the
-early part of 1604 ‘a certen rome, called the Scholehouse, and a certen
-chamber over the same’ had been ‘seuered from the said great hall, and
-made fitt by’ Evans ‘at his owne proper cost and chardges, to dyne<span class="pagenum" id="Page_513">[513]</span> and
-supp in’.<a id="FNanchor_1629" href="#Footnote_1629" class="fnanchor">[1629]</a> Professor Wallace has a number of additional lawsuits,
-still unpublished.<a id="FNanchor_1630" href="#Footnote_1630" class="fnanchor">[1630]</a> But the extracts from these given by him in
-1908 add only a few details to those formerly known. They seem to
-amount to this. The hall was 66 ft. from north to south and 46 ft. from
-east to west. It was paved, and had a stage, galleries, and seats of
-which a schedule was attached to the lease. The stage was at one end
-of the hall. The school-house was at the north end of the hall.<a id="FNanchor_1631" href="#Footnote_1631" class="fnanchor">[1631]</a>
-At this end also must have been the entrance, as one of the petitions
-of 1619 locates it near the way used from part of the precinct in
-going to church.<a id="FNanchor_1632" href="#Footnote_1632" class="fnanchor">[1632]</a> It was doubtless by the gate-house entry to the
-cloister, just beyond where the coaches turned. Unfortunately one is
-left quite in doubt upon the critical question as to which of the rooms
-known to us from earlier records were used for the theatre. It might
-have been the upper frater with the partitions removed; it might have
-been constructed out of the paved hall and blind parlour beneath, which
-appear to be represented by the ‘midle romes’ and two of the rooms
-in the occupation of Peter Johnson enumerated in the conveyance to
-Burbadge. <i>A priori</i> one would have thought the upper frater the
-most likely. It may very well have been paved, like the hall beneath
-it, and a chamber which had held parliaments and a legatine trial
-could amply suffice to hold a theatre. On this supposition the rooms
-‘above’ the hall which were conveyed by the lease of 1600, and one of
-which Evans converted into a dining-room can only have been the room
-over the staircase and the garret over that. These, indeed, may have
-extended over the north end of the frater proper, although in the main
-that building appears, down to the time when Burbadge bought it, to
-have had nothing over it but leads.<a id="FNanchor_1633" href="#Footnote_1633" class="fnanchor">[1633]</a> There is a serious difficulty
-in the way of the alternative theory, which would identify the theatre
-with the ‘midle romes’ on the ground floor. This is that these would
-most likely only be low rooms, vaulted to carry the heavy floor of the
-parliament chamber above. On the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_514">[514]</span> whole, the balance of probability
-appears to be strongly in favour of the upper frater.</p>
-
-<p>Professor Wallace’s account of the matter is categorical. ‘The south
-section’, he says, ‘underwent a thorough transformation. The two
-stories were converted into the auditorium called “the great Hall or
-Room”.... The roof was changed, and rooms, probably of the usual dormer
-sort, were built above the Great Hall.’<a id="FNanchor_1634" href="#Footnote_1634" class="fnanchor">[1634]</a> I do not know whether
-there is any evidence for this theory, which disregards a good many
-structural difficulties, in those parts of his recently discovered
-documents which Professor Wallace has not published; there is certainly
-none in those which he has. If not, I do not think we must assume
-that Burbadge undertook expensive building operations, when he had
-all the facilities for planning an admirable auditorium without them.
-Professor Wallace seems to have been led into his conjecture by an
-assumed necessity for providing space for three tiers of galleries.
-There is no such necessity, and in fact no evidence for more than one
-tier, although I dare say that the upper frater taken by itself was
-high enough for two. Professor Wallace cites a reference to ‘porticibus
-<i>anglice</i> galleryes’, and points out that ‘galleryes’ is a plural.
-This is so, but the ‘galleryes’ were not necessarily superimposed; if
-one ran along the east side of the hall and the other along the west,
-they would still constitute a plural. Professor Wallace takes the step
-from his plural to three with the aid of Cockledemoy’s address to ‘my
-very fine Heliconian gallants, and you, my worshipful friends in the
-middle region’.<a id="FNanchor_1635" href="#Footnote_1635" class="fnanchor">[1635]</a> Obviously the ‘middle region’ is not bound to be
-the middle one of three galleries; it may just as well be the space
-between the stage and the galleries.</p>
-
-<p>It is beyond the scope of this inquiry to trace the detailed fortunes
-of the Blackfriars during its later years. By Caroline times it took
-place of the Globe as the principal and most profitable house of
-the King’s men.<a id="FNanchor_1636" href="#Footnote_1636" class="fnanchor">[1636]</a> In 1653, when like the rest of the theatres
-it was closed, Richard Flecknoe recalled its origin and wrote its
-epitaph.<a id="FNanchor_1637" href="#Footnote_1637" class="fnanchor">[1637]</a> It was pulled down on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_515">[515]</span> 6 August 1655.<a id="FNanchor_1638" href="#Footnote_1638" class="fnanchor">[1638]</a> This site
-was used for tenements, which in course of time were replaced by <i>The
-Times</i> office which now occupies the site.<a id="FNanchor_1639" href="#Footnote_1639" class="fnanchor">[1639]</a></p>
-
-
-<h5>ii. THE WHITEFRIARS</h5>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="smaller">[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The relevant dissertations are
-P. Cunningham, <i>The Whitefriars, the Salisbury Court, and
-the Duke’s Theatres</i> (1849, <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iv.
-89), J. Greenstreet, <i>The Whitefriars Theatre in the Time of
-Shakspere</i> (1888, <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> 269), with text
-of the Bill and Answer in the Chancery suit of <i>Androwes v.
-Slater</i> (1609), and A. W. Clapham, <i>The Topography of the
-Carmelite Priory of London</i> (1910, <i>Brit. Arch. Assoc.
-Journal</i>, n. s. xvi. 15), with seventeenth-century plan of
-the precinct, reproduced by Adams, 312.]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The only suggestion of a sixteenth-century play-house in the
-Whitefriars is to be found in the statement of Richard Rawlidge in
-1628 that one was suppressed there at a date under Elizabeth which he
-does not specify, but which may most plausibly be put at 1596 (cf. p.
-359). It is not improbable that Rawlidge wrote ‘Whitefriars’ when he
-should have written ‘Blackfriars’, but Malone (<i>Var.</i> iii. 46,
-52) accepted the statement and assigned the suppression to 1580. I do
-not suppose that Collier had any other basis than this for the ‘more
-then 30 yeares’ of the following description which he alleged to be an
-extract from ‘an original survey of some part of the precinct, made
-in March 1616’ in his possession, and printed in his <i>New Facts</i>
-(1835), 44:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The Theater is situate near vnto the Bishopps House, and was
-in former times a hall or refectorie belonging to the dissolved
-Monastery. It hath beene vsed as a place for the presentation
-of playes and enterludes for more then 30 yeares, last by the
-Children of her Majestie. It hath little or no furniture for a
-play-house, saving an old tottered curten, some decayed benches,
-and a few worne out properties and peeces of Arras for hangings
-to the stage and tire house. The raine hath made its way in and
-if it bee not repaired, it must soone be plucked downe or it
-will fall.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_516">[516]</span></p>
-
-<p>The earliest record, therefore, on which reliance can be placed is
-the lawsuit of <i>Androwes v. Slater</i> in 1609,<a id="FNanchor_1640" href="#Footnote_1640" class="fnanchor">[1640]</a> which recites
-the lease by Robert Lord Buckhurst to Michael Drayton and Thomas
-Woodford for six years eight months and twenty days from March 1608 of
-‘a messuage or mansion howse parcell of the late dissolved monastery
-called the Whitefriars, in Fleete streete, in the subvrbs of London’,
-while the articles of agreement between the sharers of the King’s
-Revels syndicate (cf. ch. xii), of the same date, assign lodgings in
-the house to Martin Slater, and add</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘The roomes of which howse are thirteene in number, three belowe
-and tenne above, that is to saie, the greate hall, the kitchin
-by the yard, and a cellar, with all the roomes from the east
-ende of the howse to the Master of the revells’ office, as the
-same are now severed and devided.’<a id="FNanchor_1641" href="#Footnote_1641" class="fnanchor">[1641]</a></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>The precinct of the former priory of the Carmelites or White Friars lay
-between Fleet Street and the river, to the east of Serjeants’ Inn and
-to the west of Water Lane, which divided it from Salisbury Court, the
-old inn of the bishops of Salisbury, which had passed to the Sackvilles
-in the sixteenth century, and ultimately became known as Dorset House
-(Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ii. 45). The precinct was a liberty, and its
-history, from the point of view of local government, had been closely
-analogous to that of the Blackfriars. Like the Blackfriars, it came
-under complete civic control in this very year of 1608 (cf. p. 480).
-The Whitefriars mansion itself the Sackvilles probably acquired from
-the family of Thomas Lord De La Warr, to whom a grant of priory
-property was made in 1544 (Dugdale, vi. 1572).</p>
-
-<p>From the King’s Revels the Whitefriars passed to the occupation of the
-Queen’s Revels (cf. ch. xii) in 1609, and continued in their use both
-before and after their amalgamation with the Lady Elizabeth’s in March
-1613. It is named on the title-pages of <i>Woman a Weathercock</i>
-(1612) and <i>The Insatiate Countess</i> (1613), and a reference in
-the prologue to ‘daughters of Whitefriars’ shows that it was also the
-locality of <i>Epicoene</i> (1609). In February 1613 it was ‘taken up’<span class="pagenum" id="Page_517">[517]</span>
-by some London apprentices for an invitation performance of Robert
-Tailor’s <i>The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl</i> (q.v.). From March 1613 the
-amalgamated companies had Bankside theatres available, first the Swan
-and afterwards the Hope, but it is clear from the Watermen’s petition
-(cf. p. 370) that, at any rate before the Hope was built, they mainly
-used the Whitefriars. Daborne in a letter to Henslowe of 5 June 1613
-speaks of the company ‘comming over’, presumably from the Whitefriars
-to Bankside, and on 9 Dec. 1613 suggests that a play of his would be
-suitable for Henslowe’s ‘publique howse’, from which it may perhaps
-be inferred that Henslowe had also an interest in a ‘private’ house
-at the time (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 72, 79). Apparently conversion
-into a public theatre was then contemplated, for on 13 July 1613 the
-Master of the Revels received a fee of £20 ‘for a license to erect a
-new play-house in the White-friers, &amp;c.’ (<i>Var.</i> iii. 52). But
-this scheme was stopped by the Privy Council.<a id="FNanchor_1642" href="#Footnote_1642" class="fnanchor">[1642]</a> On 3 June 1615
-Rosseter and others obtained their patent for the Porter’s Hall theatre
-in Blackfriars (cf. p. 472), which contemplated its use by the Revels,
-the Prince’s, and the Lady Elizabeth’s, and incidentally recited that
-the Revels Children had been trained and exercised in the Whitefriars
-‘ever since’ 1610. The amalgamation was dissolved in the spring of
-1616, and the Lady Elizabeth’s and the Revels probably disappeared
-from London. If, therefore, the Whitefriars continued in use, it was
-probably by Prince Charles’s men, who would have been left homeless by
-the demolition of Porter’s Hall early in 1617. That it did continue
-in use and that a renewed lease was still held by some of the parties
-interested in the house in 1608 is indicated by the suit of <i>Trevell
-v. Woodford</i> before the Court of Requests in 1642, from which it
-appears, according to Peter Cunningham, that Sir Anthony Ashley, the
-then landlord of the house, entered the theatre in 1621, and turned out
-the players, on the pretence that half a year’s rent was due to him. In
-1629 the Whitefriars was replaced by the Salisbury Court theatre, built
-on the site of an old barn just on the other side of Water Lane.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_518">[518]</span></p>
-
-<h3>XVIII<br />
-
-THE STRUCTURE AND CONDUCT OF THEATRES</h3>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot sm">
-
-<p>[<i>Bibliographical Note.</i>&mdash;The only Restoration treatises
-which throw any light on the pre-Restoration theatre are R.
-Flecknoe, <i>A Short Discourse of the English Stage</i> (1664),
-and J. Wright, <i>Historia Histrionica</i> (1699), extracts from
-which are in Appendix I.</p>
-
-<p>Archaeological material was brought together by E. Malone in
-<i>Variorum</i> iii. 51, and J. P. Collier in <i>H. E. D. P.</i>
-iii. 140.</p>
-
-<p>Modern investigation may be said to begin with the discovery of
-the Swan drawing in 1888. The principal dissertations up to 1916
-are:</p>
-
-<p>K. T. Gaedertz, <i>Zur Kenntnis der altenglischen Bühne</i>
-(1888); H. B. Wheatley, <i>On a contemporary Drawing of the
-interior of the Swan Theatre</i>, 1596 (1888, <i>N. S. S.
-Trans. 1887–92</i>, 215); W. Archer, <i>A Sixteenth-Century
-Play-house</i> (1888, <i>Universal Review</i>), <i>The Stage
-of Shakespeare</i> (10 Aug. 1907, <i>Tribune</i>), <i>The
-Fortune Theatre</i>, 1600 (12 Oct. 1907, <i>Tribune</i>, repr.
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xliv. 159), <i>The Swan Drawing</i> (11 Jan.
-1908, <i>Tribune</i>), <i>The Elizabethan Stage</i> (1908,
-<i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 442), <i>The Play-house</i>
-(1916, <i>Shakespeare’s England</i>, ii. 283); R. Genée,
-<i>Ueber die scenischen Formen Shakespeare’s in ihrem
-Verhältnisse zur Bühne seiner Zeit</i> (1891, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-xxvi. 131); E. Kilian, <i>Die scenischen Formen Shakespeares in
-ihrer Beziehung zu der Aufführung seiner Dramen auf der modernen
-Bühne</i> (1893, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxviii. 90), <i>Shakespeare
-auf der modernen Bühne</i> (1900, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xxxvi.
-228); H. Logeman, <i>Johannes de Witt’s Visit to the Swan
-Theatre</i> (1897, <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 117); C. Grabau,
-<i>Zur englischen Bühne um 1600</i> (1902, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-xxxviii. 232); W. J. Lawrence, <i>Some Characteristics of
-the Elizabethan-Stuart Stage</i> (1902, <i>E. S.</i> xxxii.
-36), <i>The Elizabethan Play-house</i> (1912, 1913), <i>Night
-Performances in the Elizabethan Theatres</i> (1915, <i>E. S.</i>
-xlviii. 213), <i>New Light on the Elizabethan Theatre</i> (May
-1916, <i>Fortnightly Review</i>), <i>A Forgotten Play-house
-Custom of Shakespeare’s Day</i> (1916, <i>Book of Homage</i>,
-207), <i>Horses on the Elizabethan Stage</i> (<i>T. L. S.</i>
-5 June 1919), <i>He’s for a Jig or &mdash;&mdash; </i> (<i>T. L. S.</i>
-3 July 1919); K. Mantzius, <i>History of Theatrical Art</i>
-(1903–9); E. E. Hale, <i>The Influence of Theatrical Conditions
-on Shakespeare</i> (1904, <i>M. P.</i> i. 171); E. Koeppel,
-<i>Die unkritische Behandlung dramaturgischer Angaben in den
-Shakespeare-Ausgaben</i> (1904, <i>E. S.</i> xxxiv. 1); W.
-Bang, <i>Zur Bühne Shakespeares</i> (1904, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-xl. 223); W. Keller, <i>Nochmals zur Bühne Shakespeares</i>
-(1904, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xl. 225); A. H. Tolman, <i>Shakespeare’s
-Stage and Modern Adaptations</i> (1904, <i>Views about
-Hamlet</i>, 115), <i>Alternation in the Staging of Shakespeare’s
-Plays</i> (1909, <i>M. P.</i> vi. 517); C. Brodmeier, <i>Die
-Shakespeare-Bühne nach den alten Bühnenanweisungen</i>
-(1904); R. Prölss, <i>Von den ältesten Drucken der Dramen
-Shakespeares</i> (1905); P. Monkemeyer, <i>Prolegomena zu einer
-Darstellung der englischen Volksbühne</i> (1905); G. P. Baker,
-<i>Hamlet on an Elizabethan Stage</i> (1905, <i>Jahrbuch</i>,
-xli. 296), <i>Elizabethan Stage Theories</i> (3 Nov. 1905,
-<i>The Times Literary Supplement</i>); C. H. Kaulfuss-Diesch,
-<i>Die Inszenierung des deutschen Dramas an der Wende des
-16 und 17 Jahrhunderts</i> (1905); G. F. Reynolds, <i>Some
-Principles of Elizabethan Staging</i> (1905, <i>M. P.</i> i.
-581, ii. 69), <i>Trees on the Stage of Shakespeare</i> (1907,
-<i>M. P.</i> v. 153), <i>What we know of the Elizabethan
-Stage</i> (1911, <i>M. P.</i> ix. 47), <i>William Percy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_519">[519]</span>
-and his Plays</i> (1914, <i>M. P.</i> xii. 109); J. Corbin,
-<i>Shakespeare and the Plastic Stage</i> (1906, <i>Atlantic
-Monthly</i>, xcvii. 369), <i>Shakespeare his Own Stage
-Manager</i> (1911, <i>Century</i>, lxxxiii. 260); R. Bridges,
-<i>On the Influence of the Audience</i> (1907, <i>Stratford
-Town Shakespeare</i>, x. 321); E. K. Chambers, <i>On the Stage
-of the Globe</i> (1907, <i>Stratford Town Shakespeare</i>, x.
-351); C. C. Stopes, <i>Elizabethan Stage Scenery</i> (June 1907,
-<i>Fortnightly Review</i>); R. Wegener, <i>Die Bühneneinrichtung
-des Shakespeareschen Theaters</i> (1907); W. H. Godfrey, <i>An
-Elizabethan Play-house</i> (1908, <i>Architectural Review</i>,
-xxiii. 239; cf. xxxi. 53); C. W. Wallace, <i>The Children of
-the Chapel at Blackfriars</i> (1908); F. Schelling, <i>The
-Elizabethan Play-house</i> (1908, <i>Proc. of Philadelphia Num.
-and Antiq. Soc.</i>); A. A. Helmholtz-Phelan, <i>The Staging
-of Court Dramas before 1595</i> (1909, <i>M. L. A.</i> xxiv.
-185); V. E. Albright, <i>The Shaksperian Stage</i> (1909),
-<i>Percy’s Plays as Proof of the Elizabethan Stage</i> (1913,
-<i>M. P.</i> xi. 237); A. R. Skemp, <i>Some Characteristics
-of the English Stage before the Restoration</i> (1909,
-<i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlv. 101); W. Creizenach, <i>Bühnenwasen und
-Schauspielkunst</i> (1909, <i>Gesch. des neueren Dramas</i>,
-iv. 401); B. Neuendorff, <i>Die englische Volksbühne im
-Zeitalter Shakespeares nach den Bühnenanweisungen</i> (1910);
-H. H. Child, <i>The Elizabethan Theatre</i> (1910, <i>C.
-H.</i> vi. 241); H. Conrad, <i>Bemerkungen zu Lawrence’ Title
-and Locality Boards</i> (1910, <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 106);
-C. R. Baskervill, <i>The Custom of Sitting on the Elizabethan
-Stage</i> (1911, <i>M. P.</i> viii. 581); J. Q. Adams, <i>The
-Four Pictorial Representations of the Elizabethan Stage</i>
-(April 1911, <i>J. G. P.</i>); F. A. Foster, <i>Dumb Show in
-Elizabethan Drama before 1620</i> (1911, <i>E. S.</i> xliv.
-8); A. Forestier, <i>The Fortune Theatre Reconstructed</i> (12
-Aug. 1911, <i>Illustrated London News</i>); M. B. Evans, <i>An
-Early Type of Stage</i> (1912, <i>M. P.</i> ix. 421); T. S.
-Graves, <i>A Note on the Swan Theatre</i> (1912, <i>M. P.</i>
-ix. 431), <i>Night Scenes in the Elizabethan Theatres</i> (1913,
-<i>E. S.</i> xlvii. 63), <i>The Court and the London Theaters
-during the Reign of Elizabeth</i> (1913), <i>The Origin of the
-Custom of Sitting upon the Stage</i> (1914, <i>J. E. G. P.</i>
-xiii. 104), <i>The Act Time in Elizabethan Theatres</i> (1915,
-<i>Univ. of Carolina, Studies in Philology</i>, xii. 3), <i>The
-Ass as Actor</i> (1916, <i>S. Atlantic Quarterly</i>, xv.
-175); G. H. Cowling, <i>Music on the Shakespearian Stage</i>
-(1913); H. Bell, <i>Contributions to the History of the English
-Play-house</i> (1913, <i>Architectural Record</i>, 262, 359);
-W. G. Keith, <i>The Designs for the first Movable Scenery on
-the English Stage</i> (1914, <i>Burlington Magazine</i>, xxv.
-29, 85); W. Poel, <i>Shakespeare in the Theatre</i> (1915),
-<i>Some Notes on Shakespeare’s Stage and Plays</i> (1916); J.
-Le G. Brereton, <i>De Witt at the Swan</i> (1916, <i>Book of
-Homage</i>, 204); A. H. Thorndike, <i>Shakespeare’s Theater</i>
-(1916); T. H. Dickinson, <i>Some Principles of Shakespeare
-Staging</i> (1916, <i>Wisconsin Shakespeare Studies</i>,
-125). More recent papers are noted in the <i>Bulletin</i>
-of the English Association. R. C. Rhodes’ <i>The Stagery of
-Shakespeare</i> (1922) deserves consideration.</p>
-
-<p>It remains to give some account of the iconographical material
-available. Of four representations of the interiors of
-play-houses, the only one of early date (<i>c.</i> 1596) is
-(<i>a</i>) Arend van Buchell’s copy of a drawing by Johannes
-de Witt of the Swan, published in 1888 by Gaedertz and in
-more accurate facsimile by Wheatley (<i>vide supra</i>). The
-other three are Caroline. (<i>b</i>) A small engraving in a
-compartment of the title-page of W. Alabaster, <i>Roxana</i>
-(1632), may be taken as representing a type of academic
-stage, as the play was at Trinity, Cambridge, <i>c.</i> 1592.
-(<i>c</i>) A very similar engraving in the title-page of N.
-Richards, <i>Messallina</i> (1640), if it represents a specific
-stage at all, is less likely to represent the second Fortune,
-as suggested by Skemp in his edition of the play, or the Red
-Bull, as suggested by Albright, 45, than Salisbury Court, where
-it is clear from Murray, i. 279, that most of the career of the
-Revels company, by whom it was produced, was spent. (<i>d</i>)
-An engraved frontispiece to Francis<span class="pagenum" id="Page_520">[520]</span> Kirkman’s editions (1672,
-1673) of <i>The Wits, or Sport upon Sport</i> (originally
-published by Marsh, 1662) has been shown by Albright, 40, to
-have been erroneously regarded as a representation of the Red
-Bull, to which there is an incidental reference in the preface
-to Part II, and must be taken to show the type of stage on which
-the ‘drolls’ contained in the book were given ‘when the publique
-Theatres were shut up’.</p>
-
-<p>A Court interlude, with performers and spectators, might be
-supposed to be represented in (<i>e</i>) a woodcut prefixed to
-Wilson’s <i>Three Lords and Three Ladies of London</i> (1590),
-but the subject is not that of the play, and the cut is shown
-by A. W. Pollard (<i>English Miracle Plays</i>, ed. 6, 1914) to
-be taken from S. Batman, <i>The Travayled Pylgrime</i> (1569),
-and ultimately from a fifteenth-century illustration to O. de la
-Marche’s <i>Chevalier Délibéré</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Of the exteriors of theatres there are (<i>f</i>) a small
-engraving of <i>Theatrum</i> in a compartment of the title-page
-of Jonson’s <i>Works</i> (1616), which may be merely a bit of
-classical archaeology, but appears to have the characteristic
-Elizabethan hut, and (<i>g</i>) a series of representations,
-or perhaps only cartographical symbols, in the various maps
-detailed in the bibliographical note to ch. xvi. Doubtfully
-authentic is (<i>h</i>) a façade of the Blackfriars, reproduced
-by Baker, 78, from a print in the collection of Mr. Henry
-Gardiner, with a note (44) that the owner and various
-antiquarians ‘believe it genuine’; and almost certainly misnamed
-(<i>i</i>) a façade engraved as a relic of the second Fortune
-in R. Wilkinson, <i>Londina Illustrata</i> (1819), ii. 141,
-and elsewhere, which is plausibly assigned by W. J. Lawrence,
-<i>Restoration Stage Nurseries</i>, in <i>Archiv</i> (1914),
-301, to a post-Restoration training-school for young actors.</p>
-
-<p>A small ground-plan (<i>k</i>) of the Swan appears upon a
-manor map of Paris Garden in 1627, reproduced by W. Rendle in
-Harrison, ii, App. I.</p>
-
-<p>A rough engraving (<i>l</i>) on the title-page of <i>Cornucopia,
-Pasquils Nightcap</i> (1612) shows a section of the orchestra
-of a classical play-house as seen from the stage, and throws
-no light on contemporary conditions; and (<i>m</i>) the design
-by Inigo Jones described in ch. vii is of uncertain date, and
-intended for the private Cockpit theatre at Whitehall.</p>
-
-<p>I know of no representation of an English provincial stage,
-and unfortunately E. Mentzel, who describes (<i>Gesch. der
-Schauspielkunst in Frankfurt am Main</i>, 38) a woodcut of a
-play, with signboards, by English actors, probably at Frankfort,
-Nuremberg, or Cassel, in 1597, does not reproduce it. Some
-notion of the improvised stages used by travelling companies for
-out-of-door performances may be obtained from the continental
-engravings reproduced by Bapst, 153, by Rigal in <i>Petit de
-Julleville</i>, iii. 264, 296, and by M. B. Evans, <i>An Early
-Type of Stage</i> (<i>M. P.</i> ix. 421).</p>
-
-<p>An engraving of the Restoration stage of the Theatre Royal,
-Drury Lane (built 1663), from <i>Ariane, ou Le Mariage de
-Bacchus</i> (1674), and another of the same house as altered in
-1696, from <i>Unhappy Kindness</i> (1697), are reproduced by
-Lawrence, i. 169; ii. 140. Of the five engravings of the Duke’s
-Theatre, Dorset Garden (built 1671), in E. Settle, <i>Empress
-of Morocco</i> (1673), one is reproduced by Albright, 47, and
-another by Lawrence, ii. 160, and Thorndike, 110.</p>
-
-<p>Graphic attempts to reconstruct the plan and elevation of a
-typical Elizabethan stage will be found in the dissertations
-cited above of Brodmeier, Wegener, Archer, Godfrey, Albright,
-Corbin (1911, by G. Varian and J. Hambridge), and Forestier, and
-in the picture reproduced in W. N. Hills, <i>The Shakespearian
-Stage</i> (1919).</p>
-
-<p>Various revivals have also been carried out on Elizabethan
-stages, with more or less of archaeological purism, notably
-in London (W. Poel, <i>Shakespeare in the Theatre</i>), Paris
-(<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxv. 383), Harvard (G. P. Baker in
-<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xli. 296), and Munich (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>,
-xlii. 327).]</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_522">[522]</span></p>
-
-<p>A history of the theatres would not be complete without some account of
-their general structure and economy in the disposition of auditorium
-and stage. I propose to begin with the more assured or less important
-points, as a clearing of the way for the difficult and controverted
-problems of scenic setting, on some of which I am afraid that no very
-secure conclusion can be reached.</p>
-
- <div class="figcenter" id="i_521" >
- <img
- class="p2"
- src="images/i_521.jpg"
- alt="" />
- </div>
-
-<p>It is necessary, in the forefront, to appreciate the distinction
-between the ‘common’ or ‘public’ play-houses and the ‘private’ houses,
-which, so far as our period is concerned, were Paul’s, the Blackfriars,
-and the Whitefriars. This distinction is in its origin somewhat a
-technical one, for there is no reason to suppose that in the private
-houses the performances were private, in the sense that access to them
-could not be obtained, on payment, by members of the general public.
-Probably it is to be explained in relation to the Elizabethan system
-of State control of theatres, and represents an attempt to evade the
-limitations on the location and the number of play-houses which had
-been established through the action, first of the civic authorities
-and later of the Privy Council itself. This view receives support from
-the allegations made during the campaign for the suppression of the
-Blackfriars in 1619 that the owner ‘doth vnder the name of a private
-howse (respectinge indeed private comoditie only) convert the said
-howse to a publique play-house’.<a id="FNanchor_1643" href="#Footnote_1643" class="fnanchor">[1643]</a></p>
-
-<p>It can hardly be supposed, however, that Burbadge could have hoodwinked
-the Privy Council merely by calling the Blackfriars a ‘private’
-house, without finding any other means of differentiating it from
-the ‘public’ houses, and it is quite possible that the technical
-distinction, for which modern analogies could be found, consisted in
-the fact that admission was paid for in advance and no money taken at
-the doors.<a id="FNanchor_1644" href="#Footnote_1644" class="fnanchor">[1644]</a> Mr. Lawrence has very appropriately quoted in this
-connexion the Common Council regulations of 1574, in which an exception
-is made for performances ‘withowte publique or comen collection of
-money of the auditorie, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_523">[523]</span> behoulders theareof’; and though I do
-not suggest that the extension of this principle to Paul’s or the
-Blackfriars fell within the intention of the order, the evasion may
-have been allowed, within the gates of Paul’s or in a liberty, and
-for a well-conducted house attended by a well-to-do audience, to
-hold.<a id="FNanchor_1645" href="#Footnote_1645" class="fnanchor">[1645]</a> If so, it is probable that Paul’s from the beginning and
-the earlier Blackfriars were in effect private houses. But the actual
-terminology does not emerge before the revival of the boy companies in
-1599 and 1600. For some years past the title-pages of plays had vaunted
-them as ‘publikely acted’.<a id="FNanchor_1646" href="#Footnote_1646" class="fnanchor">[1646]</a> A corresponding ‘priuately acted’
-appears for Blackfriars in Jonson’s <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i> (1601) and
-<i>Poetaster</i> (1602), and for Paul’s in Middleton’s <i>Blurt Master
-Constable</i> (1602), while the antithesis is complete in Dekker’s
-<i>Satiromastix</i> (1602), which was presented ‘publikely’ by the
-Chamberlain’s and ‘priuately’ by Paul’s. Somewhat later we find Field’s
-<i>Woman a Weathercock</i> (1612) acted ‘priuately’, and Chapman’s
-<i>Revenge of Bussy D’Ambois</i> (1613) ‘at the priuate Play-house’ in
-the Whitefriars.<a id="FNanchor_1647" href="#Footnote_1647" class="fnanchor">[1647]</a> But by this time the distinction may be taken
-for granted as well established in general use.<a id="FNanchor_1648" href="#Footnote_1648" class="fnanchor">[1648]</a></p>
-
-<p>From the point of view, however, of stage arrangements, the technical
-<i>differentia</i> of a private house is less important than certain
-subsidiary characteristics.<a id="FNanchor_1649" href="#Footnote_1649" class="fnanchor">[1649]</a> The private houses were all in
-closed buildings, were occupied by boys, and charged higher prices
-than the ordinary theatres. These facts entailed variations of
-structure and method, which will require attention at more than one
-point. They naturally became less fundamental, but did not entirely
-disappear, after the transfer of the Blackfriars to the King’s men
-in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_524">[524]</span> 1609, and probably passed still further into the background after
-the introduction of roofed public houses in the Caroline age.<a id="FNanchor_1650" href="#Footnote_1650" class="fnanchor">[1650]</a>
-The title-pages generally describe the Blackfriars, the Cockpit, and
-Salisbury Court as ‘private’ houses right up to the closing of the
-theatres, but the term, in so far as it connotes anything different
-from ‘public’, seems to have lost what little meaning it ever had.<a id="FNanchor_1651" href="#Footnote_1651" class="fnanchor">[1651]</a></p>
-
-<p>De Witt, about 1596, describes the Theatre, Curtain, Rose, and Swan
-as ‘amphiteatra’, and Hentzner in 1598 adds that they were all
-‘lignea’.<a id="FNanchor_1652" href="#Footnote_1652" class="fnanchor">[1652]</a> The Globe and the Hope were built later on the same
-structural model. The Fortune was also of wood, but square. Of the
-shape and material of the Red Bull we know nothing. Prologues and
-epilogues often refer to the internal appearance of the auditorium as
-presenting a ‘round’, ‘ring’, ‘circuit’, ‘circumference’, or ‘O’.<a id="FNanchor_1653" href="#Footnote_1653" class="fnanchor">[1653]</a>
-If we can rely upon the draughtsmanship of the London maps, the
-external outline was rather that of a polygon. This evidence must not
-be pressed too far, for there is probably an element of cartographic
-symbolism to be reckoned with. The same house may appear in one map as
-a hexagon, in another as an octagon or decagon, and the late Hollar
-group differs from its predecessors in using a completely circular
-form. But there is confirmation in the Paris Garden manor map of
-1627, which shows the ground-plan of the Swan decagonal, and in the
-statement of Mrs. Thrale that the ruins of the Globe still visible in
-the eighteenth century were hexagonal without and round within. This
-was of course the later Globe built in 1613, and there is some reason
-for thinking that the earlier Globe may have been of rather<span class="pagenum" id="Page_525">[525]</span> different
-design. The verses on the fire by which it was destroyed speak of the
-stage-house ‘as round as taylers clewe’, and the early Hondius map,
-while it shows the Rose as polygonal, shows the Globe as circular,
-with the upper half of less diameter than the lower. This construction
-reappears in the Delaram drawings, and is so peculiar that the
-representation may well be realistic. There was an obvious precedent
-for the amphitheatrical form in the bear and bull rings which preceded
-the public theatres, and I do not know that we need go back with Ordish
-to a tradition of round mediaeval play-places, Cornish or English,
-or to the remains of Roman occupation. A ring is the natural form in
-which the maximum number of spectators can press about an object of
-interest.<a id="FNanchor_1654" href="#Footnote_1654" class="fnanchor">[1654]</a></p>
-
-<p>There is nothing to show that, for the main fabric, any material but
-timber was used, until the Fortune was rebuilt of brick in 1623. Timber
-is provided for in the contracts for the earlier Fortune and the Hope,
-and these were modelled on the Globe and Swan. Oak was to be mainly
-used for the Hope; no fir in the lower or middle stories. Burbadge’s
-lawsuits show that timber was the chief object of his expenditure on
-the Theatre, although some ironwork was also employed, presumably to
-tie the woodwork together. The dismantled fabric of the Theatre was
-used for the Globe. Henslowe used a good deal of timber for the repairs
-of the Rose in 1592–3, and did the house ‘about with ealme bordes’ in
-1595. There was also some brickwork, and the Fortune and Hope were
-to have brick foundations, a foot above the ground. The Fortune was
-to be covered with lath, lime, and hair without. Henslowe also used
-plaster, and I do not see anything inconsistent with a substantially
-wooden structure in De Witt’s statement that the Swan was ‘constructum
-ex coaceruato lapide pyrritide ... ligneis suffultum columnis’. This
-has been regarded as an error which prejudices the reliability of De
-Witt’s observations, but the description is too precise to be disproved
-by Hentzner’s generalized ‘lignea’, and after all the strength of the
-building was naturally in the columns, and the flints and mortar&mdash;a
-common form of walling in the chalk districts of England&mdash;may well have
-filled up the interstices between these. De Witt adds that the columns
-might deceive the shrewdest ‘ob illitum marmoreum colorem’.<a id="FNanchor_1655" href="#Footnote_1655" class="fnanchor">[1655]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_526">[526]</span></p>
-
-<p>De Witt has also been criticized for giving the seating capacity of
-the Swan as 3,000. I dare say this is merely the exaggerated round
-estimate of a casual visitor, but Wheatley calculates from the drawing
-that the galleries might hold 2,000, and it would not be surprising
-if our rude forefathers sat a bit closer than we care to do. Moryson
-speaks even more largely of theatres ‘more remarkable for the number,
-and the capacity, than for the building’, and ‘capable of many
-thousands’, while no less than 2,000 got into Trinity College hall for
-the academic plays of 1615.<a id="FNanchor_1656" href="#Footnote_1656" class="fnanchor">[1656]</a> The frame of the Fortune was 80 ft.
-square without and 55 ft. square within. This allows a depth of 12½ ft.
-for the galleries, and Corbin calculates a seating capacity, allowing
-18 in. for a seat and 18 in. square for a standing man, of 2,138 or
-2,558 at a pinch.<a id="FNanchor_1657" href="#Footnote_1657" class="fnanchor">[1657]</a> We do not know that the Swan was not larger
-than the Fortune, and have therefore no right to assume that De Witt
-was seriously out. Wright tells us that the Globe, Fortune, and Red
-Bull were ‘large’ houses; he is comparing them with the private houses
-of Caroline days.<a id="FNanchor_1658" href="#Footnote_1658" class="fnanchor">[1658]</a> The allusion in <i>Old Fortunatus</i> to the
-‘small circumference’ of the Rose perhaps hardly indicates that it was
-below the average size.</p>
-
-<p>The Swan drawing is our one contemporary picture of the interior of
-a public play-house, and it is a dangerous business to explain away
-its evidence by an assumption of inaccurate observation on the part
-of De Witt, merely because that evidence conflicts with subjective
-interpretations of stage-directions, arrived at in the course of
-the pursuit of a ‘typical’ stage. Still less can it be discredited
-on the ground that it was merely made by Van Buchell on ‘hearsay
-evidence’ from the instructions of De Witt.<a id="FNanchor_1659" href="#Footnote_1659" class="fnanchor">[1659]</a> It is a copy, like
-the accompanying description on the same piece of paper, of De Witt’s
-original, which De Witt says he drew (‘adpinxi’) in order to bring
-out an analogy which had struck him between the English and the Roman
-theatres. It was for this reason also, no doubt, that he marked certain
-features of the structure on the drawing with the names of what he
-thought to be their classical prototypes. I do not, of course, suggest
-that the drawing has the authority of a photographic record. De Witt is
-more likely to have made it as an afterthought in his inn than during
-the actual performance, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_527">[527]</span> he may well have omitted or misrepresented
-features. Certainly he can hardly have seen the trumpeter sounding
-when the action had already begun. And the draughtsmanship is bad, and
-may have been made worse by the copyist.<a id="FNanchor_1660" href="#Footnote_1660" class="fnanchor">[1660]</a> The upper part is done,
-with an attempt at perspective, as he may have seen it from a point
-in the middle, or perhaps the upper, gallery somewhat to the right
-of the centre; the lower part as from full face, so that the pillars
-stand equidistant from the edges of the stage, as they would not have
-appeared to him in perspective. His doors and the compartments of his
-stage gallery are of uneven sizes.<a id="FNanchor_1661" href="#Footnote_1661" class="fnanchor">[1661]</a> But, with all its faults,
-the drawing is the inevitable basis of any comprehensive account of
-the main structural features of a play-house, and I propose, leaving
-aside for the present the question of the possible hangings which it
-does not show, to take its parts one by one and illustrate them from
-other sources, and in particular from Henslowe’s contracts for the
-construction of the Fortune in 1600 and the Hope in 1614.<a id="FNanchor_1662" href="#Footnote_1662" class="fnanchor">[1662]</a></p>
-
-<p>The outline of the building is round, or slightly ovoid.<a id="FNanchor_1663" href="#Footnote_1663" class="fnanchor">[1663]</a> The
-floor, which shows no traces of seating, is marked ‘planities siue
-arena’. This is the space ordinarily known as the ‘yard’, a name which
-it may fairly be taken to have inherited from the inn-yards, surrounded
-by galleries and open overhead, in which, in the days before the
-building of the Theatre in 1576, more or less permanent play-houses
-had grown up.<a id="FNanchor_1664" href="#Footnote_1664" class="fnanchor">[1664]</a> Spectators in the yard always stood, and the more
-unstable psychology of a standing, as compared with a seated, crowd
-must always be taken into account in estimating the temperament of an
-Elizabethan audience. These are the ‘groundlings’, and the poets take
-their revenge for occasional scenes of turbulence in open or covert
-sneers at their ‘understanding’.<a id="FNanchor_1665" href="#Footnote_1665" class="fnanchor">[1665]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_528">[528]</span></p>
-
-<p>Well into the yard, leaving space for the groundlings on three sides of
-it, projects a quadrangular stage, which is marked ‘proscaenium’.<a id="FNanchor_1666" href="#Footnote_1666" class="fnanchor">[1666]</a>
-The breadth is perhaps rather greater than the depth.<a id="FNanchor_1667" href="#Footnote_1667" class="fnanchor">[1667]</a> This was
-certainly the case at the Fortune, where the stage was 43 ft. wide,
-and extended ‘to the middle of the yarde’, a distance of 27½ ft. The
-level of the stage may be some 3 or 4 ft. above the ground. Two solid
-trestles forming part of its supports are visible, but at the Fortune
-it was paled in with oak, and in view of the common use of the space
-below the stage to facilitate apparitions and other episodes requiring
-traps, this was probably the normal arrangement.<a id="FNanchor_1668" href="#Footnote_1668" class="fnanchor">[1668]</a> It has been
-thought that the stage of the Swan, like that of the Hope, which was
-in many respects modelled upon it, may have been removable. But this
-is hardly consistent with the heavy pillars which, in this respect
-certainly unlike the Hope, it carries. Moreover,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_529">[529]</span> the Hope had to be
-available for bear-baiting, which entailed an open arena, and there
-is no evidence, and very little likelihood, that baiting ever took
-place at the Swan. Like other theatres, it sometimes accommodated
-gymnasts and fencers, but these would use the stage.<a id="FNanchor_1669" href="#Footnote_1669" class="fnanchor">[1669]</a> There are
-no rails round the stage, such as we may infer the existence of at
-the Globe.<a id="FNanchor_1670" href="#Footnote_1670" class="fnanchor">[1670]</a> The only scenic apparatus visible is a large bench,
-on which a lady sits, while another stands behind her in an attitude
-of surprise, at the rapid approach from an outer corner of the stage
-of a man in an affected attitude, with a hat on his head and a long
-staff in his hand. You might take him for Malvolio cross-gartered, were
-there any chance that <i>Twelfth Night</i> could have been written when
-the drawing was made, or produced at the Swan.<a id="FNanchor_1671" href="#Footnote_1671" class="fnanchor">[1671]</a> Probably he is
-a returning traveller or a messenger bringing news. The floor of the
-stage is apparently bare. Sometimes rushes were laid down, at any rate
-for interior scenes.<a id="FNanchor_1672" href="#Footnote_1672" class="fnanchor">[1672]</a> The Globe produced <i>Henry VIII</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_530">[530]</span> in
-1613 ‘with many extraordinary circumstances of pomp and majesty, even
-to the matting of the stage’.</p>
-
-<p>Circling the yard and raised above it are three tiers of galleries,
-each containing three rows of seats. Beneath the first gallery De Witt
-wrote ‘orchestra’, above its seats ‘sedilia’, and between the middle
-and upper galleries ‘porticus’. In the classical theatre ‘porticus’ was
-the name for a covered gallery, and the classical analogy also makes
-it clear that by ‘orchestra’ De Witt meant to indicate the position
-occupied by the spectators of highest rank, corresponding to the seats
-of Roman senators, to which the name of the obsolete dancing place
-immediately in front of them had been transferred. It was not until the
-Restoration that the orchestra was allocated to the music.<a id="FNanchor_1673" href="#Footnote_1673" class="fnanchor">[1673]</a> The
-fronts of the galleries are supported by a number of turned posts. In
-the Fortune all the chief supports, presumably both in the auditorium
-and on the stage, were to be square and made ‘palasterwise, with carved
-proporcions called Satiers’. Internal painting was contemplated, but
-was not covered by the contract. Other references to painted theatres
-suggest that the Elizabethan builders were not content with bare
-scaffolds, but aimed at a decorative effect.<a id="FNanchor_1674" href="#Footnote_1674" class="fnanchor">[1674]</a> Three seems to have
-been the regular number of galleries. Kiechel bears witness to it for
-the Theatre and Curtain in 1585; and there were three at the Fortune
-and at the Hope. The lowest gallery at the Fortune was 12 ft. high,
-the next 11 ft., and the uppermost 9 ft., and each of the two latter
-jutted out 10 in. beyond that below. This gives a total height of 32
-ft., about three-fifths of the interior width of the house. The maps,
-therefore, make the buildings rather disproportionately high.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_531">[531]</span> The
-uppermost gallery has a roof, marked ‘tectum’. This in the earlier
-Globe was of thatch, which caused the fire of 1613, and left the
-unlucky King’s men with little but ‘wit to cover it with tiles’. I
-think the Rose was also thatched; but the Fortune and Hope were tiled.
-In view of the jetties, such a roof would give some protection to those
-in the galleries, but the groundlings had none. Both the drawing and
-the maps confirm the statement of Wright that the Globe, Fortune, and
-Red Bull were ‘partly open to the weather’, and this was doubtless also
-the case with their predecessors.<a id="FNanchor_1675" href="#Footnote_1675" class="fnanchor">[1675]</a></p>
-
-<p>De Witt does not indicate any internal gallery partitions, but the
-Swan had these by 1614, for they were to be the model for ‘two boxes
-in the lowermost storie fitt and decent for gentlemen to sitt in’,
-which were to be constructed at the Hope. Similarly the Fortune was
-to have ‘ffower convenient divisions for gentlemens roomes, and other
-sufficient and convenient divisions for twoe pennie roomes, with
-necessarie seates’. These were to be ceiled with lath and plaster. An
-earlier example of the technical use of the term ‘room’ for a division
-of the auditorium occurs in the draft Theatre lease of 1585, which
-gave the landlord a right to sit or stand in ‘some one of the upper
-romes’, if the places were not already taken up. If the clause, like
-the rest of the draft, merely reproduced the covenants of the 1576
-lease, the term was of long standing. Probably the divisions were of
-varying sizes. There would not have been much point in cutting up the
-space available for ‘two-pennie roomes’ into very small sections, but
-there were also ‘priuate roomes’, which are perhaps the same as the
-‘gentlemens roomes’ of the contracts.<a id="FNanchor_1676" href="#Footnote_1676" class="fnanchor">[1676]</a> If so, these were probably
-to the right and left of the stage in the lowest gallery. But the whole
-question of seating and prices is rather difficult, and it is further
-complicated by obscurely discerned changes of fashion, which involved
-the adoption of the very inconvenient custom of sitting on the stage,
-and the consequent abandonment by the gentry of what was called the
-lord’s room. Prices also, no doubt, tended to grow, at any rate for
-the better seats; the ‘popular’ prices always remained low.<a id="FNanchor_1677" href="#Footnote_1677" class="fnanchor">[1677]</a> I do
-not know whether the professional actors ever contented themselves,
-after their establishment in London, with merely sending round the
-hat,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_532">[532]</span> or, in mediaeval phrase, making a ‘gatheryng’.<a id="FNanchor_1678" href="#Footnote_1678" class="fnanchor">[1678]</a> Fixed prices
-must certainly have been the rule by the time of Kiechel’s visit in
-1585, for he tells us that, on the occasion of a new play, double
-prices were charged. This practice helps to explain the fluctuating
-receipts in Henslowe’s diary, and was still in force in the seventeenth
-century.<a id="FNanchor_1679" href="#Footnote_1679" class="fnanchor">[1679]</a> Spenser and his friends could have their laugh at
-a play for 1<i>d.</i> or 2<i>d.</i> in 1579, and ten years later
-Martin Marprelate could be seen for 2<i>d.</i> at the Theatre and
-4<i>d.</i> at Paul’s.<a id="FNanchor_1680" href="#Footnote_1680" class="fnanchor">[1680]</a> Higher prices are already characteristic
-of the private houses. In 1596 Lambarde informs us of a regular scale,
-apparently applicable to all public entertainments. None, he says,
-who ‘goe to Paris Gardein, the Bell Savage or Theatre, to beholde
-beare baiting, enterludes or fence play, can account of any pleasant
-spectacle unlesse they first pay one pennie at the gate, another at
-the entrie of the scaffolde and the thirde for a quiet standing’.
-Platter, in 1599, reports the same scale and adds a distinction, not
-made by Lambarde, between standings and seats. You paid 1<i>d.</i> to
-stand on the level, 1<i>d.</i> at an inner door to sit, and 1<i>d.</i>
-at a third door for one of the best places with a cushion.<a id="FNanchor_1681" href="#Footnote_1681" class="fnanchor">[1681]</a> The
-two-penny galleries or rooms long continued to be the resort of the
-ordinary playgoer, if he was not satisfied to stand in the yard for a
-penny.<a id="FNanchor_1682" href="#Footnote_1682" class="fnanchor">[1682]</a> He sat close,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_533">[533]</span> and the insolent poets and pamphleteers
-classed him with the groundlings as a ‘stinkard’.<a id="FNanchor_1683" href="#Footnote_1683" class="fnanchor">[1683]</a> His domain
-certainly included the top gallery, but about the other galleries I
-am not sure. There are some puzzling allusions to penny galleries
-and rooms, but probably, these are not distinct from the ‘two-penny’
-ones, and the explanation is to be found in the practice of paying
-the twopence in two instalments, one on entrance, the other at the
-gallery door.<a id="FNanchor_1684" href="#Footnote_1684" class="fnanchor">[1684]</a> It did not long remain possible to get one of the
-best seats for the 3<i>d.</i> quoted by Platter, even if there was
-not already in his time a higher charge for ‘the priuate roomes of
-greater price’.<a id="FNanchor_1685" href="#Footnote_1685" class="fnanchor">[1685]</a> There were both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_534">[534]</span> sixpenny and twelve-penny rooms
-by 1604.<a id="FNanchor_1686" href="#Footnote_1686" class="fnanchor">[1686]</a> These may have been the same private rooms at varying
-prices, according as the play was old or new. I take it that you only
-got a single seat, even in a ‘private’ room, for your 6<i>d.</i>
-or 12<i>d.</i>, and not the whole room. Overbury or another gives
-12<i>d.</i> as the price of the ‘best room’ as late as about 1614, but
-in the same year the ordinary scale of charges was greatly exceeded
-throughout the house on the production of <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> at
-the Hope, where a speaker in the induction says, ‘it shall be lawful
-to judge his six-penny-worth, his twelve-penny-worth, so to his
-eighteen-pence, two shillings, half a crown, to the value of his place,
-provided always his place get not above his wit’. This must have been
-a quite exceptional occasion, not merely a new play, but a new play at
-a new house. Similarly, when Richard Vennar brought the gulls to his
-swindle of <i>England’s Joy</i> in 1602, ‘the price at cumming in was
-two shillings or eighteen-pence at least’.</p>
-
-
-<p>A special compartment in one of the galleries was not the only
-privilege offered to the more fashionable playgoer. He might, at one
-time or another, sit ‘over the stage’ and on the stage. De Witt’s
-drawing shows, at the back of the stage, a raised gallery divided into
-six small boxes, in each of which one or two spectators appear to
-be placed.<a id="FNanchor_1687" href="#Footnote_1687" class="fnanchor">[1687]</a> It is reasonable to suppose that these are sitting
-‘over the stage’.<a id="FNanchor_1688" href="#Footnote_1688" class="fnanchor">[1688]</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_535">[535]</span> And some or all of those ‘over the stage’
-again, appear to have sat in ‘the lords room’ or ‘rooms’.<a id="FNanchor_1689" href="#Footnote_1689" class="fnanchor">[1689]</a> Of
-such a room we first hear in 1592, when Henslowe, repairing the Rose,
-paid 10<i>s.</i> ‘for sellynge of the Rome ouer the tyerhowsse’ and
-13<i>s.</i> ‘for sellinges my lords Rome’. The entry rather suggests
-that this was not so much a room for ‘lords’, as a room primarily
-reserved for the particular ‘lord’, under whose patronage the actors
-played; but however this may be, it was probably available by
-courtesy for other persons of distinction. The practice of sitting
-on the stage itself first emerges about 1596.<a id="FNanchor_1690" href="#Footnote_1690" class="fnanchor">[1690]</a> It was general
-by the seventeenth century, and was apparently most encouraged at
-the Blackfriars, where it perhaps lent itself best to the structural
-character of the building.<a id="FNanchor_1691" href="#Footnote_1691" class="fnanchor">[1691]</a> It was known at Paul’s, but was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_536">[536]</span>
-inconvenient on so small a stage.<a id="FNanchor_1692" href="#Footnote_1692" class="fnanchor">[1692]</a> And, as it certainly originated
-at the public houses, so it maintained itself there, in spite of the
-grumbles of the ordinary spectators, with whose view of the action the
-throng of feathered and restless gallants necessarily interfered.<a id="FNanchor_1693" href="#Footnote_1693" class="fnanchor">[1693]</a>
-It may have been profitable to the actors as sharers, but as actors
-they resented the restriction of the space available for their
-movements which it entailed.<a id="FNanchor_1694" href="#Footnote_1694" class="fnanchor">[1694]</a> The prologue to Jonson’s <i>The
-Devil is an Ass</i><span class="pagenum" id="Page_537">[537]</span> of 1616 contains a vigorous protest.<a id="FNanchor_1695" href="#Footnote_1695" class="fnanchor">[1695]</a> But
-the gallant liked to be seen as well as to see, and liked to slip in
-and out of the tiring-house and hob-nob with the players. It was not
-until Caroline times that the custom became intolerable.<a id="FNanchor_1696" href="#Footnote_1696" class="fnanchor">[1696]</a> On the
-stage stools were provided for those who did not care to sit on the
-rushes, and for these they paid at least sixpence and sometimes a
-shilling.<a id="FNanchor_1697" href="#Footnote_1697" class="fnanchor">[1697]</a> One result of the introduction of sitting on the stage
-appears to have been that the lord’s room lost its attractiveness and
-consequently its status. It fell into the background, and became the
-haunt of a rather disreputable class of playgoer. The lords were now
-to be found either on the stage itself, or in the private rooms of
-the lower gallery. Presumably the ‘grate’ to which the courtier of
-Sir John Davies’ epigram relegated himself, was in the lord’s room,
-perhaps fitted with a casement for scenic purposes.<a id="FNanchor_1698" href="#Footnote_1698" class="fnanchor">[1698]</a> The change is
-chronicled by Dekker in the passage of <i>The Gull’s Horn Book</i>, in
-which the gull is instructed how to behave himself in a play-house. He
-must by all means advance himself up to the throne of the stage.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘I meane not into the Lords roome (which is now but the
-Stages Suburbs): no, those boxes, by the iniquity of custome,
-conspiracy of waiting-women and Gentlemen-Ushers, that there
-sweat together, and the couetousnes of Sharers, are contemptibly
-thrust into the reare,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_538">[538]</span> and much new Satten is there dambd, by
-being smothred to death in darknesse.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I return to the guidance of De Witt. The boarding between the yard
-and the lower gallery, which in the Fortune was overlaid with iron
-pikes, presumably to prevent the groundlings from climbing over, shows
-two apertures, to right and left of the stage, one of which is marked
-‘ingressus’. From these steps lead to the lower gallery itself, and
-we may infer the presence of a passage to staircases behind, by which
-the upper galleries were reached. The contracts show that the Fortune,
-like the Globe, and the Hope, like the Swan, were to have external
-staircases.<a id="FNanchor_1699" href="#Footnote_1699" class="fnanchor">[1699]</a> Perhaps this accounts for the greater diameter of the
-lower part of the Globe in the London maps. Of external doors there
-were only two at the Globe, which caused trouble at the time of the
-fire, and two also at the Fortune, when Alleyn leased a share of it
-to Henslowe in 1601. One of these would in each case have been a door
-to the tiring-house, giving access to the stage and the lord’s room,
-while the other served the body of the theatre.<a id="FNanchor_1700" href="#Footnote_1700" class="fnanchor">[1700]</a> Those bound for
-the galleries paid their pennies at the theatre door, passed through
-the yard to the ‘ingressus’, and made additional payments there and
-in the ‘rooms’, according to the places selected.<a id="FNanchor_1701" href="#Footnote_1701" class="fnanchor">[1701]</a> The custom
-explains itself by the arrangement between the sharers of companies
-and the housekeepers of theatres, which gave the latter a proportion
-of gallery takings in lieu of rent. ‘Gatherers’, appointed by the
-persons interested, collected the money, and although this was put
-into a locked box, whence the modern term ‘box-office’, there were
-abundant opportunities for fraud. At need, the gatherers could serve as
-supernumeraries on the stage.<a id="FNanchor_1702" href="#Footnote_1702" class="fnanchor">[1702]</a></p>
-
-<p>At the back of the stage, and forming a chord to an arc of the circular
-structure of the play-house, runs a straight wall, pierced by two
-pairs of folding doors, on which De Witt has written ‘mimorum aedes’.
-Above it is the gallery or lord’s room already described. This wall
-is the ‘scene’, in the primary sense; it is also the front of the
-‘tire-house’,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_539">[539]</span> or in modern phrase ‘green-room’, a necessary adjunct
-of every theatre. The Theatre depositions of 1592 speak of this as
-‘the attyring housse or place where the players make them readye’.
-The drawing indicates nothing in the way of hangings over either wall
-or doors, but in some theatres these certainly existed. Thus Peacham,
-in his <i>Thalia’s Banquet</i> (1620) referring to much earlier days,
-tells us that</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">Tarlton when his head was onely seene,</div>
- <div>The Tire-house doore and Tapistrie betweene,</div>
- <div>Set all the multitude in such a laughter,</div>
- <div>They could not hold for scarce an hour after.<a id="FNanchor_1703" href="#Footnote_1703" class="fnanchor">[1703]</a></div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>The front of the tiring-house is the ‘scene’ in the Renaissance
-sense, and its characteristics will be of great concern in later
-chapters.<a id="FNanchor_1704" href="#Footnote_1704" class="fnanchor">[1704]</a> The Fortune tire-house was to be within<span class="pagenum" id="Page_540">[540]</span> the frame of
-the theatre, and would not, therefore, unless it projected on to the
-stage, have more depth than about 12 ft. Mr. Brereton, in a careful
-analysis of the drawing, suggests that the Swan tire-house may not have
-extended the full width of the stage, but may have left room to come
-and go on either side of its front.<a id="FNanchor_1705" href="#Footnote_1705" class="fnanchor">[1705]</a> If so, some projection is not
-improbable, but one cannot rely much upon the hazardous interpretation
-of bad draughtsmanship. The ground-plan of the Swan seems to show an
-annexe at one point, and of course additional depth could easily be
-obtained in this way. Moreover, there were at least three stories
-available. The spectators in the lord’s room would not take up the
-whole depth on the level of the middle gallery, and there must have
-been a corresponding space on that of the top gallery. Henslowe ceiled
-‘the rome ouer the tyerhowsse’ in 1592, and an inventory of the
-Admiral’s men in 1598 includes effects ‘leaft above in the tier-house
-in the cheast’. No doubt a fair amount of accommodation was needed. The
-tire-house was not merely a dressing-room and a store-house. Here came
-the author, to rail at the murdering of his lines, and the gallants
-to gossip and patronize the players.<a id="FNanchor_1706" href="#Footnote_1706" class="fnanchor">[1706]</a> Here were the book-holder,
-who prompted the speeches, surveyed the entrances and exits, and saw
-to the readiness of the properties;<a id="FNanchor_1707" href="#Footnote_1707" class="fnanchor">[1707]</a> the tireman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_541">[541]</span> who fitted the
-dresses and the beards, furnished stools, and in the private theatres
-took charge of the lights;<a id="FNanchor_1708" href="#Footnote_1708" class="fnanchor">[1708]</a> the stage-keeper;<a id="FNanchor_1709" href="#Footnote_1709" class="fnanchor">[1709]</a> the grooms
-and ‘necessary attendants’, waiting to draw curtains, to thrust out
-beds, and to carry benches and banquets on and off.<a id="FNanchor_1710" href="#Footnote_1710" class="fnanchor">[1710]</a> Here, too,
-was the head-quarters of the music, although in the public theatres the
-music was largely incidental, and was often played on, or above, or
-even below the stage, as might seem most appropriate to any particular
-action.<a id="FNanchor_1711" href="#Footnote_1711" class="fnanchor">[1711]</a> Music between the acts was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_542">[542]</span> unknown, but we learn
-from the induction to the <i>Malcontent</i> that it was ‘not received’
-by the audience at the Globe in 1604.<a id="FNanchor_1712" href="#Footnote_1712" class="fnanchor">[1712]</a> There was also, of course,
-the final ‘jig’.<a id="FNanchor_1713" href="#Footnote_1713" class="fnanchor">[1713]</a> For an overture, the public theatres seem to
-have employed nothing beyond three soundings of a trumpet, the last
-of which was the signal for the prologue to begin.<a id="FNanchor_1714" href="#Footnote_1714" class="fnanchor">[1714]</a> Probably
-the musical element tended to increase. A special music-room perhaps
-existed already at the Swan in 1611, and, if so, may have been, as it
-was in the later theatres, in the upper part of the tire-house.<a id="FNanchor_1715" href="#Footnote_1715" class="fnanchor">[1715]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_543">[543]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Fortune tire-house was to have ‘convenient windowes and lightes
-glazed’. Some of these may have looked into the auditorium, and have
-been used for scenic purposes. But the maps show external windows here
-and there in the walls, and these would be necessary to light both the
-tire-house and the galleries. We have a picture of Burbadge leaning
-out of an upper window to greet with abuse the disturbers of his peace
-at the Theatre in 1590. The yard and the stage itself were, of course,
-lit, in the absence of a roof, from above. Performances were ordinarily
-by daylight; before the end of the sixteenth century the time for
-beginning had been fixed at 2 o’clock.<a id="FNanchor_1716" href="#Footnote_1716" class="fnanchor">[1716]</a> The stage-directions point
-to a frequent enough use of lamps and tapers, but always to give the
-illusion of scenic darkness. Plays, however, lasted at least two hours,
-sometimes half an hour or even an hour longer, and there was the jig to
-follow.<a id="FNanchor_1717" href="#Footnote_1717" class="fnanchor">[1717]</a> It must therefore be doubtful whether, in the depth of
-winter, daylight could have served quite to the end. Webster complains
-that the ill-success of <i>The White Devil</i> was due to its being
-given ‘in so dull a time of winter, and presented in so open and black
-a theatre’. Perhaps the shorter plays were chosen for the shorter days,
-or the jig was omitted. But it is also possible that some primitive
-illumination, in the form of cressets, or baskets of tarred and flaring
-rope, was introduced.<a id="FNanchor_1718" href="#Footnote_1718" class="fnanchor">[1718]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_544">[544]</span></p>
-
-<p>The actors themselves were not wholly without protection from the
-elements. De Witt depicts two heavy classical columns, which stand
-on square bases rather farther back than the middle of the stage and
-a little way from each side of it. These support a pent-house roof,
-which starts from the level of the eaves of the ‘tectum’ over the
-top gallery, and descends in a steep slope to a level opposite to
-the middle of the second gallery, where it slightly projects beyond
-the supporting columns. Behind and above it rises a kind of hut,
-conspicuous above the ‘tectum’ and forming a superstructure to the
-tire-house. Its front has less width than that of the tire-house, and
-its side is shown in clumsy perspective, which is apparently followed
-round by the pent-house below it. The pent-house is the only thing
-in the drawing, that can represent the ‘shadow’ or ‘heavens’, which
-several allusions point to as a regular feature in the public theatres,
-and which certainly existed at the Rose, the Fortune&mdash;and therefore
-presumably the Globe&mdash;and the Hope.<a id="FNanchor_1719" href="#Footnote_1719" class="fnanchor">[1719]</a> But it must be admitted that
-this sharply sloping roof, coming down low and considerably impeding
-the vision of the spectators at any rate in the top gallery, does not
-agree very well with the notion of a heavens dominating the stage,
-elaborately decorated, and serving for the display of spectacular
-effects, which were surely meant to be visible to all. It is possible
-that De Witt’s halting draughtsmanship has failed him in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_545">[545]</span> the attempt
-to tackle the architectural perspective from a difficult angle in an
-upper gallery. My impression is that, by giving too much height to the
-bottom gallery, he has got the two other galleries out of line with
-the stories of the tire-house to which they correspond, and that the
-lower gallery should really be on the level of the stage, the middle
-gallery on that of the gallery ‘over the stage’, and the top gallery
-on that of the rather obscure story above. If so, the front of this
-story would have been visible, and may have contained some aperture
-of which account has not yet been taken in formulating theories of
-staging.<a id="FNanchor_1720" href="#Footnote_1720" class="fnanchor">[1720]</a> And I think that the columns were really higher and the
-roof flatter than De Witt has drawn them. It is perhaps less easy to
-suggest that the columns stood farther forward than De Witt has placed
-them, but the roof may well have projected farther over them. They are
-solid enough to bear a much greater weight than the drawing indicates.
-However these things may have been at the Swan&mdash;I am not blind to
-the dangers of attempting to convert what De Witt has shown into
-something which he has not shown&mdash;one may, perhaps, infer that more
-extensive roofing than the pent-house of the drawing would afford was
-contemplated by the Fortune contract, which provides for ‘a shadowe or
-cover over the saide stadge’, and the Hope contract, which is even more
-precise in its specification of ‘the Heavens all over the saide stage’.
-In both cases there were to be gutters to carry away rain-water. The
-heavens at the Hope were ‘to be borne or carryed without any postes
-or supporters to be fixed or sett uppon the saide stage’, and it has
-been thought that other theatres of later date than the Swan may also
-have dispensed with posts. But there is little ground for this theory,
-other than the obvious obstruction which the posts would offer to
-vision.<a id="FNanchor_1721" href="#Footnote_1721" class="fnanchor">[1721]</a> Howes seems to refer to the arrangement at the Hope as
-an innovation, and it can hardly be unrelated to the special need for
-a removable stage at that house. On the other hand the posts may very
-likely have been slighter than De Witt has shown them. At the Fortune
-they were, like other ‘princypall and maine postes’, square and carved
-‘palasterwise’ with satyrs. The posts are worked into the action of
-several plays, and Kempe tells us that pickpockets were pilloried by
-being tied to them.<a id="FNanchor_1722" href="#Footnote_1722" class="fnanchor">[1722]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_546">[546]</span></p>
-
-<p>The hut has two windows in front, and a door in the visible side. It
-has been suggested that it may really have stood rather more forward
-than De Witt indicates, jutting out from the tire-house so as to be
-directly over a part of the heavens.<a id="FNanchor_1723" href="#Footnote_1723" class="fnanchor">[1723]</a> An analogous superstructure
-is observable in most of the map-representations of theatres. That
-of the later Globe in Visscher’s map of 1616 seems to have two bays,
-one behind another, instead of the one bay of the Swan drawing, and
-would have required more space. The ‘Theatrum’ of Jonson’s 1616 Folio
-has an <b>L</b>-shaped superstructure. The object of a jut forward
-would be to facilitate the descents and ascents from and to the
-heavens, which formed popular features in many plays, and which must
-have been contrived by some kind of machinery from above.<a id="FNanchor_1724" href="#Footnote_1724" class="fnanchor">[1724]</a> From
-the roof of this hut floats a flag, with the figure of a swan upon
-it, and at the door stands a man, apparently blowing a trumpet, from
-which depends a smaller flag also bearing a swan. There is abundant
-evidence that the play-houses flew flags when they were open for
-performances, and took them down when Lent or a plague rendered playing
-impossible.<a id="FNanchor_1725" href="#Footnote_1725" class="fnanchor">[1725]</a> The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_547">[547]</span> trumpeter is no doubt giving one of the three
-‘soundings’ which preluded the appearance of the prologue in his
-traditional long black velvet cloak.<a id="FNanchor_1726" href="#Footnote_1726" class="fnanchor">[1726]</a> Nor did the flag and the
-trumpet exhaust the resources of the Elizabethan art of advertisement.
-The <i>vexillatores</i> of the miracle-play would perhaps have been
-out of keeping with London conditions.<a id="FNanchor_1727" href="#Footnote_1727" class="fnanchor">[1727]</a> But it was customary to
-announce after the epilogue of each performance what the next was to
-be.<a id="FNanchor_1728" href="#Footnote_1728" class="fnanchor">[1728]</a> And public notification was given by means of play-bills,
-of which we hear from as early a date as 1564, and which were set
-up on posts in conspicuous places up and down the city and probably
-also at the play-house doors.<a id="FNanchor_1729" href="#Footnote_1729" class="fnanchor">[1729]</a> Copies seem also to have been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_548">[548]</span>
-available for circulation from hand to hand.<a id="FNanchor_1730" href="#Footnote_1730" class="fnanchor">[1730]</a> On 30 October 1587
-John Charlwood entered in the Stationers’ Register a licence for
-‘the onely ympryntinge of all manner of billes for players’. This
-passed from him to James Roberts, and was transferred by Roberts to
-William Jaggard on 29 October 1615.<a id="FNanchor_1731" href="#Footnote_1731" class="fnanchor">[1731]</a> No theatrical bill of the
-Elizabethan or Jacobean period is preserved, although a manuscript
-bill for the Bear Garden is amongst Alleyn’s papers at Dulwich.<a id="FNanchor_1732" href="#Footnote_1732" class="fnanchor">[1732]</a>
-Four late seventeenth-century bills are at Claydon; they are brief
-announcements, which give the names of the plays, but not those of the
-authors or actors.<a id="FNanchor_1733" href="#Footnote_1733" class="fnanchor">[1733]</a> There is no evidence of anything corresponding
-to the modern programme, with its cast and synopsis of scenes.<a id="FNanchor_1734" href="#Footnote_1734" class="fnanchor">[1734]</a>
-The audience gathered early, as there were few, if any, reserved
-seats.<a id="FNanchor_1735" href="#Footnote_1735" class="fnanchor">[1735]</a> The period of waiting was spent in consuming fruit or
-sweatmeats and liquid refreshment, and in expressing impatience if the
-actors failed to make an appearance in good time.<a id="FNanchor_1736" href="#Footnote_1736" class="fnanchor">[1736]</a> Tobacco was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_549">[549]</span>
-freely used, especially by the gallants on the stage.<a id="FNanchor_1737" href="#Footnote_1737" class="fnanchor">[1737]</a> Books were
-also hawked up and down, and a game of cards might beguile the tedium
-of waiting.<a id="FNanchor_1738" href="#Footnote_1738" class="fnanchor">[1738]</a> The galleries were full of light women, who found
-them a profitable haunt, but whose presence did not altogether prevent
-that of ladies of position, probably in the private rooms, and possibly
-masked.<a id="FNanchor_1739" href="#Footnote_1739" class="fnanchor">[1739]</a></p>
-
-<p>If the audience liked a play, the actors expected a <i>Plaudite</i>
-of hand-clapping; if otherwise, they took their chance of hissing
-and ‘mewing’, or of a pointed withdrawal of spectators from the
-stage.<a id="FNanchor_1740" href="#Footnote_1740" class="fnanchor">[1740]</a> The device of a <i>claque</i> was not<span class="pagenum" id="Page_550">[550]</span> unknown.<a id="FNanchor_1741" href="#Footnote_1741" class="fnanchor">[1741]</a>
-The applause was often invited in the closing speech or in a formal
-epilogue, on the same lines as the prologue, which it seems to have
-replaced in favour about the end of the sixteenth century.<a id="FNanchor_1742" href="#Footnote_1742" class="fnanchor">[1742]</a>
-This might also lead up to or perhaps represent the prayer for the
-sovereign, of which there are traces up to a late date, and which
-was analogous to the modern use of ‘God Save the King’.<a id="FNanchor_1743" href="#Footnote_1743" class="fnanchor">[1743]</a> The
-accompanying prayer for the ‘lord’ of the players, on the other hand,
-cannot be shown to have been adopted into the public theatres.<a id="FNanchor_1744" href="#Footnote_1744" class="fnanchor">[1744]</a>
-Finally, the epilogue might indicate a coming dance.<a id="FNanchor_1745" href="#Footnote_1745" class="fnanchor">[1745]</a> Of this a
-little more needs to be said. The players have amongst other elements
-in their ancestry the mediaeval mimes, and they inherit the familiar
-mimic tradition of multifarious entertainment. The ‘legitimate’ drama
-was not as yet on its pedestal. The companies of the ’eighties and even
-the early ’nineties were composed of men ready at need to eke out their
-plays by musical performances and even the ‘activities’ of acrobats.
-This is perhaps most obvious in the continental companies, which
-had to face the obstacles to a complete intelligence between stage
-and audience introduced at the tower of Babel. Such a cosmopolitan
-mingling of drama and ‘activities’ as we may suppose <i>The Labours
-of Hercules</i> to have been was a valuable resource.<a id="FNanchor_1746" href="#Footnote_1746" class="fnanchor">[1746]</a> But at
-home also we find Strange’s and the Admiral’s men showing their
-‘activities’ at court, and Symons<span class="pagenum" id="Page_551">[551]</span> the acrobat becoming a leader
-amongst the Queen’s, and even so late as 1601 Henslowe fitting out the
-Admiral’s boy Nick to tumble in the presence of royalty. The country
-tours of the Queen’s were for some time accompanied by a Turkish rope
-dancer.<a id="FNanchor_1747" href="#Footnote_1747" class="fnanchor">[1747]</a> In the theatres themselves Italian players made their
-success and their scandal, with the help of tumbling women.<a id="FNanchor_1748" href="#Footnote_1748" class="fnanchor">[1748]</a>
-Whether English players did the same we do not know. But we do know
-that the dance by way of afterpiece was a regular and enduring
-custom.<a id="FNanchor_1749" href="#Footnote_1749" class="fnanchor">[1749]</a> It was known as the jig.<a id="FNanchor_1750" href="#Footnote_1750" class="fnanchor">[1750]</a> At first, perhaps,
-nothing more than such dancing, with the help of a variety of foreign
-costumes, as was also an element in the early masks, it developed into
-a farcical dialogue, with a musical and Terpsichorean accompaniment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_552">[552]</span>
-for which popular tunes, such as <i>Fading</i>, were utilized.<a id="FNanchor_1751" href="#Footnote_1751" class="fnanchor">[1751]</a>
-This transformation was perhaps due to the initiative of Tarlton, to
-whom several jigs are attributed.<a id="FNanchor_1752" href="#Footnote_1752" class="fnanchor">[1752]</a> But he was followed by Kempe
-and others, and in the last decade of the sixteenth century the jig
-may be inferred from the Stationers’ Register to have become almost a
-literary type.<a id="FNanchor_1753" href="#Footnote_1753" class="fnanchor">[1753]</a> Nashe in 1596 threatens Gabriel Harvey with an
-interlude, and ‘a Jigge at the latter end in English Hexameters of
-<i>O neighbour Gabriell, and his wooing of Kate Cotton</i>’.<a id="FNanchor_1754" href="#Footnote_1754" class="fnanchor">[1754]</a> In
-1597 Henslowe bought two jigs from two young men for the Admiral’s
-at a cost of 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i><a id="FNanchor_1755" href="#Footnote_1755" class="fnanchor">[1755]</a> In 1598 ‘Kemps Jigge’ was
-being sung in the streets.<a id="FNanchor_1756" href="#Footnote_1756" class="fnanchor">[1756]</a> The Middlesex justices made a
-special order against the lewd jigs, songs, and dances at the Fortune
-in 1612.<a id="FNanchor_1757" href="#Footnote_1757" class="fnanchor">[1757]</a> Unfortunately few jigs have survived except from a
-late date or in German adaptations.<a id="FNanchor_1758" href="#Footnote_1758" class="fnanchor">[1758]</a> Two or three, however,
-appear amongst collections of ballads to which they are cognate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_553">[553]</span> in
-metrical form, notably one ascribed to ‘M<sup>r</sup> Attowel’, whom we should,
-I think, identify with the sixteenth-century George, rather than the
-seventeenth-century Hugh, of that name.<a id="FNanchor_1759" href="#Footnote_1759" class="fnanchor">[1759]</a> Another, <i>Rowland’s
-Godson</i>, seems to be the surviving member of a well-known
-cycle.<a id="FNanchor_1760" href="#Footnote_1760" class="fnanchor">[1760]</a></p>
-
-<p>Nor was the jig the only form of afterpiece which had its savour in
-an Elizabethan play-house. Tarlton again, and after Tarlton Wilson,
-won reputation in the handling of ‘themes’, which appear to have been
-improvisations in verse, strung together on some motive supplied by
-a member of the audience.<a id="FNanchor_1761" href="#Footnote_1761" class="fnanchor">[1761]</a> It has been suggested that complete
-plays were also sometimes given by the method of improvised dialogue
-on a concerted plot which was followed in the Italian <i>commedie
-dell’ arte</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1762" href="#Footnote_1762" class="fnanchor">[1762]</a> This must remain very doubtful. The Italian
-practice and the stock characters, pantaloon, zany, and harlequin, of
-the <i>commedie dell’ arte</i> were certainly known in England; but we
-have the clear evidence of <i>The Case is Altered</i> that by 1597 at
-any rate they had not been naturalized.<a id="FNanchor_1763" href="#Footnote_1763" class="fnanchor">[1763]</a> If improvisation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_554">[554]</span> went
-beyond the gagging of a clown, it was probably only in some exceptional
-experiment or <i>tour de force</i>.<a id="FNanchor_1764" href="#Footnote_1764" class="fnanchor">[1764]</a> As exceptional also we may
-regard Vennar’s spectacular <i>Englands Joy</i> of 1602 and the wager
-plays, in which actors or even amateurs challenged each other to
-compete in rendering some ‘part’ of traditional repute.<a id="FNanchor_1765" href="#Footnote_1765" class="fnanchor">[1765]</a> One would
-like to know more about the play, apparently a monologue, ‘set out al
-by one virgin’, at the Theatre in 1583.<a id="FNanchor_1766" href="#Footnote_1766" class="fnanchor">[1766]</a></p>
-
-<p>Many of the characteristics of the public theatres naturally repeated
-themselves at the Blackfriars, the Whitefriars, and Paul’s. The
-distinctive features of these, as already indicated, arose from the
-structure of the buildings, from the higher prices charged, and in the
-beginning at least from the employment of singing boys as actors. Some
-assimilation of ‘public’ and ‘private’ methods was bound to follow
-upon the acquisition of the Blackfriars by men actors in 1609, but the
-period during which this was the principal house of the King’s company
-lies outside the scope of this survey.</p>
-
-<p>The exact location of Paul’s is obscure, but we know that its
-auditorium was round and its stage small.<a id="FNanchor_1767" href="#Footnote_1767" class="fnanchor">[1767]</a> Whitefriars and both
-the earlier and the later Blackfriars were in rooms which had formed
-part of mediaeval conventual buildings, rectangular, roofed, and more
-analogous to courtly halls than to popular rings. No room at Farrant’s
-disposal would have given him a stage of a greater width than 27 ft.
-Burbadge’s theatre was 66 ft. from north to south, and 46 ft. from
-east to west. It was on the second story of his purchase that he could
-have best constructed it. The stage, which stood on a paved floor, was
-probably towards the south end, and as the whole space available was
-something<span class="pagenum" id="Page_555">[555]</span> like 100 ft. long by 52 wide, we may guess that partitions
-had been put up to screen off a tiring-house behind it and a passage
-by which the tiring-house could be reached.<a id="FNanchor_1768" href="#Footnote_1768" class="fnanchor">[1768]</a> The entrance would
-be at the north end, where a great flight of stairs led up from a
-yard large enough for coaches to turn in. There were galleries, but
-not necessarily three distinct tiers of galleries, as in the public
-theatres, for which, indeed, there would hardly have been height
-enough.<a id="FNanchor_1769" href="#Footnote_1769" class="fnanchor">[1769]</a> And there was a ‘middle region’ in which the spectators
-sat, instead of standing as they did in the public ‘yards’.<a id="FNanchor_1770" href="#Footnote_1770" class="fnanchor">[1770]</a> This,
-which was a feature also of the later private houses, came to be known
-as the ‘pit’, but as the derivation of this term is from ‘cockpit’,
-it may not be of earlier origin than the building of the Cockpit or
-Phoenix theatre in Drury Lane about 1617.<a id="FNanchor_1771" href="#Footnote_1771" class="fnanchor">[1771]</a> A roofed theatre would
-not require a specially constructed ‘heavens’, as descents could
-be worked through the ceiling from a room above. There is no clear
-evidence for a lord’s room at any of the private houses.<a id="FNanchor_1772" href="#Footnote_1772" class="fnanchor">[1772]</a> But
-there were ‘boxes’, at any rate at the Whitefriars.<a id="FNanchor_1773" href="#Footnote_1773" class="fnanchor">[1773]</a> Evidence
-for seats on the stage has already been furnished. There is much to
-suggest that the audience was a more select one than that of the public
-theatres.<a id="FNanchor_1774" href="#Footnote_1774" class="fnanchor">[1774]</a> Elizabeth cannot be shown<span class="pagenum" id="Page_556">[556]</span> to have ever attended the
-Blackfriars, but Anne certainly did.<a id="FNanchor_1775" href="#Footnote_1775" class="fnanchor">[1775]</a> And the price of the seats,
-which ranged from 6<i>d.</i> to 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, was of itself
-sufficient to keep out persons of the ‘groundling’ or ‘stinkard’
-type.<a id="FNanchor_1776" href="#Footnote_1776" class="fnanchor">[1776]</a> Performances did not necessarily take place every day,
-and they could begin rather later and go on rather longer than those
-out of doors, since they were not dependent on daylight.<a id="FNanchor_1777" href="#Footnote_1777" class="fnanchor">[1777]</a>
-Windows were certainly used, for we hear of them being clapped down
-to give the illusion of night scenes.<a id="FNanchor_1778" href="#Footnote_1778" class="fnanchor">[1778]</a> But candles and torches
-supplied an artificial lighting.<a id="FNanchor_1779" href="#Footnote_1779" class="fnanchor">[1779]</a> As both the Paul’s boys and
-those of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_557">[557]</span> the Chapel were primarily choristers, it is not surprising
-that music played a considerable part in the entertainment provided.
-Musical interludes were given between the acts, and Gerschow records a
-preliminary concert of an hour in length before the play began at the
-Blackfriars in 1602.<a id="FNanchor_1780" href="#Footnote_1780" class="fnanchor">[1780]</a> Sometimes also a boy came forward and danced
-between the acts.<a id="FNanchor_1781" href="#Footnote_1781" class="fnanchor">[1781]</a> At Paul’s there was at the back of the stage
-a ‘musick tree’, which apparently rose out of a ‘canopie’ and bore a
-‘musick house’ on either side of it.<a id="FNanchor_1782" href="#Footnote_1782" class="fnanchor">[1782]</a></p>
-
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[1]</a> E. J. L. Scott, <i>Letter Book of Gabriel Harvey</i>
-(Camden Soc.), 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[2]</a> Cf. App. D, No. lxxviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[3]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[4]</a> G. Dugdale, <i>Time Triumphant</i> (1604), sig. B,
-‘Nay, see the beauty of our all kinde soveraigne! not onely to the
-indifferent of worth, and the worthy of honor, did he freely deale
-about thiese causes, but to the meane gave grace, as taking to him the
-late Lord Chamberlaines servants, now the Kings acters; the Queene
-taking to her the Earle of Worsters servants, that are now her acters;
-and the Prince, their sonne, Henry, Prince of Wales full of hope, tooke
-to him the Earle of Nottingham his servants, who are now his acters.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[5]</a> Cf. ch. xvi, introd., and App. C, No. lviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[6]</a> Flecknoe (App. I) perhaps exaggerates the share of moral
-sentiment in bringing to an end the formal connexion of the choirs with
-plays (cf. p. 52).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[7]</a> De la Boderie, in 1608 (cf. vol. i, p. 327), speaks of
-five companies in London. These would be the King’s, Queen’s, Prince’s,
-Revels, and King’s Revels.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[8]</a> <i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 216, from statutes collected
-in the decanate of Ralph of Baldock (1294–1304), ‘Cantoris officium est
-... pueros introducendos in chorum et ad cantum intitulatos examinare
-... Magistrum Scolae Cantus in ecclesia Sancti Gregorii, salva Decano
-et Capitulo ipsius collacione, preficere’; Dugdale, <i>St. Paul’s</i>
-(1818), 347, from fifteenth-or early sixteenth-century manuscript of
-statutes, ‘Magistrum Scholae Cantus constituit Cantor. Ad eum pertinet
-eos qui canere nequeunt instruere, pueros diligenter docere, eis non
-solum magistrum Cantus, sed etiam bonorum morum esse.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[9]</a> <i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 215, from statutes collected
-in decanate of Ralph de Diceto (1181–99), ‘Cotidie pascat ... duos
-pueros elemosinarios ... et secum ad Ecclesiam media nocte panem et
-cervisiam pro iunioribus chorum frequentantibus defer[r]i faciat, et
-quolibet quarterio semel vel bis post matutinas iunioribus gentaculum
-unum in domo sua faciat’. A thirteenth-century statute required the
-<i>pueri de elemosinaria</i> to sit humbly upon the ground when feeding
-in the house of a canon. Cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 355, for
-Diceto’s statute about the Boy Bishop, with its mention of the return
-of the boys ‘ad Elemosinariam’, and the reforming statute of 1263.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[10]</a> <i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 220.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[11]</a> Ibid. 217, 220 (<i>c.</i> 1263; <i>c.</i> 1310)
-‘Elemosinarius ... habeat insuper continuo secum octo pueros ad
-Ecclesiae ministerium ydoneos, quos per seipsum vel alium magistrum in
-spectantibus ad ministerium ecclesiae et litteratura ac bonis moribus
-diligenter faciat informari.... Quociens vero dicti pueri ad scolas vel
-spaciatum ire debent....’; Dugdale, 349 [Elemosinarius] ‘octo pueros
-bonae indolis et honestae parentelae habeat; quos alat et educat in
-morum disciplina; videat etiam instruantur in cantu et literatura, ut
-in omnibus apti ad ministerium Dei in Choro esse possent’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[12]</a> There was a bequest to the almoner to maintain boys,
-apparently at the University, after they had changed their voices, as
-early as 1315 (<i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 219–22).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[13]</a> Hennessy, 61; W. S. Simpson, <i>Charter and Statutes
-of the College of Minor Canons in St. Paul’s Cathedral</i>
-(<i>Archaeologia</i>, xliii. 165; cf. <i>Trans. of London and Midd.
-Arch. Soc.</i> (1st series), iv. 231). The statutes of <i>c.</i> 1521
-note a dispensation of that year for Thomas Hikeman ‘peticanon and
-amner’ and for ‘all and euery peticanon which shalbe Amneur hear-after’
-to bring a stranger to meals.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[14]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ii. 19; cf. the Hollar engraving in
-Baker, 95.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[15]</a> Stowe, i. 327; <i>Archaeologia</i>, xliii. 171. By c. 14
-of the statutes the college gates were shut at meals.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[16]</a> Leach, <i>Journal of Education</i> (1909), 506, cites the
-<i>Registrum Elemosinariae</i> (ed. M. Hacket from <i>Harl. MS.</i>
-1080), ‘If the almoner does not keep a clerk to teach the choristers
-grammar, the schoolmaster of St. Paul’s claims 5<i>s.</i> a year for
-teaching them, though he ought to demand nothing for them, because he
-keeps the school for them, as the Treasurer of St. Paul’s once alleged
-before the Dean and Chapter is to be found in ancient deeds’. Mr. Leach
-adds, ‘It is to be feared the Treasurer invented or misrepresented
-the ancient deed’. William de Tolleshunt, almoner, appears from his
-will of 1329 in the same register to have taught his boys himself
-(<i>Archaeologia</i>, lxii. 1. 220), ‘Item lego pueris ecclesiae quos
-ego educavi senioribus in Elemosinaria existentibus cuilibet xij<sup>d</sup> et
-iunioribus cuilibet vj<sup>d</sup>’. He also left his grammar books ‘et omnes
-quaternos sermonum de Festo Sanctorum Innocencium, quos tempore meo
-solebant Episcopi Puerorum pronuntiare, ad remanendum in Elemosinaria
-praedicta imperpetuum, ad usum fructum puerorum in eadem degencium’.
-His logic and physic books are to be lent out ‘pueris aptis ad
-scolatizandum, cum ab elemosinaria recesserint’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[17]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 356. The sermon written by
-Erasmus is headed <i>Concio ... pronunciata ... in nova schola Iohannis
-Coleti</i>, but Erasmus may not have known the exact procedure at St.
-Paul’s. The earlier sermon printed by Wynkyn de Worde has ‘whyche often
-times I radde whan I was Querester, in the Marteloge of Poulis’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="label">[18]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 380.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="label">[19]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 196, 215, 219. Wallace, i.
-88, points out that the performers of the <i>Menaechmi</i> before
-Wolsey in 1527 were not the Paul’s boys, but the Cardinal’s gentlemen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="label">[20]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (1545).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="label">[21]</a> Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. xxxv, ‘By Sebastian,
-scolemaister of Powles, a boke of ditties, written’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="label">[22]</a> <i>Household Accounts of Princess Elizabeth, 1551–2</i>
-(<i>Camden Misc.</i> ii), 37, ‘Paid in rewarde to the Kinges Maiesties
-drommer and phipher, the xiij<sup>th</sup> of Februarye, xx<sup>s</sup>; M<sup>r</sup>. Heywoodde,
-xxx<sup>s</sup>; and to Sebastian, towardes the charge of the children with the
-carriage of the plaiers garmentes iiij<sup>li</sup>, xix<sup>s</sup>. In thole as by
-warraunte appereth, vij<sup>li</sup>, ix<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="label">[23]</a> F. Madden, <i>Expenses of Lady Mary</i>, 62 (March 1538),
-‘Item geuen to Heywood playeng an enterlude with his children bifore my
-lades grace, xl<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="label">[24]</a> Wallace, i. 77, goes against the evidence when he
-asserts that Heywood wrote for the Chapel. Why he asserts that Heywood
-‘had grown up in the Chapel under Cornish’, to whom, by the way, he
-wantonly transfers the authorship of <i>The Four P. P.</i>, <i>The
-Pardoner and the Frere</i>, and <i>Johan Johan</i>, I do not know.
-There is nothing to show that Heywood was a Chapel boy, and the absence
-of his name from the Chapel list of 1509 (cf. p. 27), when he would
-have been about twelve, may be taken as disposing of the notion. He
-is first discoverable at Court in December 1514, for which month he
-received wages at the rate of viij<sup>d</sup> a day in some undefined capacity
-(<i>Chamber Account</i> in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 21481, f. 178), which was
-shared by one John Mason, who was a Yeoman of the Crown by March 1516
-(Brewer, ii. 475). By 1520 Heywood himself was a Yeoman of the Crown
-(Brewer, iii. 1. 499), and during 1519–21 the <i>Chamber Accounts</i>
-show him as also a ‘singer’ at £5 a quarter. Later he became player
-of the virginals, and has 50<i>s.</i> a quarter as such in the
-<i>Accounts</i> for 1529–31, 1538–41, and 1547–9. He was Sewer of the
-Chamber at the funeral of Edward in 1553. It occurs to me as just
-possible that Heywood’s ‘children’ may have been neither the Chapel nor
-the Paul’s boys, but the boys taken up by Philip Van Wilder for the
-musical establishment of the Household; cf. p. 31. But I think it is
-more likely that Heywood wrote for the Paul’s boys throughout, as he
-almost certainly did in 1559. There is another hint of his connexion
-with them in the fact that at the coronation of Mary in 1553 he sat
-under a vine against the grammar school and made speeches (Holinshed
-(1808), iv. 6). A. W. Reed (1917, <i>3 Library</i>, viii. 247) adds
-facts, and thinks the Yeoman was distinct.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="label">[25]</a> <i>Addl. MS.</i> 15233; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii.
-454. Thomas Tusser, in the <i>Autobiography</i> printed with the 1573
-edition of his <i>Points of Good Husbandry</i>, is the authority for
-placing Redford at Paul’s:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But mark the chance, myself to ’vance,</div>
- <div>By friendship’s lot, to Paul’s I got.</div>
- <div>So found I grace a certain space</div>
- <div class="i5">Still to remain</div>
- <div>With Redford there, the like nowhere</div>
- <div>For cunning such and virtue much</div>
- <div>By whom some part of musicke art</div>
- <div class="i5">So did I gain.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>From Paul’s Tusser passed to Eton, before he matriculated at Cambridge
-in 1543. In other manuscripts compositions by Redford and Thomas
-Mulliner are associated, and one of these, <i>Addl. MS.</i> 30513,
-is inscribed ‘Sum liber Thomae Mullineri, Johanne Heywoode teste’.
-Stafford Smith, on what authority is unknown, stated (cf. <i>D. N.
-B.</i>) that Mulliner was Master of St. Paul’s School. If so, he may
-have come between Redford and Westcott. On 3 March 1564 he was admitted
-as organist in Corpus Christi College, Oxford (Fowler, <i>Hist. of
-C.C.C.</i> 426).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="label">[26]</a> Feuillerat, <i>E. and M.</i> 145; Wallace, i. 84. The
-mention of ‘xij cottes for the boyes in Heywoodes play’ does not
-justify the assumption that the players were the Chapel. The ten
-established boys of the St. Paul’s choir could be supplemented by
-probationers or the grammar school.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="label">[27]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 196.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="label">[28]</a> Machyn, 206. ‘M<sup>r</sup> Philip’ was organist of Paul’s in 1557
-(Nichols, <i>Illustrations</i>, iii). Fleay, 57, guesses that the play
-was <i>Nice Wanton</i>, which is not likely, if Heywood had a hand in
-it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="label">[29]</a> Hennessy, 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="label">[30]</a> Flood cites a Vatican record of 1561 from <i>Catholic
-Record Soc.</i> i. 21, ‘Sebastianus, qui organa pulsabat apud D.
-Paulum Londini, cum vellet eiici, tamen tum ita charus Elizabethae
-fuit, ut nihil schismatice agens locum suum in ea ecclesia retineat’;
-also Grindal’s letter of 1563 to Dudley in Strype, <i>Grindal</i>
-(ed. 1821), 113. Hillebrand adds from <i>Libri Vicarii Generalis</i>
-(<i>Huick 1561–74</i>), iii, f. 77, that in July 1563 Westcott
-failed to appear before the Consistory Court and was excommunicated
-as ‘contumacem’, and from St. Paul’s records (<i>A. Box 77</i>,
-2059) that on 8 Nov. 1564 he gave a bond to conform or resign by the
-following Easter. Gee, 230, gives a list of deprived clergy from N.
-Sanders, <i>De Visibili Monarchia</i> (1571), 688, which includes
-among <i>Magistri Musices</i> ‘Sebastianus in Cathedrali ecclesia
-Londinensi’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="label">[31]</a> Fleay, 15, 60, has some inaccuracies in these dates,
-and conjectures that among the early Paul’s plays were a revival of
-Udall’s <i>Ralph Roister Doister</i> and Ulpian Fulwell’s <i>Like Will
-to Like</i>, and that these contained satire of Richard Edwards and the
-Chapel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="label">[32]</a> Dasent, ix. 56.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="label">[33]</a> Hillebrand from <i>Repertory</i>, xix, f. 18, ‘For
-asmoche as this Court ys enformed that one Sebastian that wyll not
-communicate with the Church of England kepe the playes and resorte of
-the people to great gaine and peryll of the coruptinge of the Chyldren
-wyth papistrie And therefore master Morten ys appoynted to goe to the
-Deane of Powles and to gyve him notyce of that dysorder, and to praye
-him to gyve suche remeadye therein, within his iurysdyccion, as he
-shall see meete, for Christian Relygion and good order’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="label">[34]</a> Dasent, x. 127. <i>Cath. Record Soc.</i> i. 70 gives the
-date of Westcott’s committal ‘for papistry’ from <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i>
-cxl. 40, as 21 Dec. 1577, and that of release as 19 March 1578.
-According to <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cxviii. 73, Westcott was Master of
-the Children in 1577 and valued at £100 in goods.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="label">[35]</a> Gosson, <i>P. C.</i> 188.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="label">[36]</a> Flood (<i>Mus. Ant.</i> iv. 187) gives an abstract of
-his will, dated on 3 April and proved on 14 April 1582. He describes
-himself as almoner of St. Paul’s, dwelling in the almonry and born at
-Chimley in Devonshire; appoints Henry Evans overseer and Justinian
-Kyd executor, and leaves legacies to relatives (apparently he had
-no children or wife), to members of the Redford family, to ‘Gyles
-Clothier’, to the ten choristers, to ‘sometimes children of the said
-almenerey’, by name Bromeham, Richard Huse, Robert Knight, Nicholas
-Carleton, Baylye, Nasion, and Gregory Bowringe, to ‘Shepard that
-keepeth the door at playes’, and to Pole ‘the keper of the gate’.
-Wallace, i. 171, cites the will from <i>P. C. C.</i> 14 and 31,
-Tirwhite, giving the date of confirmation as 3 July 1582. One name may
-be added to Westcott’s list of boys from a Court Minute of Christ’s
-Hospital on 5 March 1580 (<i>Musical Times</i>, 1 Jan. 1907), ‘M<sup>r</sup>.
-Sebastian, of Paulls, is appointed to have Hallawaie the younger out of
-this House to be one of the singing children of the Cathedral Church of
-Paulls in this Citie’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="label">[37]</a> Gosson (1582) speaks of the plays as ‘at Paules’; and
-Rawlidge (1628) mentions a house ‘nigh Pauls’ as one of those pulled
-down by the City, apparently in 1596 (cf. ch. xvi). The Paul’s boys,
-however, can hardly have been playing for some years before that date.
-Howes (1629) definitely specifies the singing school (cf. ch. xvi). On
-the other hand, Flecknoe, a late authority and in a passage dealing
-(inaccurately) with Jacobean rather than Elizabethan conditions,
-assigns the plays to ‘behinde the Convocation-house in Paul’s’ (App.
-I). This is expanded by Malone (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 46) into ‘in
-S<sup>t</sup>. Paul’s school-room, behind the Convocation-house’, and Baker,
-45, suggests that they used a small yard or cloister before the doors
-of the Convocation House and shut off by a high wall from the main
-churchyard (cf. Hollar’s prints in Baker, 95, 115). But I doubt if
-Flecknoe had anything in mind except St. Gregory’s, which stood just
-west of the Convocation House. The hall of the College of Minor Canons
-is perhaps also a possibility; but neither this nor the church is
-likely to have afforded a circular auditorium (cf. ch. xviii). Can they
-have used the Convocation House itself?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="label">[38]</a> McDonnell, 27, argues for the participation of the
-grammar school in the plays. Obviously the phrase ‘children of Paul’s’,
-ordinarily used of the playing-boys, proves nothing one way or the
-other. That the plays were mainly an affair of the choir is a fair
-inference from the fact that they were presented at Court by the
-song-school masters. But there is no reason to doubt that the mediaeval
-give and take between the two schools continued through the sixteenth
-century. Hunter, <i>Chorus Vatum</i>, v. 542, quotes a manuscript life
-of Sir Thomas Offley, ‘This Thomas Offley became a good grammarian
-under Mr. [William] Lillie and understood the Latin tongue perfectly;
-and because he had a sweet voice he was put to learn prick-song
-among the choristers of St. Paul’s, for that learned Mr. Lillie
-knew full well that knowledge in music was a help and a furtherance
-to all arts’. On the other hand, Dean Nowell (Churton, <i>Life of
-A. Nowell</i>, 190) instructed Thomas Giles in 1584 to teach the
-choristers catechism, writing, and music, and then to ‘suffer them to
-resort to Paul’s School that they may learn the principles of Grammar’.
-Some seventeenth-century performances by the grammar school, after the
-regular Paul’s plays ceased, are upon record.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="label">[39]</a> Cf. <i>infra</i> (Chapel, Oxford’s); ch. xvii
-(Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="label">[40]</a> R. Churton, <i>Life of Alexander Nowell</i>, 190, from
-<i>Reg. Nowell</i>, ii, f. 189; Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> ii. 432; Collier,
-i. 258; Hazlitt, 33; Wallace, ii. 67, from original warrant under the
-Signet in <i>Sloane MS.</i> 2035<sup>b</sup>, f. 73:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="r1">‘By the Queene,</p>
-
-<p class="r2 p0">Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>‘Whereas we haue authorysed our servaunte Thomas Gyles M<sup>r</sup>. of
-the children of the Cathedrall Churche of S<sup>t</sup>. Pauls within
-our Cittie of London to take vpp suche apte and meete Children
-as are most fitt to be instructed and framed in the arte and
-science of musicke and singinge as may be had and founde out
-within anie place of this our Realme of England or Wales, to be
-by his education and bringinge vp made meete and hable to serve
-vs in that behalf when our pleasure is to call for them. Wee
-therefore by the tenour of these presentes will and require you
-that ye permitt and suffer from henceforthe our saide servaunte
-Thomas Gyles and his deputie or deputies and every of them to
-take vp in anye Cathedral or Collegiate Churche or Churches and
-in everye other place or places of this our Realme of England
-and Wales, suche Childe and Children as he or they or anye of
-them shall finde and like of and the same Childe and Children
-by vertue hereof for the vse and service afouresaide, with them
-or anye of them to bringe awaye, withoute anye your lettes
-contradiccions staye or interruptions to the contrarie Charginge
-and commaundinge you and everie of you to be aydinge helpinge
-and assisting vnto the aboue named Thomas Gyles and his deputie
-and deputies in and aboute the due execucion of the premisses
-for the more spedie effectuall &amp; bettar accomplisshing thereof
-from tyme to tyme as you and everie of you doe tendar our will
-and pleasure and will aunswere for doinge the contrarye at your
-perilles. Youen vnder our Signet at our Manour of Grenewich the
-26<sup>th</sup> Day of Aprill in the 27<sup>th</sup> yere of our reign.</p>
-
-<p>To all and singuler Deanes, Provostes, Maisters and Wardens of
-Collegies and all Ecclesiasticall persons and mynisters and to
-all other our officers mynisters and subiectes to whome in this
-case it shall apperteyne and to everye of them greetinge.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>No other commission for the Paul’s choir is extant, but their rights
-are reserved in the commission for Windsor (q.v.) of 8 March 1560.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="label">[41]</a> Harvey, <i>Advertisement for Pap-Hatchet</i>
-(<i>Works</i>, ii. 212). Lyly was still Oxford’s man but writing for
-Paul’s, <i>c.</i> Aug. 1585 (<i>M. L. R.</i> xv. 82.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="label">[42]</a> Cf. ch. ix and App. C, No. xl, especially <i>Pappe with
-an Hatchet</i> (Oct. 1589).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="label">[43]</a> <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (<i>Works</i>,
-iii. 46). I do not think the reference to a twelvemonth’s silence,
-due to envy, in the prologue to Nashe’s <i>Summer’s Last Will and
-Testament</i> (<i>c.</i> Oct. 1592) affords any justification for
-ascribing that play to the Paul’s boys. Murray, i. 330; ii. 284,
-records a payment at Gloucester in 1590–1 ‘to the children of powles’.
-I am sceptical about this, especially as I observe in the next year a
-payment for a breakfast to the Queen’s men ‘at M<sup>r</sup>. Powelles’. Murray’s
-only other municipal record for the company, at Hedon, Yorkshire, on
-some quite unknown date, ‘Item, payd to the &mdash;&mdash; pawll plaiers’ (ii.
-286), is even less satisfactory. But if the boys did travel on their
-suppression, they may well have gone to Croydon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="label">[44]</a> Rimbault, 4. Giles must have resigned, if he was the
-Thomas Giles who, on 18 April 1606, was paid 100 marks a year as
-instructor to Henry in music (Devon, 35). He was instructor to Charles
-in 1613 (Reyher, 78) and figures in masks (cf. ch. vi). Fellowes,
-184, 190, has two songs set by Pearce, one from <i>Blurt Master
-Constable</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="label">[45]</a> <i>1 A. and M.</i> <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 30, ‘Enter Andrugio,
-Lucio, Cole, and Norwood’. Bullen thinks that the two boys played the
-parts named, but the action requires at least one page, who sings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="label">[46]</a> Wallace, ii. 153, says he has evidence of playing at
-Paul’s in 1598, but he does not give it. It is perhaps rash to assume
-that Pearce originated the revival, as there is no proof that he came
-to Paul’s before 1600.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="label">[47]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="label">[48]</a> V. i. 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="label">[49]</a> Collier, iii. 181. On the light thrown on the Paul’s
-stage by these plays, cf. ch. xxi. It is conceivable that some of them
-may have been originally written before 1590 (cf. ch. xxiii, s.v.
-Percy).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="label">[50]</a> Cf. ch. xxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="label">[51]</a> Cf. <i>infra</i> (Queen’s Revels).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="label">[52]</a> Nichols, <i>James</i>, iv. 1073, from <i>The King of
-Denmark’s Welcome</i> (1606), ‘the Youthes of Paules, commonlye cald
-the Children of Paules, plaide before the two Kings, a playe called
-<i>Abuses</i>: containing both a Comedie and a Tragedie, at which the
-Kinges seemed to take delight and be much pleased’. The play is lost.
-Fleay, ii. 80, has no justification for identifying it with <i>The
-Insatiate Countess</i>. <i>Wily Beguiled</i> (ch. xxiv) might be a
-Paul’s play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="label">[53]</a> C. W. Wallace, <i>Nebraska University Studies</i> (1910),
-x. 355; cf. <i>infra</i> (Queen’s Revels), ch. xvii (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="label">[54]</a> <i>Constitutio Domus Regis</i> (<i>c.</i> 1135) in
-Hearne, <i>Liber Niger Scaccarii</i>, i. 342, ‘Capellani, custos
-capellae et reliquiarum. Corridium duorum hominum, et quatuor
-servientes capellae unusquisque duplicem cibum, et duo summarii
-capellae unusquisque 1<sup>d</sup> in die et 1<sup>d</sup> ad ferrandum in mense’; cf.
-<i>R. O. Ld. Steward’s Misc.</i> 298 (1279); Tout, 278, 311 (1318);
-<i>H. O.</i> 3, 10 (1344–8); <i>Life Records of Chaucer</i> (Chaucer
-Soc.), iv. 171 (1369); Nicolas, <i>P. C.</i> vi. 223 (1454).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="label">[55]</a> <i>H. O.</i> 10. In 1318 he was ‘chief chapellain’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="label">[56]</a> J. H. Wylie, <i>Henry IV</i>, iv. 208, from <i>Household
-Accounts</i>, ‘John Bugby our chaplain retained 3 years ago pur
-apprendre et enformer les enfants de notre chapelle en la science de
-gramaire at 100/-p. a. nothing yet paid, £15 due’. A grant to John
-Tilbery, a boy of the King’s chapel, was made on 12 Nov. 1405 (<i>C. P.
-R.</i>, <i>Hen. IV</i>, iii. 96).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="label">[57]</a> Wallace, i. 12, 21, from <i>P. R.</i> The commission of
-1420 was to John Pyamour ‘uni clericorum Capellae hospicii nostri’;
-another of 1440 was to John Croucher, Dean. When regular Masters were
-instituted, the commissions seem to have been made direct to them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="label">[58]</a> Wallace, i. 14, quotes laudatory accounts of the singing
-of the chapel by two members of the suite of Leo von Ro[vz]mital, a
-Bohemian who visited the English Court in 1466.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="label">[59]</a> <i>H. O.</i> 49. There is nothing about plays, but
-‘Memorandum, that the King hathe a songe before hym in his hall or
-chambre uppon All-hallowen day at the latter graces, by some of these
-clerkes and children of chappel in remembrance of Christmasse; and soe
-of men and children in Christmasse thorowoute. But after the songe on
-All-hallowen day is done, the Steward and Thesaurere of houshold shall
-be warned where it liketh the King to kepe his Christmasse’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="label">[60]</a> At the coronation of James in 1603 (Rimbault, 127) there
-were a Sub-dean, 7 Ministers, the Master of the Children, an Organist,
-22 ordinary Gentlemen, and a Clerk of the Check; also a Sergeant, 2
-Yeomen, and a Groom of the Vestry. This agrees with the Elizabethan fee
-lists, which give the total number of Gentlemen as 32. The coronation
-list does not name Epistolers; but it is clear from the notices of
-appointments in Rimbault, 1, that a Gospeller and Epistoler were
-appointed, as next in succession to the Gentlemen’s places, although it
-does not appear that they were necessarily ex-Children. There were also
-Extraordinary Gentlemen (Rimbault, 31).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="label">[61]</a> Cf. ch. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="label">[62]</a> <i>H. O.</i> 160. The hall and chapel are to be kept
-‘at all times when his Highnesse shall lye in his castle of Windsor,
-his mannors of Bewlye, Richmond, Hampton Court, Greenwich, Eltham, or
-Woodstock’; but ‘in rideing journeys and progresses’, only the Master
-of the Children, six men, six children, and some officers of the vestry
-are to attend. In the seventeenth century ‘all removinge weekes’ were
-amongst the ‘auntient tymes of lyberty and playinge weekes’ (Rimbault,
-73). But the practice may have varied. Stopes, 252, gives a Stable
-warrant of 1554 for a wagon ‘for the necessarie conveying and cariage
-of the Children of our Chapel and their man from place to place, at
-such seasons, as they by our commandment shall remove to serve where
-wee shall appointe them’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="label">[63]</a> A chapel of St. Stephen existed in 1205. It was rebuilt
-and made a free collegiate chapel in 1348, and dissolved in 1547, and
-the building assigned as a chamber for the House of Commons (J. T.
-Smith, <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i>, 72; <i>V. H. London</i>, i.
-566). It may have originated as a domestic chapel, but seems to be
-quite distinct from the Household Chapel by the sixteenth century.
-Thus its St. Nicholas Bishop had an old annual reward of £1 from the
-Exchequer (Devon, <i>Issues of Exchequer</i>, 222; R. Henry, <i>Hist.
-of Great Britain</i><sup>3</sup>, xii. 459; Brewer, iv. 869), while the Household
-boys got their reward of £6 12<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> from the Treasurer
-of the Chamber. Wallace, i. 22, notes that the Masters of the Children
-‘all lived’ at Greenwich, which suggests that this was the Tudor
-head-quarters of the Chapel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="label">[64]</a> Wallace, i. 22, 23, 26, 61, from patents of Masters;
-<i>Fee List</i> (<i>passim</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="label">[65]</a> R. Henry, <i>Hist. of Great Britain</i><sup>3</sup>, xii. 457;
-Brewer, ii. 873; iii. 364; iv. 868; <i>Fee Lists</i> (<i>passim</i>);
-Wallace, i. 21, 23, 24, 26, 33, 61, from patents and <i>Exchequer of
-Receipt, Auditor’s Privy Seal Books</i>. The Elizabethan fee for a
-Gentleman was only £30 (cf. p. 41, n. 3), but it was increased again to
-£40 by James in 1604 (Rimbault, 61).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="label">[66]</a> <i>H. O.</i> 169, 212. The <i>Chamber Accounts</i> for
-Aug. 1520 include a special payment to the Master for the diets of the
-boys when they accompanied the King to Calais, at 2<i>d.</i> a day
-each.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="label">[67]</a> The allowance was 6<i>d.</i> in 1575 (Collier, i. 175;
-Nagel, 29; from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 589, f. 220), but Hunnis’s petition
-of 1583 (cf. p. 37) implies that this rate was customary before
-Elizabeth’s reign.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="label">[68]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (<i>passim</i>); cf. p. 24, n. 6.
-For the feast of the Boy Bishop on St. Nicholas Day, cf. <i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, i. 336, 359, 369.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="label">[69]</a> Stopes, 15, ‘40 surplices for the gentlemen and 16 for
-the children of the Chapel’ (Wardrobe warrant of 7 Oct. 1533); ‘for 10
-children of the Kings Chapell, for gownes of Tawney Chamblett lined
-with black satin of Bruges, and Milan bonnettes for the said children,
-as in the same boke of apparel is declared xliii<sup>li</sup>. iii<sup>s</sup>. iiii<sup>d</sup>.
-For two children of the Kings Chapell, for 2 gownes of Black Chamblett,
-lined with black satin of Bruges 2 cotes of yellow saten of Bruges
-lined with Coton, and 2 Millan bonnettes, and for making and lining
-of said gownes and cotes as in the said boke at large it duly apperes
-x<sup>li</sup> xviii<sup>s</sup> ... Item for twenty gentlemen of the King’s chapel, for
-20 gownes of Black Damask for the said gentlemen, cxxvii<sup>li</sup>. x<sup>s</sup>.’
-(<i>Queen’s Remembrancia, Wardrobe Expenses</i>, <i>Hen. VIII</i>,
-52/10 A).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="label">[70]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (<i>passim</i>). From 1510 to
-1513 Robert Fairfax had 2s. a week for the diet of William Alderson
-and Arthur Lovekyn, the King’s scholars, and £2 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-for their teaching. In 1513 William Max, late a Child of the Chapel,
-had 40<i>s.</i> In 1514 Cornish was finding and apparelling Robert
-Philip and another Child of the Chapel, for £1 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-a quarter, and in 1517 finding and teaching William Saunders, late
-Child of the Chapel, for the same sum, with 2<i>d.</i> a week for board
-‘when the king keepeth no household’. In 1529–30 Crane had 3<i>d.</i>
-a day wages and 20<i>d.</i> a week board wages for Robert Pery, and
-in 1530 also for William Pery. In 1531 Robert Pery was paid direct.
-Cunningham, xx, gives a late seventeenth-century example of a similar
-arrangement. In 1546 a royal letter was written for the appointment
-of William Bretten, late a Chapel boy, to be singing-man at Lichfield
-(Brewer, xxi. 1. 142). Some of the above names appear in a list of
-Chapel Children, William Colman, William Maxe, William Alderson, Henry
-Meryell, John Williams, John Graunger, Arthur Lovekyn, Henry Andrewe,
-Nicholas Ivy, Edward Cooke, and James Curteys, receiving liveries
-at the funeral of Henry VII in 1509 (Lafontaine, 3, from <i>Ld. Ch.
-Records</i>, 550, f. 131). Some amusing correspondence of 1518 relates
-to a boy Robin, whom Henry VIII wished to transfer from Wolsey’s chapel
-to his own. It was stipulated that Cornish should treat him honestly,
-‘otherwise than he doth his own’, and later Cornish wrote praising the
-clean singing and descant of the recruit (Brewer, ii. 1246–50).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="label">[71]</a> J. M. Manly in <i>C. H.</i> vi. 279; C. Johnson, <i>John
-Plummer</i> (1921, <i>Antiquaries Journal</i>, i. 52); Wallace, i. 21,
-from patents and Exchequer payments. Wallace does not include Melyonek
-although (ii. 62) he gives the following commission, already printed by
-Collier, i. 41, and Rimbault, vii, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 433, f. 189:</p>
-
-<p>‘Mellenek, Ric. etc. To all and every our subgiettes aswele spirituell
-as temporell thise our lettres hering or seeing greeting, We let you
-wite that for the confidence &amp; trust that we haue in our trusty and welbeloued
-seruant John Melyonek oon of ye gentilmen of our Chapell and knowing
-also his expert habilitie and connyng in ye science of Musique haue licenced
-him and by thise presentes licence and geue him auctorite that within
-all places in this our realme aswele Cathedral churges coliges chappells
-houses of relegion and al oyer franchised &amp; exempt places as elliswhere
-our colege roial at Wyndesor reserued &amp; except may take and sease for
-vs and in our name al suche singing men &amp; childre being expart in the
-said science of Musique as he can finde and think sufficient and able to
-do vs seruice. Wherfor &amp;c. Yeuen &amp;c. at Nottingham the xvj<sup>th</sup> day</p>
-of September A<sup>o</sup> secundo.’
-
-<p>Banaster did not die until 1487, but I think Melyonek must have
-replaced him, perhaps without a patent, under Richard III.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="label">[72]</a> Cf. <i>D. N. B.</i> Songs by Banaster and Newark are
-in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 5465 (Chambers and Sidgwick, <i>Early English
-Lyrics</i>, 299).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="label">[73]</a> Collier, i. 46; cf. Wallace, i. 12. I am not sure that
-Collier meant 1485.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="label">[74]</a> Reyher, 504, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 69, f. 34<sup>v</sup>. Wallace,
-i. 13; ii. 69, citing the same MS., misdates ‘1490’, and says that
-eight children took part. Four singing children who had appeared in
-another disguising a day or two before were probably also from the
-Chapel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="label">[75]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> in Wallace, i. 28, 38; Bernard
-Andrew, <i>Annales Hen. VII</i> (Gairdner, <i>Memorials of Hen.
-VII</i>), 104; Halle, i. 25; Professor Wallace seems to think that the
-annual Christmas rewards paid by the Treasurer of the Chamber to the
-Gentlemen, which went on to the end of the reign, were for plays. But
-these were of £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, whereas the reward for a play
-was £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> They were paid on Twelfth Night, and are
-sometimes said to be for ‘payne taking’ during Christmas. In 1510 they
-had an extra £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for praying for the Queen’s good
-deliverance. The ‘payne taking’ was no doubt as singers. An order of
-Henry VII’s time (<i>H. O.</i> 121) for the wassail on Twelfth Night
-has, ‘Item, the chappell to stand on the one side of the hall, and
-when the steward cometh in at the hall doore with the wassell, he must
-crie three tymes, Wassell, wassell, wassell; and then the chappell
-to answere with a good songe’. The Gentlemen also had 40<i>s.</i>
-annually from the Treasurer of the Chamber ‘to drink with their bucks’
-given them for a summer feast, which was still held in the seventeenth
-century (Rimbault, 122).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="label">[76]</a> Stopes, <i>Shakespeare’s Environment</i>, 238;
-Feuillerat, <i>Ed. and Mary</i>, 149, 289. Professor Feuillerat says
-that one of the documents relating to the play refers to the ‘Children
-of the Chapel’, and doubts whether there is a real distinction between
-the ‘Gentlemen’ and the ‘Children’ as actors.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="label">[77]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Ed. and Mary</i>, 3, 255. The conjecture
-is supported by the fact that garments belonging to the Revels were in
-possession of two Gentlemen of the Chapel in April 1547 (ibid., 12,
-13).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="label">[78]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> in Wallace, i. 38, 65, 70;
-Brewer, xiv. 2. 284; Kempe, 69; Collier, i. 78; Feuillerat, <i>Ed. and
-Mary</i>, 266, 288. The ‘iiij Children y<sup>t</sup> played afore y<sup>e</sup> king’ on 14
-Jan. 1508 were not necessarily of the Chapel.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="label">[79]</a> Cf. ch. viii and <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 192, 215.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="label">[80]</a> Wallace, i. 33. No patent is cited, but the privy seal
-for the payment to Cornish of the Exchequer annuity was dated 1 April
-1510, and he was shortly afterwards paid for the Christmas and Easter
-quarters. Newark had died in Nov. 1509. It is therefore a little
-puzzling to find in a list of Exchequer fees payable during the year
-ended Michaelmas 1508 (R. Henry, <i>Hist. of Great Britain</i><sup>3</sup>, xii.
-457) the item ‘Willelmo Cornysshe magistro puerorum capellae regis pro
-excubitione eorundem puerorum 26<sup>li</sup>. 13<sup>s</sup>. 4<sup>d</sup>.’ Probably the list
-was prepared retrospectively in Henry VIII’s reign (cf. the analogous
-list in Brewer, ii. 873), and the name rather than the date is an
-error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="label">[81]</a> The data are: (a) <i>Exchequer Payments</i> (Wallace,
-i. 34), Mich. 1493, ‘Willelmo Cornysshe de Rege’, 100<i>s.</i>; (b)
-<i>T. C. Accounts</i>, ‘to one Cornysshe for a prophecy in rewarde’,
-13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> (12 Nov. 1493); ‘to Cornishe of the Kings
-Chapell’, 26<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> (1 Sept. 1496); ‘to Cornysshe for 3
-pagents’ (26 Oct. 1501); ‘m<sup>r</sup> kyte Cornisshe and other of the Chapell
-y<sup>t</sup> played affore ye king at Richemounte’, £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>
-(25 Dec. 1508); (c) <i>Household Book of Q. Elizabeth</i>, 25 Dec.
-1502, ‘to Cornisshe for setting of a Carrall vpon Cristmas Day in
-reward’, 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>; (d) John Cornysh in list of Gent. of
-Chapel 23 Feb. 1504, and William Cornysh in similar lists <i>c.</i>
-1509 and 22 Feb. 1511 (Lafontaine, 2, from <i>Ld. Ch. Records</i>);
-(e) Songs by ‘W. Cornishe, jun.’ in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 5465, by ‘John
-Cornish’ in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 5665, by ‘W. Cornish’ in <i>Addl. MS.</i>
-31922 (<i>Early English Lyrics</i>, 299); (f) <i>A Treatise betweene
-Trouthe and Enformacon</i>, by ‘William Cornysshe otherwise called
-Nyssewhete Chapelman with ... Henry the VII<sup>th</sup> his raigne the
-xix<sup>th</sup> yere the moneth of July’ <a id="FNanchor_1504" href="#Footnote_1504" class="fnanchor">[1504]</a>, doubtless the satirical
-ballad on Empson referred to by Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 816 (<i>B. M.
-Royal MS.</i> 18, D. 11). I think they yield an older William and a
-John Cornish, of whom one, probably John, arranged the three pageants
-at Arthur’s wedding, and a William ‘jun.’ who must have joined the
-Chapel in 1503 or 1504 and became Master of the Children. The older
-William may be identical with the Westminster (q.v.) choir-master of
-1479–80. A Christopher or ‘Kit’ Cornish, referred to by Stopes, 17,
-and elsewhere, had no existence. This is a ghost-name, due to the
-juxtaposition of ‘kyte’, i.e. Sir John Kite, afterwards Archbishop of
-Armagh, and ‘Cornisshe’ in the 1508 record above.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="label">[82]</a> Cf. ch. v and <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 400.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="label">[83]</a> The <i>T. C. Accounts</i> show a reward of £200 to
-Cornish on 30 Nov. 1516, of which the occasion is not specified,
-and a payment of £18 2<i>s.</i> 11½<i>d.</i> for ‘ij pagentes’ on
-6 July 1517. With these possible exceptions, no expenditure on the
-disguisings or the interludes which formed part of them as distinct
-from the independent interludes by the Children, for which Cornish
-received £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> each, seems to have passed through
-these accounts. Any remuneration received by Cornish or his fellows
-or children for their personal services probably passed through the
-<i>Revels Accounts</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="label">[84]</a> Wallace, i. 16, 50. He light-heartedly accuses my friend
-Mr. Pollard, me, and others of perpetuating an old mis-ascription
-on the strength of Bale, ‘generally without consulting the
-<i>Scriptores</i>’, in the first edition of which (1548) Bale says that
-Rastell ‘reliquit’, and in the second that he ‘edidit’ <i>The Four
-Elements</i>. This Professor Wallace regards as revision by Bale of
-an incorrect assertion that Rastell was the author into an assertion
-that he was the publisher. But Bale elsewhere uses ‘edidit’ to indicate
-authorship, as Professor Wallace might have learnt from the notice of
-Heywood which he quotes on p. 80. As to <i>The Four P. P.</i> there are
-three early editions by three different publishers, and they all assign
-it to Heywood.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="label">[85]</a> Wallace, i. 61, 69; ii. 63, from patents and Exchequer
-payments. The Elizabethan patent is in Rymer, xv. 517.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="label">[86]</a> Rimbault, viii, quoting only the words ‘in anie churches
-or chappells within England to take to the King’s use, such and so
-many singing children and choristers, as he or his deputy should think
-good’. Stopes, 12, gives <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 171, and <i>Stowe MS.</i>
-371, f. 31<sup>v</sup>, as references, but the commission is not in either of
-them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="label">[87]</a> Matthew Welder appears as a lute and viol at Court in
-1516 and 1517. Peter Welder was appointed in 1519 and is traceable to
-1559, as a lute, viol, or flute. Henry van Wilder was a ‘musician’,
-1553–8. Philip Welder or van Wilder himself is first noted as a
-‘minstrel’ in 1526. Later he was a lute up to 1554. In 1547 he was also
-‘of the Privy Chamber’ and keeper of the King’s musical instruments
-(Nagel, 6, 13, 15, 16, 18, 22, 24, 27; Lafontaine, 8, 9, 12; Brewer,
-i, cxi). He died 24 Jan. 1554, leaving a son, Henry, probably the one
-noted above (Fry, <i>London Inquisitions</i>, i. 117). The <i>Chamber
-Accounts</i> for 1538–41 show an allowance to him of £70 ‘for six
-singing children’ (Stopes, 12). Several references to ‘Philippe and his
-fellows yong mynstrels’ and to ‘the children that be in the keeping
-of Philip and Edmund Harmon’ appear in Green Cloth documents from 30
-June 1538 to 1544 (<i>H. O.</i> 166, 172, 191, 208; <i>Genealogist</i>,
-xxx. 23). Edmund Harmon was one of the royal Barbers. Finally, livery
-lists of 1547 show nine singing men and children under ‘M<sup>r</sup>. Phelips’
-(Lafontaine, 7). An earlier company of ‘the King’s young minstrels’
-than this of 1538–50 seems to have been lodged at court <i>c.</i>
-1526 (Brewer, iv. 1. 865), and there were ‘troyes autres nos ioesnes
-ministralx’ as far back as 1369 (<i>Life Records of Chaucer</i>,
-iv. 174). Elizabethan fee lists continue to make provision for ‘six
-children for singing’, but there is no indication that the posts were
-filled up.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="label">[88]</a> Wallace, ii. 63, from docquet in <i>B. M. Royal MS.</i>
-18, C. xxiv, f. 232. By an obvious error, the name is written by the
-clerk as ‘Gowre’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="label">[89]</a> Wallace, i. 77.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="label">[90]</a> Cf. p. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="label">[91]</a> It is possible that the Treasurer of the Chamber did not
-pay all the rewards for plays during the earlier years of the reign;
-but the suggestion of Wallace, i. 108, that, if we had the <i>Books of
-Queen’s Payments</i>, more information might be available, seems to
-show a failure to realize the identity of the Tudor <i>Books of King’s
-Payments</i> with the <i>T. of C. Accounts</i>. There might, however,
-be rewards in a book subsidiary to the <i>Privy Purse Accounts</i>. I
-do not think that much can be made of the recital of ‘playes’ as well
-as ‘maskes’ in the preamble of the <i>Revels Accounts</i> for 1558–9,
-during which the T. of C. paid no rewards, since this may be merely
-‘common form’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="label">[92]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 34; cf. Appendix A. Naturally
-no ‘reward’ would be paid in such circumstances. Fleay, 16, 32, 60,
-conjectures that the play was <i>Misogonus</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="label">[93]</a> Strype, <i>Survey of London</i> (App. i. 92), gives the
-date from Bower’s tombstone at Greenwich, and as his death is recited
-in Edwardes’ patent (Stopes, <i>Hunnis</i>, 146) and his will of 18
-June 1561 was proved on 25 Aug. 1561 (Wallace, i. 106), it is clear
-that the entry of Rimbault, 1, ‘1563. Rich. Bower died, M<sup>r</sup> of the
-children, A<sup>o</sup> 5<sup>to</sup>’, must be an error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="label">[94]</a> Wallace, <i>Blackfriars</i>, 65, from Privy Seal in P. R.
-O. The patent dated 10 Jan. 1562 is on <i>Patent Rolls, 4 Eliz.</i> p.
-6, m. 14 <i>dorso</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="label">[95]</a> This is recorded in a Revels document, and seems a clear
-case of a play given by the Chapel and not paid for by the T. of C.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="label">[96]</a> Cf. ch. vii, p. 223.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="label">[97]</a> Rimbault, 2. On Hunnis, cf. ch. xxiii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="label">[98]</a> Stopes, 295, translates the patent of appointment from
-<i>Auditors Patent Books</i>, ix, f. 144<sup>v</sup>; the Privy Seal is in
-<i>Privy Seals</i>, Series iii, 1175. Stopes also prints the patent and
-Wallace, ii. 66, the Signet Bill (misdescribing it as a Privy Seal)
-for the commission; it is enrolled on <i>Patent Rolls, 9 Eliz.</i> p.
-10, m. 16 <i>dorso</i>. It is varied from the model of 1562 by the
-inclusion of power to the Master to take up lodging for the children in
-transit, and to fix ‘reasonable prises’ for carriage and necessaries at
-his discretion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="label">[99]</a> Hazlitt-Warton, iv. 217, citing f. xii of the pamphlet.
-I know of no copy. One is catalogued among Bishop Tanner’s books in
-the Bodleian, but Stopes, 226, ‘went to Oxford on purpose to see it,
-but found that it had utterly vanished’. Macray, <i>Annals of the
-Bodleian</i>, 211, thinks that it may have been destroyed when Tanner’s
-books fell into a river during their transit from Norwich to Oxford in
-Dec. 1731. The pamphlet is also cited for an example of the use of the
-term ‘spur money’ (Bumpus, 29, with date ‘1598’). F. T. Hibgame (<i>10
-N. Q.</i> i. 458) describes a collection of pamphlets seen by him in
-New York under the general title of <i>The Sad Decay of Discipline in
-our Schools</i> (1830), which included <i>Some Account of the Stripping
-and Whipping of the Children of the Chapel</i>, containing a ‘realistic
-account of the treatment of the boys at one of the royal chapels’, of
-which he thought the author might be George Colman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="label">[100]</a> Cf. ch. vii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="label">[101]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 244, ‘Holly, Ivye, firr poles
-&amp; Mosse for the Rock ... Hornes iij, Collers iij, Leashes iij &amp;
-dogghookes iij with Bawdrickes for the hornes in Hvnnyes playe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="label">[102]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 439.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="label">[103]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii (Gascoigne).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="label">[104]</a> W. Creizenach (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, liv. 73) points out
-that the source must have been Livy, xxvi. 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="label">[105]</a> Cf. <i>infra</i> (Windsor).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="label">[106]</a> Rimbault, 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="label">[107]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars). The bare fact of this
-early use of the Blackfriars has, of course, long been known from
-the reference to comedies at the Blackfriars in Gosson, <i>P. C.</i>
-188 (App. C, No. xxx), and the prologues to Lyly’s <i>Campaspe</i>
-and <i>Sapho and Phao</i>. Fleay, 36, 39, 40, guessed that the early
-Blackfriars performances were at an inn, and by the Paul’s boys, and
-that the euphuistic prose plays at the Bel Savage mentioned by Gosson,
-<i>S. A.</i> 39 (App. C, No. xxii), in 1579 were early Chapel versions
-of Lyly’s above-named plays. But there is no evidence that either of
-the boy companies ever used an inn.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="label">[108]</a> Cf. p. 38.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="label">[109]</a> Cf. ch. vii, p. 223.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="label">[110]</a> Rimbault, 3. The Blackfriars correspondence shows that
-the date 1581 given in Rimbault, 56, is wrong. A warrant of 1582 for
-a lease in reversion to his widow Anne is in <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> ii.
-539.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="label">[111]</a> App. C, No. xlv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="label">[112]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="label">[113]</a> Wallace, i. 156; Stopes, <i>Hunnis</i>, 252; from <i>S.
-P. D. Eliz.</i> clxiii. 88.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="label">[114]</a> Cf. p. 50, which suggests that the boys occasionally ate
-in hall at festival times.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="label">[115]</a> The <i>Chamber Accounts</i> show no renewal of the
-payments.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="label">[116]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii (Hunnis).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="label">[117]</a> Cf. ch. xiii (Oxford’s), ch. xxiii (Lyly).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="label">[118]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 470. <i>Sapho and Phao</i>
-might, however, have been the unnamed Chapel play of Shrove Tuesday (27
-Feb.) 1582.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="label">[119]</a> Perhaps Lyly was still associated with him. F. S. Boas
-(<i>M. L. R.</i> vi. 92) records payments in connexion with a visit by
-Leicester to Christ Church, Oxford, to Mr. Lyly and his man for the
-loan of apparel, as well as one of £5 to one Tipslowe ‘for the Revels’
-(January 1585).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="label">[120]</a> Cf. <i>supra</i> (Paul’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="label">[121]</a> I have no means of dating ‘The order of the show to be
-done at the Turret, entring into the parke at Grenewich, the musick
-being within the turrett’, which is preserved in <i>Egerton MS.</i>
-2877, f. 182, as ‘acted before Q. Elizabeth’. A speech of forty lines
-beginning ‘He Jove himselfe, that guides the golden spheare’, was
-delivered by ‘one of the biggest children of her Ma<sup>tes</sup> Chappell’ as
-Goodwill, and was followed by a song beginning ‘Ye Helicon muses’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="label">[122]</a> Rimbault, 4. A note of Anthony Wood’s (cf. <i>D. N.
-B.</i>) suggests that Bull joined the Chapel about 1572.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="label">[123]</a> Ashmole, <i>Antiquities of Berks</i> (ed. 1723), iii.
-172, from tombstone at St. George’s, Windsor. The inscription gives
-him 49 years as Master at Windsor, in error for 39. A second stone
-described as also his by Ashmole is clearly his wife’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="label">[124]</a> Wallace, ii. 59, prints both from the Privy Seals of 2
-and 3 July in the R. O. The appointment is enrolled in <i>Patent Rolls,
-39 Eliz.</i> p. 12, and the commission in <i>Patent Rolls, 39 Eliz.</i>
-p. 9, m. 7 <i>dorso</i>. The appointment is for life, the commission
-not so specified, and therefore during pleasure only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="label">[125]</a> The operative words of the appointment are ‘pro nobis
-heredibus et successoribus nostris damus et concedimus dilecto
-seruienti nostro Nathanieli Giles officium Magistri puerorum Capellae
-nostrae Regiae ... habendum ... durante vita sua naturali Damus etiam
-... praefato Nathanieli Giles vada siue feoda quadraginta librarum
-sterling percipienda annuatim ... pro eruditione duodecem puerorum
-eiusdem Capellae nostrae ac pro eorum conveniente exhibitione
-vestiturae et lectuarii ... vnacum omnibus et omnimodis aliis
-vadis feodis proficubus iurisdiccionibus aucthoritate priuilegiis
-commoditatibus regardis et aduantagiis quibuscunque eodem officio
-quoquo modo debitis ... ac ... praedicto Nathanieli Giles locum siue
-officium illud vnius generosorum nostrorum dictae Capellae nostrae
-Regiae ... vnacum feodo seu annuali redditu triginta librarum ...’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="label">[126]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 211; <i>K. v. P.</i> 224, 230, 233
-(misdated 44 Eliz. for 42 Eliz.), 239. These are only short recitals in
-the lawsuits. Apparently the fragmentary descriptions of the theatre in
-Wallace, ii. 39, 40, 41, 43, 49, are from a fuller Latin text of the
-terms of the lease, possibly recited in a common-law suit, which he has
-not printed in full.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="label">[127]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 230, 234.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="label">[128]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="label">[129]</a> Fleay, 124, 153; Wallace, ii. 56; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i>
-iv. 156. An initial date for the enterprise in 1600 fits in exactly
-with the seven years during which there had been plays at the house
-where <i>K. B. P.</i> was produced and the ten years’ training of
-Keysar’s company up to 1610 (cf. p. 57).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="label">[130]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="label">[131]</a> Fleay, 127. Burn, 152, notes from <i>Bodl. Tanner
-MS.</i> 300 that among the misdemeanours punished in the Star Chamber
-was ‘Taking up a gentleman’s son to be a stage player’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="label">[132]</a> Wallace, ii. 84, gives the endorsed date omitted by
-Greenstreet and Fleay, as ‘Marti decimo quinto Decembris Anno xliiij
-Elizabeth Regine’; the date set down for trial is indicated as ‘p Octab
-Hillar’. This agrees with the time indication of the offence in the
-complaint itself as ‘about one yere last past, and since your maiesties
-last free and generall pardon’. The pardon referred to must be that of
-1597–8 (<i>39 Eliz.</i> c. 28; cf. <i>R. O. Statutes</i>, iv. 952).
-There was another passed by the Parliament of 1601 (<i>43 Eliz.</i> c.
-19; cf. <i>Statutes</i>, iv. 1010) for all offences prior to 7 Aug.
-1601, but presumably this was not yet law when the complaint was drawn.
-The Parliament sat to 19 December. Clifton, however, was only just in
-time.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="label">[133]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 248. The date is recited as ‘in or about
-the three and ffortieth yeare’ of Elizabeth, i.e. 1600–1, which is
-not exact. The reference can hardly be to any other than the Clifton
-affair. No Chancery documents in the case, other than the complaint,
-are known. It may be presumed that censure fell on Giles and Robinson,
-as well as Evans, but they were not concerned in <i>K. v. P.</i>
-Evans, of course, was technically acting as deputy to Giles under his
-commission, and Wallace, ii. 71, is not justified in citing the case
-as evidence that ‘These powers to Giles were supplemented by official
-concessions to Henry Evans that enabled him to rent the Blackfriars
-theatre and train the Queen’s Children of the Chapel there, with
-remunerative privileges’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="label">[134]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 224, 230, 236, 242, 244, 248, 250.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="label">[135]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 211, 216; <i>K. v. P.</i> 237, 240, 245.
-These are recitals. Wallace, ii. 91, says that he has found two copies
-of the original bond, but the text he prints adds nothing to <i>K. v.
-P.</i> 240. Clearly he is wrong in describing it as ‘containing the
-Articles of Agreement’. That was a much more detailed document, which
-Evans unfortunately thought so ‘long and tedious’ that he did not
-insert it at large in his Answer in <i>K. v. P.</i> It was doubtless
-analogous to the King’s Revels Articles of 1608 (cf. <i>infra</i>). It
-provided for the rights of the partners to the use of rooms (<i>E. v.
-K.</i> 211) and presumably for the division of profits (<i>K. v. P.</i>
-237).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="label">[136]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 244. Wallace, ii. 102, adds the actual
-terms of the bond. He takes Evans’s explanation to mean that hitherto
-Evans had maintained the boys and the plays out of official funds
-supplied through Kirkham as Yeoman of the Revels, but that now Evans’s
-name was to be kept out of the business, and disbursements made by his
-partners, who were to pay him 8<i>s.</i> a week as a kind of steward.
-I cannot suppose that Kirkham had been the channel of any official
-subvention, and, on the whole, think it probable that the second
-‘compl<sup>t</sup>’ in the extract from the pleading is an error for ‘def<sup>t</sup>’.
-This leaves it not wholly clear why Evans should allege his relief from
-great weekly disbursements as a reason for receiving 8<i>s.</i> a week;
-but if we had the Articles of Agreement, the point would probably be
-clear. Possibly Evans had in the past made the equivalent of a weekly
-sum of 8<i>s.</i> out of board-wages passed on to him by Giles.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="label">[137]</a> Wallace, ii. 88.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="label">[138]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 213, 217, 220.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="label">[139]</a> G. von Bülow and W. Powell in <i>R. H. S. Trans.</i> vi.
-26; Wallace, ii. 105; with translations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="label">[140]</a> Wallace, ii. 126, summarizes his theory; cf. my review
-in <i>M. L. R.</i> v. 224.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="label">[141]</a> Wallace, ii. 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="label">[142]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 217; <i>K. v. P.</i> 224, 227, 229, 231,
-236, 248.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_143" href="#FNanchor_143" class="label">[143]</a> Wallace, ii. 73.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_144" href="#FNanchor_144" class="label">[144]</a> Wallace, ii. 75, shows that the Blackfriars repertory
-would require twenty or twenty-five actors.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_145" href="#FNanchor_145" class="label">[145]</a> Gawdy, 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_146" href="#FNanchor_146" class="label">[146]</a> Wallace, ii. 95. Dudley Carleton wrote to John
-Chamberlain on 29 Dec. 1601 (<i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cclxxxii. 48), ‘The
-Q: dined this day priuatly at my L<sup>d</sup> Chamberlains; I came euen now
-from the blackfriers where I saw her at the play with all her candidae
-auditrices’; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_147" href="#FNanchor_147" class="label">[147]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_148" href="#FNanchor_148" class="label">[148]</a> Wallace, ii. 89, says that Evans paid £11 0<i>s.</i>
-2<i>d.</i> for repairs on 8 Dec. 1603.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_149" href="#FNanchor_149" class="label">[149]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 267, from <i>Patent Roll, 1 Jac.
-I</i>, pt. 8. Collier, i. 340, and Hazlitt, <i>E. D. S.</i> 40, print
-the signet bill, the former dating it 30 Jan. and the latter 31 Jan.,
-and misdescribe it as a privy seal. Collier, <i>N. F.</i> 48, printed
-a forged letter from Daniel to Sir T. Egerton (cf. Ingleby, 244, 247)
-intended to suggest that Drayton, and perhaps also Shakespeare, had
-coveted his post.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_150" href="#FNanchor_150" class="label">[150]</a> Wallace, ii. 80, mentions a case of the employment of a
-boy at the Blackfriars during James’s reign under a contract with his
-mother.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_151" href="#FNanchor_151" class="label">[151]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 359. On 7 Oct. 1605 the Wardrobe
-provided holland for shirts for the 12 children and ‘for James Cutler,
-a Chappell boy gone off’ (Lafontaine, 46, from <i>L. C.</i> 804).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_152" href="#FNanchor_152" class="label">[152]</a> Rimbault, 60; Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (ed. Howes), 1037.
-An order of 17 July 1604 (<i>H. O.</i> 301) continued the allowance of
-an increase of meat at festival times which the children had presumably
-enjoyed under Elizabeth.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_153" href="#FNanchor_153" class="label">[153]</a> Middleton, <i>Father Hubbard’s Tales</i> (<i>Works</i>,
-viii. 64, 77). A reference in the same book to an ant as ‘this small
-actor in less than decimo sexto’ recalls the jest in the Induction to
-the <i>Malcontent</i> at the boys who played <i>Jeronimo</i> ‘in decimo
-sexto’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_154" href="#FNanchor_154" class="label">[154]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_155" href="#FNanchor_155" class="label">[155]</a> <i>K. v. B.</i> 340.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_156" href="#FNanchor_156" class="label">[156]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. plays named.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_157" href="#FNanchor_157" class="label">[157]</a> Kirkham and Kendall were still associated in Aug. 1605,
-when apparel and properties were obtained from them for the plays
-at James’s visit to Oxford (<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 247). There was a
-performance at the Blackfriars as late as 16 June 1605 (Wallace, ii.
-125), a date connected with a dispute in settlement of which Kirkham’s
-bond of £50 to Evans was exchanged for a new one to Hawkins (<i>K. v.
-P.</i> 244).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_158" href="#FNanchor_158" class="label">[158]</a> Cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 159. The t.p. of
-<i>Sophonisba</i> only specifies performance ‘at the Blackfriars’;
-those of <i>The Fleir</i> and <i>The Isle of Gulls</i> ‘by the Children
-of the Revels at the Blackfriars’. Probably the ‘Children of the
-Revels’ of the t.p. of Day’s <i>Law Tricks</i> (1608) is also the
-Blackfriars company. No theatre is named, but the play is too early for
-the King’s Revels, who, moreover, do not seem to be described on other
-t.ps. as ‘Children of the Revels’ pure and simple. I take it that these
-t.p. descriptions follow the designations of the companies in use when
-the plays were last on the stage before publication, rather than those
-in use at the times of first production.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_159" href="#FNanchor_159" class="label">[159]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_160" href="#FNanchor_160" class="label">[160]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Day.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_161" href="#FNanchor_161" class="label">[161]</a> Keysar was certainly associated with Kendall by the
-Christmas of 1606–7, when they supplied apparel and properties for the
-Westminster plays; cf. Murray, ii. 169.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_162" href="#FNanchor_162" class="label">[162]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 249.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_163" href="#FNanchor_163" class="label">[163]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 362, from <i>P. R. O., Patent Roll,
-4 James I</i>, p. 18, <i>dorso</i>. Collier, i. 446, long ago noted
-the existence of a similar clause in a Caroline commission to Giles of
-1626. It was probably the choristers who assisted in a quasi-dramatic
-performance on 16 July 1607, when James dined with the Merchant
-Taylors, and Giles received the freedom of the company in reward; cf.
-ch. iv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_164" href="#FNanchor_164" class="label">[164]</a> Cf. App. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_165" href="#FNanchor_165" class="label">[165]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 221; <i>K. v. P.</i> 246. ‘The Children
-of the Revells’ who appeared at Leicester on 21 Aug. 1608 (Kelly, 248)
-might have been these boys, but might also have been the King’s Revels,
-if the King’s Revels were still in existence under that name, which is
-very doubtful.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_166" href="#FNanchor_166" class="label">[166]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Chapman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_167" href="#FNanchor_167" class="label">[167]</a> <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xxxi. 73. The mine was no
-doubt the silver mine discovered at Hilderston near Linlithgow in
-1607, and worked as a royal enterprise with little success; cf. R. W.
-Cochran-Patrick, <i>Early Records relating to Mining in Scotland</i>
-(1878), xxxvii. 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_168" href="#FNanchor_168" class="label">[168]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_169" href="#FNanchor_169" class="label">[169]</a> <i>K. v. B.</i> 342.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_170" href="#FNanchor_170" class="label">[170]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 222; <i>K. v. P.</i> 225, 231, 235, 246.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_171" href="#FNanchor_171" class="label">[171]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_172" href="#FNanchor_172" class="label">[172]</a> <i>K. v. P.</i> 225, 249.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_173" href="#FNanchor_173" class="label">[173]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 221; <i>K. v. P.</i> 245. In the
-earlier suit Evans says that the royal prohibition was ‘vpon some
-misdemeanors committed in or about the plaies there, and specially
-vpon the defendants [Kirkham’s] acts and doings thereabout’. Unless
-Kirkham was more directly concerned in the management during 1608 than
-appears probable, Evans must be reflecting upon the whole series of
-misdemeanours since 1604.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_174" href="#FNanchor_174" class="label">[174]</a> On 9 May John Browne, ‘one of the playe boyes’, was
-buried at St. Anne’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_175" href="#FNanchor_175" class="label">[175]</a> <i>K. v. B.</i> 347, gives the date of surrender in 1610
-as ‘about the tenth of August last past’. Probably a year’s sub-tenancy
-under the King’s men explains the discrepancy with the ‘about August in
-the sixt year of his Majesties raigne’ of <i>K. v. P.</i> 235, and the
-confirmatory date of the King’s men’s leases.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_176" href="#FNanchor_176" class="label">[176]</a> Cf. ch. <i>supra</i> (Paul’s). <i>K. v. B.</i> 355 tells
-us that Rosseter was in partnership with Keysar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_177" href="#FNanchor_177" class="label">[177]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 271, from <i>P. R., 7 Jac. I</i>, p.
-13. Ingleby, 254, gave the material part in discussing a forged draft
-by Collier (<i>N. F.</i> 41), in which the names of the patentees
-are given as ‘Robert Daiborne, William Shakespeare, Nathaniel Field
-and Edward Kirkham’. A genuine note of the patent is in Sir Thomas
-Egerton’s note-book (<i>N. F.</i> 40). Ingleby adds that the signet
-office records (cf. Phillimore, 103) show that the warrant was obtained
-in Dec. 1609 by the influence of Monson. He was Anne’s household
-Chancellor and to him Rosseter and Campion dedicated their <i>Book of
-Airs</i> (1601) and Campion his <i>Third Book of Airs</i> (1617).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_178" href="#FNanchor_178" class="label">[178]</a> <i>K. v. B.</i> 343.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_179" href="#FNanchor_179" class="label">[179]</a> <i>K. v. B.</i> 343, 350.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_180" href="#FNanchor_180" class="label">[180]</a> Evans, Mrs. Evans, Field, Underwood, Ostler, Baxstead,
-Rosseter, Marston, and Mrs. Hawkins were to be examined for the King’s
-men.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_181" href="#FNanchor_181" class="label">[181]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 213. I presume that some of these are
-amongst the ‘twelve additional suits’ which Wallace, ii. 36, claims to
-have found.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_182" href="#FNanchor_182" class="label">[182]</a> <i>E. v. K.</i> 218. In <i>K. v. P.</i> 225, he put the
-total annual profits during 1608–12 at £160.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_183" href="#FNanchor_183" class="label">[183]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317; cf. <i>Hist. Hist.</i> 416
-(App. I), ‘Some of the chapel boys, when they grew men, became actors
-at the Blackfriars; such were Nathan Field and John Underwood’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_184" href="#FNanchor_184" class="label">[184]</a> The <i>Chamber Accounts</i> record no payment to the
-company (cf. App. B, introd.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_185" href="#FNanchor_185" class="label">[185]</a> Cf. ch. xvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_186" href="#FNanchor_186" class="label">[186]</a> Murray, i. 361.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_187" href="#FNanchor_187" class="label">[187]</a> E. Ashmole, <i>Institution of the Garter</i> (1672),
-127; R. R. Tighe and J. E. Davis, <i>Annals of Windsor</i>, i. 426,
-477; <i>Report of Cathedrals Commission</i> (1854), App. 467; <i>V. H.
-Berks</i>, ii. 106; <i>H. M. C. Various MSS.</i> vii. 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_188" href="#FNanchor_188" class="label">[188]</a> Tighe-Davis, ii. 45, from Stowe’s account ‘of the
-Castell of Wyndsore’ (<i>Harl. MS.</i> 367, f. 13).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_189" href="#FNanchor_189" class="label">[189]</a> Nichols, i. 81, and Collier, i. 170, print a copy
-in <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1113, f. 252, from the Elizabethan commission
-preserved at Windsor, as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Elizabeth R.</p>
-
-<p>Whereas our castle of Windsor hath of old been well furnished
-with singing men and children, We, willing it should not be of
-less reputation in our days, but rather augmented and increased,
-declare, that no singing men or boys be taken out of the said
-chapel by virtue of any commission, not even for our household
-chapel: and we give power to the bearer of this to take any
-singing men and boys from any chapel, our own household and St.
-Paul’s only excepted. Given at Westminster, this 8<sup>th</sup> of March
-in the second year of our reign.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A further copy from <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1113 is in <i>Addl. MS.</i> 4847,
-f. 117. Copies or notes of the three earlier commissions are in this
-MS. and in <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1124. In <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1132, f. 169, is
-a letter of 18 April 1599 from the Chapter to Sir R. Cecil defending
-their conduct in taking a singing man from Westminster.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_190" href="#FNanchor_190" class="label">[190]</a> Gee, 230, in a list of deprived clergy from N. Sanders,
-<i>De Visibili Monarchia</i> (1571), 688, ‘<i>Magistri Musices</i>
-... Prestonus in oppido Vindelisoriensi’. Can this Preston be the
-playwright (cf. ch. xxiii)?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_191" href="#FNanchor_191" class="label">[191]</a> Rimbault, 1; Stopes, <i>Shakespeare’s Environment</i>,
-243.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_192" href="#FNanchor_192" class="label">[192]</a> <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1132, f. 165<sup>a</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_193" href="#FNanchor_193" class="label">[193]</a> Rimbault, 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_194" href="#FNanchor_194" class="label">[194]</a> <i>M. L. R.</i> (1906), ii. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_195" href="#FNanchor_195" class="label">[195]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_196" href="#FNanchor_196" class="label">[196]</a> Cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_197" href="#FNanchor_197" class="label">[197]</a> Rimbault, 3; <i>H. M. C., Hatfield MSS.</i> ii. 539.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_198" href="#FNanchor_198" class="label">[198]</a> Rimbault, 182; <i>Musical Antiquary</i>, i. 30; <i>10
-N. Q.</i> v. 341. A Christ Church, Oxford, MS., dated 1581, assigns to
-Farrant (cf. ch. xxiii) a possibly dramatic lament of Panthea for the
-death of Abradates, beginning ‘Ah, ah, alas ye salt sea Gods’. This is
-assigned to Robert Parsons by <i>Addl. MSS.</i> 17786–91, which assign
-to Farrant a song which may come from a play in which Altages is a
-character. The writer in the <i>Musical Antiquary</i> thinks that a
-lament for Guichardo (not from either of the known Gismund texts) in
-the <i>Ch. Ch. MS.</i> is much in Farrant’s style.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_199" href="#FNanchor_199" class="label">[199]</a> Ashmole, <i>Antiquities of Berks</i> (ed. 1723), iii.
-172; cf. p. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_200" href="#FNanchor_200" class="label">[200]</a> <i>Ashm. MS.</i> 1125, f. 41<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_201" href="#FNanchor_201" class="label">[201]</a> Cf. ch. xiii (Chamberlain’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_202" href="#FNanchor_202" class="label">[202]</a> Presumably, however, the ‘Gerry’ buried out of the
-Whitefriars play-house (q.v.) on 29 Sept. 1607 was of the company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_203" href="#FNanchor_203" class="label">[203]</a> Phillimore, 140; cf. App. A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_204" href="#FNanchor_204" class="label">[204]</a> <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, lxxxi. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_205" href="#FNanchor_205" class="label">[205]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 279, from <i>P. R. 13 Jac. I</i>, pt.
-20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_206" href="#FNanchor_206" class="label">[206]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 426; Collier, i. 394; Hazlitt,<i>
-E. D. S.</i> 49; from <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xcvii. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_207" href="#FNanchor_207" class="label">[207]</a> Collier, i. 396, not, as he says, from the <i>P. C.
-Register</i>, but from <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, xcvii. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_208" href="#FNanchor_208" class="label">[208]</a> Clode, ii. 269; Nicholl, <i>Ironmongers</i>, 84; cf. ch.
-iv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_209" href="#FNanchor_209" class="label">[209]</a> Warton, iii. 313; Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ed. Strype, v.
-231.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_210" href="#FNanchor_210" class="label">[210]</a> E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1903), i. 220, from
-<i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> xxxvi. 22; Murray, ii. 168.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_211" href="#FNanchor_211" class="label">[211]</a> <i>Observer.</i> Other payments in this or another year
-were for ‘a haddocke occupied in the plaie’, ‘a thondre barrell’,
-‘drawing the tytle of the comedee’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_212" href="#FNanchor_212" class="label">[212]</a> E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> (1896), i. 95; (1903)
-ii. 220; Murray, ii. 168; <i>Observer</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_213" href="#FNanchor_213" class="label">[213]</a> Heywood-Wright, 632; Hazlitt-Warton, iii. 308.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_214" href="#FNanchor_214" class="label">[214]</a> Collins, 215 (1566), ‘M<sup>r</sup> Scholemaster towards his
-charges about the playes laste Christmas, 20/-’; Maxwell-Lyte,<sup>4</sup> 154
-(1566–7) ‘To M<sup>r</sup> Scholemaster for his charge setting furthe ij playes
-19<sup>o</sup> Martii, iii<sup>l</sup>, xiij<sup>s</sup>, viij<sup>d</sup>’, (1568–9) ‘For ij dossen of links
-at iij<sup>d</sup> the linke for the childrens showes at Christmass, vj<sup>s</sup>’,
-(1572–3) ‘For vj poundes of candles at the playes in the Halle, ix<sup>d</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_215" href="#FNanchor_215" class="label">[215]</a> J. W. Hales in <i>Englische Studien</i>, xviii. 408
-(cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 452), made the date of 1553–4 seem
-plausible, but his conjecture that the play was written for the
-Westminster boys is disposed of by A. F. Leach, who gives Udall’s
-appointment to Westminster from the Chapter Act Book as 16 Dec. 1555
-(<i>Encycl. Brit.</i> s.v. Udall). It might be a Court play of 1553–4,
-but the parody of the <i>Requiem</i> would have been an indiscretion on
-Udall’s part at that date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_216" href="#FNanchor_216" class="label">[216]</a> G. C. Moore Smith (<i>M. L. R.</i> viii. 368) has
-an ingenious identification of him with the Wrenock of Spenser’s
-<i>Shepheards Kalendar</i>, xii. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_217" href="#FNanchor_217" class="label">[217]</a> Clode, <i>Hist. of Merchant Taylors Company</i>, i. 235,
-from Master’s <i>Accounts</i>. Before they opened their own school the
-Company had plays by the Westminster boys (q.v.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_218" href="#FNanchor_218" class="label">[218]</a> Clode, i. 234.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_219" href="#FNanchor_219" class="label">[219]</a> The subject may have been Perseus and Andromeda, as
-the Revels prepared a picture of Andromeda this year. If so, it was
-probably the same play as that of 23 Feb. 1574.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_220" href="#FNanchor_220" class="label">[220]</a> Whitelocke, <i>Liber Famelicus</i> (Camden Soc.), 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_221" href="#FNanchor_221" class="label">[221]</a> Clode, i. 264, 280, 390.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_222" href="#FNanchor_222" class="label">[222]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 186, 256.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_223" href="#FNanchor_223" class="label">[223]</a> The documents in W. Campbell, <i>Materials for a History
-of the Reign of Henry VII</i>, are full for the period 1485–90. There
-is nothing of King’s players, but certain ‘stuffures’ paid for by a
-warrant of 25 Nov. 1485 (Campbell, i. 178) included goods delivered to
-John English, apparently a royal tailor or valet, ‘servant unto my said
-sovereign’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_224" href="#FNanchor_224" class="label">[224]</a> Collier, i. 44, from a book of Exchequer payments,
-beginning Michaelmas 1493, in the Chapter-house (probably <i>Misc.
-Books of the Treasury of the Receipt of the Exchequer</i>, 131),
-‘xvij Die Maij [1494] John Englissh, Edwardo Maye, Rico Gibbeson, &amp;
-John Hammond, Lusoribus Regis, alias, in lingua Anglicana, <i>les</i>
-pleyars of the kyngs enterluds, de feodis suis V mrc. ꝓ Ann: le home,
-per lre Regis de privato Sigillo dormant de termino Michaelis alt:
-pte rec: denar: separatim ꝓ manus proprias, x mrc.’. The payment was
-continued half-yearly. Collier adds that Mr. Ouvry owned an original
-receipt signed by May and English for the salaries of the same four
-men. It is now <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623 (3), f. 1, and appears to be
-a slip cut from some Exchequer record. F. Devon, <i>Issues of the
-Exchequer</i>, 516, gives similar payments for Michaelmas 1494 and
-Michaelmas 1503; it is in the latter that the names of William Rutter
-and John Scott appear. An Exchequer declaration of 1505–6 in <i>Lansd.
-MS.</i> 156, f. 135, has ‘To Richard Gibson, and other the kings
-plaiers, for their annuity for one yere, £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>’.
-Henry, <i>History of Britain</i>, xii. 456, gives from an Exchequer
-annuity list of 1507–8, ‘Ricardo Gybson et aliis lusoribus dom. reg.
-£13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_225" href="#FNanchor_225" class="label">[225]</a> Collier, i. 49, quotes: (a) <i>Account</i> of Robert
-Fowler (1501–2), ‘Oct. 26 <a id="FNanchor_1501" href="#Footnote_1501" class="fnanchor">[1501]</a>, Itm to John Englishe for his pagent,
-£6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> ... Jan. 1 [1502] Itm, to the Kinges players,
-over 40<sup>s</sup> paid by Thomas Trollop, 20<sup>s</sup>’; (b) <i>Household Book of
-Henry VII</i> (1492–1505, more correctly from <i>Addl. MS.</i> 7099 in
-Bentley, <i>Excerpta Historica</i>, 85), ‘Jan. 6 <a id="FNanchor_1494" href="#Footnote_1494" class="fnanchor">[1494]</a> To the Kings
-Pleyers for a rewarde, £2 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> ... Jan. 7 <a id="FNanchor_1502" href="#Footnote_1502" class="fnanchor">[1502]</a>
-To John Englishe the Pleyer, 10<i>s.</i>’; (c) <i>The Kings Boke of
-Payments</i> (1506–9, apparently <i>Misc. Books of the Treasury of the
-Receipt of the Exchequer</i>, 214), ‘Jan. 7 <a id="FNanchor_1509" href="#Footnote_1509" class="fnanchor">[1509]</a> To the kings players
-in rewarde, £2’. Both (b) and (c) are <i>Chamber Accounts</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_226" href="#FNanchor_226" class="label">[226]</a> Leland, <i>Collectanea</i> (ed. Hearne), iv. 265.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_227" href="#FNanchor_227" class="label">[227]</a> <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 171, cited by Collier, i. 72, is in
-fact an Elizabethan document, but a list of fees and annuities (1516)
-in Brewer, ii. 874 has, amongst those granted by Henry VII, ‘John
-Englisshe and other players £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>’, and amongst
-those recently granted, ‘John Englisshe and other players, in addition
-to the old annuity, £13 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_228" href="#FNanchor_228" class="label">[228]</a> Collier, i. 97, 115, gives an Exchequer payment of
-1525–6, ‘Rico Hole et Georgio Mayler, et aliis lusoribus Dom. Regis,
-de foedis suis inter se ad x marcos per ann. sibi debit: pro festo
-Michaelis, anno xvij Regis nunc Henrici VIII recept. denar. per manus
-proprias, per litt. curr. 66<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>’, and was informed
-by Mr. Devon of a similar payment of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> in
-1530, in which John Roll, Richard Hole, and Thomas Sudbury are named.
-A household list of <i>c.</i> 1526 (Brewer, iv. 869) gives as on
-yearly wages ‘Ric. Hole and other players, £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>’.
-One later than March 1544 (Collier, i. 133) gives 8 players at £3
-6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> each.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_229" href="#FNanchor_229" class="label">[229]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (Brewer, v. 303; xiii. 2. 524;
-xiv. 2. 303; xvi. 178, 698; xvii. 474; xx. 2. 515; Nicolas, xxviii;
-Collier, i. 79, 96, 113, 116, 117; <i>Trevelyan Papers</i>, i. 149,
-157, 170, 177, 195, 203) give John English (1521–31) at half-yearly
-‘fee’ or ‘wages’ of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, John Slye or Slee
-(1539–40) at £1 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> half-yearly, and Richard Parrowe
-or Parlowe (1540–5, appointed Christmas 1538), George Birch (1538–45),
-Robert Hinstock (1538–45), and George Maylour (1538–40), at 16<i>s.</i>
-8<i>d.</i> or 11<i>s.</i> 1<i>d.</i> quarterly.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_230" href="#FNanchor_230" class="label">[230]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> (Brewer, ii. 1441; iii. 1533,
-&amp;c.; Nicolas, xxviii; Collier, i. 76, 116). The reward for 1509–10 was
-£2 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i>; during 1510–13, £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>;
-during 1513–21, £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> to the ‘players’ and ‘£4’ to
-the ‘olde players’; and during 1529–41, £6 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_231" href="#FNanchor_231" class="label">[231]</a> Collier, i. 69, from a ‘paper, folded up in the roll [of
-the <i>Revels Account</i> for 1513–14] and in a different handwriting’,
-‘Inglyshe, and the oothers of the Kynges pleyers, after pleyed an
-Interluyt, whiche was wryten by Mayster Midwell, but yt was so long yt
-was not lykyd: yt was of the fyndyng of Troth, who was caryed away by
-ygnoraunce and ypocresy. The foolys part was the best, but the kyng
-departyd before the end to hys chambre.’ According to Collier, the
-paper is signed by William Cornish and also contains a description of a
-Chapel interlude. But Brewer, who calendars the <i>Revels Account</i>
-fully, does not notice it, and according to A. W. Reed in T. L. S. (3
-April 1919) it cannot be traced at the R. O.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_232" href="#FNanchor_232" class="label">[232]</a> Cf. ch. iii; <i>Tudor Revels</i>, 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_233" href="#FNanchor_233" class="label">[233]</a> Brewer, ii. 1493. In 1546–7 they had 5<i>s.</i> for the
-loan of garments to the Revels (Kempe, 71).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_234" href="#FNanchor_234" class="label">[234]</a> <i>Grey Friars Chronicle</i> (C. S.), 34, ‘Also this
-same yere John Scotte, that was one of the kynges playeres, was put in
-Newgate for rebukynge of the shreffes, and was there a sennet, and at
-the last was ledde betwene two of the offecers from Newgate thorrow
-London and soe to Newgat agayne, and then was delyveryd home to hys
-howse; but he toke such a thowte that he dyde, for he went in hys
-shurte’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_235" href="#FNanchor_235" class="label">[235]</a> John Slye and John Yonge, mercer, had been players to
-Queen Jane before her death in 1537, and were concerned about 1538 in
-a Chancery suit about a horse hired ‘to beare there playing garmentes’
-(Stopes, <i>Shakespeare’s Environment</i>, 235). Perhaps this explains
-the annuity of £1 10<i>s.</i> 5<i>d.</i> (1<i>d.</i> a day) which Young
-drew from the Chamber during 1540–2. But he obtained a patent as King’s
-player, with an annual fee of £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, on the death of
-Roo in 1539 (Brewer, xiv. 1. 423), and an ‘annuity’ of £3 6<i>s.</i>
-8<i>d.</i> on the death of Sudbury in 1546 (Brewer, xxi. 2. 156).
-Collier, i. 134, cites a description of him in a fee list amongst the
-<i>Fairfax MSS.</i> as ‘Maker of Interludes, Comedies, and Playes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_236" href="#FNanchor_236" class="label">[236]</a> Cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 183.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_237" href="#FNanchor_237" class="label">[237]</a> G. H. Overend in <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> (1877–9), 425.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_238" href="#FNanchor_238" class="label">[238]</a> Collier, i. 93; Madden, <i>Privy Purse Expenses of the
-Princess Mary</i>, 104, 140; <i>Rutland MSS.</i> iv. 270; Brewer, iv.
-340.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_239" href="#FNanchor_239" class="label">[239]</a> Cf. Murray, <i>passim</i>, and <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>,
-App. E.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_240" href="#FNanchor_240" class="label">[240]</a> <i>Royal MS.</i> 7, C. xvi, f. 97 (cited Collier, i.
-137). The names are in a list of servants ‘nuely in ordinary of the
-Chamber’, and some illegible names of players are in an accompanying
-list of ‘Offycers in ordynary of the Chamber of the late Kynges
-Majestie now discharged’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_241" href="#FNanchor_241" class="label">[241]</a> <i>Lord Chamberlain’s Records</i>, <i>Misc.</i> v. 127,
-f. 23 (also with the error ‘E. and P.’ in Sullivan, 249), ‘three broade
-yerdes of redd wollen clothe for a liuery coate of suche prices as the
-yeomen officers of oure howseholde are accustomed to haue and iij<sup>s</sup> and
-iiij<sup>d</sup> vnto euery of them for the Enbrauderinge of theire saide coates
-withe the lettres E and R on the backe and on the breste’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_242" href="#FNanchor_242" class="label">[242]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> in <i>Trevelyan Papers</i>, i.
-195–205; ii. 17–31, and Collier, i. 136, 138, 148.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_243" href="#FNanchor_243" class="label">[243]</a> <i>S. P. D. Edw. VI</i>, xiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_244" href="#FNanchor_244" class="label">[244]</a> <i>Stowe MS.</i> 571, f. 27<sup>v</sup>; <i>Harl. MS.</i> 240, f.
-13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_245" href="#FNanchor_245" class="label">[245]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 89, 90, 97, 98, 119;
-cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 406, where I think I was in error in
-taking John Smith as a name assumed by Will Somers.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_246" href="#FNanchor_246" class="label">[246]</a> <i>Hist. MSS.</i> iii. 230, from book of annuities at
-Penshurst.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_247" href="#FNanchor_247" class="label">[247]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 31, 39, 57, 86.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_248" href="#FNanchor_248" class="label">[248]</a> Collier, i. 149. The reference to Ferrers’ ‘divine’ and
-‘astronomer’ (cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 407) fixes the date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_249" href="#FNanchor_249" class="label">[249]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 201, from <i>Lansd. MS.</i>
-824, f. 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_250" href="#FNanchor_250" class="label">[250]</a> Fee-list in collection of Soc. of Antiquaries, cited by
-Collier, i. 161.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_251" href="#FNanchor_251" class="label">[251]</a> <i>Chamber Accounts</i> in Collier, i. 161; <i>Declared
-Accounts (Pipe Office)</i>, 541, m. 2<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_252" href="#FNanchor_252" class="label">[252]</a> Reading was a London player in 1550 (App. D, No. v). The
-Chamber Accounts for the first few years of Elizabeth show an annuity
-to a George Birch under a warrant of 7 Jan. 1560.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_253" href="#FNanchor_253" class="label">[253]</a> Eight players of interludes at £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>
-each are in the fee-lists (cf. vol. i, p. 29), <i>Stowe MS.</i> 571, f.
-148 (<i>c.</i> 1575–80), <i>Sloane MS.</i> 3194, f. 38 (1585), <i>Stowe
-MS.</i> 571, f. 168 (<i>c.</i> 1587–90), <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 171, f. 250
-(<i>c.</i> 1587–91), <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> ccxxi, f. 16 (<i>c.</i>
-1588–93), <i>H. O.</i> 256 (<i>c.</i> 1598), and with the error of £3
-6<i>s.</i> in <i>Hargreave MS.</i> 215, f. 21<sup>v</sup> (<i>c.</i> 1592–5),
-<i>Lord Chamberlain’s Records</i>, v. 33, f. 19<sup>v</sup> (1593), <i>Stowe
-MS.</i> 572, f. 35<sup>v</sup> (<i>c.</i> 1592–6), <i>Harl. MS.</i> 2078, f. 18<sup>v</sup>
-(<i>c.</i> 1592–6). The inaccurate <i>Cott. MS. Titus</i>, B. iii,
-f. 176 (<i>c.</i> 1585–93) gives two ‘Plaiers on Interludes’ at £3
-6<i>s.</i> The normal entry recurs in the Jacobean <i>Lansd. MS.</i>
-272, f. 27 (1614) and <i>Stowe MS.</i> 575, f. 24 (1616), but a group
-of the early part of the reign (<i>Addl. MS.</i> 35848, f. 19; <i>Addl.
-MS.</i> 38008, f. 58<sup>v</sup>; <i>Soc. Antiq. MSS.</i> 74, 75) have ‘Plaiers
-on the In lute’ or ‘on in Lutes’, at £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i> or £3
-6<i>s.</i>, which looks like an attempt to rationalize the <i>Cotton
-MS.</i> entry. And <i>Stowe MS.</i> 574, f. 16<sup>v</sup>, has ‘Players on Lute’
-at £3 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i>, which some one has corrected by inserting
-the normal entry. All this suggests that many copyists of fee-lists
-in the seventeenth century confused the post of interlude player with
-that of a lute player, and the former was therefore probably obsolete,
-and its fee no longer paid to the royal players of the day (cf.
-ch. x). I cannot agree with E. Law, <i>Shakespeare a Groom, of the
-Chamber</i>, 26, 64, that the interlude players survived under James
-as ‘mummers, who, perhaps, sang in a sort of recitative at masques and
-anti-masques’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_254" href="#FNanchor_254" class="label">[254]</a> <i>Chamber Declared Accounts</i> (<i>Pipe Office</i>),
-541, <i>passim</i>, 542, m. 3; Collier, i. 236; Cunningham, xxvii. I do
-not know how long John Young continued to draw his Exchequer ‘annuity’,
-but presumably he had retired on it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_255" href="#FNanchor_255" class="label">[255]</a> Fleay, 43, says, ‘There was no specific company called
-the Queen’s players till 1583; it was a generic title applied to
-any company who prepared plays for the Queen’s amusement. In 1561
-the players probably were the Earl of Leicester’s servants.’ I need
-hardly say that I do not accept this, which would not explain the
-disappearance of the ‘Queen’s’ from provincial records between 1573 and
-1583. For another use of the same improvised theory by Mr. Fleay, cf.
-App. D, No. lxxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_256" href="#FNanchor_256" class="label">[256]</a> Murray, i. 19, adds records from other towns, and A.
-Clark (10 <i>N. Q.</i> xi. 41) for Saffron Walden.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_257" href="#FNanchor_257" class="label">[257]</a> App. D, No. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_258" href="#FNanchor_258" class="label">[258]</a> Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. 280, ‘To my L. of Leyester’s
-men for a reward, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>’. Fleay, 18, says that the
-amount is too small to favour the supposition that these were players.
-But Elizabeth was at Saffron Walden at the time, and a present was made
-to the Master of the Revels of a podd of oysters costing no more than
-3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Probably Saffron Walden was an economical place,
-or the payment was only for some speech.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_259" href="#FNanchor_259" class="label">[259]</a> Murray, i. 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_260" href="#FNanchor_260" class="label">[260]</a> Printed in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 348, from <i>MS.</i> F. 10
-(213) in the Marquis of Bath’s collection at Longleat; also in <i>3 N.
-Q.</i> xi. 350. The letter is undated but followed <i>Procl.</i> 663,
-on which cf. ch. viii and App. D, No. xix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_261" href="#FNanchor_261" class="label">[261]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 406; Kempe, 47. The garments
-provided for Ferrers by the Revels included fools’ coats for ‘Children,
-John Smyth, Ayer apparent ... Seame 2, Parkins 3, Elderton 4’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_262" href="#FNanchor_262" class="label">[262]</a> App. D, No. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_263" href="#FNanchor_263" class="label">[263]</a> Cf. ch. ix. The patent is printed from the Patent
-Roll in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 262; also from a copy of the entry on the
-Patent Roll preserved amongst Rymer’s papers in <i>Sloane MS.</i>
-4625 by Steevens, <i>Shakespeare</i> (1773), ii. 156, and therefrom
-in <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 47. This text omits the words ‘oure Citie of
-London and liberties of the same as also within’. Collier, i. 203,
-and Hazlitt, <i>E. D. S.</i> 25, printed the Signet Bill, erroneously
-describing it as the Privy Seal, from the State Paper Office. This
-has the omitted words, and Collier correctly explains the omission in
-Steevens’s text as due to an inaccurate copyist, pointing in proof to
-the words ‘in oure <i>said</i> Citye of London’. This did not, however,
-prevent Fleay, 45, from asserting that in the Patent ‘an alteration had
-been made from the Privy Seal’, on the ground that its terms ‘infringed
-on the powers of the City authorities’. Such an alteration not merely
-did not take place, but would have been a diplomatic impossibility, as
-the Patent Roll was made up, not from the Letters Patent, but from the
-Privy Seals on which these were based.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_264" href="#FNanchor_264" class="label">[264]</a> Probably they occupied the Theatre, at any rate in
-summer, until 1583. A letter of Gabriel Harvey’s in the summer of 1579
-mentions ‘Lycesters’, the ‘Theater’, and ‘Wylson’, but in no very
-definite connexion with each other (cf. p. 4). The Privy Council letter
-of 23 Dec. 1579, for their toleration at the Blackfriars, printed by
-Collier, <i>New Facts</i>, 9, is a forgery (cf. ch. xvii).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_265" href="#FNanchor_265" class="label">[265]</a> I should think the ‘Myngs’ of Murray, ii. 214, and
-Collier, <i>Northbrooke</i>, viii, more likely to be palaeographically
-accurate than the ‘Myngo’ of J. Latimer in <i>9 N. Q.</i> xi. 444 and
-his <i>Sixteenth Century Bristol</i>. But a song of ‘Monsieur Mingo’
-exists in a setting by Orlando de Lassus (cf. <i>E. H. R.</i> xxxiii.
-83), and is quoted in <i>2 Hen. IV</i>, v. iii. 78, and <i>Summer’s
-Last Will and Testament</i>, 968.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_266" href="#FNanchor_266" class="label">[266]</a> Cf. App. D, No. xl.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_267" href="#FNanchor_267" class="label">[267]</a> Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Baylye.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_268" href="#FNanchor_268" class="label">[268]</a> Murray, i. 41, gives additional provincial records for
-1576–82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_269" href="#FNanchor_269" class="label">[269]</a> Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 717, from a description by
-William Segar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_270" href="#FNanchor_270" class="label">[270]</a> The show itself was perhaps of Italian origin, for on 17
-June 1572 the Earl of Lincoln was entertained at Paris by the Duke of
-Anjou (2 Ellis, iii. 12, from <i>Cott. MS. Vesp.</i> F. vi, f. 93) with
-‘an Italian comedie, which eandid, vaulting with notable supersaltes
-and through hoopes, and last of all the Antiques, of carying of men one
-uppon an other which som men call <i>labores Herculis</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_271" href="#FNanchor_271" class="label">[271]</a> J. Bruce from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 287, f. 1, in <i>Who
-was Will, my Lord of Leicester’s jesting player?</i> (<i>Sh. Soc.
-Papers</i>, i. 88). Bruce thinks that ‘Will’ might be Johnson, Kempe,
-or Sly, but not Shakespeare, whose ‘earliest works bear upon them the
-stamp of a mind far too contemplative and refined’ for Sidney to call
-him ‘knave’ and ‘jesting player’. I do not subscribe to the reasoning.
-W. J. Thoms, <i>Three Notelets on Shakespeare</i>, 120, upholds the
-Shakespeare theory, and attempts to support it by evidence of military
-knowledge in the plays.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_272" href="#FNanchor_272" class="label">[272]</a> Wright, <i>Eliz.</i> ii. 268, from <i>Cott. MS.
-Galba</i> C. viii; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 88.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_273" href="#FNanchor_273" class="label">[273]</a> Fleay, 82; but cf. Lee, 36, and pp. 124, 272. The
-thing is complicated by the influence of Malone’s suggestion
-(<i>Variorum</i>, ii. 166) that Shakespeare might have left Stratford
-with Leicester’s men on a visit to the town. This assumes its most
-fantastic form in the suggestion of Lee<sup>1</sup>, 33, that Shakespeare was
-already in London, but ‘Shakespeare’s friends may have called the
-attention of the strolling players to the homeless youth, rumours of
-whose search for employment about the London theatres had doubtless
-reached Stratford’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_274" href="#FNanchor_274" class="label">[274]</a> At Exeter they are called the Lord Steward’s, certainly
-not the Marquis of Winchester’s, as Murray, ii. 95, suggests, for he
-was never Steward of Elizabeth’s household.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_275" href="#FNanchor_275" class="label">[275]</a> <i>Norfolk Archaeology</i>, xiii. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_276" href="#FNanchor_276" class="label">[276]</a> J. M. Cowper, in <i>1 R. Hist. Soc. Trans.</i> i. 218,
-records a performance by ‘my Lord of Leicester’s men’ at Faversham in
-1589–90; but I think this must be an error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_277" href="#FNanchor_277" class="label">[277]</a> J. D. Walker, <i>The Black Books of Lincoln’s Inn</i>,
-i. 374, gives the name as ‘Lord Roche’, but this is probably a mistake.
-Viscount Roche of Fermoy in Ireland is not likely to have had players
-in London.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_278" href="#FNanchor_278" class="label">[278]</a> J. de Perott (<i>Rev. Germ.</i> Feb. 1914) suggests
-that <i>Portio and Demorantes</i> may be the Lamorat and Porcia of the
-French version (1548) of <i>Amadis de Grecia</i> (1542), viii. 56.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_279" href="#FNanchor_279" class="label">[279]</a> Murray, i. 307, and A. Clark (<i>10 N. Q.</i> xii. 41)
-add records for 1573–83.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_280" href="#FNanchor_280" class="label">[280]</a> Murray, i. 307, has additional provincial records for
-1585–91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_281" href="#FNanchor_281" class="label">[281]</a> I do not agree with Fleay, <i>Sh.</i> 18, 184, that
-Sussex’s were satirized in <i>A Midsummer-Night’s Dream</i>; cf.
-<i>infra</i>, s.v. Hertford’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_282" href="#FNanchor_282" class="label">[282]</a> Dasent, xxiv. 209.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_283" href="#FNanchor_283" class="label">[283]</a> Cf. App. C, No. lvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_284" href="#FNanchor_284" class="label">[284]</a> Dasent, viii. 71, dating the warrant on 29 Feb.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_285" href="#FNanchor_285" class="label">[285]</a> <i>Ancaster MSS.</i> (<i>Hist. MSS.</i>) 466.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_286" href="#FNanchor_286" class="label">[286]</a> <i>Hist. MSS.</i> ix. 1. 156. The payment is given as to
-the Earl of ‘Waffyts’ men.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_287" href="#FNanchor_287" class="label">[287]</a> Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. 531.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_288" href="#FNanchor_288" class="label">[288]</a> Wright and Halliwell, <i>Reliquiae Antiquae</i>, ii.
-122, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 7392, f. 97; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_289" href="#FNanchor_289" class="label">[289]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 222.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_290" href="#FNanchor_290" class="label">[290]</a> Cf. ch. viii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_291" href="#FNanchor_291" class="label">[291]</a> Ellis, i. 3, 32; Cooper, ii. 379; from <i>S. P. D.
-Eliz.</i> cxxxix. 26. The Privy Council letter of 30 Oct. 1575 (<i>M.
-S. C.</i> i. 195) forbids ‘open shewes’ and ‘assemblies in open places
-of multitudes of people’ within five miles of Cambridge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_292" href="#FNanchor_292" class="label">[292]</a> Murray, i. 348. I add Maldon (1581).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_293" href="#FNanchor_293" class="label">[293]</a> Murray, i. 348. I add Stratford (1583–4). Dr. Boas
-kindly informs me that the Oxford City Accounts for 1584–5 have a
-payment to Oxford’s ‘musytions’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_294" href="#FNanchor_294" class="label">[294]</a> Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_295" href="#FNanchor_295" class="label">[295]</a> The payment was made to Richard Woderam, but he is more
-likely to have been an agent of the Corporation than a member of the
-company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_296" href="#FNanchor_296" class="label">[296]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 186, 256. The 1469 entry
-has been since published by A. Clark in <i>10 N. Q.</i> vii. 181, ‘Et
-solut. lusoribus domini comitis Essex ludentibus coram burgensibus
-infra burgum hoc anno, v<i>s</i>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_297" href="#FNanchor_297" class="label">[297]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, ii. 150. The ‘lord Cartleyes players’
-recorded by B. S. Penley, <i>The Bath Stage</i>, 12, in 1580–1, 1582–3,
-and 1583–4 were perhaps Lord Berkeley’s. Murray, ii. 27, adds other
-provincial notices.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_298" href="#FNanchor_298" class="label">[298]</a> This did not prevent Chalmers from giving the date 1581
-and being set right by Malone (<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 442). Collier, i.
-247, gives 1583, but misdates Tilney’s commission of 1581, and takes it
-for the instrument constituting the company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_299" href="#FNanchor_299" class="label">[299]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 359.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_300" href="#FNanchor_300" class="label">[300]</a> Nicolas, <i>Hatton</i>, 271.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_301" href="#FNanchor_301" class="label">[301]</a> Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (1615), 697, (1631), 698.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_302" href="#FNanchor_302" class="label">[302]</a> Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 79, citing <i>Addl. MS.</i>
-5750, f. 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_303" href="#FNanchor_303" class="label">[303]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_304" href="#FNanchor_304" class="label">[304]</a> Halliwell, <i>Affray at Norwich in 1583 in which Queen
-Elizabeth’s Players were involved</i> (1864), and in <i>Illustrations
-of the Life of Shakespeare</i>, 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_305" href="#FNanchor_305" class="label">[305]</a> Murray, i. 20, and A. Clark in <i>10 N. Q.</i> xii. 41
-(Saffron Walden) give other provincial records throughout. An Ipswich
-one for 1581–2 must be misplaced.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_306" href="#FNanchor_306" class="label">[306]</a> Cf. App. D, No. lxxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_307" href="#FNanchor_307" class="label">[307]</a> Fleay, 83.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_308" href="#FNanchor_308" class="label">[308]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, ii. 166.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_309" href="#FNanchor_309" class="label">[309]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 354. from <i>P. R. O. Lay Subsidies,
-Household</i>, 69/97.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_310" href="#FNanchor_310" class="label">[310]</a> Fleay, 34.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_311" href="#FNanchor_311" class="label">[311]</a> The illustration of Mr. Fleay’s methods of constructing
-stage history is delightful. In <i>The True Tragedie of Richard the
-Third</i>, a Queen’s play, the murderers of the princes in the Tower
-are Will Slawter or Sluter, ‘yet the most part calles him blacke Will’
-(Hazlitt, <i>Sh. L.</i> v. 95), and Jack Denten or Douton. On this Mr.
-Fleay (ii. 316) comments, ‘One of the actors in it, Sc. 11, is called
-Will Slaughter, “yet the most part calls him Black Will”, <i>i.e.</i>
-the Black Will of <i>Arden of Faversham</i>, q.v., which had no doubt
-been acted by the same man. Another actor is called Jack Donton
-(Dutton) or Denten, an accommodation of the Dighton of history to the
-actor’s real name.’ Obviously there is no need to suppose that the
-characters in <i>The True Tragedie</i> bore the names of their actors.
-John Dutton is not very likely to have taken a part of four speeches,
-and Will Slawter is evidently added to the John Dighton of Holinshed,
-to give Edward V the ‘irony’ of a pun upon ‘slaughter’. As for <i>Arden
-of Faversham</i>, it is not known to have been a Queen’s play at all,
-and its ‘Black Will’ is taken from Holinshed. Having gone so far, I
-do not know why Mr. Fleay stopped short of identifying Black Will’s
-colleague ‘Shakebag’ with the name of an actor. Of course, Mr. Fleay’s
-blundering conjectures must be distinguished from the deliberate
-fabrications of Collier, who published in his <i>New Facts</i>,
-11, from a forged document amongst the <i>Bridgewater MSS.</i>, a
-certificate to the Privy Council under the date ‘Nov. 1589’, from ‘her
-Ma<sup>ts</sup> poore playeres James Burbidge Richard Burbidge John Laneham
-Thomas Greene Robert Wilson John Taylor Anth. Wadeson Thomas Pope
-George Peele Augustine Phillippes Nicholas Towley William Shakespeare
-William Kempe William Johnson Baptiste Goodale and Robert Armyn being
-all of them sharers in the blacke Fryers playehouse’. On this cf. ch.
-xvii, and Ingleby, 249.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_312" href="#FNanchor_312" class="label">[312]</a> Tarlton, 12, 13, 27, 29, 30, 31, 33, 37, ‘while the
-queenes players lay in Worcester’, ‘when the queenes players were
-restrained in summer, they travelled downe to S. James his fair at
-Bristow’, ‘in the country where the queenes plaiers were accepted
-into a gentlemans house’, ‘at Salisbury, Tarlton and his fellowes
-were to play before the maior and his brethren’, ‘the queenes players
-travelling into the west country to play, and lodging in a little
-village some ten miles from Bristow’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_313" href="#FNanchor_313" class="label">[313]</a> Tarlton, 16, ‘one in mockage threw him in this theame,
-he playing then at the Curtaine’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_314" href="#FNanchor_314" class="label">[314]</a> Tarlton, 24, ‘Tarlton then, with his fellowes, playing
-at the Bel by ... the Crosse-keyes in Gracious streete’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_315" href="#FNanchor_315" class="label">[315]</a> Tarlton, 13, ‘at the Bull in Bishops-gate-street, where
-the queenes players oftentimes played’. It was here (Tarlton, 24)
-that Tarlton and Knell played <i>The Famous Victories of Henry the
-Fifth</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_316" href="#FNanchor_316" class="label">[316]</a> Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (<i>Works</i>, i. 197;
-cf. i. 308).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_317" href="#FNanchor_317" class="label">[317]</a> Arber, ii. 526, ‘A sorowfull newe sonnette intituled
-Tarltons Recantacon uppon this theame gyven him by a gentleman at the
-Bel savage without Ludgate (nowe or ells never) beinge the laste theame
-he songe’. The tract is not extant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_318" href="#FNanchor_318" class="label">[318]</a> App. C, No. lvii. He names Knell, Bentley, Mills,
-Wilson, and Laneham.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_319" href="#FNanchor_319" class="label">[319]</a> Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Alleyn, and ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_320" href="#FNanchor_320" class="label">[320]</a> E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> for 21 Jan. 1882.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_321" href="#FNanchor_321" class="label">[321]</a> Cf. ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_322" href="#FNanchor_322" class="label">[322]</a> Murray, ii. 398 (Southampton), ‘the Queenes maiesties
-&amp; the Earle of Sussex players, xxx<sup>s</sup>’; 240 (Coventry), ‘the Quenes
-players &amp; the Erle of Sussex players, xv<sup>s</sup>’; 284 (Gloucester), ‘the
-Queenes and the Earle of Sussex players, xxx<sup>s</sup>’. At Faversham (Murray,
-ii. 274) separate payments of 1590–1 for the Queen’s (20<i>s.</i>) and
-Essex’s (10<i>s.</i>) are followed by ‘to the Queen’s Players and to
-the Earl of Essex’s Players’ (20<i>s.</i>). It is conceivable that in
-this last entry ‘Essex’s’ may be a slip for ‘Sussex’s’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_323" href="#FNanchor_323" class="label">[323]</a> App. D, No. lxxxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_324" href="#FNanchor_324" class="label">[324]</a> Nashe, <i>Works</i>, iii. 244.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_325" href="#FNanchor_325" class="label">[325]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 190, from <i>Lansd. MSS.</i> 71,
-75. The letters are both dated 18 Sept. 1592, and that to Burghley
-contained copies of the charters of Henry III and Elizabeth, of a
-Privy Council letter of 30 Oct. 1575 (cf. Dasent, ix. 39) forbidding
-shows within five miles of the University, and of the warrant of the
-Vice-Chancellor and other justices to the constables of Chesterton,
-dated 1 Sept. 1592.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_326" href="#FNanchor_326" class="label">[326]</a> University Letter of 17 July 1593 in <i>M. S. C.</i> i.
-200, from <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 75; Privy Council Act of 29 July 1593 in
-Dasent, xxiv. 427.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_327" href="#FNanchor_327" class="label">[327]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 198, from <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 71.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_328" href="#FNanchor_328" class="label">[328]</a> Henslowe, i. 4. The date in the diary is ‘8 of Maye
-1593’, but I am prepared to accept Dr. Greg’s view (ii. 80) that as
-Francis was pawnbroking for his uncle all through 1593, this must be an
-error of Henslowe’s for ‘1594’. He seems to have actually left London
-on 18 May 1594.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_329" href="#FNanchor_329" class="label">[329]</a> Henslowe, i. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_330" href="#FNanchor_330" class="label">[330]</a> W. H. Stevenson, <i>Nottingham Records</i>, iv. 244.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_331" href="#FNanchor_331" class="label">[331]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 186, 251.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_332" href="#FNanchor_332" class="label">[332]</a> <i>Sh. Homage</i>, 154.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_333" href="#FNanchor_333" class="label">[333]</a> Fleay, <i>Shakespeare</i>, 184.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_334" href="#FNanchor_334" class="label">[334]</a> Collier, i. 259.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_335" href="#FNanchor_335" class="label">[335]</a> Murray, i. 294. I add Maldon (1564–5). There is no proof
-that ‘Beeston and his fellowes’ at Barnstaple in 1560–1 were Strange’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_336" href="#FNanchor_336" class="label">[336]</a> The Revels account for 1587–9 (Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i>
-390) includes ‘a paire of fflanell hose for Symmons the Tumbler’, which
-is not in the separate account for 1587–8 (Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i>
-380).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_337" href="#FNanchor_337" class="label">[337]</a> App. D, No. lxxxii. The forged list of Queen’s men
-(q.v.) in 1589 is sometimes, by a further error, whose I do not know,
-assigned to Strange’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_338" href="#FNanchor_338" class="label">[338]</a> I had better give the complicated and in some cases
-uncertain notices in full; the unspecified references are to Murray:
-Cambridge (1591–2), ‘my Lord Stranges plaiers’ (Cooper, ii. 518),
-and so also (ii. 229, 284) Canterbury (13 July 1592) and Gloucester
-(1591–2); Bath (1591–10 June 1592), ‘my Lord Admiralls players’ ... ‘my
-L. Stranges plaiers’ (ii. 202); Aldeburgh (1591–2), ‘my Lord Admirals
-players’ (Stopes, <i>Hunnis</i>, 314); Shrewsbury (30 Sept. 1591–29
-Sept. 1592), ‘my L. Admeralls players’ ... ‘my l. Stranges and my l.
-Admyralls players’ (ii. 392, s. a. 1592–3, but the entries for the two
-years seem to be transposed; <i>vide infra</i>); Coventry (10 Dec.
-1591–29 Nov. 1592), ‘the Lord Strange players’ (ii. 240); Leicester (19
-Dec. 1592), ‘the Lorde Admiralls Playars’ (ii. 305); Shrewsbury (30
-Sept. 1592–29 Sept. 1593), ‘The iii of Feb: 1592. Bestowed vppon the
-players of my Lorde Admyrall’ ... ‘my L. Darbyes men being players’
-(ii. 392, s. a. 1591–2, but the detailed date and the name Derby
-make an error palpable); Bath (11 June 1592–10 Sept. 1593), ‘my L.
-Stranges plaiers’ (ii. 203); Coventry (30 Nov. 1592–26 Nov. 1593),
-‘the Lo Admiralls players’ (ii. 240); York (April 1593), ‘the Lord
-Admerall &amp; Lord Mordens players’ (ii. 412); Newcastle (May 1593), ‘my
-Lord Admiralls plaiers, and my Lord Morleis plaiers being all in one
-companye’ (G. B. Richardson, <i>Extracts from Municipal Accounts of
-N.</i>); Southampton (1592–3), ‘my L. Morleys players and the Earle of
-Darbyes’ (ii. 398, ‘<i>c.</i> 18 May’, but Strange became Derby on 25
-Sept.); Leicester (Oct.–Dec. 1593), ‘the Erle of Darbyes playors’ (ii.
-306); Coventry (2 Dec. 1593), ‘the Lo: of Darbyes players’ (ii. 240);
-Bath (11 Sept. 1593–1594), ‘the L. Admiralls, the L. Norris players’
-(ii. 203); Ipswich (7 March 1594), ‘vnto therlle of Darbys players and
-to the Lorde Admirals players, the ij amongste’ (ii. 293, s. a. 1591–2,
-but on 7 March 1592 Strange was not yet Derby, and his men were playing
-for Henslowe).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_339" href="#FNanchor_339" class="label">[339]</a> App. D, No. xcii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_340" href="#FNanchor_340" class="label">[340]</a> Henslowe, i. 13. The account is headed, ‘Jn the name
-of god Amen 1591 beginge the 19 of febreary my lord stranges mene a
-ffoloweth 1591’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_341" href="#FNanchor_341" class="label">[341]</a> Cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. <i>1 Jeronimo</i>. Some marginal
-notes of sums of money are not clearly intelligible, but may represent
-sums advanced by Henslowe for the company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_342" href="#FNanchor_342" class="label">[342]</a> Henslowe, i. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_343" href="#FNanchor_343" class="label">[343]</a> Dasent, xxiv. 212.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_344" href="#FNanchor_344" class="label">[344]</a> Cf. W. W. Greg in Henslowe, ii. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_345" href="#FNanchor_345" class="label">[345]</a> <i>Dulwich MSS.</i> i. 9–15 (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-34); cf. Henslowe, i. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_346" href="#FNanchor_346" class="label">[346]</a> Their patron was Edward Parker, Lord Morley (Murray, ii.
-54). I suspect the Morden of the York entry and the Norris of the Bath
-entry of being both transcriber’s errors for Morley. No players of Lord
-Norris are on record, and those of Lord Mordaunt (Murray, ii. 90) only
-recur in 1585–6 and 1602.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_347" href="#FNanchor_347" class="label">[347]</a> Text in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 130; on the nature of a
-‘plott’, cf. App. N.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_348" href="#FNanchor_348" class="label">[348]</a> The following rather hazardous identifications have
-been attempted by Greg (<i>loc. cit.</i>) and Fleay, 84: ‘Harry’ =
-Henry Condell (Fleay, Greg); ‘Kit’ = Christopher Beeston (Fleay, Greg);
-‘Saunder’ = Alexander Cooke (Fleay, Greg); ‘Nick’ = Nicholas Tooley
-(Fleay, Greg); ‘Ro.’ or ‘R. Go.’ = Robert Gough (Fleay, Greg); ‘Ned’ =
-Edward Alleyn or Edmund Shakespeare (Fleay); ‘Will’ = William Tawyer
-(Fleay), William Tawler (Greg). The object is, of course, to establish
-the connexion between Strange’s and the Chamberlain’s men. Both writers
-assign two of the unallocated parts to Heminges and Shakespeare.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_349" href="#FNanchor_349" class="label">[349]</a> For speculation as to Shakespeare’s early career, cf.
-s.v. Pembroke’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_350" href="#FNanchor_350" class="label">[350]</a> Text in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 155.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_351" href="#FNanchor_351" class="label">[351]</a> George Fanner to H. Galdelli and G. Tusinga in <i>S. P.
-Dom. Eliz.</i> cclxxi. 34, 35. I do not accept Mr. James Greenstreet’s
-theory that W. Stanley was the real W. Shakespeare.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_352" href="#FNanchor_352" class="label">[352]</a> <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> xiii. 609.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_353" href="#FNanchor_353" class="label">[353]</a> Murray, i. 295.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_354" href="#FNanchor_354" class="label">[354]</a> Taylor, <i>Penniless Pilgrimage</i> (ed. Hindley), 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_355" href="#FNanchor_355" class="label">[355]</a> <i>Dulwich MS.</i> i. 14, in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_356" href="#FNanchor_356" class="label">[356]</a> <i>Outlines</i>, i. 122; ii. 329.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_357" href="#FNanchor_357" class="label">[357]</a> Fleay, 136, ‘Pembroke’s men continued to act at the
-Curtain from 1589 to 1597’ is guesswork.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_358" href="#FNanchor_358" class="label">[358]</a> Henslowe, i. 131; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Fulwell.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_359" href="#FNanchor_359" class="label">[359]</a> Cf. <i>infra</i> (Chamberlain’s). Shank (cf. ch. xv) was
-once in Pembroke’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_360" href="#FNanchor_360" class="label">[360]</a> The Council Register assigns this performance to the
-Chamberlain’s; cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_361" href="#FNanchor_361" class="label">[361]</a> Fleay, <i>Sh.</i> 286, supposed Howard to be both
-Admiral and Chamberlain at this date, but this view was refuted by
-Halliwell-Phillipps in the <i>Athenaeum</i> for 24 April 1886, and
-resigned by Fleay, 31; cf. Greg, ii. 81.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_362" href="#FNanchor_362" class="label">[362]</a> I. H. Jeayes, <i>Letters of Philip Gawdy</i> (Roxburghe
-Club), 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_363" href="#FNanchor_363" class="label">[363]</a> Stopes, <i>Hunnis</i>, 322, names payees in error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_364" href="#FNanchor_364" class="label">[364]</a> Henslowe, ii. 83.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_365" href="#FNanchor_365" class="label">[365]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_366" href="#FNanchor_366" class="label">[366]</a> <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 11, 12; cf. <i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_367" href="#FNanchor_367" class="label">[367]</a> <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 1, 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_368" href="#FNanchor_368" class="label">[368]</a> Ibid. 54.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_369" href="#FNanchor_369" class="label">[369]</a> Henslowe, ii. 127.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_370" href="#FNanchor_370" class="label">[370]</a> Henslowe, i. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_371" href="#FNanchor_371" class="label">[371]</a> Ibid. 198.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_372" href="#FNanchor_372" class="label">[372]</a> Ibid. 17.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_373" href="#FNanchor_373" class="label">[373]</a> Cf. the petitions assigned to 1592 (App. D, No. xcii).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_374" href="#FNanchor_374" class="label">[374]</a> They may represent n[ew] e[nterlude], or merely ne[w].</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_375" href="#FNanchor_375" class="label">[375]</a> Fleay, 140; Henslowe, ii. 84.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_376" href="#FNanchor_376" class="label">[376]</a> Henslowe, ii. 324.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_377" href="#FNanchor_377" class="label">[377]</a> Ibid. ii. 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_378" href="#FNanchor_378" class="label">[378]</a> Ibid. i. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_379" href="#FNanchor_379" class="label">[379]</a> Ibid. i. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_380" href="#FNanchor_380" class="label">[380]</a> Henslowe, i. 51; cf. Dr. Greg’s explanation in ii. 129
-and my criticism in <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 409. Wallace (<i>E. S.</i>
-xliii. 361) has a third explanation, that the figures represent the
-sharers’ takings. But (<i>a</i>) these would not all pass through
-Henslowe’s hands, (<i>b</i>) the amounts are often less than half
-the galleries, and (<i>c</i>) the columns are blank for some days of
-playing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_381" href="#FNanchor_381" class="label">[381]</a> I include <i>Belin Dun</i>, produced just before the
-separation of the Admiral’s and the Chamberlain’s, in the fifty-five;
-but I do not follow Dr. Greg in taking the sign ‘j’, which Henslowe
-attaches to <i>Tamburlaine</i> (30 Aug. 1594) and <i>Long Meg of
-Westminster</i> (14 Feb. 1595) as equivalent to ‘ne’. Were it so,
-these would furnish two, and the only two, examples of a second new
-production in a single week. Probably ‘j’ indicates in both instances
-the <i>First Part</i> of a two-part play. This view is confirmed by
-Henslowe’s note on 10 March 1595, ‘17 p[laies] frome hence lycensed’;
-cf. my criticism in <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 408.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_382" href="#FNanchor_382" class="label">[382]</a> Variously entered as ‘olimpo’, ‘seleo &amp; olempo’,
-‘olempeo &amp; hengenyo’, &amp;c.; but apparently only one play is meant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_383" href="#FNanchor_383" class="label">[383]</a> <i>Alexander and Lodowick</i> is actually entered for a
-second time as ‘ne’ on 11 Feb. 1597, but I have assumed this to be a
-mistake.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_384" href="#FNanchor_384" class="label">[384]</a> It has been chiefly played by Fleay and Dr. Greg.
-The relations suggested are between <i>1 Caesar and Pompey</i> and
-Chapman’s play of the same name, <i>Disguises</i> and Chapman’s
-<i>May-day</i>, <i>Godfrey of Bulloigne</i> and Heywood’s <i>Four
-Prentices of London</i>, <i>Olympo</i>, <i>1, 2 Hercules</i>, and
-<i>Troy</i> and Heywood’s <i>Golden</i>, <i>Silver</i>, <i>Brazen</i>,
-and <i>Iron Ages</i> respectively. <i>Five Plays in One</i> and some
-of Heywood’s <i>Dialogues and Dramas</i>, <i>The Wonder of a Woman</i>
-and a supposed early version by Heywood of W. Rowley’s <i>A New Wonder,
-or, A Woman Never Vexed</i>, <i>The Venetian Comedy</i> and both the
-German <i>Josephus Jude von Venedig</i> and Dekker’s lost <i>Jew of
-Venice</i>, <i>Diocletian</i> and Dekker’s <i>The Virgin Martyr</i>,
-<i>A Set at Maw</i> and Dekker’s <i>Match Me in London</i>, <i>The
-Mack</i> and Dekker’s <i>The Wonder of a Kingdom</i>, <i>Vortigern</i>
-and Middleton’s <i>The Mayor of Quinborough</i>, <i>Uther Pendragon</i>
-and W. Rowley’s <i>Birth of Merlin</i>, <i>Philipo and Hippolito</i>
-and both Massinger’s lost <i>Philenzo and Hypollita</i> and the German
-<i>Julio und Hyppolita</i>. Full details will be found in Henslowe, ii.
-165 sqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_385" href="#FNanchor_385" class="label">[385]</a> Henslowe, i. 44, 128.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_386" href="#FNanchor_386" class="label">[386]</a> Possibly identical with <i>Mahomet</i>, if that was
-Peele’s play. Dr. Greg’s identification with <i>The Love of an English
-Lady</i> strikes me as rather arbitrary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_387" href="#FNanchor_387" class="label">[387]</a> I assume that ‘valy a for’ entered on 4 Jan. 1595 is the
-same play. Conceivably it might be <i>Vallingford</i>, i. e. <i>Fair
-Em</i>, an old Strange’s play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_388" href="#FNanchor_388" class="label">[388]</a> An allusion in Field’s <i>Amends for Ladies</i>, ii. 1,
-shows that <i>Long Meg</i> still held the Fortune stage about 1611.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_389" href="#FNanchor_389" class="label">[389]</a> Possibly identical with <i>Longshanks</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_390" href="#FNanchor_390" class="label">[390]</a> The relations suggested are between <i>The Love of a
-Grecian Lady</i> and the German <i>Tugend-und Liebesstreit</i>, <i>The
-French Doctor</i> and both Dekker’s <i>Jew of Venice</i> and the German
-<i>Josephus Jude von Venedig</i>, <i>The Siege of London</i> and
-Heywood’s <i>1 Edward IV</i>, <i>The Welshman</i> and R. A.’s <i>The
-Valiant Welshman</i>, <i>Time’s Triumph and Fortune’s</i> and Heywood’s
-<i>Timon</i>. For details cf. Henslowe, ii. 165 <i>sqq.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_391" href="#FNanchor_391" class="label">[391]</a> This was on Whit-Tuesday 1596, and I rather suspect a
-mis-entry of <i>iij</i><sup>s</sup> for <i>iij</i><sup>li</sup>, the exact amount taken
-for the plays of the Monday and Wednesday in the same week.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_392" href="#FNanchor_392" class="label">[392]</a> Henslowe, i. 5.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_393" href="#FNanchor_393" class="label">[393]</a> Ibid. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_394" href="#FNanchor_394" class="label">[394]</a> Ibid. 31, 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_395" href="#FNanchor_395" class="label">[395]</a> Henslowe, i. 29, 31, 43, 44, 199–201.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_396" href="#FNanchor_396" class="label">[396]</a> I see no reason to agree with Dr. Greg in identifying
-‘Black Dick’ with Jones, who would naturally have the ‘Mr.’; and the
-suggestions that ‘Dick’ might be Dick Juby and that ‘Will’ might be
-Will Barnes or Will Parr are mere guesses based on the occurrence
-of these names in other ‘plots’. ‘Will’ might just as well be Will
-Kendall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_397" href="#FNanchor_397" class="label">[397]</a> Henslowe, i. 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_398" href="#FNanchor_398" class="label">[398]</a> Henslowe’s entry is (i. 54), ‘Martin Slather went for
-the company of my lord admeralles men the 18 of July 1597’. I think
-that ‘for’ must be meant for ‘from’. Elsewhere (i. 66) Henslowe writes
-‘for’ for ‘from’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_399" href="#FNanchor_399" class="label">[399]</a> Henslowe, i. 47, 200.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_400" href="#FNanchor_400" class="label">[400]</a> Ibid. 201–4; <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 19 (a fragment
-from the Diary).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_401" href="#FNanchor_401" class="label">[401]</a> Henslowe, ii. 89, 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_402" href="#FNanchor_402" class="label">[402]</a> Henslowe, i. 105, 131, 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_403" href="#FNanchor_403" class="label">[403]</a> Ibid. 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_404" href="#FNanchor_404" class="label">[404]</a> Ibid. 199–201.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_405" href="#FNanchor_405" class="label">[405]</a> App. D, No. cxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_406" href="#FNanchor_406" class="label">[406]</a> Henslowe, i. 54; <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 351.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_407" href="#FNanchor_407" class="label">[407]</a> Henslowe, i. 68–70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_408" href="#FNanchor_408" class="label">[408]</a> Ibid. 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_409" href="#FNanchor_409" class="label">[409]</a> Ibid. ii. 91; cf. p. 200.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_410" href="#FNanchor_410" class="label">[410]</a> Henslowe, i. 69, 73; Wallace in <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 382.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_411" href="#FNanchor_411" class="label">[411]</a> Cf. p. 173.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_412" href="#FNanchor_412" class="label">[412]</a> Henslowe, i. 81, 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_413" href="#FNanchor_413" class="label">[413]</a> Ibid. 64, 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_414" href="#FNanchor_414" class="label">[414]</a> Ibid. 63, 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_415" href="#FNanchor_415" class="label">[415]</a> Henslowe, i. 72, ‘Lent W<sup>m</sup> Borne to folowe the sewt
-agenste Thomas Poope’; cf. i. 26, 38, 47–8, 56, 63–9, 71–8, 80, 201,
-205; and s.v. Pembroke’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_416" href="#FNanchor_416" class="label">[416]</a> Henslowe, i. 84.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_417" href="#FNanchor_417" class="label">[417]</a> During 1599–1602 Henslowe sometimes enters advances as
-made to the company through ‘W<sup>m</sup>’ Juby, and in two cases corrects the
-entry by substituting ‘Edward’. As there is no other evidence for a
-William Juby as an actor, not to speak of a sharer, either Henslowe
-must have persistently mistaken the name, or William must have been a
-relative of Edward, acting as his agent (cf. Henslowe, ii. 290).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_418" href="#FNanchor_418" class="label">[418]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 48.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_419" href="#FNanchor_419" class="label">[419]</a> Henslowe, i. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_420" href="#FNanchor_420" class="label">[420]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_421" href="#FNanchor_421" class="label">[421]</a> Henslowe, i. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_422" href="#FNanchor_422" class="label">[422]</a> Ibid. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_423" href="#FNanchor_423" class="label">[423]</a> Ibid. 66, 68, 91, 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_424" href="#FNanchor_424" class="label">[424]</a> Ibid. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_425" href="#FNanchor_425" class="label">[425]</a> Henslowe, i. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_426" href="#FNanchor_426" class="label">[426]</a> Ibid. 63, 104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_427" href="#FNanchor_427" class="label">[427]</a> Ibid. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_428" href="#FNanchor_428" class="label">[428]</a> I find ‘Lorde Haywards’ men at Leicester during
-Oct.–Dec. 1599, ‘Lord Howardes’ at Bristol in 1599–1600, ‘Lord
-Heywardes’ at Bath in the same year, ‘Lord Howards’ at Coventry on 28
-Dec. 1599, and ‘Lord Haywards’ in 1602–3. This must have been another
-company. The Admiral’s were playing in London at the time of the
-Leicester and the earlier Coventry visits, and Lord Howard of Effingham
-became Earl of Nottingham on 22 Oct. 1596. They were at Canterbury in
-1599–1600.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_429" href="#FNanchor_429" class="label">[429]</a> Henslowe, i. 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_430" href="#FNanchor_430" class="label">[430]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 49; Henslowe, i. 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_431" href="#FNanchor_431" class="label">[431]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 55; Henslowe, i. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_432" href="#FNanchor_432" class="label">[432]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56; Henslowe, i. 135, 147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_433" href="#FNanchor_433" class="label">[433]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56; Henslowe, i. 135.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_434" href="#FNanchor_434" class="label">[434]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 56–8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_435" href="#FNanchor_435" class="label">[435]</a> Henslowe, ii. 125.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_436" href="#FNanchor_436" class="label">[436]</a> Henslowe, i. 84–107.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_437" href="#FNanchor_437" class="label">[437]</a> Ibid. 103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_438" href="#FNanchor_438" class="label">[438]</a> Henslowe, i. 83, 101, 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_439" href="#FNanchor_439" class="label">[439]</a> Ibid. ii. 124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_440" href="#FNanchor_440" class="label">[440]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 113, from Malone (1790), i. 2.
-300; the manuscript is now lost. The various sections of the document
-are headed: (<i>a</i>) ‘The booke of the Inventary of the goods of
-my lord Admeralles men, tacken the 10 of Marche in the yeare 1598’;
-(<i>b</i>) ‘The Enventary of the Clownes sewtes and Hermetes Swetes,
-with dievers others sewtes, as followeth, 1598, the 10 of March’;
-(<i>c</i>) ‘The Enventary of all the aparell for my Lord Admiralles
-men, tacken the 10 of Marche 1598&mdash;Leaft above in the tier-house in the
-cheast’; (<i>d</i>) ‘The Enventary tacken of all the properties for my
-Lord Admeralles men, the 10 of Marche 1598’; (<i>e</i>) ‘The Enventorey
-of all the aparell of the Lord Admeralles men, taken the 13<sup>th</sup> of
-Marche 1598, as followeth’; (<i>f</i>) ‘A Note of all suche bookes as
-belong to the Stocke, and such as I have bought since the 3<sup>d</sup> of Marche
-1598’; (<i>g</i>) ‘A Note of all suche goodes as I have bought for
-the Companey of my Lord Admirals men, sence the 3 of Aprell, 1598, as
-followeth’. A comparison of the book-list with the diary payments makes
-it clear that ‘1598’ is 1597/8 and not 1598/9. The last book entered
-was bought in Aug. 1598. An undated inventory of Alleyn’s private
-theatrical wardrobe is in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_441" href="#FNanchor_441" class="label">[441]</a> It should be borne in mind that these lists are based
-in part upon a rather conjectural interpretation of evidence. Full
-details, for which I have not space, will be found in Henslowe, ii. 186
-<i>sqq.</i> I have annotated a few points of interest.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_442" href="#FNanchor_442" class="label">[442]</a> So called in the book-inventory; in the diary it is
-<i>Triplicity of Cuckolds</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_443" href="#FNanchor_443" class="label">[443]</a> The first name appears in the inventory, the second in
-the diary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_444" href="#FNanchor_444" class="label">[444]</a> Only £4 was paid ‘to by a boocke’, which is low for a
-new play and high for an old one. Possibly Porter was in debt to the
-company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_445" href="#FNanchor_445" class="label">[445]</a> Once described as ‘other wisse called worsse feared then
-hurte’, whence Dr. Greg infers that the 1598–9 play of that name was a
-second part of it.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_446" href="#FNanchor_446" class="label">[446]</a> So in the book-inventory; in the account it is only
-called <i>The Cobler</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_447" href="#FNanchor_447" class="label">[447]</a> Possibly <i>Strange Flattery</i>, but the manuscript is
-lost.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_448" href="#FNanchor_448" class="label">[448]</a> They had to buy <i>Mahomet</i>, <i>The Wise Man of West
-Chester</i>, <i>Longshanks</i>, and <i>Vortigern</i> from Alleyn in
-1601 and 1602.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_449" href="#FNanchor_449" class="label">[449]</a> ‘the Mores lymes’, ‘iiij Turckes hedes’, ‘j Mores
-cotte’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_450" href="#FNanchor_450" class="label">[450]</a> ‘iiij genesareys gownes’, ‘owld Mahemetes head’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_451" href="#FNanchor_451" class="label">[451]</a> ‘Tamberlyne brydell’, ‘Tamberlynes cotte, with coper
-lace’, ‘Tamberlanes breches of crymson vellvet’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_452" href="#FNanchor_452" class="label">[452]</a> ‘j cauderm for the Jewe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_453" href="#FNanchor_453" class="label">[453]</a> ‘j tree of gowlden apelles’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_454" href="#FNanchor_454" class="label">[454]</a> ‘j whell and frame in the Sege of London’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_455" href="#FNanchor_455" class="label">[455]</a> ‘Belendon stable’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_456" href="#FNanchor_456" class="label">[456]</a> ‘Tasso picter’, ‘Tasoes robe’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_457" href="#FNanchor_457" class="label">[457]</a> ‘senetores gowne’ and ‘capes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_458" href="#FNanchor_458" class="label">[458]</a> ‘Kents woden leage’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_459" href="#FNanchor_459" class="label">[459]</a> ‘j mawe gowne of calleco for the quene’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_460" href="#FNanchor_460" class="label">[460]</a> ‘j sewtte for Nepton’, ‘Nepun forcke &amp; garland’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_461" href="#FNanchor_461" class="label">[461]</a> ‘Harey the fyftes dublet’ and ‘vellet gowne’, ‘j payer
-of hosse for the Dowlfyn’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_462" href="#FNanchor_462" class="label">[462]</a> ‘j longe-shanckes sewte’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_463" href="#FNanchor_463" class="label">[463]</a> ‘j great horse with his leages’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_464" href="#FNanchor_464" class="label">[464]</a> ‘Vartemar sewtte’, ‘Valteger robe of rich tafitie’, ‘j
-payer of hosse &amp; a gercken for Valteger’, ‘ij Danes sewtes, and ij
-payer of Danes hosse’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_465" href="#FNanchor_465" class="label">[465]</a> ‘j tome of Guido’, ‘j cloth clocke of russete with coper
-lace, called Guydoes clocke’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_466" href="#FNanchor_466" class="label">[466]</a> ‘Merlen gowne, and cape’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_467" href="#FNanchor_467" class="label">[467]</a> ‘my lord Caffes gercken &amp; his hoose’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_468" href="#FNanchor_468" class="label">[468]</a> These include ‘Argosse head’, ‘Andersones sewte’, ‘Will
-Sommers sewtte’, ‘ij Orlates sewtes’, ‘Cathemer sewte’, ‘j Whittcomes
-dublett poke’, ‘Nabesathe sewte’, ‘j Hell mought’, ‘the cloth of the
-Sone &amp; Mone’, ‘Tantelouse tre’, ‘Eves bodeyes’. Probably ‘Perowes sewte
-which W<sup>m</sup> Sley were’ dated back to the days of Strange’s men. After 3
-April 1598 Henslowe bought, <i>inter alia</i>, ‘a gown for Nembia’ and
-‘a robe for to goo invisibell’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_469" href="#FNanchor_469" class="label">[469]</a> It looks as if the book-inventory were not exhaustive;
-perhaps it only includes books more or less in current use.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_470" href="#FNanchor_470" class="label">[470]</a> There is a self-contradictory entry, ‘to paye vnto M<sup>r</sup>
-Willson Monday &amp; Deckers ... iiij<sup>ll</sup> v<sup>s</sup> in this maner Willson xxx<sup>s</sup>
-Cheattell xxx<sup>s</sup> Mondy xxv<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_471" href="#FNanchor_471" class="label">[471]</a> Regarded by Dr. Greg as <i>2 Hannibal and Hermes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_472" href="#FNanchor_472" class="label">[472]</a> I agree with Dr. Greg that this, for which Chapman had
-£4 in 1598–9, is probably identical with <i>The Isle of a Woman</i>,
-for which he had had earnests of £4 or £4 10<i>s.</i> in 1597–8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_473" href="#FNanchor_473" class="label">[473]</a> I think the play licensed as <i>Brute Grenshallde</i>
-in March 1599 was a second part written by Chettle to an old <i>1
-Brute</i> by Day, which would not need re-licensing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_474" href="#FNanchor_474" class="label">[474]</a> I do not see with what to identify the play licensed
-under this name in March 1599 except the unnamed ‘playe boocke’ and
-‘tragedie’, for which Chapman had something under £9 in the previous
-Oct. and Jan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_475" href="#FNanchor_475" class="label">[475]</a> The title <i>War without Blows and Love without
-Strife</i> in one entry is probably an error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_476" href="#FNanchor_476" class="label">[476]</a> I agree with Dr. Greg that the entries point to two
-plays by Chettle and Dekker rather than one. They are probably
-incomplete owing to the hiatus in the manuscript.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_477" href="#FNanchor_477" class="label">[477]</a> Dr. Greg makes two plays of this, but the entry ‘his
-boocke called the world rones a whelles &amp; now all foolles but the
-foolle’ seems unambiguous, and the total payments of £8 10<i>s.</i> are
-not too high for a play by Chapman.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_478" href="#FNanchor_478" class="label">[478]</a> No importance can be attached to Mr. Fleay’s childish
-identifications of <i>War without Blows and Love without Suit</i>,
-<i>Joan as Good as my Lady</i>, and <i>The Four Kings</i> with <i>The
-Thracian Wonder</i>, Heywood’s <i>A Maidenhead well Lost</i>, and
-<i>Sir Clyomon and Sir Clamydes</i> respectively.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_479" href="#FNanchor_479" class="label">[479]</a> So called in Drayton’s autograph receipt, but Henslowe
-calls it <i>William Longbeard</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_480" href="#FNanchor_480" class="label">[480]</a> Henslowe, i. 72, 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_481" href="#FNanchor_481" class="label">[481]</a> Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Alleyn.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_482" href="#FNanchor_482" class="label">[482]</a> The only entry is of 15 July ‘to bye a boocke’, but the
-hiatus in the manuscript probably conceals earlier payments.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_483" href="#FNanchor_483" class="label">[483]</a> Here also the hiatus has only left an entry of £2 ‘in
-full payment’ on 1 Aug. Dr. Greg, however, would identify <i>Bear a
-Brain</i> and <i>The Gentle Craft</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_484" href="#FNanchor_484" class="label">[484]</a> The entries are as follows: 2 Sept., ‘Thomas Deckers
-Bengemen Johnson Hary Chettell &amp; other Jentellman in earneste of a
-playe calle Robart the second kinge of Scottes tragedie’; 15 Sept., ‘in
-earneste of a boocke called the Scottes tragedi vnto Thomas Dickers &amp;
-Harey Chettell’; 16 Sept., ‘Hary Chettell ... in earneste of a boocke
-called the Scottes tragedie’; 27 Sept., ‘Bengemen Johnsone in earneste
-of a boocke called the Scottes tragedie’; 28 Sept., ‘vnto M<sup>r</sup> Maxton
-the new poete in earneste of a boocke called [blank]’. Dr. Greg resists
-the fairly reasonable identification of ‘M<sup>r</sup> Maxton the new poete’ with
-the ‘other Jentellman’. All the payments are called earnests, but the
-total is £6 10<i>s.</i> and therefore the play probably existed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_485" href="#FNanchor_485" class="label">[485]</a> ‘Lent vnto me W Birde the 9 of Februarye to paye for a
-new booke to Will Boyle cald Jugurth xxx<sup>s</sup> which if you dislike Ile
-repaye it back.’ The price is the lowest ever entered for a ‘new’ book.
-Mr. Fleay’s suggestion that Will Bird, who already had one alias in
-Will Borne, was also himself Will Boyle, is one of those irresponsible
-guesses by which he has done so much to make hay of theatrical history.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_486" href="#FNanchor_486" class="label">[486]</a> Both parts were entered on the Stationers’ Register, but
-no copy of <i>2 Sir John Oldcastle</i> is known.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_487" href="#FNanchor_487" class="label">[487]</a> <i>Bodl. Ashm. MS.</i> 236, f. 77<sup>v</sup> (<i>c.</i> 1600),
-has Forman’s note of the ‘plai of Cox of Cullinton and his 3 sons,
-Henry Peter and Jhon’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_488" href="#FNanchor_488" class="label">[488]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 49.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_489" href="#FNanchor_489" class="label">[489]</a> This was taken up again in 1601, but still not finished.
-Dr. Greg, however, thinks that it is identical with Day’s Italian
-tragedy, and forms half of <i>Two Lamentable Tragedies</i> (1601),
-and that Chettle’s work in 1601 may have been the effecting of the
-combination with <i>Thomas Merry</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_490" href="#FNanchor_490" class="label">[490]</a> Dr. Greg, following Mr. Fleay, identifies this with
-Dekker’s <i>Whore of Babylon</i>, and as Time is a character in this
-play, cites the purchase of ‘a Robe for tyme’ in April 1600 as a proof
-that it was then performed. Time, however, might also have been a
-character in <i>The Seven Wise Masters</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_491" href="#FNanchor_491" class="label">[491]</a> Possibly finished later and identical with the
-pseudo-Marlowesque <i>Lust’s Dominion</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_492" href="#FNanchor_492" class="label">[492]</a> The payment-entry is cancelled. The play may have been
-finished for another company, and be identical with the extant <i>Grim,
-the Collier of Croydon</i>, or, <i>The Devil and his Dame</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_493" href="#FNanchor_493" class="label">[493]</a> Possibly the basis of Bird and Rowley’s <i>Judas</i> of
-1601.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_494" href="#FNanchor_494" class="label">[494]</a> It seems to me a little arbitrary of Dr. Greg to assume
-that the 10<i>s.</i> entered as an earnest for this was really a bonus
-on <i>1 The Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_495" href="#FNanchor_495" class="label">[495]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 51. I do not think that Dr. Greg
-recognizes the full significance of this when he suggests (Henslowe,
-ii. 94) that Alleyn was back on the stage by 1598; cf. my criticism in
-<i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 410. Dr. Greg relies mainly on the appearance of
-his name in the plot of <i>The Battle of Alcazar</i>, which, he says,
-‘almost certainly belongs to 1598’. But I can find no reason why it
-should not belong to 1600–2; cf. p. 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_496" href="#FNanchor_496" class="label">[496]</a> Henslowe, i. 56.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_497" href="#FNanchor_497" class="label">[497]</a> Ibid. 162.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_498" href="#FNanchor_498" class="label">[498]</a> Ibid. 141.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_499" href="#FNanchor_499" class="label">[499]</a> Ibid. 144, 165, 174.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_500" href="#FNanchor_500" class="label">[500]</a> Ibid. 134, 136, 140, 147.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_501" href="#FNanchor_501" class="label">[501]</a> Dr. Greg puts it in 1598, on the assumption that Alleyn
-returned to the stage in that year. It might conceivably belong to
-1597, between 18 Dec., when Bristow was bought, and 29 Dec., by which
-day Alleyn had left. It cannot be later than Feb. 1602, by which month
-Jones and Shaw had left. The prefix ‘M<sup>r</sup>’ allotted to Charles and Sam
-is in favour of a date after their agreements on 16 Nov. 1598. Dr.
-Greg’s argument (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 138) that Kendall’s agreement
-expired 7 Dec. 1599 is not convincing, as there was nothing in it to
-prevent him from staying on, and the satire of the play in Jonson’s
-<i>Poetaster</i> of 1601, to which he refers, obviously tells in favour
-of a date nearer to 1601 than 1598.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_502" href="#FNanchor_502" class="label">[502]</a> Henslowe, i. 38.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_503" href="#FNanchor_503" class="label">[503]</a> Ibid. 131, 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_504" href="#FNanchor_504" class="label">[504]</a> Ibid. 164.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_505" href="#FNanchor_505" class="label">[505]</a> Ibid. 205.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_506" href="#FNanchor_506" class="label">[506]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_507" href="#FNanchor_507" class="label">[507]</a> The entry is ‘Thomas Deckers for his boocke called
-the fortewn tenes’. Collier read ‘forteion tenes’ and interpreted
-<i>Fortunatus</i>. Mr. Fleay furnished the alternatives of <i>Fortune’s
-Tennis</i> and <i>Hortenzo’s Tennis</i>. I should add that Dr. Greg
-assigns the ‘plot’ to this play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_508" href="#FNanchor_508" class="label">[508]</a> Dr. Greg thinks that this may be the same as Haughton’s
-<i>The English Fugitives</i> of the previous April. If so, it was
-probably finished, as the payments amount to £6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_509" href="#FNanchor_509" class="label">[509]</a> As the account of advances is continuous, I have drawn
-the line between 1600–1 and 1601–2 at the beginning of Aug. 1601.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_510" href="#FNanchor_510" class="label">[510]</a> <i>The Life</i> became <i>2 Cardinal Wolsey</i>,
-as <i>The Rising</i>, although written later, was historically
-<i>1 Cardinal Wolsey</i>. The entries are complicated. It is just
-possible that the playwrights were working on an old play, for the
-property-inventories of 1598 include an unexplained ‘Will Sommers
-sewtte’ (cf. p. 168). A ‘W<sup>m</sup> Someres cotte’ was, however, bought for
-<i>The Rising</i> on 27 May 1602.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_511" href="#FNanchor_511" class="label">[511]</a> Possibly based on Haughton’s unfinished play of 1600.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_512" href="#FNanchor_512" class="label">[512]</a> A note preserved at Dulwich (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-58) indicates that licensing fees were in arrear on 4 Aug. 1602 for
-‘baxsters tragedy, Tobias Comedy, Jepha Judg of Israel &amp; the Cardinall,
-Loue parts frendshipp’. But of course Warner’s identification of
-‘baxsters tragedy’ with <i>The Bristol Tragedy</i> is conjectural.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_513" href="#FNanchor_513" class="label">[513]</a> There is no <i>1 Tom Dough</i>, unless this was an
-intended sequel to <i>The Six Yeomen of the West</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_514" href="#FNanchor_514" class="label">[514]</a> Already begun by Chettle in 1599.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_515" href="#FNanchor_515" class="label">[515]</a> This may be identical with <i>1 The Six Clothiers</i>,
-which is not called by Henslowe a ‘first part’, if, as is possible,
-that was a sequel to <i>The Six Yeomen of the West</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_516" href="#FNanchor_516" class="label">[516]</a> Possibly finished later as Dekker and Rowley’s <i>The
-Noble Spanish Soldier</i>. But it may have been an old play re-written,
-for C. R. Baskervill (<i>M. P.</i> xiv. 16) quotes from the preface to
-H. O.’s translation of Vasco Figueiro’s <i>Spaniard’s Monarchie</i>
-(1592), ‘albeit it hath no title fetched from the Bull within
-Bishopsgate, as a figge for a Spaniard’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_517" href="#FNanchor_517" class="label">[517]</a> I suppose this was unfinished. The only entry is on 22
-June 1602, ‘vnto Bengemy Johnsone ... in earneste of a boocke called
-Richard Crockbacke &amp; for new adicyons for Jeronymo the some of x<sup>ll</sup>’.
-Jonson had already had £2 on 25 Sept. 1601 ‘vpon his writtinge of his
-adicians in Geronymo’. Unless <i>Richard Crookback</i> was nearly
-complete, his prices must have risen a good deal.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_518" href="#FNanchor_518" class="label">[518]</a> Possibly finished later as <i>Hoffman</i> (1631).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_519" href="#FNanchor_519" class="label">[519]</a> The £4 paid was cancelled and then reinstated, but the
-book was evidently transferred to Worcester’s men (cf. p. 227).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_520" href="#FNanchor_520" class="label">[520]</a> Cf. p. 168.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_521" href="#FNanchor_521" class="label">[521]</a> Cf. vol. i, p. 323. <i>The Massacre</i> was printed
-(<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>) as an Admiral’s play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_522" href="#FNanchor_522" class="label">[522]</a> The conjectural rendering of Henslowe’s ‘ponesciones
-pillet’ finds support from the presence of garments for ‘Caffes’ or
-Caiaphas in the inventory of 1598; cf. p. 168.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_523" href="#FNanchor_523" class="label">[523]</a> A payment to ‘John Daye &amp; his felowe poetes’ implies at
-least three collaborators.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_524" href="#FNanchor_524" class="label">[524]</a> For <i>Samson</i> cf. p. 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_525" href="#FNanchor_525" class="label">[525]</a> All four entries merely show the payments as made to
-‘Antony the poyete’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_526" href="#FNanchor_526" class="label">[526]</a> Finished later and extant; probably identical with the
-<i>Danish Tragedy</i> of 1601–2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_527" href="#FNanchor_527" class="label">[527]</a> I suppose that it was the play which Chettle ‘layd vnto
-pane’ to Mr. Bromfield, and which had to be redeemed for £1 (Henslowe,
-i. 174).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_528" href="#FNanchor_528" class="label">[528]</a> The more so as I do not think that Dr. Greg’s survey in
-Henslowe. ii. 135, is accurate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_529" href="#FNanchor_529" class="label">[529]</a> Henslowe made the total £167 7<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i>, but
-evidently the error was detected, as only £166 17<i>s.</i> 7<i>d.</i>
-was carried forward.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_530" href="#FNanchor_530" class="label">[530]</a> Henslowe, ii. 133. Apparently Henslowe reverted to the
-plan of deducting three-quarters only, at the beginning of 1599–1600,
-but only for a fortnight, as the receipts from 20 Oct. are headed,
-‘Heare I begane to receue the gallereys agayne which they receued
-begynynge at Myhellmas wecke being the 6 of October 1599’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_531" href="#FNanchor_531" class="label">[531]</a> I have disregarded an error of 15<i>s.</i> made by
-Henslowe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_532" href="#FNanchor_532" class="label">[532]</a> Henslowe, i. 85, 145.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_533" href="#FNanchor_533" class="label">[533]</a> Ibid. ii. 33.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_534" href="#FNanchor_534" class="label">[534]</a> Henslowe, i. 29, 47, 81, 96, 97, 118, 124, 136, 138,
-144, 146, 148, 152, 153, 166, 172, &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_535" href="#FNanchor_535" class="label">[535]</a> The exact date is uncertain, as they do not appear to
-have had a patent until 1606; but it must lie between their visit to
-Leicester as the Admiral’s on 18 Aug. 1603 and the making out of a
-warrant to them as the Prince’s men on 19 Feb. 1604 for their Christmas
-plays.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_536" href="#FNanchor_536" class="label">[536]</a> <i>N. Sh. Soc. Trans.</i> (<i>1877–9</i>), 17*, from
-<i>Lord Chamberlain’s Books</i>, 58<sup>a</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_537" href="#FNanchor_537" class="label">[537]</a> Cf. ch. xvi (Hope).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_538" href="#FNanchor_538" class="label">[538]</a> On the legend that he had developed moral scruples about
-the stage, cf. s.v. Marlowe, <i>Dr. Faustus</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_539" href="#FNanchor_539" class="label">[539]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_540" href="#FNanchor_540" class="label">[540]</a> <i>Dulwich MS.</i> iii. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_541" href="#FNanchor_541" class="label">[541]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 13; cf. ch. xvi, s.v.
-<i>Fortune</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_542" href="#FNanchor_542" class="label">[542]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_543" href="#FNanchor_543" class="label">[543]</a> Ibid. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_544" href="#FNanchor_544" class="label">[544]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 268, from <i>P. R. 4 Jac. I</i>, pt.
-19; also printed by T. E. Tomlins, and dated in error 1607, in <i>Sh.
-Soc. Papers</i>, iv. 42.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_545" href="#FNanchor_545" class="label">[545]</a> Birch, <i>Life of Henry</i>, 455; Greg, <i>Gentleman’s
-Magazine</i>, ccc. 67, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 252, f. 5, dated 1610.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_546" href="#FNanchor_546" class="label">[546]</a> Henslowe, i. 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_547" href="#FNanchor_547" class="label">[547]</a> Ibid. 214.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_548" href="#FNanchor_548" class="label">[548]</a> There may be an allusion to this play in H. Parrot,
-<i>Laquei Ridiculosi, Springes for Woodcocks</i> (1613), ii. 162:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">’Tis said that <i>Whittington</i> was rais’d of nought,</div>
- <div>And by a cat hath divers wonders wrought:</div>
- <div>But <i>Fortune</i> (not his cat) makes it appear,</div>
- <div>He may dispend a thousand marks a year.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Dr. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 65) has dispersed Collier’s myth of
-one Whittington ‘perhaps a sleeping partner in the speculation of the
-Fortune’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_549" href="#FNanchor_549" class="label">[549]</a> Most of the play-dates of 1605–12 are in Apps. A and B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_550" href="#FNanchor_550" class="label">[550]</a> <i>A. for L.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. In <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iv a
-drawer says, ‘all the gentlewomen [from Bess Turnup’s] went to see a
-play at the Fortune, and are not come in yet, and she believes they sup
-with the players’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_551" href="#FNanchor_551" class="label">[551]</a> Cf. ch. xv, s.v. Garlick.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_552" href="#FNanchor_552" class="label">[552]</a> Nichols, <i>James</i>, ii. 495.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_553" href="#FNanchor_553" class="label">[553]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 275, from <i>P. R. 10 Jac. I</i>,
-pt. 25; also from signet bill in Collier, i. 366, and Hazlitt, <i>E.
-D. S.</i> 44. Greg (<i>Henslowe</i>, ii. 263) notes copies in <i>Addl.
-MS.</i> 24502, f. 60<sup>v</sup>, and <i>Lincoln’s Inn MS.</i> clviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_554" href="#FNanchor_554" class="label">[554]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_555" href="#FNanchor_555" class="label">[555]</a> Ibid. 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_556" href="#FNanchor_556" class="label">[556]</a> <i>Fennor’s Defence, or I am Your First Man</i>
-(Taylor’s <i>Works</i>, 1630, ed. <i>Spenser Soc.</i> 314). The 1659
-print of the <i>Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green</i> has at l. 2177,
-‘Enter ... Captain Westford, Sill Clark’. The title-page professes to
-give the play as acted by the Prince’s men, but whether Clark was an
-actor of 1603–12 or not must remain doubtful.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_557" href="#FNanchor_557" class="label">[557]</a> Henslowe, i. 17; cf. p. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_558" href="#FNanchor_558" class="label">[558]</a> Cf. App. D, No. ci. It is not ‘my newe companie’, as
-it is sometimes misprinted. But I do not think that either term can
-be interpreted as showing that the company had or had not a corporate
-existence before it came under Hunsdon’s patronage. The use which the
-company ‘have byn accustomed’ to make of the inn is only related to
-‘this winter time’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_559" href="#FNanchor_559" class="label">[559]</a> The dates here assigned to Shakespeare’s plays are
-mainly based on the conclusions of my article on Shakespeare in the
-<i>Encyclopaedia Britannica</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_560" href="#FNanchor_560" class="label">[560]</a> Cf. ch. xxiv, s.v. <i>Gesta Grayorum</i> and <i>M. L.
-R.</i> ii. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_561" href="#FNanchor_561" class="label">[561]</a> Cf. my paper on <i>The Occasion of A Midsummer-Night’s
-Dream</i> in <i>Shakespeare Homage</i>, 154, and App. A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_562" href="#FNanchor_562" class="label">[562]</a> I have recently found confirmation of the date for
-<i>Rich. II</i> in a letter from Sir Edward Hoby inviting Sir R. Cecil
-to his house in Canon Row on 9 Dec. 1595, ‘where, as late as shall
-please you, a gate for your supper shall be open, and K. Richard
-present himself to your view’ (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> v. 487).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_563" href="#FNanchor_563" class="label">[563]</a> T. Lodge, <i>Wits Miserie</i> (S. R. 5 May 1596), 56,
-‘the Visard of y<sup>e</sup> ghost which cried so miserably at y<sup>e</sup> Theator, like
-an oister wife, Hamlet, revenge’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_564" href="#FNanchor_564" class="label">[564]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars). There is a slight doubt as
-to the authenticity of the text of the petition, which the inclusion of
-Lord Hunsdon’s name can only emphasize. But the fact of the petition
-and its result are vouched for by a City document of later date. The
-counter-petition of the players published by Collier, i. 288, in which
-they are misdescribed as the Lord Chamberlain’s men, is a forgery.
-The names given are those of Pope, Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips,
-Shakespeare, Kempe, Sly, and Tooley. There is nothing to connect Tooley
-with the company before 1605.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_565" href="#FNanchor_565" class="label">[565]</a> Cf. App. D, No. cvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_566" href="#FNanchor_566" class="label">[566]</a> For the distinction between ‘bad’ and ‘good’ quartos,
-cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_567" href="#FNanchor_567" class="label">[567]</a> R. James (c. 1625), in the dedication to his
-manuscript <i>Legend of Sir John Oldcastle</i> (quoted by Ingleby,
-<i>Shakespeare’s Centurie of Praise</i>, 165), says, ‘offence beinge
-worthily taken by Personages descended from his title’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_568" href="#FNanchor_568" class="label">[568]</a> Raleigh wrote to R. Cecil on 6 July 1597 that Essex was
-‘wonderful merry at your conceit of Richard II’ (Edwardes, ii. 169);
-for the later history of the play, <i>vide infra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_569" href="#FNanchor_569" class="label">[569]</a> Cf. ch. xvi (Curtain).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_570" href="#FNanchor_570" class="label">[570]</a> App. C, No. lii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_571" href="#FNanchor_571" class="label">[571]</a> Aubrey, ii. 12. The same writer is obviously confused
-when he says, on the authority of Sir Edward Shirburn, that Jonson
-‘killed M<sup>r</sup> Marlow the poet, on Bunhill, comeing from the Green-Curtain
-play-house’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_572" href="#FNanchor_572" class="label">[572]</a> Cf. ch. x. There is no reason to suppose that the
-Richard Hoope, W<sup>m</sup> Blackwage, Rafe Raye, and W<sup>m</sup> Ferney, to whom
-Henslowe lent money as ‘my lord chamberlenes men’ in 1595 (Henslowe, i.
-5, 6), were actors. In fact Raye was a ‘man’ of Hunsdon’s before the
-company was in existence at all (Henslowe, ii. 305).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_573" href="#FNanchor_573" class="label">[573]</a> The order of the Shakespearian actors named in the
-1623 Folio, and the omission of the names of Duke and Beeston, rather
-suggests that these two were hired men, and that there were ten
-original sharers, Shakespeare, Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips, Kempe,
-Pope, Bryan, Condell, Sly, and Cowley.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_574" href="#FNanchor_574" class="label">[574]</a> App. C. No. xlviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_575" href="#FNanchor_575" class="label">[575]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_576" href="#FNanchor_576" class="label">[576]</a> Henslowe, i. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_577" href="#FNanchor_577" class="label">[577]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_578" href="#FNanchor_578" class="label">[578]</a> Malone, <i>Variorum</i>, ii. 166; Fleay, <i>L. and
-W.</i> 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_579" href="#FNanchor_579" class="label">[579]</a> <i>Hen. V</i>, epil. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_580" href="#FNanchor_580" class="label">[580]</a> That the <i>Famous Victories</i> was reprinted in 1617
-as a King’s men’s play proves nothing. It was to pass as <i>Henry
-V</i>; obviously the King’s men never acted it, <i>Henry V</i> being in
-existence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_581" href="#FNanchor_581" class="label">[581]</a> Henslowe, i. 72, 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_582" href="#FNanchor_582" class="label">[582]</a> For further details, cf. ch. xvi (Globe).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_583" href="#FNanchor_583" class="label">[583]</a> Cf. ch. xvi, introd.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_584" href="#FNanchor_584" class="label">[584]</a> Fleay, 138; cf. Murray, ii. 125; Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 108. A loan of 21 Sept. 1600 by Henslowe (i. 132) to Duke is
-only slight evidence, and the fact that Anne’s men chose to revive
-the already printed <i>Edward II</i>, once a Pembroke’s play, even
-slighter.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_585" href="#FNanchor_585" class="label">[585]</a> Cf. ch. xv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_586" href="#FNanchor_586" class="label">[586]</a> Cf. ch. vii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_587" href="#FNanchor_587" class="label">[587]</a> Cf. ch. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_588" href="#FNanchor_588" class="label">[588]</a> <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cclxxviii. 72, 78, 85. Accounts
-consistent with this are given in depositions of Sir W. Constable
-and Sir Gilly Meyrick (ibid.), Camden, <i>Annales</i>, 867, Cobbett,
-<i>State Trials</i>, i. 1445, and Bacon, <i>A Declaration of the
-Practices and Treasons attempted and committed by Robert late Earl of
-Essex and his Complices</i> (1601; <i>Works</i>, ix. 289).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_589" href="#FNanchor_589" class="label">[589]</a> Fleay, 123, 136; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_590" href="#FNanchor_590" class="label">[590]</a> Cf. ch. xiv (Scotland).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_591" href="#FNanchor_591" class="label">[591]</a> For the texts cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_592" href="#FNanchor_592" class="label">[592]</a> W. H. Griffin in <i>Academy</i> for 25 April 1896,
-suggests that the ‘innovation’ of 1604 was the same as the ‘noveltie’
-of 1603, i.e. the setting up of child actors. But I am afraid that this
-leaves ‘inhibition’ without a meaning.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_593" href="#FNanchor_593" class="label">[593]</a> Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> iii. 552, prints, perhaps from
-a manuscript of Lord De La Warr’s (<i>Hist. MSS.</i> iv. 300), a
-note by W. Lambarde of a conversation with the Queen on 4 Aug. 1601,
-‘Her Majestie fell upon the reign of King Richard II, saying, I am
-Richard II, know ye not that? <i>W. L.</i> Such a wicked imagination
-was determined and attempted by a most unkind Gent. the most adorned
-creature that ever your Majestie made. <i>Her Majestie.</i> He that
-will forget God, will also forget his benefactors; this tragedy was
-played 40<sup>tie</sup> times in open streets and houses’. The performances
-here referred to must have been in 1596–7, not 1601.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_594" href="#FNanchor_594" class="label">[594]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_595" href="#FNanchor_595" class="label">[595]</a> J. Manningham, <i>Diary</i>, 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_596" href="#FNanchor_596" class="label">[596]</a> Cf. App. A.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_597" href="#FNanchor_597" class="label">[597]</a> Collier, <i>New Particulars</i>, 57, and <i>Egerton
-Papers</i>, 343, ‘6 August 1602 Rewardes ... x<sup>li</sup> to Burbidges
-players for Othello’; cf. Ingleby, 262.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_598" href="#FNanchor_598" class="label">[598]</a> Wallace, ii, 108; cf. p. 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_599" href="#FNanchor_599" class="label">[599]</a> Cf. ch. xv (Kempe).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_600" href="#FNanchor_600" class="label">[600]</a> Cf. ch. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_601" href="#FNanchor_601" class="label">[601]</a> G. Dugdale, <i>Time Triumphant</i> (1604), sig. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_602" href="#FNanchor_602" class="label">[602]</a> Printed in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 264, from <i>P. R. 1 Jac.
-I</i>, <i>pars 2</i>, <i>membr. 4</i>; also in Rymer, xvi. 505, and
-Halliwell, <i>Illustr. 83</i>. Halliwell also prints the practically
-identical texts of the Privy Signet Bill, dated 17 May, and the Privy
-Seal, dated 18 May. The former is also in Collier, i. 334, Hazlitt, 38,
-and Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_603" href="#FNanchor_603" class="label">[603]</a> Cf. ch. xiv (Scotland).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_604" href="#FNanchor_604" class="label">[604]</a> Except in one of Collier’s Blackfriars forgeries; cf.
-ch. xvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_605" href="#FNanchor_605" class="label">[605]</a> W. Cory (<i>Letters and Journals</i>, 168) was told on a
-visit to Wilton in 1865 that a letter existed there, naming Shakespeare
-as present and the play as <i>As You Like It</i>; but the letter cannot
-now be found.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_606" href="#FNanchor_606" class="label">[606]</a> Marston, <i>Malcontent</i>, Ind. 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_607" href="#FNanchor_607" class="label">[607]</a> Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, viii. 36, ‘Give him leaue to
-see the Merry Deuil of Edmonton or A Woman Killed with Kindness’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_608" href="#FNanchor_608" class="label">[608]</a> <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> (1877–9), 15*, from <i>Lord
-Chamberlain’s Records</i>, vol. 58<sup>a</sup>, now ix. 4 (5); cf. Law (<i>ut
-infra</i>), 10. Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 68, printed a list
-headed ‘Ks Company’ from the margin of the copy of the Privy Council
-order of 9 April 1604 at Dulwich. This is a forgery. To the nine
-genuine names Collier added those of Hostler and Day. The former joined
-the company some years later, the latter never; cf. Ingleby, 269.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_609" href="#FNanchor_609" class="label">[609]</a> App. B; cf. E. Law, <i>Shakespeare as a Groom of the
-Chamber</i> (1910), and the Spanish narrative in <i>Colección de
-Documentos inéditos para la historia de España</i>, lxxi. 467.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_610" href="#FNanchor_610" class="label">[610]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_611" href="#FNanchor_611" class="label">[611]</a> For the exact dates and the difficult critical questions
-raised by the records, cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_612" href="#FNanchor_612" class="label">[612]</a> Cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_613" href="#FNanchor_613" class="label">[613]</a> Clode, <i>Early Hist. of Merchant Taylors</i>, i. 290,
-‘To M<sup>r</sup> Hemmyngs for his direccion of his boy that made the speech to
-his Maiestie 40<sup>s</sup>, and 6<sup>s</sup> given to John Rise the speaker’; cf. ch. iv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_614" href="#FNanchor_614" class="label">[614]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_615" href="#FNanchor_615" class="label">[615]</a> App. C, No. lvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_616" href="#FNanchor_616" class="label">[616]</a> Cf. ch. xii (Queen’s Revels).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_617" href="#FNanchor_617" class="label">[617]</a> Fleay, 173, and Murray, i. 152, are wrong in saying that
-there were no Court plays this year; cf. <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 154.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_618" href="#FNanchor_618" class="label">[618]</a> Rye, 61, from narrative of tour of Lewis Frederick, Duke
-of Württemberg, ‘Lundi, 30 [Apr.] S. E. alla au Globe, lieu ordinaire
-où l’on joue les Commedies, y fut representé l’histoire du More de
-Venise’. Forman’s accounts of <i>Macbeth</i> from <i>Bodl. Ashm.
-MS.</i> 208, f. 207, and of <i>Cymbeline</i> from the preceding leaf,
-but undated, are printed in <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> (1875–6), 417.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_619" href="#FNanchor_619" class="label">[619]</a> Fleay, 190, says that Ecclestone came from the Queen’s
-Revels. I think he must have confused him with Field.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_620" href="#FNanchor_620" class="label">[620]</a> Perhaps his place between Ostler and Underwood in the
-actor-list of the 1623 Folio gives some confirmation to the statement
-of the Burbadges; cf. p. 219.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_621" href="#FNanchor_621" class="label">[621]</a> Cf. ch. iv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_622" href="#FNanchor_622" class="label">[622]</a> <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> (1875–6), 415, from Simon
-Forman’s notes in <i>Bodl. Ashm. MS.</i> 208, f. 200.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_623" href="#FNanchor_623" class="label">[623]</a> For the precise dates and their difficulties, cf. App.
-B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_624" href="#FNanchor_624" class="label">[624]</a> Clode, <i>Early Hist. of the Merchant Taylors</i>, i.
-334.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_625" href="#FNanchor_625" class="label">[625]</a> Text in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 280, from Signet Bill in
-<i>Exchequer, Treasury of Receipt, Privy Seals, 17 Jac. I</i>, Bundle
-ix, No. 2; also in Collier, i. 400, and Hazlitt, <i>E. D. S.</i> 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_626" href="#FNanchor_626" class="label">[626]</a> Tawyer, a ‘man’ of Heminges’s, played in some revival of
-<i>M. N. D.</i> before 1623, but not necessarily before 1619 (cf. ch.
-xv).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_627" href="#FNanchor_627" class="label">[627]</a> <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 395.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_628" href="#FNanchor_628" class="label">[628]</a> Downes, 21, 24. Nevertheless, Taylor did not join the
-King’s men until three years after Shakespeare’s death.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_629" href="#FNanchor_629" class="label">[629]</a> Murray, i. 56, adds 1563–83 records.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_630" href="#FNanchor_630" class="label">[630]</a> G. Le B. Smith, <i>Haddon Hall</i>, 121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_631" href="#FNanchor_631" class="label">[631]</a> Kelly, 211, from <i>Leicester Hall Papers</i>, i, ff.
-38, 42; <i>Hist. MSS.</i> viii. 1, 431. The latter part of the record,
-from the Earl’s licence onwards, was given by Halliwell in <i>Sh. Soc.
-Papers</i>, iv. 145, but with the date 1586, due to a misprint of ‘28<sup>o</sup>
-Eliz.’ for ‘25<sup>o</sup> Eliz.’ in the licence. This has misled Fleay, 86, and
-other writers. Maas, 49, and M. Bateson, <i>Records of Leicester</i>,
-iii. 198, introduce fresh errors of their own.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_632" href="#FNanchor_632" class="label">[632]</a> Gildersleeve, 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_633" href="#FNanchor_633" class="label">[633]</a> Cf. ch. ix and App. D, No. lvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_634" href="#FNanchor_634" class="label">[634]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>Notices of Players Acting at
-Ludlow</i>; B. S. Penley, <i>The Bath Stage</i>, 12, from account for
-year ending 16 June 1584.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_635" href="#FNanchor_635" class="label">[635]</a> Lord Herbert was, of course, Worcester’s son; not,
-as Dr. Greg (Henslowe, ii. 104) seems to think, one of the Pembroke
-family.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_636" href="#FNanchor_636" class="label">[636]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 31; cf. <i>supra</i>
-(Admiral’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_637" href="#FNanchor_637" class="label">[637]</a> Fleay, 87.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_638" href="#FNanchor_638" class="label">[638]</a> Murray, i. 58, adds 1589–94 records.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_639" href="#FNanchor_639" class="label">[639]</a> App. D, No. cxxx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_640" href="#FNanchor_640" class="label">[640]</a> Henslowe, i. 179. As Henslowe paid 7<i>s.</i> ‘for my
-Lo<sup>r</sup> Worsters mens warant for playinge at the cort vnto the clarke of
-the cownselles for geatynge the cownselles handes to yt’ (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 108), and the only warrant to these men was dated 28 Feb.
-1602, the connexion with Henslowe probably began while they were still
-at the Boar’s Head.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_641" href="#FNanchor_641" class="label">[641]</a> Henslowe, i. 160, 190.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_642" href="#FNanchor_642" class="label">[642]</a> Cf. <i>supra</i> (Chamberlain’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_643" href="#FNanchor_643" class="label">[643]</a> Henslowe, i. 132, 163.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_644" href="#FNanchor_644" class="label">[644]</a> Ibid. 177.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_645" href="#FNanchor_645" class="label">[645]</a> Ibid. 178, ‘Lent vnto Richard Perckens the 4 of
-September 1602 to buy thinges for Thomas Hewode play &amp; to lend vnto
-Dick Syferweste to ride downe to his felowes’. This is, of course, a
-private loan, and not in the company’s account.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_646" href="#FNanchor_646" class="label">[646]</a> Called in the earlier entries <i>The Two Brothers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_647" href="#FNanchor_647" class="label">[647]</a> The two names do not occur together, but almost
-certainly indicate the same play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_648" href="#FNanchor_648" class="label">[648]</a> Spelt ‘Burone’ and ‘Berowne’ in the entries.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_649" href="#FNanchor_649" class="label">[649]</a> Henslowe, i. 180, 183, 185, 186, 187, 190.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_650" href="#FNanchor_650" class="label">[650]</a> Cf. p. 7. A further notice of the transfer is given by
-Thomas Heywood, Γυναικεῖον <i>or General History of Women</i> (1624),
-who says that he was one of Worcester’s men, who at James’s accession
-‘bestowed me upon the excellent princesse Queen Anne’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_651" href="#FNanchor_651" class="label">[651]</a> <i>N. S. S. Trans.</i> (<i>1877–9</i>), 16*, from
-<i>Lord Chamberlain’s Books</i>, 58<sup>a</sup>. In August the company served as
-grooms of the chamber (App. B).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_652" href="#FNanchor_652" class="label">[652]</a> In assigning Kempe to the Queen’s Revels in 1605, Dr.
-Greg (Henslowe, ii. 108) has been tripped up by one of Collier’s
-forgeries; cf. my review in <i>M. L. R.</i> iv. 408.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_653" href="#FNanchor_653" class="label">[653]</a> Printed in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 265, from <i>S. P. D.
-Jac. I</i>, ii. 100; also by Collier, i. 336, and Halliwell-Phillipps,
-<i>Illustrations</i>, 106. It is a rough draft full of deletions,
-marked by square brackets, and of additions, printed in italics, in
-the text. The theory of Fleay, 191, that the document is a forgery is
-disposed of by Greg, <i>Henslowe’s Diary</i>, ii. 107.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_654" href="#FNanchor_654" class="label">[654]</a> Printed in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 270, from <i>P. R. 7 Jac.
-I</i>, pt. 39; also from <i>P. R.</i>, but misdescribed as a Privy
-Seal, by T. E. Tomlins in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iv. 45. The Signet
-Bill is indexed under April 1609 in Phillimore, 104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_655" href="#FNanchor_655" class="label">[655]</a> Cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_656" href="#FNanchor_656" class="label">[656]</a> <i>Rutland MSS.</i> iv. 461. They stayed two days, and
-gave four performances.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_657" href="#FNanchor_657" class="label">[657]</a> Kelly, 248, ‘Item the vj<sup>th</sup> of June given to the
-Queenes Players xl<sup>s</sup>.... Item the xxj<sup>th</sup> of Auguste given to the
-Children of the Revells xx<sup>s</sup>. Item the xxvj<sup>th</sup> of September given to
-one other Companye of the Queenes playors xx<sup>s</sup>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_658" href="#FNanchor_658" class="label">[658]</a> Murray, ii. 245, ‘paid to the Queenes players to Thomas
-Swinerton xl<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_659" href="#FNanchor_659" class="label">[659]</a> Murray, ii. 340, from Mayor’s Court Books (18 April
-1614), ‘Swynnerton one of the Quenes players in the name of himselfe &amp;
-the rest of his company desyred leaue to play in the cytty accordinge
-to his Maiesties Lettres patents shewed forth. And M<sup>r</sup> Maior &amp; Court
-moved them to play onely on Wednesday, Thursday &amp; Fryday in Easter
-weke.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_660" href="#FNanchor_660" class="label">[660]</a> Murray, ibid. (6 May 1615), ‘Thomas Swynnerton produced
-this day Letters Patents dated the x<sup>th</sup> [? xv<sup>th</sup>] of Aprill Anno
-Septimo Jacobi whereby hee &amp; others are authorised to play as the
-Quenes men, vidz. Thomas Grene, Christofer Breston [? Beeston], Thomas
-Haywood, Richard Pyrkyns, Rob<sup>t</sup>. Pallant, Tho. Swynnerton, John Duke,
-Robt. Lee, James Hoult, &amp; Robt. Breston [? Beeston].’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_661" href="#FNanchor_661" class="label">[661]</a> Kelly, 252, ‘Item given to the Queenes Maiesties Highnes
-Playors xl<sup>s</sup>.... Item the xvj<sup>th</sup> daye of October Given to the Queenes
-Playors xl<sup>s</sup>. Item given to one other Companye of the Queenes Playors
-xxx<sup>s</sup>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_662" href="#FNanchor_662" class="label">[662]</a> Murray, ii. 340 (30 March 1616), ‘A Patent was this day
-brought into the Court by Thomas Swynerton made to Thomas Grene ... &amp;
-Robert Beeston Servants to Quene Anne &amp; the rest of their associats
-bearing Teste xv<sup>o</sup> Aprilis Anno Septimo Jacobi. But the said Swynerton
-confesseth that hee himselfe &amp; Robert Lee only are here to play the
-rest are absent....’; (29 May 1616), ‘Thomas Swynerton came this day
-into the Court &amp; affirmed himselfe to be one of the players to the
-Quenes Maiestie &amp; bringinge with him no patent desyred to haue leaue
-to play here ... the same company had liberty to play here at Easter
-last....’ Leave was refused on this occasion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_663" href="#FNanchor_663" class="label">[663]</a> Kelly, 253, ‘Item the sixt of Februarye given to the
-Queenes Playors. Item given to one other Companye of the Queenes
-Playors’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_664" href="#FNanchor_664" class="label">[664]</a> <i>Hist. MSS.</i> xi. 3. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_665" href="#FNanchor_665" class="label">[665]</a> App. D, No. clviii; cf. Murray, ii. 343.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_666" href="#FNanchor_666" class="label">[666]</a> Murray, i. 204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_667" href="#FNanchor_667" class="label">[667]</a> Kelly, 254.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_668" href="#FNanchor_668" class="label">[668]</a> Collier, i. 397, from a manuscript at Bridgewater House.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_669" href="#FNanchor_669" class="label">[669]</a> Fleay, 192, guesses that her first husband was Robert
-Browne of the 1583 Worcester’s company. As Queen Anne’s men played at
-the Boar’s Head, he is very likely to have been the ‘Browne of the
-Boares head’ who ‘dyed very pore’ in the plague of 1603 (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 59).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_670" href="#FNanchor_670" class="label">[670]</a> Murray, i. 193, appears to date this list <i>c.</i>
-1612, and the allegation in the Bill (Fleay, 275) that the pensions
-were paid for five years supports this. But it cannot be earlier than
-1613 as Read was still with the Lady Elizabeth’s in that year. Nor does
-it include Lee, who was payee for the Queen’s in 1614–16. It clearly
-belongs to the 1616 settlement.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_671" href="#FNanchor_671" class="label">[671]</a> ‘Goodman Freshwater’ was furnishing stuffs to
-Worcester’s men in 1602–3 (Henslowe, i. 179, 187).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_672" href="#FNanchor_672" class="label">[672]</a> Sanderson may be the ‘Sands’ who played with ‘Ellis’
-[Worth] in Daborne’s <i>Poor Man’s Comfort</i> (q.v.), about 1617. Or
-James Sands, formerly a boy with the King’s men, may have come to the
-Queen’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_673" href="#FNanchor_673" class="label">[673]</a> Adams, 351.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_674" href="#FNanchor_674" class="label">[674]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 272, from <i>P. R. 8 Jac. I</i>, p.
-8; also printed by T. E. Tomlins in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, iv. 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_675" href="#FNanchor_675" class="label">[675]</a> Fleay, 188.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_676" href="#FNanchor_676" class="label">[676]</a> Murray, i. 239, confuses the Duke’s with Lord Aubigny’s
-men.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_677" href="#FNanchor_677" class="label">[677]</a> A letter, probably originally from Dulwich, but now
-<i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 25 (printed in <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, i.
-18, and <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 126), is signed by William Rowley, as
-well as by Taylor and Pallant, and must therefore be later than this
-amalgamation, and not, as Dr. Greg suggests, from the Lady Elizabeth’s
-<i>c.</i> 1613. It confirms a purchase of clothes from Henslowe for
-£55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_678" href="#FNanchor_678" class="label">[678]</a> Text in Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 127; abstract
-in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 90.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_679" href="#FNanchor_679" class="label">[679]</a> <i>N. S. S. Trans. 1877–9</i>, 19*; cf. Fleay, 265.
-Collier, i. 406, has an elegy by William Rowley on Hugh Attwell,
-servant to Prince Charles, who died 25 Sept. 1621.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_680" href="#FNanchor_680" class="label">[680]</a> App. D, No. clviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_681" href="#FNanchor_681" class="label">[681]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 93.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_682" href="#FNanchor_682" class="label">[682]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 274, from <i>P. R. 9 Jac. I</i>, p.
-20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_683" href="#FNanchor_683" class="label">[683]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 18, 111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_684" href="#FNanchor_684" class="label">[684]</a> Cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_685" href="#FNanchor_685" class="label">[685]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 86, from <i>Dulwich MS.</i> i.
-106; also printed in <i>Variorum</i>, xxi. 416, and Collier, <i>Alleyn
-Papers</i>, 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_686" href="#FNanchor_686" class="label">[686]</a> Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 58, 87, thinks that the
-‘Baxter’ of the Grievances was William Barksted or Backstede. It may be
-so.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_687" href="#FNanchor_687" class="label">[687]</a> Thorndike, 66, thinks that the list belongs to an
-earlier production by the Queen’s Revels before 30 March 1610, when
-Taylor joined the Duke of York’s. But there is no evidence that he was
-ever in the Queen’s Revels.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_688" href="#FNanchor_688" class="label">[688]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 65, 125; A. E. H. Swaen,
-<i>Robert Daborne’s Plays</i> (<i>Anglia</i>, xx. 153). The account in
-Fleay, i. 75, is full of inaccuracies. The documents now form separate
-articles of <i>Dulwich MS.</i> 1. All, unless otherwise specified
-below, are letters or undertakings from Daborne to Henslowe. Most
-of them are dated, and I think that the following ordering, due to
-Dr. Greg, is reasonable: (i) Art. 70, 17 Apr. 1613; (ii) Art. 71, 17
-Apr. 1613; (iii) Art. 72, 25 Apr. 1613; (iv) Art. 73, 3 May 1613; (v)
-Art. 74, 8 May 1613; (vi) Art. 75, 16 May 1613; (vii) Art. 77, 19 May
-1613; (viii) Art. 78, 5 June 1613; (ix) Art. 79, 10 June 1613; (xi)
-Art. 80, 18 June 1613; (xii) Art. 81, 25 June 1613; (xiii)? Art. 100,
-Field to Henslowe, <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xiv)? Art. 69, Field to Henslowe,
-<span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xv)? Art. 68, Field, Daborne, and Massinger to
-Henslowe, <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xvi) Art. 82, 16 July 1613; (xvii) Art. 83,
-30 July 1613; (xviii)? Art. 76, <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xix)? Art. 99, Daborne
-to Edward Griffin (Henslowe’s scrivener), <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xx). Art.
-84, 23 Aug. 1613; (xxi) Art. 85, 14 Oct. 1613; (xxii) Art. 86, 29 Oct.
-1613; (xxiii) Art. 87, 5 Nov. 1613; (xxiv) Art. 88, 13 Nov. 1613; (xxv)
-Art. 89, 13 Nov. 1613; (xxvi). Art. 90, 27 Nov. 1613; (xxvii) Art. 91,
-9 Dec. 1613; (xxviii) Art. 92, 10 Dec. 1613; (xxix) Art. 93, 24 Dec.
-1613; (xxx)? Art. 95, <span class="allsmcap">N.D.</span>; (xxxi) Art. 94, 31 Dec. 1613;
-(xxxii) Art. 96, 11 Mar. 1614; (xxxiii) Art. 97, 28 Mar. 1614; (xxxiv),
-Art. 98, 31 July 1614.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_689" href="#FNanchor_689" class="label">[689]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 68.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_690" href="#FNanchor_690" class="label">[690]</a> <i>Sh. Soc. Papers</i>, i. 16; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-125, from <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 24. This document cannot be
-dated, but it has probably been detached from the Dulwich series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_691" href="#FNanchor_691" class="label">[691]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_692" href="#FNanchor_692" class="label">[692]</a> Ibid. 71. I should suppose this, rather than, with Dr.
-Greg, <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>, to be the ‘Johnsons play’ contemplated
-on 13 Nov. (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 78), but others of Jonson’s plays
-may also have been revived.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_693" href="#FNanchor_693" class="label">[693]</a> Ibid. 69, 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_694" href="#FNanchor_694" class="label">[694]</a> Ibid. 71, 103, 111.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_695" href="#FNanchor_695" class="label">[695]</a> Ibid. 76, 77, 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_696" href="#FNanchor_696" class="label">[696]</a> Ibid. 71.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_697" href="#FNanchor_697" class="label">[697]</a> Dr. Greg (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 75) makes them the
-same play, founded on Dekker’s tracts, <i>The Bellman of London</i>
-(1608) and <i>Lanthorn and Candlelight, or the Bellman’s Second
-Night-walk</i> (1609), but <i>The Arraignment</i> seems to have been
-too nearly finished on 5 June for this identification (<i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 72).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_698" href="#FNanchor_698" class="label">[698]</a> Still more so the ascription (Fleay, i. 81) of <i>The
-Faithful Friends</i> to Daborne and the Lady Elizabeth’s men.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_699" href="#FNanchor_699" class="label">[699]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 23; also in Collier, <i>Memoirs
-of Alleyn</i>, 118. A few additional lines, much mutilated, appear
-to have provided for the allocation of half the daily takings of the
-galleries to the discharge of a debt of £124 due to Henslowe and Meade
-and of any further disbursements by them. This agrees with the Dawes
-articles <i>infra</i>, but the Articles of Grievance refer to a debt of
-£126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_700" href="#FNanchor_700" class="label">[700]</a> Fleay, 187; Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 87,
-<i>Henslowe’s Diary</i>, ii. 138.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_701" href="#FNanchor_701" class="label">[701]</a> Cf. p. 240.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_702" href="#FNanchor_702" class="label">[702]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_703" href="#FNanchor_703" class="label">[703]</a> Ibid. 123, from <i>Variorum</i>, xxi. 413; also in
-Collier, <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 75. The original, formerly at Dulwich,
-is now missing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_704" href="#FNanchor_704" class="label">[704]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 72, 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_705" href="#FNanchor_705" class="label">[705]</a> I agree with Dr. Greg that the ‘fower’ in Dawes’s
-articles is probably a mistake for ‘fourteen’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_706" href="#FNanchor_706" class="label">[706]</a> <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>, v. 3, ‘I thinke, one Taylor,
-would goe neere to beat all this company, with a hand bound behinde
-him’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_707" href="#FNanchor_707" class="label">[707]</a> Ibid.</p>
-
-<p class="left"><i>Cokes.</i> Which is your Burbage now?</p>
-
-<p class="left p0"><i>Lanterne.</i> What meane you by that, Sir?</p>
-
-<p class="left p0"><i>Cokes.</i> Your best Actor. Your Field?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_708" href="#FNanchor_708" class="label">[708]</a> Murray, ii. 254. This, however, was probably Long’s
-company; v. <i>infra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_709" href="#FNanchor_709" class="label">[709]</a> Robert Pallant, one of the company, is noted (Henslowe,
-ii. 20) as visiting Henslowe on his death-bed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_710" href="#FNanchor_710" class="label">[710]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_711" href="#FNanchor_711" class="label">[711]</a> App. D, No. clviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_712" href="#FNanchor_712" class="label">[712]</a> Murray, i. 263; ii. 4. I add Belvoir on 1 March 1614.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_713" href="#FNanchor_713" class="label">[713]</a> Cunningham, xliv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_714" href="#FNanchor_714" class="label">[714]</a> Murray, ii. 344.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_715" href="#FNanchor_715" class="label">[715]</a> Lawrence, i. 128 (<i>Early French Players in
-England</i>). One can hardly, I suppose, assume that the Turkish
-acrobat of 1589–90 (cf. ch. xviii) was a real Turk.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_716" href="#FNanchor_716" class="label">[716]</a> J. A. Lester, <i>Italian Players in Scotland</i> (<i>M.
-L. N.</i> xxiii. 240), traces <i>histriones</i>, whom he unjustifiably
-assumes to be actors, and <i>tubicines</i> in 1514–61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_717" href="#FNanchor_717" class="label">[717]</a> <i>S. P. F.</i> (1569–71), 413.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_718" href="#FNanchor_718" class="label">[718]</a> Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. 302.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_719" href="#FNanchor_719" class="label">[719]</a> Murray, ii. 374.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_720" href="#FNanchor_720" class="label">[720]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 225, 227, 458.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_721" href="#FNanchor_721" class="label">[721]</a> Furnivall, <i>Robert Laneham’s Letter</i>, 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_722" href="#FNanchor_722" class="label">[722]</a> Cf. App. B.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_723" href="#FNanchor_723" class="label">[723]</a> Smith, 148, makes him then head of the Gelosi, but the
-authorities she cites do not bear her out.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_724" href="#FNanchor_724" class="label">[724]</a> Baschet, 18, 25, 34, 43; D’Ancona, ii. 455, 457, 459;
-Rennert, 28, 479.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_725" href="#FNanchor_725" class="label">[725]</a> R. B. M<sup>c</sup>Kerrow (<i>Nashe</i>, iv. 462) suggests that
-Tristano may have been ‘that famous Francatrip Harlicken’ represented
-in the dedication of <i>An Almond for a Parrat</i> (1590) as asking
-questions at Venice about Kempe. But Francatrippa seems to have
-been the stage name of Gabriello Panzanini da Bologna of the Gelosi
-(D’Ancona, ii. 469, 511).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_726" href="#FNanchor_726" class="label">[726]</a> Is this ‘the nimble, tumbling Angelica’ of Marston’s
-<i>Scourge of Villainy</i> (1598), xi. 101? If so, a later visit may be
-suspected. Drusiano Martinelli was comedian to the Duke of Mantua, to
-whose son Angelica had been mistress, in 1595 (D’Ancona, ii. 518).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_727" href="#FNanchor_727" class="label">[727]</a> Baschet, 72, 82, 90, 194, 199; D’Ancona, ii. 464,
-479, 504, 518, 523, 526; Smith, 147. The main body of the Gelosi
-passed about this time under the leadership of Flaminio Scala, fifty
-of whose <i>scenarii</i> are printed in <i>Il Teatro delle Fauole
-rappresentatiue</i> (1611).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_728" href="#FNanchor_728" class="label">[728]</a> Cf. ch. xviii as to traces of improvised comedy in
-England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_729" href="#FNanchor_729" class="label">[729]</a> G. E. P. Arkwright, <i>Notes on the Ferrabosco Family
-(Musical Antiquary</i>, iii. 221; iv. 42); G. Livi, <i>The Ferrabosco
-Family</i> (ibid. iv. 121). I may add that he was evidently the
-Bolognese groom of the chamber, favoured by the Queen as a musician,
-who dropped a hint for a Venetian embassy in 1575 (<i>V. P.</i> vii.
-524). He left an illegitimate son, Alfonso, in England, who also was a
-Court musician by 1603, and was succeeded in turn by sons, Alfonso and
-Henry, in 1627 (Lafontaine, 45, 63).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_730" href="#FNanchor_730" class="label">[730]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 159, 160.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_731" href="#FNanchor_731" class="label">[731]</a> Ibid. 160, 301.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_732" href="#FNanchor_732" class="label">[732]</a> Cunningham, 221; cf. <i>D. N. B.</i>; <i>M. L. N.</i>
-xxii. 2, 129, 201.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_733" href="#FNanchor_733" class="label">[733]</a> <i>Magdalene College, Cambridge, Pepys MS.</i> ii. 663
-(cf. <i>Hist. MSS. Comm. Report</i>, 190). The letter is endorsed, ‘To
-Q. Elizabeth: Ubaldino an Italian Musitian I suppose’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_734" href="#FNanchor_734" class="label">[734]</a> Cf. my letter in <i>T.L.S.</i> for 12 May 1921.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_735" href="#FNanchor_735" class="label">[735]</a> Cf. ch. xiii (Interluders); <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii.
-187.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_736" href="#FNanchor_736" class="label">[736]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 461; cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>,
-ii. 202.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_737" href="#FNanchor_737" class="label">[737]</a> Cf. p. 272.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_738" href="#FNanchor_738" class="label">[738]</a> E. J. L. Scott in <i>Athenaeum</i> for 21 Jan. 1882. I
-am sorry to say that Mr. Scott suggests that Shakespeare was of the
-company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_739" href="#FNanchor_739" class="label">[739]</a> J. Scott, <i>An Account of Perth</i>, in Sir J.
-Sinclair, <i>Statistical Account of Scotland</i>, xviii (1796), 522.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_740" href="#FNanchor_740" class="label">[740]</a> J. C. Dibdin, <i>Annals of the Edinburgh Stage</i>
-(1888), 20, from <i>Accounts</i> of the Lord High Treasurer
-of Scotland. <i>A True Accompt of the Baptism of Prince Henry
-Frederick</i>, printed in 1594 (<i>Somers Tracts</i>, ii. 171), records
-plays amongst other festivities, but does not say that English actors
-took part.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_741" href="#FNanchor_741" class="label">[741]</a> <i>Scottish Papers</i>, ii. 676. I suppose that
-this document is the authority on which P. F. Tytler, <i>Hist. of
-Scotland</i>, ix. 302, describing the events of 1599, says of Fletcher,
-‘He had been there before, in 1594; and on his return to England, had
-suffered some persecution from his popularity with James’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_742" href="#FNanchor_742" class="label">[742]</a> D. H. Fleming, <i>St. Andrews Kirk Session Register</i>,
-ii. 870, ‘Ane Jnglishman haveing desyrit libertie of the session to mak
-ane publik play in this citie, it was voted and concludit that he suld
-nocht be permitted to do the samin’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_743" href="#FNanchor_743" class="label">[743]</a> Calderwood, <i>Historie of the Kirk of Scotland</i>
-(Wodrow Soc.), v. 765.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_744" href="#FNanchor_744" class="label">[744]</a> <i>Acts of the Privy Council of Scotland</i>, vi. 39,
-41. Calderwood seems to have put the whole business a week too late.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_745" href="#FNanchor_745" class="label">[745]</a> Dibdin, 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_746" href="#FNanchor_746" class="label">[746]</a> Lee, 83, from <i>S. P. D. Scotland</i> (R. O.), lxv.
-64; cf. summary in <i>Scottish Papers</i>, ii. 777, ‘Performances of
-English players, Fletcher, Martin, and their company, by the King’s
-permission; enactment of the [Fower] Sessions, and preaching of the
-ministers against them. The bellows blowers say that they are sent by
-England to sow dissension between the King and the Kirk’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_747" href="#FNanchor_747" class="label">[747]</a> Dibdin, 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_748" href="#FNanchor_748" class="label">[748]</a> J. Stuart, <i>Extracts from the Council Register of the
-Burgh of Aberdeen</i> (<i>Spalding Club</i>), ii. xxi, xxii, 222.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_749" href="#FNanchor_749" class="label">[749]</a> Fleay, 136; cf. Furness, <i>Macbeth</i>, 407. Fleay
-goes so far as to ‘hazard the guess’ that the ‘speciall letter’ of
-recommendation from James produced at Aberdeen was ‘the identical
-letter that James wrote to Shakespeare with his own hand’, as recorded
-by Oldys.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_750" href="#FNanchor_750" class="label">[750]</a> Henslowe, i. 45</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_751" href="#FNanchor_751" class="label">[751]</a> App. C, No. lvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_752" href="#FNanchor_752" class="label">[752]</a> <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlv. 311, ‘5 Thaler den englischen
-Spielleuten, so ufm Rathaus ihr Spiel mit Springen und allerlei
-Kurzweil getrieben’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_753" href="#FNanchor_753" class="label">[753]</a> The inevitable attempt to show that Shakespeare ‘must’
-have been of the party was made by J. Stefansson, <i>Shakespeare at
-Elsinore</i>, in <i>Contemporary Review</i>, lxix. 20, and disposed
-of by H. Logeman, <i>Shakespeare te Helsingör</i> in <i>Mélanges Paul
-Fredericy</i> (1904); cf. <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xii. 241.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_754" href="#FNanchor_754" class="label">[754]</a> Fürstenau, 69; Cohn, xxiii; Bolte, <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>,
-xxiii. 99. Herz, 5, endeavours to show traces of a visit to Danzig by
-this company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_755" href="#FNanchor_755" class="label">[755]</a> M. Röchell, <i>Chronik</i>, in J. Janssen, <i>Gesch. des
-Bisthums Münster</i> (1852), iii. 174; Cohn, cxxxiv (misdated 1599);
-<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxvi. 274.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_756" href="#FNanchor_756" class="label">[756]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 31. Greg, <i>Henslowe</i>,
-ii. 8, disposes of the confusion between Robert Browne and Alleyn’s
-step-father, John Browne.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_757" href="#FNanchor_757" class="label">[757]</a> Cohn, xxxi. There seems nothing to connect the Andreas
-Röthsch who appeared at Leipzig in July 1591 with Browne, or even to
-justify the conjecture (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlv. 311) that he was
-English.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_758" href="#FNanchor_758" class="label">[758]</a> L. Ph. C. van den Bergh, <i>’s Gravenhaagsche
-Bijzonderheden</i> (1857), 51 from Hague Archives; Cohn, xxviii. A
-letter from R. Jones to Alleyn (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 33), often
-assigned to this date, seems to me probably to belong to 1615: cf. p.
-287.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_759" href="#FNanchor_759" class="label">[759]</a> Another Admiral’s passport is printed in Rye, 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_760" href="#FNanchor_760" class="label">[760]</a> G. van Hasselt, <i>Arnhemsche Oudheden</i>, i (1803),
-244, naming Robert Bruyn, Johan Bradsdret, Thomas Saxwiell, Richardus
-Jonas, and Everhart Sauss.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_761" href="#FNanchor_761" class="label">[761]</a> Bolte in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxiii. 104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_762" href="#FNanchor_762" class="label">[762]</a> Mentzel, 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_763" href="#FNanchor_763" class="label">[763]</a> Cf. vol. i, p. 343.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_764" href="#FNanchor_764" class="label">[764]</a> <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 247.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_765" href="#FNanchor_765" class="label">[765]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 116.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_766" href="#FNanchor_766" class="label">[766]</a> Mentzel, 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_767" href="#FNanchor_767" class="label">[767]</a> Henslowe, i. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_768" href="#FNanchor_768" class="label">[768]</a> Cohn, xxxiii, xxxviii; Goedeke, ii. 519; Herz, 8. A
-conventional clown, variously called ‘Jahn Clam’, ‘Jahn Posset’,
-‘Jahn der Engelländische Narr’, &amp;c., also appears in plays, from 1596
-onwards, by Jacob Ayrer of Nuremberg, who has other debts, including
-the ‘jig’, to the English players (Cohn, lxi; Goedeke, ii. 545).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_769" href="#FNanchor_769" class="label">[769]</a> <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxiii. 103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_770" href="#FNanchor_770" class="label">[770]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xii. 320; xiii. 316; xiv. 118; xv. 115;
-Mentzel, 26, 37. Herz, 34, points out that about this date the Duke of
-Brunswick’s <i>Ehebrecherin</i> and <i>Vincentius Ladislaus</i> were
-played in Frankfort, probably by these men. They are referred to at
-length by Marx Mangoldt, <i>Markschiffs-Nachen</i> (1597), in a passage
-beginning:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Da war nun weiter mein Intent,</div>
- <div>Zu sehen das Englische Spiel,</div>
- <div>Dauon ich hab gehört so viel.</div>
- <div>Wie der Narr drinnen, Jan genennt,</div>
- <div>Mit Bossen wer so excellent.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>Herz, 34, also assigns to the company anonymous appearances at Ulm,
-Munich, and Tübingen in 1597 (<i>Archiv</i>, xii. 319; xiii. 316; xv.
-212).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_771" href="#FNanchor_771" class="label">[771]</a> Cohn, xxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_772" href="#FNanchor_772" class="label">[772]</a> Cf. p. 279.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_773" href="#FNanchor_773" class="label">[773]</a> Cohn, xxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_774" href="#FNanchor_774" class="label">[774]</a> Herz, 37; T. Coryat, <i>Crudities</i>, ii. 291. Cf. also
-<i>Ein Discurss von der Frankfurter Messe</i> (1615):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Der Narr macht lachen, doch ich weht,</div>
- <div>&mdash;Da ist keiner so gut wie Jahn begeht&mdash;</div>
- <div>Vor dieser Zeitt wol hat gethan,</div>
- <div>Jetzt ist er ein reicher Handelsmann.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_775" href="#FNanchor_775" class="label">[775]</a> Cohn, xxxiv; <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xl. 342.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_776" href="#FNanchor_776" class="label">[776]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_777" href="#FNanchor_777" class="label">[777]</a> Cohn, xviii, lvii; Goedeke, ii. 522; Duncker,
-<i>Landgrave Moritz von Hessen und die Englischen Komödianten</i> in
-<i>Deutsche Rundschau</i>, xlviii. 260.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_778" href="#FNanchor_778" class="label">[778]</a> <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xiv. 361.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_779" href="#FNanchor_779" class="label">[779]</a> Cohn, lviii; Herz, 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_780" href="#FNanchor_780" class="label">[780]</a> Könnecke in <i>Z. f. vergleichende
-Litteralurgeschichte</i>, N. F. i. 85.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_781" href="#FNanchor_781" class="label">[781]</a> <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> v. 174. Browne was also the agent
-for a similar transaction licensed on 11 July 1597 (<i>S. P. D.
-Eliz.</i> cclxiv).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_782" href="#FNanchor_782" class="label">[782]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 117; xv. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_783" href="#FNanchor_783" class="label">[783]</a> Rommel, vi. 390, from Cassel archives, ‘Robert Brown und
-John Wobster begleiteten ihn’. The payment therefore on behalf of the
-Admiral’s men about Oct. 1596 ‘to feache Browne’ (Henslowe, i. 45) is
-not very likely to refer to Robert.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_784" href="#FNanchor_784" class="label">[784]</a> Cohn, lviii; Duncker, 265.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_785" href="#FNanchor_785" class="label">[785]</a> Mentzel, 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_786" href="#FNanchor_786" class="label">[786]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 115. Herz, 17, assigns to them,
-conjecturally, performances by ‘Englishmen’ at Memmingen, Cologne,
-Munich, Ulm, and Stuttgart during 1600. But the wording of the
-Strassburg documents suggests a continuous stay.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_787" href="#FNanchor_787" class="label">[787]</a> On 21 Oct. 1603 Joan Alleyn wrote to Edward Alleyn
-(<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 59), ‘All the companyes be come hoame &amp; well
-for ought we knowe, but that Browne of the Boares head is dead &amp; dyed
-very pore, he went not into the countrye at all’. Obviously this is
-not Robert Browne, who lived many years longer. But it may have been
-a relative, as Lord Derby’s men are very likely to have preceded
-Worcester’s at the Boar’s Head. There was at least one other actor of
-the name, Edward Browne, and possibly more (cf. ch. xv).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_788" href="#FNanchor_788" class="label">[788]</a> Mentzel, 46.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_789" href="#FNanchor_789" class="label">[789]</a> Mentzel, 45, 48; <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 119. A performance
-at Dresden in Oct. 1600, assigned to them by Herz, 38, is anonymous.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_790" href="#FNanchor_790" class="label">[790]</a> Mentzel, 48.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_791" href="#FNanchor_791" class="label">[791]</a> Duncker, 267, from chronicle of Wilhelm Buch, ‘Anno
-1602 hat er die Engländer alle mit einander von sich gejagt und des
-springens und tanzens müde geworden’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_792" href="#FNanchor_792" class="label">[792]</a> Mentzel, 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_793" href="#FNanchor_793" class="label">[793]</a> Mentzel, 51; Bolte, <i>Das Danziger Theater</i>, 34.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_794" href="#FNanchor_794" class="label">[794]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_795" href="#FNanchor_795" class="label">[795]</a> Mentzel, 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_796" href="#FNanchor_796" class="label">[796]</a> Mentzel, 50; <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_797" href="#FNanchor_797" class="label">[797]</a> The Frankfort archives call them ‘Thomas Blackreude’ and
-‘Johannes Fheer’, which has prevented their identity with Worcester’s
-men from being noticed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_798" href="#FNanchor_798" class="label">[798]</a> Mentzel, 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_799" href="#FNanchor_799" class="label">[799]</a> Mentzel, 53; <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 117. Herz, 18, assigns
-to Browne anonymous appearances by Englishmen at Strassburg in June
-1601, Ulm in Nov. 1602, Nördlingen in May 1605, and Ulm in May and June
-1605. At Nördlingen a play from the prophet Jonah, possibly Greene and
-Lodge’s <i>Looking Glass for London and England</i>, was given.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_800" href="#FNanchor_800" class="label">[800]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 120. Coryat, ii. 183, saw him at
-Strassburg in 1608.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_801" href="#FNanchor_801" class="label">[801]</a> Mentzel, 53; Meissner in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xix. 125;
-<i>Archiv</i>, xiii. 320; Duncker, 268. The <i>Ottonium</i> was named
-after Maurice’s son Otto, the friend of Prince Henry Frederick, who
-paid a visit to England in 1611 (Rye, 141).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_802" href="#FNanchor_802" class="label">[802]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 124.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_803" href="#FNanchor_803" class="label">[803]</a> Cohn, lviii; R. P. Wülcker in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xiv.
-360.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_804" href="#FNanchor_804" class="label">[804]</a> Mentzel, 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_805" href="#FNanchor_805" class="label">[805]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_806" href="#FNanchor_806" class="label">[806]</a> Bolte, 35.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_807" href="#FNanchor_807" class="label">[807]</a> This might be Heywood’s <i>King Edward IV</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_808" href="#FNanchor_808" class="label">[808]</a> F. von Hurter, <i>Gesch. Kaiser Ferdinands II</i>, v.
-395.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_809" href="#FNanchor_809" class="label">[809]</a> <i>The Proud Woman of Antwerp</i> might be the lost
-piece by Day and Haughton.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_810" href="#FNanchor_810" class="label">[810]</a> Meissner, 74, and in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xix. 128; cf.
-pp. 284–6. The text of <i>Nobody and Somebody</i> is printed from a
-manuscript at Rein by F. Bischoff in <i>Mittheilungen des hist. Vereins
-für Steiermark</i>, xlvii. 127. I think it is just possible that the
-companies of 1608 and 1617 may have been Spencer’s. There seem to have
-been <i>Saxoni</i>, as well as <i>Angli</i>, playing. These do not seem
-to have constituted a distinct company, and are perhaps more likely to
-have been with Spencer than with Green. Spencer, as well as Green, was
-in relations with the imperial court in 1617; cf. p. 290. But I think
-that the evidence of the Rein manuscript is fairly decisive in favour
-of Green.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_811" href="#FNanchor_811" class="label">[811]</a> This may have been Green himself. A drawing of a
-red-haired actor, in the traditional get-up of Nobody, is on the Rein
-manuscript.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_812" href="#FNanchor_812" class="label">[812]</a> Mentzel, 54, 55, 56, 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_813" href="#FNanchor_813" class="label">[813]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 125; xv. 215. Herz, 41, ascribes
-to them anonymous appearances at Ulm, Nördlingen, and Augsburg. John
-Price, afterwards well known as a musician at Dresden and Stuttgart, is
-said to be recorded at Stuttgart in 1609 (Cohn, cxxxviii), and may have
-been with the Hessian company.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_814" href="#FNanchor_814" class="label">[814]</a> Cohn, lix; Duncker, 272.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_815" href="#FNanchor_815" class="label">[815]</a> Meissner, 46; Duncker, 272. Herz, 41, ascribes to them
-anonymous appearances at the wedding of the Margrave John George,
-brother of the Elector of Brandenburg, and the Princess Christina of
-Saxony at Jägerndorf in July, and at Nuremberg and Ulm in November.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_816" href="#FNanchor_816" class="label">[816]</a> Cohn, lix, without reference. Herz, 41, adds an
-anonymous performance of <i>The Merchant of Venice</i> at the Court of
-Margrave Christian of Brandenburg at Halle.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_817" href="#FNanchor_817" class="label">[817]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_818" href="#FNanchor_818" class="label">[818]</a> Duncker, 273.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_819" href="#FNanchor_819" class="label">[819]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiii. 319. If this is the company which,
-according to Alvensleben, <i>Allgemeine Theaterchronik</i> (1832),
-No. 158, played <i>Daniel</i>, <i>The Chaste Susanna</i>, and <i>The
-Two Judges in Israel</i> at Ulm in 1602, the identification with the
-company found at Nördlingen and Rothenburg is assisted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_820" href="#FNanchor_820" class="label">[820]</a> Cohn, lxxvii, from Erhard Cellius, <i>Eques Auratus
-Anglo-Wirtembergicus</i> (1605); cf. Rye, cvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_821" href="#FNanchor_821" class="label">[821]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xi. 625; xiii. 70. They also played
-<i>Daniel in the Lions’ Den</i>, <i>Susanna</i> (? by Henry Julius
-of Brunswick or another version), <i>The Prodigal Son</i>, <i>A
-Disobedient Merchant’s Son</i> (? <i>The London Prodigal</i>),
-<i>Charles Duke of Burgundy</i>, <i>Annabella a Duke’s Daughter of
-Ferrara</i> (? Marston’s <i>Parasitaster</i>), <i>Botzarius an Ancient
-Roman</i>, and <i>Vincentius Ladislaus</i> (? by Henry Julius of
-Brunswick). Three of these plays (<i>Romeo and Juliet</i>, <i>The
-Prodigal Son</i>, and <i>Annabella</i>) are in the repertories of John
-Green; cf. p. 285.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_822" href="#FNanchor_822" class="label">[822]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_823" href="#FNanchor_823" class="label">[823]</a> <i>Zeitschrift für vergleichende
-Litteraturgeschichte</i>, N. F. vii. 61. They played in 1604 <i>Daniel
-in the Lions’ Den</i>, <i>Melone of Dalmatia</i>, <i>Lewis King of
-Spain</i>, <i>Celinde and Sedea</i>, <i>Pyramus and Thisbe</i>,
-<i>Annabella a Duke’s Daughter of Montferrat</i>; and in 1606
-<i>Charles Duke of Burgundy</i>, <i>Susanna</i>, <i>The Prodigal
-Son</i>, <i>A Disobedient Merchant’s Son</i>, <i>An Ancient Roman</i>,
-<i>Vincentius Ladislaus</i>. The Nördlingen and Rothenburg companies
-must be the same. <i>Celinde and Sedea</i>, however, is found in a
-repertory, not of Green, but of Spencer; cf. p. 289.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_824" href="#FNanchor_824" class="label">[824]</a> Herz, 42, 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_825" href="#FNanchor_825" class="label">[825]</a> A. van Sorgen, <i>De Tooneelspeelkunst in Utrecht</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_826" href="#FNanchor_826" class="label">[826]</a> Bolte, 41, 47. Herz, 27, conjectures that these may have
-been the English players at Wolfenbüttel in May 1615; cf. p. 277.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_827" href="#FNanchor_827" class="label">[827]</a> Schlager, 168; Meissner in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xix.
-139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_828" href="#FNanchor_828" class="label">[828]</a> Cohn, xciii; cf. p. 282 as to the inference that Green
-was at Gräz in 1607–8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_829" href="#FNanchor_829" class="label">[829]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 129.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_830" href="#FNanchor_830" class="label">[830]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_831" href="#FNanchor_831" class="label">[831]</a> Mentzel, 60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_832" href="#FNanchor_832" class="label">[832]</a> Bolte, 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_833" href="#FNanchor_833" class="label">[833]</a> Herz, 22, from Wolter, 97.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_834" href="#FNanchor_834" class="label">[834]</a> Mentzel, 61; Meissner, 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_835" href="#FNanchor_835" class="label">[835]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 130; Mentzel, 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_836" href="#FNanchor_836" class="label">[836]</a> Herz, 30, from Wolter, 97; A. van Sorgen, <i>De
-Tooneelspeelkunst in Utrecht</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_837" href="#FNanchor_837" class="label">[837]</a> Herz, 30.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_838" href="#FNanchor_838" class="label">[838]</a> Goedeke, ii. 543, could find no copy of <i>Musarum
-Aoniarum tertia Erato</i> (Hamburg, 1611), the title-page of which
-claims ‘etlichen Englischen Comedien’ as a source.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_839" href="#FNanchor_839" class="label">[839]</a> The last two plays have some kind of relation
-to Shakespeare’s <i>Two Gentlemen of Verona</i> and <i>Titus
-Andronicus</i>. <i>Sidonia and Theagenes</i> is a prose version of
-Gabriel Rollenhagen’s <i>Amantes Amentes</i> (1609). A supplement
-to the 1620 collection, with six other plays and two jigs, appeared
-as <i>Liebeskampff oder Ander Theil der Englischen Comödien und
-Tragödien</i> (1630), but none of these are traceable before the Thirty
-Years’ War.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_840" href="#FNanchor_840" class="label">[840]</a> Cf. pp. 279, 281, 283. The Dresden list is in Cohn, cxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_841" href="#FNanchor_841" class="label">[841]</a> Played at Nördlingen in 1604. Cohn, 309, prints a German
-version from a Vienna manuscript.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_842" href="#FNanchor_842" class="label">[842]</a> Possibly Heywood’s <i>The Silver Age</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_843" href="#FNanchor_843" class="label">[843]</a> Green played at Gräz in 1608 ‘Von ein Herzog von Florenz
-der sich in eines Edelmann’s Tochter verliebt hat’. This seems too
-early for Massinger’s <i>Great Duke of Florence</i>, but suggests the
-same story.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_844" href="#FNanchor_844" class="label">[844]</a> Possibly <i>1 Jeronimo</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_845" href="#FNanchor_845" class="label">[845]</a> Possibly Dekker’s <i>Patient Grissel</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_846" href="#FNanchor_846" class="label">[846]</a> Played at Nördlingen and Rothenburg in 1604. Bolte,
-177, prints from a Danzig manuscript a later German version based on
-Marston’s <i>Parasitaster</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_847" href="#FNanchor_847" class="label">[847]</a> Played by Green at Gräz in 1608, in a version extant in
-a Rein manuscript; a later one is in the 1620 collection. Cf. p. 282.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_848" href="#FNanchor_848" class="label">[848]</a> Possibly <i>Clyomon and Clamydes</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_849" href="#FNanchor_849" class="label">[849]</a> Cohn, 236, prints a German version from a late copy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_850" href="#FNanchor_850" class="label">[850]</a> Possibly Robert Greene’s play.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_851" href="#FNanchor_851" class="label">[851]</a> Played by Browne at Cassel in 1607; a text is in the
-1620 collection.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_852" href="#FNanchor_852" class="label">[852]</a> Probably Kyd’s <i>Spanish Tragedy</i>, played by Browne
-at Frankfort in 1601.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_853" href="#FNanchor_853" class="label">[853]</a> Printed in the 1620 collection.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_854" href="#FNanchor_854" class="label">[854]</a> Probably Dekker’s <i>Virgin Martyr</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_855" href="#FNanchor_855" class="label">[855]</a> Played by Green at Gräz in 1608.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_856" href="#FNanchor_856" class="label">[856]</a> Possibly Robert Greene’s <i>Alphonsus</i>, <i>King of
-Arragon</i> or <i>Mucedorus</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_857" href="#FNanchor_857" class="label">[857]</a> Played by Green at Gräz in 1608. A version, related to
-Dekker’s <i>Old Fortunatus</i>, is in the 1620 collection.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_858" href="#FNanchor_858" class="label">[858]</a> Played by an anonymous company at Halle in 1611; cf.
-p. 283. <i>The Jew</i>, played by Green at Passau and Gräz in 1607–8,
-might be either this play or <i>The Jew of Malta</i>. Dekker wrote
-a <i>Jew of Venice</i>, now lost; but a German version, printed by
-Meissner, 131, from a Vienna manuscript, is in part based on <i>The
-Merchant of Venice</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_859" href="#FNanchor_859" class="label">[859]</a> Could this be <i>The Winter’s Tale</i>?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_860" href="#FNanchor_860" class="label">[860]</a> Green played <i>The King of Cyprus and Duke of
-Venice</i> at Gräz in 1608.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_861" href="#FNanchor_861" class="label">[861]</a> Played at Nördlingen in 1604 and Rothenburg in 1606
-and by Green at Passau and Gräz in 1607–8. A version is in the 1620
-collection.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_862" href="#FNanchor_862" class="label">[862]</a> Green played <i>Dives and Lazarus</i> at Gräz in 1608.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_863" href="#FNanchor_863" class="label">[863]</a> Fleay, <i>Sh.</i> 307.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_864" href="#FNanchor_864" class="label">[864]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 33.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_865" href="#FNanchor_865" class="label">[865]</a> Ibid. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_866" href="#FNanchor_866" class="label">[866]</a> Cf. ch. xvi, introd.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_867" href="#FNanchor_867" class="label">[867]</a> C. F. Meyer in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxxviii. 208.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_868" href="#FNanchor_868" class="label">[868]</a> <i>D. N. B.</i> s.v. Giles Farnaby.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_869" href="#FNanchor_869" class="label">[869]</a> Cf. pp. 279, 283.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_870" href="#FNanchor_870" class="label">[870]</a> Cohn, lxxviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_871" href="#FNanchor_871" class="label">[871]</a> Fürstenau, i. 76.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_872" href="#FNanchor_872" class="label">[872]</a> Cf. p. 282. Herz, 44, identifies them with ‘English’
-at The Hague (June 1606), Cologne (Feb. 1607), The Hague (April), Ulm
-(May), Nördlingen (June), and Munich (July).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_873" href="#FNanchor_873" class="label">[873]</a> Wolter, 93.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_874" href="#FNanchor_874" class="label">[874]</a> L. Schneider, <i>Geschichte der Oper in Berlin</i>,
-Beilage, lxx. 25; Fürstenau, i. 77.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_875" href="#FNanchor_875" class="label">[875]</a> Cf. p. 283.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_876" href="#FNanchor_876" class="label">[876]</a> Cohn, lxxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_877" href="#FNanchor_877" class="label">[877]</a> Ibid. lxxxvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_878" href="#FNanchor_878" class="label">[878]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 128. <i>Philole and Mariana</i> may
-be Lewis Machin’s <i>The Dumb Knight</i>, and <i>The Turk</i> Mason’s
-play of that name. <i>Celinde and Sedea</i> had formed part of a
-repertory at Rothenburg in 1604 apparently related to those of Green;
-cf. p. 284. Spencer is not recorded to have played any other piece
-found in Green’s repertories.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_879" href="#FNanchor_879" class="label">[879]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xii. 320; xiv. 128.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_880" href="#FNanchor_880" class="label">[880]</a> Schlager, 168; Elze in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xiv. 362;
-Meissner, 53, and in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xix. 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_881" href="#FNanchor_881" class="label">[881]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 129; <i>Zeitschrift für vergl.
-Litt.</i> vii. 64; Mentzel, 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_882" href="#FNanchor_882" class="label">[882]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_883" href="#FNanchor_883" class="label">[883]</a> Ibid. xii. 320; xiii. 322.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_884" href="#FNanchor_884" class="label">[884]</a> Ibid. xv. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_885" href="#FNanchor_885" class="label">[885]</a> Ibid. xv. 215; cf. Herz, 48.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_886" href="#FNanchor_886" class="label">[886]</a> Wolter, 96; Cohn in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 260;
-Cohn, xci, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 3888, <i>The Evangelic Fruict of the
-Seraphicall Franciscan Order</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_887" href="#FNanchor_887" class="label">[887]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xv. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_888" href="#FNanchor_888" class="label">[888]</a> Mentzel, 59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_889" href="#FNanchor_889" class="label">[889]</a> Cohn in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 261; Wolter, 96.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_890" href="#FNanchor_890" class="label">[890]</a> Meissner, 59, and in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xix. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_891" href="#FNanchor_891" class="label">[891]</a> Cohn, lxxxviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_892" href="#FNanchor_892" class="label">[892]</a> Ibid. lxxxiii; Mentzel, 54.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_893" href="#FNanchor_893" class="label">[893]</a> Cohn in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 257; Wolter, 95.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_894" href="#FNanchor_894" class="label">[894]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 124; Mentzel, 54; Schlager, 168;
-Herz, 53.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_895" href="#FNanchor_895" class="label">[895]</a> Cohn, xxxv; Bolte, 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_896" href="#FNanchor_896" class="label">[896]</a> Cohn, xcii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_897" href="#FNanchor_897" class="label">[897]</a> Bolte, 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_898" href="#FNanchor_898" class="label">[898]</a> Cohn, xcii; Meissner, 38, and in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>,
-xix. 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_899" href="#FNanchor_899" class="label">[899]</a> Cf. pp. 275, 285.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_900" href="#FNanchor_900" class="label">[900]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiv. 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_901" href="#FNanchor_901" class="label">[901]</a> Ibid., xiii. 316; xiv. 116; Heywood, 60.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_902" href="#FNanchor_902" class="label">[902]</a> Mentzel, 55. H. Chardon, <i>La Troupe du Roman
-comique</i>, 32, notices Maurice of Nassau’s company at Nantes in 1618
-and Paris in 1625, but does not say that they were English.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_903" href="#FNanchor_903" class="label">[903]</a> <i>Archiv</i>, xiii. 317; xiv. 121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_904" href="#FNanchor_904" class="label">[904]</a> Cohn, lxxvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_905" href="#FNanchor_905" class="label">[905]</a> <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlv. 311.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_906" href="#FNanchor_906" class="label">[906]</a> Cohn in <i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxi. 253.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_907" href="#FNanchor_907" class="label">[907]</a> Cf. p. 273.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_908" href="#FNanchor_908" class="label">[908]</a> Pellicer, i. 80, citing the records of the Madrid
-hospital, ‘en 11 de Enero de 1583 voltearon unos ingleses en el Corral
-de la Pacheca’. The original record is probably lost, as it is not
-with those of 1579–82, 1590, and 1601–2 published from the <i>Archivo
-de la Diputacion provincial de Madrid</i> by C. Pérez Pastor in the
-<i>Bulletin Hispanique</i> (1906) and reprinted by Rennert, 345.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_909" href="#FNanchor_909" class="label">[909]</a> E. Soulié, <i>Recherches sur Molière</i>, 153; cf.
-Rigal, 46; Jusserand, <i>Shakespeare in France</i>, 51.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_910" href="#FNanchor_910" class="label">[910]</a> Henslowe, i. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_911" href="#FNanchor_911" class="label">[911]</a> Soulié et de Barthélemy, <i>Journal de Jean Héroard</i>,
-i. 88, 91, 92.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_912" href="#FNanchor_912" class="label">[912]</a> H. C. Coote in <i>Intermédiaire des Chercheurs et
-Curieux</i>, ii. 105; cf. <i>5 N. Q.</i> ix. 42. The idea was that
-‘Tiph, toph’ represented a reminiscence of <i>2 Henry IV</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 205, ‘This is the right fencing grace, my lord; tap for
-tap, and so part fair’. The phrase ‘tiff toff’ occurs in brackets in a
-speech of Crapula while he beats Mendacio in <i>Lingua</i> (Dodsley,<sup>4</sup>
-ix. 434). Collier explains it as hiccups; Fleay, ii. 261, on the
-authority of P. A. Daniel, as an Italian term for the thwack of stage
-blows.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_913" href="#FNanchor_913" class="label">[913]</a> E. Fournier, <i>Chansons de Gaultier Garguille</i>,
-lix, and <i>L’Espagne et ses Comédiens en France au xvii<sup>e</sup> Siècle</i>
-(<i>Revue des Provinces</i>, iv. 496), cites H. Ternaux in <i>Revue
-Françoise et Étrangère</i>, i. 78, for statements that the head of the
-English at Fontainebleau was Ganassa, who in Spain had had a mixed
-company of English, Italians, and Spanish, and on 11 Jan. 1583 had a
-share in the receipts of a troupe of English <i>volteadores</i>. I
-have not been able to see the work of M. Ternaux, who does not inspire
-confidence by calling Ganassa Juan instead of Alberto. There seems to
-be nothing to connect Ganassa with the <i>volteadores</i> of 1583,
-except the fact that the Corral de la Pacheca where they played was
-leased to him for nine or ten years in 1574 (Rennert, 29), and they
-may therefore have paid him rent. His troupe in 1581–2, as given
-by Rennert, 479, consisted entirely of Italians, with two Spanish
-musicians. He is said to have been in Spain in 1603 (Pellicer, i. 57,
-72; Rennert, 30), but there is nothing to show that, if so, he went on
-to France. But Héroard tells us that there was a Spanish rope-dancer
-at Fontainebleau in 1604, and a very obscure passage in his diary
-suggests that this Spaniard was really an Irishman. Irish marauders
-(<i>voleurs</i>) were then giving trouble in Paris, which led Louis to
-say ‘Ce voleur qui voloit sur la corde étoit Irlandois?’ and Héroard
-comments, ‘Il étoit vrai; il accommoda le mot de voleur à l’autre
-signification, il l’avoit vu voler à Fontainebleau’ (<i>Journal</i>, i.
-90, 126).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_914" href="#FNanchor_914" class="label">[914]</a> F. Bischoff in <i>Mittheilungen des hist. Vereins für
-Steiermark</i>, xlvii. 127; cf. p. 282.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_915" href="#FNanchor_915" class="label">[915]</a> De Bry, <i>India Orientalis</i> (1613), xii. 137, ‘Angli
-ludiones per Germaniam et Galliam vagantur’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_916" href="#FNanchor_916" class="label">[916]</a> Alleyn’s life is more fully dealt with than is here
-possible in G. F. Warner and F. Bickley, <i>Catalogue of Dulwich
-MSS.</i> (1881, 1903); G. F. Warner in <i>D. N. B.</i> (1885);
-W. Young, <i>History of Dulwich College</i> (1889); W. W. Greg,
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i> (1907), <i>Henslowe’s Diary</i>, vol. ii
-(1908). An earlier treatment of the material is that by J. P. Collier,
-<i>Memoirs of Edward Alleyn</i> (1841), <i>Alleyn Papers</i> (1843).
-On an account by G. Steevens in <i>Theatrical Review</i> (1763) with a
-forged letter from Peele to Marlowe, cf. Lee, 646.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_917" href="#FNanchor_917" class="label">[917]</a> <i>Dulwich Muniments</i>, 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_918" href="#FNanchor_918" class="label">[918]</a> Cf. ch. xiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_919" href="#FNanchor_919" class="label">[919]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 34, from <i>Dulwich MSS.</i>,
-i. 9–15; Edward to Joan Alleyn, 2 May 1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn,
-5 July 1593; Edward to Joan Alleyn, 1 August 1593; Henslowe to Edward
-Alleyn, <i>c.</i> August 1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn, 14 August
-1593; Henslowe to Edward Alleyn, 28 September 1593; John Pyk (Alleyn’s
-‘boy’) to Joan Alleyn, <i>c.</i> 1593. Later letters of 4 June and 26
-September 1598 from Henslowe to Edward Alleyn and of 21 October 1603
-from Joan to Edward Alleyn are in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 47, 59, 97.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_920" href="#FNanchor_920" class="label">[920]</a> <i>Works</i>, i. 215, 296.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_921" href="#FNanchor_921" class="label">[921]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 32. The verses on the same theme
-in Collier, <i>Memoirs</i>, 13, are forged.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_922" href="#FNanchor_922" class="label">[922]</a> Dekker, <i>Plays</i>, i. 280.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_923" href="#FNanchor_923" class="label">[923]</a> <i>Epigrammes</i> (1599), iv. 23:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <h5><i>In Ed: Allen.</i></h5>
- <div class="poetry p0">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div><i>Rome</i> had her <i>Roscius</i> and her Theater,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Her <i>Terence</i>, <i>Plautus</i>, <i>Ennius</i> and <i>Me</i>[n]<i>ander</i>,</div>
- <div>The first to <i>Allen</i>, <i>Phoebus</i> did transfer</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The next, <i>Thames</i> Swans receiu’d fore he coulde land her,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Of both more worthy we by <i>Phoebus</i> doome,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Then t’ <i>Allen Roscius</i> yeeld, to <i>London Rome</i>.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_924" href="#FNanchor_924" class="label">[924]</a> Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_925" href="#FNanchor_925" class="label">[925]</a> Fuller, <i>Worthies</i> (ed. 1840), ii. 385.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_926" href="#FNanchor_926" class="label">[926]</a> S. Rowland, <i>Knave of Clubs</i> (1609), 29:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The gull gets on a surplis</div>
- <div class="i1">With a crosse upon his breast,</div>
- <div>Like Allen playing Faustus,</div>
- <div class="i1">In that manner he was drest.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_927" href="#FNanchor_927" class="label">[927]</a> Heywood, <i>Epistle</i> to <i>The Jew of Malta</i>
-(1633), ‘the part of the Jew presented by so vnimitable an Actor as M<sup>r</sup>
-Allin’; and <i>Prologue</i>,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And He, then by the best of Actors [<i>in margin</i> ‘Allin’] play’d:</div>
- <div class="i12">... in Tamberlaine,</div>
- <div>This Jew, with others many, th’ other wan</div>
- <div>The Attribute of peerelesse, being a man</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Whom we may ranke with (doing no one wrong)</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Proteus for shapes, and Roscius for a tongue,</div>
- <div>So could he speake, so vary.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_928" href="#FNanchor_928" class="label">[928]</a> E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i> (1598), <i>Epig.</i>
-xliii,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent"><i>Clodius</i> me thinks lookes passing big of late,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With <i>Dunston’s</i> browes, and <i>Allens Cutlacks</i> gate.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_929" href="#FNanchor_929" class="label">[929]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 155.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_930" href="#FNanchor_930" class="label">[930]</a> For this myth, cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Marlowe.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_931" href="#FNanchor_931" class="label">[931]</a> Tarlton, 22, ‘How Tarlton made Armin his adopted sonne,
-to succeed him’. The earliest extant edition of <i>Tarlton’s Jests</i>
-is that of 1611, but the Second Part, here quoted, was entered in <i>S.
-R.</i> on 4 Aug. 1600.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_932" href="#FNanchor_932" class="label">[932]</a> Extract in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 321; the unique
-copy of this edition is described in his <i>Calendar of Shakespeare
-Rarities</i> (1887), 145.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_933" href="#FNanchor_933" class="label">[933]</a> Reprinted in the Shakespeare Society’s <i>Fools and
-Jesters</i> (1842).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_934" href="#FNanchor_934" class="label">[934]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 159, 241, 242; <i>M. S. C.</i> i.
-345.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_935" href="#FNanchor_935" class="label">[935]</a> Jeaffreson, ii. 107, 110, 114, 120, 128, 220.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_936" href="#FNanchor_936" class="label">[936]</a> Harleian Soc. <i>Registers</i>, ix. 62; xvii. 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_937" href="#FNanchor_937" class="label">[937]</a> Collier, <i>Actors</i>, xxxi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_938" href="#FNanchor_938" class="label">[938]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 344.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_939" href="#FNanchor_939" class="label">[939]</a> McKerrow, <i>Nashe</i>, i. 255.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_940" href="#FNanchor_940" class="label">[940]</a> Collier, iii. 364.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_941" href="#FNanchor_941" class="label">[941]</a> The biographical material collected by C. C. Stopes,
-<i>Burbage and Shakespeare’s Stage</i> (1913), is supplemented by
-the lawsuit records in C. W. Wallace, <i>The First London Theatre,
-Materials for a History</i> (1913, <i>Nebraska University Studies</i>,
-xiii. 1).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_942" href="#FNanchor_942" class="label">[942]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 199, 476; Collier, iii. 367; P. C.
-Carter, <i>Hist. of St. Mary Aldermanbury</i>, 9, 11, 21, 58, 86, 87.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_943" href="#FNanchor_943" class="label">[943]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 200, from P. C. C.; Collier, iii.
-376.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_944" href="#FNanchor_944" class="label">[944]</a> Collier, iii. 376, 380.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_945" href="#FNanchor_945" class="label">[945]</a> <i>Varioram</i>, iii. 211.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_946" href="#FNanchor_946" class="label">[946]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_947" href="#FNanchor_947" class="label">[947]</a> Collier, iii. 406; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_948" href="#FNanchor_948" class="label">[948]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 482, from P. C. C.; Collier, iii.
-409.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_949" href="#FNanchor_949" class="label">[949]</a> Collier, iii. 389.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_950" href="#FNanchor_950" class="label">[950]</a> H. R. Plomer in <i>10 N. Q.</i> vi. 368, from <i>London
-Archdeaconry Wills</i>, vi, f. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_951" href="#FNanchor_951" class="label">[951]</a> Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_952" href="#FNanchor_952" class="label">[952]</a> Fleay, 190; cf. <i>The Sharers Papers</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_953" href="#FNanchor_953" class="label">[953]</a> Collier, iii. 457; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_954" href="#FNanchor_954" class="label">[954]</a> <i>K. B. P.</i> i. 104, ‘Were you neuer none of Mr.
-Monkesters schollars?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_955" href="#FNanchor_955" class="label">[955]</a> Collier, iii. 411.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_956" href="#FNanchor_956" class="label">[956]</a> Fleay, 85; Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_957" href="#FNanchor_957" class="label">[957]</a> Collier, iii. 473; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_958" href="#FNanchor_958" class="label">[958]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 472; Chester, <i>London Marriage
-Licenses</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_959" href="#FNanchor_959" class="label">[959]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 187.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_960" href="#FNanchor_960" class="label">[960]</a> Ibid. 188.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_961" href="#FNanchor_961" class="label">[961]</a> Ibid. 187.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_962" href="#FNanchor_962" class="label">[962]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_963" href="#FNanchor_963" class="label">[963]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 198, 475; Collier, iii. 308; P. C.
-Carter, <i>St. Mary, Aldermanbury</i>, 11, 58, 86, 87. Malone misread
-Beavis as Beatrice. An earlier John (1598) and a Swynnerton (1613) died
-as infants.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_964" href="#FNanchor_964" class="label">[964]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 191.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_965" href="#FNanchor_965" class="label">[965]</a> <i>D. N. B.</i> s.v.; Wood, <i>Athenae</i>, iii. 277.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_966" href="#FNanchor_966" class="label">[966]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> 16; cf. C. W. Wallace, in <i>The
-Times</i> for 2 and 4 Oct. 1909.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_967" href="#FNanchor_967" class="label">[967]</a> <i>N. U. S.</i> x. 311.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_968" href="#FNanchor_968" class="label">[968]</a> <i>Kemps Nine Daies Wonder. Performed in a Daunce from
-London to Norwich</i> (1600) is reprinted with a biography by A. Dyce
-(1840, <i>Camden Soc.</i>) and in Arber, <i>English Garner</i><sup>2</sup>,
-ii (<i>Social England</i>), 139, and E. Goldsmid, <i>Collectanea
-Adamantea</i>, ii (1884). Dissertations are J. Bruce, <i>Who was
-‘Will, my Lord of Leycester’s Jesting Player’?</i> (1844, <i>Sh.
-Soc. Papers</i>, i. 88); B. Nicholson, <i>Kemp and the Play of
-Hamlet</i> (<i>N. S. S. Trans. 1880–6</i>, 57); <i>Will Kemp</i> (1887,
-<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xxii. 255).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_969" href="#FNanchor_969" class="label">[969]</a> Collier, iii. 391.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_970" href="#FNanchor_970" class="label">[970]</a> Ibid. 395.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_971" href="#FNanchor_971" class="label">[971]</a> Ibid. 396.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_972" href="#FNanchor_972" class="label">[972]</a> Ibid. 397; <i>Bodl.</i>; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_973" href="#FNanchor_973" class="label">[973]</a> Norman, 91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_974" href="#FNanchor_974" class="label">[974]</a> For further details of his later career, cf. Collier and
-<i>D. N. B.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_975" href="#FNanchor_975" class="label">[975]</a> Downes, 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_976" href="#FNanchor_976" class="label">[976]</a> Wright, 10.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_977" href="#FNanchor_977" class="label">[977]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 211; Collier, iii. 403.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_978" href="#FNanchor_978" class="label">[978]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_979" href="#FNanchor_979" class="label">[979]</a> Collier, iii. 423.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_980" href="#FNanchor_980" class="label">[980]</a> Henslowe, ii. 302; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 36, 41.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_981" href="#FNanchor_981" class="label">[981]</a> Collier, iii. 322, 325; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_982" href="#FNanchor_982" class="label">[982]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 470.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_983" href="#FNanchor_983" class="label">[983]</a> S. Lee in <i>Nineteenth Century</i> for May 1906,
-quoting a manuscript by Smith in private hands, with the title <i>A
-Brief Discourse of y<sup>e</sup> causes of Discord amongst y<sup>e</sup> Officers of arms
-and of the great abuses and absurdities comitted by painters to the
-great prejudice and hindrance of the same office</i>. Northampton did
-not get his title until 1604.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_984" href="#FNanchor_984" class="label">[984]</a> Collier, iii. 323.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_985" href="#FNanchor_985" class="label">[985]</a> <i>N. U. S.</i> x. 308, 312; cf. ch. xvi (Globe).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_986" href="#FNanchor_986" class="label">[986]</a> Henslowe, i. 72.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_987" href="#FNanchor_987" class="label">[987]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 506; Collier, iii. 363.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_988" href="#FNanchor_988" class="label">[988]</a> Collier, iii. 358; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_989" href="#FNanchor_989" class="label">[989]</a> Henslowe, i. 178; ii. 303.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_990" href="#FNanchor_990" class="label">[990]</a> Cf. s.v. Phillips.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_991" href="#FNanchor_991" class="label">[991]</a> Collier, iii. 488; J. 348; <i>Bodl.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_992" href="#FNanchor_992" class="label">[992]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 514; P. Cunningham in <i>Sh. Soc.
-Papers</i>, ii. 11; Collier, iii. 478.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_993" href="#FNanchor_993" class="label">[993]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 314.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_994" href="#FNanchor_994" class="label">[994]</a> Collier, iii. 482; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_995" href="#FNanchor_995" class="label">[995]</a> Collier, iii. 483.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_996" href="#FNanchor_996" class="label">[996]</a> App. I (ii).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_997" href="#FNanchor_997" class="label">[997]</a> Collier, iii. 481.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_998" href="#FNanchor_998" class="label">[998]</a> Henslowe, i. 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_999" href="#FNanchor_999" class="label">[999]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1000" href="#FNanchor_1000" class="label">[1000]</a> Collier, iii. 381.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1001" href="#FNanchor_1001" class="label">[1001]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 477; Collier, iii. 385.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1002" href="#FNanchor_1002" class="label">[1002]</a> <i>N. U. S.</i> x. 317; <i>O. v. H.</i> 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1003" href="#FNanchor_1003" class="label">[1003]</a> J. O. Halliwell, <i>Tarlton’s Jests ... With ... some
-Account of the Life of Tarlton</i> (1844, <i>Sh. Soc.</i>; the Jests
-are reprinted with a few additions in Hazlitt, <i>Jest-Books</i>, ii.
-189) and <i>Papers respecting Disputes which arose from Incidents at
-the Death-bed of Richard Tarlton, the Actor</i> (1866).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1004" href="#FNanchor_1004" class="label">[1004]</a> Collier, iii. 460; Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1005" href="#FNanchor_1005" class="label">[1005]</a> C. W. Wallace, <i>Globe Theatre Apparel</i> (1909).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1006" href="#FNanchor_1006" class="label">[1006]</a> <i>M. L. Review</i>, iv. 395, from <i>Hist. MSS.</i>
-iv. 299.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1007" href="#FNanchor_1007" class="label">[1007]</a> Downes, 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1008" href="#FNanchor_1008" class="label">[1008]</a> Wright, <i>Hist. Hist.</i> 405.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1009" href="#FNanchor_1009" class="label">[1009]</a> <i>S. P. D.</i> 1637–8, p. 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1010" href="#FNanchor_1010" class="label">[1010]</a> Cunningham, l.; <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 238.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1011" href="#FNanchor_1011" class="label">[1011]</a> Cunningham, l.; Wright, <i>Hist. Hist.</i> 411.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1012" href="#FNanchor_1012" class="label">[1012]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 484, from <i>P. C. C.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1013" href="#FNanchor_1013" class="label">[1013]</a> Collier, iii. 447.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1014" href="#FNanchor_1014" class="label">[1014]</a> Henslowe, i. 152; <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1015" href="#FNanchor_1015" class="label">[1015]</a> Collier, iii. 451.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1016" href="#FNanchor_1016" class="label">[1016]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 214.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1017" href="#FNanchor_1017" class="label">[1017]</a> Collier, iii. 443.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1018" href="#FNanchor_1018" class="label">[1018]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 313.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1019" href="#FNanchor_1019" class="label">[1019]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, i. 383; ii. 184, 190, 380. It
-is, of course, doubtful whether the ‘theatrum nostrae civitatis’ at
-Exeter was permanent.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1020" href="#FNanchor_1020" class="label">[1020]</a> Ordish, 12, attempts to affiliate the ring type of
-baiting-place and theatre to Roman amphitheatres, Cornish ‘rounds’, and
-other circular places used for mediaeval entertainments. But a ring is
-so obviously the form in which the maximum number of spectators can see
-an object of interest, that too much stress must not be laid upon it as
-an evidence of folk ‘tradition’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1021" href="#FNanchor_1021" class="label">[1021]</a> Cf. ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1022" href="#FNanchor_1022" class="label">[1022]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1023" href="#FNanchor_1023" class="label">[1023]</a> G. Fothergill in <i>10 N. Q.</i> vi. 287, from
-<i>Guildhall MS.</i> 1454, roll 70, ‘And wyth 22<sup>s</sup> 2<sup>d</sup> for money by
-them receyved for the hyer of Tryntie Halle for playes, the warmanthe
-[ward-moot] inquest and other assemblyes within the time of this
-accompt’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1024" href="#FNanchor_1024" class="label">[1024]</a> Cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Vennar.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1025" href="#FNanchor_1025" class="label">[1025]</a> Several galleried inns are illustrated in W. Rendle and
-P. Norman, <i>The Inns of Old Southwark</i> (1888), and by Ordish, 119
-(Tabard), Baker, 200 (Four Swans), Adams, 4 (White Hart). Probably,
-however, none of these are pre-Restoration. The only ones still extant
-are the George in Southwark and a much later one in Theobalds Road
-(<i>V. H. Surrey</i>, iv. 128).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1026" href="#FNanchor_1026" class="label">[1026]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 190, 223.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1027" href="#FNanchor_1027" class="label">[1027]</a> Cf. ch. ix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1028" href="#FNanchor_1028" class="label">[1028]</a> Flecknoe tells us <i>c.</i> 1664 (App. I) that the
-actors, ‘about the beginning of Queen Elizabeth’s reign ... set up
-Theaters, first in the City (as in the Inn-yards of the Cross-Keyes,
-and Bull in Grace and Bishops-Gate Street at this day is to be seen)’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1029" href="#FNanchor_1029" class="label">[1029]</a> Cf. App. C, No. xvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1030" href="#FNanchor_1030" class="label">[1030]</a> App. C, Nos. xv, xvii; App. D, No. xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1031" href="#FNanchor_1031" class="label">[1031]</a> Cf. s.v. Hope.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1032" href="#FNanchor_1032" class="label">[1032]</a> K. D. Hassler, <i>Die Reisen des Samuel Kiechel</i>
-(1866) 29, ‘Werden auch täglichen commedien gehalten, sonderlichen
-ist lustig zu zusehen, wann der Königen comedianten agiren, aber
-einem frembden, der düe sprach nicht kan, verdrüslich, das ers nicht
-verstöth; es hat öttliche sonderbare heüser, wölche dozu gemacht sein,
-das ettwann drey genng ob ein ander sein, derowegen stöts ein grosse
-menge volckhs dohin kompt, solcher kurzweil zuzusehen. Es begibt sich
-wol, das süe uf einmal 50 in 60 dalr ufhöben; sonderlichen wann süe was
-neyes agiren, so zuvor nicht gehalten worden, mues mann doppelt gelt
-gebenn, und wehrt solchs vast alle tag durch düe wochen, onangesehen
-es freytag wüe auch samstags zu halten verbotten, würt es doch nicht
-gehalten.’ Cf. Rye, 87. Kiechel appears to have been in London from 12
-Sept. to about 29 Oct. and from 14 to 17 Nov. 1585.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1033" href="#FNanchor_1033" class="label">[1033]</a> Lambarde, <i>Perambulation of Kent</i> (1596), 233. The
-passage is not in the first edition of 1576.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1034" href="#FNanchor_1034" class="label">[1034]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 222; cf. ch. xiii
-(Oxford’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1035" href="#FNanchor_1035" class="label">[1035]</a> P. 2. Malone, in <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 46, refers the
-event to a date soon after 1580; but there is no justification for this
-in the text.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1036" href="#FNanchor_1036" class="label">[1036]</a> Cf. p. 477.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1037" href="#FNanchor_1037" class="label">[1037]</a> Rye, 216, from <i>Itinerarium</i> in Beckmann,
-<i>Accessions Historiae Anhaltinae</i> (1716), 165:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5 hangingindent">‘Hier besieht man vier spielhäuser,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Darinnen man fürstelt die Fürsten, Könge, Keyser,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">In rechter lebens gröss, in schöner kleider pracht,</div>
- <div class="i1 hangingindent">Es wird der thaten auch, wie sie geschehn, gedacht.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1038" href="#FNanchor_1038" class="label">[1038]</a> Text by H. B. Wheatley, <i>On a Contemporary Drawing
-of the Interior of the Swan Theatre, 1596</i> (<i>N. S. S. Trans.
-1887–92</i>, 215), from <i>Utrecht Univ. Library MS. Var.</i> 355, ff.
-131<sup>v</sup>, 132, with facsimile reproduction of drawing. The passage was
-first made known by K. T. Gaedertz, <i>Zur Kenntniss der altenglischen
-Bühne</i> (1888). The reproduction of the drawing published by Gaedertz
-and further reproduced from him in many modern books is not an exact
-facsimile; the only material difference is that the engraver has made
-the figure at the door of the loft rather more obviously a man than
-it is in the original. Letters of the early part of the seventeenth
-century from de Witt to Buchell, who was his fellow-student at Leyden
-in 1583, are also in the Utrecht Library (Gaedertz, 57). The last
-sentence of the passage appears from ‘narrabat’ to be a report by
-Buchell either of something not directly copied by him or of de Witt’s
-conversation; but the rest is pretty clearly from ‘ea quae alio loco
-a me notata sunt’ a verbatim extract from a manuscript of de Witt’s
-own. If so, ‘adpinxi’ further shows that the eye-witness of de Witt and
-not the imagination of Buchell is the source of the drawing. Gaedertz,
-63, indeed suggests that the drawing is an original given by de Witt
-to Buchell, but as Wheatley, 219, points out, this is impossible, as
-the paper is the same as that used in the rest of the volume. There
-remains the question of date. De Witt is traceable at Amsterdam in Nov.
-1594, at Utrecht in the winters of 1595 and 1596, and in 1599, and
-at Amsterdam again in March 1604 (Gaedertz, 58). His visit to London
-obviously falls between Nov. 1594, when the Swan was still only an
-intention, and Dec. 1598, when the Theatre was pulled down. Gaedertz,
-55, puts it in the summer of 1596, largely because Shakespeare, whom
-he thinks de Witt would certainly have mentioned if he had met him,
-may have been in Stratford about that time. This is hopeless. Nor
-does the further suggestion of Gaedertz that a lameness from which
-de Witt was suffering in Dec. 1596 was due to his travels carry much
-conviction. But he is not likely, before that year, to have appended
-the words ‘A<sup>o</sup>. 1596’ to his notice of Sir John Burgh’s tomb. If this
-is intended to be the date, not of his visit, but of the tomb, it is an
-error. Camden, <i>Reges ... in Ecclesia ... West-monasterii sepulti</i>
-(1600), gives the final words of the inscription as ‘G. B. A. M. P.
-anno Dom. 1595’, and although the tomb itself has disappeared since
-1868 and some modern guides date it 1594 or 1598, Camden is confirmed
-by J. C[rull], <i>Antiquities of Westminster</i> (1711), 198. Burgh’s
-death, also given on the monument, was 7 March ‘1594’. On the whole
-1596 is the most probable date for de Witt’s visit. Arend van Buchell
-was himself a traveller, and his <i>Diarium</i> has been edited (1907)
-by G. Brom and L. A. van Langeraad. But he did not visit England.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1039" href="#FNanchor_1039" class="label">[1039]</a> The emendation is due to Wallace (<i>E. S.</i> xliii.
-356). Adams, 168, suggests that ‘cijn’ is Flemish for ‘swan’, but the
-dictionary gives ‘zwaen’, which is perhaps what de Witt wrote.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1040" href="#FNanchor_1040" class="label">[1040]</a> Cf. plan of the manor in Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1041" href="#FNanchor_1041" class="label">[1041]</a> Cf. p. 456.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1042" href="#FNanchor_1042" class="label">[1042]</a> Hentzner, 196.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1043" href="#FNanchor_1043" class="label">[1043]</a> <i>Survey</i> (ed. Kingsford), i. 93. In 1603 the words
-‘as the Theater, the Curtine, &amp;c.’ are omitted from the body of the
-passage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1044" href="#FNanchor_1044" class="label">[1044]</a> <i>Survey</i>, ii. 73. This passage was omitted
-altogether in 1603. The early draft in <i>Harl. MS.</i> 538 (Kingsford,
-ii. 369) runs, ‘Neare adjoyning are builded two houses for the shewe of
-Activities, Comedies, tragedies and histories, for recreation. The one
-of them is named the Curtayn in Holy Well, the other the Theatre.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1045" href="#FNanchor_1045" class="label">[1045]</a> G. Binz in <i>Anglia</i>, xxii. 456 (from Platter’s
-narrative written in 1604–5 of his travels in 1595–1600, now in the
-Basle University Library): ‘Den 21 Septembris nach dem Imbissessen,
-etwan umb zwey vhren, bin ich mitt meiner geselschaft [:v]ber dz wasser
-gefahren, haben in dem streüwinen Dachhaus die Tragedy vom ersten
-Keyser Julio Caesare mitt ohngefahr 15 personen sehen gar artlich
-agieren; zu endt der Comedien dantzeten sie ihrem gebrauch nach gar
-[:v]berausz zierlich, ye zwen in mannes vndt 2 in weiber kleideren
-angethan, wunderbahrlich mitt einanderen.</p>
-
-<p>Auf ein andere Zeitt hab ich nicht weit von unserem wirdtshaus in
-der Vorstadt, meines behaltens an der Bischofsgeet, auch nach essens
-ein Comoedien gesehen, da presentierten sie allerhandt nationen, mit
-welchen yeder zeit ein Engellender vmb ein tochter kempfete, vndt
-vberwandt er sie alle, aussgenommen den teütschen, der gewan die
-tochter mitt kempfen, satzet sich neben sie, trank ihme deszwegen
-mit seinem diener ein starken rausch, also dasz sie beyde beweinet
-wurden, vndt warfe der diener seinem Herren den schu an kopf, vnndt
-entschliefen beyde. Hiezwischen stige der engellender in die Zelten,
-vnndt entfuhret dem teütschen sein gewin, also [:v]berlistet er
-den teütschen auch. Zu endt dantzeten sie auch auf Englisch vnndt
-Irlendisch gar zierlich vnndt werden also alle tag vmb 2 vhren nach
-mittag in der stadt London zwo biszweilen auch drey Comedien an
-vnderscheidenen örteren gehalten, damitt einer den anderen lustig
-mache, dann welche sich am besten verhalten, die haben auch zum meisten
-Zuhörer. Die örter sindt dergestalt erbauwen, dasz sie auf einer
-erhöchten brüge spilen, vnndt yederman alles woll sehen kan. Yedoch
-sindt vnderscheidene gäng vnndt ständt da man lustiger vnndt basz
-sitzet, bezahlet auch deszwegen mehr. Dann welcher vnden gleich stehn
-beleibt, bezahlt nur 1 Englischen pfenning, so er aber sitzen will,
-lasset man ihn noch zu einer thür hinein, da gibt er noch 1<sup>d</sup>, begeret
-er aber am lustigesten ort auf kissen ze sitzen, da er nicht allein
-alles woll sihet, sondern auch gesehen kan werden, so gibt er bey einer
-anderen thüren noch 1 Englischen pfenning. Vnndt tragt man in wehrender
-Comedy zu essen vndt zu trinken vnder den Leüten herumb, mag einer vmb
-sein gelt sich also auch erlaben.</p>
-
-<p>Die Comedienspiler sindt beim allerköstlichsten vnndt zierlichsten
-bekleidet, dann der brauch in Engellandt, dasz wann fürnemme herren
-oder Ritter absterben, sie ihren dieneren vast die schönesten kleider
-verehren vndt vergaben, welche, weil es ihnen nicht gezimpt, solche
-kleider nicht tragen, sondern nachmahlen, den Comoedienspileren vmb ein
-ringen pfenning ze kaufen geben.</p>
-
-<p>Was für zeit sie also in dem Comoedien lustig alle tag können
-zubringen, weisset yeglicher woll, der sie etwan hatt sehen agieren
-oder spilen....</p>
-
-<p>... Midt solchen vndt viel anderen kurtzweilen mehr vertreiben die
-Engellender ihr zeit, erfahren in den Comedien, wasz sich in anderen
-Landen zutraget, vndt gehendt ohne scheüchen, mann vndt weibs personen
-an gemelte ort, weil mehrtheils Engellender nicht pflegen viel ze
-reysen, sondern sich vergnügen zehausz frembde sachen ze erfahren vnndt
-ihre kurtzweil ze nemmen.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1046" href="#FNanchor_1046" class="label">[1046]</a> C. A. Mills in <i>The Times</i> (11 April 1914) from
-the travels of ‘a foreign nobleman, to be published by J. A. F. Orbaan
-from a <i>Vatican MS.</i>’. Mills says that the visit was to the Globe,
-but the passage quoted does not exclude the Rose or Swan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1047" href="#FNanchor_1047" class="label">[1047]</a> G. von Bülow in <i>2 R. Hist. Soc. Trans.</i> (1892),
-vi. 6, 10, from MS. <i>penes</i> Count von der Osten of Plathe,
-Pomerania; cf. Wallace, <i>Blackfriars</i>, 105, who identifies the
-<i>Samson</i> play, rightly, with that of the Admiral’s men at the
-Fortune (cf. p. 180), and that at the Blackfriars, wrongly I think,
-with Chapman’s <i>The Widow’s Tears</i>. He assumes that the theatre
-visited on 13 Sept, was the Globe, but it might have been the Rose.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1048" href="#FNanchor_1048" class="label">[1048]</a> ‘13. Den 13 ward eine comedia agirt, wie
-Stuhl-Weissenburg erstlich von den Türken, hernacher von den Christen
-wiederum erobert....</p>
-
-<p>14. Auf den Nachmittag ward eine tragica comoedia von Samsone und dem
-halben Stamm Benjamin agirt. Als wir zu dem Theatro gingen ...’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1049" href="#FNanchor_1049" class="label">[1049]</a> Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1050" href="#FNanchor_1050" class="label">[1050]</a> Grosart, <i>Dekker</i>, iv. 210 (S. R. July 1608,
-printed 1609). The ‘two houses’ are, of course, those of York and
-Lancaster. Note the final puns.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1051" href="#FNanchor_1051" class="label">[1051]</a> Cf. ch. x. Fynes Moryson says in his <i>Itinerary</i>,
-iii. 2. 2 (<i>c.</i> 1605–17), ‘The Theaters at London in England for
-Stage-plaies are more remarkeable for the number, and for the capacity,
-than for the building,’ and in the continuation (<i>c.</i> 1609–26, C.
-Hughes, <i>Shakespeare’s Europe</i>, 476), ‘The Citty of London alone
-hath foure or fiue Companyes of players with their peculiar Theaters
-capable of many thousands, wherein they all play euery day in the weeke
-but Sunday.... As there be, in my opinion, more Playes in London than
-in all the partes of the worlde I haue seene, so doe these players or
-Comedians excell all other in the worlde.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1052" href="#FNanchor_1052" class="label">[1052]</a> <i>Epigram 39.</i> Both Curtain and Swan are named by
-W. Turner in <i>Turners Dish of Stuffe, or a Gallimaufry</i> (1662),
-but this cannot be dated; cf. ch. xv (Shank):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>That’s the fat fool of the Curtain,</div>
- <div class="i1">And the lean fool of the Bull:</div>
- <div>Since Shancke did leave to sing his rhimes,</div>
- <div class="i1">He is counted but a gull:</div>
- <div>The players on the Bankside,</div>
- <div class="i1">The round Globe and the Swan,</div>
- <div>Will teach you idle tricks of love,</div>
- <div class="i1">But the Bull will play the man.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1053" href="#FNanchor_1053" class="label">[1053]</a> Jodocus Sincerus, <i>Itineris Anglici brevissima
-delineatio</i> in <i>Itinerarium Galliae</i> (1617), 370; cf. Rye, 131,
-who gives the first edition as 1616.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1054" href="#FNanchor_1054" class="label">[1054]</a> K. Feyerabend in <i>E. S.</i> xiv. 440, from manuscript
-in Cassel Library (cf. Rye, 143), ‘Zu Londen sind 7 theatra, da
-tägliche, die sonntäge ausgenommen, comoedien gehalten werden, unter
-welchen die vornehmste der glbs [<i>sic</i>, for <i>globus</i>], so
-über dem wasser liegt. Das theatrum, da die kinder spielen, ist auf
-diesseit des wassers, spielen um 3 uhr, aber nur von michaelis bis
-auf ostern; hier kostet der eingang einen halben schilling nur, da
-an andern orten wohl eine halbe kron. Diese [nämlich der Globus,
-<i>Ed.</i>, but surely in error] spielen nur bei lichtern und is die
-beste Cumpani in London.’ The baiting is also mentioned; cf. p. 457.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1055" href="#FNanchor_1055" class="label">[1055]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 72, 79.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1056" href="#FNanchor_1056" class="label">[1056]</a> Taylor, <i>The True Cause of the Watermen’s Suit
-concerning Players,</i> <i>and the reasons that their Playing on London
-side is their extreame hindrances. With a Relation how farre that suit
-was proceeded in, and the occasions that it was not effected</i>,
-reprinted by Hindley, ii, No. 15, from Taylor’s <i>Works</i> (1630),
-probably originally printed in 1614.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1057" href="#FNanchor_1057" class="label">[1057]</a> It cites Caesar’s promotion and describes the agitation
-by the watermen as taking place in ‘January last, 1613’, i. e. 161¾.
-Probably it was written in the winter of 1614, and touched up before
-1630, since it refers to Bacon and Somerset as ‘then’ Attorney-General
-and Lord Chamberlain respectively. Bacon’s term of office was from 27
-Oct. 1613 to 7 March 1617, Somerset’s from 10 July 1614 to 2 Nov. 1615.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1058" href="#FNanchor_1058" class="label">[1058]</a> There is, I suppose, no reason why Randolph’s <i>Muses
-Looking Glass</i>, 1. i. 55, should not have been written before
-Salisbury Court was built. Herein a ‘brother’ is said to pray&mdash;</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i8h">That the Globe,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Wherein (quoth he) reigns a whole world of vice,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Had been consum’d: the Phoenix burnt to ashes:</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The Fortune whipp’d for a blind whore: Blackfriars,</div>
- <div>He wonders how it ’scaped demolishing</div>
- <div>I’ th’ time of reformation: lastly, he wish’d</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">The Bull might cross the Thames to the Bear Garden,</div>
- <div>And there be soundly baited.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1059" href="#FNanchor_1059" class="label">[1059]</a> Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (1631), 1004. In the extract in
-Harrison, ii. 49*, the period covered is given in error as 1553–1613.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1060" href="#FNanchor_1060" class="label">[1060]</a> Cf. App. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1061" href="#FNanchor_1061" class="label">[1061]</a> S. A. Strong, <i>Catalogue of Letters at Welbeck</i>,
-226.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1062" href="#FNanchor_1062" class="label">[1062]</a> Harrison, iv. 212, from <i>Phillipps MS.</i> 11613, f.
-16, <i>penes</i> J. F. P. Fenwick, of Thirlestane House, Cheltenham,
-written about 1656–8. The writer is not quite accurate in some of his
-earlier dates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1063" href="#FNanchor_1063" class="label">[1063]</a> Ward, iii. 280; Lawrence, ii. 138.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1064" href="#FNanchor_1064" class="label">[1064]</a> Baker, 135, gives an enlarged reproduction under the
-name of the Theatre; but that is an obvious mistake.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1065" href="#FNanchor_1065" class="label">[1065]</a> Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1066" href="#FNanchor_1066" class="label">[1066]</a> [Nicholas Goodman?] <i>Hollands Leaguer or an
-historical Discourse of the Life and Actions of Dona Britanica
-Hollandia the Arch-Mistris of the wicked women of Evtopia</i> (1632),
-sig. F 2; cf. C. W. Wallace in <i>Engl. Stud.</i> xliii. 392.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1067" href="#FNanchor_1067" class="label">[1067]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ii. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1068" href="#FNanchor_1068" class="label">[1068]</a> I cannot agree with Dr. Martin (<i>Surrey Arch.
-Colls.</i> xxiii. 186), who sees, both in the Delaram and the ‘Hondius’
-engravings, an east to west highway running north of the cylindrical
-building, which he takes for Maid Lane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1069" href="#FNanchor_1069" class="label">[1069]</a> The somewhat wanton suggestion of Dr. Martin (loc. cit.
-188) that the engraver mistook the Rose for the Globe is sufficiently
-refuted by the fact that the Rose was extinct or at least long disused.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1070" href="#FNanchor_1070" class="label">[1070]</a> I do not know on what ground Adams, 458, says that
-Visscher’s view was drawn several years before it was printed, ‘and
-represents the city as it was in or before 1613’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1071" href="#FNanchor_1071" class="label">[1071]</a> Martin, loc. cit. 192, again suggests that the houses
-are misnamed. He thinks that the Rose has been called the Globe in
-error and the Globe the Bear Garden, and that the unnamed house is
-the Globe. I cannot follow him in thinking that Merian represents the
-western house of the group as south of Maid Lane; all three are clearly
-to the north.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1072" href="#FNanchor_1072" class="label">[1072]</a> Adams, 458, thinks that Merian worked upon Visscher,
-‘with additions from some other earlier view not yet identified’. If
-so, this might perhaps go back to 1605.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1073" href="#FNanchor_1073" class="label">[1073]</a> Cf. p. 463.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1074" href="#FNanchor_1074" class="label">[1074]</a> Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xxx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1075" href="#FNanchor_1075" class="label">[1075]</a> Cf. p. 433.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1076" href="#FNanchor_1076" class="label">[1076]</a> B. Marsh, <i>Records of the Worshipful Company of
-Carpenters</i>, iii. 95. I have to thank Mr. Marsh for this reference.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1077" href="#FNanchor_1077" class="label">[1077]</a> <i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530, f. 11 <i>et passim</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1078" href="#FNanchor_1078" class="label">[1078]</a> App. C, No. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1079" href="#FNanchor_1079" class="label">[1079]</a> Gosson, <i>Schoole of Abuse</i>, 40. The date renders
-very hazardous the identifications of <i>Ptolemy</i> with the
-<i>Telomo</i> shown at Court by Leicester’s men on 10 Feb. 1583, and of
-<i>The Jew</i> with R. W.’s <i>Three Ladies of London</i> (1584), which
-leads Fleay, 36, 40, to infer that Leicester’s men played at the Bull
-from 1560 to 1576.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1080" href="#FNanchor_1080" class="label">[1080]</a> App. D, Nos. lx-lxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1081" href="#FNanchor_1081" class="label">[1081]</a> Tarlton, 13, 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1082" href="#FNanchor_1082" class="label">[1082]</a> Birch, <i>Elizabeth</i>, i. 173, from <i>Lambeth
-MS.</i>; Spedding, viii. 314.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1083" href="#FNanchor_1083" class="label">[1083]</a> Cf. App. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1084" href="#FNanchor_1084" class="label">[1084]</a> Machyn, 238.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1085" href="#FNanchor_1085" class="label">[1085]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 277. The play may have only
-been rehearsed, so that the identification of it by Fleay, 36, with
-<i>The Irish Knight</i> shown at Court by Warwick’s men on 18 Feb. 1577
-is untenable, and with it vanishes all ground for the assignment of the
-inn by Fleay, 40, to Rich’s men in 1568–70, Lane’s in 1571–3, Warwick’s
-in 1575–80, and Hunsdon’s in 1582–3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1086" href="#FNanchor_1086" class="label">[1086]</a> Tarlton, 24.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1087" href="#FNanchor_1087" class="label">[1087]</a> Harben, 65.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1088" href="#FNanchor_1088" class="label">[1088]</a> Tarlton, 21. Apparently the Queen of Sheba, and not
-Pocahontas, was the original <i>Belle Sauvage</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1089" href="#FNanchor_1089" class="label">[1089]</a> App. C, No. xiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1090" href="#FNanchor_1090" class="label">[1090]</a> App. C, No. xxii. The description reads like a
-compliment to Lyly, but does not justify the inference of Fleay, 39,
-that the Chapel boys played at the Bel Savage from 1559 to 1582.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1091" href="#FNanchor_1091" class="label">[1091]</a> Arber, ii. 526.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1092" href="#FNanchor_1092" class="label">[1092]</a> <i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530, ff. 7, 10, 11, 14; cf. the
-quotation from G. Silver, <i>Paradoxe of Defence</i> (1599), in Adams,
-13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1093" href="#FNanchor_1093" class="label">[1093]</a> Wallace, <i>N. U. S.</i> xiii. 82, 89.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1094" href="#FNanchor_1094" class="label">[1094]</a> Tarlton, 23.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1095" href="#FNanchor_1095" class="label">[1095]</a> App. D, No. ci. Fleay, 89, has no other material than
-these notices and an unjustifiable assumption of identity between the
-two companies for assigning the house to Leicester’s (1586–8) and
-Strange’s (1589–91).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1096" href="#FNanchor_1096" class="label">[1096]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317; cf. p. 425.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1097" href="#FNanchor_1097" class="label">[1097]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i> (ed. Kingsford, ii. 262, 369),
-ends his account of Holywell in the 1598 edition, ‘And neare therevnto
-are builded two publique houses for the acting and shewe of Comedies,
-Tragedies, and Histories, for recreation. Whereof the one is called the
-Courtein, the other the Theatre: both standing on the South-west side
-towards the field’. This is omitted from the 1603 edition, probably
-not so much, as has been suggested, because Stowe shared the Puritan
-dislike of the stage, as because in 1603 the Theatre was gone and the
-Curtain little used. Stowe’s draft (<i>c.</i> 1598) in <i>Harl. MS.</i>
-538 runs, ‘Neare adjoyning are builded two houses for the shewe of
-Activities, Comedies, tragedies and histories, for recreation. The one
-of them is named the Curtayn in Holy Well, the other the Theatre.’ No
-contemporary map shows the Theatre, although that of Agas (<i>c.</i>
-1561) gives a good idea of the Halliwell district before it was built.
-The representation from the seventeenth-century ‘Ryther’ map, given as
-the Theatre by Baker, 135, is presumably the Curtain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1098" href="#FNanchor_1098" class="label">[1098]</a> Braines (1915), 4; Stopes, 185.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1099" href="#FNanchor_1099" class="label">[1099]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 345; Braines (1915), 5, 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1100" href="#FNanchor_1100" class="label">[1100]</a> Latin translations of parts of the lease are recited in
-pleadings of 1600 and 1602 (Wallace, 166, 268), and the description of
-parcels agrees with that in the draft lease of 1585, similarly recited
-in 1600 (Wallace, 169); cf. Braines (1915), 8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1101" href="#FNanchor_1101" class="label">[1101]</a> The position of the well in Chassereau’s <i>Survey of
-Shoreditch</i> (1745) seems to me to bear out this identification,
-although, as Braines (1915), 4, points out, we do not know Chassereau’s
-authority. Under Burbadge’s lease all Giles Allen’s tenants in Holywell
-were to have access to the well. Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, i. 15, describes
-the holy well as ‘much decayed and marred with filthinesse purposely
-laide there, for the heighthening of the ground for garden plots’. It
-is clearly distinct from Dame Agnes a Cleere’s well, which was outside
-Holywell, towards the north (Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, i. 16; ii. 273;
-Stopes, 192).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1102" href="#FNanchor_1102" class="label">[1102]</a> <i>Tarlton’s News out of Purgatory</i> (S. R. 26 June
-1590), in <i>Tarlton</i>, 54, 105, ‘I would needs to the Theatre to a
-play, where when I came, I founde such concourse of unrulye people,
-that I thought it better solitary to walk in the fields, then to
-intermeddle myselfe amongst such a great presse. Feeding mine humour
-with this fancie, I stept by dame Anne of Cleeres well, and went by the
-backside of Hogsdon, where, finding the sun to be hotte, and seeing a
-faire tree that had a coole shade, I sat me downe to take the aire,
-where after I had rested me a while, I fell asleepe.... And with that I
-waked, and saw such concourse of people through the fields that I knew
-the play was doon.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1103" href="#FNanchor_1103" class="label">[1103]</a> Braines (1915), 27. Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 351, put
-the site on the present Deane’s Mews, but this is too far south, and
-does not allow for the interposition of Rutland’s holding between
-Holywell Lane and Allen’s. The shoring up of the barn to the Theatre is
-testified to in Wallace, 227, 231, 243. The exact site therefore cannot
-have been far east of the Curtain Road, which apparently occupies the
-strip of void land held by Burbadge between the old priory wall and the
-ditch bordering Finsbury fields.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1104" href="#FNanchor_1104" class="label">[1104]</a> Wallace, 134, 141, 153.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1105" href="#FNanchor_1105" class="label">[1105]</a> Ibid. 39.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1106" href="#FNanchor_1106" class="label">[1106]</a> Ibid. 139.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1107" href="#FNanchor_1107" class="label">[1107]</a> Wallace, 142 (Miles), 152 (Nicoll).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1108" href="#FNanchor_1108" class="label">[1108]</a> App. D, No. xxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1109" href="#FNanchor_1109" class="label">[1109]</a> Wallace, 135.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1110" href="#FNanchor_1110" class="label">[1110]</a> Ibid. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1111" href="#FNanchor_1111" class="label">[1111]</a> Ibid. 151 (Nicoll).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1112" href="#FNanchor_1112" class="label">[1112]</a> Ibid. 152 (Nicoll).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1113" href="#FNanchor_1113" class="label">[1113]</a> Wallace, 73 (Bett), 102, 119 (Ralph Miles), 137
-(Collins), 143 (Robert Miles), 152 (Nicoll), 157.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1114" href="#FNanchor_1114" class="label">[1114]</a> Ibid. 53, 107, 111 (Hyde), 73 (Bett), 143 (Robert
-Miles), 103, 120 (Ralph Miles). Brayne’s will was proved 10 Aug. 1586
-(Wallace, 14).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1115" href="#FNanchor_1115" class="label">[1115]</a> Ibid. 104 (Ralph Miles), 146 (Robert Miles).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1116" href="#FNanchor_1116" class="label">[1116]</a> Ibid. 16, 55, 108 (Hyde), 73 (Bett), 145 (Miles).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1117" href="#FNanchor_1117" class="label">[1117]</a> Ibid. 46.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1118" href="#FNanchor_1118" class="label">[1118]</a> Wallace, 86 (Bett), 115 (Bishop), 122 (Ralph Miles).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1119" href="#FNanchor_1119" class="label">[1119]</a> Ibid. 109 (Hyde), 134 (Griggs), 137 (Collins), 106
-(Ralph Miles), 139, 148 (Robert Miles).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1120" href="#FNanchor_1120" class="label">[1120]</a> Ibid. 83 (Bett), 88 (Gascoigne), 90 (James).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1121" href="#FNanchor_1121" class="label">[1121]</a> Ibid. 87 (Bett).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1122" href="#FNanchor_1122" class="label">[1122]</a> Griggs (Wallace, 134) puts Brayne’s expenditure at
-1,000 marks and Burbadge’s at under £100; Collins (Wallace, 137) agrees
-as to Brayne’s and puts Burbadge’s at about £50; Miles (ibid. 141) says
-Brayne spent £600 or £700 in cash or credit and Burbadge about £50 in
-cash and material; Lanman (ibid. 148) had heard that the building cost
-1,000 marks; Giles Allen (ibid. 164) valued it at £700 in 1599.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1123" href="#FNanchor_1123" class="label">[1123]</a> Robert Miles put Burbadge’s total profits from
-tenements and play-house in eight or nine years before 1592 at 2,000
-marks, but in 1600 he only put the aggregate profits of James and
-Cuthbert from the play-house by itself at 1,000 marks (Wallace, 147,
-263). Giles Allen (ibid. 198) put them at £2,000. Ralph Miles in
-1592 had heard that Burbadge had received £700 or £800 in rents and
-profits since Brayne’s death in 1586 (ibid. 106). John Alleyn, a more
-disinterested witness, confirms this estimate, putting the figure at
-£100 or 200 marks a year for the five years before 1592 (ibid. 102).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1124" href="#FNanchor_1124" class="label">[1124]</a> Wallace, 76 (Ellam), 77 (Hudson).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1125" href="#FNanchor_1125" class="label">[1125]</a> Ibid. 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1126" href="#FNanchor_1126" class="label">[1126]</a> Wallace, 59 (C. Burbadge), 62 (J. Burbadge), 97, 114
-(Bishop), 100, 126 (Alleyn), 105, 121 (Ralph Miles).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1127" href="#FNanchor_1127" class="label">[1127]</a> Ibid. 49, 66.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1128" href="#FNanchor_1128" class="label">[1128]</a> Ibid. 101, 127 (Alleyn). The two depositions are not
-quite consistent as to dates. From that of 6 Feb. 1592, one would infer
-that the dispute between Burbadge and the Admiral’s was at the time of
-the contempt of 16 Nov. 1590. The second, of 6 May 1592, apparently
-corrects the first, by giving the date of the insult to the Lord
-Admiral as ‘about a yere past’. The point is of importance, as bearing
-upon the length of the stay of the Admiral’s and Strange’s (cf. ch.
-xiii) at the Theatre. No doubt Mrs. Brayne, who came ‘dyvers tymes’ to
-the Theatre, continued her applications after laying her affidavit of
-contempt.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1129" href="#FNanchor_1129" class="label">[1129]</a> Wallace, 153.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1130" href="#FNanchor_1130" class="label">[1130]</a> Wallace, 156.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1131" href="#FNanchor_1131" class="label">[1131]</a> Ibid. 161, 263. Miles still held Burbadge’s bonds in
-1600.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1132" href="#FNanchor_1132" class="label">[1132]</a> Ibid. 137, ‘iron worke which the said Braynes bestowed
-vppon the same Theater’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1133" href="#FNanchor_1133" class="label">[1133]</a> Cf. ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1134" href="#FNanchor_1134" class="label">[1134]</a> Wallace, 62 (Burbadge), 88 (Bett), 125 (Alleyn), 149
-(Lanman).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1135" href="#FNanchor_1135" class="label">[1135]</a> Cf. pp. 358, 362. This evidence outweighs the rather
-slight grounds on which T. S. Graves, <i>The Shape of the First London
-Theatre</i> (<i>South Atlantic Quarterly</i>, xiii. 280), conjectures
-that it may have been rectangular.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1136" href="#FNanchor_1136" class="label">[1136]</a> G. Harvey, <i>Letter Book</i>, 67, suggests in 1579
-that he may be asked by Leicester’s, Warwick’s, Vaux’s or Rich’s men,
-or ‘sum other freshe starteup comedanties’ for ‘sum malt conceivid
-comedye fitt for the Theater, or sum other paintid stage’ (cf. p. 4).
-It is a pity he was not more precise.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1137" href="#FNanchor_1137" class="label">[1137]</a> Cf. App. C, Nos. xxii, xxx. Fleay, 40, 88, 145,
-identifies <i>The Play of Plays</i> in which Delight was a character
-with the <i>Delight</i> shown at Court by Leicester’s on 26 Dec. 1580,
-and <i>Caesar and Pompey</i>, which Gosson does not quite clearly
-assign to the Theatre at all, with the <i>Pompey</i> shown by Paul’s
-on 6 Jan. 1581; and conjectures successive occupations by Leicester’s
-(1576–83), Paul’s (1582), Queen’s and Hunsdon’s (1584), Queen’s and
-Oxford’s (1585), Queen’s (1586–93), Chamberlain’s (1594–7). He was
-unlucky in omitting the Admiral’s from his guesses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1138" href="#FNanchor_1138" class="label">[1138]</a> Cf. App. D, Nos. xliii, xliv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1139" href="#FNanchor_1139" class="label">[1139]</a> Wallace, 201 (Cuthbert Burbadge), 239 (Smith), 240
-(May), 242 (Tilt).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1140" href="#FNanchor_1140" class="label">[1140]</a> Ibid. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1141" href="#FNanchor_1141" class="label">[1141]</a> Cf. App. D, No. lxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1142" href="#FNanchor_1142" class="label">[1142]</a> Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i> (<i>Works</i>, i. 197).
-Harington, <i>Metamorphosis of Ajax</i> (1596), speaks of a vulgar word
-‘admitted into the Theater with great applause by the mouth of Mayster
-Tarlton, the excellent comedian’. It was near the Theatre that the
-writer of <i>Tarltons Newes of Purgatorie</i> (Tarlton, 54) had his
-dream of the dead actor.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1143" href="#FNanchor_1143" class="label">[1143]</a> Cf. App. C, No. xl.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1144" href="#FNanchor_1144" class="label">[1144]</a> Lodge, <i>Wits Miserie</i> (1596), ‘pale as the visard
-of the ghost which cried so miserably at the Theator, like an oister
-wife, Hamlet, revenge’. In T. M., <i>Black Book</i> (1604), is a
-mention of ‘one of my divells in D<sup>r</sup> Faustus, when the olde Theatre
-crackt and frighted the audience’. This was presumably before 1592, as
-<i>Dr. Faustus</i> seems to have been continuously in Henslowe’s hands
-from the beginning of that year. Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 363, quotes an
-allusion of Barnaby Rich in 1606 (<i>Faultes Faults, and Nothing Else
-but Faultes</i>, 7) to ‘Gravets part at the Theatre’, but this must not
-be pressed as a reference to the long-destroyed house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1145" href="#FNanchor_1145" class="label">[1145]</a> <i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530, ff. 6, 11, 12, 46; cf. App. D,
-Nos. lxii, lxviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1146" href="#FNanchor_1146" class="label">[1146]</a> Cf. ch. xi, p. 371.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1147" href="#FNanchor_1147" class="label">[1147]</a> T. W., <i>Sermon at Paul’s Cross</i> (3 Nov. 1577),
-‘Beholde the sumptuous Theatre houses’; Northbrooke (S. R. 2 Dec.
-1577), 85, ‘places ... builded for such Playes and Enterludes, as the
-Theatre and Curtaine is’; Stockwood, <i>Sermon at Paul’s Cross</i> (24
-Aug. 1578), ‘the Theatre, the Curtayne, and other places of Playes
-in the Citie ... the gorgeous Playing place erected in the fieldes
-... as they please to have it called, a Theatre’; <i>News from the
-North</i> (1579), ‘the Theaters, Curtines ... and such places where the
-time is so shamefully mispent’; T. Twyne, <i>Physic for Fortune</i>
-(1579), i. xxx, 42, ‘the Curteine or Theater; which two places are
-well knowen to be enimies to good manners: for looke who goeth
-thyther evyl, returneth worse’; Stubbes (S. R. 1 March 1583), i. 144,
-‘flockyng and runnyng to Theaters and Curtens ... Venus pallaces’;
-Field (1583), ‘the distruction bothe of bodye and soule that many are
-brought unto by frequenting the Theater, the Curtin and such like’;
-Rankins (1587), f. 4, ‘the Theater and Curtine may aptlie be termed
-for their abhomination, the chappell <i>adulterinum</i>’; Harrison,
-<i>Chronologie</i> (1588), i. liv, ‘It is an evident token of a wicked
-time when plaiers wexe so riche that they can build suche houses’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1148" href="#FNanchor_1148" class="label">[1148]</a> App. D, Nos. XXXV, lxxiv. It appears to have been
-thought a good example to frequenters of the Theatre that the
-locality should occasionally be used for a public execution. Stowe,
-<i>Annales</i> (1615), 749, 750, records the hanging of W. Gunter, a
-priest from beyond the seas, ‘at the Theater’ on 28 Aug. 1588, and of
-W. Hartley, another priest, ‘nigh the Theator,’ on 1 Oct. 1588; cf.
-Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 351, from <i>True Report of the Inditement of
-Weldon, Hartley, and Sutton, who Suffred for High Treason</i> (1588).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1149" href="#FNanchor_1149" class="label">[1149]</a> Sir A. Ashley to Sir R. Cecil (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i>
-vii. 504).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1150" href="#FNanchor_1150" class="label">[1150]</a> Cf. ch. ix. In addition to the occasions described
-above, the Theatre and Curtain are particularly referred to in the
-City’s complaint to Walsingham on 3 May 1583, and in the Council’s
-inhibitions of 29 Oct. 1587, where the ‘Liberty’ of Holywell is clearly
-pointed at in the allusion to ‘places priviledged’, and 23 June 1592
-(App. D, Nos. lxix, lxxx, xc).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1151" href="#FNanchor_1151" class="label">[1151]</a> App. D, No. xlii. The County records also contain
-entries of a recognisance by ‘James Burbage of Shorditch gent.’, Henry
-Bett, and [Cuthbert] Burbage in the Strond, yeoman’, on 6 April 1592,
-for the former’s appearance at the next Middlesex sessions, and a
-similar recognisance of ‘James Burbage of Hallywell, yeoman’, on 11
-Sept. 1593 (Jeaffreson, i. 205, 217); but there is nothing to show the
-nature of the proceedings.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1152" href="#FNanchor_1152" class="label">[1152]</a> Cf. App. C, No. xxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1153" href="#FNanchor_1153" class="label">[1153]</a> App. D, No. cx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1154" href="#FNanchor_1154" class="label">[1154]</a> E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i>, sat. v:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i7h">‘but see yonder,</div>
- <div>One, like the unfrequented Theater,</div>
- <div>Walkes in darke silence and vast solitude’.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1155" href="#FNanchor_1155" class="label">[1155]</a> Wallace, 169, 183, 191, 214, 218.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1156" href="#FNanchor_1156" class="label">[1156]</a> Ibid. 72, 76, 226.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1157" href="#FNanchor_1157" class="label">[1157]</a> Ibid. 232, 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1158" href="#FNanchor_1158" class="label">[1158]</a> Wallace, 195, 203, 212, 216, 220, 238. Robert
-Miles took occasion of the negotiations to renew his old claim by
-petitioning in the Court of Requests for an interest in the new
-lease. The proceedings, so far as preserved, are inconclusive (ibid.
-158). Meanwhile Cuthbert Burbadge was co-operating with Giles Allen
-in defending a claim made by the Earl of Rutland to the ‘debateable’
-ground, and remained a party to the consequent litigation in 1602, long
-after the Theatre had disappeared (Stopes, 184).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1159" href="#FNanchor_1159" class="label">[1159]</a> Wallace, 184, 196, 204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1160" href="#FNanchor_1160" class="label">[1160]</a> Ibid. 221.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1161" href="#FNanchor_1161" class="label">[1161]</a> Ibid. 164, 179, 197, 217, 222, 238, 278. The dates are
-not quite certain; possibly the 20 Jan. of <i>Allen v. Street</i> was
-an error. Allen’s Answer in the Court of Requests places the whole
-transaction ‘aboute the feast of the Natiuitie’, and this in his Star
-Chamber suit becomes ‘aboute the eight and twentyth day of December’,
-without any suggestion that more than one day was occupied.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1162" href="#FNanchor_1162" class="label">[1162]</a> Ibid. 163.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1163" href="#FNanchor_1163" class="label">[1163]</a> Ibid. 181.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1164" href="#FNanchor_1164" class="label">[1164]</a> Wallace, 186, 215, 220.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1165" href="#FNanchor_1165" class="label">[1165]</a> Ibid. 285.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1166" href="#FNanchor_1166" class="label">[1166]</a> Ibid. 267, 275.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1167" href="#FNanchor_1167" class="label">[1167]</a> Aubrey, ii. 12, on the authority of J. Greenhill, says
-that Ben Jonson ‘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 on that of Sir Edward
-Shirburn that Jonson killed Marlowe, ‘on Bunhill, comeing from the
-Green-Curtain play-house’. Hoxton, where Jonson killed Gabriel Spencer,
-is of course not far from Bunhill, and both are in the Holywell
-neighbourhood. Probably Aubrey, in giving a name to the theatre, is
-babbling of green frieze, rather than green fields. Steevens and Malone
-(<i>Variorum</i>, iii. 54) committed themselves to the view that ‘the
-original sign hung out at this play-house was the painting of a curtain
-striped’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1168" href="#FNanchor_1168" class="label">[1168]</a> Thomas Wilkins was perhaps related to George Wilkins
-the dramatist, who was buried at Shoreditch 9 Aug. 1613. Sir William
-Allen is not known to have had anything to do either with Edward
-Alleyn or with Giles Allen, the ground-landlord of the Theatre. Lanman
-was 54 on 30 July 1592. We cannot assume that the name is merely an
-orthographic variant of that of Laneham.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1169" href="#FNanchor_1169" class="label">[1169]</a> Reproduced in Ordish, 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1170" href="#FNanchor_1170" class="label">[1170]</a> Reproduced in Baker, 36, 135, with a photographic
-enlargement of the building, wrongly identified with the
-<i>Theatre</i>. It is shown as a round or hexagonal structure, with a
-large flag, standing in the middle of a square paled plot; but too much
-stress must not be laid on what is probably only a cartographic symbol.
-Immediately south of it is Bedlam. Kiechel tells us that the house had
-three galleries, and de Witt that it was an ‘amphitheatrum’ (cf. pp.
-358, 362). In the epilogue to <i>Three English Brothers</i> (1607) it
-is a ‘round circumference’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1171" href="#FNanchor_1171" class="label">[1171]</a> Cf. p. 393.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1172" href="#FNanchor_1172" class="label">[1172]</a> Fleay, 40, 88, 145, 201, 300, assigns it as follows:
-Sussex’s (1576–83), Arundel’s and Oxford’s (1584), Howard’s
-and Hunsdon’s (1585), Oxford’s (1586–8), Pembroke’s (1589–97),
-Chamberlain’s (1597–9), Derby’s (1599–1600), uncertain company (1601),
-Queen Anne’s (1604–9), Duke of York’s (1610–23). But, of course, this
-<i>is</i> guessing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1173" href="#FNanchor_1173" class="label">[1173]</a> Tarlton, 16. If <i>Tarlton’s Jig of a Horse Load of
-Fools</i>, taken from a manuscript of Collier’s (Tarlton, xx), is
-genuine, that also was given at the Curtain.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1174" href="#FNanchor_1174" class="label">[1174]</a> <i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530, ff. 4, 12, 43, 44, 46.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1175" href="#FNanchor_1175" class="label">[1175]</a> Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i> (S. R. 8 Sept. 1598), Sat.
-v:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10">if my dispose</div>
- <div>Perswade me to a play, I’le to the Rose,</div>
- <div>Or Curtaine, one of Plautus comedies,</div>
- <div>Or the patheticke Spaniards tragedies;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>and in the <i>Preludium</i>, of a ‘Cittizen ... comming from the
-Curtaine’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1176" href="#FNanchor_1176" class="label">[1176]</a> <i>Scourge of Villainy</i> (1598), xi. 37
-(<i>Works</i>, iii. 372):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">Luscus, what’s play’d to-day? Faith now I know</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">I set thy lips abroach, from whence doth flow</div>
- <div>Naught but pure Juliet and Romeo.</div>
- <div>Say who acts best? Drusus or Roscio?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Now I have him, that ne’er of ought did speak</div>
- <div>But when of plays or players he did treat&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Hath made a commonplace book out of plays,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And speaks in print: at least what e’er he says</div>
- <div>Is warranted by Curtain plaudities.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1177" href="#FNanchor_1177" class="label">[1177]</a> Cf. p. 365.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1178" href="#FNanchor_1178" class="label">[1178]</a> Jeaffreson, i. 259.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1179" href="#FNanchor_1179" class="label">[1179]</a> Heath, Epigram 39; Wither, <i>Abuses</i>, i. 1; ii. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1180" href="#FNanchor_1180" class="label">[1180]</a> Cf. App. C, No. lix.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1181" href="#FNanchor_1181" class="label">[1181]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 54, 59; Ordish, 106, from <i>Vox
-Graculi</i> (1623) and Jeaffreson, iii. 164.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1182" href="#FNanchor_1182" class="label">[1182]</a> A writer in the <i>Daily News</i> for 9 April 1898
-identifies the site of the theatre, without giving any evidence, as
-‘between Clock Passage, Newington Butts, Swan Place, and Hampton
-Street’; cf. <i>9 N. Q.</i> i. 386.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1183" href="#FNanchor_1183" class="label">[1183]</a> App. D, Nos. xlvi, lxxvi, xcii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1184" href="#FNanchor_1184" class="label">[1184]</a> Cf. p. 373.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1185" href="#FNanchor_1185" class="label">[1185]</a> C. W. Wallace in <i>N. U. S.</i> xiii. 2, ‘as shown by
-a contemporary record to be published later’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1186" href="#FNanchor_1186" class="label">[1186]</a> <i>A Woman is a Weathercock</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1187" href="#FNanchor_1187" class="label">[1187]</a> Rendle, <i>Antiquarian</i>, viii. 60, ‘Among the early
-Surveys, 1 Edward VI, we see that this was not merely a name&mdash;the place
-was a veritable Rose Garden, and paid £1 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> by the
-year, and the messuage called the Rose paid £4’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1188" href="#FNanchor_1188" class="label">[1188]</a> <i>Close Roll 6 Edw. VI</i>, p. 5, m. 13; cf. Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i>, xv; <i>H. P.</i> 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1189" href="#FNanchor_1189" class="label">[1189]</a> <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 13, quoted in Henslowe, ii.
-25. But in ii. 43 Dr. Greg misdescribes the Rose as on the west of the
-Barge, Bell, and Cock.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1190" href="#FNanchor_1190" class="label">[1190]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1191" href="#FNanchor_1191" class="label">[1191]</a> Ibid. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1192" href="#FNanchor_1192" class="label">[1192]</a> Henslowe, i. 209.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1193" href="#FNanchor_1193" class="label">[1193]</a> Cf. Dekker, <i>Satiromastix</i>, 1247, ‘th’ast a breath
-as sweet as the Rose, that growes by the Beare-garden’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1194" href="#FNanchor_1194" class="label">[1194]</a> G. L. Gomme, <i>The Story of London Maps</i>
-(<i>Geographical Journal</i>, xxxi. 628), ‘1588. Henchley.&mdash;Item, we
-present Phillip Henchley to pull upp all the pylles that stand in
-the common sewer against the play-house to the stopping of the water
-course, the which to be done by midsomer next uppon paine of x<sup>s</sup> yf
-it be undone. x<sup>s</sup> (done)’. Wallace, in <i>The Times</i> (1914), says
-that these records mention the theatre as ‘new’ in April 1588, and show
-other amercements during the next eighteen years.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1195" href="#FNanchor_1195" class="label">[1195]</a> Dr. Greg, in Henslowe, ii. 46, is, I think, successful
-in showing that all the dated building entries belong to 1592 and
-not to 1591 or 1593. I suppose the scattered entries with the date
-‘1591’ to have been written in first, and the continuous account under
-the date ‘1592’ added later, probably after Henslowe had changed the
-year-date in his play-entries, which seems to have been on 6 May.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1196" href="#FNanchor_1196" class="label">[1196]</a> Henslowe, i. 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1197" href="#FNanchor_1197" class="label">[1197]</a> App. D, No. xcii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1198" href="#FNanchor_1198" class="label">[1198]</a> The words ‘Chomley when’ appear with other scribbles by
-Henslowe on the first page of the diary (Henslowe, i. 217).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1199" href="#FNanchor_1199" class="label">[1199]</a> Cf. p. 402.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1200" href="#FNanchor_1200" class="label">[1200]</a> Henslowe, i. 4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1201" href="#FNanchor_1201" class="label">[1201]</a> Henslowe, i. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1202" href="#FNanchor_1202" class="label">[1202]</a> Ibid. ii. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1203" href="#FNanchor_1203" class="label">[1203]</a> Wallace, in <i>The Times</i> (1914).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1204" href="#FNanchor_1204" class="label">[1204]</a> Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xv, quotes</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In the last great fire</div>
- <div>The Rose did expire,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p>and adds ‘but when that was, I am not clear’. It reads like Collier.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1205" href="#FNanchor_1205" class="label">[1205]</a> I cannot endorse the suggestion of Dr. Martin (cf. p.
-378) that the ‘Globe’ of Visscher (1616) was really the Rose. Baker,
-165, reproducing a cut from Hollar (1640), also misnames the Globe as
-the Rose.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1206" href="#FNanchor_1206" class="label">[1206]</a> Young, ii. 241.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1207" href="#FNanchor_1207" class="label">[1207]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 56. I should have been happier if
-Malone had quoted <i>verbatim</i>, but I do not see that Adams, 160,
-explains away the statement by suggesting that a source for Malone’s
-‘error’ is a note on p. 66, where he again cites Herbert for fencing at
-the Red Bull in 1623.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1208" href="#FNanchor_1208" class="label">[1208]</a> <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 341; <i>Index to Remembrancia</i>,
-277. It appears from <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> vi. 182, 184, that in May
-1596 Langley was concerned in some negotiations about a missing diamond
-claimed by the Crown; cf. p. 396.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1209" href="#FNanchor_1209" class="label">[1209]</a> Printed from a contemporary copy in the Guildhall
-by W. Rendle in Appendix to Part II of <i>Harrison’s Description of
-England</i> (<i>N. S. S.</i>, 1878) and Adams, 162. The original is
-held by the steward of the manor.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1210" href="#FNanchor_1210" class="label">[1210]</a> App. D, No. cii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1211" href="#FNanchor_1211" class="label">[1211]</a> Cf. p. 361, and for the reliability and value of the
-record as evidence for the structure and staging of theatres, chh.
-xviii, xx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1212" href="#FNanchor_1212" class="label">[1212]</a> <i>S. v. L.</i> 352, ‘the said howse was then lately
-afore vsed to have playes in hit’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1213" href="#FNanchor_1213" class="label">[1213]</a> Ibid., ‘the Defendant should be allowed for the true
-value thereof out of the Complainantes moytie of the gains for the
-seuerall standinges in the galleries of the said howse which belonged
-to them’. As ‘which’ may follow on ‘moytie’, I see no reason for
-Wallace’s inference (360) that the galleries were structurally divided
-between the two parties, instead of the takings being shared.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1214" href="#FNanchor_1214" class="label">[1214]</a> Cf. ch. xiv (Pembroke’s) and ch. xxii (Nashe).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1215" href="#FNanchor_1215" class="label">[1215]</a> <i>S. v. L.</i> 353 (6 Feb. 1598), ‘the said Defendant
-hath euer synce had his said howse contynually from tyme to tyme
-exercysed with other players to his great gaines’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1216" href="#FNanchor_1216" class="label">[1216]</a> App. D, No. cxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1217" href="#FNanchor_1217" class="label">[1217]</a> App. D, No. cxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1218" href="#FNanchor_1218" class="label">[1218]</a> App. C, No. lii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1219" href="#FNanchor_1219" class="label">[1219]</a> Cf. p. 362.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1220" href="#FNanchor_1220" class="label">[1220]</a> App. D, No. cxxiii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1221" href="#FNanchor_1221" class="label">[1221]</a> Manningham, 130; Gawdy, 93.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1222" href="#FNanchor_1222" class="label">[1222]</a> Ch. xxiii (Vennar).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1223" href="#FNanchor_1223" class="label">[1223]</a> <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 342.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1224" href="#FNanchor_1224" class="label">[1224]</a> Act v, sc. i.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1225" href="#FNanchor_1225" class="label">[1225]</a> P. Norman, <i>The Accounts of the Overseers of the Poor
-of Paris Garden, 1608–71</i> (1901, <i>Surrey Arch. Colls.</i> xvi.
-55), from <i>Addl. MS.</i> 34, 110, and again by C. W. Wallace as a new
-discovery in <i>E. S.</i> xliii. 390. The amounts are £4 6<i>s.</i>
-8<i>d.</i> in 1611, £5 3<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> in 1612, £5 5<i>s.</i>
-in 1613, £3 0<i>s.</i> 10<i>d.</i> in 1614, 19<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> in
-1615, and £3 19<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> in 1621.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1226" href="#FNanchor_1226" class="label">[1226]</a> It can hardly have been open at the time of the
-Watermen’s petition early in 1614 (cf. p. 370).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1227" href="#FNanchor_1227" class="label">[1227]</a> Herbert, 63; <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 56. Rendle, in
-<i>Antiquarian Magazine</i>, vii. 211, notes a ‘licence for T. B. and
-three assistants to make shows of Italian motion, at the Prince’s Arms,
-or the Swan’ in 1623; cf. Herbert, 47.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1228" href="#FNanchor_1228" class="label">[1228]</a> Cf. p. 376.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1229" href="#FNanchor_1229" class="label">[1229]</a> <i>N. U. S.</i> xiii. 279; cf. p. 399.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1230" href="#FNanchor_1230" class="label">[1230]</a> Wallace, in <i>The Times</i> (1914), ‘Ac de et in
-vna domo de novo edificata cum gardino eidem pertinenti in parochia
-S<sup>ci</sup> Salvatoris praedicta in comitatu Surria praedicta in occupacione
-Willielmi Shakespeare et aliorum’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1231" href="#FNanchor_1231" class="label">[1231]</a> Cf. p. 364.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1232" href="#FNanchor_1232" class="label">[1232]</a> A rather fantastic argument of Ordish, 85, for the
-Curtain on the ground of the martial character of the neighbourhood is
-answered by Murray, i. 99.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1233" href="#FNanchor_1233" class="label">[1233]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> 4368.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1234" href="#FNanchor_1234" class="label">[1234]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> l. 110.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1235" href="#FNanchor_1235" class="label">[1235]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> l. 99; <i>W. v. H.</i> 313.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1236" href="#FNanchor_1236" class="label">[1236]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1237" href="#FNanchor_1237" class="label">[1237]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 314.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1238" href="#FNanchor_1238" class="label">[1238]</a> <i>Century</i> (Aug. 1910), 508; cf. p. 424.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1239" href="#FNanchor_1239" class="label">[1239]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 314.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1240" href="#FNanchor_1240" class="label">[1240]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> l. 194.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1241" href="#FNanchor_1241" class="label">[1241]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 319.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1242" href="#FNanchor_1242" class="label">[1242]</a> Ibid. 317. Wallace dates the admission of Condell in
-1610, but this seems to be an error.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1243" href="#FNanchor_1243" class="label">[1243]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> l. 97; <i>W. v. H.</i> 321.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1244" href="#FNanchor_1244" class="label">[1244]</a> Rye, 61, from <i>Relation</i> of Hans Jacob Wurmsser
-von Vendenheym, ‘Lundi 30 [April 1610] S. E. [Prince Lewis Frederick of
-Württemberg] alla au Globe, lieu ordinaire ou l’on joue les Commedies,
-y fut representé l’histoire du More de Venise’; cf. p. 369 on visit of
-Prince of Hesse-Cassel in 1611.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1245" href="#FNanchor_1245" class="label">[1245]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 320.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1246" href="#FNanchor_1246" class="label">[1246]</a> Stowe, 926. Jonas, 104, cites another record of the
-date from A. Hopten, <i>A Concordancy of Yeares</i> (1615).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1247" href="#FNanchor_1247" class="label">[1247]</a> Birch, <i>James</i>, i. 253.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1248" href="#FNanchor_1248" class="label">[1248]</a> L. Pearsall Smith, <i>Letters of Wotton</i>, ii. 32.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1249" href="#FNanchor_1249" class="label">[1249]</a> Winwood, iii. 469.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1250" href="#FNanchor_1250" class="label">[1250]</a> Arber, iii. 528, ‘Simon Stafford ... a ballad called
-the sodayne Burninge of the Globe on the Bankside in the Play tyme on
-Saint Peters day last 1613’; ‘Edward White ... a doleful ballad of the
-general ouerthrowe of the famous theater on the Banksyde called the
-Globe &amp;c. by William Parrat’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1251" href="#FNanchor_1251" class="label">[1251]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>Outlines</i>, i. 310, ‘from
-a manuscript of the early part of the seventeenth century, of
-unquestionable authenticity, preserved in the library of Sir Mathew
-Wilson, Bart., of Eshton Hall, co. York’. The Eshton Hall collection,
-originally formed by John Hopkinson in 1660, has recently been sold,
-with the verses, to Mr. G. D. Smith of New York. The ‘Sonnett’ was
-first printed [by Joseph Haslewood] in <i>The Gentleman’s Magazine</i>
-(1816), lxxxvi. 114, ‘from an old manuscript volume of poems and
-therefrom by Collier, i. 371, and Hazlitt, <i>E. D. S.</i> 225.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1252" href="#FNanchor_1252" class="label">[1252]</a> <i>Taylors Water-Works</i> (1614), reprinted as <i>The
-Sculler</i> (1630, <i>Works</i>, 515), ep. 22 of 3rd series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1253" href="#FNanchor_1253" class="label">[1253]</a> <i>Underwoods</i>, lxii, written later than the Fortune
-fire of 9 Dec. 1621.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1254" href="#FNanchor_1254" class="label">[1254]</a> <i>Histriomastix</i>, 556.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1255" href="#FNanchor_1255" class="label">[1255]</a> Birch, <i>James I</i>, i. 329.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1256" href="#FNanchor_1256" class="label">[1256]</a> Cf. p. 374.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1257" href="#FNanchor_1257" class="label">[1257]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 320.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1258" href="#FNanchor_1258" class="label">[1258]</a> Ibid. 321.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1259" href="#FNanchor_1259" class="label">[1259]</a> A later statement by Shank in the <i>Sharers Papers</i>
-puts it at £1,400. Heminges describes Witter’s ‘parte’ by a slip
-as one-sixth instead of one-seventh of the moiety. If the £120 was
-one-twelfth of the total cost, his figure (£1,440) would agree with
-that of Shank. Professor Wallace says in <i>The Times</i> of 2 Oct.
-1909, ‘This amount is in fact excessive.... I have other contemporary
-documents showing the cost was far less than £1,400.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1260" href="#FNanchor_1260" class="label">[1260]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 323; Wallace in <i>The Times</i>
-(1914).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1261" href="#FNanchor_1261" class="label">[1261]</a> <i>O. v. H.</i> ll. 245 sqq.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1262" href="#FNanchor_1262" class="label">[1262]</a> Lambert, <i>Shakespeare Documents</i>, 87.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1263" href="#FNanchor_1263" class="label">[1263]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 323.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1264" href="#FNanchor_1264" class="label">[1264]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 312.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1265" href="#FNanchor_1265" class="label">[1265]</a> Cf. ch. xi. There was a much rougher type of audience
-at the Globe; cf. Shirley, <i>Prologue at the Globe, to his Comedy
-called ‘The Doubtful Heir’, which should have been presented at the
-Blackfriars</i>, quoted in <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 69.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1266" href="#FNanchor_1266" class="label">[1266]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1267" href="#FNanchor_1267" class="label">[1267]</a> Wallace in <i>The Times</i> (1914). Bodley seems to
-have acquired a dubious title to hold the land in his own right in
-1608, raised a fine of £20 for recognizing the players’ lease in 1609,
-and a fine of £2 on Heminges for leave to build his taphouse in 1615.
-Matthew Brend recovered the property through the Court of Wards, after
-the end of his minority, in 1622.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1268" href="#FNanchor_1268" class="label">[1268]</a> Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xvii, from <i>Southwark Vestry
-Papers</i>. Brend was knighted in 1622.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1269" href="#FNanchor_1269" class="label">[1269]</a> Cf. p. 374. Wallace, in <i>The Times</i> (1914), makes
-Matthew Brend’s lease end on 25 Dec. Yet he puts the destruction after
-the expiration of the lease.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1270" href="#FNanchor_1270" class="label">[1270]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ii. 58.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1271" href="#FNanchor_1271" class="label">[1271]</a> Martin, 158.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1272" href="#FNanchor_1272" class="label">[1272]</a> Stopes, <i>Burbage</i>, 196; Martin, 169; from <i>Close
-Roll, 3 Car. I</i>, pt. 23, m. 22.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1273" href="#FNanchor_1273" class="label">[1273]</a> Martin, 174.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1274" href="#FNanchor_1274" class="label">[1274]</a> A. Hayward, <i>Autobiography of Mrs. Piozzi</i>, ii.
-33.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1275" href="#FNanchor_1275" class="label">[1275]</a> <i>History of St. Saviour’s</i> (1795), 231.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1276" href="#FNanchor_1276" class="label">[1276]</a> T. Pennant, <i>London</i> (1791), 60, ‘A little west
-of S. Mary Overies (in a place still called Globe Alley) stood the
-Globe.... I have been told that the door was very lately standing’;
-Concanen and Morgan, 224, ‘Several of the neighbouring inhabitants
-remember these premises being wholly taken down about fifty years ago,
-having remained for many years in a very ruinous state: avoided by the
-young and superstitious as a place haunted by those imaginary beings
-called evil spirits’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1277" href="#FNanchor_1277" class="label">[1277]</a> Martin, 165, 177. It is probably a mere coincidence
-that John Knowles held a garden next the Globe site in 1599.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1278" href="#FNanchor_1278" class="label">[1278]</a> Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, xix; <i>Antiquarian</i>, viii.
-216.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1279" href="#FNanchor_1279" class="label">[1279]</a> Chalmers, <i>Apology</i> (1797), 114, ‘I maintain,
-that the Globe was situated on the Bank, within eighty paces of the
-river, which has since receded from its former limits; that the Globe
-stood on the site of John Whatley’s windmill, which is at present used
-for grinding colours; as I was assured by an intelligent manager of
-Barclay’s brewhouse, which covers, in its ample range, part of Globe
-Alley; and that Whatley’s wind mill stands due south from the western
-side of Queenhythe by the compass, which I set for the express purpose
-of ascertaining the relative bearings of the windmill to the opposite
-objects on the Thames’; W. Wilson, <i>History and Antiquities of
-Dissenting Churches</i> (1814), iv. 148, 175, ‘In former days there
-stood here [in Globe Alley] a theatre called the “Globe”.... Near to
-this place stood the meeting-house.... Its dissolution took place
-about the year 1752.... It is at present used for warehousing goods.
-A mill was also erected over it for the purpose of grinding bones’;
-R. Wilkinson, <i>Londina Illustrata</i> (1819), i. 135, ‘Upon the
-disuse of the theatre, its site ... was formed into a meeting-house....
-Afterwards a mill was erected here to grind bones; and it is at present
-appropriated for the purpose of grinding stones and similar materials’.
-The plan, however, which accompanies Wilkinson’s text, assigns the
-theatre to an improbable site some way west of the meeting-house. The
-Globe Alley meeting-house was built in 1672; it appears in a list of
-1683, and is marked on Rocque’s map of 1746 on Rendle’s favourite
-site. Wilson only says the meeting-house was near the Globe; Wilkinson
-identifies the sites. Chalmers mentions the windmill, but not the
-meeting-house. I may add that a line drawn south from the west of
-Queenhithe would pass west of any possible site for the Globe. Malone’s
-‘nearly opposite to Friday Street, Cheapside’ (<i>Variorum</i>, iii.
-63) can also only be approximate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1280" href="#FNanchor_1280" class="label">[1280]</a> Cf. facsimile from token-book in Martin, 157.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1281" href="#FNanchor_1281" class="label">[1281]</a> Concanen and Morgan, <i>History of St. Saviour’s</i>
-(1795), 224, ‘It was situated in what is now called Maid lane; the
-north side and building adjoining, extending from the west side of
-Counter-alley to the north side of the passage leading to Mr. Brook’s
-cooperage; on the east side beyond the end of Globe-alley, including
-the ground on which stood the late parish workhouse, and from thence
-continuing to the south end of Mr. Brook’s passage. Under this building
-was Fountain-alley, leading from Horseshoe-alley into Castle-lane.’
-This account appears to make the site extend farther north than Dr.
-Martin allows for, right up, indeed, to Maid Lane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1282" href="#FNanchor_1282" class="label">[1282]</a> Plan of 1810 in R. Taylor, <i>Londina Illustrata</i>,
-ii. (1825) 136; plan of 1818 in Taylor, <i>Annals of St. Mary Overy</i>
-(1833), 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1283" href="#FNanchor_1283" class="label">[1283]</a> Martin, 171. One cannot lay much stress upon hearsay
-locations of the site by employees of the brewery (Martin, 183), or the
-discovery of underground staging still farther south than Dr. Martin’s
-site on a spot which in 1599 must have been well within Winchester Park
-(Martin, 201), or of a stone inscribed ‘[T]heayter’, just south of
-Globe Alley (Martin, 184).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1284" href="#FNanchor_1284" class="label">[1284]</a> Martin, 164.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1285" href="#FNanchor_1285" class="label">[1285]</a> A Clink poor relief assessment of 1609 (Collier,
-<i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 91; Warner, 49) shows two names, each assessed
-for ‘halfe the parke’; this would hardly be the Bishop’s. The
-token-books also show persons resident in the park, but here the order
-of the entries points to a locality south of Maiden Lane, near the gate
-of the Bishop’s Park (<i>11 N. Q.</i> xii. 143).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1286" href="#FNanchor_1286" class="label">[1286]</a> Wallace in <i>The Times</i> (1914). Dr. Martin explains
-(<i>11 N. Q.</i> xii. 161) that, in order to conduct their patrons from
-Bankside to the play-house south of Maiden Lane, ‘the owners of the
-Globe had erected a bridge over the ditches and quagmire of Maid Lane’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1287" href="#FNanchor_1287" class="label">[1287]</a> Dr. Wallace says that all these records were made by
-the Commissioners ‘in dealing with the property of Brend and others on
-the north side’ of Maiden Lane. But there is no reference to ‘the north
-side’ in the actual record. Bingham had, and Sellers may have had, more
-than one plot in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1288" href="#FNanchor_1288" class="label">[1288]</a> Cf. p. 379.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1289" href="#FNanchor_1289" class="label">[1289]</a> <i>R. I. B. A. Journal</i>, 3rd series, xvii. 26.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1290" href="#FNanchor_1290" class="label">[1290]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps (<i>Calendar of Shakespeare
-Rarities</i>, 81) had a document of 1653 concerning a sewer ‘in Maide
-Lane nere the place where the Globe play-house lately stood’, which he
-considered as establishing the exact locality of the theatre. It is
-probably now in America.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1291" href="#FNanchor_1291" class="label">[1291]</a> Cf. p. 436.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1292" href="#FNanchor_1292" class="label">[1292]</a> I ought not to have suggested in <i>The Stage of the
-Globe</i>, 356, that the first Globe might have been rectangular.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1293" href="#FNanchor_1293" class="label">[1293]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 67.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1294" href="#FNanchor_1294" class="label">[1294]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 14; Henslowe, ii. 56.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1295" href="#FNanchor_1295" class="label">[1295]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1296" href="#FNanchor_1296" class="label">[1296]</a> Ibid. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1297" href="#FNanchor_1297" class="label">[1297]</a> Ibid. 108.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1298" href="#FNanchor_1298" class="label">[1298]</a> Printed by W. W. Greg, <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 4, from
-<i>Dulwich Muniments</i>, 22; also in <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 338, and
-Halliwell-Phillipps, <i>Illustrations</i>, 81; <i>Outlines</i>, i. 304.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1299" href="#FNanchor_1299" class="label">[1299]</a> <i>Quarterly Review</i>, ccviii. 442; <i>Architectural
-Review</i>, xxiii. 239. Models by Mr. Godfrey are at the Columbia and
-Illinois Universities (Adams, 277). M. W. Sampson has pointed out in
-<i>M. L. N.</i> for June 1915 (cited by Adams, 279) that the passage
-in <i>The Roaring Girl</i> (1611), i. 1, where Sir Alexander Weargrave
-displays his house to his friends, is really a description of the
-Fortune when ‘Within one square a thousand heads are laid’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1300" href="#FNanchor_1300" class="label">[1300]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1301" href="#FNanchor_1301" class="label">[1301]</a> Ibid. 11.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1302" href="#FNanchor_1302" class="label">[1302]</a> App. D, Nos. cxvii, cxviii, cxxi, cxxii, cxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1303" href="#FNanchor_1303" class="label">[1303]</a> Cf. ch. viii and App. D, No. cl.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1304" href="#FNanchor_1304" class="label">[1304]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 110.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1305" href="#FNanchor_1305" class="label">[1305]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1306" href="#FNanchor_1306" class="label">[1306]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1307" href="#FNanchor_1307" class="label">[1307]</a> Ibid. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1308" href="#FNanchor_1308" class="label">[1308]</a> Ibid. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1309" href="#FNanchor_1309" class="label">[1309]</a> Birch, <i>James I</i>, ii. 270.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1310" href="#FNanchor_1310" class="label">[1310]</a> Cf. ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1311" href="#FNanchor_1311" class="label">[1311]</a> Birch, <i>James I</i>, ii. 280.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1312" href="#FNanchor_1312" class="label">[1312]</a> Young, ii. 225.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1313" href="#FNanchor_1313" class="label">[1313]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 28.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1314" href="#FNanchor_1314" class="label">[1314]</a> Cf. App. I. It is this second house that is represented
-as a small angular flagged building in the ‘Ryther’ maps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1315" href="#FNanchor_1315" class="label">[1315]</a> <i>Fortnightly Review</i> (May 1916).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1316" href="#FNanchor_1316" class="label">[1316]</a> W. J. Lawrence in <i>Archiv</i> (1914), 301; cf. p.
-520.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1317" href="#FNanchor_1317" class="label">[1317]</a> Adams, 284, gives the history of the Fortune during
-1621–49.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1318" href="#FNanchor_1318" class="label">[1318]</a> A Boar’s Head on the Bankside, which belonged to
-Henslowe in 1604 and previously to Alleyn (Henslowe, ii. 30), was
-apparently not an inn.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1319" href="#FNanchor_1319" class="label">[1319]</a> E. Gayton, <i>Pleasant Notes upon Don Quixot</i>
-(1654), 277, ‘Sir John of famous memory; not he of the Boares Head
-in Eastcheap’. Neither the text nor the stage-directions of <i>Henry
-IV</i> name the Boar’s Head; but the references to Eastcheap (<i>1 Hen.
-IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 145, 176; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv. 16, 485; <i>2 Hen.
-IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 76; <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 161) are sufficient, and
-when Prince Hal asks (<i>2 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 159) ‘Doth the
-old boar feed in the old frank?’, Bardolph answers, ‘At the old place,
-my lord, in Eastcheap’. Doll Tearsheet (<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv. 250) calls
-Falstaff a ‘whoreson little tidy Bartholomew boar-pig’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1320" href="#FNanchor_1320" class="label">[1320]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, ii. 258. Harben, 88, however,
-suggests that the name was transferred to this house from another on
-the north side of Great Eastcheap in St. Clement’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1321" href="#FNanchor_1321" class="label">[1321]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, i. 126; ii. 72. I suppose the inn
-is identical with the ‘Blue Bore Inne’ marked by Ogilby (1677). The
-site is at No. 30 on the north of Aldgate High Street (Harben, 87).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1322" href="#FNanchor_1322" class="label">[1322]</a> Dasent, vi. 168.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1323" href="#FNanchor_1323" class="label">[1323]</a> App. D, No. cxxx. The description of this letter in the
-<i>Index to Remembrancia</i>, 355, as referring to ‘the Boar’s Head in
-Eastcheap’ has proved misleading.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1324" href="#FNanchor_1324" class="label">[1324]</a> App. D, Nos. cxxv, cxxix, cxxxv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1325" href="#FNanchor_1325" class="label">[1325]</a> Cf. ch. xiii (Anne’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1326" href="#FNanchor_1326" class="label">[1326]</a> Adams, 17; cf. ch. xiii (Duke of York’s). The further
-suggestion of Adams, 8, that Rawlidge in 1628 (cf. p. 360) wrote
-‘Whitefriars’ for ‘Whitechapel’ is less plausible. Rawlidge is only
-dealing with play-houses within the City.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1327" href="#FNanchor_1327" class="label">[1327]</a> Adams, 17, identifies the site with Boar’s Head Yard,
-between Middlesex Street and Goulston Street, Whitechapel. But this is
-the house of 1557 (v. <i>supra</i>) within the liberties. Rocque (1746)
-shows an oval site, just east of Church Lane and south of the church of
-St. Mary, Whitechapel, which rather suggests an amphitheatre, but may
-be merely a churchyard.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1328" href="#FNanchor_1328" class="label">[1328]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 59.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1329" href="#FNanchor_1329" class="label">[1329]</a> Cf. p. 374.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1330" href="#FNanchor_1330" class="label">[1330]</a> The section is reproduced in Adams, 294.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1331" href="#FNanchor_1331" class="label">[1331]</a> Not the mercer Stone who sold stuffs to the Admiral’s
-in 1601 and 1602 (Henslowe, ii. 313); he was doubtless William Stone
-(Knt. in 1604).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1332" href="#FNanchor_1332" class="label">[1332]</a> <i>W. v. H.</i> 296. Professor Wallace has confused
-this 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> with the profits of Woodford’s seventh, and
-thinks that a gatherer got one-eighteenth of the receipts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1333" href="#FNanchor_1333" class="label">[1333]</a> I think the inference is that the gallery profits were
-divided in the proportion of seven-eighteenths to the housekeepers and
-eleven-eighteenths to the players.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1334" href="#FNanchor_1334" class="label">[1334]</a> No order seems to have been made as to the gatherer’s
-place.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1335" href="#FNanchor_1335" class="label">[1335]</a> <i>Knight of the Burning Pestle</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i.
-43.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1336" href="#FNanchor_1336" class="label">[1336]</a> <i>Travels of the Three Brothers</i> (ed. Bullen, p.
-88).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1337" href="#FNanchor_1337" class="label">[1337]</a> Dekker, <i>Works</i>, iv. 97; cf. p. 367.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1338" href="#FNanchor_1338" class="label">[1338]</a> Jeaffreson, ii. 64, 86.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1339" href="#FNanchor_1339" class="label">[1339]</a> Wither, <i>Abuses Stript and Whipt</i> (1613), i. 1,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>‘His poetry is such as he can cull</div>
- <div>From plays he heard at Curtain or at Bull’;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Albumazar</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 16, ‘Then will I
-confound her with compliments drawn from the plays I see at the Fortune
-and Red Bull, where I learn all the words I speak and understand
-not’; Gayton, 24, ‘I have heard that the poets of the Fortune and Red
-Bull had always a mouth-measure for their actors (who were terrible
-tear-throats) and made their lines proportionable to their compass,
-which were sesquipedales, a foot and a half’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1340" href="#FNanchor_1340" class="label">[1340]</a> Collier, <i>Memoirs of Alleyn</i>, 107; <i>D. N. B.</i>
-s.v. Alleyn. The <i>Diary</i> (Young, ii. 51) runs:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Oct. 1, 1617. I came to London in the coach and went to the red
-Bull. 2<sup>d</sup>.</p>
-
-<p>Oct. 3. I went to the red bull and ℞ for the younger brother but
-3. 6. 4, water 4<sup>d</sup>.’</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>The Younger Brother</i> was entered in the Stationers’
-Register in 1653, but is not extant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1341" href="#FNanchor_1341" class="label">[1341]</a> Heywood, <i>Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas</i>, 247.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1342" href="#FNanchor_1342" class="label">[1342]</a> Adams, 300.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1343" href="#FNanchor_1343" class="label">[1343]</a> Prynne, <i>Epistle</i> to <i>Histriomastix</i> (1633);
-W. C., <i>London’s Lamentation for her Sins</i> (1625), ‘Yet even then,
-Oh Lord, were the theatres magnified and enlarged’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1344" href="#FNanchor_1344" class="label">[1344]</a> <i>Fortnightly Review</i> (May 1916).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1345" href="#FNanchor_1345" class="label">[1345]</a> Cf. App. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1346" href="#FNanchor_1346" class="label">[1346]</a> Cf. ch. xviii, <i>Bibl. Note</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1347" href="#FNanchor_1347" class="label">[1347]</a> <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 250; cf. i. 53, 68, 72; ii.
-244 (Durham Priory), 246 (Thetford Priory), 247 (Winchester College),
-248 (Magdalen, Oxford).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1348" href="#FNanchor_1348" class="label">[1348]</a> Strutt, <i>Sports and Pastimes</i> (ed. Cox), 195.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1349" href="#FNanchor_1349" class="label">[1349]</a> Rendle, <i>Old Southwark</i>, f. p., 31.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1350" href="#FNanchor_1350" class="label">[1350]</a> It is also, although unnamed, in Smith’s drawing of
-1588, but that is probably based on Agas.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1351" href="#FNanchor_1351" class="label">[1351]</a> William Fitzstephen (<i>c.</i> 1170–82) in J. C.
-Robertson, <i>Materials for the History of Becket</i> (R. S.), iii.
-11, ‘In hieme singulis feré festis ante prandium ... pingues tauri
-cornipetae, seu ursi immanes, cum objectis depugnant canibus’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1352" href="#FNanchor_1352" class="label">[1352]</a> Erasmus, <i>Adagia</i>, 3354, ‘Sed intolerabilius est
-quod apud Britannos complures alunt greges ursorum ad saltationem,
-animal vorax et maleficum’. I owe the correct reference to Mr. P. S.
-Allen. Presumably ‘greges’ is no more than ‘numbers’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1353" href="#FNanchor_1353" class="label">[1353]</a> Collier, i. 42, from <i>Harl. MS.</i> 433.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1354" href="#FNanchor_1354" class="label">[1354]</a> <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 11. Collier, who owned
-this document, or some other modern, has substituted the name of John
-Dorrington. A copy, exemplified for Morgan Pope on 18 Nov. 1585, is at
-Dulwich; cf. <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 1. Long became steward of Paris
-Garden in 1536 (Kingsford, 159).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1355" href="#FNanchor_1355" class="label">[1355]</a> Collier, i. 194, from list of fees payable by the
-Treasurer of the Chamber in 1571 (<i>Cotton MS.</i> Vesp. C. xiv),
-‘keapers of Beares and Mastives, iij. Item to Mathew Becke, Sergeaunte
-of the beares, for his wages per ann. 12<sup>l</sup> 10<sup>s</sup> 7½<sup>d</sup>. Item to Symon
-Powlter, yoman, per ann. 14<sup>l</sup> 6<sup>s</sup> 3<sup>d</sup>. Item to Richard Darryngton M<sup>r</sup>
-and kepar of the bandogges and mastives, per ann. 21<sup>l</sup> 5<sup>s</sup> 10<sup>d</sup>’.
-Similarly, the Treasurer’s <i>Declared Account</i> for 1594–5 (<i>Pipe
-Roll</i>, 542) shows a total payment to keepers of Bears and Mastiffs
-of £48 12<i>s.</i> 8½<i>d.</i> There is an error in one or other entry
-of 10<i>s.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1356" href="#FNanchor_1356" class="label">[1356]</a> The Privy Council Acts record warrants <i>inter
-alia</i> to Ralph in 1574 (Dasent, viii. 257), Thomas in 1576, 1577,
-1578, 1579, and 1580 (ix. 121, 153, 335; x. 148; xi. 70, 392), Ralph in
-1581 (xii. 321), and Edward in 1581 and 1582 (xiii. 115, 311). Edward
-Bowes seems to have held the Keepership of Dogs, but disclaimed having
-a fee of £15 17<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> at the subsidy of 1588 (<i>M. S.
-C.</i> i. 355).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1357" href="#FNanchor_1357" class="label">[1357]</a> Earlier licensees were William Payne and Simon Powlter
-(&gt; 1574). Wistow (<i>c.</i> 1575), John Napton, Morgan Pope (<i>c.</i>
-1585–7), Thomas Burnaby (<i>c.</i> 1590–4), and perhaps others; cf. p.
-464; Wallace in <i>The Times</i> (1914); Kingsford, 171–8.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1358" href="#FNanchor_1358" class="label">[1358]</a> <i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 213; cf. <i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1359" href="#FNanchor_1359" class="label">[1359]</a> Henslowe, i. 71. Some payments of June 1597 on account
-of a privy seal and a patent for Alleyn (Henslowe, i. 200) may relate
-to this.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1360" href="#FNanchor_1360" class="label">[1360]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 98. Possibly an undated letter
-from Arthur Langworth to Alleyn (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 99), in which
-he refers to Bowes’s illness and protests against a charge of not
-giving Alleyn sufficient help in procuring some ‘place’, relates to
-this. But it is allusive and obscure.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1361" href="#FNanchor_1361" class="label">[1361]</a> <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cclxviii. 18; cf. <i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1362" href="#FNanchor_1362" class="label">[1362]</a> Probably Bowes had also held this keepership with his
-Mastership, as he was drawing a fee from the Chamber in 1596 (Henslowe,
-i. 128).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1363" href="#FNanchor_1363" class="label">[1363]</a> Muniment 19 in the <i>Dulwich MSS.</i> is a warrant of
-24 Nov. 1599 by Meade to a deputy; cf. Henslowe, ii. 38. A list of fees
-<i>c.</i> 1600 in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 108, shows, under the general
-heading ‘Parris garden’, only two keeperships, instead of the three of
-1571, that of Bears at £12 8<i>s.</i> 1½<i>d.</i>, and that of Mastiffs
-at £21 5<i>s.</i> 10½<i>d.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1364" href="#FNanchor_1364" class="label">[1364]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 12; cf. Henslowe, ii. 37.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1365" href="#FNanchor_1365" class="label">[1365]</a> Receipts by or on behalf of Dorrington dated Jan. and
-April 1602 are in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 101; Henslowe, i. 212. Each
-is for a quarter’s ‘rent’ of £10, and the earlier is specified as
-‘for the commissyon for the Bear-garden’. A letter of May 1600 from
-Dorrington to Henslowe asking him and Meade to have the ‘games’ ready
-for Court is in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 100. In 1603 Henslowe spent
-16<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> ‘for sewinge at the cort’, on petitions to
-Dorrington, the Lord Chamberlain, and the Council, the drawing of two
-licences, and ‘our warent for baytynge’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 109).
-I think that from 1603, if not earlier, he had a regular appointment as
-deputy to Dorrington. On 18 April 1604 he received the Treasurer of the
-Chamber’s reward as ‘Deputy Master of the Game’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1366" href="#FNanchor_1366" class="label">[1366]</a> <i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 213; cf. <i>Henslowe Papers</i>,
-4.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1367" href="#FNanchor_1367" class="label">[1367]</a> <i>S. P. D. Jac. I, 1603–10</i>, p. 134.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1368" href="#FNanchor_1368" class="label">[1368]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 101; <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>,
-x, p. 167. It appears from a memorandum of Alleyn’s in <i>Henslowe
-Papers</i>, 107, that he paid £250 for his share.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1369" href="#FNanchor_1369" class="label">[1369]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 104.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1370" href="#FNanchor_1370" class="label">[1370]</a> This is recited in a warrant to one of their deputies
-in <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 18.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1371" href="#FNanchor_1371" class="label">[1371]</a> Henslowe, ii. 38. Dr. Greg gives many interesting
-details of the business, and of the relations of the Masters with their
-agents, for which I have not space. Others, of Bowes’s time, are in
-Dasent, ix. 9; xiii. 101.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1372" href="#FNanchor_1372" class="label">[1372]</a> <i>Sydney Papers</i>, ii. 194 (12 May 1600), ‘This
-day she appointes to see a Frenchman doe feates upon a rope, in the
-Conduit court. To morrow she hath commanded the beares, the bull and
-the ape to be baited in the tiltyard. Upon Wednesday she will have
-solemn dawncing’; cf. <i>Epicoene</i>, iii. 1, ‘Were you ever so much
-as look’d upon by a lord or a lady, before I married you, but on the
-Easter or Whitsun-holidays? and then out at the banqueting-house
-window, when Ned Whiting or George Stone were at the stake?’ George
-Stone was killed during the visit of Christian of Denmark in 1606
-(<i>H. P.</i> 105). The Court practice was followed by the Lord Mayor
-and Aldermen. Payments to the bearward of Paris Garden for pastime
-showed at the Conduit Heads are in Harrison, iv. 322.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1373" href="#FNanchor_1373" class="label">[1373]</a> Machyn, 198.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1374" href="#FNanchor_1374" class="label">[1374]</a> Ibid. 270; Nichols, <i>Eliz.</i> i. 305; ii. 469;
-Walsingham, <i>Journal</i>, 42; Boississe, i. 345. There is a spirited
-description of a baiting before Elizabeth at Kenilworth on 14 July 1575
-in <i>Laneham’s Letter</i> (Furnivall, <i>Captain Cox</i>, 17); but
-I do not suppose that these were the London bears. Leicester, whose
-cognizance was the bear and ragged staff, doubtless kept his own ursine
-establishment.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1375" href="#FNanchor_1375" class="label">[1375]</a> Rye, 123.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1376" href="#FNanchor_1376" class="label">[1376]</a> <i>Pipe Office Declared Account</i>, 543, m. 194.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1377" href="#FNanchor_1377" class="label">[1377]</a> Stowe, <i>Annales</i> (1615), 835, 865, 895.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1378" href="#FNanchor_1378" class="label">[1378]</a> Translated by F. Madden in <i>Archaeologia</i>, xxiii.
-354.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1379" href="#FNanchor_1379" class="label">[1379]</a> Machyn, 198.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1380" href="#FNanchor_1380" class="label">[1380]</a> Translated by G. von Bülow in <i>2 Transactions of
-Royal Hist. Soc.</i> ix. 230, from a manuscript in the possession
-of Graf von der Osten at Plathe, Pomerania. I add for the sake of
-completeness the following lines from the <i>Hodoeporica</i> (1568,
-ed. 2, 1575), 224, of N. Chytraeus, whose visit was probably <i>c.</i>
-1565–7:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Opposita in Tamesis ripa, longa area paruis</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Distincta aspicitur tectis, vbi magna canum vis</div>
- <div>Vrsorumque alitur diuersarumque ferarum,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Quae canibus commissae Anglis spectacula praebent,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Hospitibusque nouis, vincti dum praelia miscent,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Luctantes aut ungue fero, vel dentibus uncis.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1381" href="#FNanchor_1381" class="label">[1381]</a> Cf. ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1382" href="#FNanchor_1382" class="label">[1382]</a> Translated in Rye, 45.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1383" href="#FNanchor_1383" class="label">[1383]</a> Cf. p. 362.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1384" href="#FNanchor_1384" class="label">[1384]</a> Hentzner, 196; cf. p. 363.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1385" href="#FNanchor_1385" class="label">[1385]</a> G. Binz in <i>Anglia</i>, xxii. 460, ‘Man pfleget
-auch alle Sontag vnndt mittwochen zu Londen, yenseits desz wassers
-den Berenhatz zu halten.... Der Schauplatz ist in die Ründe gebauwen,
-sind oben herumb viel geng, darauf man zusicht, vnden am boden vnder
-dem heiteren Himmel ist es nicht besetzet. Da bande man in mitten desz
-platzes einen grossen Beeren an ein stock am langen seil an.... Wie wir
-die stegen hinunter kamen, gungen wir hinder den schauwplatz, besahen
-die Englischen docken, deren bey 120 in einem bezirk beysamen, yedoch
-yetwederer in einem sonderbahren ställin an einer kettin angeheftet
-wahren.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1386" href="#FNanchor_1386" class="label">[1386]</a> <i>Hatfield MSS.</i> xi. 382.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1387" href="#FNanchor_1387" class="label">[1387]</a> G. von Bülow in <i>2 Transactions of the Royal Hist.
-Soc.</i> vi. 16, ‘16 Sept. Auf den Nachmittag haben wir den Bär u.
-Stierhetze zugesehen ... wohlmehr as 200 Hünde an selbigem Ort in einem
-besonderen Häuslein unterhalten’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1388" href="#FNanchor_1388" class="label">[1388]</a> Rye, 61.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1389" href="#FNanchor_1389" class="label">[1389]</a> Rye, 133.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1390" href="#FNanchor_1390" class="label">[1390]</a> <i>Englische Studien</i>, xiv. 440.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1391" href="#FNanchor_1391" class="label">[1391]</a> <i>Epigram</i> xliii:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Publius, student at the common law,</div>
- <div>Oft leaves his books, and for his recreation,</div>
- <div>To Paris Garden doth himself withdraw,</div>
- <div>Where he is ravished with such delectation,</div>
- <div>As down among the bears and dogs he goes;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Where, whilst he skipping cries, ‘To head! to head!’</div>
- <div>His satin doublet and his velvet hose</div>
- <div>Are all with spittle from above bespread:</div>
- <div>When he is like his father’s country hall,</div>
- <div>Stinking with dogs and muted all with hawks;</div>
- <div>And rightly on him too this filth doth fall,</div>
- <div>Which for such filthy sports his books forsakes,</div>
- <div>Leaving old Ployden, Dyer, Brooke alone,</div>
- <div>To see old Harry Hunks, and Sacarson.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1392" href="#FNanchor_1392" class="label">[1392]</a> <i>Merry Wives</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 306.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1393" href="#FNanchor_1393" class="label">[1393]</a> Dekker, <i>Work for Armourers</i> (1609, <i>Works</i>,
-iv. 98), ‘At length a blind bear was tied to the stake, and instead
-of baiting him with dogs, a company of creatures that had the shapes
-of men and faces of Christians (being either colliers, carters, or
-watermen) took the office of beadles upon them, and whipped Monsieur
-Hunkes till the blood ran down his old shoulders’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1394" href="#FNanchor_1394" class="label">[1394]</a> <i>Coryats Crudities</i> (1611), i. 114, ‘Hunks of the
-Beare-garden to be feared if he be nigh on’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1395" href="#FNanchor_1395" class="label">[1395]</a> Cf. p. 453. Nashe, <i>Strange News</i> (1592,
-<i>Works</i>, i. 281, also names ‘great Ned’ and adds ‘Harry of Tame’.
-In 1590 Burnaby had at the Bear Garden ‘Tom Hunckes’, ‘Whitinge’,
-‘Harry of Tame’, three other bears, three bulls, a horse, an ape. A
-‘great’ bear was worth £8 or £10, a bull £4 or £5 (Kingsford, 175).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1396" href="#FNanchor_1396" class="label">[1396]</a> <i>Puritan</i>, iii. 5, ‘How many dogs do you think
-I had upon me?... almost as many as George Stone, the bear; three at
-once’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1397" href="#FNanchor_1397" class="label">[1397]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1398" href="#FNanchor_1398" class="label">[1398]</a> <i>Copley Accounts</i>, s. a. 1575, in <i>Collectanea
-Genealogica et Topographica</i>, viii. 253, ‘Gyven to the master of
-Paryshe Garden his man for goynge with Thos. Sharples into Barmensy
-Street to see certen mastyve dogges’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1399" href="#FNanchor_1399" class="label">[1399]</a> R. Crowley, <i>One and thyrtye Epigrammes</i> (1550,
-ed. E. E. T. S.), 381:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">And yet me thynke those men be mooste foles of all,</div>
- <div>Whose store of money is but verye smale,</div>
- <div>And yet euerye Sondaye they will surely spende</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">One peny or two, the bearwardes lyuyng to mende.</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">At Paryse garden, eche Sundaye, a man shall not fayle</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">To fynde two or thre hundredes for the bearwardes vaile.</div>
- <div>One halpenye a piece they vse for to giue,</div>
- <div>When some haue no more in their purse, I belieue;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Jonson, <i>Execration upon Vulcan</i> (<i>Works</i>, iii.
-322):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">a threatning to the bears,</div>
- <div>And that accursed ground, the Paris-garden;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Taylor, <i>Bull, Bear and Horse</i> (1638):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>And that we have obtained again the game,</div>
- <div>Our Paris Garden flag proclaims the same.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Cf. Sir John Davies’ lines already quoted; also Dekker,
-ii. 125 (<i>News from Hell</i>), iv. 109 (<i>Work for Armourers</i>),
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1400" href="#FNanchor_1400" class="label">[1400]</a> Stowe, <i>Annales</i>, 695.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1401" href="#FNanchor_1401" class="label">[1401]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 15, 104. Miss Dormer Harris
-kindly tells me that the Coventry Corporation rewarded the ‘Bearward of
-palace Garden’ in 1576–7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1402" href="#FNanchor_1402" class="label">[1402]</a> Cf. p. 411.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1403" href="#FNanchor_1403" class="label">[1403]</a> Malone, <i>Variorum</i>, xix. 483; Rendle,
-<i>Bankside</i>, iii; <i>Antiquarian</i>, vii. 277; Ordish, 128.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1404" href="#FNanchor_1404" class="label">[1404]</a> <i>Annales Monasterii de Bermundseia</i>, s. a. 1113
-(Luard, <i>Annales Monastici</i>, iii. 432), ‘Hoc anno Robertus
-Marmion dedit hidam de Wideflete cum molendino et aliis pertinentibus
-suis monachis de Bermundeseye’; <i>Register of Hospital of St.
-John</i>, s. a. 1420 (<i>Monasticon Anglicanum</i>, vi. 819), ‘Haec
-sunt statuta et ordinationes concernentia locum privilegiatum vocatum
-Parishgardyn, alias dictum Wideflete, sive Wiles, cum pertinentiis,
-facta per Johannem nuper Ducem Bedfordiae, firmarium ibidem, anno
-Domini mccc[c]xx’ [Rules for a sanctuary, with a dominus, senescallus,
-ballivus, constabularius, and societas, follow]; <i>Liber Fundatorum
-of St. John</i> (ibid. vi. 832), ‘Molendina de Wideflete cum gardino
-vocato Parish-gardin ... tenentur de Abbate de Barmondesey’ (1434).
-Kingsford, 157, traces the manor through Bermondsey priory, the
-Templars, and St. John’s Hospital to the Crown in 1536.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1405" href="#FNanchor_1405" class="label">[1405]</a> Blount, <i>Glossographia</i> (ed. 4, 1674), 469, quotes
-<i>Close Roll, 16 Rich. II</i>, dorso ii. Kingsford, 156, translates
-the writ, which is abstracted (Sharpe, <i>Letter Book H</i>, 392),
-‘Writ to the Mayor and Sheriffs to proclaim ordinances made in the last
-Parliament at Winchester to the effect that the laystall or latrine
-(fimarium sive sterquilinium) on the bank of the Thames near the house
-of Robert de Parys be removed, and a house be built on its site for the
-use of butchers, where they may cut up their offal and take it in boats
-to mid-stream and cast it into the water at ebb-tide.... Witness the
-King at Westminster 21 Feb. 16 Rich. II’. The ordinance is recorded in
-<i>Rot. Parl.</i> iii. 306.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1406" href="#FNanchor_1406" class="label">[1406]</a> <i>Index to Remembrancia</i>, 478.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1407" href="#FNanchor_1407" class="label">[1407]</a> Brewer, xxi. 2. 88, ‘a licence for Thomas Fluddie,
-yeoman of your Majesty’s bears, to bait and make pastime with your
-Graces bears at the accustomed place at London, called the Stewes,
-notwithstanding the proclamation’ (Sept. 1546); Machyn, 78, ‘The sam
-day [9 Dec. 1554] at after-non was a bere-beytyn on the Banke syde, and
-ther the grett blynd bere broke losse, and in ronnyng away he chakt a
-servyng man by the calff of the lege, and bytt a gret pesse away, and
-after by the hokyll-bone, that within iij days after he ded’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1408" href="#FNanchor_1408" class="label">[1408]</a> Foxe, <i>Acts and Monuments</i> (ed. 1846), v. 388.
-Collier, iii. 94, cites ‘a book of the expenses of the Northumberland
-family’ to the effect that the earl went to Paris Garden to behold the
-bear-baiting in 1525–6. Ordish, 129, criticizes this on the ground
-that the statement is not in the <i>Northumberland Household Book</i>
-printed by Percy. It was in fact a different book, from which Collier,
-i. 86, gives entries, of which one is of boat-hire from and to ‘Parys
-gardyn’. But there is nothing about bear-baiting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1409" href="#FNanchor_1409" class="label">[1409]</a> <i>Account of Treasurer of Chamber</i>, s. a. 1515
-(Brewer, ii. 1466), ‘Hen. Anesley, conveying the King’s barge from
-Greenwich to Parys Garden, 16<sup>d</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1410" href="#FNanchor_1410" class="label">[1410]</a> Ordish, 127.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1411" href="#FNanchor_1411" class="label">[1411]</a> In <i>Shaw v. Langley</i> (1597) the Swan is described
-as ‘in the oulde Parrisgardin’, although there is no specific mention
-of baiting (<i>E. S.</i> xliii. 345, 355).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1412" href="#FNanchor_1412" class="label">[1412]</a> Fleetwood, writing to Burghley on 13 July 1578 (Rendle,
-<i>Antiquarian</i>, vii. 274, from <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cxxv. 21),
-describes intrigues of the French ambassador ‘on the Thames side behind
-Paris Garden toward Lambeth, in the fields ... I got a skuller to Paris
-Garden, but the place was dark and shadowed with trees, that one man
-cannot see another unless they have <i>lynceos oculos</i> or els cattes
-eys, shewing how admirable a place it was for such doings. The place
-is that boowre of conspiracies, it is the college of male cownsell....
-There be certain <i>virgulta</i> or eightes of willows set by the
-Thames near that place; they grow now exceeding thick, and a notable
-covert for confederates to shrowd in; a milkmade lately did see the
-French ambassador land in that <i>virgulta</i>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1413" href="#FNanchor_1413" class="label">[1413]</a> The ring, without a name, is also shown in Smith’s
-drawing (1588), but this is probably based on one of the maps.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1414" href="#FNanchor_1414" class="label">[1414]</a> Rendle, <i>Antiquarian</i>, viii. 57, from <i>Exchequer
-Depositions, 18 Jac. I</i>. The depositions also mention a bull-house
-built in a dog-yard, a bear-house, a hay-house, a pond for the bears
-to wash in, and a pond for dead dogs. Kingsford, 175, gives fuller
-extracts.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1415" href="#FNanchor_1415" class="label">[1415]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, ii. 54. A short passage in i. 95
-adds nothing.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1416" href="#FNanchor_1416" class="label">[1416]</a> Stowe (1615), 695.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1417" href="#FNanchor_1417" class="label">[1417]</a> Halliwell, <i>Dr. Dee’s Diary</i> (C. S.), 18; App. C,
-No. xxxi; App. D, No. lxiv. The ballad of which four stanzas are given
-by Collier, i. 244, is presumably a forgery.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1418" href="#FNanchor_1418" class="label">[1418]</a> More, <i>Works</i> (ed. 1557), 208, ‘This is much like
-as at Beuerlay late, whan much of the people beyng at a bere baytyng,
-the church fell sodeinly down at euensonge tyme, and ouer whelmed some
-that than were in it: a good felow, that after herde the tale tolde,
-“lo”, quod he, “now maie you see what it is to be at euensong whan ye
-should be at the bere baytynge”. How be it, the hurt was not ther in
-beinge at euensonge, but in that the churche was falsely wrought’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1419" href="#FNanchor_1419" class="label">[1419]</a> App. D, No. lxx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1420" href="#FNanchor_1420" class="label">[1420]</a> Rendle, <i>Antiquarian</i>, viii. 57.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1421" href="#FNanchor_1421" class="label">[1421]</a> Rendle, <i>Antiquarian</i>, viii. 57; <i>Bankside</i>,
-xxx, with map.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1422" href="#FNanchor_1422" class="label">[1422]</a> The tithes were for ‘the bear garden and for the ground
-adjoining to the same where the dogs are’ (Rendle, <i>Bankside</i>, v).
-It was for Morgan Pope that Bowes’s patent as Master of the Game was
-exemplified in 1585; cf. p. 450.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1423" href="#FNanchor_1423" class="label">[1423]</a> Henslowe, ii. 25, from <i>Egerton MS.</i> 2623, f. 13,
-and <i>Dulwich MS.</i> iv. 21.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1424" href="#FNanchor_1424" class="label">[1424]</a> Henslowe, i. 71, ‘Ano do 1595 the xxviij<sup>th</sup> of
-Novembere Reseved of M<sup>r</sup> Henslow the day and yeare abov written the som
-of syx poundes of curant mony of England and is in part of a mor som
-[yf he the sayd] by twyxt the sayd Phillyp Henslow and me consaning a
-bargen of the beargarden I say Reseved vj<sup>ll</sup>. By me John Mavlthouse.
-Wittnes I E Alley.’ I take the words in square brackets, which are
-cancelled in the diary, to represent ‘if he proceed’. In Henslowe, i.
-43, are further receipts for 40<i>s.</i> ‘in part of the bargen for
-the tenymentes on the bankes syd’ in Dec. 1595, and sums of £10, £20,
-and £4 for unspecified purposes in Jan. and Feb. 1596. Kingsford, 177,
-gives the date of Henslowe’s purchase.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1425" href="#FNanchor_1425" class="label">[1425]</a> Henslowe, i. 209; cf. <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 109.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1426" href="#FNanchor_1426" class="label">[1426]</a> Henslowe, ii. 25.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1427" href="#FNanchor_1427" class="label">[1427]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 107. I agree with Dr. Greg
-(Henslowe, ii. 30, 39) that it is difficult to see what a lease from
-Thomas Garland to Henslowe and Alleyn in 1608 of a close called Long
-Slip or Long Meadow in Lambeth can have had to do with the baiting. But
-Alleyn added the word ‘Bear-garden’ to the original endorsement ‘M<sup>r</sup>
-Garlands lece’ (<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 12). Perhaps the land was used
-for some subsidiary purpose in connexion with the Garden.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1428" href="#FNanchor_1428" class="label">[1428]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 110; <i>Architectural
-Review</i>, xlvii. 152.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1429" href="#FNanchor_1429" class="label">[1429]</a> Full text in <i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 78; abstract in
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1430" href="#FNanchor_1430" class="label">[1430]</a> Henslowe, i. 214; cf. p. 189 (<i>supra</i>).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1431" href="#FNanchor_1431" class="label">[1431]</a> Cf. p. 458.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1432" href="#FNanchor_1432" class="label">[1432]</a> Cf. ch. xviii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1433" href="#FNanchor_1433" class="label">[1433]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 19, from Dulwich Muniment 49;
-also printed in <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 343. Muniment 50 is Katherens’
-bond, and Muniment 51 a sub-contract of 8 Sept. 1613 with John Browne,
-bricklayer, to do the brickwork for £80.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1434" href="#FNanchor_1434" class="label">[1434]</a> Cf. p. 370.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1435" href="#FNanchor_1435" class="label">[1435]</a> Taylor, <i>Works</i> (1630), 304, with a reply by
-Fennor and rejoinder by Taylor. Incidentally Taylor mentions the arras
-of the theatre and the tiles with which it was covered.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1436" href="#FNanchor_1436" class="label">[1436]</a> The Southwark vestry order of 1 May 1598 (App. D, No.
-cxv) seems to connect him with ‘play-houses’, but I doubt whether
-anything but the bear garden is meant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1437" href="#FNanchor_1437" class="label">[1437]</a> Cf. <i>Satiromastix</i>, 1247, ‘Th’ast a breath as
-sweet as the Rose that growes by the Beare-Garden’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1438" href="#FNanchor_1438" class="label">[1438]</a> <i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 159.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1439" href="#FNanchor_1439" class="label">[1439]</a> Ordish, 235. No date can be assigned to <i>A North
-Countrey Song</i> in <i>Wit and Drollery</i> (1656):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="hangingindent">When I’se come there [to Paris Garden], I was in a rage,</div>
- <div class="i1">I rayl’d on him that kept the Beares,</div>
- <div>Instead of a Stake was suffered a Stage,</div>
- <div class="i1">And in Hunkes his house a crue of Players.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1440" href="#FNanchor_1440" class="label">[1440]</a> Collier, iii. 102.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1441" href="#FNanchor_1441" class="label">[1441]</a> Cf. p. 375.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1442" href="#FNanchor_1442" class="label">[1442]</a> Ordish, 244. A Bearsfoot Alley shown farther to
-the east by Rocque (1746) may derive from one of the earlier
-baiting-places.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1443" href="#FNanchor_1443" class="label">[1443]</a> C. W. Wallace in <i>The Times</i> (30 April 1914),
-‘We present John Wardner William Sellors and all the land holders or
-their tenantes that holde anie landes gardeines ground or tenementes
-abbutting vpon the common sewer leadinge from Sellors gardin to the
-beare garden to cast clense and scoure their and euerie one of their
-seuerall partes of the common sewer by Candlemas nexte vpon paine of
-euerie pole then vndone ... ij<sup>s</sup>’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1444" href="#FNanchor_1444" class="label">[1444]</a> Cf. p. 458.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1445" href="#FNanchor_1445" class="label">[1445]</a> E. Hake, <i>Newes out of Poules Churchyarde</i> (1579),
-Sat. v:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>What else but gaine and money gote</div>
- <div class="i1">Maintaines each Saboth day</div>
- <div>The bayting of the Beare and Bull?</div>
- <div class="i1">What brings this brutish play?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Many of the attacks on plays (App. C) also refer to
-baiting.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1446" href="#FNanchor_1446" class="label">[1446]</a> App. D, No. lxxxiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1447" href="#FNanchor_1447" class="label">[1447]</a> App. D, No. cxxxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1448" href="#FNanchor_1448" class="label">[1448]</a> ‘In the late quenes tyme fre libertie was permited
-with owt restrainte to bayght them which now is tacken a way frome vs
-especiallye one the Sondayes in the after none after devine service
-which was the cheffest meanes and benefit to the place’; cf. p. 452.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1449" href="#FNanchor_1449" class="label">[1449]</a> Cf. p. 375.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1450" href="#FNanchor_1450" class="label">[1450]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 88, 125.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1451" href="#FNanchor_1451" class="label">[1451]</a> Printed in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 277, from <i>P. R. 13
-Jac. I</i>, pt. 20; also by Collier, i. 381, and Hazlitt, <i>E. D.
-S.</i> 46, from the Signet Bill, misdescribed as the Privy Seal, of 31
-May.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1452" href="#FNanchor_1452" class="label">[1452]</a> Cf. App. D, No. clvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1453" href="#FNanchor_1453" class="label">[1453]</a> Cf. App. D, No. clx. Collier, i. 384, without giving
-his authority, says that the Corporation reported the carrying out of
-this mandate ‘before three days had elapsed’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1454" href="#FNanchor_1454" class="label">[1454]</a> Shaw. ii. 107. Sir Thomas Saunders had the same
-lodgings <i>c.</i> 1551 (cf. p. 478, n. 4; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 120).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1455" href="#FNanchor_1455" class="label">[1455]</a> Cf. ch. xvii (Blackfriars); <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 93,
-110, 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1456" href="#FNanchor_1456" class="label">[1456]</a> W. P. Baildon, <i>Black Books of Lincoln’s Inn</i>, iv.
-263; C. F. R. Palmer, <i>The Friar-Preachers of Holborn, London</i>
-(<i>Reliquary</i>, xvii. 33, 75).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1457" href="#FNanchor_1457" class="label">[1457]</a> Stowe, <i>Survey</i>, i. 9, 27, 40, 64, 339; ii.
-14, 44, 89; (1720) i. 3. 177; Halle, ii. 150; Nicolas, <i>Acts of
-Privy Council</i>, <i>passim</i>; <i>Rot. Parl.</i> v. 171; Clapham,
-58; <i>V. H.</i> i. 498; Brewer, iv. 2483; Riley, <i>Memorials of
-London</i>, 90; Baldwin, 154, 261, 355, 358, 499; Gairdner, <i>Paston
-Letters</i>, i. 426, ‘for the ease of resorting of the Lordys that are
-withinne the toun’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1458" href="#FNanchor_1458" class="label">[1458]</a> <i>V. H.</i> i. 498.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1459" href="#FNanchor_1459" class="label">[1459]</a> Brewer, iii. 2. 1053.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1460" href="#FNanchor_1460" class="label">[1460]</a> Ibid. xiii. 2. 215.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1461" href="#FNanchor_1461" class="label">[1461]</a> Rymer, xiv. 609; Brewer, xiii. 2. 320.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1462" href="#FNanchor_1462" class="label">[1462]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1463" href="#FNanchor_1463" class="label">[1463]</a> Ibid. ii. 4, 6, 8, 109, 114. Cawarden had had a lease
-of part of the property on 4 April 1548.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1464" href="#FNanchor_1464" class="label">[1464]</a> Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1465" href="#FNanchor_1465" class="label">[1465]</a> Printed from <i>Journal</i>, 14, f. 129, as appendix to
-<i>Memoranda, References, and Documents relating to the Royal Hospitals
-of the City of London</i> (1836).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1466" href="#FNanchor_1466" class="label">[1466]</a> Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178. Portinari was a pensioner
-<i>c.</i> 1526 (Brewer, iv. 871), and he was aged 64 in 1572 (<i>M.
-S. C.</i> ii. 52). He was a Florentine by birth and an engineer by
-profession (<i>Sp. P.</i> ii. 399; Winwood, i. 145).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1467" href="#FNanchor_1467" class="label">[1467]</a> <i>B. M. Lansd. MS.</i> 155, f. 80<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1468" href="#FNanchor_1468" class="label">[1468]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 2, 5, 103, 127; Stowe (1598), i.
-339; <i>Athenaeum</i> (1886), ii. 91; Dasent, xxvi. 448; xxvii. 13.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1469" href="#FNanchor_1469" class="label">[1469]</a> In 1585 the Lord Mayor asked that the Blackfriars
-might contribute to the musters (Stowe, ed. Strype, i. 3. 180). In
-1588 and 1593 requisitions for a levy were sent to the chief officer,
-i. e. the constable, and the inhabitants (Dasent, xv. 428; xxiv. 30).
-But in 1589 similar action was taken through the Lord Mayor (Dasent,
-xvii. 118). A local dispute was referred to Richard Young and another
-Middlesex justice in 1591, with whom the Lord Mayor was joined because
-a City company was involved (Dasent, xx. 245, 283). Young and others
-again received the Council’s instructions, after they had heard the
-inhabitants, on a building matter in 1591 (Dasent, xxi. 337). At a time
-of danger in 1592 the keeping of a midsummer watch was committed to
-Lord Cobham (Dasent, xxii. 551).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1470" href="#FNanchor_1470" class="label">[1470]</a> Stowe (1720), i. 3. 183; Dasent, iii. 235 (Letter of
-14 March 1551 ‘to the Maiour of London to suffer the Lorde Cobham, the
-Lorde Wardein, and others dwelling within the Blacke Freres t’enjoye
-their liberties there’). The riot was put down by Sir Thomas Saunders,
-Sir Henry Jerningham, and William More.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1471" href="#FNanchor_1471" class="label">[1471]</a> Stowe (1720), i. 3. 183.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1472" href="#FNanchor_1472" class="label">[1472]</a> Stowe, ed. Strype (1720), i. 3. 184. The Blackfriars
-papers added by A. Munday in 1618 appear to be all notes and
-examinations taken by Sir Thomas Saunders, who appealed to the Earl of
-Arundel for support.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1473" href="#FNanchor_1473" class="label">[1473]</a> Dasent, viii. 240, 257.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1474" href="#FNanchor_1474" class="label">[1474]</a> Dasent, x. 429; xii. 19. Pending a decision the Lord
-Mayor was directed ‘not to intermeddle in any cawse within the saide
-liberties, savinge onlie for the punishment of fellons as heretofore he
-hath don’. The report dated 27 Jan. 1580 is printed by Ingleby, 250,
-from the Bridgewater MSS. It seems to be genuine. Collier does not
-print it, although he mentions it (<i>New Facts</i>, 9) in connexion
-with a forged Privy Council order which he dates 23 Dec. 1579. Wallace,
-ii. 22, describes an unprinted statement of the City’s case, dated 27
-Jan. 1579, in <i>Letter Book</i> Z, f. 23<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1475" href="#FNanchor_1475" class="label">[1475]</a> Dasent, xv. 137; Stowe (1720), i. 3. 177.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1476" href="#FNanchor_1476" class="label">[1476]</a> This may be the undated petition relating both to the
-Blackfriars and the Whitefriars in <i>B. M. Lansd. MS.</i> 155, f.
-79<sup>v</sup>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1477" href="#FNanchor_1477" class="label">[1477]</a> Wallace, i. 174, from <i>Loseley MSS.</i>, bundle 425.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1478" href="#FNanchor_1478" class="label">[1478]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 124; cf. Dasent, xiii. 76.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1479" href="#FNanchor_1479" class="label">[1479]</a> Dasent, xxvi. 448. Lord Hunsdon and Sir John Fortescue,
-both residents in or near the Blackfriars, sat on the commission with
-the chief justices. Lady Russell records the want of a steward and
-bailiff to keep order in 1597 (<i>Hatfield MSS.</i> vii. 298).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1480" href="#FNanchor_1480" class="label">[1480]</a> Dasent, xxvii. 13; xxx. 134, 149; cf. App. D, No.
-cxxvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1481" href="#FNanchor_1481" class="label">[1481]</a> W. de G. Birch, <i>Historical Charters and
-Constitutional Documents of the City of London</i>, 142. James is said
-to have made the City pay for the rebuilding of the Banqueting House
-(cf. ch. i) in return for this extension of jurisdiction (Goodman,
-ii. 176). Collier, <i>N. F.</i> 20, 22, 32, although ignorant of the
-charter, quotes documents relating to the status of the Blackfriars in
-1608, of which two at least, a note of the interest of the players in
-the theatre and a letter in their favour signed ‘H. S.’, are forgeries
-(Ingleby, 244, 246, 256).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1482" href="#FNanchor_1482" class="label">[1482]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 66, 114; cf. Cawarden’s i. p.m. in
-Fry, <i>London Inquisitiones Post Mortem</i>, i. 191.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1483" href="#FNanchor_1483" class="label">[1483]</a> The general lie of Blackfriars can be gathered from
-Stowe (1598), i. 313; ii. 11, with the maps described in the <i>Bibl.
-Note</i> to ch. xvi, and the modern ordnance maps. The earlier maps are
-largely picturesque, and notably place far too much of the precinct on
-the east of Water Lane. But they seem to preserve certain details, such
-as the arches over the north to south highway. The old lines of the
-roads appear to have been preserved at the rebuilding after the great
-fire of 1666. I have added some details from other sources.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1484" href="#FNanchor_1484" class="label">[1484]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1485" href="#FNanchor_1485" class="label">[1485]</a> The reconstructed map of London by Emery Walker in C.
-L. Kingsford’s edition of Stowe gives this name in error to Water Lane.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1486" href="#FNanchor_1486" class="label">[1486]</a> The 1586 documents in Stowe (1720), i. 3. 178, state
-that the prior held of the lord of St. John’s, ‘who did make the
-bridge at the Thames’. Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 454, however, quotes
-a Declared Account of 1550 for ‘the ereccion and buyldynge ... of
-two bridges thone at the Blackfreers and thother at the Temple’.
-Under Elizabeth the liberty maintained the bridge as well as that at
-Bridewell (<i>Lansd. MS.</i> 155, f. 80<sup>v</sup>). The tenure from St. John’s
-is also alleged (1587) in Dasent, xv. 137. It is rather curious that
-in an endorsement of the survey of St. John’s in 1586–7 (Feuillerat,
-<i>Eliz.</i> 47) that house, although in Clerkenwell, is described,
-perhaps by a slip, as in the Blackfriars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1487" href="#FNanchor_1487" class="label">[1487]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 115. For the ‘turngate’ cf. <i>M.
-S. C.</i> ii. 114; Strype (1720), i. 3. 184. This, with the great gate,
-and the gates at the Thames and Fleet bridges, made up the four gates
-of conventual times. The gate, over which Shakespeare had a house,
-where Ireland Yard debouches into St. Andrew’s Hill, was probably of
-later date.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1488" href="#FNanchor_1488" class="label">[1488]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 6, 11, 109.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1489" href="#FNanchor_1489" class="label">[1489]</a> The upper gate is described in a lease as ‘a gate of
-the Citie of London’ (<i>Loseley MS.</i> 1396, f. 44). It may have been
-a relic of the pre-1276 wall. Its site is shown on the Ordnance map.
-The lower gate is visible in the maps of Braun and Agas. It seems to
-have carried Charles V’s gallery over the roadway to the guest-house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1490" href="#FNanchor_1490" class="label">[1490]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 9, 107, 110; Clapham, 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1491" href="#FNanchor_1491" class="label">[1491]</a> The details for the rest of this paragraph are mainly
-taken from Crown surveys of 1548 and 1550 (<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 6, 8),
-and from a memorandum by Cawarden on the grants anterior to his own
-(<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 1, 103), and Professor Feuillerat’s notes of the
-original patents which illustrate this.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1492" href="#FNanchor_1492" class="label">[1492]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 9, 107, 114; Clapham, 62; <i>London
-Inquisitiones Post Mortem</i>, ii. 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1493" href="#FNanchor_1493" class="label">[1493]</a> Ibid. 9, 10, 112.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1494" href="#FNanchor_1494" class="label">[1494]</a> Ibid. 111, 113.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1495" href="#FNanchor_1495" class="label">[1495]</a> Ibid. 110; Clapham, 63.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1496" href="#FNanchor_1496" class="label">[1496]</a> Ibid. 10, 110, 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1497" href="#FNanchor_1497" class="label">[1497]</a> Ibid. 3.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1498" href="#FNanchor_1498" class="label">[1498]</a> Some vaulted fragments stood until 1900 at a spot
-which must have been just east of the school-house. Possibly they
-formed part of the provincial’s lodging. They are shown in a plan
-of <i>c.</i> 1670–80 (Clapham, 71), and their condition in 1900 was
-carefully recorded (Clapham, 69, 70, 78). Only a fragment of wall is
-now <i>in situ</i>, just north of what is now the west end of Ireland
-Yard, but appears on the seventeenth-century plan as Cloister Court. It
-must, however, have run out from the south-east corner of the cloister
-towards the east. The name Cloister Court has now passed to a yard
-farther south.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1499" href="#FNanchor_1499" class="label">[1499]</a> Clapham, 68; cf. p. 486.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1500" href="#FNanchor_1500" class="label">[1500]</a> Clapham suggests, plausibly enough, that the
-description (<i>c.</i> 1394) of a Dominican house in <i>Pierce the
-Ploughmans Crede</i> (ed. Skeat, <i>E. E. T. S.</i> 153–215) was based
-upon the London Blackfriars. The following passages relate to the
-cloister and refectory.</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Þanne kam i to þat cloister . &amp; gaped abouten</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Whouȝ it was pilered and peynt . &amp; portred well clene,</div>
- <div>All y-hyled wiþ leed . lowe to þe stones,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And y-paued wiþ peynt til . iche poynte after oþer;</div>
- <div>With kundites of clene tyn . closed all aboute,</div>
- <div>Wiþ lauoures of latun . louelyche y-greithed....</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1 hangingindent">... Þanne was þe chaptire-hous wrouȝt . as a greet chirche,</div>
- <div>Coruen and couered . and queyntliche entayled;</div>
- <div>Wiþ semlich selure . y-set on lofte;</div>
- <div>As a Parlement-hous . y-peynted aboute....</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">... Þanne ferd y into fraytour . and fond þere an oþer,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">An halle for an heyȝ king . an housholde to holden,</div>
- <div>Wiþ brode bordes aboute . y-benched wel clene,</div>
- <div>Wiþ windowes of glas . wrouȝt as a Chirche....</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="ileft1">... Chambers wiþ chymneyes . &amp; Chapells gaie;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And kychens for an hyȝe kinge . in castells to holden,</div>
- <div>And her dortour y-diȝte . wiþ dores ful stronge;</div>
- <div>Fermery and fraitur . with fele mo houses,</div>
- <div>And all strong ston wall . sterne opon heiþe,</div>
- <div>Wiþ gaie garites &amp; grete . &amp; iche hole y-glased;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And oþere houses y-nowe . to herberwe þe queene.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1501" href="#FNanchor_1501" class="label">[1501]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1502" href="#FNanchor_1502" class="label">[1502]</a> Ibid. 13, 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1503" href="#FNanchor_1503" class="label">[1503]</a> Ibid. 6, 8, gives the texts of two surveys (<i>a</i>)
-of the property leased to Cawarden on 4 April 1548, (<i>b</i>) of that
-included in his grant of 12 March 1550.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1504" href="#FNanchor_1504" class="label">[1504]</a> Ibid. 7, 12, 35; cf. p. 499.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1505" href="#FNanchor_1505" class="label">[1505]</a> <i>London Inquisitiones Post Mortem</i>, i. 191; cf.
-<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 4, 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1506" href="#FNanchor_1506" class="label">[1506]</a> Stowe (1598), i. 341; <i>Athenaeum</i> (1886), ii. 91;
-<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 2, 127; Hennessy, 88; <i>Loseley MSS.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1507" href="#FNanchor_1507" class="label">[1507]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 103.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1508" href="#FNanchor_1508" class="label">[1508]</a> Ibid. 92, 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1509" href="#FNanchor_1509" class="label">[1509]</a> Ibid. 21, 31, 92, 126.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1510" href="#FNanchor_1510" class="label">[1510]</a> Ibid. 21, 93, 119. They were let to Henry Knowles in
-1565 and had been earlier occupied by Roger Lygon, Lady Parr, and Sir
-Thomas Saunders. Later Nicholas Saunders had them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1511" href="#FNanchor_1511" class="label">[1511]</a> Ibid. 117, 124, 125, show Anthony Browne, probably, as
-tenant in 1560, Henry Lord Hunsdon, probably, in 1584 and 1585, and
-Ralph Bowes in 1596.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1512" href="#FNanchor_1512" class="label">[1512]</a> Dasent, xxi. 402, gives a Privy Council letter of 18
-August 1591 to the Lord Mayor requiring him to repair the supply pipe
-from Clerkenwell; cf. p. 494.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1513" href="#FNanchor_1513" class="label">[1513]</a> (1548) ‘A Cuchin yarde, an owlde Cuchyn, an entre
-or passage Ioyninge to the same, conteyninge in lengethe 84 fote,
-abuttinge to the lane aforseide on the weste side, being in breddethe
-at that ende 68 fote, Abuttinge ageanste an owlde butery on the easte
-side, being in breddethe at that ende 74 foote, Abuttinge to M<sup>r</sup>
-Portynarys parler nexte the lane on the Southe side, And to my lorde
-Cobhames brick wall and garden on the Northe syde. An owlde buttery
-and an entrye or passage with a greate stayre therin, with Sellers
-therunder, with a hall place at the vpper ende of the stayre and an
-entere there to the ffrater ouer the same buttery, all which conteyne
-in lengethe 36 foote and in breddethe 95 foote, abuttinge to the
-cloyster on the Este side, the Cuchin on the weste side, to the lorde
-Cobhams howse on the Northe syde, and on the Sowthe side to a blynd
-parlour that my lorde warden did clame.</p>
-
-<p>A howse called the vpper frater conteyninge in lengethe 107 foote
-and in breddethe 52 foote, abuttinge Sowthe and easte to my ladye
-Kingestons howse and garden, Northe to a hall where the kinges revelles
-lyes at this presente, and weste towardes the seide Duchie Chamber and
-M<sup>r</sup> Portynaryes howse.</p>
-
-<div class="sidenote">Memorandum my lorde warden clamethe the seide hall, parlour,
-Cutchin and Chaumber.</div>
-
-<p>A hall and a parlour vnder the seide frater of the same lengethe
-and breddethe, A litle Cuchen conteyning in lengethe 23 foote and
-in breddethe 22 foote abuttinge to the aforseide lane on the weste,
-towardes the seide parlour on the este, to M<sup>r</sup> Portinarys howse on
-the northe, and to a waye ledinge to my ladye Kingestons howse on the
-southe, A litle Chamber with a voyde rome therunder, conteyning in
-lengethe 26 fote, in breddeth 10 foote, abuttinge weste to the cuchin,
-este to the parlour, northe to M<sup>r</sup> Portinarys howse, and ye seid way to
-my ladie Kingestons howse Sowthe, with 4 small Sellers or darke holes
-therunder.</p>
-
-<p>A voyde rome, beinge an entre towardes the lytle cytchin and colehowse,
-conteyning in lengeth 30 fote and in breddethe 17 fote.</p>
-
-<p>A Chamber called the Duchie Chaumber, with a darke loginge therunder,
-conteyninge in lengthe 50 fote and in breddethe 16 foote, abuttinge
-este ageanste the north ende of the seide ffrater, abuttinge weste on
-M<sup>r</sup> Portinaryes parlour &mdash;&mdash; 66<sup>s</sup> 8<sup>d</sup>.’</p>
-
-<p>(1550) ‘One Kitchyn yarde, an olde Kitchyn, an Entrie or passage
-ioyneinge to the same, Conteineinge in lengthe 84 fote, abutinge to
-the Lane aforesaid on the west side, beinge in bredethe at that ende
-three score fowrtene fote, abutinge to M<sup>r</sup> Portinareys parler next the
-Lane on the southe side and to the Lord Cobham brickewall &amp; gardeine
-on the Northe side. One olde Butterie &amp; a Entrie or passage with a
-great staier therein, with Cellers therevnder, with a Hawle place at
-the vpper ende of the staiers and a entrie there to the ffrater ouer
-the same butterie, which all conteinethe in lengthe 95 fote and in
-bredethe 36 fote, abuttinge to the Cloyster on thest side, the kitchyn
-on the west side, to the Lorde Cobham howse on the northe side, and
-on the southe side to a blinde parler that my Lord warden did Clayme.
-One howse called the vpper ffrater conteinethe in Lengthe 107 fote and
-in bredethe 52 fote, Abuttinge southe and est to the Ladie Kingston
-howse and gardein, northe to a hawle where the Kinges Revelles
-Liethe at theis presentes, and west towardes the Duchie Chamber and
-M<sup>r</sup> Portinareyes howse. A voide rome, beinge an Entrie towardes the
-Litle Kitchyn &amp; Cole howse, conteininge in Lengthe 30 fote and in
-bredethe 17 fote. One Chamber called the Duchie chamber, with a darke
-Lodginge there vnder, conteininge in Lengthe 50 fote and in bredethe
-16 fote, abuttinge est agaynst the northe ende of the said ffrater,
-and abuttinge west apon M<sup>r</sup> Portinareys parler. All which premisses be
-valued to be worthe by yere &mdash;&mdash; iij<sup>li</sup> vj<sup>s</sup> viij<sup>d</sup>.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1514" href="#FNanchor_1514" class="label">[1514]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 14, 24, 116, 117, 119, 120; cf. p.
-482. The stone gallery was removed in 1564.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1515" href="#FNanchor_1515" class="label">[1515]</a> Ibid. 13, 16, 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1516" href="#FNanchor_1516" class="label">[1516]</a> Ibid. 14, 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1517" href="#FNanchor_1517" class="label">[1517]</a> Ibid. 7, 11, ‘an entrye or passage with a greate
-stayre therin’ (1548, 1550), 21 ‘one entrye ledinge vnder parcell
-of the premysses demysed from that end of the house of William More
-wherin John Horleye his servaunt doth lodge’ (1560), 118, ‘the entre
-in the west ende of the garden openyng into the same garden’ (1560),
-31, ‘an entrye leadynge from the sayde voyde ground into the sayd
-dwellynge howse or tenement of the sayd Sir William More’ (1576), 63,
-‘the dore entry way voide ground and passage leadinge and vsed to and
-from the saide greate yard nexte the saide Pipe Office’ (1596), 126,
-‘the gate-house with the appurtenances on the west side of the sayd
-monastery’ (1611), ‘the great gate near the play-house’ (1617).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1518" href="#FNanchor_1518" class="label">[1518]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 20.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1519" href="#FNanchor_1519" class="label">[1519]</a> Ibid. 14 (cf. 116), ‘vnius paris graduum ducentium a
-coquina predicta vsque magnum claustrum’ (1546), 21, ‘the waye ledinge
-from the house and garden of William More towards the Water Lane’, ‘one
-entrye ledinge vnder parcell of the premysses demysed from the garden
-of William More to the voide grounde’ (1560), 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1520" href="#FNanchor_1520" class="label">[1520]</a> Ibid. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1521" href="#FNanchor_1521" class="label">[1521]</a> Ibid. 115.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1522" href="#FNanchor_1522" class="label">[1522]</a> Ibid. 27, 29.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1523" href="#FNanchor_1523" class="label">[1523]</a> The whole length of the Neville-Farrant holding is
-given in 1560 (<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 20) as 157½ ft., and in 1576 (<i>M.
-S. C.</i> ii. 29) as 156½ ft. As this included 37 ft. of the northern
-block, 119½ ft. or 120½ ft. seems to be left for the staircase and
-frater. The difference between inside and outside measurements often
-causes confusion in old surveys.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1524" href="#FNanchor_1524" class="label">[1524]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 62, 119; cf. p. 504.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1525" href="#FNanchor_1525" class="label">[1525]</a> Ibid. 94.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1526" href="#FNanchor_1526" class="label">[1526]</a> Cf. p. 513.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1527" href="#FNanchor_1527" class="label">[1527]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 105.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1528" href="#FNanchor_1528" class="label">[1528]</a> The room is described as ‘intrale seu le parlour’ in
-Cawarden’s grant of 1550.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1529" href="#FNanchor_1529" class="label">[1529]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 105, 124. There was yet another
-room under the infirmary. One Kempe, an assign of Lady Kingston’s heir,
-tried to claim the Parliament Chamber from Cawarden, on the strength of
-her grant of the infirmary.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1530" href="#FNanchor_1530" class="label">[1530]</a> Cf. p. 504.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1531" href="#FNanchor_1531" class="label">[1531]</a> On Cheyne’s houses cf. p. 499.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1532" href="#FNanchor_1532" class="label">[1532]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 42–51. This hall is doubtless the
-ground-floor frater referred to in a document of <i>c</i>. 1562 (<i>M.
-S. C.</i> ii. 105).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1533" href="#FNanchor_1533" class="label">[1533]</a> Cf. p. 499. The ‘blinde parler that my Lord warden did
-clayme’ and ‘the litle kitchyn and cole howse’ are mentioned in the
-survey of 1550 to define the position of other parcels. But the hall
-and parlour might be held to be covered by the grant of the ‘howse
-called the vpper frater’, and I do not know what the ‘little tenement’
-near that held by Kirkham from Cheyne was, if it was not the little
-chamber and kitchen. It is noteworthy that the disputed rooms, after
-being included, with a note of Cheyne’s claim, in the survey of 1548,
-were left out of Cawarden’s lease of the same year.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1534" href="#FNanchor_1534" class="label">[1534]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 109.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1535" href="#FNanchor_1535" class="label">[1535]</a> Brewer, ii. 2. 1494.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1536" href="#FNanchor_1536" class="label">[1536]</a> <i>Tudor Revels</i>, 7.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1537" href="#FNanchor_1537" class="label">[1537]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 255; Wallace, i. 140.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1538" href="#FNanchor_1538" class="label">[1538]</a> <i>Athenaeum</i> (1886), ii. 91.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1539" href="#FNanchor_1539" class="label">[1539]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 430; cf. <i>M. S. C.</i> ii.
-120; Wallace, i. 192.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1540" href="#FNanchor_1540" class="label">[1540]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 35. I do not know whether More
-deliberately confused the Tents and Revels.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1541" href="#FNanchor_1541" class="label">[1541]</a> Ibid. 52.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1542" href="#FNanchor_1542" class="label">[1542]</a> Ibid. 105.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1543" href="#FNanchor_1543" class="label">[1543]</a> Ibid. 14, 116; <i>Hist. MSS.</i> vii. 603.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1544" href="#FNanchor_1544" class="label">[1544]</a> Ibid. 15.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1545" href="#FNanchor_1545" class="label">[1545]</a> Only an abstract of title at the date of the sale
-exists (Barrett, <i>Apothecaries</i>, 46), but Apothecaries’ Hall
-occupies the site of these rooms.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1546" href="#FNanchor_1546" class="label">[1546]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 4, 9; Feuillerat, <i>Eliz.</i> 440.
-In 1552 Jane Fremownte had succeeded Barnard (<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 115),
-but she cannot have had the whole of the original lodge, as her 4 ft.
-entry on Water Lane is too small to have been the main access to the
-cloister. Probably part had been granted to her neighbour, Sir George
-Harper. Nor did all her holding pass to Cobham in 1554. Some of it was
-probably added to the house on the north, which occupied the site of
-the old church porch.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1547" href="#FNanchor_1547" class="label">[1547]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 44, 53; cf. p. 502.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1548" href="#FNanchor_1548" class="label">[1548]</a> Ibid. 51, 121.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1549" href="#FNanchor_1549" class="label">[1549]</a> Ibid. 16.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1550" href="#FNanchor_1550" class="label">[1550]</a> Feuillerat, <i>Edw. and Mary</i>, 210, 230, 242, 301;
-<i>Eliz.</i> 103, 107.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1551" href="#FNanchor_1551" class="label">[1551]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 118, ‘one other grete rome or vawte
-next the ground next the entre in the west ende of the garden openyng
-into the same garden wherin now the robes of the revelles do lye’
-(Lease of 12 Feb. 1560).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1552" href="#FNanchor_1552" class="label">[1552]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 19.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1553" href="#FNanchor_1553" class="label">[1553]</a> Cf. p. 489.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1554" href="#FNanchor_1554" class="label">[1554]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 105, 118.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1555" href="#FNanchor_1555" class="label">[1555]</a> Ibid. 119, 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1556" href="#FNanchor_1556" class="label">[1556]</a> Wallace, i. 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1557" href="#FNanchor_1557" class="label">[1557]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 119.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1558" href="#FNanchor_1558" class="label">[1558]</a> Ibid. 27; Wallace, i. 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1559" href="#FNanchor_1559" class="label">[1559]</a> Wallace, i. 175.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1560" href="#FNanchor_1560" class="label">[1560]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 120.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1561" href="#FNanchor_1561" class="label">[1561]</a> Ibid. 27.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1562" href="#FNanchor_1562" class="label">[1562]</a> <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlviii. 92; Wallace, i. 131.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1563" href="#FNanchor_1563" class="label">[1563]</a> Ibid. 93; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 28; Wallace, i. 132.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1564" href="#FNanchor_1564" class="label">[1564]</a> On the plays performed there, cf. chh. xii, xiii
-(Chapel, Paul’s, Oxford’s). Collier appears to have been aware,
-probably from the Lyly prologues and the reference in Gosson, <i>P.
-C.</i> 188, of the existence of the earlier Blackfriars play-house, and
-to have dated it, by a singular coincidence, in 1576. He knew nothing
-of the real facts, but inferred (<i>H. E. D. P.</i> i. 219) that the
-undated petition of the Blackfriars inhabitants, which is really of
-1596, was of 1576, on the strength of a reference in it to a banishment
-of the players from the City, which an incorrect endorsement on a
-<i>Lansdowne MS.</i> (cf. App. D, No. lxxv) had led him to place in
-1575. This did not prevent him from also assigning the petition, with
-a forged reply from the players, to 1596 (cf. p. 508). He proceeded
-to forge (<i>a</i>) an order dated 23 Dec. 1579 for the toleration
-of Leicester’s men at the Blackfriars (<i>New Facts</i>, 9), and
-(<i>b</i>) a memorial by Shakespeare and others as Queen’s men and
-Blackfriars ‘sharers’ in 1589 (<i>New Facts</i>, 11; cf. Ingleby, 244,
-249).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1565" href="#FNanchor_1565" class="label">[1565]</a> Cf. ch. xii (Chapel).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1566" href="#FNanchor_1566" class="label">[1566]</a> <i>Jahrbuch</i>, xlviii. 99; Wallace, i. 152 (Will of
-Farrant, 30 Nov. 1580), 153 (Anne Farrant to More, 25 Dec. 1580), 154
-(Leicester to More, 19 Sept. 1581), 158 (Anne Farrant to Walsingham,
-<i>c.</i> 1583), 159 (Court of Common Pleas, <i>Farrant v. Hunnis</i>
-and <i>Farrant v. Newman</i>, 1583–4), 160 (Court of Requests,
-<i>Newman and Hunnis v. Farrant</i>, 1584), 177 (Wolley to More, 13
-Jan. 1587), 174 (Memoranda by More, <i>c.</i> 1587; cf. Dasent, xv.
-137).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1567" href="#FNanchor_1567" class="label">[1567]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 123. More’s rental of 1584 includes
-£50 from Hunsdon for the mansion house, £20 from Oxford, £8 from Lyly;
-that of 1585 the same three sums, all from Hunsdon. But the two smaller
-sums represent twice Farrant’s rent, which was £14.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1568" href="#FNanchor_1568" class="label">[1568]</a> Kempe, 495; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 123; Wallace, i. 186
-(More to Hunsdon, 8 April 1586; Hunsdon to More, 27 April 1586; Hunsdon
-to More, 14 April 1590; More to Hunsdon, draft, 17 April 1590; More
-to Hunsdon, 18 April 1590). Did the Paul’s ‘boyes’ keep up connexion
-with the Blackfriars by learning dancing and perhaps playing in Frith’s
-school?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1569" href="#FNanchor_1569" class="label">[1569]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 61, 93, 94, 98.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1570" href="#FNanchor_1570" class="label">[1570]</a> Ibid. 123 (Skinner to More, 11 Oct. 1591).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1571" href="#FNanchor_1571" class="label">[1571]</a> Ibid. 50, 54.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1572" href="#FNanchor_1572" class="label">[1572]</a> This may have been Thomas Hale, Groom of the Tents, who
-was a witness in the case (ibid. 44), or the Thomas Hall, musician, who
-in 1565 was sub-tenant of Frith’s garrets (ibid. 119).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1573" href="#FNanchor_1573" class="label">[1573]</a> Ibid. 35 (memorandum by More), 36 (award by
-arbitrators), 40 (depositions of More’s witnesses), 122 (notes of
-evidence by Pole’s witnesses).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1574" href="#FNanchor_1574" class="label">[1574]</a> On Bonetti’s career as a fencer, cf. Wallace, i. 187;
-<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 122; Reyher, 257; G. Silver, <i>Paradoxes of
-Defence</i>, 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1575" href="#FNanchor_1575" class="label">[1575]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 56; Wallace, i. 188 (Willoughby to
-More, July 1584), 190.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1576" href="#FNanchor_1576" class="label">[1576]</a> Wallace, i. 189; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 122. I do not
-think the lease of the fencing-school was in question between More
-and Bonetti. Both Raleigh’s letter and the workmen’s petition imply
-house-building, not mere internal repairs. Bonetti could have added
-no building to the fencing-school except perhaps the kitchen which
-adjoined in 1596 (ibid. 61). But the western house had been extensively
-rebuilt by 1584.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1577" href="#FNanchor_1577" class="label">[1577]</a> Ibid. 55.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1578" href="#FNanchor_1578" class="label">[1578]</a> Ibid. 56. The whole description from ‘All w<sup>ch</sup> six
-foote &amp; a halfe’ (l. 18) to ‘xxxix foote &amp; viij inches’ (l. 29) is
-parenthetic, a point which the punctuation obscures.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1579" href="#FNanchor_1579" class="label">[1579]</a> Cf. chh. ii, xiii (Chamberlain’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1580" href="#FNanchor_1580" class="label">[1580]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 124; cf. p. 490.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1581" href="#FNanchor_1581" class="label">[1581]</a> Ibid. 62; cf. p. 504.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1582" href="#FNanchor_1582" class="label">[1582]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 36, 47, 51, 122.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1583" href="#FNanchor_1583" class="label">[1583]</a> Ibid. 36, 38, 56 (‘the tenemente of Margrett Poole on
-the south and weste’), 70, 77, 81, 85, 125. Here must have been the
-chamber which Thomas Blagrave, finding the butler’s lodging too small,
-hired of Parson Wythers, Cheyne’s servant, from 1552 to 1560, and which
-Pole still had in 1572 (ibid. 53). But if it was strictly ‘adjoininge’
-to his house he must have had the ‘little kitchen’ as well as the
-‘little chamber’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1584" href="#FNanchor_1584" class="label">[1584]</a> Ibid. 63, 71.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1585" href="#FNanchor_1585" class="label">[1585]</a> Ibid. 125. An unfortunate hiatus in a document (ibid.
-70) leaves it uncertain whether Tice occupied one of Mrs. Pole’s houses
-or More’s enlarged ‘little kitchen’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1586" href="#FNanchor_1586" class="label">[1586]</a> Ibid. 50.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1587" href="#FNanchor_1587" class="label">[1587]</a> Cf. p. 504.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1588" href="#FNanchor_1588" class="label">[1588]</a> Kempe, 496; Wallace, i. 195; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 125,
-misdated 1595. The ‘other’ house was probably the mansion house, which
-was let to Ralph Bowes on 3 March 1596 (cf. p. 497). Hunsdon died on 22
-July 1596.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1589" href="#FNanchor_1589" class="label">[1589]</a> Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 299, from enrolment in R.
-O.; <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 60, from counterpart executed by Burbadge in
-<i>Loseley MS.</i> 348.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1590" href="#FNanchor_1590" class="label">[1590]</a> I suppose that this was the old lavatory. If so,
-probably Burbadge’s use terminated when this became a glass-house in
-1601; cf. p. 506.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1591" href="#FNanchor_1591" class="label">[1591]</a> The account in Wallace, ii. 37, is not trustworthy; it
-assumes, in lieu of the Duchy Chamber and staircase tower, a ‘north
-section’ of the building 40 ft. from north to south.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1592" href="#FNanchor_1592" class="label">[1592]</a> Cf. p. 498.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1593" href="#FNanchor_1593" class="label">[1593]</a> Wallace, i. 196; ii. 38, is misleading here.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1594" href="#FNanchor_1594" class="label">[1594]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 70.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1595" href="#FNanchor_1595" class="label">[1595]</a> Ibid. 76 (conveyance by Sir Richard Michelborne, George
-Pole, and Charles Pole), 84 (conveyance by Richard and Elizabeth
-Mansell), 125.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1596" href="#FNanchor_1596" class="label">[1596]</a> <i>Variorum</i>, iii. 62; Birch, ii. 426.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1597" href="#FNanchor_1597" class="label">[1597]</a> H. R. Plomer, <i>The King’s Printing House under the
-Stuarts</i> (<i>2 Library</i> ii. 353).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1598" href="#FNanchor_1598" class="label">[1598]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 83 (Recital of conveyance by
-trustees of Lady Howard); cf. p. 512.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1599" href="#FNanchor_1599" class="label">[1599]</a> Ibid. 98 (Recital of lease in deed of sale of 1609).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1600" href="#FNanchor_1600" class="label">[1600]</a> Ibid. 93, ‘all that greate Vault or lowe roome
-adioyneing to the said greate Garden lyeing and being at the south west
-end of the said greate garden nowe vsed and imployed for a glassehowse’
-(1609). By 26 June 1601 (<i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 70) the way south of the
-kitchen yard has become ‘the yard or way ... which leadeth towardes
-the glassehouse nowe in the tenure of Sir Ierom Bowes’. Bowes had
-obtained a patent for making drinking-glasses in 1592 and occupied a
-warehouse under the church in 1597 (<i>D. N. B.</i>). Dekker, <i>Newes
-from Hell</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>, ii. 97), says, ‘Like the Glass-house
-Furnace in Blacke-friers, the bonefiers that are kept there neuer goe
-out’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1601" href="#FNanchor_1601" class="label">[1601]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 92 (Deed of Sale).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1602" href="#FNanchor_1602" class="label">[1602]</a> Ibid. 126. There is some confusion as to the position
-of Mrs. Basil’s house. I think it was west of the gate-house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1603" href="#FNanchor_1603" class="label">[1603]</a> Ibid. 88 (Deed of Sale, misdated 1602).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1604" href="#FNanchor_1604" class="label">[1604]</a> Ibid. 64.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1605" href="#FNanchor_1605" class="label">[1605]</a> Ibid. 83; <i>S. P. D. Jac. I</i>, viii. 18 (Grant
-to trustees for Lady Kildare). An <i>inquisitio</i> on Cobham’s
-Blackfriars property (<i>1 Jac. I</i>) appears to be amongst the
-Special Commissions and Returns in the Exchequer (R. O. <i>Lists and
-Indexes</i>, xxxvii. 61).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1606" href="#FNanchor_1606" class="label">[1606]</a> C. R. B. Barrett, <i>History of the Society of
-Apothecaries</i>, 42. The existing Hall dates from 1669–70. John
-Downes (cf. App. I, No. iii) and Pepys, i. 336, record the use of the
-older building by Davenant for plays at the Restoration. So Farrant’s
-tradition survived.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1607" href="#FNanchor_1607" class="label">[1607]</a> For text and discussion of bona fides cf. App. D, No.
-cvii. Collier, having already assigned the document to 1576 (cf. p.
-496), uses it again for 1596 (<i>H. E. D. P.</i> i. 287). With it, in
-his first edition (i. 297), he printed a reply, now in <i>S. P. D.
-Eliz.</i> cclx. 117, by Pope, Richard Burbadge, Heminges, Phillips,
-Shakespeare, Kempe, Sly, and Tooley, on behalf of the players, which is
-palaeographically a forgery (Ingleby, 289) and could not be genuine in
-substance, since it refers to the Globe, which did not exist in 1596.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1608" href="#FNanchor_1608" class="label">[1608]</a> Cf. p. 511. Wallace, ii. 53, thinks this an error or
-invention of the City in 1619, because the Privy Council registers
-‘giving all the official acts of that body, record no such order’. But
-the Privy Council registers notoriously do not record all the official
-acts of that body (cf. ch. ii). The petitioners of 1619 are not likely
-to have invented the ‘petition and indorsemente’ of 1596 to which they
-appealed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1609" href="#FNanchor_1609" class="label">[1609]</a> In the <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635
-(Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 317) Cuthbert and the other Burbadges then
-living say ‘now for the Blackfriers, that is our inheritance; our
-father purchased it at extreame rates, and made it into a play-house
-with great charge and troble’. Further, Cuthbert was associated with
-Richard in buying subsidiary property in 1601, 1610, 1612, and 1614
-(cf. p. 505). But the leases of 1600 and 1608 were by Richard alone,
-and under one of these Cuthbert became his tenant.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1610" href="#FNanchor_1610" class="label">[1610]</a> Cf. p. 511.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1611" href="#FNanchor_1611" class="label">[1611]</a> Fleay, 211, 234, 240.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1612" href="#FNanchor_1612" class="label">[1612]</a> Cf. ch. xii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1613" href="#FNanchor_1613" class="label">[1613]</a> Fleay, 224, 230, 245, 250. Evans maintained that the
-assignment to Hawkins was absolute, to cover his liability under
-the bond to Burbadge. But the court appears to have held that a
-reassignment was intended, but that ‘the conveyance was never perfected
-and sealed’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1614" href="#FNanchor_1614" class="label">[1614]</a> Wallace, ii. 89, from unpublished document; <i>Evans v.
-Kirkham</i> in Fleay, 214.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1615" href="#FNanchor_1615" class="label">[1615]</a> Ibid. 235.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1616" href="#FNanchor_1616" class="label">[1616]</a> Ibid. 221, 231, 235, 246.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1617" href="#FNanchor_1617" class="label">[1617]</a> The Burbadges say in the <i>Sharers Papers</i> of 1635,
-‘the more to strengthen the service, the boys daily wearing out, it was
-considered that house would be as fit for ourselves, and so purchased
-the lease remaining from Evans with our money, and placed men players,
-which were Hemings, Condall, Shakspeare, etc.’. They also say that the
-players had their shares ‘of us for nothing’. Very likely they paid no
-fine, but they had to pay their quota towards rent. It is reasonable
-to infer that Thomas Evans was a relative and nominee of Henry Evans.
-Kirkham’s allegation in the 1612 litigation that Henry Evans had shared
-in the Blackfriars profits during the past four years (Fleay, 225) was
-not seriously contested.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1618" href="#FNanchor_1618" class="label">[1618]</a> Cf. ch. xiii. Collier (<i>New Facts</i>, 16) printed
-a document professing to set out action taken by the City against
-scurrilities of Kempe and Armin at Blackfriars in 1605. But this cannot
-be traced in the City archives (S. Lee in <i>D. N. B.</i> s.v. Kempe),
-and the City did not obtain control of the Blackfriars until 1608 (cf.
-p. 480). It is probably a forgery.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1619" href="#FNanchor_1619" class="label">[1619]</a> Cf. vol. i, p. 357.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1620" href="#FNanchor_1620" class="label">[1620]</a> C. W. Wallace, <i>Advance Sheets from Shakespeare, the
-Globe, and Blackfriars</i> (p.p. 1909).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1621" href="#FNanchor_1621" class="label">[1621]</a> <i>Sharers Papers</i> in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 312.
-Collier, <i>Alleyn Memoirs</i>, 105, conjectures that Alleyn bought
-Shakespeare’s interest in April 1612, and it appears from G. F. Warner,
-<i>Dulwich MSS.</i> 115, 172, 174, that he forged entries in documents
-relating to other property of Alleyn’s in Blackfriars, as a support to
-this conjecture.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1622" href="#FNanchor_1622" class="label">[1622]</a> Cf. p. 480.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1623" href="#FNanchor_1623" class="label">[1623]</a> Text in Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 311, and Harrison, iv.
-323, from City <i>Repertory</i>, xxxiv, f. 38<sup>v</sup>. The two petitions
-of the officials and inhabitants are in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 90, from
-<i>Remembrancia</i>, v. 28, 29. They are undated, but can be identified
-from a recital in the order. The officials allege ‘that whereas in
-November 1596 divers both honorable persons and others then inhabiting
-the said precinct made knowne to the Lordes and others of the privie
-Counsell, what inconveniencies were likelie to fall vpon them, by a
-common Play-house which was then preparinge to bee erected there,
-wherevpon their Honours then forbadd the vse of the said howse for
-playes, as by the peticion and indorsemente in aunswere thereof may
-appeare.... Nevertheles ... the owner of the said play-house doth vnder
-the name of a private howse (respectinge indeed private comoditie
-only) convert the said howse to a publique play-house.’ They dwell on
-the inconvenience caused by the congested streets and the difficulty
-of getting to church ‘the ordinary passage for a great part of the
-precinct aforesaid being close by the play house dore’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1624" href="#FNanchor_1624" class="label">[1624]</a> Text in <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 280.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1625" href="#FNanchor_1625" class="label">[1625]</a> Text in Collier, i. 455, from <i>S. P. D. Car. I</i>,
-ccv. 32, where it is accompanied by copies of the Privy Council order
-and letter of 22 June 1600 (App. D, No. cxxiv) and the City order
-of 21 Jan. 1619. Probably the copy of the petition of Blackfriars
-inhabitants in 1596 (cf. p. 508), now in <i>S. P. D. Eliz.</i> cclx.
-116, originally belonged to this set of documents.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1626" href="#FNanchor_1626" class="label">[1626]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 386.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1627" href="#FNanchor_1627" class="label">[1627]</a> The report of the commissioners is printed by Collier,
-<i>New Facts</i>, 27, and <i>H. E. D. P.</i> i. 477. It is confirmed by
-a memorandum of Secretary Windebank in <i>S. P. D. Car. I</i>, ccli. p.
-293, and I think Ingleby, 304, is wrong in suspecting a forgery (cf.
-<i>M. S. C.</i> i. 386). The commissioners allowed (<i>a</i>) £700 to
-Cuthbert and William Burbadge for 14 years’ purchase of the rent of £50
-reserved to them by lease, (<i>b</i>) £1,134 for 14 years’ purchase of
-an interest in four tenements rated at £75 and a piece of void ground
-to turn coaches at £6, (<i>c</i>) £1,066 13<i>s.</i> 4<i>d.</i> for 100
-marks apiece to 16 players for ‘the interest that some of them haue
-by lease in the said Play-house, and in respect of the shares which
-others haue in the benefits thereof’, and for compensation for removal.
-Collier, <i>Reply</i>, 39, mentions but does not print another document
-containing a summary of the players’ claim, with notes by Buck. But
-Buck was long dead. A third valuation published by Collier, in which
-Laz. Fletcher’s name occurs, is certainly a forgery (Ingleby, 246).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1628" href="#FNanchor_1628" class="label">[1628]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 386.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1629" href="#FNanchor_1629" class="label">[1629]</a> Fleay, 211, 213. I suppose it was on this that Evans
-spent £11 0<i>s.</i> 2<i>d.</i> in Dec. 1603 (Wallace, ii. 89).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1630" href="#FNanchor_1630" class="label">[1630]</a> In <i>The Times</i> of 12 Sept. 1906 Professor Wallace
-gives the number of new suits as four; in <i>The Children of the
-Chapel at Blackfriars</i> (1908), 36, as twelve. Presumably the Court
-of Requests suit of <i>Keysar v. Burbadge et al.</i>, printed in
-<i>Nebraska University Studies</i>, x. 336, is one of these.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1631" href="#FNanchor_1631" class="label">[1631]</a> Wallace, ii. 39, 40, 41, 43, 49.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1632" href="#FNanchor_1632" class="label">[1632]</a> Cf. p. 511.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1633" href="#FNanchor_1633" class="label">[1633]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> ii. 31, ‘all the Leds couerynge the
-premysses’ (1576), 61, ‘the stone staires leadinge vpp vnto the Leades
-or route over the saide seaven greate vpper romes oute of the saide
-seaven greate vpper romes’ (1596).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1634" href="#FNanchor_1634" class="label">[1634]</a> Wallace, ii. 40.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1635" href="#FNanchor_1635" class="label">[1635]</a> Marston, <i>The Dutch Courtesan</i>, v. iii. 162.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1636" href="#FNanchor_1636" class="label">[1636]</a> Cf. p. 425.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1637" href="#FNanchor_1637" class="label">[1637]</a> R. Flecknoe, <i>Miscellania</i> (1653), 141, ‘From
-thence passing on to the Black-fryers, and seeing never a Play-bil on
-the Gate, no Coaches on the place, nor Doorkeeper at the Play-house
-door, with his Boxe like a Churchwarden, desiring you to remember the
-poor Players, I cannot but say for Epilogue to all the Playes were ever
-acted there:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Poor House that in dayes of our Grand-sires,</div>
- <div>Belongst unto the Mendiant Fryers:</div>
- <div>And where so oft in our Fathers dayes</div>
- <div>We have seen so many of Shakspears Playes,</div>
- <div>So many of Johnsons, Beaumonts &amp; Fletchers.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1638" href="#FNanchor_1638" class="label">[1638]</a> I do not know what value to attach to a print in the
-Gardiner collection, reproduced by Baker, 44, 78, as representing
-the theatre. It shows a Renaissance façade, which can have been no
-part of the mediaeval building. Adams, 197, reproduces a painting of
-mediaeval fragments found in rebuilding <i>The Times</i> in 1872, small
-ground-floor rooms divided by entries. But <i>The Times</i> must cover
-the site of Hunsdon House as well as that of the theatre.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1639" href="#FNanchor_1639" class="label">[1639]</a> As an epilogue to this narrative and an example of
-how popular history is written, I quote D. E. Oliver, <i>The English
-Stage</i> (1912), 9, ‘Blackfriars House, a deserted monastery on the
-Thames side, was granted by Edward VI in 1596 to the Court Players
-for their use as a play-house, but it was not until the accession of
-Elizabeth that it received official sanction as a recognized place of
-public entertainment’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1640" href="#FNanchor_1640" class="label">[1640]</a> Jonas, 132, however, quotes from the register of St.
-Dunstan’s, Whitefriars, with the date 29 Sept. 1607, ‘Gerry out of the
-play-house in the Friars buried’, which suggests use of the theatre
-before 1608. The King’s Revels may well have started by 1607. He also
-quotes, without date, ‘We present one play-house in the same precinct,
-not fitting these to be now tolerable’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1641" href="#FNanchor_1641" class="label">[1641]</a> I do not know why Adams, 312, identifies the play-house
-with a cloister shown in Clapham’s plan. Surely it is more likely to
-have been the hall also shown at the north-west corner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1642" href="#FNanchor_1642" class="label">[1642]</a> <i>P. C. Acts</i> (1613–14), 166. One Sturgis had
-leased a house and garden from Sir Edward Gorge, and sublet the garden
-to ‘one Rossetoe Kynman and others, who goe aboute to erecte a p[l]aye
-house thereupon’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1643" href="#FNanchor_1643" class="label">[1643]</a> <i>M. S. C.</i> i. 91; cf. ch. xvii. The Blackfriars
-is still the ‘private house’ of the King’s men in the patent of 1619
-issued to them after this controversy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1644" href="#FNanchor_1644" class="label">[1644]</a> It is true that, when the prentices took up Whitefriars
-for <i>The Hog Hath Lost His Pearl</i> in 1613, the admission <i>per
-bullettini</i> is said to have been ‘for a note of distinction from
-ordinary comedians’. But the companies had no need to continue any
-special system of admission after they had the protection of their
-patents; Dekker (<i>vide</i> p. 523) speaks of gatherers at private
-houses in 1609. After the Restoration, ‘ballatine, or tickets sealed
-for all doors and boxes’ were introduced at the Duke’s Theatre in 1660
-(R. W. Lowe, <i>Thomas Betterton</i>, 75).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1645" href="#FNanchor_1645" class="label">[1645]</a> Lawrence, i. 230; cf. App. D, No. xxxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1646" href="#FNanchor_1646" class="label">[1646]</a> The earliest example is <i>The Troublesome Reign of
-King John</i> (1591).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1647" href="#FNanchor_1647" class="label">[1647]</a> But ‘priuately’ is also used of strictly private
-performances on the title-pages of <i>Caesar’s Revenge</i> (1607) acted
-at Trinity College, Oxford, and, later, W. Montague’s <i>Shepherd’s
-Paradise</i> (1659) acted by amateurs at Court.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1648" href="#FNanchor_1648" class="label">[1648]</a> T. M., <i>Black Book</i> (1604), in Bullen,
-<i>Middleton</i>, viii. 42, ‘arch tobacco-taker of England ... upon
-stages both common and private’; <i>Malcontent</i> (1604), ind., ‘we
-may sit upon the stage at the private house’; <i>Sophonisba</i> (1606),
-<i>ad fin.</i>, ‘it is printed only as it was represented by youths,
-and after the fashion of the private stage’; Dekker, <i>Gull’s Horn
-Book</i> (cf. App. H), ‘Whether therefore the gatherers of the publique
-or priuate Play-house stand to receiue the afternoones rent’; Dekker,
-<i>Seven Deadly Sins</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>, ii. 41), ‘All the Citty
-lookt like a priuate Play-house, when the windowes are clapt downe’;
-<i>Roaring Girl</i> (1611), ii. 1, ‘the private stage’s audience,
-the twelve-penny stool gentlemen’; <i>Daborne to Henslowe</i> (1613,
-<i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 79), ‘as good a play for your publique howse as
-ever was playd’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1649" href="#FNanchor_1649" class="label">[1649]</a> Cf. Wright (App. I).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1650" href="#FNanchor_1650" class="label">[1650]</a> Lawrence (<i>Fortnightly</i>, May 1916) has shown
-that the rebuilt Fortune of 1623 and Red Bull of <i>c.</i> 1632 were
-probably roofed, and Wright’s description confuses the two phases of
-these houses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1651" href="#FNanchor_1651" class="label">[1651]</a> Chapman’s <i>Byron</i> (1625) is said to have been
-acted ‘at the Blacke-Friers and other publique Stages’, Heywood’s
-<i>English Traveller</i> (1633), <i>A Maidenhead Well Lost</i> (1634),
-and <i>Love’s Mistress</i> (1636) to have been ‘publikely acted’ at
-the Cockpit, and Shirley’s <i>Martyred Soldier</i> (1638) to have
-been acted ‘at the Private House in Drury Lane and at other publicke
-Theaters’. This is exceptional terminology, but shows the obsolescence
-of the distinction.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1652" href="#FNanchor_1652" class="label">[1652]</a> Cf. ch. xvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1653" href="#FNanchor_1653" class="label">[1653]</a> <i>Old Fortunatus</i> (Rose, 1599), prol. 81, ‘this
-small circumference’; <i>Warning for Fair Women</i> (? Curtain, 1599),
-prol. 83, 88, ‘all this fair circuit ... this round’; <i>Hen. V</i>
-(Curtain or Globe, 1599), prol. 11, ‘this cockpit ... this wooden O’;
-<i>E. M. O.</i> (Globe, 1599), prol. 199, epil. 4406, ‘this thronged
-round ... this faire-fild Globe’; <i>Sejanus</i> (Globe, 1603), comm.
-v, ‘the Globe’s fair ring’; <i>Three English Brothers</i> (Curtain or
-Red Bull, 1607), epil., ‘this round circumference’; <i>Merry Devil of
-Edmonton</i> (Globe, 1608), prol. 5, ‘this round’. On the other hand,
-<i>Whore of Babylon</i> (Fortune, 1607), prol. 1, ‘The charmes of
-Silence through this Square be throwne’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1654" href="#FNanchor_1654" class="label">[1654]</a> Ordish, 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1655" href="#FNanchor_1655" class="label">[1655]</a> Before the Swan was built, Nashe wrote in <i>The
-Unfortunate Traveller</i> (1594), ‘I sawe a banketting house belonging
-to a merchant that was the meruaile of the world.... It was builte
-round of green marble like a Theater without’ (<i>Works</i>, ii. 282).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1656" href="#FNanchor_1656" class="label">[1656]</a> Cf. chh. iv, xvi (introd.).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1657" href="#FNanchor_1657" class="label">[1657]</a> <i>Atlantic Monthly</i> (1906), xcvii. 369.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1658" href="#FNanchor_1658" class="label">[1658]</a> Kirkman also says in the preface to <i>The Wits</i>
-(1672), ‘I have seen the Red Bull Play-house, which was a large one’;
-but he is referring, more certainly than Wright, to the rebuilt house.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1659" href="#FNanchor_1659" class="label">[1659]</a> Cf. Albright, 40; Lawrence, i. 12, and <i>E. S.</i>
-xxxii. 44.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1660" href="#FNanchor_1660" class="label">[1660]</a> There is a dot in Wheatley’s facsimile over the second
-well-marked ‘r’ of the word ‘orchestra’. Is it possible that Van
-Buchell misread it ‘orchestia’?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1661" href="#FNanchor_1661" class="label">[1661]</a> Cf. Brereton in <i>Homage</i>, 204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1662" href="#FNanchor_1662" class="label">[1662]</a> Cf. ch. xvi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1663" href="#FNanchor_1663" class="label">[1663]</a> The <i>Theatrum</i> of Jonson’s 1616 Folio t.p. is
-oval, rather than round, but it is safer to take this, in spite of its
-hut, as representing Jonson’s notion of a classical theatre.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1664" href="#FNanchor_1664" class="label">[1664]</a> Cf. ch. xvi. Graves, 32, tries to minimize the
-structural influence of inn-yards on the theatres, and even doubts
-whether the actors preferred to act in these ‘rather than in the great
-halls’. But I do not think that he makes much of a case. Had the inns,
-indeed, ‘great halls’ at all?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1665" href="#FNanchor_1665" class="label">[1665]</a> Gosson, <i>P. C.</i> (1582), ‘it is the fashion of
-youthes to go first into the yarde, and to carry theire eye through
-every gallery’; <i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 10, ‘tear a passion to
-tatters, to very rags, to split the ears of the groundlings, who for
-the most part are capable of nothing but inexplicable dumb-shows and
-noise’; Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (1609), ‘your <i>Groundling</i> and
-<i>Gallery-Commoner</i> buyes his sport by the penny ... neither are
-you to be hunted from thence, though the Scar-crows in the yard hoot at
-you, hisse at you, spit at you, yea, throw durt euen in your teeth’;
-<i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614), ind. 51, ‘the vnderstanding Gentlemen
-o’ the ground here, ask’d my iudgement’, 59, 79; <i>The Hog Has Lost
-His Pearl</i> (1614), prol.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>We may be pelted off for ought we know,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With apples, egges, or stones, from thence belowe;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">W. Fennor, <i>Descriptions</i> (1616):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i3 hangingindent">the understanding, grounded, men for their just reward,</div>
- <div>Shall gape and gaze among the fools in the yard.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">So later, <i>Vox Graculi</i> (1623), ‘they will sit dryer
-in the galleries then those who are the understanding men in the yard’;
-Shirley, <i>The Changes</i> (1632):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i8h">Many gentlemen</div>
- <div>Are not, as in the days of understanding,</div>
- <div>Now satisfied with a Jig;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Shirley, <i>The Doubtful Heir</i> (1640), prol.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>No shews, no frisk and, what you most delight in,</div>
- <div>Grave understanders, here’s no target-fighting.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1666" href="#FNanchor_1666" class="label">[1666]</a> <i>Proscenium</i> is the proper classical word for the
-space in front of the <i>scena</i>; cf. p. 539.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1667" href="#FNanchor_1667" class="label">[1667]</a> Albright has no justification for introducing into his
-reconstruction of a typical Shakespearian stage the tapering, instead
-of quadrangular, platform which characterizes the late engraving in
-<i>The Wits</i>, and to a less degree those in <i>Roxana</i> and
-<i>Messallina</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1668" href="#FNanchor_1668" class="label">[1668]</a> Wegener, 125, collects examples of the use of traps.
-They served, <i>inter alia</i>, for the representation of ‘hell-mouth’,
-which the Elizabethan stage inherited from the miracle-plays (cf. p.
-544), and the space under the stage was known as ‘hell’; cf. Dekker,
-<i>News from Hell</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>, ii. 92, 139), ‘Mary the
-question is, in which of the <i>Play-houses</i> he [the Devil] would
-have performed his prize.... Hell being vnder euerie one of their
-<i>Stages</i>, the Players (if they had owed him a spight) might with
-a false Trappe doore haue slipt him downe, and there kept him, as a
-laughing stocke to al their yawning spectators.... Tailors ... (as well
-as Plaiers) haue a hell of their owne, (vnder their shop-board).’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1669" href="#FNanchor_1669" class="label">[1669]</a> Cf. Graves, 41. The register of the association of
-Masters of Defence (<i>Sloane MS.</i> 2530; cf. extracts in A. Hutton,
-<i>The Sword and the Centuries</i>, 259) records many ‘prizes’ played
-at theatres and theatrical inns during the sixteenth century; cf. App.
-D, Nos. lx-lxii, <i>Case is Altered</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii. 28, ‘First
-they [maisters of defence] are brought to the publicke <i>Theater</i>’,
-and for later periods Henslowe, i. 98 (the Rose, 1598), the fatal
-contest at the Swan in 1602, and Herbert, 47, 81. For acrobats cf.
-App. D, No. cxxiii, on the use of the Swan by Peter Bromvill in
-1600. Henslowe, i. 98, 106, records loans in connexion with vaulting
-performances with a horse, perhaps at the Rose, in 1598 and 1599 by
-John Haslett or Hassett, who was also paid for court performances (App.
-B) in 1603 and 1608.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1670" href="#FNanchor_1670" class="label">[1670]</a> T. M. <i>Black Book</i> (1604, Bullen,
-<i>Middleton</i>, viii. 7) opens with <i>Lucifer ascending, as Prologue
-to his own Play</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Now is hell landed here upon the earth,</div>
- <div>When Lucifer, in limbs of burning gold,</div>
- <div>Ascends the dusty theatre of the world,...</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i8h">... my tortured spleen</div>
- <div>Melts into mirthful humour at this fate,</div>
- <div>That heaven is hung so high, drawn up so far,</div>
- <div>And made so fast, nailed up with many a star;</div>
- <div>And hell the very shop-board of the earth,...</div>
- </div>
-
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>... And now that I have vaulted up so high</div>
- <div>Above the stage-rails of this earthen globe,</div>
- <div>I must turn actor and join companies.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Rails are shown in the late <i>Roxana</i> and <i>Messallina</i>
-engravings of indoor stages.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1671" href="#FNanchor_1671" class="label">[1671]</a> Cf. H. Logeman in <i>Anglia</i>, xix. 117.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1672" href="#FNanchor_1672" class="label">[1672]</a> Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (1609), ‘on the very Rushes
-where the Commedy is to daunce ... must our fethered <i>Estridge</i>
-... be planted’ ... ‘Salute all your gentle acquaintance, that are
-spred either on the rushes, or on stooles about you ... take vp a
-rush, and tickle the earnest eares of your fellow gallants’; <i>1 Hen.
-IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 214, ‘She bids you on the wanton rushes lay
-you down’. In <i>The Gentleman Usher</i> (<i>c. 1604</i>, Blackfriars),
-<span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 72, ‘Enter Bassiolo with Servants, with rushes and a
-carpet’, and Bassiolo says,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10">lay me ’em thus,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">In fine smooth threaves; look you, sir, thus, in threaves.</div>
- <div>Perhaps some tender lady will squat here,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And if some standing rush should chance to prick her,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">She’d squeak, and spoil the songs that must be sung.’</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1673" href="#FNanchor_1673" class="label">[1673]</a> Lawrence, i. 39, 161.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1674" href="#FNanchor_1674" class="label">[1674]</a> G. Harvey (1579, <i>Letter Book</i>, 67), ‘sum
-maltconceivid comedye fitt for the Theater, or sum other paintid stage
-whereat thou and thy liuely copesmates in London may lawghe ther
-mouthes and bellyes full for pence or twoepence apeece’; Spenser,
-<i>Tears of the Muses</i> (1591), 176, ‘That wont with comick sock to
-beautefie The painted Theaters’; cf. Graves, 68. Coryat, i. 386, in
-1608, found a Venice play-house ‘very beggarly and base in comparison
-of our stately Play-houses in England: neyther can their Actors
-compare with us for apparell, shewes and musicke’. So in <i>Case is
-Altered</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii. 30, the plays in Utopia (= England) are
-‘set foorth with as much state as can be imagined’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1675" href="#FNanchor_1675" class="label">[1675]</a> App. I; but cf. p. 524, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1676" href="#FNanchor_1676" class="label">[1676]</a> <i>Malcontent</i> (<i>1604</i>, Globe), ind., ‘Good
-sir, will you leave the stage? I’ll help you to a private room’; cf.
-Sir J. Davies’ epigram, <i>infra</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1677" href="#FNanchor_1677" class="label">[1677]</a> Wright, <i>Hist. Hist.</i> 407, ‘The prices were small
-(there being no scenes)’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1678" href="#FNanchor_1678" class="label">[1678]</a> L. Wager’s <i>Mary Magdalene</i> (1566) has a prologue
-which says that the actors will take ‘halfpence or pence’ from the
-audience, but this was probably used by strolling actors and continues
-the miracle-play tradition. At almost the same date, a jest in <i>Merry
-Tales, Wittie Questions and Quick Answers</i> (1567, Hazlitt, <i>Jest
-Books</i>, i. 145) tells how men stood at the gate of a play at
-Northumberland Place, ‘with a boxe (as the facion is) who toke of euery
-persone that came in a peny or an half peny at the least’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1679" href="#FNanchor_1679" class="label">[1679]</a> J. Mayne in <i>Jonsonus Virbius</i> (1638):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>So when thy Fox had ten times acted been,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Each day was first, but that ’twas cheaper seen;</div>
- <div>And so thy Alchemist played o’er and o’er,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Was new o’ the stage, when ’twas not at the door.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1680" href="#FNanchor_1680" class="label">[1680]</a> G. Harvey (p. 530, <i>supra</i>); Lyly, <i>Pappe with
-an Hatchet</i> (<i>Works</i>, iii. 408); cf. <i>Martin’s Month’s
-Mind</i> (1589, App. C, No. xl). Lodge, <i>Scillaes Metamorphosis</i>
-(1589), will not ‘tie my pen to Pennie-knaves delight’, and S.
-Rowlands, <i>Letting of Humour’s Blood in the Head Vein</i> (1600),
-bids poets not ‘To teach stage parrots speak for penny pleasure’; cf.
-<i>Case is Altered</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> i. 104, ‘Tut, giue me the penny,
-giue me the peny, I care not for the Gentlemen, I, let me haue a good
-ground’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1681" href="#FNanchor_1681" class="label">[1681]</a> Cf. ch. xvi, introd. Field says in 1583 (App. C, No.
-xxxi), ‘Euery dore hath a payment, &amp; euery gallerie maketh a yearely
-stipend’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1682" href="#FNanchor_1682" class="label">[1682]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> (1599), ind. 425, ‘Let me neuer liue
-to looke as highe as the two-pennie roome, againe’; T. Garzoni,
-<i>Hospitall of Incurable Fooles</i> (tr. 1600), epist., ‘a Player
-that in speaking an Epilogue makes loue to the two pennie roume for a
-plaudite’; <i>Satiromastix</i> (1602), epil. 2690, ‘Are you pleas’d?...
-if you be not, by’th Lord Ile see you all&mdash;heere for your two pence a
-peice agen before Ile loose your company.... Good night, my two-penny
-Tenants’; <i>Mad World, my Masters</i> (<i>c.</i> 1604–6), v. ii.
-36, ‘some ... that ... took a good conceit of their parts into th’
-two-penny room’; <i>Woman Hater</i> (1607), prol. 5, ‘I do pronounce
-this, to the utter discomfort of all two-penny Gallery men, you shall
-have no bawdery’; <i>Fleire</i> (1607), ii. 30, ‘They (like your common
-players) let men come in for twopence a peece’; Dekker, <i>News from
-Hell</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>, ii. 96), ‘You may take him ... in the
-afternoones, in the twopeny roomes of a Play-house, like a Puny, seated
-Cheeke by Iowle with a punke’, <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i> (1606, ii.
-53), ‘<i>Sloth</i> ... will come and sit in the two-pennie galleries
-amongst the gentlemen, and see their knaveries and their pastimes’,
-<i>The Dead Term</i> (1608, iv. 55), ‘Players ... prostitute themselues
-to the pleasures of euery two-penny drunken Plebeian’, <i>Lanthorn
-and Candle-Light</i> (1608, iii. 216), ‘Pay thy twopence to a Player,
-in his gallerie maist thou sitte by a Harlot’, <i>Raven’s Almanac</i>
-(1609, iv. 184), ‘As if you sat in the moste perspicuous place of the
-two-penny gallerie in a play-house’; <i>Roaring Girl</i> (1611), v. 1,
-‘One of them is a nip; I took him once i’ the two-penny gallerie at the
-Fortune’; &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1683" href="#FNanchor_1683" class="label">[1683]</a> Dekker, <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i> (1606, <i>Works</i>,
-ii. 53), ‘Their houses smoakt euery after noone with Stinkards who
-were so glewed together in crowdes with the steames of strong breath,
-that when they came foorth, their faces lookt as if they had beene per
-boyld’, <i>Raven’s Almanac</i> (1609, iv. 194), ‘Hee shall be glad to
-play three houres for two pence to the basest stinkard in London, whose
-breth is stronger than garlicke, and able to poison all the twelve
-penny roomes’, <i>Work for Armourers</i> (1609, iv. 96), ‘tearme times,
-when the Twopeny Clients and Peny Stinkards swarme together to heere
-the Stagerites’; <i>vide</i> n. 2, <i>infra</i>, and p. 534, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1684" href="#FNanchor_1684" class="label">[1684]</a> <i>Satiromastix</i> (1602), 1669, ‘a Gentleman or an
-honest Cittizen shall not sit in your pennie-bench Theaters, with his
-Squirrell by his side cracking nuttes ... but he shall be Satyr’d
-and Epigram’d vpon’; T. M. <i>Black Book</i> (1604), ‘penny-rooms at
-theatres’; T. M. <i>Ant and Nightingale</i> (1604), ‘stinkards sitting
-in the penny galleries of a theatre, and yawning upon the players’;
-Dekker, <i>Gull’s Horn Book</i> (1609, <i>Works</i>, ii. 208), ‘thou
-... hast vouchsafed to be acquainted with penny galleries’; <i>Wit
-Without Money</i> (<i>c.</i> 1614), iv. 1, ‘break in at plays like
-prentices for three a groat, and crack nuts with the scholars in peny
-rooms again’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1685" href="#FNanchor_1685" class="label">[1685]</a> A. Copley, <i>Wits, Fits and Fancies</i> (1595; ed.
-1614, p. 124), tells of a man cast off by his brother, an actor,
-who sent him sixpence in a sheet of paper, to show that, ‘though
-his brother had vowed not in seven years to see him, yet he for his
-sixpence could come and see him upon the stage at his pleasure’. If
-Platter’s 3<i>d.</i> was the highest normal charge in the sixteenth
-century, the 6<i>d.</i> may represent a first night’s charge.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1686" href="#FNanchor_1686" class="label">[1686]</a> Most of the allusions to 6<i>d.</i> charges relate to
-private houses (cf. p. 556), but Beaumont’s grammar lecture (cf. ch.
-xxiii) gives this price for the Bankside, and T. M. <i>Black Book</i>
-(1604, Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, viii. 41) has ‘I give and bequeath
-to you Benedick Bottomless, most deep cut-purse, all the benefit of
-... the sixpenny rooms in play-places, to cut, dive and nim’. Later,
-<i>The Actors Remonstrance</i> (1643) professes that the players
-will not admit into their ‘sixpenny rooms those unwholesome enticing
-harlots that sit there merely to be taken up by prentices or lawyers’
-clerks’; cf. Lawrence, i. 36, who thinks that the lord’s rooms became
-the sixpenny rooms. For the 1<i>s.</i> charge, cf. p. 533, n. 1, and
-<i>Malcontent</i> (1604), ind. 63, ‘I say, any man that hath wit may
-censure, if he sit in the twelve-penny room’; Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i>
-(1609), ‘When at a new play you take up the twelve-penny rome next the
-stage; (because the Lords and you may seeme to be haile fellow wel-met)
-there draw forth this booke, read alowd, laugh alowd, and play the
-<i>Antickes</i>, that all the garlike mouthed stinkards may cry out,
-<i>Away with the fool</i>’; <i>Hen. VIII</i> (<i>1613</i>), prol., ‘may
-see away their shilling’; Overbury, <i>Characters</i> (ed. Rimbault,
-154, <i>The Proud Man</i>), ‘If he have but twelvepence in ’s purse he
-will give it for the best room in a play-house’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1687" href="#FNanchor_1687" class="label">[1687]</a> They include women, and certainly look more like
-spectators than actors or musicians.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1688" href="#FNanchor_1688" class="label">[1688]</a> E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i> (1598), ep. 53:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>See you him yonder, who sits o’re the stage,</div>
- <div>With the Tobacco-pipe now at his mouth?</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In <i>E. M. O.</i> (<i>1599</i>), 1390 (Q<sub>1</sub>), Brisk
-is said to speak of lords ‘as familiarlie as if hee had ... ta’ne
-tabacco with them ouer the stage i’ the Lords roome’. Dekker-Wilkins,
-<i>Jests to Make you Merry</i> (1607, <i>Works</i>, ii. 292), has a
-jest of ‘one that sat ouer the stage’ on a wench in the two-penny room.
-<i>Farmer-Chetham MS.</i> (seventeenth-century, ed. Grosart, i. 104)
-has an epigram on Spongus, who ‘Plays at Primero over the stage’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1689" href="#FNanchor_1689" class="label">[1689]</a> <i>Satiromastix</i> (1602), 2612, ‘You must forsweare
-to venter on the stage when your play is ended, and to exchange
-curtezies and complements with gallants in the Lordes roomes’. The
-subject is well discussed by Lawrence (i. 29), <i>The Situation of the
-Lords’ Room</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1690" href="#FNanchor_1690" class="label">[1690]</a> Sir J. Davies, <i>Epigrams</i> (prob. &lt; 1596), ep. 28,
-<i>In Sillam</i>, ‘He that dares take Tobacco on the stage’; ep. 3,
-<i>In Rufum</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Rufus the Courtier at the theatre</div>
- <div>Leauing the best and most conspicuous place,</div>
- <div>Doth either to the stage himselfe transfer,</div>
- <div>Or through a grate doth show his doubtful face,</div>
- <div>For that the clamorous frie of Innes of court</div>
- <div>Filles vp the priuate roomes of greater prise:</div>
- <div>And such a place where all may haue resort</div>
- <div>He in his singularitie doth despise.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">It is not, I think, sitting on the stage that is
-satirized in J. Hall, <i>Virgedemiarum</i> (1597), i. 3, but a
-performance by illiterate amateurs on a ‘hired Stage’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1691" href="#FNanchor_1691" class="label">[1691]</a> <i>C. Revels</i> (<i>1601</i>), ind. 138:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘3. Child ... Here I enter.</p>
-
-<p>1. What, vpon the stage too?</p>
-
-<p>2. Yes: and I step forth like one of the children, and ask you,
-Would you have a Stool, Sir?</p>
-
-<p>3. A Stoole Boy?</p>
-
-<p>2. I Sir, if you’le giue me sixe Pence, I’le fetch you one.</p>
-
-<p>3. For what I pray thee? what shall I doe with it?</p>
-
-<p>2. O God Sir! will you betraye your Ignorance so much? why,
-throne your selfe in state on the stage, as other Gentlemen vse
-Sir’;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>All Fools</i> (<i>c. 1604</i>), prol. 30:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i5">if our other audience see</div>
- <div>You on the stage depart before we end,</div>
- <div>Our wits go with you all and we are fools.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p><i>Isle of Gulls</i> (<i>1606</i>), ind., ‘But come boy, furnish us
-with stools’.... ‘He [the author] is not on the stage amongst gallants
-preparing a bespoke Plaudite’.</p>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>K. B. P.</i> (<i>1607</i>), ind. 41:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center"><i>Wife below Rafe below.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>Wife.</i> Husband, shall I come vp husband?</p>
-
-<p><i>Citizen.</i> I cunny. Rafe helpe your mistresse this way:
-pray gentlemen make her a little roome, I pray you sir lend me
-your hand to helpe vp my wife.... Boy, let my wife and I haue a
-cupple stooles.... Come vp Rafe.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>It must not be assumed from this burlesque that women usually sat on
-the stage, even at the private houses.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1692" href="#FNanchor_1692" class="label">[1692]</a> <i>What You Will</i> (1602), ind., ‘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>Faery
-Pastoral</i> (1603), author’s note, ‘If so be that the Properties of
-any of These, that be outward, will not serue the turne by reason
-of concourse of the People on the Stage, Then you may omit the sayd
-Properties’. In <i>Wily Beguiled</i> (possibly a Paul’s play), 2021,
-comes the s. d. ‘Stands vpon a stoole’, in a wood scene.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1693" href="#FNanchor_1693" class="label">[1693]</a> <i>E. M. O.</i> (<i>1599</i>), 585 (Q<sub>1</sub>), ‘Sit o’
-the stage and flout; prouided, you haue a good suit’; 1784, ‘rich
-apparell ... takes possession of your stage at your new play’; <i>A Mad
-World, my Masters</i> (<i>c. 1604–6</i>), v. ii. 38, ‘The actors have
-been found i’ th’ morning in a less compass than their stage, though
-it were ne’er so full of gentlemen’; <i>Woman Hater</i> (1607), i. 3,
-‘All the Gallants on the stage rise, vail to me, kiss their hand, offer
-me their places’. It is true that <i>Roaring Girl</i> (1611), ii. 1,
-has ‘the private stages audience, the twelve-penny stool gentlemen’,
-but this may only point to a higher price for a stool at the private
-house, and in any case cannot outweigh the allusions of Davies and
-Jonson before the Blackfriars, or probably Paul’s, were reopened, or
-T. M. <i>Black Book</i> (1604, Bullen, <i>Middleton</i>, viii. 42),
-‘Barnaby Burning-glass, arch tobacco-taker of England, in ordinaries,
-upon stages both common and private’; Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (1609),
-‘Whether therefore the gatherers of the publique or priuate Play-house
-stand to receiue the afternoones rent, let our Gallant (hauing paid
-it) presently aduance himselfe vp to the Throne of the Stage’ (cf. the
-whole passage on the procedure and advantages of sitting on the stage,
-where Dekker clearly mingles traits of both types of house, in App. H).
-Wallace, ii. 130, argues that the custom was started at Blackfriars and
-was confined to the private houses, but is hopelessly confuted by C. R.
-Baskervill in <i>M. P.</i> viii. 581.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1694" href="#FNanchor_1694" class="label">[1694]</a> <i>Malcontent</i> (1604, Globe), ind.:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>‘Enter W. Sly, a Tire-man following him with a stool.</p>
-
-<p><i>Tire-man.</i> Sir, the gentlemen will be angry if you sit
-here.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sly.</i> Why, we may sit upon the stage at the private house.
-Thou dost not take me for a country gentleman, dost? dost think
-I fear hissing?...</p>
-
-<p><i>Lowin.</i> Good sir, will you leave the stage? I’ll help you
-to a private room.</p>
-
-<p><i>Sly.</i> Come, coz, lets take some tobacco’;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><i>M. D’Olive</i> (1606, Blackfriars), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 173, ‘I’ll take
-up some other fool for the Duke to employ: every ordinary affords fools
-enow; and didst not see a pair of gallants sit not far hence like a
-couple of bough-pots to make the room smell?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1695" href="#FNanchor_1695" class="label">[1695]</a></p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Yet, Grandee’s, would you were not come to grace</div>
- <div>Our matter, with allowing vs no place.</div>
- <div>Though you presume Satan a subtill thing,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">And may haue heard hee’s worne in a thumbe-ring;</div>
- <div>Doe not on these presumptions, force vs act,</div>
- <div>In compasse of a cheese-trencher. This tract</div>
- <div>Will ne’er admit our vice, because of yours.</div>
- <div>Anone, who, worse than you, the fault endures</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That your selues make? when you will thrust and spurne,</div>
- <div>And knocke vs o’ the elbowes, and bid, turne;</div>
- <div>As if, when wee had spoke, wee must be gone,</div>
- <div>Or, till wee speake, must all runne in, to one,</div>
- <div>Like the young adders, at the old ones mouth?</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Would wee could stand due North; or had no South,</div>
- <div>If that offend: or were Muscouy glasse,</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">That you might looke our Scenes through as they passe.</div>
- <div>We know not how to affect you. If you’ll come</div>
- <div>To see new Playes, pray you affoord vs roome.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1696" href="#FNanchor_1696" class="label">[1696]</a> Wallace, ii. 142.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1697" href="#FNanchor_1697" class="label">[1697]</a> Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (1609), ‘You may ... haue
-a good stoole for sixpence ... creepe from behind the Arras, with
-your Tripos or three-footed stoole in one hand, and a teston mounted
-betweene a forefinger and a thumbe in the other’; cf. pp. 535, n. 3,
-536, n. 2.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1698" href="#FNanchor_1698" class="label">[1698]</a> Cf. ch. xx.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1699" href="#FNanchor_1699" class="label">[1699]</a> Godfrey (<i>Architectural Review</i>, xxiii. 239) has
-no authority for his internal roofed staircases and landings in the
-narrow spaces between the galleries and the sides of the stage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1700" href="#FNanchor_1700" class="label">[1700]</a> Henslowe made a ‘penthowsse shed at the tyeringe howsse
-doore’ of the Rose in 1591. Doubtless the stage could also be reached
-from in front; cf. the <i>K. B. P.</i> passage on p. 536.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1701" href="#FNanchor_1701" class="label">[1701]</a> Gosson, <i>P. C.</i> (1582, App. C, No. xxx), tells how
-youths are wont ‘to go first into the yarde, and to carry theire eye
-through euery gallery’ in search of attractive company; cf. p. 532.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1702" href="#FNanchor_1702" class="label">[1702]</a> Cf. p. 541, and ch. xi.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1703" href="#FNanchor_1703" class="label">[1703]</a> Peacham, however, may be merely versifying the story
-of the choleric justice and the provincial audience which laughed
-when he ‘first peept out his head’ in Nashe, <i>Pierce Penilesse</i>
-(<i>Works</i>, i. 188), and reading in a feature, in the process, of
-the stage as known to himself; and the same applies to Davenant, <i>The
-Unfortunate Lovers</i> (<i>c. 1638</i>), prol., on the play-goers of
-old times:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>For they, he swears, to the theatre would come,</div>
- <div>Ere they had din’d, to take up the best room;</div>
- <div>There sit on benches, not adorn’d with mats,</div>
- <div>And graciously did vail their high-crown’d hats</div>
- <div>To every half-dress’d player, as he still</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Through the hangings peeped to see how the house did fill.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">For Caroline practice, cf. T. Goffe, <i>Careless
-Shepherdess</i> ind.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>I never saw Rheade peeping through the curtain,</div>
- <div>But ravishing joy entered into my heart;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">also Tatham’s prologue for the Fortune players, when they
-moved to the Red Bull in 1640:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10">Forbear</div>
- <div>Your wonted custom, banding tile and pear</div>
- <div>Against our curtains, to allure us forth;</div>
- <div>I pray, take notice, these are of more worth;</div>
- <div>Pure Naples silk, not worsted.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">I defer a full consideration of stage hangings to the
-chapters on staging; cf. vol. iii, p. 78.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1704" href="#FNanchor_1704" class="label">[1704]</a> For the classical sense of <i>Scaena</i>, cf.
-the passage from Vitruvius quoted in vol. iii, p. 3. Florio,
-<i>Dictionary</i> (1598), s.v. <i>Scena</i>, ‘a skaffold, a pavillion,
-or forepart of a theatre where players make them readie, being trimmed
-with hangings, out of which they enter upon the stage’, points to the
-identity of scene and tire-house front. This structure has therefore
-precisely the double function of the ‘domus’ of the court plays; cf.
-ch. xix. I owe the quotation to Graves, 15, who adds, <i>The Englysshe
-Mancyne upon the foure Cardynale Vertues</i> (<i>c.</i> 1520), ‘a
-disgyser yt goeth into a secret corner callyd a sene of the pleyinge
-place to chaunge his rayment’, and Palsgrave, <i>Acolastus</i> (1540),
-prol., ‘our scenes, that is to saye, our places appoynted for our
-players to come forth of’. The English ‘Mancyne’ is a translation,
-earlier than A. Barclay’s, of Dominic Mancini’s <i>De Quatuor
-Virtutibus</i> (1516), and the original has only ‘Histrio, qui in
-scaenam vadit’. The notion of scena as not a mere wall, but a shelter
-for performers, is mediaeval, and appears to go back to an early
-definition from σκῆνος, a hut or tent, found, e. g., side by side with
-the regular mediaeval misunderstanding of the classical art of acting
-in Hugutius, <i>Liber Derivationum</i>, ‘Scena est umbraculum siue
-locus obumbratus in theatro et cortinis coopertus similis tabernaculis
-mercenariorum, quae sunt asseribus vel cortinis opertae, et secundum
-hoc scena potest dici a scenos, quod est domus, quae in modum domus
-erat constructa. In umbraculo latebant personae larvatae, quae ad
-vocem recitatoris exigebantur ad gestus faciendos’; cf. Herrmann, 280,
-W. Cloetta, <i>Komödie und Tragödie im Mittelalter</i> (1890), 38;
-<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 208. It is revised on humanist lines by
-Jodocus Badius Ascensius in the <i>Praenotamenta</i> to his Terence of
-1502, ‘Intra igitur theatrum ab una parte opposita spectatoribus erant
-scenae et proscenia, id est loca lusoria ante scenas facta. Scenae
-autem erant quaedam umbracula seu absconsoria, in quibus abscondebantur
-lusores, donec exire deberent. Ante autem scenas erant quaedam
-tabulata, in quibus personae qui exierant ludebant.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1705" href="#FNanchor_1705" class="label">[1705]</a> The <i>Roxana</i> engraving shows a projecting building
-at the back of the stage, but this can hardly be regarded as throwing
-light upon sixteenth-century structure.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1706" href="#FNanchor_1706" class="label">[1706]</a> <i>C. Revels</i> (1601), ind. 160. The author is not
-‘in the Tiring-house, to prompt us aloud, stampe at the Booke-holder,
-sweare for our Properties, cursse the poore Tire-man, rayle the Musique
-out of tune’; <i>Bartholomew Fair</i> (1614), ind. 8, ‘I am looking,
-lest the <i>Poet</i> heare me, or his man, Master Broome, behind the
-Arras.... Hee has (sirreuerence) kick’d me three, or foure times about
-the Tyring-house, I thanke him, for but offering to putt in, with
-my experience’; v. iii. 57, ‘I would be glad drinke with the young
-company; which is the Tiring-house?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1707" href="#FNanchor_1707" class="label">[1707]</a> <i>Every Woman in her Humour</i>, p. 354, ‘He would ...
-stamp and stare (God blesse us,) like a play-house book-keeper when the
-actors misse their entrance’; <i>R. J.</i> <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 7,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nor no without-book prologue, faintly spoke</div>
- <div>After the prompter, for our entrance.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The actor’s signal for entrance was already his ‘cue’;
-cf. <i>M. N. D.</i> <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> i. 77, ‘And so every one according to
-his cue’; <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, ii. 2, ‘you know your que’; ii. 3, ‘She
-hath entred the Dutches iust at her que’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1708" href="#FNanchor_1708" class="label">[1708]</a> <i>2 Ant. Mellida</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 30, ‘The tiring
-man hath not glued on my beard half fast enough’. A tireman appears
-in the inductions to <i>Malcontent</i>, ‘Enter W. Sly, a Tire-man
-following him with a stool’, and to <i>What You Will</i>, ‘Enter
-Tire-man with lights’. ‘Steven the tyerman’ of the Admiral’s in 1596
-is probably the Steven Magett of other entries by Henslowe (i. 31, 44,
-45).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1709" href="#FNanchor_1709" class="label">[1709]</a> Speakers in the induction to <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>
-(1614) are the Booke-Holder and the Stage-Keeper, who ‘kept the
-<i>Stage</i> in Master <i>Tarletons</i> time’, and whose work is
-‘sweeping the <i>Stage</i>? or gathering vp the broken apples for the
-beares within?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1710" href="#FNanchor_1710" class="label">[1710]</a> The Fortune company, <i>c.</i> 1617 (<i>H. P.</i> 85),
-offer to employ a dismissed ‘gatherer’ as ‘a nessessary atendaunt on
-the stage’ and to mend garments. On 27 Dec. 1624 the Master of Revels
-(<i>Var.</i> iii. 112; Herbert, 74) issued a warrant of protection for
-Nicholas Underhill, Robert Pallant, John Rhodes, and eighteen others
-‘all imployed by the kings maiesties servantes in theire quallity of
-playinge as musitions and other necessary attendantes’. In <i>Devil’s
-Charter</i> (1607), 3016, is the s. d. ‘Alexander vnbraced betwixt two
-Cardinalls in his study looking vpon a booke, whilst a groome draweth
-the curtaine’. Is this ‘groom’ a character or an ‘attendant’? In any
-case attendants were naturally, with musicians and even ‘gatherers’ (on
-whom cf. ch. xi), used at need for supernumeraries; cf. the gatherers
-in the <i>Frederick and Basilea</i> plot (1597, <i>H. P.</i> 136) and
-<i>2 If You Know Not Me</i> (1606), p. 297, ‘Enter ... the waits in
-sergeants’ gowns’. The long list of men and boys in the procession
-at the end of <i>1 Tamar Cham</i> (1602, <i>H. P.</i> 148) must have
-taxed all such resources. For the use of boys as attendants, cf.
-<i>Bartholomew Fair</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 65, ‘Ha’ you none of your
-pretty impudent boyes, now; to bring stooles, fill Tabacco, fetch Ale,
-and beg money, as they haue at other houses?’ Seventeenth-century
-gossip (<i>Centurie of Prayse</i>, 417) made Shakespeare join the stage
-as a ‘serviture’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1711" href="#FNanchor_1711" class="label">[1711]</a> Lawrence, i. 75, ii. 159; Wegener, 150; G. H. Cowling,
-<i>Music on the Shakespearian Stage</i>, 29, 70, 80. I refer to Cowling
-and to E. W. Naylor, <i>Shakespeare and Music</i>, for discussions of
-the instruments used&mdash;drums, timbrels, bells (percussion instruments),
-sackbuts, trumpets, horns (brass instruments), cornets, hautboys,
-recorders, fifes (wood instruments), viols, lutes, citterns, pandores
-(string instruments)&mdash;of such terms as ‘flourish’, ‘sennet’, ‘tucket’,
-‘peal’, ‘alarum’, ‘consort’, and of other technical matters with which
-I am not qualified to deal. The Admiral’s inventories of 1598 (<i>H.
-P.</i> 115, 116, 118) include ‘iij trumpettes and a drum, and a trebel
-viall, a basse viall, a bandore, a sytteren ... j chyme of bells ...
-iij tymbrells ... j sack-bute’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1712" href="#FNanchor_1712" class="label">[1712]</a> <i>Malcontent</i>, ind. 89. The additions for the
-King’s are ‘to entertain a little more time, and to abridge the
-not-received custom of music in our theatre’. But ‘abridge’ only
-means shorten, and there are s. ds. for music between the acts of
-<i>Sejanus</i> (Globe, <i>1603</i>) and in the plot of <i>Dead Man’s
-Fortune</i> (Admiral’s, <i>c.</i> 1590, <i>H. P.</i> 133); cf. Dekker,
-<i>Belman of London</i> (1608, <i>Works</i>, iii. 76), ‘These were
-appointed to be my Actes, in this goodly Theater, the musicke betweene,
-were the Singers of the Wood’. But such evidence is rare, and Lawrence,
-i. 75, and Cowling, 67, do not discriminate sufficiently the practice
-of the public theatres from that of the private theatres on the one
-hand and the early neo-classic court plays on the other. Here music
-is an integral part of the <i>intermedii</i> or dumb-shows, which are
-little more than survivals in the full-blown public drama; cf. F. A.
-Foster in <i>E. S.</i> xliv. 8, and <i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii.
-13, ‘inexplicable dumb-shows’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1713" href="#FNanchor_1713" class="label">[1713]</a> Cf. p. 551.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1714" href="#FNanchor_1714" class="label">[1714]</a> <i>Alphonsus</i>, prol., ‘after you haue sounded
-thrise, let Venus be let downe from the top of the Stage’; Heywood,
-<i>Four Prentices</i>, prol., ‘Do you not know that I am the prologue?
-Do you not see the long black velvet coat upon my back? Have I not all
-the signs of the prologue about me? Have you not sounded thrice?’;
-Dekker, <i>Satiromastix</i>, epist., ‘In steed of the trumpets sounding
-thrice, before the play begin, it shall not be amisse ... first to
-beholde this short Comedy of Errors’; <i>G. H. B.</i> (cf. App. H),
-‘untill the quaking prologue hath (by rubbing) got cullor into his
-cheekes, and is ready to give the trumpets their cue that hee’s
-upon point to enter’; <i>E. M. O.</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), 107, ‘Inductio, sono
-secundo’, 402, ‘Sound the third time. Enter Prologue’. Jonson has a
-similar arrangement (F<sub>1</sub>) in the private house plays <i>Cynthia’s
-Revels</i> and <i>Poetaster</i>, but probably the trumpets were here
-replaced by more elaborate music; cf. <i>1 Ant. Mellida</i>, ind. 1,
-‘the music will sound straight for entrance’; <i>What You Will</i>,
-ind. 1 (s. d.), ‘Before the music sounds for the Act’; <i>C. Revels</i>
-(Q<sub>1</sub>), 1435, ‘Like an unperfect Prologue, at third musique’. Surely
-this is the origin of the ‘first’, ‘second’, and ‘third’ (or ‘curtain
-tune’) music of the Restoration and eighteenth-century overtures,
-described by Lawrence, ii. 155. Exceptionally the prologue in Percy’s
-<i>C. and C. Errant</i> is between the second and third sounding.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1715" href="#FNanchor_1715" class="label">[1715]</a> <i>Chaste Maid in Cheapside</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 1
-(s. d.), ‘There is a sad song in the music-room’; cf. <i>Thracian
-Wonder</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 182, ‘Pythia speaks in the musick Room
-behind the Curtain’, 186, ‘Pythia above, behind the curtains.’ But
-these, although early plays, are in late prints, and the other examples
-of a music-room ‘above’ given by Lawrence, i. 91, are Caroline. Jasper
-Mayne says of Jonson (1638, <i>Jonsonus Virbius</i>), ‘Thou laid’st no
-sieges to the music-room’. My own impression is that when the lord’s
-room over the tire-house was disused by spectators (cf. p. 537) it
-became indifferently available for actors and for music, and that here,
-rather than, as is possible, higher still in the scenic wall, was the
-normal place for the seventeenth-century music, when it was not needed
-elsewhere, or the space needed for other purposes. The introduction of
-the high proscenium arch at the Restoration caused difficulties, and
-various experiments were tried in placing the music above (Lawrence,
-i. 91, 161; ii. 160; W. G. Keith, <i>The Designs for the First Movable
-Scenery on the English Public Stage</i> in <i>Burlington Magazine</i>,
-xxv. 29, 85), before the modern situation was adopted.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1716" href="#FNanchor_1716" class="label">[1716]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1717" href="#FNanchor_1717" class="label">[1717]</a> <i>R. J.</i>, prol. 12, ‘the two hours’ traffic of our
-stage’; <i>Alchemist</i>, prol. 1, ‘these two short hours’; <i>Hen.
-VIII</i>, prol. 13, ‘two short hours’; <i>T. N. K.</i>, prol. 28,
-‘Sceanes ... worth two houres travell’; Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 11
-(Beeston’s c. v.), ‘two houres well spent’; <i>Barth. Fair</i>, ind.,
-‘the space of two hours and a half and somewhat more’. Perhaps plays
-tended to grow shorter. Fenton (1574) and Northbrooke (1577–8) give
-‘two or three houres’, and Whetstone (1578) three hours (cf. App.
-C), but Dekker (cf. p. 533, n. 3) seems to regard three hours as an
-exceptionally long period.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1718" href="#FNanchor_1718" class="label">[1718]</a> Cotgrave, <i>French-English Dict.</i> (1611), s.v.
-Falot, ‘a cresset light (such as they use in play-houses) made of
-ropes wreathed, pitched and put into small and open cages of iron’;
-cf. Lawrence, ii. 13, who thinks the cressets were part of the
-lighting of private houses. But would they not smoke and smell badly,
-if used indoors? There is no particular reason for translating the
-<i>lucernae</i> of Christ Church hall in 1566, with Schelling and
-Lawrence, as ‘cressets’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1719" href="#FNanchor_1719" class="label">[1719]</a> Nashe (iii. 329), epist. to <i>Astrophel and Stella</i>
-(1591), ‘here you shal find a paper stage streud with pearle, an
-artificial heau’n to ouershadow the faire frame’; <i>Wagnerbook</i>
-(1594, cf. ch. xx), ‘Now aboue 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 liuely portrayed the
-whole Imperiall Army of the faire heauenly inhabitauntes’; <i>Birth
-of Hercules</i> (1597 &lt;), i. 1, s. d., ‘Ad comoediae magnificentiam
-apprime conferet ut coelum Histrionium sit luna et stellis perspicue
-distinctum’; Heywood, <i>Apology</i> (<i>c. 1608</i>), 34, of the
-Roman theatre, ‘the covering of the stage, which we call the heavens’;
-Cotgrave, <i>Dict.</i> (1611), s.v. <i>Volerie</i>, ‘a place over a
-stage, which we call the heavens’. The same word was used for the state
-over a throne; cf. Cotgrave, s.v. <i>Dais</i>, ‘a cloth of estate,
-canopie, or Heaven, that stands over the heads of Princes thrones’.
-Graves, 24, gives examples of heavens used in Tudor pageants. It is
-to be noted that the ‘heavens’ and ‘hell’ (cf. p. 528) of a theatre
-continue characteristic features of mediaeval staging (cf. <i>Mediaeval
-Stage</i>, ii. 86, 137, 142); cf. <i>All Fools</i>, prol. 1:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The fortune of a stage (like Fortunes selfe)</div>
- <div>Amazeth greatest judgments; and none knowes</div>
- <div>The hidden causes of those strange effects</div>
- <div>That rise from this Hell, or fall from this Heaven.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The theory of J. Corbin in <i>Century</i> (1911), 267,
-that the heavens was a mere <i>velarium</i> or cloud of canvas thrown
-out from the hut, will not fit the evidence; cf. Lawrence, ii. 6.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1720" href="#FNanchor_1720" class="label">[1720]</a> Cf. vol. iii, p. 78. Is this, or the hut, the ‘garret’
-of R. M.’s <i>A Player</i> (cf. p. 546)?</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1721" href="#FNanchor_1721" class="label">[1721]</a> I do not now regard as tenable my suggestion in <i>The
-Stage of the Globe</i> (<i>Stratford Town Shakespeare</i>, x. 351)
-that De Witt represented as outstanding columns what were really mere
-pilasters in the tire-house wall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1722" href="#FNanchor_1722" class="label">[1722]</a> Kempe, <i>Nine Days Wonder</i>, 6, ‘I remembred one
-of them to be a noted Cut-purse, such a one as we tye to a poast on
-our stage, for all people to wonder at, when at a play they are taken
-pilfring’; cf. <i>Nobody and Somebody</i>, 1893,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i10"><i>Somebody</i></div>
- <div>Once pickt a pocket in this Play-house yard,</div>
- <div>Was hoysted on the stage, and shamd about it;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">also ch. xx, p. 75; ch. xxi, pp. 108, 141.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1723" href="#FNanchor_1723" class="label">[1723]</a> For criticism of the drawing of the heavens and hut,
-cf. Graves, 22, and Brereton in <i>Homage</i>, 204.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1724" href="#FNanchor_1724" class="label">[1724]</a> Henslowe paid in 1595 for ‘mackinge the throne in the
-heuenes’ at the Rose; cf. R. M., <i>Micrologia</i> (1629), in Morley,
-<i>Character Writings</i>, 285, <i>A Player</i>, ‘If his action
-prefigure passion, he raves, rages, and protests much by his painted
-heavens, and seems in the height of this fit ready to pull Jove out
-of the garret where perchance he lies leaning on his elbows, or is
-employed to make squibs and crackers to grace the play’. Wegener, 133,
-gives examples of the use of machines; for the throne, cf. vol. iii, p.
-77.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1725" href="#FNanchor_1725" class="label">[1725]</a> Field (1583, App. C, No. xxxi), ‘Those flagges of
-defiance against God’; Vennar’s apology (1614) for <i>England’s Joy</i>
-(1602, cf. ch. xxiii). ‘The report of gentlemen and gentlewomens
-actions, being indeed the flagge to our theatre, was not meerely
-falcification’; <i>A Mad World, my Masters</i> (1604–6), <span class="allsmcap">I.</span>
-i. 38, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> iii. 143, ‘’Tis Lent in your cheeks; the flag’s
-down’.... ‘The hair about the hat is as good as a flag upo’ th’
-pole, at a common play-house, to waft company’; Dekker, <i>Raven’s
-Almanac</i> (1609, <i>Works</i>, iv. 210), ‘Another ciuill warre doe I
-finde will fal betweene players.... For it is thought that Flag will
-be aduanced (as it were in mortall defiance against Flag)’; <i>Work
-for Armourers</i> (1609, <i>Works</i>, iv. 96), ‘Play-houses stand ...
-the dores locked vp, the flagges ... taken down’; <i>Curtain-Drawer of
-the World</i> (1612), ‘Each play-house advanceth his flag in the aire,
-whither quickly at the waving thereof are summoned whole troops of men,
-women, and children’. The maps regularly show flags on the theatres.
-The Globe fire in 1613 ‘did not spare the silken flagg’ (cf. p. 421).
-Heywood, <i>Apology</i>, 22, mistranslates Ovid’s ‘Tunc neque marmoreo
-pendebant vela theatro’ as:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>In those days from the marble house did waive</div>
- <div>No sail, no silken flag, no ensign brave.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1726" href="#FNanchor_1726" class="label">[1726]</a> Cf. p. 542; <i>Cynthia’s Revels</i>, ind., where the
-boys struggle for the cloak; <i>Woman Hater</i>, prol. 1, ‘Gentlemen,
-Inductions are out of date, and a Prologue in Verse, is as stale as a
-black Velvet Cloak, and a Bay Garland’; <i>Birth of Hercules</i> (1597
-&lt;), prol. 5, ‘Thepilogue is in fashion; prologues no more’; and much
-later. <i>Coronation</i>, prol. 4,</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i12">he</div>
- <div>That with a little Beard, a long black Cloak,</div>
- <div>With a starch’d face, and supple leg hath spoke</div>
- <div>Before the plays the twelvemonth.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">The prologue appears to be a composite figure, partly
-representing the poet, and deriving also in part from the presenter
-of dumb-shows, in part from the Chorus of neo-classic tragedy, and in
-part from the ‘exposytour in doctorys wede’, developed by miracle-plays
-and moralities out of the Augustine of the <i>Prophetae</i>; cf.
-<i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 52, 72, 153, 417, 423, 426, 429, 448; F.
-A. Foster in <i>E. S.</i> xliv. 13; F. Lüders, <i>Prolog und Epilog
-bei Shakespeare</i> (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, v. 274); Creizenach, 275.
-The short dramatic inductions, often introducing actors <i>in propria
-persona</i>, favoured by Jonson, Marston, and others about the
-beginning of the seventeenth century, attempt to give new life to a
-waning convention.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1727" href="#FNanchor_1727" class="label">[1727]</a> Cf. <i>Mediaeval Stage</i>, ii. 141, 156. Drums and
-trumpets were used as advertisements in the city at any rate until
-1587 (App. C, Nos. xvii, xxxi, xxxviii), and were traditional in the
-provinces up to the middle of the eighteenth century (Lawrence, ii.
-58). Parolles tells us (<i>All’s Well</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> iii. 298)
-that Captain Dumain ‘has led the drum before the English tragedians’.
-Henslowe (i. 118) bought a drum and two trumpets for the Admiral’s
-‘when to go into the contry’ in Feb. 1600. In <i>Histriomastix</i>, ii.
-80, ‘One of them steppes on the Crosse, and cryes, A Play’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1728" href="#FNanchor_1728" class="label">[1728]</a> H. Moseley, pref. verses to F<sub>1</sub> of Beaumont and
-Fletcher (1647):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>As after th’ Epilogue there comes some one</div>
- <div>To tell spectators what shall next be shown;</div>
- <div>So here am I.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">This is, of course, only Caroline evidence; for the
-continuance of the practice after the Restoration, cf. Lawrence, ii.
-187.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1729" href="#FNanchor_1729" class="label">[1729]</a> <i>Grindal to Cecil</i> (1564, App. D, No. xv),
-‘these Histriones, common playours who now daylye, butt speciallye on
-holydayes, sett vp bylles’; <i>Merry Tales, &amp;c.</i> (1567; cf. ch.
-xxiii, s.v. Vennar), ‘billes ... vpon postes about London’; Northbrooke
-(1577, App. C, No. xvi), ‘they use to set vp their billes vpon postes
-certain dayes before’; Gosson, <i>S. A.</i> (1579, App. C, No. xxii),
-44, ‘If players can ... proclame it in their billes, and make it
-good in theaters’; Rankins (1587, App. C, No. xxxviii), ‘sticking
-of their bills in London’; Marston, <i>Scourge of Villainy</i>
-(Bullen, iii. 302), ‘Go read each post, view what is play’d to-day’;
-<i>Histriomastix</i>, v. 69, ‘Text-bills must now be turned to iron
-bills’; <i>Warning for Fair Women</i>, (&gt; 1599):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>’Tis you have kept the Theatres so long,</div>
- <div>Painted in play-bills upon every post.</div>
- <div>That I am scorned of the multitude.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Wither, <i>Abuses Stript and Whipt</i> (1613), ii. 2:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>But, by the way, a Bill he doth espy,</div>
- <div>Which showes theres acted some new Comedy.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In <i>Bartholomew Fair</i>, v. iii. 6, Cokes ‘reads
-the Bill’ of the motion; cf. Lawrence (ii. 55), <i>The Origin of the
-Theatre Programme</i>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1730" href="#FNanchor_1730" class="label">[1730]</a> <i>Devil an Ass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> iv. 43, ‘Hee giues him
-the Play-bill’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1731" href="#FNanchor_1731" class="label">[1731]</a> Arber, ii. 477; iii. 575.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1732" href="#FNanchor_1732" class="label">[1732]</a> <i>Henslowe Papers</i>, 106.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1733" href="#FNanchor_1733" class="label">[1733]</a> Lawrence, ii. 240.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1734" href="#FNanchor_1734" class="label">[1734]</a> Jonson, in printing plays, and following him the
-editors of the Beaumont and Fletcher F<sub>1</sub> often give the scene and
-the actors’ names, and casts appear in <i>Duchess of Malfi</i> (1623).
-But these are not necessarily taken from any documents put before the
-audiences.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1735" href="#FNanchor_1735" class="label">[1735]</a> Lawrence, ii. 154; cf. the stipulation in Burbadge’s
-lease (p. 387), and W. Fennor, <i>Compter’s Commonwealth</i> (1617), 8,
-‘he that first comes in is first seated, like those that come to see
-playes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1736" href="#FNanchor_1736" class="label">[1736]</a> Cf. p. 540 (Tatham), and the notices of Hentzner and
-Platter (ch. xvi, introd.). In <i>K. B. P.</i> the wife comes with
-her pockets full of sweetmeats, which she bestows upon the actors,
-liquorice (i. 77), green ginger (ii. 279), sugar-candy (ii. 366), and
-her husband brings beer (iii. 631). The liquorice would open Ralph’s
-pipes; cf. ch. xii (Westminster) and <i>C. Revels</i>, ind. 215, ‘I
-would thou hadst some sugar candyed, to sweeten thy mouth’; Overbury,
-<i>Characters</i> (ed. Rimbault, 113, <i>A Puny-Clarke</i>), ‘Hee eats
-ginger-bread at a play-house’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1737" href="#FNanchor_1737" class="label">[1737]</a> Cf. pp. 534, 536 and Hentzner (ch. xvi, introd.);
-<i>C. Revels</i>, ind. 122, ‘I haue my three sorts of Tabacco, in my
-Pocket, my light by me’; <i>K. B. P.</i> i. 224, ‘Fie, this stinking
-Tobacco kils men, would there were none in <i>England</i>, now I pray
-Gentlemen, what good does this stinking Tobacco? do you nothing, I
-warrant you make chimnies a your faces’; Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i>, ‘By
-sitting on the stage, you may ... get your match lighted’; <i>Scornful
-Lady</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii. 52, ‘They wear swords to reach fire at a
-play’; <i>Sir Giles Goosecap</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> ii. 87 (street-scene),
-‘By this fire, they do, my lord’. Burn, 84, cites a note by Sir J.
-Caesar in <i>Lansd. MS.</i> 160, p. 302, of a speech by James in a
-Star Chamber case of 1613, in which he advised gentlemen of the Temple
-not to frequent plays, whence the smoke of tobacco and the presence of
-painted ladies should deter them.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1738" href="#FNanchor_1738" class="label">[1738]</a> W. Fennor, <i>Descriptions</i> (1616), ‘I suppose
-this Pamphlet will hap into your hands before a Play begin, with the
-importunate clamour of “Buy a new Booke!” by some needy companion that
-will be glad to furnish you with worke for a turned teaster’. Dekker,
-<i>G. H. B.</i> (cf. App. H), recommends cards.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1739" href="#FNanchor_1739" class="label">[1739]</a> <i>V. P.</i> xiv. 593, 599, records a charge against
-the ambassador Foscarini (1611–15) of pursuing a woman, and ‘sometimes
-attending the public comedies and standing among the people on the
-chance of seeing her’. Foscarini said he only went three or four times
-to the play and that the archduke’s ambassador and his wife did the
-same. It was given in evidence that the ambassador Giustiniani (Dec.
-1605–Oct. 1608) went with the French ambassador and his wife to see
-<i>Pericles</i> at a cost of 20 crowns. This must have been at the
-Globe. For the presence of harlots, cf. pp. 534, 535; vol. i, p. 255.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1740" href="#FNanchor_1740" class="label">[1740]</a> Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (1609, <i>Works</i>, ii. 201),
-‘you can neither shake our <i>Comick Theater</i> with your stinking
-breath of hisses, nor raise it with the thunder-claps of your hands’
-(cf. also App. H); <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, ind., ’Tis growne into a
-custome at playes if anyone rise (especially of any fashionable sort)
-about what serious busines soeuer, the rest thinking it in dislike of
-the play, tho he neuer thinks it, cry “Mew! by Jesus, vilde!” and leaue
-the poore hartlesse children to speake their Epilogue to the emptie
-seates’. Later a Gent. says, ‘See it be baudy, or by the light I and
-all my friends will hisse’, and the Prologue replies, ‘You shoulde
-not deale gentlemanlike with us els’; E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i>
-(1598), prol. to Sat., ‘It is the grand hisse to a filthy play’;
-<i>Roaring Girl</i>, prol., ‘If that he finds not here, he mews at it’;
-<i>T. and C.</i>, epil.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i7h">my fear is this,</div>
- <div>Some galled goose of Winchester would hiss;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Downfall of Robin Hood</i>, <i>ad fin.</i>:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i6h">if I fail in this,</div>
- <div>Then let my pains be baffled with a hiss;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left"><i>Devil an Ass</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> v. 41:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>If I could but see a piece...</div>
- <div>Come but to one act, and I did not care&mdash;</div>
- <div>But to be seene to rise, and goe away,</div>
- <div>To vex the Players, and to punish their <i>Poet</i>&mdash;</div>
- <div>Keepe him in awe!</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1741" href="#FNanchor_1741" class="label">[1741]</a> <i>Isle of Gulls</i>, ind., ‘a prepared company
-of gallants to aplaud his iests and grace out his play’;
-<i>Histriomastix</i>, ii. 137, ‘<i>Belch.</i>’ ‘What’s an Ingle?
-<i>Posthaste.</i> One whose hands are hard as battle doors with
-clapping at baldness’. For the special use of ‘ingle’ (= ‘intimate’) in
-the sense of a patron of players, cf. <i>Poetaster</i>, <span class="allsmcap">I.</span> ii.
-18, ‘What! shall I have my sonne a stager now? an enghle for players? a
-gull? a rooke? a shot-clogge? to make suppers, and bee laught at?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1742" href="#FNanchor_1742" class="label">[1742]</a> Cf. p. 547, n. 1.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1743" href="#FNanchor_1743" class="label">[1743]</a> <i>K. to K. a Knave</i> (1594), <i>ad fin.</i>;
-<i>Looking-Glass</i>, 2282; <i>Locrine</i>, 2276; <i>2 Hen. IV</i>,
-epil. 35, ‘And so kneele down before you; but indeed, to pray for the
-Queene’; <i>Two Wise Men and All the Rest Fools</i> (1619), epil., ‘It
-resteth that we render you very humble and hearty thanks, and that all
-our hearts pray for the king and his family’s enduring happiness, and
-our country’s perpetual welfare. <i>Si placet, plaudite</i>’; cf. ch.
-xxii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1744" href="#FNanchor_1744" class="label">[1744]</a> Cf. ch. x.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1745" href="#FNanchor_1745" class="label">[1745]</a> <i>M. N. D.</i> v. i. 360, ‘Will it please you
-to see the epilogue, or to hear a Bergomask dance between two of
-our company?’; <i>Much Ado</i>, v. i. 130, ‘Strike vp, pipers.
-<i>Dance</i>’; <i>A. Y. L.</i> <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iv. 182.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1746" href="#FNanchor_1746" class="label">[1746]</a> Cf. ch. xiii (Leicester’s).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1747" href="#FNanchor_1747" class="label">[1747]</a> Murray, ii. 206, 293, 304, 367, ‘upon the Q. players
-at the dancing on the rop’ (1590, Bridgnorth), ‘vnto the Torkey
-Tumblers’ (1589–90, Ipswich), ‘to certen playars, playinge uppon
-ropes at the Crosse Keyes’ (1590, Leicester), ‘to the Quenes men when
-the Turke wente vpon roppes at Newhall’ (22 April 1590, Norwich);
-<i>Coventry Corp. MS.</i> A 7 (b), ‘the Queens players &amp; the turk’
-(1589–90, Coventry); cf. Nashe, <i>Epistle to Strange Newes</i> (1592,
-<i>Works</i>, i. 262), ‘Say I am as verie a Turke as hee that three
-yeeres ago ranne vpon ropes’. A Gloucester payment of 1594–5 for ‘a
-wagon in the pageant for the Turke’ (Murray, ii. 285) may or may not
-refer to the acrobat of 1590.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1748" href="#FNanchor_1748" class="label">[1748]</a> Cf. ch. xiv.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1749" href="#FNanchor_1749" class="label">[1749]</a> Both Hentzner (1598) and Platter (1599) describe it;
-cf. ch. xvi, introd. Platter saw it at both the Globe and the Curtain,
-where it was ‘Englisch unndt Irlendisch’. Von Wedel also describes
-something very much like a well-developed jig after a baiting on the
-Bankside in 1584 (cf. ch. xvi, Hope).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1750" href="#FNanchor_1750" class="label">[1750]</a> Gosson, <i>P. C.</i> (1582; cf. App. C, No. xxx),
-‘daunsing of gigges’; <i>Much Ado</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> i. 78, ‘Wooing
-... is hot and hasty, like a Scotch jig, and full as fantastical’;
-<i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 132, ‘O God, your only jig-maker’;
-<i>E. M. O.</i> (Q<sub>1</sub>), 1147, ‘a thing studied, and rehearst as
-ordinarily at his comming from hawking, or hunting, as a Iigge after a
-play’; <i>Jack Drum</i>, i. 404, ‘as the Iigge is cal’d for when the
-play is done’; R. Knolles, <i>Six Bookes of a Commonweal</i> (1606),
-645, ‘Now adayes they put at the end of euerie Tragedie (as poyson
-into meat) a comedie or jigge’ (translating Bodin’s ‘obscoena quadam
-fabula turpissimis ac sordidissimis narrationibus condita’); Cotgrave
-(1611), ‘Farce ... also, the Iyg at the end of an Enterlude, wherein
-some pretie knauerie is acted’; Dekker, <i>A Strange Horse Race</i>
-(1613, <i>Works</i>, iii. 340), ‘As I haue often seene, after the
-finishing of some worthy Tragedy, or Catastrophe in the open Theaters,
-that the sceane after the Epilogue hath been more blacke (about a
-nasty bawdy jigge) then the most horrid sceane in the play was: The
-stinkards speaking all things, yet no man understanding any thing’;
-cf. the late Shirley allusion on p. 528. The term is sometimes more
-loosely used. In <i>James IV</i>, 82, 88, 620, 636, 661, 666, 673,
-1116, the speakers of the Induction call the main action a jig; cf.
-<i>1 Tamburlaine</i>, prol. 1, ‘iygging vaines of riming mother wits’.
-Swaen (<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 122) points out that a tune known
-as <i>The Cobler’s Jig</i> would fit the dialogue song by cobblers in
-<i>Locrine</i>, 569. Naylor, 124, gives some account of jig tunes and
-derives the term from <i>giga</i>, an instrument of the fiddle type.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1751" href="#FNanchor_1751" class="label">[1751]</a> Cf. the quotation from <i>K. B. P.</i> on p. 557, and
-ch. v.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1752" href="#FNanchor_1752" class="label">[1752]</a> Tarlton and Kempe (cf. ch. xv) are spoken of as acting
-in ‘merriments’. I doubt whether anything more technical is meant than
-a farcical episode in a play, perhaps helped out with such ‘gags’ as
-<i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 42, deprecates.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1753" href="#FNanchor_1753" class="label">[1753]</a> Arber, ii. 297, 298, 571, 600, 601, 669, 670, 671; iii.
-49, 50, ‘a newe Northerne Jigge’ (5 Jan. 1591), ‘the seconde parte of
-the gigge betwene Rowland and the Sexton’ (16 Dec. 1591), ‘the thirde
-and last parte of Kempes Jigge’ (28 Dec. 1591), ‘a merrie newe Jigge
-betwene Jenkin the Collier and Nansie’ (14 Jan. 1592), ‘a plesant
-newe Jigge of the broome-man’, ascribed in the margin to Kempe (16
-Jan. 1595), ‘a pleasant Jigge betwene a tincker and a Clowne’ (4 Feb.
-1595), ‘a ballad of Cuttinge George and his hostis beinge a Jigge’ (17
-Feb. 1595), ‘Master Kempes Newe Jigge of the kitchen stuffe woman’
-(2 May 1595), ‘Phillips his gigg of the slyppers’ (26 May 1595), ‘a
-pretie newe Jigge betwene Ffrancis the gentleman Richard the farmer and
-theire wyves’ (14 Oct. 1595), and ‘Kemps newe Jygge betwixt a Souldiour
-and a Miser and Sym the clown’ (21 Oct. 1595); cf. ch. xv (Tarlton).
-Creizenach, 312, cites a list of jig titles by Hoenig in <i>Anzeiger
-für deutsches Altertum</i>, xxii. 304.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1754" href="#FNanchor_1754" class="label">[1754]</a> <i>Have With You to Saffron Walden</i> (<i>Works</i>,
-iii. 114).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1755" href="#FNanchor_1755" class="label">[1755]</a> Henslowe, i. 70, 82.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1756" href="#FNanchor_1756" class="label">[1756]</a> E. Guilpin, <i>Skialetheia</i>, Sat. v.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1757" href="#FNanchor_1757" class="label">[1757]</a> App. D, No. cl; cf. the quotation from Dekker,
-<i>supra</i>; <i>Hamlet</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 522, of Polonius, ‘He ’s
-for a jig or a tale of bawdry, or he sleeps’; Wither, <i>Abuses Stript
-and Whipt</i> (1613), ii. 3, ‘a Curtaine Iigge, a Libell, or a Ballet’.
-Possibly the Middlesex order has a bearing on the curious variant in
-the Epistle to Jonson’s <i>Alchemist</i> (1612), where some copies
-lament ‘the concupiscence of jigges and daunces’, others of ‘daunces
-and antikes’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1758" href="#FNanchor_1758" class="label">[1758]</a> <i>The Black Man</i> is in Kirkman’s <i>The Wits</i>
-(1672), and <i>Singing Simpkin</i> is ascribed in undated texts to the
-Caroline Robert Cox, but a tune of this name was known in Basle in
-1592, and a German jig of 1620 seems to be a translation; cf. Herz,
-132; F. Bolte, <i>Die Singspiele der englischen Komödianten und ihrer
-Nachfolger</i> (1893, <i>Theatergeschichtliche Forschungen</i>, vii);
-W. J. Lawrence (<i>T. L. S.</i> 3 July 1919).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1759" href="#FNanchor_1759" class="label">[1759]</a> A. Clark, <i>Shirburn Ballads</i>, 244 (cf. S. R. list,
-<i>supra</i>, s. a. 1595), ‘M<sup>r</sup> Attowel’s Jigge: betweene Francis, a
-Gentleman; Richard, a farmer; and their wives’. It is in four scenes,
-sung respectively to the tunes of ‘Walsingham’, ‘The Jewishe Dance’,
-‘Buggle-boe’, and ‘Goe from my windo’. In <i>Roxburghe Ballads</i>, i.
-201; ii. 101, are ‘Clod’s Carroll, a proper new jigg’, and ‘A mery new
-Jigge’. Collier’s ‘Jigge of a Horse Loade of Fooles’ (<i>New Facts</i>,
-18; cf. Halliwell, <i>Tarlton</i>, xx) is probably a fake.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1760" href="#FNanchor_1760" class="label">[1760]</a> Clark, 354, from <i>Bodl. Rawlinson Poet. MS.</i>
-185 (<i>c.</i> 1590), ‘A proper new ballett, intituled Rowland’s
-god-sonne’. It is to the tune of ‘Loth to departe’. Nashe, <i>Summer’s
-Last Will and Testament</i>, 76, mentions this jig. Two parts of a
-‘Rowlandes godson moralised’ were entered in S. R. on 18 and 29 April
-1592. Rowland is not a character, and numerous German allusions to and
-adaptations of a jig beginning ‘Oh neighbour Rowland’ (Herz, 134) have
-probably some other original. A ‘Roland and the Sexton’ is in the S.
-R. list, <i>supra</i>. A verse dialogue in <i>Alleyn Papers</i>, 8,
-mentions ‘bonny Rowland’ and is probably a jig of his cycle; another
-(p. 29) does not read to me like a jig.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1761" href="#FNanchor_1761" class="label">[1761]</a> Cf. ch. xv (Tarlton, Wilson) and Nashe, <i>Pierce
-Penilesse</i> (<i>Works</i>, i. 244), ‘the queint Comaedians of
-our time, That when their Play is doone, do fal to ryme’. Armin’s
-(q.v.) <i>Quips Upon Questions</i> (1600) are probably themes,
-or based upon the conception of themes. A theme is introduced in
-<i>Histriomastix</i>, ii. 293. The Lord sets it:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Your poetts and your pottes</div>
- <div>Are knit in true-love knots,</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">and a sixteen-line ‘song extempore’ by Posthaste follows.
-The verses on ‘theames’ in Gascoigne’s <i>Posies</i> (ed. Cunliffe, 62)
-are not, I think, improvisations.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1762" href="#FNanchor_1762" class="label">[1762]</a> Smith, <i>Commedia dell’ Arte</i>, 175; cf.
-M. J. Wolff, <i>Shakespeare und die Commedia dell’ arte</i>
-(<i>Sh.-Jahrbuch</i>, xlvi. 1).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1763" href="#FNanchor_1763" class="label">[1763]</a> <i>C. is A.</i> <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> vii. 36, of the players in
-Utopia (England), ‘<i>Sebastian.</i> And how are their plaies? as ours
-are? extemporall? <i>Valentine.</i> O no! all premeditated things’. The
-references of Whetstone, <i>Heptameron</i> (1582), <i>Sp. Tragedy</i>,
-<span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 163, Middleton, <i>Spanish Gypsy</i>, <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span>
-ii. 38, are specifically to French and Italian practice, and so too,
-presumably, <i>A. C.</i> v. ii. 216, ‘The quick comedians Extemporally
-will stage us’. The interpretation of Hamlet, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> ii. 420,
-‘For the law of writ and the liberty, these are the only men’, is open,
-but Falstaff says in <i>1 Hen. IV</i>, <span class="allsmcap">II.</span> iv. 309, ‘Shall we
-have a play extempore?’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1764" href="#FNanchor_1764" class="label">[1764]</a> Hamlet, <span class="allsmcap">III.</span> ii. 42; cf. <i>John a Kent and
-John a Cumber</i>, iii, <i>ad fin.</i>, ‘One of us Johns must play
-beside the book’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1765" href="#FNanchor_1765" class="label">[1765]</a> In <i>K. B. P.</i>, ind. 94, where Ralph ‘should have
-playd Jeronimo with a Shooemaker for a wager’; <i>Ratseis Ghost</i>
-(1605, Halliwell-Phillipps, i. 326), ‘I durst venture all the mony in
-my purse on thy head to play Hamlet with him for a wager’; Dekker,
-<i>Jests to Make You Merrie</i> (1607, <i>Works</i>, ii. 282), ‘A
-paire of players, growing into an emulous contention of one anothers
-worth, refusde to put themselves to a day of hearing (as any Players
-would haue done) but stood onely vpon their good parts’; cf. ch. xvi
-(Fortune), ch. xv (Alleyn).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1766" href="#FNanchor_1766" class="label">[1766]</a> Cf. ch. xi, p. 371.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1767" href="#FNanchor_1767" class="label">[1767]</a> <i>2 Ant. Mellida</i>, prol., ‘within this round
-... this ring’; cf. p. 536. <i>Fawn</i> (1604–6), prol., has ‘this
-fair-filled room’, but the play was transferred to Paul’s from
-Blackfriars.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1768" href="#FNanchor_1768" class="label">[1768]</a> For the existence of tiring-houses in private theatres,
-cf. inductions to <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i> (Paul’s) and <i>C.
-Revels</i> (Blackfriars).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1769" href="#FNanchor_1769" class="label">[1769]</a> Cf. ch. xvii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1770" href="#FNanchor_1770" class="label">[1770]</a> <i>Dutch Courtesan</i> (<i>c. 1603</i>, Blackfriars),
-<span class="allsmcap">V.</span> iii. 162, ‘my very fine Heliconian gallants, and you my
-worshipful friends in the middle region’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1771" href="#FNanchor_1771" class="label">[1771]</a> Cf. Wright (App. I). For the origin of the term, cf.
-the c. v. of L. Digges to Shakespeare’s <i>Poems</i> (1640):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i7h">Let but Beatrice</div>
- <div>And Benedicke be seene, loe in a trice</div>
- <div>The cockpit, galleries, boxes, are all full,</div>
- <div>To hear Malvoglio that crosse-garterd gull.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1772" href="#FNanchor_1772" class="label">[1772]</a> Dekker, <i>G. H. B.</i> (cf. App. H), with its
-mingling of ‘public’ and ‘private’ features, cannot be relied on. The
-<i>Roxana</i> and <i>Wits</i> engravings show spectators ‘over the
-stage’, but cannot be treated as evidence for the private houses. The
-<i>Messallina</i> engraving only shows a window closed by curtains.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1773" href="#FNanchor_1773" class="label">[1773]</a> Cf. p. 556, <i>infra.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1774" href="#FNanchor_1774" class="label">[1774]</a> <i>1 Ant. Mellida</i> (Paul’s), prol., ‘select and most
-respected auditors’; <i>What You Will</i> (Paul’s), ind., ‘the female
-presence, the genteletza, the women’; <i>Jack Drum’s Entertainment</i>
-(Paul’s), ind., ‘this choise selected influence’. But it was still
-mixed enough; cf. Jonson’s c. v. to <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i>
-(Revels, <i>c.</i> 1608–9):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>The wise and many-headed bench that sits</div>
- <div>Upon the life and death of plays and wits&mdash;</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">Composed of gamester, captain, knight, knight’s man,</div>
- <div>Lady or pusill that wears mask or fan,</div>
- <div>Velvet or taffata cap, rank’d in the dark</div>
- <div class="hangingindent">With the shop’s foreman, or some such brave spark,</div>
- <div>That may judge for his sixpence.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1775" href="#FNanchor_1775" class="label">[1775]</a> Cf. chh. i, x, and <i>M. L. R.</i> ii. 12.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1776" href="#FNanchor_1776" class="label">[1776]</a> Jonson, <i>supra</i>; <i>Mich. Term</i> (<i>c.</i>
-1606, Paul’s), ‘sixpenny fees all the year long’; Otho of Hesse-Cassel
-(1611, Whitefriars), ‘hier kostet der eingang einen halben schilling
-nur, da an andern orten wohl eine halbe kron’; <i>Scornful Lady</i>
-(1613–16,? Whitefriars), <span class="allsmcap">IV.</span> i. 238, ‘I ... can see a play
-For eighteen-pence again: I can, my lady’; <i>Wit Without Money</i> (?
-1614, Whitefriars), i. 1, ‘And who extoled you in the halfcrown boxes,
-where you might sit and muster all the beauties’. So later, Jonson,
-<i>Magnetic Lady</i> (<i>1632</i>, Blackfriars), ind., ‘the faeces or
-grounds of your people, that sit in the oblique caves and wedges of
-your house, your sinful sixpenny mechanicks’. I am rather puzzled by
-Percy, <i>C. and C. Errant</i>, ‘Poules steeple stands in the place it
-did before; and twopence is the price for the going into a newe play
-there’. Even in 1589 (cf. p. 532) the price at Paul’s was 4<i>d.</i>
-according to a Marprelate tract, and William Darrell in that year paid
-6<i>d.</i> (Hall, <i>Society in Elizabethan Age</i>, 211).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1777" href="#FNanchor_1777" class="label">[1777]</a> In <i>Isle of Gulls</i> (1606, Blackfriars), ind., a
-Gent. can only see an act or two out, for ‘I lay in bed till past three
-a clock, slept out my dinner and my stomache will toule to supper afore
-fiue’. Otho of Hesse-Cassel (1611) says that the Whitefriars plays were
-at three, and from Michaelmas to Easter only. Percy, on the other hand
-(cf. ch. xii), says that the Paul’s boys were not allowed to begin
-before four, after prayers, and the gates of Paul’s shut at six. So,
-too, <i>Ram Alley</i> (King’s Revels), epil., ‘Thus two hours have
-brought to end’. Gerschow in 1602 (cf. ch. xii) says that the Chapel
-acted once a week; cf. <i>Eastward Hoe</i> (1605, Blackfriars), epil.,
-‘May this attract you hither once a week’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1778" href="#FNanchor_1778" class="label">[1778]</a> Dekker, <i>Seven Deadly Sins</i> (1606, Works, ii. 41),
-‘All the Citty lookt like a priuate Play-house, when the windowes are
-clapt downe, as if some <i>Nocturnall</i>, or dismal <i>Tragedy</i>
-were presently to be acted’.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1779" href="#FNanchor_1779" class="label">[1779]</a> <i>What You Will</i> (1601, Paul’s), ‘Enter Atticus,
-Doricus, and Philomuse, they sit a good while on the stage before the
-Candles are lighted.... Enter Tier-man with lights’; <i>Mich. Term</i>
-(1607, Paul’s), ‘Ours [terms] haue but sixpenny fees all the year
-long, yet we dispatch you in two hours without demur: your suits hang
-not long here after candles be lighted’; <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i>
-(1608–9, Blackfriars), Beaumont’s c. v., ‘Some like, if the wax lights
-be new that day’. Otho of Hesse-Cassel (1611) says that the Whitefriars
-plays were ‘nur bei lichtern’. Later we have G. Wither, <i>Fair
-Virtue</i> (1622), 1781:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i2">those lamps which at a play</div>
- <div>Are set up to light the day;</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Lenton, <i>The Young Gallants Whirligig</i> (1629):</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="i4">spangled, rare perfumed attires,</div>
- <div>Which once so glister’d at the torchy Friars.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">Cf. Lawrence (ii. 1), <i>Light and Darkness in the Elizabethan
-Theatre</i>; also <i>E. S.</i> xlviii. 213.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1780" href="#FNanchor_1780" class="label">[1780]</a> Cf. ch. xii; and for evidence of inter-act music,
-Lawrence, i. 81; Cowling, 68. Papers on <i>Early Elizabethan Stage
-Music</i> in <i>Musical Antiquary</i> (Oct. 1909, Jan. 1913) show the
-origin of the musical tradition in the earlier boy companies; for its
-seventeenth-century development, cf. Wallace, ii. 114.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1781" href="#FNanchor_1781" class="label">[1781]</a> <i>Faithful Shepherdess</i> (1608–9, Blackfriars),
-Beaumont’s c. v.:</p>
-
- <div class="poetry-container1">
- <div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div>Nor wants there those who, as the boy doth dance</div>
- <div>Between the acts, will censure the whole play.</div>
- </div>
- </div>
- </div>
-
-<p class="p-left">In <i>K. B. P.</i> (1607, Blackfriars) a boy dances after Acts i and
-iii, and the citizens comment, ‘I will haue him dance <i>Fading</i>;
-<i>Fading</i> is a fine Iigge’. After Act ii there are fiddlers. After
-Act iv Ralph intervenes with a May Day speech.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1782" href="#FNanchor_1782" class="label">[1782]</a> <i>2 Ant. Mellida</i>, <span class="allsmcap">V.</span> i. 50, ‘Andrugio’s
-ghost is placed betwixt the music-houses’; <i>Faery Pastoral</i>,
-s. ds., ‘Highest aloft and on the Top of the Musick Tree the Title
-The Faery Pastoral. Beneath him pind on Post of the Tree The Scene
-Eluida Forest Lowest of all ouer the Canopie ΝΑΠΑΙΤΒΟΔΑΙΟΝ or Faery
-Chappell’.... ‘Here they shutt both into the Canopie Fane or Trophey’;
-<i>Cuck Queenes and Cuckolds Errants</i>, prol. by Tarlton, ‘standing
-at entrance of the doore and right vnder the Beame I think Graves,
-14, rightly explains ‘Trophey’ as ‘arch’, on the analogy of its use
-for a triumphal arch in Dekker, <i>Coronation Pageant</i> (1603). The
-only other use of ‘canopy’ for a structural part of a theatre seems to
-be in <i>Sophonisba</i>, iv. 1, ‘Play softly within the canopy’....
-‘Syphax hasteneth within the canopy, as to Sophonisba’s bed’. This is
-a Blackfriars play, but it might conceivably have been written for
-Paul’s.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-<p class="transnote">Transcriber’s Notes:<br />
-
-1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been
-corrected silently.<br />
-
-2. Where necessary, original spelling has been retained.
-
-3. Where hyphenation is in doubt, it has been retained as in the original.<br />
-
-4. Hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have been
-retained as in the original.
-
-5. Some words seem to have been written as one word, e.g.
-thexecutor. These have been retained as in the original.<br />
-
-6. The heading hierarchy used follows the original publication and consequently in some
-chapters the h4 level has been skipped.</p>
-
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ELIZABETHAN STAGE (VOL 2 OF 4) ***</div>
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