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A COLLECTION OF OLD ENGLISH PLAYS, VOL. IV
In Four Volumes
Edited by
A.H. BULLEN
1882-89.
CONTENTS:
Preface Two Tragedies in One. By Robert Yarington The Captives, or the Lost Recovered. By Thomas Heywood The Costlie Whore. Everie Woman in her Humor. Appendix Index Footnotes
PREFACE.
The fourth and final volume of this Collection of Old Plays ought to have been issued many months ago. I dare not attempt to offer any excuses for the wholly unwarrantable delay.
In the preface to the third volume I stated that I hoped to be able to procure a transcript of an unpublished play (preserved in Eg. MS. 1,994) of Thomas Heywood. It affords me no slight pleasure to include this play in the present volume. Mr. JEAVES, of the Manuscript Department of the British Museum, undertook the labour of transcription and persevered to the end. As I have elsewhere stated, the play is written in a detestable hand; and few can appreciate the immense trouble that it cost Mr. JEAVES to make his transcript. Where Mr. JEAVES' labours ended mine began; I spent many days in minutely comparing the transcript with the original. There are still left passages that neither of us could decipher, but they are not numerous.
I may be pardoned for regarding the Collection with some pride. Six of the sixteen plays are absolutely new, printed for the first time; and I am speaking within bounds when I declare that no addition so substantial has been made to the Jacobean drama since the days of Humphrey Moseley and Francis Kirkman. _Sir John Van Olden Barnavelt_ has been styled by Mr. Swinburne a "noble poem." Professor Delius urged that it should be translated into German; and I understand that an accomplished scholar, Dr. Gelbeke of St. Petersburg, has just completed an admirable translation. Meanwhile the English edition[1] has been reproduced in Holland.
In the original announcement of this Collection I promised a reprint of _Arden of Feversham_ from the quarto of 1592; I also proposed to include plays by Davenport, William Rowley, and Nabbes. After I had transcribed _Arden of Feversham_ I determined not to include it in the present series. It occurred to me that I should enhance the value of these volumes by excluding such plays as were already accessible in modern editions. Accordingly I rejected _Arden of Feversham, Sir John Oldcastle, Patient Grissel_, and _The Yorkshire Tragedy_. The plays of Davenport, William Rowley, and Nabbes were excluded on other grounds. Several correspondents suggested to me that I should issue separately the complete works of each of these three dramatists; and, not without some misgivings, I adopted this suggestion.
I acknowledge with regret that the printing has not been as accurate as I should have desired. There have been too many misprints, especially in the first two volumes;[2] but in the eyes of generous and competent readers these blemishes (trivial for the most part) will not detract from the solid value of the Collection.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 4
- 2: Although not published until 1601
- 3: What cruell hand hath done so foule a deede
- 4: Left to his carefull education By dying Parents
- 5: Ile draw my neighbours then their drinke my selfe
- 6: That manie misers cofer up in bagges
- 7: Let me imbrace thee in my dying armes
- 8: So should my Unckle seeme in me alive
- 9: Murtherd one that would have murtherd me
- 10: My soule assureth me Exit Merry and Rach
- 11: Ere young Pertillo should sustain a wrong
- 12: To sound what mightie share Pertillo hath in my affection
- 13: Enter Avarice and Homicide bloody
- 14: Praie God his Maister be not slaine himselfe
- 15: Here is two hundreth markes in golde
- 16: To morrow end Pertillos tragedie
- 17: Now let us go to Maister Beeches shop
- 18: Of all my friends Allenso loves me best
- 19: And will protect Pertillo happily
- 20: Sostratus sic kisseth the boy weeping
- 21: I see no reason whie I should relent
- 22: This bloody slave intends to murther thee
- 23: Stab the other murtherer againe
- 24: The subtile creature with a greater crie
- 25: What should incite Fallerio to devise
- 26: For thou hast slaine Allenso with the boy
- 27: Then be not so iniurious to thy selfe
- 28: Enter three neighbors knocking at Loneys doore Loney comes
- 29: Which call you Beeches shoppe
- 30: Viewing their deeds of damned wickednesse
- 31: Would never do so great a murther
- 32: Twixt feare and hope of young Pertillos life
- 33: To be captiv'd by humaine pollicie
- 34: Accompanied with Lordes and Gentlemen Fal
- 35: At last attaine to earth by funerall
- 36: Falleria shaven in shepheards habilliments
- 37: For the cruell murther Of young Pertillo
- 38: Be not obdurate in your wickednesse
- 39: Alberto and Fallerio disguised
- 40: Alenso died to set his father free
- 41: And use Alenso with all clemencie
- 42: And feeles no terror for such wickednesse
- 43: And I will place stern Murther by my side
- 44: That seekes to sincke her in reproches waves
- 45: Condeme the necessary use of fyre
- 46: There shee lyves Lyke to a ritche and pretious Jewell lost
- 47: Mildewe Y'have such a bargen Marcellis
- 48: And knwe all this most certeine
- 49: So itt bringe gayne and profitt
- 50: Knwe then in this small covent
- 51: I will complayne to'th fownder of your loosenes
- 52: For in all this villaige I woll not leave a howse
- 53: Sawe you not bowte this villadge late last night
- 54: Still theire coates beare them upp
- 55: I cannot shoone shun in my Palestras losse
- 56: Shee may lyve in som monastery
- 57: Some 76 faggotts instantly Hott brothes
- 58: Whyle these are Att solleme mattens
- 59: And I a thyrd contrary from them boathe
- 60: For last night Our shipp was splitt
- 61: My whytinge mopp 92 Late scapt from feedinge haddocks
- 62: Oh my giurles You sweete and never faylinge marchandyse
- 63: In th'out part of this cloyster
- 64: Enter the Lord de Averne with som followers
- 65: Possible That this shoold bee in man
- 66: If with men that have eyes and can distinguishe bewty
- 67: And I'l go call the pesants To rayse another tempest
- 68: But to give these a menace whom thou calst thyne
- 69: Beefore I give due thankes to this good man
- 70: Wilt thou intreate them neather
- 71: Yes I will By the fore topp and topp gallant
- 72: Such as ban Proffred delights may
- 73: And I'l conveighe him Where som
- 74: I woold som body else had thyne
- 75: Synce fishinge is free and the sea common
- 76: This stormes woorse then that until'd the howse
- 77: Nor good redd herringe fisherman
- 78: The caskett is nowe open'd what coms fyrste
- 79: The guift of Isabell to her daughter Mirable
- 80: Mirable This thyrteene yeares
- 81: The ritch man's dayes are short
- 82: But though prevention canott helpe what's past
- 83: Once A lusty horse but now past servyce
- 84: In these I'l arme the fryar from head to knee
- 85: Then hee's pleasd Wee too shalbee contracted
- 86: And Dennis with the Fryar armed
- 87: Thus I back one mare Least I shoold ryde another
- 88: And saw Ritchard stopt At a turninge lane
- 89: Hee talkt of a leatheren budgett lost at sea
- 90: Synce of my wealthe I am once againe possest
- 91: These bagges conteine fyve hundred pownds apeece
- 92: If to this frendly fayer society
- 93: 'tis fitt for our dischardge That the Kinge's hand bee seene
- 94: And not the dead Fryar Richard
- 95: The yron Mills are excellent for that
- 96: There are other allusions that point to 1613
- 97: How do'st thou like the lovely Euphrata
- 98: With divers other honorable sutors
- 99: To chaine your liking to a groome so base
- 100: Want no suggestion to beguile a trueth
- 101: An upright sentence of an act so vilde
- 102: Enter Hatto and Alfrid conferring
- 103: At thy feete the Cittizens of Meath
- 104: Alfred our brother may awaite your grace In Saxony
- 105: And tis directed to my Euphrata
- 106: All things to him were free Otho
- 107: The beauteous and the famous Curtezan
- 108: Then why doe men resort to Curtezans
- 109: That what I taste in Musique may be drown'd
- 110: Beautie's a counsellor that wants no fee
- 111: The poore is as unpleasing Unto me as the plague
- 112: With which Ile signe their warrants
- 113: Shee is doubly excellent in sin and beauty
- 114: Princes may seeke renowne by wayes more sure
- 115: Enter Constantine and Euphrata
- 116: Thou art incompast with a world of foes Montano
- 117: I command Thou set a ransome on Valentia
- 118: This more then kindnesse I turne backe to you
- 119: But these are wise can counsaile with your bride
- 120: They'l kill the father that will kill the sonne
- 121: Hath that ambitious boy Taught you such Rethoricke
- 122: Had need of faithfull hearts This is the prison
- 123: Didst thou ever know A Father pleased his sonne to murder so
- 124: And like a strumpet turne thee to the lawes
- 125: And let our other offspring be brought foorth
- 126: What means these sable vailes upon their faces
- 127: Except thou giue me the departed lives Of my deare childeren
- 128: Like to unkindnesse there is no divorce
- 129: Redeeme your lost estate with better dayes
- 130: Overflowing with bitter and tedious moralising
- 131: Then break prison and get out of this melancholly Gaole
- 132: That that mooving marish element
- 133: Tis pittie the Vermilion Wormes shoulde eate thee
- 134: By this bright horison ye shall
- 135: 234 By this illuminate welkin
- 136: If he were as madde as a weaver
- 137: When an Hostis must come and go at everye mans pleasure
- 138: Dance not your Canaries heere up down
- 139: We shall have such a coyle else
- 140: Olde Flaminius Comes to welcome us
- 141: Terentia drawing neere to Tulley
- 142: Yonders great looking for Tulley
- 143: Must fall from billing to byting
- 144: By this bright horrison Accut
- 145: By the horison hee's a propper man indeede
- 146: Ifaith a better breathing then a game at bowles
- 147: That hee devours with great alacritie
- 148: He did preambulate sic or walk off
- 149: I hope we are all friends sol
- 150: None so new as this Tully shall be married to Terentia
- 151: Doost thou recall my former promises
- 152: Or Terentia Finde in her heart to be your Deathes man
- 153: The like is doomde to faire Terentia
- 154: Mine Host bids the Cobler Gra
- 155: Seaven men going to their graves
- 156: But in the end your kindenes appeares
- 157: Wanting to discharge the Fryer
- 158: Now thinke what shame tis to be vilde
- 159: Cannot you search his breeches
- 160: With his neighbor Cornutus shall bee two of the Maskers
- 161: Tis good to drinke good drinke
- 162: Graccus is overthrown so far as the damage of the suite
- 163: But what is hee and the qualitie of his fault
- 164: By seeing them unmaskt and the reason of their habits
- 165: Be jealious no more unlesse thou weare thine eares still
- 166: But let them weare no changeable stuffe
- 167: Tragedy of Sir John Van Olden Barnavelt
- 168: Or by Neo Greek pronunciation vita
- 169: As teehee tahha when louers meet
- 170: 1615 speaks of Cupid's diety
- 171: And give her neck three lathers
- 172: Trevant is a corruption of Germ
- 173: Sewe is a misprint for serve
- 174: Fleay suggests flocked flecked
- 175: Husband are scored through in the MS
- 176: Men call in witness of your mechall sin
- 177: 99 This speech is scored through in the MS
- 178: 141 In the left hand margin of the MS
- 179: 154 Sowse 1 halfpenny Fr
- 180: 180 Before this line the old ed
- 181: The allusion is to the bum rolls
- 182: Hence a general term for a sword
- 183: 302 An allusion to the proverbial expression
