CORNELL UNIVERSTTY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCQME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN iS^I'-'BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE Cornell University Library PR 1261.B71 Early plays from the Italian; 3 1924 013 324 110 Cornell University Library The original of tliis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31 92401 33241 1 EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN EDITED, WITH ESSAY, INTRODUCTIONS AND NOTES BY R. WARWICK BOND M.A. EDITOR OF THE OXFORD LYLV AND OTHER WORKS OXFORD AT THE CLARENDON PRESS MDCCCCXI HENRY FROWDE, M.A. PUBLISHER TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD LONDON, EDINBURGH, NEW YORK TORONTO AND MELBOURNE PREFACE What I have endeavoured to do in this little book is something wider than an edition of three plays, and something closer than can well be done in a literary history. I started with the wish to show how ancient Greek and Roman Comedy finds representation in our own, not only in subject and spirit, but in matters of form and technique ; and to show this not only by statement and discussion, but by giving therewith actual plays to which the reader might instantly turn for verification of indicated parallelism or imitation. I wished to bring under the purely English reader's notice some facts about ancient comedy for its, own sake, facts usually too cursorily dismissed in histories of the modern drama to leave a very distinct impression on the mind ; and at the same time I wished to show the great impor- tance of Italian Renaissance Comedy in handing on the classical form and substance to modern Europe, while introducing considerable modifications of it. The general influence of Italy has been stated again and again. Critic after critic has raked together the allusions to Italian fashions, Italian books, Italian acting, found in English treatises of the first twenty or thirty years of Elizabeth, or in English plays of the latter half of her reign. But the illustration offered has been inade- quate to ensure the due realization of the Latin or Italian connexion ; and that largely because English exemplars of classical dramatic form were so few and so inaccessible. Until quite recently Roister Doister was the only early iv PREFACE Latinized play that the ordinary student had a chance of making his own ; and the Latin Comedy relations even of that piece were inadequately stated, the Eunuchus being overlooked. Jack Juggler was, and remains, buried in the fifteen volumes of Hazlitt's Dodsley. Of Supposes, so important for Latin and Italian Comedy alike, the only modern reprints were in large collections, or in the same editor's expensive and limited edition of Gascoigne's collected Works. I well remember how long it was before I had any opportunity of reading the actual text for myself; and my case must have been that of countless others. The Buggbears and Misogonus, admirable examples of Italian and Latin influence, and of the way these combined with the native spirit, were never printed before 1897 and 1898, and then in Ger- many. And it may well be questioned whether the failure to emphasize the Latin connexions of our drama has not been due to inadequate knowledge of Latin Comedy itself. Terence has fared better than Plautus, in modern as in mediaeval days : he has always seemed more possible as an educational subject, whether on philological or moral grounds. With the twenty surviving plays of his more vigorous and original predecessor it is permissible to doubt the existence among us of any very full acquain- tance, even in the case of professed scholars. Plautus, abounding in good things, is very seldom quoted ; and outside histories of Roman literature, of the existence of which the average student of English is quite unconscious, there is but little to be found about his work and influ- ence. Admirable service to Plautine literary study was done by the Spdtere Bearbeitungen plautinischer Lust- spiele of Dr. Karl von Reinhardstottner (Leipzig, 1886) : but for the English reader there was nothing of similar PREFACE V kind before Professor M. W. Wallace's capital Introduc- tion to his edition of The Birthe of Hercules published at Chicago, 1903, which discussed his influence on our sixteenth-century drama, whether direct, or filtered through Germany or Italy. His subject is very similar to that of the present book ; though our lines are different, approximating most nearly, perhaps, on the Education- drama, where we had to sketch the same plays. But the particularity of Professor Wallace's title will probably limit the merited diffusion of his essay ; while of actual Italian work he says but little, though he enumerates, after Messrs. Churchill and Keller {Shakespeare-Jahrbuch, xxxiv), some prominent Latin university-plays of the last decade of the century, which show Latin influence strained through Italian work. Of Italian Comedy, it is safe to say, our ignorance is greater than of Roman. The two volumes dealing with Italian Literature in Symonds' Renaissance in Italy con- stituted the so.le source in England whence anything could be gleaned until Dr. Garnett's brief and general chapter on the subject in his Italian Literature of 1 898. Mr. Lewis Einstein in his Italian Renaissance in England (Columbia University Press, New York, 190a, pp. 365-7) dismisses Italian drama as almost without direct influence on ours ; while admitting that it assisted the transition from morality to comedy, that dumb shows and the play within the play were of Italian origin, that Supposes began the refinement of dialogue, and that Italian influence 'contributed to bring to life the ancient forms of tragedy and teach the canons of Aristotle as interpreted in Italy '. This is, indeed, the general attitude; adequately represented before by Dr. Ward {English Dramatic Literature, ch. ii passim), and as much, no doubt, as should be expected in a work of scope so large as his. Yet if Italian drama did all vi PREFACE this, it surely demands our closer consideration. Gosson assures us that, not only novelle, but Italian ' comedies ' were ransacked to furnish our playhouses ; we have the undoubted fact of Italian actors travelling in France, Spain, Germany, and England in the latter half of the century ; and John Wolfe thought it worth while to pub- lish four of Aretino's comedies (all except // Filosofo) in Italian in London, 1588. His attention and that of Petruccio Ubaldini, perhaps his partner, would have been better devoted to the dramatic output of Ariosto, Cecchi, or Grazzini; but what they neglected has remained in neglect. There is no modern English edition, still less translation, of any Renaissance comic playwright — nothing beyond the elegant verse-rendering of Tasso's pastoral by Leigh Hunt (1820), which had predecessors and has one recent successor, and T. L. Peacock's abbreviated prose-version of GV Ingannati in 1863: while the only critical work which comes to really close quarters with any branch of Italian drama is Dr. W. W. Greg's recent book on Pastoral, 1906. While believing as firmly as any one in the substantial originality of our English drama, I have long felt that we were doing something less than justice to Italian precedence ; that a comedy so enormously prolific as theirs must needs be more than prurience and barren husks and was worth attention for its own sake ; and that until that attention was given something of the truth about our own would still remain hidden. In Germany the work of Klein, Gaspary, and Creizenach has done full justice to the commedia erudita : I hope English critics will be patient of an attempt to bring the English student a little nearer to it, and to that ancient comedy on which it is based. Only now at the last moment have I met with Professor G. Saintsbury's The Earlier Renaissance (1901) in the PREFACE vii series entitled 'Periods of European Literature' under his editorship. I find his sixth chapter ' The Changes of European Drama ', pp. 321-72, anticipates in part my effort to combine some notice of Italian Comedy with some of the Education-drama and of near-following English work. I have read the chapter with all my old pleasure in the professor's wide grasp and the vitalizing power which enables him to rise above a vast or dull material ; and I shall expect to find some help from this and the following chapter in a later book. But he shares, I think, the tendency to underrate Italian Comedy in itself as a mere reproduction, and to minimize the modern dramatic effect of the antique example it handed on to Europe. At least I am able to feel that he in no way renders superfluous that closer illustration here at- tempted. But, even if defect be admitted, it will also be recog- nized that no very comprehensive remedy can be applied in a book the bulk of which must needs consist of text and notes. Setting out in 1903 to supply a felt want rapidly by an edition of Supposes and Buggbears accom- panied by an essay, I soon reached that state of self- dissatisfaction which tends, one may hope, to improve the work, while it impairs the fortunes, of literary men. I read long and closely in Latin and Italian comedy: I read much criticism, Latin, Italian, and German. Other editing or writing tasks, an occasional request for lectures, interrupted and delayed me; my matter had become unwieldy ; and meantime the want I had recog- nized was partly supplied by Dr. Cunliffe's editions of Supposes, whether in the Belles Lettres series (New York, 1906) or the Cambridge English Classics, 1907. I saw that space for all I wished to say could never be found in the book I at first intended ; and resolved to viii PREFACE limit myself, in that, to the most necessary points, such as might best illustrate the plays I had in hand, and to relegate fuller discussion, whether of Latin, Italian, or other English work, to another book of wider scope which I had already partly written. At the same time I felt it desirable to include the important and nearly contemporary play of MisogonUs, of which Dr. Brandl had published an edition in his Quellen of 1898; partly because it illustrates the direct Latin influence, partly because it is intimately connected with that neo- Latin Education-drama which is one of the channels of the classical influence and was affecting us strongly about 1560-70, as even Supposes shows. Narrowing my scope for the present in one direction, I broadened it in another ; and find myself now in the position of offering, along with two early plays from the Italian, one which is not really from the Italian at all, and yet exhibits something of Italian, along with much Latin and more of neo- Latin influence. I hope, however, the reader will recognize a sufficient homogeneity and kinship to my purpose; and will not quarrel with the fact that this third play does not strictly correspond with the title of the book. Dr. Brandl has even traced in / Stcppositi a main original of Misogonus. That, I think, is unnecessary, in any specific sense; but it is the fact that the Latin, Italian, and neo- Latin influences can ill be separated, and it is a main object of this book to show as much. I should further apologize, perhaps, for omitting some things the reader will most expect to find — for not discuss- ing Jack Juggler, Roister Doister, and other plays ; for not reproducing the usual mention of Ascham's tirade and Gosson's Captain Mario, or the allusions to Italian sports and devices in the work of Shakespeare and his predecessors or contemporaries. They have already been PKEFAUt ix collected by others ; and in truth I have found enough to do in compressing the results of my personal observa- tion into small space, in bringing together matter from works lying wide enough apart, and in trying to combine all into a somewhat new point of view. My chief obligations here, besides those which all must owetothe larger historians like Symonds, Ward, D' Ancona, Gaspary, Creizenach, and others, are to Professor Herford in his Literary Relations, Dr. Grabau in his edition of The Buggbears, Dr. Brandl in his edition of Misogonus (see below, pp. 163-4), and Herr Schiicking in his Stoff- liche Beziehungen. When I was editing Lyly I could find little that was useful in the chapter Schiicking de- voted to that author, who did not, in fact, very well illustrate his thesis. Here, where my subject is more nearly parallel with his own, I gladly witness to the care and thoroughness shown in his treatise, and the use I have been able to make of its suggestions at several points, but particularly in regard to The Buggbears. Courtesy re- quires, too, a brief reference to Dr. Cunlifife. My own text and notes on Supposes were prepared some time before the issue of either of his editions ; but when my essay was written and my book all but finished, I examined them, and embodied from him, after due verification in the quartos, seventeen textual variants overlooked or ignored before, besides adding to my note on p. Ixiii a mention of the first French translation. That is the limit of my debt to work in which I was glad to note some points of coincidence with my own. Alone, almost, among literary workers I have dedicated no book to Dr. Frederick Furnivall. I had hoped that this might have secured his consent to grace itself with an honoured name. I have been prevented by the too X PREFACE swift execution of a sentence passed some three months ago ; and to-day a world far wider than that of letters mourns the passing of an essentially noble figure, whose energy, versatility, and achievement compelled its admira- tion, whose fearless honesty and dislike of cant must have inspired respect even in the respectable, and whose unselfish kindness of heart won from me, and many another, the warmer tribute of personal love. R. W. B. Upper Norwood, CONTENTS PAGE Essay on the Relation of these Plays to Latin AND Italian Comedy and to the Dutch Educa- tion Drama ... xv Various influences represented .... . xv Ariosto founder of the modern drama .... xvii Bibbiena's La Calandria ; Machiavelli's La Mandragola . xvii other Italian playwrights, Aretino, Cecchi, Grazzini . xix Their work grew out of revival of Plautus and Terence, . xx but shows a large modern element — Italian i6th cent, life assimilated to ancient xxi Comparison of Ltalian with Roman Comedy I. General : subject and spirit : a burgher-comedy . . xxiii General type of Plot xxv Changes induced by religion — clerical characters . . xxvii Learning represented by new types — doctor of laws, of medicine, professor, Pedant in Aretino's plays, elderly suitor xxviii The pretended Sorcerer — little magic in Roman comedy — xxxi mediseval demonology — impulse given by the Bull of xxxii 1484 and the Malleus Maleficarum — widespread belief in the occult — important place in Italian comedy . . xxxiii Ariosto's // Negromante xxxiv Cecchi' s Lo Spiriio and L'Ammalaia . . . xxxv The Inn-keeper — the Parasite xxxvii The burgher-household — the men little changed, . xxxviii the heroine becomes respectable, is disguised as a man, . xxxix the Nurse or servant, .... . . . xl wives and mothers xli II. Detailed Marks : form and technique 1. Prose and Verse xlii 2. Unities strictly observed — painted movable scenery — xlii-iii effects of Unities— the English freedom in Misogonus . xliv-v CONTENTS PAGE . Stereotyped comic efifects reproduced from Latin : (l) arrivals announced, (2) talking back on entry, (3) sup- posed invisibility, (4) asides, (s) direct address of audi- ence, (6) mention of doors— violent knocking, (7) bringer of good news, (8) the currens servtis, (9) forgetting a name, (10) abusive chaff, (l i) cookwith spit, (12) ominous dreams xlvi-1 Supposes : its sources and treatment . Ariosto's / Suppositi, prose and verse forms — His debt to the Captivi and Eunuckus, &c. Gascoigne's translation from both Italian forms his changes, names, allusions his additions his euphuism, proverbs and phrases . observes Unities general impressions of the play compared with Taming of A Shrew . „., „ Tami7ig of The Shrew The Buggbears : its sources and treatment . . . Ixvii Grazzini's La Spiritata, sketch of . . . . Ixviii Additions from Gl' Jngannati Ixix „ „ the Andria of Terence .... Ixxi enlargement of necromantic element from Weier . . Ixxii Grazzini's Le Cene Ixxiii Coarse humour — Trappola and La Cassaria . . . Ixxiv Minor structural changes — the Songs .... Ixxv Table of correspondence with Sources .... Ixxvi Original additions Ixxvii Proverbs and phrases Ixxviii Local colour and allusions Ixxix The Verse : rhymes — abuse of alliteration . . . Ixxx Metres : Skeltonics ; the Fourteener, its gradual introduc tion for serious characters Ixxxi The Doggerel ; probable origin in alliterative verse, ana- psestic four-accent basis in Heywood, becomes modified by iambic rhythm after publication of Tottell's Miscel- lany, holds its ground for comic matter after admission of regular iambic measure — reasons . . . Ixxxiii-xc 1 li lii-iv Iv Ivii Iviii lix Ixi Ixi Ixiv Ixvi CONTENTS xii PAGE Misogonus : its sources and treatment xci Its English colouring and spirit xci Belongs to the Education-drama — objects of the latter — Latin and Biblical sources xcii Parable of the Prodigal in the hands of the Humanists . xciv Macropedius' Asotus, sketch of xcv Waldis' Parabell xcvii Gnapheus' Acolastus, sketch of xcvii Macropedius' Rebelles and Petrisais xcix Stymmelius' Studentes .... . . ci Connexion of Misogonus with these plays . . . . ci „ ,, „ Latin Comedy . . . ciii Earlier English Prodigal Plays, a fragments. 1530, Dis- obedient Child, Nice Wanton, Jacob and Esau, Like Will to Like, Glasse of Governement, play of the English actors in Germany, allusions in Shakespeare . . civ-viii Luis de Miranda's Comedia Prddiga, Cecchi's Figliuol Prodigo cix Cacurgus as astrologer and quack combines Education - drama with Faustus-cycle, but has Italian affinities . cix-xi Sir John and The Tale of the Basyn cxii Jest- Books, German and English ; vernacular proverbs, &c., in Misogonus cxiii-xv Effects of, or evidence afiforded by, our plays — example of Italian construction cxvi SUPPOSES Introduction: Argument— Text— Date— the Author . . 1-9 Text 10-73 THE BUGGBEARS Introduction: Argument— the MS. and its treatment — Date — Authorship 77-83 Text .... 84-157 MISOGONUS Introduction: Argument— the MS. and its treatment — Authorship— Date 161-171 Text 172-258 CONTENTS NOTES Supposes . Bteggbears , Misogomts . Glossary Index . PAGE 259-274 274-303 303-323 324-328 329-332 ON THE RELATION OF THESE PLAYS TO LATIN AND ITALIAN COMEDY AND TO THE DUTCH EDUCATION DRAMA The drama of modern Europe begins in Italy early in the ! sixteenth century with the work of Ariosto, Bibbiena, Machia- velli, and their successors, work which was a direct derivative \ from that of ancient Rome as represented by Plautus and ' Terence. To Latin Comedy the English stage, too, owes ■ a direct debt, the full extent of which is hardly recognized : it owes also an indirect debt, through the medium of Italian work, of which the first two plays in this volume afford some illustra- tion : and, further, Latin Comedy was ajnain constituent of that other growth, nearly contemporary with the Italian and to some extent indebted to Italy, the Education^rama, namely, of Dutch, Rhenish, or Swiss schoolmasters — a drama which stands as the chief model of Mtsogonus and must have had many repre- sentatives in this .country, though but Utile of their work remains, and modern interest in it slumbered until the publication of Professor Herford's illuminative study in 1886.^ The plays edited in this volume, then, are typical of three strains of foreign influence : 1. The direct influence of Italian plays, shown in Supposes and Bugghears, 2. The direct influence of the Dutch or German Education- drama, shown in Mtsogonus and in Gascoigne's slight additions to Supposes. 3. The influence of Lalin Comedy ; whether acting directly, 1 The Literary Relations of England and Germany in the Sixteenth Century — a work to which this essay is at several points indebted. xvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN as it certainly does in Buggbears and seems to do in Misogonus, or filtered through Italian work as in Supposes and in part in Buggbears, or through Dutch work as in Misogonus. To distinguish precisely the channel through which Latin influence came is not always possible. To these we should add, I think, the influence of the German Jest-books, as translated and imitated in England. They cer- tainly contributed to that rough humour of clownage and abuse and obscenity, that atmosphere of the tavern and the street, which so conspicuously marks English dramatic work from Heywood onwards ; though, as it is found also in much earlier work like Mankind and Medwell's Nature, we must allot a due share of it to native tendencies. Of English rural life and character Misogonus, indeed, affords us a most lifelike represen- tation ; and gives us, too, the earliest known dramatic reflection of the institution of the domestic fool. The reader will not only perceive the importance of these plays written within twenty to twenty-five years of the coming of Shakespeare ; he will at once be struck with the innumerable connexions they suggest — he will see how difficult it is to dis- sever them from others, e.g. Jack Jttgghr, Roister Doister, The Comedy of Errors, and The Birthe of Hercules for the direct Latin influence ; locasta and The Two Italian Gentlemen for the direct Italian ; The Glasse of Gouernement for the Dutch ; Lyly's work, and much else, the discussion of which would utterly overweight what purports to be merely an introduction to three texts. In a separate and longer work, which I have had some time in hand, I hope to deal more fully with the connexion between the Latin, Italian, and Elizabethan comic stage. Here my task must be more directly illustrative. Of Italian Renais- ( sance Comedy, so much neglected in England, I must needs! enumerate some leading names and dates : I must briefly exhibit ' its debt to that of ancient Rome, whether in subject and general spirit or in the detailed marks of form and technique, and the modifications it introduces — a debt and a modification amply reproduced in our first two plays : and, finally, I must essay INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xvii some close comparison of all three plays with their specific originals and sources, whether Latin, Italian, or neo-Latin. The true founder of the modern European stage is Lodovico Ariosto (1474-1533). the poet of the Orlando Furioso, who was, first, secretary to Cardinal Ippolito d'Este of Ferrara, and from 1 5 18 chamberlain to his brother Duke Alfonso I. Ariosto wrote five comedies, all produced at the ducal court of Ferrara, in the first half of the sixteenth century. These were 1. La-Qassaria: (a) prose-form, produced the first week in March, 1508; (b) verse-form, produced Jan. 24, 1529, or perhaps not before the carnival of Feb. 1531.^ 2. / Suppositi': (a) prose-form, produced the first week of Feb. 1 509, and again at the Vatican with new (lost) pro- logue March 6, 1519; (b) verse-form, not made till 1529'' — no recorded performance. 3. La Lena : verse, produced at the carnival of 1529.^ 4. // Negromanie : verse, composed for the carnival at Rome 1520, but not acted till the performance at Ferrara 1530.* 5. La Scolasiica: verse, begun 'many years' before 1532, but left unfinished, and completed (a) in prose (lost) by his son Virginio; (b) in verse by his brother Gabriele d'Ariosti 1543-8-° A priority in date was long claimed for La Calandria of Ariosto's friend, Bernardo Dovizi da Bibbiena (1470-1519), cardinal of S. Maria in Portico, whose play was acted at the Court of Urbino Feb. 6, 1513, and again before Leo X in Rome, 1 51 4.* However widely popular in its day and influential as an 1 See The King of Court Poets by E. G. Gardner (Constable), 1906, PP- 323-4. 203, 343-4. 2 Lettere di Lod. Ariosto per cura di Ant. Cappelli, Milano (Hoepli), 3rd ed. 1887 ; No. 193. See below, p. li. ' N. Campanini, Lod. Ariosto nei Prologhi delle sue Commedie, Bologna (Zanichelli), 1891, pp. 151-2. * Campanini, pp. 115, 181. ^ Lettera 193 ; and Gardner, p. 349. ^ Cf. D'Ancona's Origini del Teatro Italiano, Torino (Loescher), ii. 101-2. Castiglione's undated letter about the play has been shown by I. del Lungo {Florentia, 1897, pp. 363-78) to be more appropriate to 1513 632 b xviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN example, I hold it much inferior to Ariosto's work in humour, interest, and power of management. There is perhaps a possi- bility that Bibbiena was author of another comedy, presented by him at the Vatican in 1518, which had Mantua for its scene.' Another competitor for the priority is Niccol6 Machiavelli (1469-1527), whose lost Le Maschere (1504) satirized contem- poraries in imitation of the Clouds of Aristophanes, and whose La Mandragola and Clizia (the latter after Plautus' Casino) were composed between 1512-20.* The Mandragola is held by many critics as the best of all Renaissance comedies ; an opinion I cannot share, feeling it far surpassed in vigour and variety, in ease and naturalness of conduct, and in humour, both by La Cassaria and / Supposiii; while its subject, the corrup- tion of an innocent young wife by her mother and confessor, is one that could only cease to be repellent if treated with the high seriousness and passion of tragedy. Neither on grounds of merit nor chronology should we yield to Bibbiena or Machiavelli Ariosto's claim to be the founder of the modern drama : and if the primacy be refused to these workers in the same kind, still more must it be sq. to efforts of earlier date but different aim — to the Latin plays acted from 1471 onwards by Pomponius Lsetus' Academy at Rome ; to Politian's mythological drama or opera, Orfeo, given at Mantua 1471 and followed by the similar Cefalo of Niccolb da Correggio at Ferrara 1487'; and to the whole body of Sacre Rappresentazioni at Florence, which occupy roughly the century 1450 to 1550, the earliest of known date than to the period 1504-8 ; and his statement that the author's prologue came too late, so that one by himself had to be substituted, is perhaps more naturally understood of an original prologue at a first performance than of a new one written for a revival. G. B. Pigna, however, forty years later (/ Rotnami, 1554, p. 115) states that Ariosto, having La Calandria before him, wrote his own comedies in prose (' Egli hauendo dinanzi la Calandra del Bibienna fecele in prosa') and afterwards refashioned them in sdrucciolo verse. ' See below, p. li, note i. ' Villari's Life and Times of Machiavelli, English translation 1898, PP- 34a, 352- ^ For the present I simply acquiesce in D'Ancona's (ii. 8 sqq.) classi- fication of the most interesting Timone, Comoedia (c. 149a) of Boiardo with these hybrid plays. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xix being Maffeo Belcari's Abramo ed Isaac; 1449.* Undoubtedly these sacred plays set the scholars the example of introducing comic figures of contemporary life : but to Ariosto and his suc- cessors was open life itself and the whole har^st of the novella ; and the diffusion of the Rappresentazioni was hardly wide until its rival, the commedia erudila, had become firmly established. Very quickly, too, the superior artistic and constructive merits of the latter began to affect the former ; until in the sacred dramas of Cecchi, such as the Morte del Re Acab, 1559, the Sanf' Agnese, 1582, or the undated // Sammaritano, we get sacred themes handled, nqt_in the old fashion, but with the wholly different technique of the secular stage. Besides Ariosto, Bibbiena, and Machiavelli, the three be- ginners, the classical comedy found innumerable other repre- sentatives. The chief names are Adriano Politi : Gt Ingannati, 1531, pr. 1538. Pietro Aretino (1492-1526): five comedies of a more independent type than the rest — La Cortigiana,htg. 1525, pub. 1534; // Marescalco, beg. bef. 1530, pub. 1533; La Talanta, 1542; L' Ipocrito, 1542; II Filosofo, 1546. Lorenzino de' Medici: L' Aridosia, 1536. Giambattista Gelli (1498-1563): La Sporia, 1543 (perhaps only finished from Machiavelli's draft''); I] Err ore, 1555. Ercole Bentivoglio (c. 1 505-1 573): I Fantasmi and // Geloso, 1544. Lodovico Dolce : II Capitano and // Marito, 1545. Giovan Giorgio Trissino : I Simillimi, 1548. Agnolo Firenzuola (1493-bef. 1548): / Lucidi, 1549, La Trinuzia. Giovammaria Cecchi (1518-87): forty-five to fifty dramatic pieces, appearing between 1542-87, some of them sacred, one or two moral plays. Antonfrancesco Grazzini (II Lasca), 1503-84 : La Gelosia, ' D'Ancona's Origini, i. 1317, 257-60. ' A. Gaspary, Storia della Letteratura Italiana (trad, da V. Rossi), n. ii. 257. b2 XX EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN 1550; LaSpiritata,\efi\; La Strega, La Sibilla, La Pin- zochera, I Parentadi, all writt. bef. 1566, though not acted and not pub. till 1582; h^siits L' Arzigogolo (doubtful), and three farces. Giordano Bruno (i 548-1 600): II Candelaio, 1582. This Renaissance drama, fairly represented in the cinquecento by the names given above, lasted on till it was superseded in the eighteenth century by the more modern type of Goldoni. Riccoboni counted 563 comedies and 234 tragedies produced before 1650 ' : Dr. Garnett, on what authority I know not, says 'more than 5,000 plays were written between 1500 and 1734'.'' The alarmed reader, whose conscience has been very properly pricked by these figures, may be reassured by a concise state- ment of the limits of our plays' connexions, the nature of which will be seen in the following pages. Supposes is closely translated, with but slight additions, from the two forms of Ariosto's I Supposiii, 1509 and 1529. Buggbears is a translation, not very close, from Grazzini's La Spiritata, 1561 ; combined with some scenes from Politi's GV Ingannati, 1531, and others from the Andria of Terence : and La Spiritata owes suggestions to Cecchi's Lo Spirito, 1549, which is itself indebted to Ariosto's 11 Negromante, 1520-30, and that in some measure to Ma- chiavelli's Mandragola, 1512-20. Misogonus has no direct connexion with any Italian work. Cinquecento comedy, we have said, is a derivative from ancient Roman. It arose directly out of the revival on the stage, at Rome and Ferrara, of the comedies of Plautus and Terence. The study of Plautus, in particular, had received a strong impulse from the discovery by Nicholas of Treves in 1427 of twelve of his plays' which had been lost throughout 1 Histoire du Theatre Italien, Paris 1728-31 (Catalogue). 2 Italian Literature, 1898, p. 224. ° Bacchides to Truculentus in the order in which the plays are usually printed. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxi the Middle Ages, but now came to supplement the eight hitherto known. The appearance of so many Greeks in Italy about the middle of the century still further quickened Italian interest in a drama which could tell even more, perhaps, of ancient Athens than of ancient Rome. The scholars criti- cized the text, boldly completed it where defective, and began to present it on the stage. Very soon they passed to trans- lation, a demand quickened if not engendered by the presence of ladies among the audience ' ; and whatever the priority of Rome in performance of the Latin, the earliest acted Italian translation was that of the Menachmi given before Ercole I in the Corte Vecchia at Ferrara, i486. Gradually translation was followed by adaptation, and adaptation by imitation in original Italian work. Putting aside isolated Latin plays given much earlier in the century,'' and the eclogues and mythological pieces presented in Italian at the Papal Court and elsewhere, includ- ing many indefinite ' commedie ' in the time of Alexander VI,' we may assign as the period of performance of Latin or translated Latin work, the period of the drama's incubation, a rough thirty years, 1 471-1502, from the first efforts of Lastus' Roman Academy to the marriage of Duke Ercole's son, Alfonso, with Lucrezia Borgia ; and, as the period of the first Italian comedies, another thirty years, 1504-33, from the com- position of Machiavelli's lost Ze Maschereio Ariosto's death. The degree of originality exhibited in this latter period, and afterwards, varies widely. Ariosto passes from close imitation in La Cassaria — a play to which his genius gives nevertheless its own marked stamp of vigour and variety, and which has every claim to be counted original — to freer yet hardly better work in his later plays. Bibbiena's La Calandria, apparently ' On Feb. 18, 1479, Guarino the younger writes of a translation of Plautus commissioned by Ercole I, which is already advanced as far in the alphabetical series as the Mercator (Creizenach, ii. S17). It is mainly of translations that Guarino, Niccold or Lelio Cosmico, and Castello, write to Isabella Gonzaga in 1498 (D'Ancona, ii. 372-4). ^ Gaspary, I, ch, xviii, pp. 200-4. ' D'Ancona, Origini, ii. 65-77. Alexander VI was Pope from 1492-1503. xxii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN more modern, nowhere pleases so well. It owes more to Boccaccio than La Cassaria to Latin worlc, while Castiglione's prologue plainly admits a debt to Plautus also. Machiavelli's La Mandragola, too, is Boccaccian in matter, though more striking and original, especially in the character of Fra Timoteo ; yet his Clizia is closer to Plautus in plot and conduct than Ariostp ever is. Aretino is the most independent of them all : his disinclination to study, his impatience of structure and re- straint, his unbounded flow of dialogue, his variety of allusion, produce almost a new type, fusing the commedia erudita with the formless, popular, extempore commedia deW arte, Cecchi begins with close adherence to Latin models and close reproduction of Latin matter ; and passes on to a growing independence, a larger and larger admixture of contemporary Italian stuff. Grazzini, while professedly raising the standard of revolt from the Latin imitators, shows in reality the same tendencies, and is fain to bave recourse to the old clichds in detail, the old ritrovamenti in general plot. Men of less genius than these are more slavish. 'Yx\%%\no'&I Simillimi, Firenzuola's / Lucidi, are very close to the Mencechmi; Dolce's // Marito follows the Amphitruo, his // Cafitano the Miles Gloriosus ; and the Due Cortigiane of that inveterate plagiarist, Lodovico Domenichi, is scene by scene from the Bacchides with merely an added word or two, and moderniza- tion of allusions, places, and the like. Yet the idea of cinquecento ■ comedy as a mere lifeless reproduction cannot survive a study of the actual plays, a study, in England at least, hardly ever rnade. The point generally overlooked, yet well argued by some Italians like Agresti,' is the striking assimilation of the life and feeling of Renaissance Italy to those of classical times, of ancient Rome, or of Greece in the days of the Diadochi — of the New Comedy, in fact, from 338 b.c. onwards, for that, rather than the life of Rome, is what Plautus, and still more Terence, reproduce. Much that the modern student regards as merely ^ Studii sulla Commedia lialiana del Secolo XVI per Alberto Agresti, Napoli (Stamperia della R. Universita), 1871. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxiii imitated — the gross immorality, the dangers of travel, the piracy and raiding of the Mediterranean coasts, the sack of cities, the political vicissitude, the separation of classes into military and political adventurers, sober burgher tradesmen, and clever unscrupulous servants — is a mere reflection of actual modern conditions in an age when Italy was harassed by foreign invaders and perpetual intestine war, when her sea- board was constantly threatened by the Moors and Turks, when her prelates, nobles, and princes cultivated in practice a pagan temper and endeavoured to be more Greek and Roman than the ancients themselves. A very large Italian element does undoubtedly enter into cinquecento comedy, drawn partly from the novelle, partly from actual burgher- and student-life. Still, the dominant tone and colour remain classical; and especially classical is the general structure and the detail of technique. With whatever infusion of new elements, it revives the latest form of Greek Comedy — though working on its Roman imitation — in the modern world : and the product serves in great part as model for the dramatic work of other countries. Let us then briefly examine in what respects the «»z»z««/z'a eru- dita reproduces the ancient, and in what respects it modifies it. I. General : Subject and Spirit In the first place the New Comedy ^ was essentially a burgher comedy. The family conceived is that of the substantial mer- chant with estates or business-connexion in different parts of the Mediterranean, which often compel his own absence, or necessitate the dispatch of a son or representative. Or he is 1 The chief New Comedy writers were Philemon, Menander, Diphilus, Philippides, Posidippus, and Apollodorus of Carystus ; and a rough 80 years is generally assigned as the period of their work, dating from the battle of Cliseronea 338 b. c. ; but, in fact, the romantic comedy of private life, which they introduced, remained the type of subsequent classical comedy (with the exception of the Atellanse Fabulse and Comoedia Togata in Italy) right down to Hadrian's time, A. D. 117-138. Cf. Haigh's Attic Theatre, 3rd ed. pp. 22-3. xxiv EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN a well-to-do citizen, whose town-house is largely dependent on the produce of his country-farm, which is superintended by a bailiff or one of his sons, and constantly visited by himself. It is not a-comedv of t he governing-class . Under the supre- macy of Alexander and his successors the Greek comic poets, whose earlier tendency to political satire had been checked by repeated enactments, turned wholly from politics to private life, and from satire to a realistic reproduction of family-aflfairs, ren- dered romantic by prevailing political and social conditions. Frequent wars, internal factions, unchecked piracy at sea — these and the ancient custom of exposing children, especially girls, whom the parents did not wish to rear, supplied that atmo- sphere of vicissitude on which the Greek comic poets based their plots. The Roman ruling-class, with whom the idea of the State and its authority was more paramount than with the Greeks, and who moreover had small native instinct for litera- ture, was even less inclined to tolerate criticism or ridicule by unlicensed poets of inferior social and political status, generally, indeed, of servile condition without status at all. Drama at Rome was, in fact, an exotic introduced by cultivated Greek slaves. Latin comedy was Greek translated, or an adaptation effected by mingling two plots in one (coniaminatid) ; and naturally retained the spirit as well as the subject-matter of its originals. Some share of Roman colouring was introduced by Plautus, whose work is comprised roughly in the twenty- five years from 211 or 210 to 1 86 b.c, and who died in 184 ^; but warned by the example of Cnseus Naevius, imprisoned in 207 or 206 for free political reflections on the Metelli and other senators, P]autus abstained from more than passing allu- sions to current affairs; and his Roman colouring, largely topographical, was reduced to a minimum by his successor, ■ Varro, the Roman critic of Ii6-a8 B.C., considered him the author of 40 plays, of which we still possess 20, and a fragment of the Vidularia ; but 13 others were assigned to him by various later gram- marians, and before Varro's time he was credited with no fewer than 130, probably by confusion with another poet of very similar name, Plautius. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxv Terence, whose six plays, produced 166-160 e.g., were even more closely assimilated to Greek models. Latin comedy, then, was in the main a burgher-comedy re- j producing the conditions of Greek rather than Roman life ; | and nearly all those conditions, save that of the exposure of children, were reproduced in the imitative comedy of Renais- sance Italy, not merely because they were Plautine or Teren- tian, but because they formed part of actual sixteenth-century life. In the much more disturbed politics of the latter the exception noted (exposed infants) could easily be made good by supposing the child to have been separated from its parents in the sack of some town, or by an accident of travel. We have sketched the general conditions. Of plot the type is something as follows. The son of a wealthy merchant, in- stead of pursuing industriously the path of business marked out for him by his father, wastes his time and money in gratifying a passion for some girl of the hetaira class, or at least of a social position inferior to his own. Money is usually needed, either to purchase the girl from a kno or professional dealer, or to support the married life on which he has imprudently ventured; and to procure such, whether from his father or some other source, the ingenuity of a clever slave is called into requisition, the success of whose devices, or else their defeat and discovery by the outraged parent, forms the staple of the comedy. In three plays of Terence ^ and in one or two of Plautus "^ the real or pretended pregnancy of the heroine is an important factor in precipitating the crisis : and a solution is generally found in the opportune arrival of some former con- nexion of the girl ; or at least in the discovery, by means of trinkets, toys, or clothes produced at the proper moment, that she is really of good birth, the daughter of one or other of the old men who figure prominently in the plot. Thus the marriage of the lovers is permitted or condoned ; and the rascally slave receives the pardon which his splendid audacity and resource, • Andria, Adelphi, Hecyra. '' Aulularia, Truculentus. xxvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN and his devotion to the young, if not the old, master, seem to merit. One of his commonest tricks is the procuring of some rogue among his circle of shady acquaintance to personate an- other character, a device always ultimately exposed. Both father and son usually have some crony of their own age with whom to forgather ; besides the contrast of character thus afforded, this coupling of old men may give occasion to a statement of rival views of education or morality, the coupling of young men to a causeless jealousy about a girl beloved by one of them. JMistakes, deceptions, surprises, with a happy solution of all ibifiSculties — these are of the essence of a comedy in which Ihumorous situation and intrigue are made more important than character, and which, spite of a variety too great to be illustrated nere, exhibits a pervading sameness of tone and subject. Italian The whole of this subject-matter is taken over by Italian '^Uifs'""' comedy, with such modifications as result from a transference of the scene to modern Italy, a transference in itself sufficient to show that the writers meant to exhibit contemporary life and not merely to reproduce the ancient world.' Politically the Pope, the prince of some Italian state, the Emperor, or the French or Spanish invader, are substituted for the rulers of the Greek world: and the invasion of Charles IX (1494), the cap- ture of Milan by the French (1499), the sack of Rome (1527), or the siege of Florence (1530), takes the place of Hiero in the MencBchmi, of the capture of Sicyon in the Curculto, or the wars of Seleucus in the Miles Gloriosus. The unpopular Spaniard quartered on unwilling Italian inhabitants is the usual represen- tative of the Greek alazon or braggart with the unmanageable 1 An exception is often cited in the prose version of Ariosto's La Cassaria, which lays its scene in Mytilene ; but in fact the modern Mitilene is intended, under Turkish government, expressly represented by the ' Bassam ' (basso or pasha), Caridoro's father ; a place where it would be natural enough to find a dealer in girls like Lucramo. Even ' Sibari ', to which (in the verse form) that worthy transfers his operations, need not, in view of the frequent Turkish descents on the coasts of the Kingdom, be considered so unlikely a market for his wares. See the examples of such raids given by Agresti, op. cit., pp. 122-30 : ' Delle donne,' he says, p. 126, ' i turchi facevano uso per gli harem.' INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxvii ! name, such as Pyrogopolinices {Miles), Polymachseroplagides {Pseudolus), Therapontigonus Platigidorus {Curculid), or Peri- phanes Platenius (retired) of the Epidt^us. External changes like these are easily made in a comedy in which politics appear onlyj as remote background. It. is in the sphere of social or domestic] life that the chief alteration occurs ; leading to the elimination, of one or two types, the modification of others, and the intro-! 1 duction of some new ones. The change in religion and the more intimate way in which the Church Roman Catholic Christianity enters into the individual life is reflected in churches which appear on the stage and are used for retirement ; in nunneries which ladies visit, at which 'comedies' are acted, and in which unmarriageable girls may be immured ; in the part played by the confessor and by religious motives, and in the occasional appearance of z. friar or cleric in the actual cast. An art which depended so largely on the patronage of great prelates, Popes and Cardinals, could not venture too far in this last direction ; and with the advance of the Reformation, and the growth of a new spirit of circumspec- tion among the clergy, these figures disappear. At the begin- ning they are frankly satirical. In the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the friars had furnished the novelists with some of their most scandalous scenes, and might still do so in the six- teenth ; nor is such ribaldry absent from Ariosto's great poem, though a sincere religious temper also finds occasional expres- sion. In drama the two most notable instances are, Fra Timoteo in La Mandragola, who as Lucrezia's confessor accepts a heavy bribe to persuade her to a sin represented as innocent, yet feels strong twinges of conscience and is concerned for popular faith ; and the frate of Ariosto's Scolastica (iii. vi) who quiets Bartolo's conscience, made uneasy by his parish-priest, by assuring him that the costly restitution he ought to make may be commuted for some pious gift or endowment. The conflict in the popular mind between religious habit and sceptical distrust of the friars is well seen in Albigia and \htguardiano of Ara Coeli in Aretino's Cortigiana in. x-xii). The frate is unrepresented in bur plays xxviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN save by Amedeo's report of his visit to his confessor^: the rakehell chaplain of Misogonus is of other than Italian derivation. The Church is less directly satirized by the pinzochera in her gray habit, ostensibly repenting in minor orders a misspent youth, but eking out her living by the corruption of young women — a vile type, seen in Cecchi's Gl' Jncantesimi and L' Assiuolo and still better in a play of Grazzini's to which she gives a title." learning Renaissance learning and enthusiasm for the classics are shown in the much larger part taken by the learned professions. The practising dodgr of laws, like Cleandro in / Suppositi or Giansimone in La Sibilla, can hardly be held original in view of the Advocati of the Pcenulus and Mensechmus' daily pleading in the courts ; but he fills a larger space : and we have satire of the lawyers' chicanery and delay from Ariosto ; and, in L' Arzi- gogolo, an amusing instance of an advocate outwitted by his client, borrowed from the French farce of Matire Fathelin. In the extemporized commedia delT arte, which came into vogue about the middle of the sixteenth century, the Bolognese doctor became a stock type : but in it he is ridiculed, not for his profes- sional quality, but for some defect or departure from it ; as also in Comedy proper, for instance, where Cleandro or Giansimone indulge hopes of marriage more proper to youth, or where Basilio of Cecchi's / Rivali engages in a discreditable intrigue. The doctor of medicine, too, is no longer the farcical figure of the MencEchmi : La Sibilla (iii. v) describes the pomp of dress and equipment affected by the profession in Florence in the first quarter of the century. If the family physician in Cecchi's i' Ammalata has a distrust of consultations from the point of view of the patient, it is quite unshared by the patient's father : while Innocenzio in La Spiritata is indispensable, and Biondello of Aretino's L' Ipocrito (iii. vi, v. iv), whose name is perhaps ^ Buggbears iii. ii, on which see p. Ixxx. " Prof. F. Rizzi {Commedie osservate di G. M. Cecchi, Rocca S. Casciano (Licinio Cappelli), 1904, p. 172) mentions Alessandro Picco- lomini's Raffaella (1539) as a portrait of the type. My own impression, when I read the dialogue some years ago in connexion with other work, was rather of a confessed bawd and witch. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxix borrowed in Buggbears, though engrossed in his science, is sensible enough to supply a fantastic girl with something more innocuous than the poison she requests. Doctor Antonio in Cecchi's Lo Spirito (iv. vii) is sensitive on the score of repute. He aspires to the chair of medicine at Pisa, a position which supplies another original figure to Renaissance comedy, illus- trated by Basilio in / Rivali and more creditably by Lazzero in La Scolastica, a family-man, like Antonio, of dignified character. The student-life that figures in these two plays and / Suppositi is another new feature. The ludicrous side of learning is expressed rather in the the Pedant Pedant, usually indeed a teacher, but one who has lost touch with practical life through sheer devotion to classical study ; a type necessarily unrepresented in the ancient world, so that we can hardly find its model in the pedagogue Lydus defied by j Pistoclerus in the Bacchides. Sebastian Brandt had allotted to i the bibliophile the foremost place in his great shipload of fools, ridiculing rather his neglect to read the tomes he gathered. It was Erasmus who in his Morim Encomium first drew the picture of the vain dictatorial schoolmaster, tyrannizing over a parcel of boys, intensely eager about grammatical trifles and apparently blind to the toils and discomforts of his position. In drama the character is original in Francesco Belo's II Pedanie, 1529, who falls in love with'Xivia the sister of one of his pupils, opposes a rival with Latin quotations, and rewards a servant with a Latin epigram.' He appears again in Piero, Fabrizio's guardian in Gr Ingannati (iii. i. 2) ; but finds his best exponent in the work of Aretino, whose contempt of mere book-learning made the satire particularly congenial. Indeed the Pedant of // Marescalco may perhaps claim priority over Belo's, for Aretino's play, though not published till 1533, was written shortly after La Cortigiana, which was first sketched in 1525.^ He is not unkindly drawn : he seems to be a cleric, and has to preach the sermon at the veterinary's mock-wedding (i. ix), his chief foible being a mild 1 Creizenach, Geschichte des neuenn Dramas, 1901, ii. 362. ' Carlo Bertani, Pietro Aretino e le sue Opere, 1901, pp. 380, 386. XXX EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN vanity and the untimely display of learning. The only other joke played on him is that of a boy who attaches a cracker to his coat-tails and sets it alight, an outrage he indignantly resents and one for which, though advised to overlook it, he exacts some chastisement later. Fuller treatment is accorded to Plat- aristotele the hero of // Filosofo, 1 546, who forgets to consum- mate his marriage with his young wife Tessa. She consoles herself with a gallant; and, on his appeal to her relatives, contrives to put him in the wrong, like George Dandin, who owes something to him. He has to ask pardon, and decides to be less remiss in future. Manfurio, the pedant of Bruno's Candelaio (1582), is a schoolmaster and misogynist, but more reminiscent of // Marescalco than of Plataristotele. The Pedant of Munday's Two Italian Gsntlemen (ent. Sta. Reg. Nov. 12, 1584) is part of Pasqualigo's II Fedele which Munday is adapting ' ; and to Italian models, no doubt, we owe Sidney's Rhombus in The Lady of May, 1578, and the hero of the university-play P«(/i2«/z«j, which Harington mentions in 1591, and to which Keller considers Holofernes indebted.' elderly Neither pedantry nor the old husband with the young wife,! both favourite subjects of Renaissance comedy, are represented in our three plays : but the first two afford example of a kindred type in the elderly suitor, another Renaissance addition, of which Cleandro may be considered the original instance; for, if we except the amours of old married men like Lysimachus in the Casina or Demipho in Mercator, the only case in surviving Roman work is that of bachelor Megadorus in the Aulularia, whose sister Eunomia only faintly suggests an inappropriateness in the match he seeks. Cleandro is followed by Girifalco in Ricchi's / tre iiranni, 1530, Gherardo in GV Ingannati, Giansimone in La Sibilla, Lando in Cecchi's Le Pellegrine, 1567, and others. What actuates these old lovers is less vanity 1 Creizenach, iv. a8. The play has been edited for the Malone Society by Mr. Percy Simpson. Munday allows himself greater freedom in recreating Capifano Frangipietra as Captain Crackstone. ^ Shakespeare- J ahrbuch, xxxiv. 375-8. suitor xnd magic •n Italy INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxxi or passion than covetousness, or the desire for offspring to whom they may leave the wealth secured by years of toil. This is the real motive of Cleandro. With Gherardo in Politi's comedy, however, senile desire and vanity predominate, and are accord- ingly reproduced in Cantalupo of the Buggbears. These learned or professional types lead us to another figure, y^j/ra/u^j/ the most distinct expression of the modern element, that of the Negromante or pretended sorcerer, who often replaces, but does not entirely displace Plautus' mere impostor or assumer of another's identity.' This element of magic enters so largely into the Buggbears — it is represented also in Misogonus — as compels us to notice a little more fully its place in the Italian life of the time. Sorcery existed, of course, in the life of ancient Rome; but, even had Roman comedy closely represented Roman life, this nefarious and superstitious element can hardly have claimed the importance which Horace's Canidia seems to give it after much longer and closer contact with the East. Much that became later a constituent in mediaeval demono- logy was still a recognized part of the Roman religion; and a playvirright's attempt to handle matters connected there- with would inevitably have brought down the interference of the censors. Mommsen notes that subjects like Menander's moon- conjuress and mendicant priest are not reproduced.'' The gods, that must be introduced in tragedy, would be Greek gods : the permission of such a handling of Jupiter and Mercurius as we find in a comedy (or tragicomedy) like the Amphiiruo, Greek though the story be, is matter for surprise. It is at least the only surviving instance : for the rest, beyond the ominous dreams in Plautus, usually misinterpreted, the pretence of a haunted house in the Moslellaria, the suggestion of Gripus that Palaestra may be able to tell the contents of the cistella by supernatural means," or the occasional address of an old or a 1 Italian instances of the Plautine type are Trappola in La Cassaria, Ciuifagna in La Sibilla, and the feigned Sinolfo in Le Pellegrine. ^ Book III. ch. xiv (ed. 1901, iii. 153). ' Rudens, iv. iv. 95-6. xxxii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN young woman as ' venefica' by an irate paterfamilias/ the element is wholly unrepresented.'' The mediaeval field of magic and demonology was far larger : it had been reinforced by all those deities and rites of pagan Europe which the Christian Church had wished to discredit.' Late in the fifteenth century it received an immense impulse from the bull of Innocent VIII (1484), and from the operations of Sprenger and Kramer (Institor), the Dominicans appointed under that bull as inquisitors to stamp out witchcraft in Germany.* In Italy, as Burckhardt has shown, superstition drew nourishment from the decay of faith, and the reaction to pagan feeling that accompanied the revival of the classics.^ Throughout the fifteenth and part of the sixteenth century astrology was everywhere cultivated, and its professors occupied chairs in the chief universities. Exemption from the superstition as in the case of Pius II, protests against the fatalism it engendered like the Disputationes adversus astrohgiam divina- tricem (1495) of Pico della Mirandola," were rare. With the desire to read the future, and a faith in those who undertook to declare it, went naturally the hope of a possible modification of events by beings so gifted : and a comparatively innocent astro- logy brought in its train a vast trafiic in the occult, which found votaries among the highest in days of vicissitude and oppor- tunism, when the attainment of the ends of love or ambition by swift and extraordinary means seemed so much more possible. Had religious faith been stronger, life more ordered and secure, such prevalence and persistence of superstition would have been impossible. Some of the best brains of Italy strenuously 1 Aulularia, i. ii. 8, Epidicus, 11. ii. 40 : the term is also applied to the boy Pasgnium in Persa, 11. iv. 7, and to the girl Pythias in Eunuchus, V. i. g. 2 The suggestion of sorcery made in The Comedy of Errors is not found in the Men^chmi, the nearest approach to such being the Epidamnian's reflection in v. vii. 57 that what is happening to-day is like a dream. ' Lecky's History of Rationalism, i. 37. ' See Herford's Literary Relations, 219-28. " See Burckhardt, Die Kuliurder Renaissance, Eng. trs. ii. c. 4 : Maury, La Magie ei V Astrologie, i860, pp. 211-12. « Burckhardt, ii. 334. Cf. his ii&log-ae Strix, sive de Ludificatione Dmnonum, cited by Tiraboscbi (E. Camerini, Nuovi Profili, vol. iv). INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxxiii opposed it. Petrarch, Boccaccio, Piccolomini, Politian, and the novelists and dramatists as a body, met it either with indignant argument or bright mockery. Yet Aldus, Sannazaro, Bembo, Leo X, were all believers; and the poem of Marcellus Palin- genius, published in 1536, describes an interview he had with four demons as he travelled to Rome one moonlit night from Mount Soracte.' Burckhardt draws some distinction between the northern witch with her hysterical dreams, carnal union with demons, and wonderful journeys through the air, and the Italian strega with whom witchcraft was rather a money-making profession, and her chief field the love-affairs of her clients, the provision of philtres, the manufacture of poisons.^ But the diffusion of the inquisitors' text-book. Malleus Maleficarum, 1487, had familiarized Italy with German superstitions ; and though in Renaissance comedy it is naturally love which brings sorcery into play, yet appeal is freely made to all those circumstances which figured elsewhere, to demoniac possession, conjuration, familiar spirits, or the transformation of one person into the likeness of another.' The characters most liable to the superstition are members of the burgher-class who may be acquitted of any high degree of cul- ture ; but it is not confined to them. Temolo, the servant in // Negromante, 1530, finds his own scepticism dashed by the fact that men so much his betters are believers (i. iii) : and as late as 1548 Cecchi can write in the prologue to GV Incan- tesini — ' The sum of the matter is to make you understand the whole truth of this fine art, which with the simple herd— a name under which I include not merely the crowd of common folk but the great lords, princes and prelates, who let these enchanters turn them about like a weathercock and attach to them a faith much greater than they repose in the Gospel— these set such a rate on this roguery that they think to turn Heaven and Nature from their 1 Zodiacus VUx, i. 770 sqq. ; described by Burckhardt, ii. 356-7. 2 lb. 352-4. * Instances occur in Gl' Incantesimi, La Pineochera, V Arzigogoh, &c. 532 ^ as comic viotive II Negro- mante xxxiv EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN course: the way they squander treasure on its professors shows they expect to profit by it ; and meanwhile the hogs grow fat, and laugh at folks' simplicity, giving lies and tales in change for money.' The Malleus and the vigorous persecution that ensued had, in fact, roused the curiosity of many who would else have been indifferent. In La Spiritata (ii. iii) Albizo wonders that a lettered man like Giovangualberto should be so credulous, and is told that magic is a craze he has lately taken up. Such a revival of superstition makes less unreasonable the constant assumption of the dramatists, that experienced old men of the world are the natural victims of imposture, while unstaid youth is exempt. This element of magic finds a place in cinquecento comedy from the first ; and the material was too valuable to be easily lost. In La Cassaria, indeed, it does not appear : the impostor is merely disguised as a merchant. But in I Suppositi we have at least some palmistry (i. ii) : in La Calandria Fulvia employs magic to retain her lover (i. i, ii. iii), and when Santilla his sister appears, quite believes that Ruffo has changed Lidio into a woman, and angrily requires his retransformation (iv. i. 2): in the Mandragola there is something more than nature in the strange operation of the drug promised by the (disguised) doctor : and in // Negromante we get the full representation of the tricks which popular credulity enabled rogues to play. The motive of the chest, indeed, as a means of entering a mistress' chamber, is not new : it had been used in La Calandria and by the novelists, being original perhaps in Boccaccio's 'Bernab6 da Genova ',' whence it was borrowed in Shakespeare's Cymheline. But for what concerns the necromancer and his frauds Ariosto has, so far as I know, no literary model. Maestro Jachelino is a Spanish Jew who, though hardly able to read or write, professes philosophy, alchemy, medicine, and of course astrology, magic, and conjuration of spirits ; and who travels from land to land, changing name and nationality at need and 1 Decamerone, ii. 9. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxxv enriching himself at the cost of gentle and simple of either sex. Such is the account of Nibbio, the assistant of his frauds and sharer of his profits. To him applies the wealthy old Massimo to remove for a fee of twenty ducats the strange impotence of his foster-son Cinthio, recently married to Emilia, but secretly married before to another girl : to him applies Cinthio himself, quite believing Nibbio's tales of his master's power to darken the sun, to illuminate the night, or cause an earthquake, and fearful lest his subject-spirits should acquaint him with the truth, a contingency against which he will provide by an offer of forty ducats: to him, finally, applies Camillo, Emilia's ardent lover, who is possessed of a mass of plate, to induce him to keep up the farce of impotence and procure the dissolution of the marriage at the price of fifty florins. With an eye to the plate Jachelino suggests a plan for smuggling Camillo into Emilia's chamber during Cinthio's absence. He could change him to a dog, cat, or rat, or make him invisible ; but the former might expose him to blows, the spells for the latter would take too long — better he should be carried in in a chest, which none will touch if declared full of spirits ; and meanwhile Jachelino in Camillo's chamber, which has the advantage of looking to the East (and of containing the plate), will perform rites that shall cast a slumber on all in Massimo's house save Emilia only. To Massimo the chest is represented as an experiment to test Cinthio's curability — it con- tains a corpse into which he has sent a spirit, whose mere neighbour- hood will remove any grudge that may exist between the couple : in the morning he will come himself and remove the spell. Besides two silver basons already borrowed from Massimo for mixing the drugs in Cinthio's case, some further slight expenses will be neces- sary, twenty ells of fine linen for an alb (' shirts for himself ! ' interjects Nibbio), some cloth ('his waistcoat is getting a bit worn ! '), a pentacle ; but all shall be done as economically as possible. So the rogue lies and schemes, neglecting no chance of profit ; but partly by his grasping at another petty gain, partly as a result of Temolo's suspicions, the grand coup miscarries, and the astrologer hardly escapes, without his cloak, and robbed of his baggage by his own servant. Modelled with some closeness on this excellent figure, yet Z Spinto conceived with independent imagination, is the ' Aristone Greco' of Cecchi's Lo Spirito, 1549, a play which advances us a stage xxxvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN nearer to the Buggbears. The plot has distinct similarities to Ariosto's. We have a young wife, Emilia, whose nominal husband, Aldo- brando, is only the screen for intercourse between her and his friend Napoleone, her real husband, though the marriage is a secret. Anselmo, with whom Aldobrando lives as adopted son, offended with Neri, Napoleone's uncle, forbids Napoleone the house ; and Napoleone, thus debarred his wife Emilia's society, begs aid from Aristone, whose public profession is that of a herb- alist, but who is also reputed a master of magic, alchemy, and engineering. Aristone, having some acquaintance with Anselmo, coaches Emilia's servant in Latin phrases for her mistress to utter, in order to persuade Anselmo she is possessed : and, when Anselmo consults him on the case, prescribes the introduction into her room of a chest full of powerful charms which will control the spirit (and will also contain Napoleone). Anselmo shall keep the key of the room : he himself will come and feed the girl, and guarantees the departure of the spirit within fom: days. He persuades Anselmo he learned his lore at Pisa of a wonderful Calabrian, who ' had gone as a young man to the wise Sibyl above Norcia, in the mountains where the truffles grow, and had drawn from her the true art and conjuration of spirits once possessed by Zoroaster and Malagigi ', and, had he chosen, might have learned to make castles as in the Morgante, but refrained ' to avoid being burnt, for our rulers nowa- days dislike anyone being more powerful than themselves' : he taught me all I know — ' sequences, characters, pentacles, suffumi- gations, diagrams, and the Key of Solomon'. Like Jachelino, Aristone has a servant, SoUetico, who plays into his hands and soliloquizes on his roguery : ' he has cooked in three kettles ; he sucks at three breasts, the young man's, Anselmo's, and the young woman's.' Aldobrando, the supposed husband, is another client, and the same trick of a chest is employed to get him into the house of doctor Antonio, whose daughter he loves. The widow Laura, too, pays him to forward her love-affair with Anselmo, which her brother, Neri, opposes. She is expecting a chest full of linen, and nothing better occurs to Aristone than that this shall be unloaded at his lodging — the linen will be useful — and Anselmo take its place and so be carried into Neri's house. The denoue- ment is brought about, as in Ariosto's piece, by a miscarriage of the INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxxvii chests. That containing Napoleone reaches its right destination : but that in which Anselmo is hidden finds its way by mistake to the doctor's, where it is lodged in his study alongside that containing Aldobrando, and others belonging to the doctor, who is packing preparatory to a journey. Sending Aldobrando's by mistake for one with books in it to the custom-house, Antonio is shamed by the discovery of this young man, whom he rightly suspects of designs upon his daughter. Returning home, he finds Anselmo in the other, and hounds him out ; while Anselmo at his own house surprises Napoleone. The astrologer, assailed now with reproaches on all sides, and finding flight and evasion equally impossible, falls back on the position of the honest friend of all parties, who, aware of the truth about the young folk, feigned Emilia's possession simply in order to precipitate a crisis and terminate a position sure to breed scandal. The lame excuse passes, and the plausible rogue is employed to placate the outraged doctor, who is relieved alike of disgrace and responsibility by the discovery that his supposed daughter is really Neri's child. The matches are made up ; and, as sometimes elsewhere, the hasty and prolific author trusts to the fulness and crowding of his matter to hide some weaknesses of his plot. Doubtless it was Lo Spirito that suggested to Grazzini the motive of possession in La Spiritata, though the hoax of a visitation by devils in order to frighten a man out of his own room is anticipated in his own Le Cene ' and may possibly be due to Plautus' Mostellaria. Cecchi repeats the motives of pretended magic and pretended sickness of the heroine in Z' Ammalata {1555), where Laura by this means secures the attentions of her father's secretary, Fortunio ; and barber Cal- fuccio, engaged to furnish a pretended love-charm, acquires a sudden reputation for magical powers that yields him a golden harvest from all parties. Among cinquecento characters of less importance is the inn- keeper, represented by Bonifazio in La Scolastica, who combines sympathy for his young guest with a general practical shrewd- ness. He won't hear his fellow townswomen abused, and his 1 See below, pp. Ixxiii-iv, site xxxviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN ready self-defence against Bartolo (v. iv) quite wins our hearts. An even closer bond of sympathy and service unites Arrigo, the hottegaio in L' Ammalata, with Fortunio, whom he once saved from his father's anger, and now vainly tries to deflect from his quixotic fidelity in resisting Laura's advances. GV Ingannati (m. ii) shows an amusing competition for the custom of some travellers between two rival inn-keepers of Modena. Gascoigne's change of Philogano's Ferrarese acquaintance into his host is noted below.^ The Para- The Parosik, represented by Pasifilo* and less closely by Misogonus' servants, is of course perennial ; as much a reality of the cinquecento as of Greek and Roman society, and surviving to-day in the talented diner-out. He is rarer, however, on the Renaissance stage, and his social status rather higher ; witness Ligurio in Mandragola, Aretino's Ipocrito, and Frosino in / Parentadi. He leads us naturally to the burgher-household, where there are some changes to note, due to the altered posi- tion of women. The Old and young men remain much the same : the old pre- ^^'hij occupied with business and the preservation of their wealth, or with making profitable matches for their children, and exhibiting the Latin contrasts between avarice and liberality, strictness and indulgence ; the young with an almost exclusive interest in love, contrasted as energetic and resolute or weak and desponding, and exhibiting much carelessness of the paternal feelingfs or purse, so but the desired girl or sum of money be obtained. And in the young man's interest is the same resourceful and daring servant ; though the risks he runs are far less serious, the extreme penalty mentioned being that of the galleys, of which we are once told that it is never really inflicted.' His foil is usually, not as in Latin one who has chosen fideUty to paterfamilias as the most prudent course, but one who shows the more independent 1 p. Iv. ^ See below, p. liv. ' Giorgetto in V Assi'uolo iii. i ' i' non vo' dire ne ammazzatemi; ne cacciatemi in galea, che queste sono scioccherie, che non voglion dir niente, perche le non si fanno mai ', &c. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xxxix and voluntary nature of his service by much grumbling, as with the servants in L' Ipocrilo, Guagniele in La Spiritata or his representative Piccinino in Buggbears. In / Parentadi (iv. viii) we have a brief soliloquy by Guidotto on a servant's duty, much in the Plautine manner ; but such ' philosophizing ' is usually transferred to a woman-servant. The chief change is in the position of the heroine. In Greek the heroine and Roman comedy, the scene being always in a public place> respectable unmarried girls could take no part. The heroine, therefore, either does not appear, or, as a more frequent alterna- tive, is lowered to the rank of psaltria, tibicina, or other girl in charge of a leno or Una, though she is often discovered in the end to be of free birth, and resumes her proper rank. The changed cinquecento conditions are reflected in the fact that young men are no longer attracted solely by these declass^es, but usually fall in love with respectable girls, though the plot may require that they shall be poor or dependent, and not a match which a calculating parent would approve. But Italian custom, equally with classical, forbade the appearance of citizens' daughters in the streets ' ; so that the drama would have lost, not gained, by the change in young men's taste, but for the device, introduced from the novelle, of presenting girls in male dis- guise. To English notions such disguise involves a much greater shock to modesty, as is felt by the Julia and Jessica of Shake- speare, who borrowed the idea perhaps from Montemayor, perhaps from Italian novelists, perhaps even directly from Italian plays. To the Italian dramatist the male dress excused the heroine's appearance in male company, and conferred upon her the right ' Giraldi Cinthio, Sulle Comedie, Sec, p. 103 (dated 1543, pub. 1554) ' Serva, messer Giulio, la comedia una certa religione che mai giovane vergine, o polzella, non viene a ragionare in iscena, e pero lo contrario nelle scene tragiche vi s'introducono lodevolmente '. G. B. Pigna in / Romanzi, 1554 (lib. ii) says virgins should not be included in the cast of Comedy, which shows public and private streets : ' in the public ones it is not proper that a citizen's daughter should stop to talk and hold con- ference ; while the private are not for people of rank, but vulgar and unrespectable, where therefore she is forbidden, not merely to stop, but to go at all.' xl EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN to talk. Hence the large part taken by Santilla in La Calandria, Lelia as page in GV Ingannati, Laura as Pisa student in I Rivali, Fiammetta as page in Le PeUegrine. Ariosto never resorts to the device : Eulalia and Corisca, who appear in La Cassaria, are in the same position as the Latin heroines ; Polinesta opens / Suppositi by a conference with her nurse, but retires indoors on the approach of the men, and appears no more save mutely at the end ; in La Lena and // Negromank no young heroine appears ; in La Scolasiica Ippolita speaks but a few words as she hurries across the stage, while the other heroine, Flamminia, makes no appearance. In Grazzini girls appear only when espoused, as in La Gelosia and La Spiritata ; or are silent, like Sibilla in the play which bears her name. Hence the absence of the heroine of Bugglears. In Misogonus she is of the dis- orderly class, and is allowed to figure in two long consecutive scenes. the Nurse Accompanying the change in the social position of the heroine is the substitution of the Nurse (balia) for the horrible lena ot Latin comedy. Neither on grounds of integrity or morality is the Nurse well fitted to be the guardian of her young mistress ; yet, spite of covetousness and an excess of sympathy with youthful passion, she has usually conscience and care enough to insist on the lover giving the troth-plight and the ring which may secure the marriage-ceremony at a later date. The type, well represented in / Suppositi and La Spiritata, acquires in Buggbears some serious sentiment from assimilation to the Mysis of the Andria ; but to the usual Italian type must certainly be attributed that tinge of coarseness with which Shakespeare draws her English representative, whether Lucetta {Two Gentle- men), Margaret (Much Ado), Emilia {Othello), or, best of all, Juliet's Nurse. In Italian plays she is sometimes merged in the more general type of serva or fantesca, and may be old or young, shrewd or simple. Some of these servant-girls are excellently drawn — a very different type from the Milphidippa or Astaphium of Latin work— especially by Cecchi and Grazzini, who excel Ariosto in characterization. The best, I think, are INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xli Nastasia in Le Pellegrine, Agata in L' Assiuolo, Betta in // Figliuol Prodigo and Dinorah in / Parentadi; also the old nurse of Aretino's // Marescalco, who vainly lectures the vet on the blessings of matrimony. The frequent jealousy between this older, more trusted, servant and some young house- or kitchen-maid is better seen in La Spiritata than in Buggbears, where it survives only in the competition for the ' beverage ' (v. viii). Change is also seen in the mothers and wives who often the wife diverge considerably from the harsh lines of the doiata uxor of Latin comedy. Strong-minded masculine women are not, however, wanting. Niccolozzo in Gl' Incantesimi (ii. iv) is said to be fortunate in the rule of a young second wife ; and Liseo in Z' Ipocriio (ii. sec. 3, 9, 19 and 20) openly admits the same governance by Maia. Albiera beats Gerozzo in La Pinzochera (iv. ix) ; but her wrath, like that of Nausistrata in the Phormio, or Oretta and Cangenova in L' Assiuolo and / Parentadi, is justified by the husband's amours, real or supposed. There are an equal or greater number of good and gentle women, of marked piety and conscientiousness, submissive to their hus- bands and anxious about their children or protegees. Such are Antonia in II Servigiale, Veronica in / Rivali, Clemenza in // Figliuol Prodigo (all Cecchi's), Zanobia in Grazzini's La Gelosia and Caterina and Margherita in his La Sibilla ; while Marino's wife in Cecchi's L' Amwalata approaches the saintly type of the Sacre Rappresentazioni, from one of which she is derived. There is some echo of Latin-comedy allusions by husbands to their household-plague, e.g. in La Lena, iii. ii; but Damone in I Suppositi (both forms) realizes by his daughter's trespass how much he has lost in his wife. In our English Misogonus Philogonus has the same feeling, and reveres her memory; and Rosimunda's mother in Buggbears (i. ii, in. ii. 38-49) is anxious to screen her daughter's fault,' like the mothers of Terence. ' In La Spiritata Maddalena has committed no such fault and her mother is not mentioned, while Giulio's is away at the farm {i. iii, v. x). xlii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN Shorter space will serve for discussion of II. Detailed Marks : Form and Technique 1. Prose is generally substituted for the invariable verse of the ancients. Ariosto wrote his first two comedies in prose, but for his others adopted sdrucciolo unrhymed verse of twelve syllables (closing with a dactyl) in imitation of the iambic trimeter of the ancients ; and about the same time turned his two earlier comedies into the same metre. Ricchi and Bentivoglio followed his example, but made their verse of eleven syllables (endecasillabo piano)} Bibbiena wrote La Calandria in prose, which he defended as more natural for the familiar speech of comedy. Cecchi, like Ariosto, began with prose, but wrote Lo Spirilo and almost all his later pieces in verse.^ All Grazzini's comedies are prose. The question of the two forms was much debated ; but it is now generally agreed that verse was only adopted in deference to ancient practice, and since even its champions insisted that it should be a verse as near prose as possible,' prose ultimately triumphed. 2. As in Latin comedy, the unities of Place and Timj are always observed. The scene, that is, remains one and the same spot throughout, a street or square in some Italian town ; and the time of the action is limited to a single day, sometimes extended to a day and a half, but sometimes reduced to only a few hours. Both unities are marked, not only by internal references, but by scenic adjuncts. A set piece or prospettiva, exhibiting a view of a receding street or streets, with houses of three dimensions and practicable doors and windows standing on the stage, fixed the scene definitely throughout as one spot, while giving the impression of a larger area than the stage 1 Creizenach, ii. agi. ''■ II FigUuol Prodigo (1570), however, is in prose. ' e.g. Giraldi Cinthio, Sulle Comedie, &c., pp. 49-50 'since domestic and popular matters are dealt with, it is desirable that the mode of speech should lean to the familiar. Since prose is not proper to comedy, those verses beseem it which, though conformable to verse by the obligation of number, are most like prose, and such are the blank verses which want rhyme ', &c. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xliii really afforded : and the two or three hours required for the acting were occasionally marked as a whole day or night by a representation of the sun (or moon) rising to the meridian near the middle of the piece and setting at its close.' This introduction of movable scenery seems to have been made at Rome by Baldassare Peruzzi about 151 3, but should perhaps be assigned rather to Girolamo Genga at Urbino before 1508.'' It went probably much further than any arrangements the Greek, the Vitruvian,' still less the Plautine stage, could boast ; and set the scenic fashion for the whole subsequent theatre of Europe, though it was long before this pictorial ideal won the victory in England. It reinforced the arts of the poet and the actor by those of the painter and the architect, enabling the former to give realistically, by help of an exaggerated per- spective, much that had anciently been conventional, requiring an exercise of the spectator's imagination; for instance, the assumption constantly made that characters who enter from opposite sides, seeking one another, are invisible or inaudible to each other for many lines after their entry. Pigna justifies; such asides by the distance supposed to lie between the speakers : ' the scene being a prospettiva we must allow the space to be more ample than it actually is, and the buildings proportionately greater,' * i. e. the imagination is now assisted by an apparent realization of the conditions imagined. 1 Wasaxi's Lives of the Painters — Aristotile di San Gallo, i^^g. A moon appeared in Grazzini's nocturnal piece, La Gelosia. 2 See Vasari'c Lives of both artists. Genga employed, we are told, his knowledge of perspective and architecture in making ' apparatus and scenery for comedies ' for Duke Guidobaldo, who died in 1508. So that the prospettiva painted by Pellegrino da San Daniello for Ariosto's La Cassaria (1508) was probably not the first, though in any case it is difficult to be sure whether this or Genga's work was more than painting on the flat. The luoghi deputati of the Sucre Rappresentazioni had familiarized the Italians with stage-buildings; and Isabella Gonzaga, writing of the Ferrarese performances of 1502, says ' on the stage are the houses of the Comedies, which are six, not superior to the ordinary ' (the comedies were five) (D'Ancona, ii. 134). The only question is of the degree in which these ' houses ' were combined with perspective painting to produce a consistent and beautiful whole. ' Vitruvius' De Architectura dates about ao-ii b. c. * I Romanzi, 1554, p. iiS- xliv EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN This matter of scenery is important for the evidence it affords of Renaissance observation of both Unities long before any Italian critic touches the subject.' They were part of the classical tradition which the modern stage took over ; and have effects very important for classical drama, whether ancient or modern. The Unity of Time tends to produce a sense of overcrowding in the plot, and some abuse of coincidence, where characters arrive so pat to the occasion'''; and, further, hinders the portrayal of the development of character. The Unity of Place is also fruitful in improbabilities, e.g. where people of widely differing social status reside close together ; where the same spot, and that a public one, is chosen for conference in succession by opposite parties in an intrigue ; and where exits and entries are often dictated merely by stage-necessity. And both Unities tend to an effect of excessive involution and same- ness which sometimes renders the action very difficult to follow. These rules, though certainly observed by the New Comedy and the Roman poets, were less stringent in the best period of Greek drama. Aristotle himself actually formulates only that of Time, though that of Place is implied by the continuous presence of the Chorus, which the New Comedy dropped while adhering ^to the Unity. They were first emphatically insisted on by Castelvetro, the Italian critic, in 1570; and became an irrefragable rule with the French critics of the seventeenth cen- tury.' In England, after finding some initial acceptance with 1 Giraldi Cinthio, Sulle Comedie, &c. (1543, pub. 1554), is the first ; and he, like Aristotle, speaks only of Time (p. 10), tiiough Place is clearly implied by his requirement that the fall (or as we should say, rise) of the curtain should discover a scene suitable to the kind of play in hand (p. 109). 2 Ariosto seeks to anticipate the criticism by making the servant in / Suppositi v. iii emphasize the untowardness of Filogono's arrival : ' Ah maligna fortuna ! li mali, che dispensati a parte a parte fra molti anni sarebbono stati a fare un uom miserrimo suflScienti, tutti insieme raccolti da due ore in qua me gli hai versati in capo ! . . . e questo giorno appunto, quando meno era il bisogno nostro ! . . . n6 prima di oggi, ne dopo tre giorni o quattro n' ha possuto giungere' — words reproduced with but slight change in Gascoigne's text, v. iii. 5-17. ^ See J. E. Spingarn, Literary Criticism tn the Renaissance, 1899, pp. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xlv the dramatists of the universities and the Inns of Court, they were early modified in accordance with the demand for freedom made by the Romantic stage, which also lacked for the most part localizing scenery. In Lyly's work the opposing prin- ciples can be seen struggling for the mastery. Of our three plays, the Unities are strictly observed in the two of Italian derivation; while in the probably later Misogonus, though^ modelled in part on neo-Latin work which observed them, we already see their partial relaxation. The Unity of Place is evaded by the exhibition of an interior, used, I think, not only for Melissa's ' bowre ' (ii^v. 1 2),' but also for Cacurgus' booth as travelling astrologer and quack-doctor (in. iii).° It was prob- ably arranged, as Brandl suggests,^ by means of a recess with a curtain. The Unity of Time is taken as a rough working- hypothesis, but disregarded at the dramatist's convenience. Acts I and 11, which are closely continuous, may be taken to occupy the afternoon and evening of one day ; though there is inconsistency between the supper of Philogonus at the close of I. i (cf. II. iii. 8 2 'the foole thinkes truly e I am still at supper ') and II. ii. 22 'How shall we spende this whole afternoone ? ' " In Act III inconsistency is still more apparent. Codrus' com- munication would naturally be made, as an answer to the broken-hearted father's prayer of 11. v, on the following morn- ing (ni. i). The first line of in. ii shows it closely continuous with III. i, wherein (1. 258) Philogonus said he would dispatch Liturgus ' to morrowe ' ; yet in 1. 55 of sc. ii we hear that he 'went forward a fortnit ago', while in 1. 18 Misogonus has longed to talk with Cacurgus ' this sennitt '. This indecision of view is exactly paralleled in Lyly's Gallathea, Endimion, and Loves Metamorphosis.* 3. Subsidiary in part to the Unities and to ancient scenic 1 II. iv. 105- II show this interior to occupy only part of the stage : cf. Plaut. Mostellaria, 11. i, &c. '^ Quellen des Weltlichen Dramas in England, 1898 : p. Ixxxvi. ' See note on i. i. 215. * See my edition of his Works, ii. 267, and introductions to the several plays (Place and Time). xlvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN conditions are certain stereotyped comic effects or tricks of technique, which strike every reader of Latin comedy and are nearly all reproduced in Italian work, most of them finding a place in the plays of this volume. (i) The advent of other characters is usually announced by those already on the stage. Sometimes this informs the audi- ence who the new-comers are : often it suggests an excuse for departure.' In any case it is the expression of a regular rule, that of the close continuity of scenes within the limits of the single Act. Occasionally the Acts themselves are represented as closely continuous, whatever break for music or dancing may have intervened. (2) Characters as they enter frequently address some person off the stage (generally in a house), whom they are just leaving.' The object, no doubt, is the same, to promote the continuity of the action ; but it has the further purpose of reminding the spectator of the position in which a particular department of it was left, and somewhat lessens the confusion and over- involution to which classical drama is specially liable. (3) Two characters, both visible to the audience, deliver one or more speeches apiece before they become aware of each other's presence.' In Roman comedy, what was probably at first merely a Greek stage-convention, is developed into a comic effect. In Renaissance Comedy some interposing scenery might give it vraiseniblance, as suggested above.* {4) On the advent of another person characters frequently say they will step aside to listen before declaring themselves ; and, having done so, comment aside on what they hear." The explicit announcement of the intention on the ancient stage seems to point to the absence of scenery behind which cover 1 See end of Supposes, i. i, i. iii, 11. i, m. iv, &c. : Buggb, 1. ii, 11. ii. iii. iv, iii. i. ii, &c. ; Misog. i. v. 5, 11. ii. 112. ^ Supposes, V. iv. i : Buggb. i. iii. 1-3 ; 11. iii. i sqq., 63 sqq. ; iv. i. 1-2 ; v. iv. 1-6, vi. 1-6 : no instance in Misogonus. ' Supposes, V. ii, vii. 1-6 (Pasifilo and Damone) : Buggb. v. v. 1-8 ix. 1-8 ; II. iii. 65-83 : no instance in Misogonus. * p. xliii. ° Supposes, II. i. 186, iii. 13 (and iv) : Buggb. iv. i. 37 ; v. vi. 40 : Misog. II. iii. (Cac.) ; iv. i. 45 (Piiilog.). INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xlvii might be found. Ironical asides by one of two interlocutors are not uncommon'; also derisive asides by a third party .^ These asides, and likewise soliloquies, which abound, are men- tioned here only to assure the English reader of their frequency in, and ultimate derivation from, Latin comedy, though the sacred drama presents sufficient examples. (5) Direct address of the audience in soliloquy was fairly common in Latin comedy ; being justified perhaps by analogy with the Prologue, which in Greek work and sometimes in Plautus formed part of the play itself; or it may have been a legacy from the Old-Comedy Parabasis, in which the audience was talked to about current affairs. In Italian comedy, played on a separate stage erected at one end of a hall and furnished with elaborate scenery, I do not find it very common ' ; though Giraldi Cinthio thinks it worth while to disallow the practice (Sulk Comedte, pp. 112— 13), and Pigna praises Ariosto for abstaining therefrom, an abstinence ' che da pochi h seruato ' (/ Romanzi, 1554, p. 112). But on the Elizabethan popular stage, bare of scenery, and projecting into a standing crowd 01 spectators, it was as natural as on the Greek, where the central position of the Chorus in the orchestra related that body more closely to the audience, or on the stage of Plautus set up in the middle of the Circus. Gascoigne, playing in Gray's^nn, inserts no instance in Supposes, unless Pasifilo's 'I promise you', i. iii. 4, 'I warrant you', 20, be taken as such; nor is any found in Bugghears : but the more distinctly English Misogonus, which we have just seen to lack some of the Italian marks, has this direct address in three cases, two by the Clown or Vice, Cacurgus, and one by the rustic Codrus.* Both Supposes and Bugghears, however, afford instances of the Italian Ucenzia or ' Supposes, I. ii. 14, 115, 117, 119, 129 : Buggb. i. iii. * Supposes, II. iv. 13, 24, 26 : Misogt 11. iii. 9-12, &c. ' See La Calandria, in. i (Fessenio) ' O spettatori ' : Lorenzino de' Medici's Z.' Aridosia {1536), 11. i 'se nol sapete lo intenderete' : Gl' In- gannati, iv. iii (Pasquella) ' Donne mie, ... a uoi lo uo dire, & non a questi hominacci ', &c. * ' My masters,' 11. iv. 293, iv. iii. 70 (and ' Sirs ', 1. 9) ; in. i. 2. xlviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN dismissal of the audience, which found example for its matter ' in the brief epilogues of Plautus. In these allusion is sometimes made to further developments 'within'; the spectators are bidden not to wait — the actors won't appear again; they're going to undress and get blows or drinks, as they happen to deserve ; or else the audience is jocularly invited to dine at some remote date, or bidden go home to its own meal.'' The trick of alluding to ' comedies ', censured, perhaps mistakenly, by Gaspary, as destructive of the illusion,' is represented by Supposes, V. vii. 41-2, and Buggbears, v. iv. 12. (6) Nothing is more frequent, in Latin and Renaissance comedy than talk about doors, entry Aom a house being nearly always heralded by a mention of their creaking or movement.* The only instance in our plays is Piccinino in Buggbears (ii. i. 31). Similarly we hear perpetually in Latin and Italian work of a new-comer's intention to knock at a door ; and there is a general desire to spare him that exercise, for the slave's ostentatious zeal makes him assail it with a fury that threatens to lay it in ruins, and, should he come short of the due standard of violence, he is sometimes replaced by a more efficient performer." Express mention of knocking is reproduced in Supposes, v. v. 145 and Buggbears iii. ii. 28-33 (Amedeus); and the insistence on ' For which see Biondello's last speech in Buggbears. 2 See epilogues to Casina, Cistellaria, Pseudolus, Rudens, Stichus ; and Terence's Andria. ' Gaspary, 11. ii. 273. Latin instances are Amphitruo, iii. iv. 4, Curculio, V. i. 1-2, Mostellaria, v. ii. 30, Pseudolus, 11. iv. 17, Rudens, iv. vii. 23. Besides / Supp. v. vii, Corbolo in La Lena, iii. i trusts he can concoct a scheme ' as well as any Davus or Sosia he has seen on stage '. Bonifazio in La Scolastica, iv. i compares himself to the slave in 'il'antiche commedie ' ; and Virginio in GV Ingannati laments among other mishaps that he has lived ' to be put into a comedy ' by the Intronati, an instance which may deserve censure. * Such mention would enable the ancient actor to point to the particular door in question, and so (each door having its fixed signi- ficance) to indicate the person expected. " Cf. Asinaria, 11. iii. 4-11 ; Mencechmi, 1. ii. 66-9 ; Pseudolus, 11. ii. 12-13 '• andj for the replacement, Bacchides, iv. i. 6 to ii. 4. ' Ut pulsat propudium ! . . . Fores pultare nescis ' . . . ' Fores paene eiiregisti '. This comic exaggeration is probably meant to suggest the slumber or truancy of the porter. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xlix vigour in Supposes iv. iii. 72-3. A relic of the cliche is seen in The Taming of the Shrew i. ii. 5 sqq. and v. i. 16' What 's he that knocks as he would beat down the gate ? ', a play partly founded on Supposes. (7) Slaves and parasites are always anxious to be the first bringers of good news and secure the reward due to such. Examples survive in Supposes v. vii. 3 (Pasiphilo) ; Bugghears V. V, 2-3, 12 'beverage' (Biondello), v. viii (Tomasine and Philhda); and Misogonus iv. i. 23-36 (Codrus, Isbell and Madge). (8) Associated with this last is the specific cliche known as 'TJhe currens servus, wherein the slave (or parasite) in his zeal on his master's errands throws his cloak over his shoulder and rushes wildly through the streets, elbowing or striking out of his way all who oppose his passage. The instances in Plautus are Ergasilus in Capiivi (iv. i), Curculio (iii. iii), Epidicus, 11. ii. 23-4, Acanthio in Mercator i. ii, Pinacium in Stichus 11. i, and Mercury in Amphitruo iii. iv. Terence, who preferred the quieter stataria comcedia, scoffs at this old motive in the prologue to Heautontimorumenos. I recollect no precise instance in Italian work, but perhaps Pasifilo in I Suppostiiv. vi (prose-form), might be cited,^ as well as Buggbears v. iv. 22-3 and the other English instances given in (7) above. As a corollary of this furious speed, the Latin slave on arrival sometimes pretends complete exhaus- tion, sinks into a seat, demands refreshment, and only after much entreaty will gratify his impatient master with his news : e. g. Curculio, Acanthio and Pinacium. It is difficult to believe Shakespeare had not this humorous Latin-comedy situation in mind when he wrote the scene between Juliet and her Nurse. (9) A constant incident of impostures is the forgetting or ignorance, at the critical moment, of some name essential to the success of the fraud, and the clever evasion of the difficulty. We find it in Supposes v. v. 85-g, 112 sqq., and faintly in Miso- ^ ' Che salta come un pazzo nella via ' : also in Gascoigne, v. vi. 37-9, but not in Ariosto's verse-form, 533 d I EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN gonus IV. i. 90-110, in neither case associated with imposture, though in the former with suspicion of such. (10) Slaves' abusive chaff of each other, as in Asinaria 11. ii. 31-41, is reproduced at the meeting of Biondello and Trappola in Buggbears i. 2, and in the scene between Crapino and Psiteria in Supposes iv. ii. (11) It is a trait of Latin comedy that a cook appears with some implement of his craft, knife or spit, as a weapon. Norcia, the cook in Cecchi's // FigUuol Prodigo, has both spit and mortar: Dalio in Supposes ly . v . 36 brings out his 'fawchion' {schtdone, spit, Ariosto's prose iv. 5) and 'pestil' iv. vii, 46. Codrus in Misogonus iv. ii. i? bids Alison fetch his 'gose spitt' to let a little of the prodigal's hot blood. (12) Lastly Plautus is fond of introducing ominous or alle- gorical dreams, on which the characters speculate, e. g. those of Demipho (Mercator 11. i) and Dsemones {Hudens iii. i). Italian instances occur in Ruffo {La Calandria ni. xx), Luc' Antonio in La Strega 11. ii, and Berna of // FigUuol Prodigo v. v. It is unrepresented in our plays, but much imitated, of course, by Lyly and Shakespeare. It remains to consider briefly the sources of our three plays, and how the English adapters or composers have dealt with them. Supposes Gascoigne's sole, and acknowledged, original is Ariosto's comedy, T Suppositi (' the Substituted ' or ' Supposed '), the prose-form of which was first acted at Ferrara at the carnival of 1309,' the earliest dated edition being that of Siena, 1523. The 1 The representation is described in a letter of Feb. 8 from Bernardino Prosperi to Isabella, Marchioness of Mantua, given in Campori's Notisie per la vita di Lod. Ariosto, Modena, 1871, p. 50, and partly translated in E. G. Gardner's The King of Court Poets, 325-6. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY li date of the verse-form is uncertain. It has been assumed that this latter was the form given before Leo X in the Vatican on ]March 6, 1519; but evidence is wanting. The present verse- prologue is not that described in Paolucci's letter to Alfonso of Ferrara of March 8,' and contains allusion to engravings in a book not published till 1524. The appearance of another edition of the prose-play at Rome, 1524, would rather suggest that that was the form given at the Vatican. There were further performances, at Venice 1524, and Ferrara 1525 or 1526. Writing to Guidobaldo Feltrio on Dec. 17, 1532, the poet mentions that his first two plays ' stolen from me by the actors, twenty years after their performance at Ferrara, went to press to my great annoyance; then about three years ago I took La Cassaria in hand again, and changed it almost throughout and refashioned it'. He does not specifically say that the revision of / Suppositi yet existed, and we should certainly infer that at least it was not made before that of La Cassaria. No date can be fixed for its performance; and the earliest known edition of it is that of Bindone, Venice, 1542, 8vo.^ The differences between the two forms, of which some examples occur in the Notes, are very numerous, but very sUght, and usually without purpose beyond that of adaptation to the metrical form. How near that form lies to prose may be seen in the ease with which whole sentences are transferred almost without change. Generally Ariosto abbreviates, with an occasional slight loss of force or picturesqueness,' and rarely of clearness ; though more 1 Capelli's Lettere di Lod. Ariosto, Docum. xvi, p. clxxvi. Paolucci says the prologue alluded to m comedy of Bibbiena's, with Mantua for scene, played at Rome the year before — an allusion not found either in the prose- or verse-prologue we now have. '' See the bibliography in Polidori's Opere Minori di L. Ariosto, vol. i, p. xvi. ¥enazzi, Bibliografia Ariostesca, 1881, p. 222, mentions no earlier edition than that of Giolito de' Ferrari Venice, 1551, lamo, which Q,3X!vf3.ri\ni (L. Ariosto nei prologhi, 1891, p. no) calls the first, while regarding the Ferrarese performance of 1525 or 1526 as that of the verse-form. • ' e. g. in II. i the classical allusion ' a greater liar than any born in Crete or Africa ' is abandoned in the ' bugiardo, adulatore e perfido ' of the verse ; and the ' piii netto che una bambola di specchio ' of the stripped gambler in iii. i becomes merely ' povero '. d2 Hi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN often the verse clarifies a point, or adds an effective detail. In II. i the name of the gate is changed from ' porta del Leone ' to ' porta degli Angeli ', and a mention of Ercole I's duchess intro- duced ; while a coarseness is deleted in sc. iv : in in. i there is slight l^addition to the cooking-directions, and in sc. iv some detail added to Dulippo's arrest and some expansion of Damone's soliloquy: in iv. iii there are the added touches of Filogono's nightly tears and quickened pulse as he knocks at his son's door : while revision in Act v is almost always on the side of abbreviation. Slight addition or redistribution of scenes occurs in Acts ii, iii, and v, without addition of matter. Throughout, the course of the action, and the characters, remain the same ; and the dialogue shows no considerable addition or omission. Ariosto's riper judgment seems to have been able to approve his earlier work more fully than in the case of La Cas- saria, wherein his alterations were extensive. His debt to Latin comedy in this play must be shown, because it is all reproduced by Gascoigne. In the prologue to the prose version he confesses that in making master and man change places 'he has followed both Plautus and Terence, the one of whom made Cherea take the place of Dorus, and the other made Philo- crates exchange with Tyndarus and Tyndarus with Philocrates, the one in the Eunuchus and the other in the Captivi : because not only in the manners, but in the arguments also of his plays, he wishes to imitate to the best of his power the ancient and famous poets ; and as they in their Latin comedies followed Menander and ApoUodorus and the other Greeks, he too in his native Italian has no wish to avoid the methods and procedure of the Latin writers. /As I say, he has transferred part of the argument of his Suppositi from Terence's Eunuchus and Plautus' Captivi, yet within such limits that Terence and Plautus themselves, if they knew it, would not take it amiss, and would give it the name of poetic imitation rather than of theft.' The plea is entirely just, though the debt is insufficiently stated. Captivi The story of the Captivi is briefly as follows. Philopolemus, son of Hegio of jEtolia, has been taken prisoner INTRODUCTORY ESSAY liii in a war with Elis, and Hegio buys Elean captives with a view to an exchange. Among these are Philocrates and his slave Tyndarus, who agree to exchange roles in order to secure at once the advan- tage of Philocrates' liberty. The latter, supposed the slave, is sent to Elis to negotiate; and Tyndarus, supposed the master, remains in bondage, but is unfortunately recognized by another captive, Aristophontes, whose irritation at the slave's attempt to discredit him makes him reveal to Hegio a deception, the motive of which escapes him. Thereupon Tyndarus is sent to hard labour in the quarries ; but is rescued by the return of his master with Philopolemus, and is himself discovered to be a younger son of Hegio, stolen by a slave in infancy. An important subsidiary figure is the parasite Ergasilus, who, reduced to great need by his patron Philopolemus' absence, offers sympathy and flattery to the father, is invited by him to a sparing meal which he thinks he can better with another friend at the harbour, meets Philocrates there returning with Philopolemus, hurries back to Hegio with the good news, and, appointed by him to supervise the evening's banquet, makes a grand to-do among the cooks and servants in the kitchen. Of the Eunuchus the only part that concerns us is that a young officer, Chserea, enters a house disguised as the eunuch Dorus in pursuit of the beautiful Pamphila; and that, later, Parmeno, the slave vcho assisted him in the disguise, believing him in bodily danger from the girl's relatives, reveals the matter at his own risk to his father Laches on his return from the country : but all is happily settled by Chserea's under- taking to marry the girl. In this play, too, there is a parasite Gnatho, whose variety of acquaintance, and consideration with the market-tradesmen, show him as occupying a somewhat better position than the needy Ergasilus. The points borrowed by Ariosto from these two plays are as follows : I. The exchange of r61es between master and man resembles that of the Captivi in being carried out on both sides, though the circumstances are quite different, and the motive is rather that of ^Jove-intrigue, which prompts Chserea to assume a servant's character in the Eunuchus. The despair of the servant (feigned liv EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN Erostrato) when threatened with discovery (/ Supp. iv. i, v. iii) recalls that of Tyndarus in like case (Capt. m. iii) ; his bold front maintained in iv. vii reflects Tyndarus' resource (Capt. III. iv) ; while his resolve to risk making a clean breast of the deception to Filogono (v. iii) in order to save his master from peril, is borrowed from Parmeno's similar resolve in Eunuchus v. iv and v. 2. The discovery that the servant is really the son of Cleandro, lost in infancy at the sack of Otranto, is paralleled, if not sug- gested, by the discovery in the Captivi of the real parentage oi the devoted Tyndarus. 3. Ariosto's parasite, Pasifilo, is borrowed from Ergasilus in the circumstance of his dependence on a variety of patrons and anxiety about meals, his unpopularity with servants (i. iii Dulippo, II. iv Carione, iii. iv Nevola — cf. Capt. iv. iv, Menmchmi i. iv), his sympathy with Cleandro (i. ii), his mission to 'the water-gate' (iv. i, cf. Capt. III. i), his being made president of Erostrato's supper and the stir that he makes in the kitchen (v. ii and iv, beginning — cf. Capt. iv. ii, iii, iv), and his anxiety to be the first bearer of good news to Damone (v. vii), as Ergasilus to Hegio (Capt. IV. i. ii). The parasite's function of catering for his patrons is suggested both in Ergasilus {Capt. iii. i) and Gnatho (Eun. II. ii) : Pasifilo's habit of hanging about the market to watch other caterers as a guide to his choice of a house at which, to scrape a dinner (i. iii beg., in. i end), seems to be Ariosto's improvement. Other points borrowed by Ariosto from Latin comedy are the servant's procuring the Sienese to impersonate Filogono in the manner of the Plautine impostors, e. g. Simla personating Harpax in the Pseudolus, and the Sycophant personating Char- mides in the Trinuvimm ; Dulippo's impatience (11. i) with the servant's recital of a scheme, the drift of which he is slow to grasp ^ ; Filogono's grief for his son's absence (in. iv), like that of Menedemus in Heautontimorumenos (i. i) ; the introduction of * Cf. Panulus i. i. 39-45 ' quo evadas nescio ', Curculio 11. iii end. Mil. Glor. III. i. an sqq., Andria 11. ii. 16-24 ' Quorsutrinam istuc ? ' &c. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY Iv an abusive cook, as in Aulularia in. i-iii, Mercator iv. iv, Mil. Glor. V. i, &c., and of a mischievous boy Crapino, like Psegnium in the Persa, Dinacium in Siichus, or Hegio's in Captivi; the . allegorical names of an abusive kind in ii. iv, iii. ii, as in Perm IV. vi. 20-3 ; and perhaps the way in which Damone rates his old servant Psiteria, as Euclio Staphyla in Aulularia i. i. ii. Turning now_to_Gascoigne, it is evident that he had both forms of the Italian before him, and followed sometimes one, sometimes the other, o ccasionally using both in the same scene.^ He translates with vigour and freedorn^ almosf always speech by speech, but always rendering sense rather tha^ words, keeping closely to it, condensing at while? but making no important omission, inserting stage-directions^ and a line or two here and there in the actual text, besides his considerable development of Damon's mournful soliloquy on parents and children (iii. iii), often introducing racy English phrases^ and jjroverbs -unrepre- sented^ in the original, and substituting English equivalents for names or allusions that he felt would be unintelligible, but without making any change in the action or the characters beyond converting the Ferrarese stranger to whom Philogano appeals on his arrival into an^nnkeeper.^ Of the numerous minute changes of sense in the dialogue the great majority were certainly made with intention : indeed the translation as a whole is of such vigour and accuracy that one hesitates to attribute any of them to a misunderstanding of the Italian. Some ten 1 See Notes, the first on each Act. "^ In the Italian, as in Latin and classical comedy in general, there are none beyond the enumeration at the head of each scene of the characters who have a share in its dialogue ; those present, but mute, being omitted. ^ The change, confined to stage-directions and the insertion of 'your hoste ' in the text at iv.. vih 35, was no doubt suggested by the reflection that his host was the person~Philogano would be most likely to question, and by the Ferrarese's remark in iv. iii about the bad inns along the river between Ravenna and Ferrara ; but has no further warrant in Ariosto's text. It is contradicted by the philosophical tone of the Ferrarese in iv. iii, by Lizio's epithet for him in iv. vii ' questo giovene, Che nostra guida e scorta dovrebbe essere ', and perhaps by Filogono's reproach that one in whom he thought he had found a lasting friend is a confederate against him, iv. viii (verse). Ivi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN years later, on Jan. i, 1576, Gascoigne presented Elizabeth with an elaborately-lettered MS. translation of ' The tale of Hemetes the heremyte', apparently not his own composition and of no great length or merit, which had been ' pronounced , before ' her at Woodstock in the previous summer. He renders it into Latin, Italian, and French ; and Professor F. E. Schelling is probably right in supposing the gift intended as evidence of his competence for diplomatic employment abroad.* In his I introductory address Gascoigne speaks with modesty of his ! linguistic accomphshments : ' my latyne is rustye, myne Itallyan j mustye, and my frenche forgrowne : I meane my latyne over long yeared, myne Itallj-an to lately lerned, and my frenche altogether owt of fashyon. But yet suche Itallyan as I have lerned in London, and such lattyn as I forgatt att Cantabridge : suche frenche as I borowed in hoUand, and suche Englishe as I stale in westmerland : even such & no better (myTworthy sovereigne) have I here poured forth before you,' &c.^ Professor Schelling suggests that he may possibly have been assisted in these renderings ; but in view of the general closeness with which he follows the Italian, whether of Ariosto in Supposes or of Dolce in his share oijocasla (Acts 11, in, and v), I hardly feel the supposition necessary j and the date of both plays, 1566, shows that his Italian at least was in 1576 no very recent acquisition. I collect below the few passages which seem to me suggestive of mistake rather than of conscious change,' ' The Life and WriUngs of George Gascoigne, Philadelphia (1894), p. 70. ' W. C. Hazlitt's ed. of the Works (Roxburgh Library), ii. 139. ^ I. i. 104 'straunge aduenture ' for ' gran ventura ' (great good luck), ii. 92 ' Why, euen now, I came but from thence since ' for •' lo non son stato a quest' ora' (I have not delayed to do it till now). 117 'He speaketh of a dead mans faste ' for ' Parla coi morti, ch' altresi digiunano ' (Talk with the dead, who also fast^. iii. 3 'As though I should dine at his owne dishe ' for ' quasi ch" io abbia a mangiare con la sua bocca ' (as if I must needs fast because he does^i. 9 ' Marie I reach always to his owne dishe . . . that only on the table ' for ' Senz" altri avvantaggiuzzi che a un medesimo | Desco ha sempre da me ' (apart from other points of advantage over me at one and the same table), iii. i. i6 ' laden either with wine or with ale ' for ' carico o di vino o di bastonate ' (blows). IV. v. 24 'Phi. Nay I will doe more than I haue yet proffered to doe, for I will proue thee ' &c. for ' Oltra il dirla [ingiuria]. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY Ivii while feeling that even these may be intentional or due to mere carelessness ; and note here Gascoigne's other departures, under headings which may best illustrate his detailed treatment. Changes : The Prologue differs a good deal from those of Ariosto. II. IV. loo ' nice to die for hunger', said of Pasiphilo, not of Polynesta. III. i. l8 ' strike and say neuer a woorde ' for ' tu biastemi col cuore, e non osi con la lingua ' (dare not utter the rage you feel), iii. 38 'so carelesse a creature' softened from 'vecchia puttana'. 38-41 ' for we see . . . revi'ards ' — 3 11. on nurses substituted for Damon's reflection that he should have made Polinesta sleep in his own room and kept no men-servants, v. 17 ' this other day ' for * questa mattina ', an unfortunate change ; cf. note. iv. i. 12 'setting forth his first step on land ' : in Ariosto the servant sees the bark approaching the wharf, Lizio on the prow, and Filogono just putting out his head. iii. 21 'the marchants bobbe them, but they play the knaues still' for ' vi si fanno grandi assassinamenti ', Ar. i, or ' i mercatanti vi assassinano ', Ar. 2. viii. 1-24 Philogano's opening speech changed and shortened, and the Ferrarese's reply loosely given. 27 'cut his throate, or by some euill meanes made him away ' for ' venduto o assassinate, o fattone Alcun contratto, alcun governo pessimo'. v. i. 9-12 Erostrato lays stress on his debt to Philogano rather than his affection for home and adds that he has no other father, to prepare the discovery of his parentage, ii. 28 ' fasted this night with maister doctor ' for ' senza mangiar tutt' ogni intero ', G. recalling that he /las had one square meal with Damon, iii. 6 'to subuert a legion of Louers ' for ' A far tutta sua vita un uom miserrimo '. viii. 6 suggestion of a good story trans- ferred from Cleander to the Sienese himself, x. 36 'loue of the childe to the father ' for ' tenerezza de li padri verso i figliuoli '- end 'to make . . . the sample', 3 II. changed. The whole of sc. x is rather freer. saria piu dritto a fartela ' (it would be better to leave mere insult and proceed to deeds). 31 ' See. Well, you may beleue me if you liste' for ' Ormai dovreste intendermi ' (You should understand me by this time). v. v. 19 ' a knaue, but no villein ' for ' ghiotto (glutton), ribaldo no ' (of Paslfilo). V. ix. 6 ' Pas. I am glad then that it proceeded rather of ignorance than of malice ' for ' Mi place che la ragione non sia stata de la malizia oppressa' ('1 am glad right' as represented by himself (or ' your better sense ') 'has not been quite overborne by malice '). x. 11 ' I here in proper person ' for ' presente questi gentiluomini ' (in these gentlemen's presence). Iviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN NameSj allusions, or play on words : I. i. 85 ' in the street ' for ' nella Via Grande '. 108 ' Doctor Dotipole ' for ' il dottoraccio ', and below for ' il dottoraccio de la berretta lunga'. iv. I 'Where is Erostrato ? ... in his skinne ' for the untranslatable play ' che h di Erostrato ? Di Erostrato sono libri ', &c. ; and ' finde him . . . by the weeke or the yeere ' for ' m' insegni ... A compito, o a dis- tesa' ; while ' Casket . . . basket ', 15-16, fails to give ' canestro . . . capestro '. 11. i. 2 ' euery streete and euery bylane ' for ' Or per la piazza or pel Cortil'. 70 'S. Anthonies gate' for those named in Ariosto. ii. 20 ' Haccanea ' as the mistake for ' Catanea ', instead of Italian 'castagna'. iv. 2 'the Maiors ofificers ' for ' Ogni ban- chiero, ogni ufficial di camera '. 87 ' Rpscus or arskisse ' for ' Rospo o Grosco'. 142-5 ' Foule fall you . . . Scabbe catch you' for ' Maltivenga . . . Tagliacozzo '. ill. ii. 3 ' primero ' for ' bassetta o zara '. 12 'left with as many crosses as God hath brethren' for 'lascia netto I'altro piu che una bambola di specchio' (glass doll), iii. 6 ' lohn of the Deane . . ■ the Grange ferme ' for the ominous names ' Lippo Malpensa . . . Ugo de la Siepe . . . il Serraglio'- iv. 2 ' Casteling the iayler . . . S. Antonies gate ' for the different play 'Paolin da Bib\Aa. ... a San Francesco'. 18-19 '^s fine as the Crusadoe ... as course as canuas ' for ' d'oro finissimo, Di fango . . . e di polvere '. iv. iii. 10 'had affaires to dispatche ' for 'all' Oreto avevano voto '. v. 36 ' this good fawchio ' for ' questo schi- done ' (spit), vi. 3 'the falsehood of Ferara' for 'questo nome Ferara ' {Fi rard). 23 ' at the conuocations ' for ' al circulo in vescovato '. v. ii. 48-9 ' if you should haue studied this seuennight, you could not haue appointed me an ofKce to please me better ' for ' Se m' avessi fatto giudice de' savi', &c. iv. 24 ' a cornerd cappe of a new fashion ' for ' il cimiero de le coma '. vi. 12 ' the weauers ' for ' Monna Bionda ' (who weaves). Additions : all stage-directions and marginal notes. The speeches of Dulippo, I. iii, -Damon, ill. iii, and Erostrato, iv. i, v. iii are considerably developed, i. i. 15-16 Polinesta's reproach 'marie . . .cappe' 39-42 ' Indeede I . . . flames of loue' (though quite in the Italian nurse's character). 61 ' you loue . . . Dulipo very well '. ii. 4 the Nurse's aside. 57 ' Logike' added to philosophy and poetry. 73-4 ' grafts of suche a stocke are very gayson in these dayes '. 86-9 ' and lette him thinke ... in this Citie ' (flattery) and 98 'I forget nothing that may furder your cause', iii. 17 'with codpeece poynt and al'. 52-3 'maister doctor neuer dineth . . . INTRODUCTORY ESSAY lix knoweth '. 64-7 ' for as the flie . . . consumption'. 71-4 ' I haue free libertie . . . my desire '. 81-8 ' I know she loueth me best . . . then may I say' (about 16 U. in all). II. i. 60-2 ' when he ... of shame ' (student-interest). 72 ' he should be none of the wisest ' III. i. 4 Crapino's stick, iii. 25-6 ' for to suche . . . onely death '. 28-9 ' The lawes . . . wrongs ', and 43-63 ' if thou hadst lined . . . to litle by theselues '—all in the student-interest. IV. i Erostrato's speech much developed, iv. 27 ' I am matched . . . another while ', referring to Crapino. v. 38 ' I wold not be . . . conney skins . . . twelue monethes' (Dalio). viii. 44 ' a good pursejo procure it ' (favour with a Judge), and 63-5 ' but' within a seuenight . . . twetie times in an houre ' (on legal ' refreshers ')■ v. ii. 50 ' You shall see what dishes I will deuise '. iii. 38 ' wondring about me, as it were at an Owle'. iv. 15 'caphers'. v. 11 Philogano's exaggerated offer ' if you finde me contrarie let me suffer death for it '. 23 Pasi- philo's retort when Cleander devotes him to the gallows. 133-4 indecency in Litio's speech, x. i-io Oleander's opening speech a little expanded. 15 Philogano's offer of his whole lands as dower. 21-2 'to leaue that litle which god hath sent me' for 'lasciare erede '. As against these additions the only omissions I notice are (reference to the English scenes) — the pun on ' ears ' of vessels missed in Polinesta's first speech (i. i. 5), and a pun on Bari (bari, rogues) found untranslatable in v. v. 100; the detail 'in giubbone ' of Cleander's escape from Otranto (i. ii. 52) ; Pasifilo's comparison of himself to beaver or otter who can pasture on water or land (i. iii, 1 9) ; his remark that there is no whisper of Polinesta's ever having been in love (iii. iv. 46) ; Philogano's sneer that the servant ' looks like a doctor ' (iv. vii. 1 7) ; his reproach of the Ferrarese about ' lasting friendship ' (rv. viii. 5) ; and ' although I should have to enter Damon's house ' in Ero- strato's speech, v. i. 6. And the above list of additions to matter must be swollen by many others due rather to Gascoigne's style, which exhibits the growthof a Euphuism traceable, perhaps, as far back as Berners' translation of Guevara, 1534. It is shown chiefly in an abounding alliteration, especially in pathetic soliloquies, and the insertion Ix EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN everywhere, to that end, of clauses not found in the Italian ; but there is also occasional antithetic structure, once at least a simile from natural history in Lyly's manner, and a host of racy English proverbs or proverbial phrases equally unrepresented in Ariosto. Euphuistic alliteration, antithesis, &c. : I. i. 43 '/itie nor/£«cion, /i?«y nor /ater-noster ' (represented in thjC Italian ' com/assione o /ensione . . . /;>-ece o prtuo ') ; 113 'be ^rombred with such a coy- strell ' ; iii. 8 ' feede at the borAes ende with iJrowne brta.A ' ; 20 ' mo ^ajtures to ^asst in ' ; 64-7 ' for as the flie . . . his owne consump- tion ' ; 74-6 ' yet as my ioyes ... the more I desire ' (antithetic) ; 78-9 '/arre /etches . . . /ather . . . dotmg doctor . . . /5uzard, this (bribing villaine'; 83-5 'the pleasant tast of my sugred ioyes . . . gal in my mouth ' ; 86 ' delight . . . dreadful 8-9, 11-12, 21-6 ; iv. i. 1-6. In the first Act of Misogonus and in the first three scenes of Act 11 four accent lines of anapaestic rhythm distinctly predominate. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY Ixxxv ' W6 be so ioconde and loyfuUy ioyned Hfer loue for my loue so currantly coyned That kll pleasures y^rthly the treuth to declkre Are pleasures not kble with ours to compkre,' &c., 11. iiS4sqq. Or take the following anticipation of Autolycus, where the beat is less distinct : What ! dost thou not know that every pedlar In all kind of trifles must be a meddler ? Specially in women's triflings ; These use we chiefly above all things. Who liveth in love and love would win, Even at this pack he must begin, Wherein is right many a proper token, Of which by name part shall be spoken : Gloves, pins, combs, glasses unspotted. Pomades, hooks, and laces knotted ; Brooches, rings and all manner of beads ; Laces, round and flat, for women's heads ; Needles, thread, thimbles, shears and all such knacks. Where lovers be no such thing lacks : Sipers [cypress], swathbands, ribbons and sleeve laces. Girdles, knives, purses, and pincases.' Heywood's regularity, indeed, is not imitated by his successors. Ther sites, 1537, is lame enough ; and in Roister Doister, .''1552, alongside the anapaestic cadence is seen an iambic tendency together with some lengthening of the line.^ It is ill dogmatizing in this region of uncertainty ; but I think we shall be right in con- ceiving a dramatic verse, whose native principle was anapaestic, undergoing about 1550-60 an iambic influence due to the non- dramatic work of Wyatt, Surrey, Grimald and others collected in Tottell. The Miscellany, 1557, had printed, along with the deca- 1 The Four PPinHBizlitt's Dodsley, vol. i : printed by William Myddle- ton between 1543-7, but probably written a good deal earlier. (Ward's Eng. Dmm. Lit. i. 244-5.) four of Heywood's six pieces, including The Play of Love, were printed by William Rastell in 1533. See Mr. .A. W. Pollard's Introd. to Hey wood in Representative English Comedies, 1903, PP- 3-17- 2 e. g. II. i ; III. i begins with anapaests and changes to Alexandrines. Ixxxvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN syllabic sonnets, much fourteener verse and some in the poulter's measure, our earliest 7nodern English naturalization of the Alexan- drine line. The rapid diffusion of the fourteener has been already noted, and its effect on the ear of a dramatist is seen in Gammer Gurion. I have cited (p. Ixxxii, n. 5) one passage (v. ii. 182-95) where its seven-accent rhythm is unbroken : I print, below, one where the six-accent Alexandrine movement is clearly visible, and its attainment by truncating the fourth foot of a fourteener, leaving the first half of the line with an extra syllable and a more marked pause.' Seldom is the rhythm so uniform as here ; extra syllables everywhere recall the anapaestic tendency ; yet iambic movement is seen in the last and determining half' of the majority of lines, and it is the result of all the recent work in iambic measures. In the Buggbears a few years later the same thing is seen : a distinct iambic ending to the great majority of lines, a strongly- marked division of the line, with often an extra-syllable, and greater irregularity, in the first half. Wholly anapaestic lines, like 31-4 in the passage I am about to quote, are not uncommon, singly ; but it is much more common to find the author begin- ning a line with anapaests and changing to iambs at the pause.^ 1 Chat. I am as glad | as a w6|man can | be || of this | thing to | here t61I. By G6gs I b6nes, | when he c6m|meth, || n6wthat | I kn6w | the mat|ter, He shal | [be] siire | at the first | skip || to leape | in scald|ing wat|er, With a w6rse | tiirne | besides ; || vifhen he will, let him come. Diccon. I tell | you as | my sis|ter ; || you knaw | what mean|eth ' miim ' ! Now lacke | I biit | my d6c|tor || to play | his part | againe. And 16 1 where he c6mlmeth t6w|ards, || peradv6n|ture to | his paine ! D. Rat. What go6d ] newes, Dic|con, ftl|low? || is Mothjer Chat | at hdme? Diccon. She is, | syr,and | she is nbt, || but it | please her | to wh6me ; Yet did | I take | her tard|y, || as sub|tle as | she was. Gammer Gurton, iv. ii. loi-io. 2 The latter half is determinative because it has the accented rhyme syllable from which the ear reckons backwards to the preceding accent. At the beginning of the line there is no rhyme to restrain foot-substitu- tion or truncation. When Professor J. B. Mayor denies the close of the line as a criterion of the metre, he is thinking almost entirely of blank verse. {English Metre, 1886, ch. vi, ' Metrical Metamorphosis,' p. 82.) s e.g. I. ii. iio-ii, 114; III. i. 24, aS, 35-6, 50; ii. 21, 23, 26; iv. i. 24-6 ; V. 12, 53-5, 58 ; v. vi. 15-16. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY Ixxxvii Bion. \ am hyr|6d with yoii || to d6 | my sim|ple s^rv|ice & n6t I to fight I with bug|beares || O whkt | a noyse | was this I those shrikes | those cries || that criilell r6r|inge fitte | though thS n^ghte | b6 quyte pkst, || ring in | myne ekr|es y^tt | I do 1 not mferv|aill 1 1| thoughe yo""^ s6nne | diirste not tkr|rye but laie | those ij | nyghts forthe, || he hkd | good reks|on mkr|ry Atne. when mjr sonne | told mS firste, H y* night | \ hard n6|thinge but thfese I ij nyghtes gon |1 thgr hathe binne | an old rumb|- linge Bion. why ? in whkt | sort wks | it Ame. thgy bovmsed | on the floore 1 right 6|Sr my hfed, || yt I 16kte 1 every howre | that thfi 16ft, I the whiles, || the howse, | & kll | wolde downe | but lie lie ( no more ] nights ther, || yf \ male | in kll | this towne I find nfever | so bkse | a 16dg|inge till | y* clktt|(e)ringe | be end led & streight | I mynd | to sfeke|Jhow yt mkt|tar male | be mfendjed (l. i. 25-38). Successive fourteeners are found, as said, only in one scene (ill. iv. 1-40) ; but a general iambic six-accent scheme, secured by omitting one or both syllables of the fourth foot of a four- teener into which the Alexandrine is occasionally allowed to pass,' with anapaestic variations, is I think clearly visible. Now to our ear to-day, trained by three and a half centuries of regular decasyllabic iambics, from Sackville and Spenser to the latest modern, this jumble of anapaestic and iambic rhythm is perhaps the most excruciating form that verse can assume — felt as such when first we make its acquaintance, though custom and the historico-literary sense teach us to ignore it. But in the first half of the sixteenth century, and till the last quarter had well begun, there was no such strong iambic predisposition, and no such instant revolt of the ear from inconsistency that has not harmony behind it. The failure to retain Chaucer's versification 1 The following will serve as examples of this Alexandrine iambic character, with medially-truncated and sometimes perfect fourteeners : I. ii. 14S-54 ; II. i ; II. iii. 78-84 ; 11. v. 22-9, 50-9, 81-5, &c. Ixxxviii EARLY INLAYS ±ikOM Ititi, LiAL,ii\i.y shows that iambic rhythm had not taken firm hold. Prosody existed not, save in the uncertain ear of the poets. Assuredly it was with but slight reference to formal scansion that Heywood, Stevenson, Jeflfere and the rest produced their jumble, though the modern student of it must try to express in terms of prosody the course their ear followed. Gascoigne's ' Certayne Notes of Instruction concerning the making of verse ' — five leaves ap- pended to TAe Posies of 1575 — is our earliest treatise on the subject; and the first three even of Wyatt's sonnets in Tottell' illustrate the prevailing confusion. ; In the long and troubled period after Chaucer's death, when literature was largely in abey- ance, the attempt to follow his rhymed and regular versification had been crippled and stultified by the lack of ear, skill and patience ; by the confusion between two systems, the new French and the old English, and the persistence of the alliterative habit associated with the latter; still more, perhaps, by that gradual change in grammar, words and pronunciation which was trans- forming the language. Hawes' Pastime of Pleasure, printed by Wynkyn de Worde in 1509, represents an attempt to revive Chaucerian manner and spirit, but is no whit better than the drama in the matter of metre. TotteirsiI/zi«//a«y shows the attainment of some regularity, at last, in non-dramatic work ; but in drama the old confusion continued. The metrical in- decision of the Mysteries and Morals of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries was perpetuated by their continued perfonn- ance. They set the fashion for dramatic work. Gradually the short ballad-metres disappear, or are relegated to distinct songs ; while for the ordinary dialogue is accepted the formless hobbling jingle we have been discussing, with its one acknowledged law of final rhyme, by which, as Professor Saintsbury humorously says, the poet ' held on ' and steadied himself for a fresh erratic career in the next line,^ although even rhyme was wofuUy mis- understood and its rhythmical backward effect ignored by a too frequent failure to place it on an accented syllable. It must have been the contrast felt between this dramatic doggerel and the 1 Ed. Arber, pp. 33-4. ' Hist, of Prosody, i. 340, 343. INTROUUCIORY ESSAY Ixxxix regular rhythms introduced from Italy that guided the nation back to the sense of prosody it had lost, and set Drant and Harvey and Sidney on their attempt at reformation by quantita- tive scansion and classical measures. But when we consider its extraordinary persistence, despite Wyatt and Surrey, Sack- ville and Gascoigne, despite the influence of Latin comedy, and of the Dutch Education-drama with its attention to Latin comic metres ; when we note how, modified and even partly displaced by more regular measures, it still holds its ground for the comic portions ' ; when we remember that it is used, not merely by skilless scribblers who could do no better, but by scholars and schoolmasters like Udall and Preston, Edwardes and Fulwell, Jefifere and Barjona, some of whom were writing at the same time or even in the same play verse of Smooth correctness — remembering all this, we cannot dismiss the doggerel of 1560 onwards as mere sloth, ignorance, or incompetence. It per- sisted not merely because it was traditional and popular, but also because the dramatists perceived it better adapted for average comic uses — for dialogue as opposed to set speech, and for farcical matter — than more regular measures. The same dramatic mstinct which bade Sackville and Norton, Gascoigne and Kinwehnersh, and Marlowe later, reject the 'jigging vein of rhyming mother- wits' for the uses of the cothurnus, taught those mother-wits to retain it when they donned the comic sock, at least imtil Lyly had demonstrated the superiority of prose. Had Supposes been an original work, had the Latin use of verse for Comedy been less authoritative, a successful and consistent comic prose would doubtless have arrived earlier. In default of such the doggerel survived the introduction of regular measures by a quarter of a century ; and did so largely as a matter of reasoned choice, as a compromise, parallel in fact to Ariosto's choice of sdruccioli, and to Italian critical preference for a verse which, while not prose, might be as near prose as possible. Many men read Italian. Our author, who seems to have known 1 There is plenty of it still in the decade 1580-90 ; and fragments are embalmed, whether his or not, in the early plays of Shakespeare. xc EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALL^N the Decamerone^ and the Orlando Furioso ^ as well as La Cassaria, La Spiritata, and GV Ingannati, very possibly read Cinthio or Pigna ; and even his rhymes, in which he seems so terrible an offender, may represent a deliberate attempt to lighten the pulse, and to reproduce something of the slide of Italian double rhymes and feminine endings in a language not well fitted for it. To sum up this matter of metre, I hold the basis of the doggerel to be four-accent anapsestic ; and its gradual replace- ment by iambic rhythm and a longer line to be mainly the result of the publication of Tottell's Miscellany, 1557, and the crop of verse-translation that followed. I trace the first infusion of this longer iambic rhythm in Gammer Gurton, 1559-60 : I see it in the following decade, not only issuing in the gradual appropria- tion of regular iambic fourteeners to serious characters and special rhetorical effects, but also greatly modifying the character of the doggerel itself, a modification of which Buggbears affords excel- lent illustration : while by 1570 or a little later the distinction between serious iambic parts and comic doggerel parts is more clearly established, and Misogonus 11. iv to end shows us the doggerel written, not now with an approximation to iambic rhythm, but with an almost complete freedom from metrical trammels, approximating in fact to the prose that was soon to come. And since the earlier part of Misogonus (down to the end of II. iii) shows a marked anapaestic regularity which almost disappears in the latter half, I am inclined to believe the play represents a revision or completion in 1570-77 of work begun much earlier (about 1560), before this distinction of vehicles had been clearly established ; and for this later date of the latter portion of the play I find confirmation in its excellent ribald or rustic characterization, (See end of Introduction, p. 171.) Let us turn to consider its Sources. 1 The names Biondello and Iphigenia are probably taken from it, as well as Calandrino, i. iii. 24. 2 Besides Amedeus' remark in v. ii. 66, see note on Cornewayle ni. i. 29. Its foreign origin seems suggested by the form it assumes in Florio's Second Frvtes, 1591, ' Lei fa le fusa storte, e manda il sue marito in Cornouaglia smza barca.' INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xci MiSOGONUS The play differs widely from the two just discussed. In the first place it is neither a translation nor adaptation of any known work, but an independent creation, whatever its debt to various sources. In the second, it is not strictly Italian either in subject or tone, its exemplars being rather Dutch and German, and its dominant inspiration native and English. The scene, indeed, is laid in Italy. The Prologue begins — ' Whilum there in Laurentu dwelte a toune^of antike fame in Italye a countrey earste renounde w*!" troiane knightes a gentleman,' &c. and the author keeps up the fiction by an occasional refer- ence'; but 'Laurentum' and 'troiane knightes', as well as the mention of ApoUonia, a town without modern representa- tive, show clearly that not modern, but ancient Italy, the Italy of Phaer's Virgilj(i558), is in his mind, though no serious reproduction of antiquity is aimed at. The whole tone and atmosphere is unmistakably English. English are the navies — English Will Somer or Summer given to Cacurgus, that of Henry VIII's ' ^ ^ famous jester, whose portrait Holbein has left us ; and those of the servants, Dick Duckling, Will Wasp (i. i. 205), Jone (i. ii. 59, iii. 100); of the women, Alison, Madge (?)Caro, Isbell Busbye; of the priest Sir John and Jack his clerk; of games of cards (11. iv. 94, 129), of dice-games (ib. 137), of dances (ib. 270-3). English are the allusions — local, 'a fine Ihinge that cam from London,' iii. i. 37, ' our swete Lady of Walsingham,' iii. i. 150, ' ye wethercock of poles,' III. ii. 3, 'warrant him as bene at Cambridge,' in. iii. 74; or literary, 'Robin Hood,' i. iii. 6, 'maid Marion,' 11. iv. 75, 'brown Bessy,' ib. 76, 'the nine worthies,' 11. ii. 11, 'some skoggingly feate,' i. iii. 28, 'a good mery greke,' 11. iv. 123: English, the whole picture of rural life — the relations between Philogonus and his tenants, 'rent hens,' in. i. 15, rotation of ' ' In Italye ', i. i. 26, ' Laurentum ', i. i. 56, ' on Taleon grounde he near trode ', m. i. 108, ' He that can doe that is not in Italia ', iii. ii. 33, ' welcome . . . into Laurentu toune ', iv. i. 63. xcii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN crops, IV. i. 132-6, the names of real herbs mixed with Cacur- gus' allegorical ones, iii. iii. 129-46, the roasting of a crab by the fire, i. ii. 60, the 'pott oth best with a toust', in. i. 269, Codrus' call to his horses, iii. i. i, the putting the sow ' out to mast', ib. 4, the hobby horse, i. iii. 3, ' lected for my scretion five tymes constable,' in. i. 19, ' thirdborough,' iv. i. 93, 'the next market,' in. i. 189, ' indite him at the size,' iv. ii. 7, ' this shire,' 11. iv. 50, in. ii. 29, iv. ii. 43. English, too, is the strong religious tone, e.g. the talk between Philogonus and Eupelas in I. i, II. V, IV. i, of Liturgus in 11. iii and again with Miso- gonus in iv. iv ; the conditions imagined being those of Eliza- bethan times with reminiscences of earlier Roman Catholicism, e.g. Cacurgus, i. iii. 47, and Codrus, iv. i. 153-4, have served in the choir ; the dean orders the service, 11. ii. 63 ; allusions to changes in the Prayer Book (11. iv. 244-5) by Orgelus, who sympathizes with Sir John as not ' of this new start vp rabies ' (11. iv. 64), nor wont to carry a bible but cards and dice, though he can allude to 'ys holy tyme of lent', ib. 238, argue Jesuitic- ally, II. v, 33-6, and still hear confession, iv. i. 34; cf. ' pild Jacke', 'y" Idolatrous besle', 11. v. 32, 37 ; ' 'tis popery to vse fastinge,' 11. ii. 100; the deprecation of prayers for the dead by Philogonus, who is described by Codrus as ' oth new larn- inge ', III. i. 1 50-9 : we may notice, too, the lay patronage, i. ii. 45, 88-9, and Misogonus' promise to procure Sir John coun- tenance from the bishop, ' Yf thou nedst ath ordinarye He get the a charter,' 11. iv. 218. All this shows the work of one who intimately knew the country-life he paints ; and it is just those scenes where local atmosphere is strongest that are the best in the play. They seem entirely to preclude the idea of any foreign original. In one passage, four lines after ' on Taleoh grounde', Codrus is made to say 'He speake plaine English no we'. III. i. 112. But while the general spirit and the local colour of Miso- gonus i^ English, the type of drama to which it belongs is of foreign growth : and though the chief exemplars are not Italian, Italy may claim at least some share in originating the genre. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xciii The type in question is that known as the Education-drama, The originating in a combination of the story of the Prodigal Son ^f"^^^""j with the forms and spirit of Latin Comedy. In the hands of compound the Dutch and German schoolmasters, among whom it found Comedy its chief development, it is animated by the double aim (i) oi and inculcating on youth sound morality, industry, and obedience ,„^J^„„ to parents and teachers, (2) of making boys acquainted with the forms, language, and metres of Latin Comedy, without the accompaniment of pagan immorality; without, that is, inviting sympathy for lying, for the deceit of and theft from fathers, without condoning or bringing to successful issue the surrender of young men to youthful temptations, or the formation of mar- riage-connexions which a parent cannot approve. It aims, in a word, at presenting a ' Christian Terence '. Considerations of art are freely sacrificed to the need of speaking clearly and earnestly to the young. A strong didactic purpose is obtruded throughout. The tavern- and brothel-element of Plautus is retained ; but the rich humour of Latin Comedy is for the most part eliminated, and the sentimental side of Terence is deepened to a melodramatic or tragic tone in the fate that threatens or overtakes the votaries of idleness and illicit pleasures. The Latin contrasts between sober and reckless young men, between severe and indulgent parents with varying ideals of education, between faithful and unprincipled servants, are seized upon by Protestant and Catholic schoolmasters alike and applied to em- phasize Christian teaching. The material was less incongruous with such teaching than might be supposed : the Bible itself afforded very similar examples. The contrasts of obedience with self-will, of piety with irreligion, of sobriety with disorder, might find clear originals and analogues in Abel and Cain, Shem and Ham, Isaac and Ishmael, Jacob and Esau, and in the history of Joseph : Noah, Abraham, Isaac, Jacob exhibit the paternal relation : even the sinister influence of the mother on which the schoolmaster-dramatist so constantly insists, might find some warrant in the laughter of Sarah and the deceitful scheme of Rebekah. The New Testament offered its Parables. xciv EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN Something might be drawn from the Sower, the Tares, the Talents, the Unfaithful Steward, the Two Sons : but that which stands obviously in the position of main source for the whole Education-drama is the touching story of the Prodigal, with its contrast of the brothers, its warning of penalties awaiting folly, its picture of repentance and of a father's forgiving love. Possible These points of connexion with the Bible give the Education- influmce '^•'^'"^ ^ distinct affinity with the sacred ; and since the story of the Prodigal is directly handled in three of the fifteenth- century Florentine Sacre Rappresentazioni^ but not, so far as we know, in other countries anterior to Asotus, Waldis' Parabell vam vorlorn Szohn and Gnapheus' Acolasius^ there appears some ground for tracing the biblical as well as the humanist side of the new kind to Italian example, though we cannot be sure that the combination of the two was consciously made in Italy. Spengler notes with truth that those brothel-scenes, which are only hinted at by the sacred text and which formed the dramatists' natural line of development, are already fully represented in Castellani's Del Figliuol Prodigo, printed at the beginning of the sixteenth century and probably composed well before the close of the fifteenth ; and thinks that Waldis, whose Parabell was published at Riga in 1527, may possibly have seen during his visit/to Italy an Italian play on the subject ' ; though he prefers the hypothesis of a lost Latin play which served as model to Waldis and Gnapheus alike. The earliest real assimilation of Terentian form and spirit in Germany is 1 I. Festa del Vitel sagginato (Fatted Calf), of unknown authorship, ed. end of fifteenth century. 2. Del Figliuol prodigo by Antonia Puici, pr. begining of sixteenth century. 3. Del Figliuol prodigo by Castellano Castellani, ed. in D'Ancona's Sacre Rapp. 1872, i. 357-89. See Biblio- grafia delle Antiche Rapp. lialianc by Visconte Colomb de Batines, 1852, pp. 43, 18, 44. " See, however, note 2 on p. xcix below. 3 Der Verlorene Sohn im Drama des xvi. Jahrhunderts . . . Innsbruck, 1888, pp. a-ii. He quotes from Waldis' Prologue : 'Senior pultron de ridt vor, Madonna putana steyt ynn der doer, Ribaldus vp sie beyde wardt,' &c. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xcv found in the Henno of Johann Reuchlin,' on which Professor Herford admits some possible Italian influence : while we know from the undated dedication to Lazarus Mendicus ^ that Macro- pedius had also visited Italy, though perhaps not till after the first composition of that play, and of the still earlier Asotus. It is to this last-named play of the Utrecht schoolmaster, George Macropedius or Langveldt(c. 1475-1558), that we must point both as the earliest extant specimen of Education-drama and as one of the main influences on Misogonus. It was not, indeed, printed till 1537'; but in the dedication to Bollius he speaks of it as ' the beginning of all his labour ', a work ' which now nearly thirty years ago I laid away as useless ', but which he has now taken up afresh and published. The original date, then, will be about 1510 ; and about that time it was probably acted by other scholars than those of Utrecht. The action is as follows : — Eumenius laments that while he has performed a father's duty, Asotus toiled and gotten wealth, educated his sons and not forbidden their chastisement, on Asotus, the younger, training, threats and strokes are alike thrown away, and he fills the house with contention. Starting now for the farm with the elder son Philastius, Eumenius leaves Comasta, the steward, in charge till his return on the morrow. Comasta is a rogue : he soHloquizes — ' The dotard thinks me honest, which I never mean to be. My line is banqueting, immorality, milking the young heir : I filch from the old man and amuse him with false colours.' He will send all the household out, and arrange a revel for Asotus. Colax, a parasite, is bidden bring two meretrices. Several ensuing scenes are devoted to talk among other servants, exhibiting the steward's rascality : Tribonius, one of these, having spied the meretrices being smuggled in by the back door, goes off ' Entitled Scenica Progymnasmata in the first ed. Strasburpr, 1498 ; first entitled Henno in the twenty-first ed. 1614 (Holstein, Reuchlins. Komodien, 1888, p. 155). The far earlier mediseval attempts of the Nun of Gandersheim were discovered and edited by Conrad Celtes a year or two later, in 1501. See Herford's Literary Relations, pp. 79-84. * Printed second, following the Asotus, in the first volume of the collected edition of Harmannus Borculous, Utrecht, 1552. ^ Asotvs Evangelicvs sev Evangelica de filio prodigo parabola a Georgia Macropedio cornice descripta. Busc. ijjy. 8°. xcvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN to inform Eumenius : the appearance of Asotus himself, from fowl- ingji is delayed till the end of Act ii, when he is informed by Colax of the pleasures awaiting him. In Act ill Colax quits the banquet, disturbed by a presentiment of Eumenius' return ; but Comasta mocks his fears and persuades him in again. Cometa, the bailiff, arrives from the farm ; and, getting no answer to his knock, calls Comasta loudly by name, who comes out, abuses and beats him off; but is himself recalled to the house by a sudden tumult. Eumenius and Philffitius have returned : their voices are heard high in anger within ; and Asotus issues with his meretrices, who begin to quarrel, and are with difficulty placated and dismissed. Eumenius, since the house reeks with wine, bids a servant bring a seat outside, where he will judge the offenders : in a later soliloquy he charac- terizes Philaetius as righteous and a hard worker, but too sparing and somewhat morose in temper. Philastius meanwhile remon- strates with Asotus and advises him not to shun his father. Asotus at last repudiates his lecturing — let him mind his own business ; ' It is my business that you waste, while I toil.' They part in anger ; and Asotus, repairing to his father, demands his share of the property, as he cannot endure being made the subject of carp- ing and grudging. In Act IV we hear that Comasta has been crucified, Daetrus, the cook, imprisoned, and Colax flogged. Asotus, who has received more than fifteen talents, takes his passage for Miletus, and sends for the meretrices to join him. They feast and sing before embarking, and their proceedings are duly reported to the brother and father. Philastius complains that so much money should be given to the spendthrift ; but Eumenius rebukes his hardness, which has brought this grief upon his old age. In Act V a traveller from Miletus brings the saddened father news of a famine there, of his son's destitution and wish to return. Colax, who has seen him actually returned, hurries to Eumenius with the news, and is sent, like Ergasilus, to feast in the kitchen. There follows the prodigal's arrival in rags, his entreaty, his father's forgiveness, the elder brother's displeasure and the father's reason- ing therewith, all exactly as in the Gospel ; but Dsetrus is pardoned at the prodigal's request. 1 With Colax's remark (ii. 4) ' Parasitus est uenatico similis cani ', and his comparison of Asotus to the hawk on his fist ' Accipitris in morem, sinistra quem gerit ', compare Misogonus 11. iii. 105-9. The prodigal's devotion to field-sports is probably borrowed from Esau of the Old Testament. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xcvii Macropedius' claim to priority in the Prodigal-drama rests on the dedication to Bollius mentioned above, and on his preface to two later pkys, Alula et Rebelles, the first of his eleven pieces actually published, 1535. He there mentions Reuchlin, not only as the introducer of Hebrew studies in Germany, but as the first restorer of comic art and the inspirer of his own work, which had, so far as he knows, no intervening predecessor, though, since he began, others have written with considerable success.' Among these must be included Burchard Waldis, whose Parabell vam vorlorn Szohn, published at Riga, 1527, represents the ensnaring of the prodigal by a rascal, his intro- duction to a tavem-Host, the dissipation of his money amid wine, song, dice, and presents to the wenches, and, when all is gone, the robbing him of his clothes and his contemptuous ejectment.^ And indebted either to Waldis or to some lost Latin source common to them both is the far more famous Acolaslus of Willem de Voider (the fuller), c. 1 493-1 568, com- monly known as Gnapheus (Gr. Kvatl>evs, fuller) or Fullonius, schoolmaster at the Hague, where it was acted by his boys in 1528, being printed at Antwerp in the following year.^ Its action is as follows : — Acolastus, son of Pelargus, impatient of home-restraint, desires Acolaslus his father to give him his portion. Pelargus consults his friend Eubulus on a request with which he is the less willing to comply, • • . . . loannes Capnio [Reuchlin] . . . qui prseter hoc quod linguam Hebraicam primus Germanise inuezit, etiam coUapsum prorsus artificium comicom primus instaurauit. Is mihi primus (ut uerum latear) ansam scribendi dedit, is me primus excitauit. Si praeter eum hoc posteriori sseculo alij ante me scripserint nescio ; hoc scio quod alios non uiderim. Scripserunt interea nonnulli quibus non infeliciter res cessit.' 2 Spengler, op. cit., p. 10. ' Acolastvs De Jilio prodigo comoedia Acolasti tHulo iiiscripta, attlhore GiUielmo Gnapheo, Gymnasiarcha Hagiensi. Godfridvs Dvmaus Ayttuer- piai excudebat, Anno M.D. XXIX. Mense Julio. Cvm Gratia et Priuilegio Imperiali ad triennium. It has been edited by J. Bolte, Beriin, 1891, from a copy of 1329. Holslein, Das Drama vom Verlornen So/in, Halle am S., 1880, p. 4, states the dedication to Johannes Sart onus to be dated 'ex musaeo nostro ad Hagam comitis Hollandiae, Kal. Oclobr. anno 1528', The dedication as given by Bolte bears no such date ; but Bolte states, p. xii, that in 1528 Gnapheus had to fly from Holland to escape ■ perbecution. 532 g xcviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN as he knows it prompted by his son's bad companion, Philautus : but Eubulus advises him not to strain the parental authority, but to grant the request, administering at the same time kindly warn- ings. The youth will realize his folly, and return a wiser man. Fortified by conference with Philautus (l. ii) Acolastus again approaches his father ; and, in a scene where he exhibits insensi- bility to affection rather than positive disrespect, obtains his wish and receives ten talents as his ' fair share ', coupled with warnings and a charge to learn to ' know himself '. The two youths repair to another country, where we hear no more of Philautus. Acolastus, proud of his new wealth, conceives he only needs an attendant flatterer to be sure of friends and influence, and accepts as followers two needy rogues on the look-out for some one to fleece. While Pamphagus caters extravagantly, Pantolabus conducts his new ' rex ' to a leno's house. Enough provisions are brought to occupy ten cooks ; harp-players arrive ; also the sumptuous Lais with a train of servant-maids like Bacchis in the Heautontimorumenos : and with Lais the prodigal, having offered her anything she wishes and surrendered at her request his gold necklace, eventually retires. On the following day Pamphagus with loaded dice cheats him of all his money ; Sannio, the leno, and' Lais demand their promised payment ; and Acolastus is too astounded at the general desertion to offer opposition. He finds himself penniless, and is ashamed to beg : but famine is abroad in the land ; he must lay shame aside, and seek support by work. He approaches Chremes, a country- man who is lamenting the poor yield of his field and the barrenness of his oxen in the manner of Menandrian comedy ; begs for any hard work that may be coupled with decent food, and is hired to feed the swine. Serving thus in the famine-stricken land, he realizes to the full his utter misery. He groans over his guilt and folly. He has nothing but husks to eat, while at home there is abundance : but how dare he return, a naked rascal ? In the fifth Act Eubulus, who in the third has consoled Pelargus with assur- ances that God will turn all to good, and has thereafter dined with him, finds his prophecy justified. From the portitores or custom- house officials he hears of the prodigal's extreme want : and as the old men are conferring upon his rescue, Acolastus himself approaches, and the reconciliation takes place as in the parable. No elder brother appears ; the only hints of one being Pelargus' statement in I. i. ii8 that Acolastus is ' minor natu ', a younger son, and the mention in I. iii of his ' fair share '- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY xcix The Acolasius was reprinted in innumerable editions for school- reading: it was translated into German at Zurich 153S, Vienna 1545) and Thurgau 1627; into English by John Palsgrave, chaplain to Henry VIII, in 1S40; and into French by Antoine Tiron, Antwerp 1564.^ But its predominant fame and its trans- lation into English need not exclude from our view the parallel influence on English schoolmasters of the work of Macropedius, whose eleven Latin plays were collected in two volumes at Utrecht 1552 and 1553; and all the more that to Macropedius belongs the credit of first adapting the prodigal-story to a reproduction of contemporary school-life. This step he took in his Rebelles '■' published with Aluta in 1535. Rebelles represents the evil eifects of maternal indulgence on Rebelles two boys who are transferred from one master to another in the hope of escaping the penalties due to breaches of discipline ; and are at length entrusted to Aristippus with a request that they may be exempt from corporal punishment, to which he returns a guarded answer. The lads, enjoying a fancied immunity, are soon at their pranks, and incur a flogging. They complain to their mothers, 1 So Holstein, op. cit., 1880, p. 50, De Julleville in his Repertoire, 1886, p. 58, and Bolte in his edition 1891, p. xv. Spengler, on the other hand, op. at., 1888, p. 164, 'asserts Tiron's U Enfant Prodigue to be a translation of Macropedius' Asotus ; but the details of the dramatis personse given by De Julleville rather confirm the derivation from Acolastus. ^ In the Prologue to Petriscus, however, he admits that, before composing Rebelles, he had witnessed with pleasure a brief prose play upon the same theme, though diiferent in treatment. Just so Gnapheus in his prefatory epistle to Acolastus says he has heard of one Reyner Snoy, a doctor, who has handled the theme of the prodigal, perhaps more happily than he. Evidently we are far from finality in the matter of the beginning of the Education-drama. De Julleville {Ripertoire, p. 57 ) mentions a French Morality of about 1500 lines played at Laval in 1504 (i. e. sixty years before Tiron's version of the Acolastus), of which he gives the following title — ' L'Enfant Prodigue par personnaiges, nou- vellement translate du latin en franfoys selon le texte de I'Evangile, et lui bailla son pare sa part, laquelle il despendit meschamment avec foUes femmes Paris ' s. d. The characters are Le Rustre, I'Enfant gaste, le Pere, le Prodigue, le Frere aisne, la Maquerelle, la Gorriere [Fashion], Fin Coeur-Doux, I'Acteur, le Maistre (du Prodigue), I'Amy de bonne foi, le Valet du pere. Spengler, however, who gives an account of it on p. 162 of his work, speaks of it as composed between 1534-40 after the example of Gnapheus. Further a pantomime-play of D Enfant Prodigue was exhibited at Ghent before Duke Philip the Good in 1458. (De Julleville, Repertoire, p. 58, from Jean Chartier, Hisloire de Charles VII.) g2 c EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN Philotecnium and Cacolalia, who angrily remove them from the school and furnish them with funds to start life in trade. They promptly repair to revel at a tavern, where they commission their host to procure them meretrices ; but, engaging in play meanwhile, are cheated by two rogues, and finally ejected from the house, stripped alike of clothes and money. They then rob a sleeping farmer of his wallet with some precious contents, for which they are arrested and condemned by the magistrate to be hung. The distraught mothers are only able to save them by humiliating themselves before the schoolmaster and getting hina to assert his scholastic privilege and claim the boys from the magistrate ' virgi ', by-right of the rod, as subject to his correction, and therefore exempt from the civil authority. The repentant youths, thus delivered from death, beg Aristippus' forgiveness ; the claims of justice are satisfied by a sound flogging; and the master is invited to feast with the parents and neighbours. The action is accompanied throughout by scenes in the manner of the sacred drama in which two devils, Lorcoballus and Marcolappus (whose names we shall see introduced in the Buggiears), exult over the prospect of secur- ing the lads' souls or (in Act v) lament their failure ; while Choruses at the end of the Acts reprobate maternal indulgence or youthful insubordination and inculcate the need of discipline. The same matter is rehandled, and with more effect, in the PciriscHs Pelriscus, assigned by Bolte to 1536, wherein Macropedius substitutes for the two mothers a single one, Misandra, a shrew who beats her easy-going husband and thwarts by foolish indulgence his attempts to correct their son Petriscus : while, as the boy's comrades, are assigned two older and more hardened youths, who have long before withdrawn them- selves from the schoolmaster's authority, which is therefore not exerted to save them, but only Petriscus, from the gallows. A modification, of importance in regard to Misogonus, is the part played by the good servant Liturgus, who acquaints Petriscus' father of his petty thefts in the house, and on whom Petriscus manages to lay the guilt of his more serious robbery of money ; so that the servant is haled off to prison and narrowly escapes the death-penalty. Petriscus makes him amends at the close by beg- ging his father for his manumission, which is granted, as in Roman comedy. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY ci One other famous foreign play indebted to Acolashis may just Studentes be mentioned, the Studentes of Christopher Stymmelius, 1549, of which eleven editions were issued before 1575.^ It transfers the scene from school to university, of which latter life it gives a lively picture. We have three youths, Philomathes, Acolastus, and Aerates, sons respectively of Philargyrus (a money-lover), the liberal Eubulus and Piiilostorgus, who confer upon parental treatment and agree to send their sons to college. There Philo- mathes alone plucks the fruits of learning, while Aerates gives himself up to gambling and becomes involved with money- lenders, and Acolastus compromises an honest girl Daleathisa, whom he is honourable enough to marry, a match to which his now angered parent is forced to yield a reluctant consent.^ The misogynist tone is marked throughout.' The discussion of parental methods which we saw first in Acolastus is ultimately traceable, of course, to the treatment of the same theme in the Bacchides, Mercator, or Trinummus of Plautus, or the Adelphi or Heautontiviorumenos of Terence. The close connexion of Misogonus with the type of drama we Misogonus have been discussing will be at once apparent. The theme is *" "'", '^l treated, indeed, with a vigour, freedom, and variety not found Educatioif elsewhere ; notably in the open and brutal insolence of Miso- *'''""' gonus to his father and his father's friend, which far exceeds anything in Roman or cinquecento, comedy, or in the plays of the schoolmasters; and also in the dramatic surprise of the discovery of the elder brother's existence, the change which makes him, and not the prodigal, the traveller, and the con- 1 Herford, Literary Relations, p. 158, note 3. 2 Possibly the insistence on her respectabiHty, and Acolastus' resolve to marry her, suggest CEnophilus' bold assertion of Melissa's good birth (11. V. 21-2) and all the talk of marriage between her and Misogonus. ' Eubulus in 1. iii commences his lecture to the young men with ' Primum igitur cum nullum uiuat animal pe^ilentius | Quam mulier, cauete ' &c. ; and even Acolastus, when involved in difficulties by Daleathisa's condition, reflects (v. i.) 'Recte dictum est, damnosas esse foeminas Bonas malasque. Nam quantumuis castitas Laudetur Penelopes, tamen procis Aiit Exitii caussa, quos Vlysses sustulit.' cii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN sequent deletion of his morose jealousy. Moreover its connexion with education does not lie in any attempt to reproduce school or college life, but in the general moral, as expressed in passages where Philogonus laments his past indulgence, e.g. i. i. 61-96 (Misogonus' childhood), 11. ii. 73-6 (a verse in the song repu- diating school and study), 11. iii. 57-64 'Education is the best thinge that can be'. Sec, 69-72 ' He that spareth the rode', &c., II. V. 93-100 'AH yow that loue your children take example by me', &c., 127-36, 157-66; while Misogonus' apostrophe to other youths to be wiser than himself (iv. iv. 33-40) is closely in the spirit of the speeches made at the gallows-foot by the repentant boys of Rebelks (v. v) and Peiriscus (v. vii). These passages form the most obvious point of connexion ; but there are many others. Such are the Grsecized names, of a typical significance— a link also with the Moralities ; the early death of the mother lamented by Philogonus (i. i. 57-60, iii. i. 91) as by Eumenius in Asoius iv. iv (she is absent also in Acolastus), and by Damon in Supposes in. iii. 41 sqq. ; the presence of Eubulus as counsellor to the father, as in Acolastus — he has no adviser in Asoius ; the disorderly scene of drinking, dicing, and dancing with Melissa (11. iv), recalling the tavern-scenes of the Education- plays, wA Asoius rather ^vtiAcolasius, inasmuch as these excesses are committed at home ; the interruption of the revel by Philo- gonus (11. v) as by Eumenius in Asoius (and compare the bringing out of a seat for him in in. vii, with Philogonus in iv. i. 46-7) ; the faithful Liturgus who warns the father (i. i. 173-6), like Tribonius in Asoius, and who bears the same name as his proto- type in Peiriscus ; the deceitful servant Cacurgus, abettor of the son's evil courses while pretending to be on the father's side, and his final discomfiture, recalling Comasta in Asoius; the other servants, CEnophilus and Orgelus, who reproduce rather faintly the parasite and braggart of Latin comedy and are represented by Colax, Pamphagus, and Pantolabus in Asoius and Acolastus; the honest old tenant Codrus,^ who represents not only the ^ The early Athenian king is a recognized type of probity and poverty — cf. Juvenal iii. 208— and is so used by Lyiy in EupJmes ii. 76." 34 ; but INTRODUCTORY ESSAY ciii faithful farm-bailiff of Latin comedy (e. g. Grumio in Mostdlaria I. i) or Cometa in Asotus iii. i, whose unanswered knock and maltreatment by Comasta are reflected in Codrus and Cacurgus in HI. i of our play, but by his poverty, rusticity, and ill-luck in farming (the lost calf, the lost sow, the pigs ' out to mast ', &c.) recalls Chremes to whom Acolastus as Prodigal becomes swine- herd ; while the shrewish wife of Macropedius is found again in Alison, and the Milesian ' peregrinus ', who brings news of the famine in Asotus, suggests the ' Crito peregrinus ' who accom- panies Eugonus home from ApoUonia. It will be seen that though Eupelas' friendship and supper with the father is antici- pated by Eubulus of the Acolastus, yet our play, as a whole, presents many more points in common with the Asotus, which also has an elder brother, in iii. 9 at least not quite unlike Eugonus, while Acolastus introduces no brother at all. The imitative connexion of the Education-drama with Latin Misogomis comedy, in the relations of fathers and sons, the contrasts <^^"colmd'"' character in young men, the conflict of educational ideals, and the opposition of good and bad servants, has been already referred to ; and, Terence and Plautus being open to all, their influence in the case of English work like Misogonus need not operate solely through neo-Latin plays. The idea of the severance of a child (usually a girl) from its home shortly after birth, its growth to womanhood and ultimate reunion with its parents, forms a common basis of New Comedy and Latin work; the reliance of Misogonus on Cacurgus' ingenuity to find a way of escape in iii. ii. 57-72, is as reminiscent as is the opposition between Cacurgus and good servants like Liturgus or Codrus ; the gross flattery of Misogonus by his creatures, and their stimula- tion of his lower nature, recalls the relation of parasite to braggart it may be worth noting that Herford, Lit Relations, p. 78, mentions a MS. play Codrus by an anonymous humanist, which makes fun of an unsuccessful schoolmaster, and that the name is given in Rebelles i. iv to the underling who enrolls the boys among Aristippus' scholars. I am not aware of an earlier instance of the name Cacurgus, though there probably is one. Those cited by Spengler, pp. 85, 89, are from the far later prodigal-plays by Martin Bohme, 1608, and Nikolaus Locke, 1619. civ EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN in the Miles ; the set speech of Eugonus on reaching home after his voyage, 'O high Jehovah/ &c. (iv. i. 67-70) is imitated from the customary thanks to Neptune, genuine in Charmides {Trmummus IV. i), ironical in Theuropides {Moslell. 11. ii. 1-7), become flat abuse in Labrax {Rudens 11. vi. 1-6) ; Isbell and Madge exhibit (iv. i. 3 1 sqq.) the familiar eagerness to be first with good news ; and even Codrus bidding Alison fetch his goose-spit (iv. ii. 17) may be reminiscent of the Latin cooks who bring such utensils on the stage. ( Schiicking urges with much point a special resem- blance of our play to the Heauiontimorummos in the fact that Clitopho, son of Chremes, who is there enslaved by the extrava- gant meretrix Bacchis, is brought to reason by the rediscovery of his sister Antiphila, exposed in infancy, on whom Chremes now settles all his property ' : we might, I think, even trace a reminiscence of Chremes' chagrin when his superior wisdom is found at fault, in Eupelas' discomfiture by Misogonus after his confident language (i. i. 153 sqq.) about what he would do in Philogonus' place, j Previous The hope expressed in Palsgrave's preface, that his translation Prodigal of Acolastus might stimulate English ' clerkes ' to similar pro- Plays duction, was not unfulfilled ; though of the ten comedies and tragedies of the Hitchin schoolmaster Ralph RadclifF, between 1540-52, the titles, as preserved by Bale,^ suggest no likeness to our type, and of Udall's 'plures comoediae' only Roister Doister (? 1552) survives. But a recent discovery of Dr. F. Jenkinson shows that the Prodigal theme had been treated dramatically in England some ten years before Palsgrave's translation. In the first volume of the Malone Society's Collec- tions (issued Feb., 1908) appeared a fragment of a black-letter Interlude recovered by him from a printed folio leaf that had been used in the binding of a book printed at Paris in 1542. This leaf, in the judgement of Dr. W. W. Greg, General Editor for the Society, was printed by John or by William Rastell, ' Die stoffliche Beet'efiuitgen der Englischen Komodie . . . von L. L. Schiicking, Halle a. S., 1901, p. ir. 2 Cenhirim, ed. 1557-9, viii. 98. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cv therefore between 1516 and 1534. The fragment, of 84 11., is long enough to indicate much the same lines of construction as are followed in the later Disobedient Child. A son who has resisted his father's wish to make him ' a clarke ', and has made for himself instead an imprudent marriage, is beaten by his wife and compelled by her to go round selling faggots, while she amuses herself with other admirers, including a Sir John Rose {? a priest) for whom she sews a handkerchief. A characterisfic feature is the colloquy in which the humbled prodigal hears home-truths from one of his own servants, who does not recognize him. The just-mentioned Disobedient Child of Thomas Ingelend is perhaps the earliest English specimen of the type that survives complete.^ It was printed in black-letter by Thomas Colwell (without date, 'about 1560,' according to Halliwell), and its reference to ' serving the king ' seems to put back its composi- tion at least to the time of Edward VI. Its prologue announces a definite moral purpose, that of showing the misery attending the neglect of study during youth for dreams of marriage or wantonness. Allegorical figures are wanting ; but ' Satan the Devil' appears, to exult over the misery he causes, and the characters figure under merely class-names, 'The Rich Man,' 'The Rich Man's Son,' 'The Young Woman,' 'The Man Cook,' ' The Woman Cook,' &c. — the last two, however, are called ' Long Tongue ' and ' Blanche ' in the dialogue. The action shows a son, reared in indulgence, declining to adopt a profession and determined to marry and leave his father's house. The marriage takes place at St. Alban's ; but after no long experience of matrimonial joys, his wife gives him to understand that he must work for their support, and enforces her opinion by beating. He is made to carry wood, fetch water, ' It should be noted that Professor M. W. Wallace, in the excellent essay on the influence of Plaulus on our sixteenth-century drama prefixed to his edition of The Birthe of Hercules (Chicago, 1903), deals in ch. v with 'The Influence from Germany ', and sketches under prodigal-dramas this, and The Nice Watiton, Jacob mid Esau, Misogonus and The Glasse of Goiiernement. cvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN ■ wash clothes; and is rated soundly the while. He can only weep and lament ; and seizes the opportunity of her absence on a visit to some friends to return to his father in London, whose grief at the match appears to have been mainly prompted by the fear that the couple will quarter themselves upon himself, and who now coldly sends him back to dree his weird with his termagant spouse. The Perorator closes a somewhat dull and unimaginative piece with a repetition of the moral about training children early to study and obedience. A special point con- necting it with plays like Rebelles and Peiriscus is the son's report at the outset of the cruelties practised by schoolmasters on their pupils. A connexion with Misogonus may be traced in the headstrong marriage, the father's laments over his past indulgence, his liberality to the messenger whom he regales with venison while declining to pay his son's debts, and further in the introduction of a priest and parish-clerk, though here it is clerk, not priest, who is irregular and unpunctual. The Nice WanioMy daXed 1560 on the title-page, of unknown authorship, but possibly also by Ingelend and of earlier com- position, is equally moral and even tragic in substance. It shows the sad fate attending a brother and sister, Ismael and Dalilah, who, petted by their mother Xantippe, play truant from school, meet with Iniquity, are led by him into gambling and immorality, and finally die, the sister of disease, the brother by hanging : while their irreproachable brother Barnabas, who was always neglected in childhood, is able to dissuade Xantippe from suicide and ensure Dalilah's deathbed repentance. In addition to these should be mentioned the entry on the Stationers' Register for 1565-6 (ed. Arber, i. 300) to 'gyles godett ' of ' the historye of the prodigall chylde ' of which nothing more is known ; and TAe Historie of Jacob and Esau, printed in black letter by Henry Bynneman, 1568, but entered on the Stationers Register, 1557-8 — a play which, while introducing some additional comic characters, simply follows the Bible story, and has no special points of connexion with the Education-drama other than the general opposition between the brothers, and the INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cvii taste for field-sports exhibited by the reckless Esau, which is found also in Asotus and Misogonus. Ulpian Fulwell's piece Like Will to Like, title dated 1568, which Mr. Fleay has endeavoured to connect with our play, pre- sents indeed some parallels of phrase and of minor motive — see below, Introduction (pp. 166-7, Authorship) and the Notes there referred to — but lacks the special marks of Education-drama. The Glasse of Gouernement by George Gascoigne, on the other hand, which was dedicated and published in 1575, is more distinctly in the genre than any of those hitherto mentioned, and is perhaps more likely than any to be related to Dutch work by reason of Gascoigne's own stay in Holland in 1572-3. Yet its story of two Antwerp youths, quick-witted but morally unstable, who are drawn away from study under their tutor Gnomaticus by the allurements of Eccho a parasite and Lamia a courtesan, and who, when sent to Douai University, only make further progress in evil courses which finally bring them, the one to the gallows at Heidelberg, the other to three days' public whipping at Geneva — an end which their virtuous younger brothers are compelled to witness but can do nothing to prevent — this story has no special relation to that of Misogonus. It is interesting in its suggestion of the course of study followed : but its first two Acts are overburdened from a dramatic point of view by the lengthy discourses of Gnomaticus; and in its failure to adjust its matter to the needs of effective dramatic development — the striking end of the brothers is merely hurriedly reported in the last scene — suggests that Gascoigne, however successful as a translator, lacked the power needed for original dramatic con- struction. Its professed aim, indeed, is other than dramatic. If the statement of Christopher Barker, the publisher, is to be relied on, it was ' compiled vpon ' some eight moral ' sentences set doune by mee C. B.' inculcating duty to God, the king, one's country, the ministers of the Gospel, the magistrates, one's parents, elders and self; and there is nothing to show that it was ever performed or intended for performance. Last among English versions of the Prodigal — though it cviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN probably preceded Gascoigne's piece — may be mentioned that performed by the English actors in Germany, and printed in the German translation of their pieces, Englische Covioedien vnd Tragoedien, 1620.^ It presents the usual features : the departure spite of father's and brother's warning ; the rascally Host with wife and seductive daughter, who steals by night the prodigal's purse with all his treasure ; his ejectment half-naked ; his repulse as he begs from door to door during a famine ; his poor employ- ment on the dairy-farm of a citizen ; his bitter repentance, return, and forgiveness. A feature indicating a fairly early date is the introduction, before he obtains work, of two allegorical figures. Despair and Hope ; the first as Satan, offering a naked sword with which the prodigal may kill himself, a temptation combated and defeated by the rival figure, as in Skelton's Magnyfycmce (1515-20), 2284 sqq., and Spenser's Faerie Queene i. ix. 35-54." In rapid survey I have endeavoured to trace the aflBnities of Misogonus with ancient Roman comedy; and also with that Renaissance Education-drama which combined the forms, language, and something of the spirit of Roman comedy with Christian teaching, and especially with the story of the Prodigal. I have made no pretence at exhaustive treatment. The Latin in which the schoolmasters — Macropedius, Gnapheus, Stymmelius, ' The second piece in vol. i ; it is reproduced in Goedeke and Titt- mann's collection, bd. 13 ' Deutsche Dichter des sechzehnten Jahrhun- derts ', SS. 45-73. 2 I collect, from Schmidt, Shakespeare's definite allusions, some of which rather suggest a dramatic version than the parable itself : Com. of Err. IV. iii. 17 'he that goes in the calf's skin that was killed for the Prodigal ', i. e. an officer with a warrant of arrest for debt ; Two Gent. n. iii. 4 (Launce) ' I have received my proportion, like the prodigious son ' ; Merchant 11. vi. 14-19 ' How like a younker and a prodigal | The scarfed bark puts from her native bay | . . . Lean, rent and beggar'd by the strumpet wind ' ; i Hen. IV iv. ii. 37 ' you would think that I had a hundred and fifty tatter'd prodigals, lately come from swine-keeping, from eating draff and husks ' ; 2 Hen. IV 11. i. 157 ' for thy walls a pretty slight drollery, or the story of the Prodigal ' ; Merry Wives iv. v. 8 ' chamber . . . painted about with the story of the Prodigal, fresh and new' ; A. Y. L. I. i. i. 40 'Shall I keep your hogs, and eat husks with them ? What prodigal portion have I spent that I should come to such penury ? ' Wint. Tale iv. ii. 103 (Autolycus) ' he compassed a motion of the Prodigal Son, and married a tinker's wife within a mile where my land and living lies '- INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cix Crocus — wrote, ensured a European diffusion of their work at a time when Latin was still living, the language of correspon- dence, of the Church, of the schools. I h^e said nothing of the Comedia Prodiga of Luis de Miranda, published at Seville 1554, wherein the travel and adventures of master and man assume a picaresque tinge reminding us of, possibly due to, the famous Lazarillo de Torvies, though the earliest known editions of that work only appeared, at Antwerp, Burgos, and Alcala, the same year. And I have said nothing of what I take to be the best of all the Prodigal-plays, // Figliiiol Prodigo of Giovam- maria Cecchi (1569 or 1570) frankly modernized but not scho- lastic, adding much in character or motive — a tender-hearted mother, a miserly banker as father's friend, a faithful friend of the prodigal, a parasite, a rogue, a robbery, some excellent servants and countrymen — keeping the action wholly in Florence without loss of pathos, the humiliation and misery of the prodigal being transferred to the occasion of his return before the actual meeting with his father. Of neither Spanish nor Italian piece do I see any traces in Misogonus, though it is possible that Barjona was one of the numerous Spanish Jews, and that he or his family settled in England, probably Yorkshire, in Mary's reign. Two points remain. The first is the role assumed by Cacurgus as quack doctor Cacurgiis and astrologer in in. iii. Professor Herford, a propos of The^^^ . Glasse of Gouernement, indicated Gascoigne as a kind of meeting- drama to point of the Education-drama and the Faust-cycle with its 'tales ^"^ .'"'''''■ of magicians and witches, of fools and rogues, of Grobians cycle and Owlglasses ... a genuine and characteristic creation of the Teutonic genius '.^ I do not recall any magic or astrological matter in Gascoigne beyond the brief allusion to palmistry in Supposes, though his stay in Holland and almost certain acquain- tance with the work of Dutch schoolmasters makes him a suitable point of transition to a new section of Herford's work. The junction is surely far better seen in this role played by Cacurgus I Literary Relations, &c., 1886, ff. 163-4. ex EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN in Misogonus, a play not published until twelve years after the Literary Relations appeared ; while the astrological cycle itself is better represented by The Buggbears (first printed 1897) than \>y Jack Juggler or other examples of the English Vice. Thus, while Supposes represents Latin Comedy Italianized and receiv- ing further a faint educational tincture, and The Glasse oj Gouernement represents Education-drama pure and simple (i. e. Latin Comedy plus a strong scholastic element. Prodigal- motive, and Christian morality); in The Buggbears we get Latin Comedy with a change of its motive of simple imposture to one of pretended necromancy and astrology, the whole com- bined from direct Latin and Italian sources with a little assistance from German work (Weier and Agrippa) ; while in Misogoms we have all three elements— Latin Comedy, Christian Education- drama, and pretended astrology as well, and the interweaving of the three appears an additional reason for assigning a later date than 1560 for the present form of the play. I have already dealt with the astrological superstition so widely prevalent in Italy. Agrippa and Nostradamus, with whom we are concerned in Buggbears, and who may also perhaps be appealed to here, were rather French than German, whatever they owed to Trithemius, Faustus, or Paracelsus. Agrippa's De Vanitate Scientiarum was Englished by James Sanford in 1569: 'An almanack and pronostication of master Mygchell Nostradamus ' is entered on the Stationers' Register to Henry Denham in 1565-6. Even before those dates both must have been well known by repute to Englishmen ; nor can England herself have lacked her travelling-quacks to feign the skill these really pos- sessed. If, however, Barjona was the author of Misogonus, and if the possible German or Dutch connexion hinted at below' was a fact, then it would seem more natural to trace Cacurgus' r61e as quack to the tradition of the travelling Dr. John Faustus of some thirty years before. But it may be worth adding that the combination of astrological quackery with a story of a son's estrangement is made in Cecchi's L' Ammalata acted in Florence 1 Introduction, p. 169, note i. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cxi December, 1555, and at the Carnival of 1556/ though never printed, so far as we know, before Tortoli's edition of 1855. Cecchi was the most conspicuous and popular representative of the comnudia erudita during the period 1560-80; and there is at least a possibility that the repertoire of ' the Italyan players that ffollowed ihe progresse and made pastyme fyrst at AVynsor and afterwardes at Reading' in the summer of 1574,'' contained examples of the hterary comedy as well as of the covimedia ddt arte — pastoral is clearly suggested, and there is an entry ' for hier of iij devells cotes and heades '. I could point to a distinct relation, whether direct or indirect, between L' Ammalata and Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors, and to some other pos- sible connexion between Shakespeare and Cecchi's work ; The Two Italian Gentlemen entered on the Stationers Register, November 12, 1584 (an adaptation from // Fedele of Luigi Pasqualigo) ' also contains an element of witchcraft ; and some quack astrology is again combined with a son's estrangement in Grazzini's La Strega, written before 1566, though he enjoyed nothing like Cecchi's popularity, and the piece was not printed before 1582. It is hardly necessary to seek example for JMadge's stutter or for peasants' dialect: but Hance in Like Will to Like (1568) furnishes a drunken stammer, and the lingo of his earlier namesake in Welth and Helth (pr. 1557) has recently exercised the Malone Society. The violent extraction of an old woman's tooth is the subject of one of Scoggins Jests, a book entered to Thomas Colwell in the year 1565-6;* and the same motive figures, as Schficking points out,' in the university play Sapientia Salomonis V. ii (acted in 1565-6),° and nearly thirty years later in Lyly's Hildas m. ii. * See Prologue to // Seraigiale. " Documents relating to tlie Office of the Revels, ed. by Professor A. FeuiUerat, 1908, pp. 225, 227-8 {Materialien, Band xxi). ' See above, p. xxx note. * The ed. of 1626, the earliest surviving, is reprinted in W. C. Hazlitt's Old English Jest Books, ii. 86. ^ Die stoffliche Beeiehungen, Sic, p. 12, note 2. ^ Cf. Churchill and Keller's art. in Shakespeare- Jahrbuch, xxxiv. 228. cxii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN The ribald These features, as indeed the whole matter of the rustic dialogue in Muogonus, are not Italian but quite definitely English : and the same may be said of our second outstanding point, the vigorous portraiture, namely, of the rakehell priest, Sir John. There is sufficient suggestion for him in preceding English work; though his ultimate original may be German, and the tavern-scenes may owe something to German jest-books as well as to Prodigal-plays. In the Prodigal-fragment of c, 153b we caught a glimpse of an amiable Sir John Rose, for whom handkerchiefs are considerately hemmed by a wife who has quite other treatment for her husband. The position is repeated in Heywood's Johan Johan, printed by William Rastell with a colophon dated 12 February, 1533-4, wherein the husband expresses with frankness his opinion of Syr Johan, the priest, as ' a haunter of the stewes, An ypocrite, a knave, that all men refuse, A Iyer, a wretche, a maker of stryfe '} Still more noticeable is the fascinating cleric of the same name in a ballad of probably much earlier date in Shropshire dialect. The Tale of the Basyn, reprinted by Mr. W. C. Hazlitt,^ who holds it perhaps the earliest surviving specimen of 'bur- lesques on the monkish stories of enchantment '. The priest is thus described by the husband ' Hit is a preest, men callis sir John, Sich a felow know I non ; Off felawes he berys the bell. Hym gode and curtesse I fynde euer moo ; He harpys and gytryns and syngs well ther-too He wrestels and lepis, and casts the ston also.' On the occasion of a nocturnal visit to the wife, his hands, by means of a charm imposed by another priest, the husband's brother, are glued to a certain vessel ; as are likewise those of 1 Edition by Mr. A. W. Pollard in Representative English Comedies, 1903, p. 72. 2 Early Popular Poetry, iii. 42-53 (Library, of Old Authors, 1866). INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cxiii the wife, and of all who attempt to liberate him. Day dawns, and the priest is detained beyond the hour for matins. 'Thar thei daunsyd all the nyjt, till the son con ryse ; The clerk rang the day-bell, as hit was his gise ; He knew his maisters councell and his tre . . ise ; He thojt he was long to sey his seruyse, His matyns be the morow. Softly and stille thider he jede ' — He calls his master, but himself becomes attached to the fatal basin. ' The godeman and the parson came in that stounde ; Alle that fayre feliship dawnsyng thei founde. The gode man seid to sir John : be cocks swete wounde, Thu shalle lese thine harnesse or a c pounde Truly thu shalle not chese.' The priest offers money rather than be unfrocked, and the charm is loosed; but he has to quit the country. Here we have a pretty close original for the Sir John and his clerk, and the interrupted revel, of Misogonus. Hazlitt gives no date for the ballad, but thinks the story is remembered by the twenty- fourth oi A C Mery Talys, the only extant edition of which is of 1526. Other collections such as Skelton's Merie Tales and The ^ Merry Parson of Kalenborowe give the same picture of a disorderly "^ " and ready-tongued priest, who scandalizes his parishioners, but whose humour and resource enable him to evade the conse- quences of their complaints to the bishop. The only known edition of the former, printed by Thomas Colwell without date, is probably identical with that entered to him on the Stationers Register in 1566-7 : but as Skelton died in 1529 and is known to have been at Diss in Norfolk as early as 1504,' it seems unlikely there was none earlier. The Parson of Kalenborowe is considered by Professor Herford to have appeared about the end of Henry VIII's reign,' and to be an English development ' H. Morley, English Writers, vii. 180. ' Lit. Relations, p. 275. The only known copy is the slightly mutilated one in the Douce collection in the Bodleian (Douce, K. 94). It is in £32 h cxiv EARLV PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN of the German Volksbuch, Der Pfarrer von Kalenherg, of which the first distinct evidence is found early in the sixteenth century.' Neither Skelton nor the Kalenberger afford any closer suggestion for Mtsogonus than we have just cited from the ballad ; but to German collections like the latter, and still more Euknspiegel, the English collections such as the Tales of Skelton, A C Mery Talys, Scoggins Jests, The Sack-Full of Newes, were clearly indebted. The original Euknspiegel was Low Saxon, though the earliest surviving form is High German and pub- lished at Strasburg, 15 15. From an Antwerp edition of about 1520-30 was made the English translation, Howleglas, printed by William Copland probably between 1548-60.^ In tale 35 Howleglas discomfits a hostess who requires him to discharge his score with his best coat, by handing over the skin of her favourite dog which he has previously killed : the reader will recall the snatching of CEnophilus' coat by the hostess in Misogonus 11. i. 25-52.' black letter of a large character, and contains 23 fols. irregularly signed ; only 2-3 fols. seem missing. It has thirteen woodcuts. ^ It is said to have been compiled early in the fifteenth, and its historic original, Weigand von Theben, to have lived in the first half of the fourteenth ; but he had a predecessor, PfafT Amis, a century earlier, and a successor in Peter Leu a century later. See Herford, Literary Relations, 272-82. The Kalenberg is a chain of hills terminating in a wooded crest which overhangs the Danute some five or six miles NW. of Vienna. The name Kalenbergersdorf still marks « village at the foot. One of the tales in the English Parson is of his undertaking to ' fle (fly) ouer the riuer of Tonowa ' (Donau). ^ Herford, Literary Relations, 285. It was edited in 1867 by Frederic Ouvry. The British Museum contains, besides two editions of the trans- lation printed by Copland, fragments of an earlier one, described in the Catalogue as printed by ' J. Doesborke : Antwerp, 1510 ? '. * I collect here, as already done for the other plays, the proverbs or phrases I have noticed, omitting some of the most common : i. i. 79 ' the like bredes the like (eche man sayd) ' ; 109 ' He goeth farr that never tournes agayne as folke say ' ; 185 ' Children & fooles they say can not ly ' ; ii. 17 ' waltum and waltumes calfe' ; iii. 21 ' woulde haue bene thy preist' ; 26 ' as full of knaverie as an egge is full of meate ' ; 61 ' ride byard ' ; 99 ' fare well froste ' ; iv. 9 ' yow are none of y" hastlinges ' ; 10 ' He do no more till next tyme ' ; 13 ' lett all go a whales ' ; v. 8, ' the bickeringes a bredinge ' ; 11. i. 10 ' pay him oth peticole ' ; 12 ' giue him his olde fippens ' ; 59 ' borde you throughe nose ' ; ii. 3 ' haue a knave betwext you ' ; 14 ' as good as ere twangde ' ; 50 ' He nether singe nor say ' ; 59-60 ' to low for the crowe ... to hye for the pye ' INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cxv It is to these jest-books, indeed, German and English, that we must trace much of the rough horse-play, the poorly-treated motives from town- or country-life, the ' humour of filth ', which hungrily furnish forth the comic banquet in so many of our early plays, forming the staple of matter between the Vice and the lower-class characters, and filling the modern with a sense of woe and desolation only equalled by the torture his ear suffers from the metrical jumble of the doggerel. Were this comic stuff of anything like the quality attained in Misogonus our feeling would be very different. Yet was it, we wonder, very much worse than the matter vented in Italy by the actors of the commedia dell' arte ? Their crudities have escaped ; they were never written down. Even of their scenarii the earliest preserved is of 1568,' sixty years after £a Cassaria had charmed Ferrara and (of music) ; iii. 10 'the wise men of gotum ' ; 11 'Peter poppum'; 37 ' not yet sowne all his vsfilde otes ' ; 40 ' in space cometh grace ' ; 52 ' came . . . fromth cart ' (of. 11. v. 54) ; 55 ' past whoo ' ( = out of hear- ing) ; 65 ' A curste cowe hath shorte horns ' ; 66 'be good in your office ' (again iv. I. 94) ; 69 ' he that spareth the rode hates the childe ' ; iv. 76 ' as good as brown bessye' ; 79 ' will ye haue a nutmugge to grate ' ; 96 ' as round as a purr' ; 102 'thinke ereye rainnit seven yeare' ; 194 ' lubunn lawe ' ; 195 ' hab or nabes ' ; 196 ' the devill & his dame go w"' all ' ; 206 ' has the Marchant a shillinge so sone to nine pence brought ' ; 215 ' kepe thy farme ' ; 223 ' a man or a mouse ' ; 277 ' closse q''. curyer' ; 288 ' a close carver . . . a right cocke oth kinde' ; v. 9 'meddle w"" your old showes' ; 23 ' come yow in w"" your seven egges ' ; 24 ' houlde your pease when year well frende ' ; 73 ' Thers no raischeife as they say comonly but a preist at one end ' ; 82 ' as sure as a clubb Naue ' (cf. ili. ii. 52 ' as sure as a clubb') ; iii. i. 20 ' two fooles toth tyth ' ; 24 ' eat a bottell of hay ' ; 65 'toumde vp his heiles' ; 69 'showe the gouse' (= shoe the goose, waste labour) ; 73 'an I were in your coat' ; 132 'if the fair be no[t past] ' ; 194 ' takh tale out of my mouth ' ; 196 ' are yow nowe in your Crileson ' ; 197 'as thou bakst so shat brewe' ; 212 ' kepe in his fooles boulte ' ; 253 ' tale of Jacke a male ' ; ii. 23 ' a cowlinge carde ' ; 24 'plucke in your homes'; 50 'but a tale of a tubb' ; iv. i. 158 'as vp- right a fellowe as ere trod on nates lether' ; ii. 31 'fly vp toth roust w"" Jacksons hens'. ' So Schiicking, Die stoffliche Beziehungen, p. 14, I am not sure on what authority. Creizenach, ii. 357, places the earliest clearly ascer- tained performance of an improvised play at Munich in that year (1568) by Orlando di Lasso and other Italians. The origin of the kind in Italy is indefinitely put about the middle of the century, some of its character- istics, such as the use of dialects and the recurrence of the same figure played by the same actor in different pieces, being already traceable in the somewhat earlier written comedies of Ruzzante and Calmo .Gaspary, II, Pt. II, c. XXX, pp. 288-9). The earliest scmaii known to have been h 2 cxvi EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN inaugurated the polished and prolific commedia erudita. Our poor English essays in humour remain, to elicit from courteous foreign critics euphemisms about their 'strongly-nationalized tone,' to fill Englishmen with shame at their barbarous brutality and witless jesting, and to strike both dumb with amazement as, within the brief space of thirty or forty years, they watch rise like an exhalation from this middenstead of filth, this chaos of clumsiness, the work, first of a spruce courtier, next of a ' mighty- mouthed inventor of harmonies ', last of a large-browed con- siderate angel 'looking before and after', who assimilated both ere passing on to assimilate and reproduce mankind. Our estimate of the effect of these three plays on English drama must suffer serious discount by the fact that, so far as we know, only one of them, Supposes, was ever printed. But regarded as a result, they offer, where so much is lost, valuable evidence of advance. They give, at least, a capital representa- tion of Italian burgher-life, and of rustic English life fuller and closer than is to be gathered from preceding work like Jack Juggler, Gammer Gurton's Needle, or Ralph Roister Doisier. They introduce, or enlarge English conception of, certain Latin and Italian types of character. To Supposes, apparently, we owe the learned doctor and elderly suitor: to Buggbears the pantaloon of Gremio's fashion. If braggart and parasite had already been ushered in by Udall, the parasite of Supposes is at prinled are those of the famous actor Flaminio Scala, who travelled in France with the company known as / Gelosi in 1577 and -8. A copy is in the British Museum, entitled II Teatro delle Fauole rappresentatiue . . . Vcnetia, 1611, 4°, containing fifty plays, with argument to each, lists of dramatis persons, dress and properties, and full details for the conduct of action and dialogue in each of the three Acts (the invariable number), but without the actual words ; though Francesco Andreini, one of the Gelosi, in a commendatory address says Scala could have given the pieces in more extended form ' e scriuerle da verbo a verbo come s'vsa di fare'. They are indebted at innumerable points to the commedia erudita. Bartoli mentions as the next collection that of Basilio Locatelli, about the middle of the seventeenth century. His own collection is printed from a MS. of the eighteenth century, though some of its twenty-two pieces go back to the seventeenth. See his valuable Introduction in Scenari inediti delta Commedia dell' Arte . . . di Adolfo Bartoli , . . Ftrenze, 1880. INTRODUCTORY ESSAY cxvii least jtno re faithful t g. the -type. In Cleander and Amedeus we have our first individualized misers ; in Philogano, Damon and Philogonus our first full studies of indulgent fathers: to the Sienese, to Trappola, to Cacurgus, we owe the impostor or the quack : Cacurgus, the first of our domestic Fools, is further interesting as exhibiting the actual treatment of the ' natural ', and helping us to understand the privileged footing made over to his professional successor: and not only Tranio and Biondello of the Shrew but later servants. Launcelot Gobbo, Malvolio, Oswald, Flavius, Pisanio, may possibly owe something to con- trasts of good and bad in these plays. But far the most important point is the exemplar, or at least the evidence, they afford in the matter of dramatic technique, of construction and carpentry. The gulf in this respect between them and surviving con- temporary or earlier work, other than Roister Doister, is immense. They give, or illustrate, in comedy that lesson in form which was given in tragedy by Gorioduc, Jocasta, and Gtsmond of Salem ; and they give it in a sphere more realistic, nearer to common life, and therefore more threatened with disruption by invading farce. Their constructive merits are not, indeed, equal. Where Gascoigne merely translates, Jeffere (if Buggbears be his) weaves and combines, and Barjona (or Rychardes) invents. Yet Gascoigne and Jeffere bring within our ken weaving and con- struction by masters far more skilled and polished than Barjona. The smooth, progressive, conduct ; the due care for the order to be followed and machinery used; the natural transitions, the unforced yet interesting development, the little points by which dramatic action is knit up ; and the exhibition of character and humour without ' setting the teeth to the leather to pull it out ' ; the whole art by which the spectator's interest is aroused and kept alert — this is what is here transplanted, in the work of Ariosto and Grazzini, from Italy to England. And if these detailed constructive merits are less apparent in the author of Misogonus ; if his sentiment, too, is often conventional and his dialogue sometimes dull ; yet his plot (an interesting departure from the usual Prodigal lines) evolves with smooth naturalness, cxviii EARLY PLAYS FROM THE ITALIAN and his conduct of certain scenes (like iv. iv and v), and especially his portrayal of rustic life and character in the third and fourth Acts, exhibit, for those who will take the trouble to look past the difficulties of his text, a power of imaginative comic creation surely unequalled in any surviving English work preceding Shakespeare's. The inequality of the play seems to argue either patchwork or want of practice. If Misogonus be indeed one man's work and the creation of one date, we may safely credit the Prologue's modest disclaimer, and regard it as a first essay by one of high, but undeveloped, dramatic powers, which un- fortunately found no further exercise. ERRATA ; 5, 1. 13. For p. 73 read p. 72 Page II, footnote on 1. 21. For i read Z» Page 157 (middle of page). For (sith*> read (Sith)* Page 171, 1. 15. For pp. 68-70 readp'p. Ixxxii-iii SUPPOSES BY GEORGE GASCOIGNE. SUPPOSES Argument. — The following details are common in every respect to Gascoigne, and both forms of Ariosto's play: A young Sicilian, Erostrato, coming to Ferrara to study, falls in love on his arrival with Polinesta, daughter of the merchant Damon. To gratify his passion he changes name and position with his servant Dulipo, enters Damon's household in a humble capacity, and by aid of her Nurse wins his mistress, to whom he declares his real identity. Two years later her unsuspecting father purposes to bestow her on a wealthy old doctor of laws, Oleander ; and Erostrato instructs his servant, who is supporting his role of student, to appear as rival, and match the doctor's offered dowry of two thousand ducats. Finding Damon incredulous, the sup- posed student induces a travelling Sienese to personate the absent father, Philogano of Catanea, and confirm what he has promised. But hardly is this pretended father installed in his house, than the real Philogano appears on the scene. Alarmed by reports of his son's strange seclusion of himself from his travelling fellow- countrymen, he has come from Sicily to investigate. At the feigned Erostrato's house he is confronted by the Sienese, who stoutly maintains himself to be Philogano from Sicily, and by the servant Dulipo, who blandly denies all knowledge of his foster- father, and for confirmation of his claim to be Erostrato appeals to the Innkeeper with whom Philogano is lodging. Driven desperate and fearing foul play, the Sicilian seeks legal remedy through the advocate Cleander. Their conference reveals the fact that the clever Dulipo is in reality Oleander's son, lost eighteen^ years before at the capture of Otranto by the Turks, recaptured imme- diately by a Sicilian vessel, and bought as a child of five by Philogano. Meantime Damon, by overhearing a dispute between the Nurse and a fellow-servant (Psiteria), has come to know of his daughter's intrigue with the supposed Dulipo, whom he straitly confines. News thereof is brought to the feigned Erostrato ' In the prose form Ariosto, having said ' in spazio di venti anni ' in r. ii, changed it to ' diciotto ' in v. v, as does Gascoigne : in the verse Aiiosto reads ' venti ' in both places. H 2 4 SUPPOSES by the parasite Pasiphilo, who has himself overheard the colloquy between Damon and i'siteria ; and the knowledge of his young master's danger determines the servant to confess all. His confes- sion confirms Oleander's discovery, and relieves Philogano's anxiety: Damon, already informed by Polinesta of her lover's real rank, is now further consoled by the offer of marriage with a handsome settlement ; and Oleander, having recovered his son, desists from his suit. r~ Incidental comic matter is found in the appetite of Pasiphilo — 'he enjoys the confidence and sparing table of Oleander, to whom he is slandered by Erostrato, but feeds also on Damon and the liberal student ; in Dalio the cook and Orapino the boy, Ferrarese servants of the latter ; in the gullible Sienese ; in the foolish-wise I caution of Philogano's servant, Litio ; and in reflections on lawyers [and custom-house officials. Text. — There are three old quarto editions of Gascoigne's works, indicated in the foot-notes by the letters here affixed : — A. A hundreth sundrie Flowres bounde vp in one small Poesie. . . . At London, Imprinted for Richarde Smith [a colophon p. 164 adds 'by Henrie Bynneman']. (n. d. [1572-3] Blackletter 40.) Svpposes is the first work given, occupying the fourth leaf (unsigned) and the immediately ensuing Biij-Kj (pp. 1-70). B. The Posies of George Gascoigne Esquire. Corrected, perfected, and augmented by the Authour. IJJJ. Tarn Marti quavi Mer curio : Printed at London for Richard Smith, and are to be solde at the Northweast doore of Paules Church. (Bl. lett. 4°.) The matter is redistributed into 'Flowers' pp. i-clx, 'Hearbes' pp. 1-173, including (pp. 1-68) Svpposes, the title-page and prologue occupying a preceding leaf, and 'Weedes' pp. 175-290. The short treatise on metre, ' Certayne notes,' etc. (5 flf.), is added. 0. The Whole [some copies The pleasauntesi] woorkes of George Gascoigne Esquyre : Newly e compyled into one Volume, . . . London Imprinted by A bell leffes, dwelling in the Fore Streete, tvithout Creeple- gate, neere vnto Grub-streete. i^Sj. (Bl. lett. 4".) The place of Svpposes is exactly as in B. 'The princelie pleasures' (pub. 1576) are added before ' Certaine notes ' : ' The Steele glasse ' and ' The Oomplaint of Phylomene' (pub. together 1576), though announced in the title, appear only in some copies, with irregular pagination : 'The Glasse of Gouernement' (pub. 1575), 'The Droome of Doomes Day' (pub. 1576), and the other works mentioned below (pp. 8-9), are not included. Of these B furnishes the best text of our play, and the last seen by the author, who died Oct. 7, 1577. It exhibits the following INTRODUCTION 5 improvements on its predecessor, which certainly seem to indicate the author's hand — the addition of the date of performance, of twenty-seven marginal comments, and of three more stage-direc- tions with enlargement of two others, the insertion in the dialogue of two words (' Nourse ' i. i. 38, and ' I ' iii. iii. 33) and the important correction of seven others ('affects' p. 22, 'pack' p. 23, 'paused' p. 29, 'consort' p. 41, 'lyen' p. 44, 'you' p. 46, 'if p. 52), and about twenty other slight changes for the better with two or three indifferent ; against which must be set about a score of deteriorations, mbstly misspellings, the only important ones being 'villainy' p. 35, 'Aneona' p. 47, 'maister' p. 50, 'bide' p. 53, ' me ' p. 58, ' awayes ' p. 59, ' sorowe ' p. 60, ' Philogano ' pp. 68, 7 1, and 'inuention' p. 73. C follows B, without any certain collation of A, and exhibits a much larger number of small changes, nearly all bad or otiose. Among the former are ' mouth ' for ' mount 'p. 17,' man ' for 'men' p. 30, 'it' for 'in' p. 30, 'cull' for 'cut' p. 41, 'feer' for 'for' p. 52, 'hath' for 'had' p. 66, 'me' and 'his' omitted pp. 68, 72 : among the latter four transpositions and about a dozen trifling changes of words without change of sense, though it is of course conceivable that these were made from some copy of B marked by Gascoigne. The only counterbalancing merit to C's defects is an attention to the punctuation, which leads to the occasional insertion of a desirable comma, as at prae, p. 63. D. Hawkins' text of the play in The Origin of the English Drama, Oxf. 1773 (vol. iii. pp. i-86) is taken from C, and reproduces nearly all its errors. In ten cases he improves the punctuation, and inserts a needed prefix p. 42, as also the first in each scene, omitted in the old editions. But he omits 'very weir p. 15, a whole line p. 38, 'at' p. 61; and makes ten bad or needless changes, e. g. 'Silicia' p. 35, 'mark' p. 54, 'my' p. 59, 'better' p. 61, 'me.?' p. 65. D is followed in Anc. Brit. Drama, vol. i. H. Hazlitt's text in The Complete Poems of George Gascoigne . . . in Two Volumes printed for the Roxburghe Library m.dccc.lxix-lxx (vol. i. pp. 199-256) has met with cavil and is not of the most careful ; but it is taken from B, and for Svpposes is an improvement on any preceding edition, inserting six necessary (and two needless) asides, and one 'exit' p. 40, and rightly reverting to A in 'sowre' p. 60, if wrongly in omitting 'of p. 60. He omits 'since' p. 19, reads 'this' for 'thus' p. 61, 'praesequar' for ' prae, sequar ' p. 63, and follows D in ' me ? ' for ' me ' p. 65. ^ My own text is that of B for word, letter, and stop : if B s 6 SUPPOSES reading is relegated to footnotes, the reading of the text is A's, unless otherwise noted. Every footnote implies a collation of all five editions, e. g. ' els, C p. 44 implies that every other edition reads ' else : ' as in text. All B's verbal changes from A are noted, but of punctuation only such as might possibly affect sense. Angular brackets enclose every modern addition to the text, and distinguish new stage-directions (s.d.) or prefixes from Gascoigne's : where not otherwise noted, such additions are my own, being confined to eight asides, eight s.d. for exit and one for entry, and 'litle' p. 42. C, D, and H have all been carefully collated, and every variant of the least importance recorded. Date. — Acted at Gray's Inn, 1566, as the title-page of the second edition (B) first informs us. Mr. Fleay (Biog. Chronicle, i. 242) considers that ' St. Nicolas fast ' i. iii. i (Dec. 26) points to a Christmas performance. Ariosto has merely ' vigilia di Santo N.', and Mr. Fleay may be right, though in any month St. Nicholas would be natural in a play written for students. The date of the first edition, i. e. of the undated A, is to be inferred from quasi-editorial matter therein and from Gascoigne's later statement. The Printer's Address (on A ij), which alludes to locasta and Svpposes, refers also to two letters found immediately after the title (p. 201) of F. I.'s Aduentures. In the first, dated ' From my lodging nere the Strande the xx of January . 1572 ' [-3], ' H. W.' appears as editor of the work, which he asserts to be a collection of ' verses ... by sundrie gentlemen ' made by ' my familiar friend G. T.'. ' G. T.'s ' letter follows, dated ' this tenth of August, 1 5 7 2 ', in which he speaks of ' F. I.' as the chief contributor ; and ' G T.'s ' initials are affixed to various comments scattered among the ensuing poems. Professors Arber and Schelling have shown that ' H. W.' and ' G. T.' are probably a mere fiction of the real author, George Gascoigne, who, before he sailed for Holland, March 19, 1572, had left his work with the Printer, choosing anonymity because he rightly foresaw objection to the contents on grounds of licentiousness or personal satire. In his absence the book was printed and made a success. His sole authorship and responsibility may be inferred from his reprint of nearly all its contents in the somewhat expurgated second edition (B), with an ' Epistle to the reuerend Diuines ' dated ' From my poore house at Waltamstow in the Forest, this last day of lanuarie . 1574.' [-5], in which he says 'It is verie neare two yeares past, since (I beeing in Hollande . . .) the most parte of these Posies were imprinted ' (sig. H ii r.), and admits (sig. H iii) that he ' was not vnwillinge the same shoulde bee imprinted ' . Gascoigne's INTRODUCTION 7 book, then, with Svpposes in it, first appeared in the early months of 1573. and probably with his full sanction. The date of the action of the play is fixed approximately at 1500 by Oleander's statement (i. ii.) that after the capture of Otranto by the Turks (1480) he proceeded to Padua and thence to Ferrara, where 'within twentie yeares' he has made 10,000 ducats. This, and the slightly different statement of v. v. that he lost his son ' eighteen yeares since ', are reproduced by Gascoigne from the prose-form of the Italian, first acted at Ferrara at the carnival of 1509, the earliest dated edition being of Siena, 1523. In the later verse-form, which Gascoigne also used, the eighteen years of the second passage is changed to twenty to harmonize with the earlier statement; but Ariosto left a much more serious inconsistency in the allusion in 11. i. (prose) to presents sent by ' il re Ferrante' (Ferdinand I, 1458-94) supposed still reigning at Naples c. 1500, an allusion rendered even more precise in the verse-form by the added mention of Ferdinand's daughter as the reigning duchess of Ferrara, i. e. Ercole I's Leonora, who died Oct. II, 1493.^ In Gascoigne the presents are sent from the duke to ' the king of Naples ', and the duchess is not referred to. Authorship. — Announced as Gascoigne's on its title-page in all editions, including the anonymous collection of 1573. The chief facts about Gascoigne may be briefly summarized from Mr. Sidney Lee's article in the Dictionary of National Biography (1890), and Professor Schelling's monograph.'' Born_ig32zi0> son of Sir John Gascoigne of Cardington, Bedfordshire, and a descen- dant of Henry IV's Chief Justice of the King's Bench, he seems to have spent some time in Westmorland, to have studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, without taking a degree, and to have been entered at the Middle Temple before 1548. He was disinherited by his father for extravagance, became a student of Gray's Inn in i555> sat as M.P. for Bedford in 1557-8 and 1558-9, travelled in England and France about 1563-4, and thereafter made acquain- tance with Francis Russell, second Earl of Bedford, and Arthur, Lord Grey de Wilton. In 1 566 he produced at Gray's Inn Svpposes, closely adapted from Ariosto's / Suppositi; and also in the same year, in conjunction with Francis Kinwelmersh, a blank-verse tragedy, locasta, which is not a translation of Euripides' PhcenisscB or Seneca's (Edipus, but a close translation from the Italian of * See Mr. E. G. Gardner's Dukes and Poets in Ferrara, pp. 135-7, and A King of Court Poets, p. 326. " Zz/e and Writings of George Gascoigne, by Felix E. Schelling. (Piiblici- lions of the University of Pennsylvania [1894], Ginn & Co.) 8 SUPPOSES Lodovico Dolce's largely independent Giocasta of 1549, with some variation from the Italian in the choral odes. Some time before Oct. 27, 1568, Gascoigne married Elizabeth, widow of a London merchant named William Breton, who brought him some property and a house at Walthamstow ; yet on March 19 (29, new style), 1572 he sailed for Holland to avoid his creditors and also charges of slander, manslaughter, and atheism. He narrowly escaped shipwreck, landed at Breyll, took service with the Prince of Orange, and while making enemies, won the prince's esteem and distin- guished himself at the siege of Middleburg. Later he was sur- prised by, and surrendered to, the Spaniards, who after four months' imprisonment sent him back to England near the end of 1574. During his absence had appeared (1573) the undated anonymous collection of his work as yet produced, and caused considerable scandal. Early in 1575 he issued a revised edition under his own name. In the same year he produced his school-drama, -The Glasse of Gouernement \ and accompanied Elizabeth on her visit to Kenilworth, where Leicester engaged him to write verses and masques, published next year (with some work by others) as The Princely Pleasures at the Courte of Kenelworthe. The tale of Hemetes the heremyte, ' pronownced ' before the Queen at Wood- stock, Sept. II, 1575 seems not to^haye been Gascoigne's; but he made it his own by rendering iF into Latin, Italian, and French, and presenting these versions with the English original to the queen in a fine script embellished with drawings as a New- Year's gift on Jan. i, 1576, preceded by an address praying for employ- -ment.^ Very probably, as Professor Schelling suggests, his intention was to present evidence of his competence for diplomatic employment, though it is uncertain whether any was given him. In April, 1576, he finished his satire The Steele Glas, in May The Dromme of Doomesday, in August (at London) A delicate Diet &c. ; while on the following Jan. i, 1577, he presented the queen with a manuscript collection of moral elegies entitled The Grief e of Joy e (unpublished till Hazlitt's edition), as witness 'how the interims and vacant houres of those daies which I spent this somer in your ' His language in this address is quite opposed to his authorship of the English. ' Loricus,' a knight who figures in the tale, appears again in Sir Henry Lee's entertainment given to Elizabeth at Quarendon, near Aylesbury, in August 1592, which entertainment being found in a volume in the possession of one Henry Ferrers, Nichols {Progresses of Elh. vol. iii) attributed it to George Ferrers, who had composed something at Kenilworth this same year of The tale, 1575. Elsewhere I have thought the Quarendon work might possibly be Lyly's; but though the euphuism of The tale is even more marked I do not claim it for him. INTRODUCTION 9 service haue byn bestowed. Surely, Madame, the leaves of this pamphlet have passed with mee in all my perilles, neither coulde any daies travaile so tyre mee but that the night had some confer- ence with my restles (and yet worthies) Muze'. Spite of some ill-health and much literary production, it seems very possible he had been abroad ; and also that he was the ' George Gaston ' who was with the English merchants in their ' house ' at Antwerp during its sack by the Spaniards, Oct. 1576, the 'George Gas- coigne' who bore letters thence to the Queen on Nov. 21 and received ' xx'.' in payment therefor, and the author of the pamphlet The Spoyle of Aniwerpe 'written the 25th day of November, 1576,' the rapid composition of which while the details were fresh in his mind would sufficiently account for some modification of his wonted manner. In the autumn of 1577 he visited his friend, George Whetstone, at Stamford, and died in his house on Oct. 7, praying his son William (according to Whetstone's ' reporte ') to discharge his debt of service to the Queen, 'beyond desartes who still rewardes bestowes.' SIGLA The text is always that of 1575 (Q"), for word and letter and stop, unless otherwise noted. Every verbal departure from A is noted, as also every change of punctuation that could affect sense. See, further, top of p. 6, above. ^ = Qi 1572-3. B = (i^ IS7S- C = Qs 1587. D = Hawkins, ed. I773> i° ^^^ Origin of Ike English Drama, vol. iii. 11= Hazlitt's text, vol. i. pp. 196 sqq. ' Before ' and ' after ' refer to additions, not substitutions or transpositions. ' Rest ' refers only to editions subsequent to that symbolized by the letter to which it is attached. The spelling given of a variant is not always the same for editions other than the first reported. SVPPOSES : A Comedie written in the Italian tongue by Ario- sto, Englished by George Gas- coygne of Grayes Inne 5 Esquire, and there presented. 1566. The names of the Actors. Balia, the Nurse. 10 PoLYNESTA, the yong woman. Cleander, the Doctor, suter to Polynesia. Pasyphilo, the Parasite. Carion, the Doctors man. DvLYPO, fayned seruant and louer oi Polynesia. 15 Erostrato, fayned master and suter to Polynesia. Dalio & ) ^ , --, ^ \ seruantes to fayned Eroslralo. Lrapyno J ScenjEse, a gentleman stranger. Paquetto & 1 ■• , 20 „ \ his seruantes. Petrucio J Damon, father to Polinesla. Neuola, and two other his seruants. PsYTERiA, an olde hag in his house. Phyldgano, a Scycilian gentleman, father to Erostrato. 25 Lytio, his seruant. Ferrarese, an Inkeeper of Ferrara. The Comedie presented as it were in Ferrara. 4 and bef. Englished A 8 1566 oin. A 21 Petruchio L 24 olda B 28 as it were om. A The Prologue or argument. I Suppose you are assembled here, supposing to reape the fruite of my trauayles : and to be playne, I meane presently to presente you with a Comedie called Supposes: the verye name wherof may peraduenture driue into euery of your heades 5 a sundry Suppose, to suppose the meaning of our supposes. Some percase will Suppose we meane to occupie your eares with sophisticall handling of subtill Suppositions. Some other wil suppose we go about to discipher vnto you some queint conceiptes, which hitherto haue bene onely supposed as it were 10 in shadowes : and some I see smyling as though they supposed we would trouble you with the vaine suppose of some wanton Suppose. But vnderstand, this our Suppose is nothing else but a mystaking or imagination of one thing for an other. For you shall see the master supposed for the seruant, the seruant for the 15 master : the freeman for a slaue, and the bondslaue for a free- man: the stranger for a well knowen friend, and the familiar for a stranger. But what ? I suppose that euen already you suppose me very fonde, that haue so simply disclosed vnto you the subtilties of these our Supposes : where otherwise in deede 20 I suppose you shoulde haue hearde almoste the laste of our Supposes, before you coulde haue supposed anye of them arighte. Let this then suflSse. 6 Suppose, ABH: suppose, CD 6 to suppose ADH : to suppose, BC Supposes. Actus primus. Scena i. Balia, the Nurse. Polynesta, the yong woman. HEre is nobody, come foorth Polynesta, let vs looke about, to be sure least any man heare our talke : for I thinke within the house the tables, the plankes, the beds, the portals, yea and the cupbords them selues haue eares. Pol. You might as well haue sayde, the windowes and the 5 doores : do you not see howe they harken ? Ba. Well you iest faire, but I would aduise you take heede, I haue bidden you a thousande times beware : you will be spied one day talking with Dulippo. Po. And why should I not talke with Dulippo, as well as with lo any other, I pray you ? Ba. I haue giuen you a wherfore for this why many times : but go too, followe your owne aduise till you ouerwhelme vs all with soden mishappe. Po. A great mishappe I promise you: marie Gods blessing 15 on their heart that sette suche a brouche on my cappe. Ba. Well, looke well about you : a man would thinke it were inough for you secretly to reioyce, that by my helpe you haue passed so many pleasant nightes togither : and yet by my trouth I do it more than halfe agaynst my will, for I would rather you 20 had setled your fansie in some noble familie, yea and it is no small griefe vnto me, that (reiecting the suites of so many nobles and gentlemen) you have chosen for your darling a poore seruaunt of your fathers, by whome shame and infamie is the best dower you can looke for to attayne. 25 2 do lie/, heare CD 21 familie, ACDH: familie B 14 SVPPOSES I. i Po. And I pray you whome may I thanke but gentle nourse ? that continually praysing him, what for his personage, his curtesie, and aboue all, the extreme passions of his minde, in fine you would neuer cease till I accepted him, delighted in him, and at length desired him with no lesse affection, than he earstso desired me. Ba. I can not denie, but at the beginning I did recommende him vnto you (as in deede I may say that for my selfe I haue a pitiful heart) seeing the depth of his vnbridled affection, and that continually he neuer ceassed to fiU mine eares with lament- 35 able complaynts. « Po. Nay rather that he filled your pursse with bribes and rewards, Nourse. Ba. Well you may iudge of Nourse as you liste. In deede I haue thought it alwayes a deede of charitie to helpe the 40 miserable yong men, whose tender youth consumeth with the furious flames of loue. But be you sure if I had thought you would haue passed to the termes you nowe stand in, pitie nor pencion, peny nor pater noster shoulde euer haue made Nurse once to open hir mouth in the cause. 45 Po. No of honestie, I pray you, who first brought him into my chamber ? who first taught him the way to my bed but you ? fie Nourse fie, neuer speake of it for shame, you will make me tell a wise tale anone. Ba. And haue I these thanks for my good wil .? why then 50 I see wel I shall be counted the cause of all mishappe. Po. Nay rather the author of my good happe (gentle Nourse) for I would thou knewest I loue not DuNpo, nor any of so meane estate, but haue bestowed my loue more worthily than thou deemest : but I will say no more at this time. 55 Ba. Then I am glad you haue changed your minde yet. Po. Nay I neither haue changed, nor will change it. Ba. Then I vnderstande you not, how sayde you ? Po. Mary I say that I loue not Dulipo, nor any suche as he, and yet I neither haue changed nor wil change my minde. 60 38 'Somse Brest 46 No? D Hshtly: No[w,] // I. i SVPPOSES 15 Ba. I can not tell, you loue to lye wilh Dulipo very well : this geare is Greeke to me : either it hangs not well togither, or I am very dull of vnderstanding : speake plaine I pray you. Po. I can speake no plainer, I haue sworne to ye contrary, Ba. Howe ? make you'so deintie to tell it Nourse, least she 65 shoulde reueale it? you haue trusted me as farre as may be, (I may shewe to you) in things that touche your honor if they were knowne : and make you strange to tell me this ? I am sure it is but a trifle in comparison of those things wherof heretofore you haue made me priuie. 7° Po. Well, it is of greater importance than you thinke Nourse : yet would I tell it you vnder condition and promise that you shall not tell it agayne, nor giue any signe or token to be suspected that you know it. Ba. I promise you of my honestie, say on. 75 Po. Well heare you me then: this yong man whome you haue alwayes taken for Dulipo, is a noble borne Sicilian, his right name Erostrato, sonne to Philogano, one of the worthiest men in that countrey. Ba. How Erostrato ? is it not our neighbour, whiche ? 80 -^ Po. Holde thy talking nourse, and harken to me, that I may Tljg explane the whole case vnto thee. The man whome to this first day you haue supposed to be Dulipo, is (as I say) Erostrato, o"e'& * gentleman that came from Sicilia to studie in this Citie, grownd & euen at his first arriuall met me in the street, fel enamored 85 the'snp- °f '"^i * °f suche vehement force were the passions he OSes.* suflfred, that immediatly he cast aside both long gowne and bookes, & determined on me only to apply his study. And to the end he might the more comodiously bothe see me and talke with me, he exchanged both name, habite, clothes and 9° credite with his seruat Dulipo (whom only he brought with him out of Sicilia) and so with the turning of a hand, of Erostrato a gendeman, he became Dulipo a seruing man, and soone after sought seruice of my father, and obteyned it. 61 very well om. D 80 which—? DH : whiche? ABC "■ The . . . suposes B rest 1 6 SVPPOSES I. i Ba. Are you sure of this ? 95 Po. Yea out of doubt ; on the other side Dulippo tooke vppon him the name of Erosirato his maister, the habite, the credite, bookes, and all things needefuU to a studente, and in shorte space profited very muche, and is novfe esteemed as you see. Ba. Are there no other Sicylians heere : nor none that passe 100 this way, which may discouer them ? Po. Very fewe that passe this way, and fewe or none that tarrie heere any time. Ba. This hath been a straunge aduenture : but I pray you howe hang these thinges togither ? that the studente whom you 105 say to be the seruant, and not the maister, is become an earnest suter to you, and requireth you of your father in mariage ? Po. That is a poUicie deuised betweene them, to put Doctor Dotipole out of conceite : the olde dotarde, he that so instantly dothe lye vpon my father for me. But looke where he comes, no as God helpe me it is he, out vpon him, what a luskie yonker is this ? yet I had rather be a Noonne a thousande times, than be combred with suche a Coystrell. Ba. Daughter you haue reason, but let vs go in before he come any neerer. 115 Polynesia goeih in, and Balya stayelh a Utile whyk after, speaking a worde or two to the doctor, and then departeth. Scena 2. Cleander, Doctor. Pasiphilo, Parasite. = -V ' ' Balya, Nourse. WEre these dames heere, or did mine eyes dazil ? Pa. Nay fyr heere were Polynesia and hir nourse. Cle. Was my Polynesia heere ? alas I knewe hir not. Ba. {aside) He muste haue better eyesight that shoulde marry 109 Dotipoll CZ) III luskie a// younkcr ZJ 112 had I CZ) I these] there A 4 (aside) U i.ii SVPPOSES 17 your Polynesia, or else he may channce to ouersee the best 5 poynt in his tables sometimes. Pa. SjT it is no marueU, the ayre is very misde too day: I my selfe knew hir better by hir apparell than by hir face. Ck. In good fayth and I thanke God I haue mine eye sighte goode and perfit, little worse than when I was but twentie 10 yeres olde. Pa. How can it be otherwise ? you are but yong. Cle. I am fiftie yeres olde. Pa. {aside} He telles ten lesse than he is. Ck. What sayst thou of ten lesse ? 15 Pa. I say I wonlde haue thoughte you tenne lesse, you looke like one of sixe and thirtie, or seuen and thirtie at the moste. Ck. I am no lesse than I tell. Pa. You are like inough too liue fiftie more : shewe me 20 your hande. Cle. Why is Pasiphilo a. Chiromancer ? Pa. What is not PasipMlol I pray you shewe mee it a little. Cle. Here it is. 25 Pa. O how straight and iniracte is this line of life ? you will liue to the yeeres of Melchisedech. Cle. Thou wouldest say, Methusalem. Pa. Why is it not all one ? Cle. I perceine you are no very good Bibler Pasiphilo. 30 Pa. Yes sir an excellent good Bibbeler, specially in a bottle : Oh what a monnte of Venus here is ? but this lighte serueth not very well, I will beholde it an other day, when the ayre is clearer, and tell you somewhat, peraduenture to your contenta- tion. 35 Cle. You shal do me great pleasure: but tell me, I pray thee Pasiphilo, whome doste thou thinke Polytusla liketh better, Erostralo or me ? 8 know CD 14 (aside) H 31 Bibler A 32 month CD, the latter noting ' Perhaps mount ' 532 C 1 8 SVPPOSES I- 11 Pa. Why? you out of doubt: She is a gentlewoman of a noble minde, and maketh greater accompte of the reputation 4° she shall haue in marrying your worship, than that poore scholer, whose birthe and parentage God knoweth, and very fewe else. Cle. Yet he taketh it vpon him brauely in this countrey. Pa. Yea, where no man knoweth the contrarie : but let him 45 braue it, bost his birth, and do what he can, the vertue and knowledge that is within this body of yours, is worth more than all the countrey he came from. Cle, It becommeth not a man to praise him selfe: but in deede I may say, (and say truely,) that my knowledge hath 50 stoode me in better steade at a pinche, than coulde all the goodes in the worlde. I came out of Otranto when the Turkes wonne it, and first I came to Padua, after hither, where by reading, counsailing, and pleading, within twentie yeares I haue gathered and gayned as good as ten thousande Ducats. 55 Pa. Yea mary, this is the righte knowledge: Philosophie, Poetrie, Logike, and all the rest, are but pickling sciences in comparison to this. Cle. But pyckling in deede, whereof we haue a verse : The trade of Lavue doth fill the boystrous bagges, 60 They swimme in silke, when others royst in ragges. Pa. O excellent verse, who made it? Virgin Cle. Virgin tushe it is written in one of our gloses. Pa. Sure who soeuer wrote it, the morall is excellent, and worthy to be written in letters of golde. But too the purpose : 65 I thinke you shall neuer recouer the wealth that you loste at Otranto. Cle. I thinke I haue dubled it, or rather made it foure times An as muche : but in deed, I lost mine only sonne there, a childe °^_^' of fiue yeres old. 70 pose.* Pa. O great pitie. 39 Why you, // 44 the A 57 piglmg CD 61 other CD 63 glosses D * An other supose B rest I. ii SVPPOSES 19 Cle. Yea, I had rather haue lost al the goods in ye world. Pa. Alas, alas: by God and grafts of suche a stocke are very gayson in these dayes. Cle. I know not whether he were slayne, or the Turks toke 75 him and kept him as a bond slaue. Pa. Alas, I could weepe for compassion, but there is no remedy but patience, you shall get many by this yong damsell with the grace of God. Cle. Yea, if I get hir. 80 Pa. Get hir ? why doubt you of that ? Cle. Why? hir father holds me off with delayes, so that I must needes doubt. Pa. Content your selfe sir, he is a wise man, and desirous to place his Daughter well : he will not be too rashe in hys 85 determination, he will thinke well of the matter : and lette him thinke, for the longer he thinketh, the more good of you shall he thinke : whose welth ? whose vertue ? whose skill ? or whose estimation can he compare to yours in this Citie ? Cle. And hast thou not tolde him that I would make his 90 Daughter a dower of two thousand Ducates ? Pa. Why, euen now, I came but from thence since. Cle. What said he ? Pa. Nothing, but that Eroiirato had profered the like. Cle. Erostrato ? how can he make any dower, and his father 95 yet aliue ? Pa. Thinke you I did not tell him so? yes I warrat you, I forgot nothing that may furder your cause : and doubte you not, Erostrato shal neuer haue hir vnlesse it be in a dreame. Cle. Well gentle Pasiphilo, go thy wayes and tell Damon 100 I require nothing but his daughter : I wil -none of his goods : I shal enrich hir of mine owne : & if this dower of two thousand Ducates seem not sufficict, I wil make it fiue hundreth more, yea a thousand, or what so euer he will demaud rather 72 haue B rest 73 graffes CD 74 geason CDH 85 his] hio C 92 since om. H 98 and AD : & B {erased Br. A/«s. copy) CH 99 not,] not C C 2 20 SVPPOSES I-" the faile : go to Pasiphilo, shew thy selfe fredly in working 105 this feate for me : spare for no cost, since I haue gone thus farre, I wilbe loth to be out bidden. Go. Pa. Where shall I come to you againe ? Cle. At my house. Pa. When? "° Cle. When thou wilte. Pa. Shall I come at dinner time ? Cle. I would byd thee to dinner, but it is a Saincts euen which I haue euer fasted. Pa. {aside) Faste till thou famishe. 115 Cle. Harke. Pa. {aside} He speaketh of a dead mans faste. Cle. Thou hearest me not. Pa. {aside) Nor thou vnderstandest me not. Cle. I dare say thou art angrie I byd the not to dinner : but lao come if thou wilte, thou shalt take such as thou findest. Pa. What ? think you I know not where to dine ? Cle. Yes Pasiphilo thou art not to seeke. Pa. No be you sure, there are enowe will pray me. Cle. That I knowe well enough Pasiphilo, but thou canst not 125 be better welcome in any place than to me, I will tarrie for thee. Pa. Well, since you will needes, I will come, Cle. Dispatche then, and bring no newes but good. Pa. {aside) Better than my rewarde by the rood. Cleander exit, Pasiphilo restai. Scena iij. Pasiphilo. Dvlipo. O Miserable couetous wretche, he findeth an excuse by S. Nicolas fast, bicause I should not dine with him, as though I should dine at his owne dishe: he maketh goodly feasts_I^promise_you, it is no wonder though hee thinks me 105 to] to, DH 115 (aside) H 122 What? ABH: What C: What, D 4 no wonder, though D : no wonder, though, N i.iii SVPPOSES '21 bounde vnlo him for my fare : for ouer and besides that his 5 prouision is as skant as may be, yet there is great difference betweene his diet and mine. I neuer so much as sippe of the wine that he tasteth, I feede at the hordes ende with browne bread : Marie I reach always to his owne dishe, for there are no more but that only on the table. Yet he thinks that for one 10 such dinner I am bound to do him al the seruice that I can, and thinks me sufficiently rewarded for all my trauell, with one suche festiuall promotion. And yet peraduenture some men thinke I haue great gaines vnder him: but I may say and sweare, that this dosen yeere I haue not gayned so muche in 15 value as the points at my hose (whiche are but three with codpeece poynt and al) : he thinkes that I may feede vpon his fauour and faire wordes : but if I could not otherwise prouide for one, Pasiphilo were in a wyse case. Pasiphilo hath mo pastures to passe in than one, I warrant you : I am of housholde 20 with this scholer Erostrato, (his riuale) as well as with Domine Cleander : nowe with the one, and then with the other, according as I see their Caters prouide good cheere at the market : and I finde the meanes so to handle the matter, that I am welcome too bothe. If the one see me talke with the other, I make him 25 beleeue it is to harken newes in the furtherance of his cause : and thus I become a broker on bothe sides. Well, lette them bothe apply the matter as well as they can, for in deede I will trauell for none of them bothe : yet will I seeme to worke wonders on eche hande. But is not this one of Damons 30 seruants that commeth foorth ? it is : of him I shall vnderstand where his master is. Whither goeth this ioyly gallant ? Du. I come to seeke some body that may accompany my Master at dinner, he is alone, and woulde fayne haue good company. 35 Pa. Seeke no further, you coulde neuer haue found one better than me. Du. I haue no commission to bring so many. 16 with oni. CD 32 iolly CD 2 2 SVPPOSES I- "1 Pa. How many ? I will come alone. Du. How canst thou come alone, that hast continually a 40 legion of rauening wolues within thee ? Pa. Thou doest (as seruants commonly doe) hate al that loue to visite their maisters. Du. And why ? Pa. Because they haue too many teeth as you thinke. 45 Du. Nay bicause they haue to many tongues. Pa. Togues .? I pray you what did my togue euer hurt you ? Du. I speake but merily with you Pasiphilo, goe in, my maister is ready to dine. Pa. What ? dineth he so earely .? 50 Du. He that riseth early, dineth early. Pa. I would I were his man, maister doctor neuer dineth till noone, and how dilicately then God knoweth. I wil be bolde to goe in, for I count my selfe bidden. Du. You were best so. Pasiphilo intrat. Dul. restat. 55 Hard hap had I when I first began this vnfortunate enter- prise : for I supposed the readiest medicine to my miserable affects had bene to change name, clothes, & credite with my seruant, & to place my selfe in Damons seruice : thinking that as sheuering colde by glowing fire, thurst by drinke, hunger 60 by pleasant repasts, and a thousande suche like passions finde remedie by their contraries, so my restlesse desire might haue founde quiet by continuall contemplation. But alas, I find that only loue is vnsaciable: for as the flie playeth with the flame till at last she is cause of hir owne decay, so the louer 65 that thinketh with kissing and colling to content his vnbrideled apetite, is comonly scene the only cause of his owne consump- tion. Two yeeres are nowe past since (vnder the colour of Damons seruice) I haue bene a swome seruant to Cupid: of whom I haue receiued as much fauour & grace as euer man 70 founde in his seruice. I haue free libertie at al times to behold my desired, to talke with hir, to embrace hir, yea (be it 39 How {i. e. Why) all 55 do bef. so CD Pasiphilo . . . restat B rest 58 effectes A i.iii SVPPOSES 23 spoken in secrete) to lie with hir. I reape the fruites of my desire : yet as my ioyes abounde, euen so my paines encrease. I fare like the couetous man, that hauing all the world at will, 75 is neuer yet content : the more I haue, the more I desire. Alas, what wretched estate haue I brought my selfe vnto, if in the ende of all my farre fetches, she be giuen by hir father to this olde doting doctor, this buzard, this bribing villaine, that by so many meanes seeketh to obtain hir at hir fathers hads f 80 I know she loueth me best of all others, but what may that preuaile when perforce she shalbe costrained to marie another ? Alas, the pleasant tast of my sugred ioyes doth yet remaine so perfect in my remebrance, that the least soppe of sorow seemeth more soure tha gal in my mouth. If I had neuer knowen 85 delight, with better contentatio might I haue passed these dreadful dolours. And if this olde Mumpsivius (whom the pockes consume) should win hir, then may I say, farewell the pleasant talke, the kind embracings, yea farewel the sight of my Polynesia : for he like a ielouse wretch will pen hir vp, that 90 I thinke the birdes of the aire shall not winne the sighte of hir. I hoped to haue caste a blocke in his waie, by the meanes that my seruaunt (who is supposed to be Erosirato, and with my habite and credite is wel esteemed) should proffer himself a suter, at the least to counteruaile the doctors proffers. But 95 my maister knowing the wealth of the one, and doubting the state of the other, is determined to be fed no longer with faire wordes, but to accept the doctor, (whom he right well knoweth) for his sonne in law. Wei, my seruant promised me yesterday to deuise yet againe some newe conspiracie to driue maister 100 doctor out of conceite, and to laye a snare that the foxe himselfe might be caughte in : what it is, I knowe not, nor I saw him not since he went about it : I will goe see if he be within, that at least if he helpe me not, he maye yet prolong my life for this once. But here commeth his lackie : ho lack pack, where is 105 Erostrato ? Here must Crapine he camming in with a basket and a sticke in his hand. 105 pack B rest: heark A 24 SVPPOSES I- iv Scena .iiij. Cvikvitio the Lackie. »~/aif^ Dvlipo. TT'Rostralo ? mary he is in his skinne. JH/Du. Ah hooreson boy, I say, howe shall I finde Ero- strata ? Cra. Finde him ? howe meane you, by the weeke or by the yeere ? 5 Du. You cracke halter, if I catche you by the eares, I shall make you answere me directly. Cra. In deede ? Du. Tarry me a little. Cra. In faith sir I haue no leisure. lo Du. Shall we trie who can runne fastest ? Cra. Your legges be longer than mine, you should haue giuen me the aduauntage. Du. Go to, tell me where is Erostrato ? Cra. I left him in the streete, where he gaue me this Casket, 15 (this basket I would haue sayde) and bad me beare it to Dalio, and returne to him at the Dukes Palace. Du. If thou see him, tell him I must needes speake with him immediatly : or abide awhyle, I will go seeke him my selfe, rather than be suspected by going to his house. 20 Crapino departeth, and Dulipo also : after Duh'po com- meth in agayne seeking Erostrato. Finis Actus, i. Actus .{]. Scena .]. DvLiPO. Erostrato. IThinke if I had as many eyes as Argus, I coulde not haue sought a man more narrowly in euery streete and euery by lane, there are not many Gentlemen, scholers, nor Marchauntes 23 :.] primi CD 11. i SVPPOSES 25 in the Citie of Ferara, but I haue mette with them, excepte him : peraduenture hee is come home an other way : but looke where 5 he commeth at the last. Ero. In good time haue I spied my good maister. Du. For the loue of God call me Dulipo (not master,) main- tayne the credite that thou haste hitherto kepte, and let me alone. '° Ero. Yet sir let me sometimes do my duetie vnto you, especially where no body heareth. Du. Yea, but so long the Parat vseth to crie knappe in sporte, that at the last she calleth hir maister knaue in earnest : so long you will vse to call me master, that at the last we shall 15 be heard. What newes ? Ero. Good. Du. In deede ? Ero. Yea excellent, we haue as good as won the wager. Du. Oh, how happie were I if this were true ? 20 Ero. Heare you me, yesternight in the euening I walked out, and founde Pasiphilo, and with small entreating I had him home to supper, where by suche meanes as I vsed, he became my great friend, and tolde me the whole order of our aduersaries deter- mination : yea "and what Damon doth intende to do also, and 25 hath promised me that fro time to time, what he can espie he will bring me word of it. Du. I can not tel whether you know him or no, he is not to trust vnto, a very flattering and a lying knaue. Ero. I know him very well, he can not deceiue me : and this 3° that he hath told me I know must needes be true. Du. And what was it in effect ? An- Ero. That Damon had purposed to giue his daughter in mariage to this doctor, vpo the dower that he hath profered. Du. Are these your good newes ? your excellent newes ? 35 Ero. Stay a whyle, you will vnderstande me before you heare me. Du. Well, say on. II Yet] But CD 13 knap CD * Another supose B II only other su- 26 SVPPOSES n.i En. I answered to that, I was ready to make hir the lyke dower. 40 Du. Well sayde. Ero. Abide, you heare not the worst yet. Du. O God, is there any worsse behinde ? Ero. Worsse ? why what assurance coulde you suppose that I might make without some speciall consent from Pkilogano my 45 father ? Du. Nay you can tell, you are better scholar than I. Ero. In deede you haue lost your time : for the books that you tosse now a dayes, treate of smal science. Du. Leaue thy iesting, and proceede. 50 Ero. I sayd further, that I receyued letters lately from my father, whereby I vnderstoode that he woulde be heere very shortly to performe all that I had profered : therefore I required him to request Damon on my behalf, that he would stay his promise to the doctor for a fourtnight or more. 55 Du. This is somewhat yet, for by this meanes I shal be sure to linger and liue in hope one fourtnight longer: but, at the fourthnights ende when Pkilogano commeth not, how shall I then do ? yea and though he came, howe may I any way hope of his consent, when he shall see, that to follow this amorous enterprise, 60 I haue set aside all studie, all remembraunce of my duetie, and all dread of shame. Alas, alas, I may go hang my selfe. Ero. Comforte your selfe man, and trust in me : there is a salue for euery sore, and doubt you not, to this mischeefe we shall finde a remedie. 65 Du. O friend reuiue me, that hitherto since I first attempted this matter haue bene continually dying. Ero. Well harken a while then : this morning I tooke my horse and rode into the fieldes to solace my self, and as I passed the foorde beyonde 5. Anihonies gate, I met at the foote of the 70 hill a gentleman riding with two or three men : and as me thought by his habite and his lookes, he should be none of the wisest. He saluted me, and I him : I asked him from whence he came, 65. 67 fourthnight A : fortnight C II. i SVPPOSES 27 and whither he would? he answered that he had come from Venice, then from Padua, nowe was going to Ferrara, and so to 75 his countrey, whiche is Scienna : As soone as I knewe him to be a Scenese, sodenly lifting vp mine eyes, (as it were with an admira- tion) I sayd vnto him, are you a Scenese, and come to Ferrara ? why not, sayde he : quoth I (halfe and more with a trembling voyce) know you the daunger that should ensue if you be knowne 80 in Ferrara to be a Scenese ? he more than halfe amased, desired me earnestly to tell him what I ment. Du. I vnderstande not wherto this tendeth. Ero. I beleeue you : but harken to me. Du. Go too then, 85 Fro. I answered him in this sorte: Gentleman, bycause I haue heretofore founde very curteous entertaynement in your countrey, (beeing a studet there,) I accompt my self as it were bounde to a Scenese : and therefore if I knewe of any mishappe towards any of that countrey, God forbid but I should disclose 90 it : and I maruell that you knewe not of the iniurie that your countreymen offered this other day to the Embassadours of Counte Hercules. Du. What tales he telieth me : what appertayne these to me ? Ero. If you will harken a whyle, you shall finde them no tales, 95 but that they appertayne to you more than you thinke for. Du. Foorth. Ero. I tolde him further, these Ambassadoures of Counte Hercules had dyuers Mules, Waggens, and Charettes, lade with diuers costly iewels, gorgeous furniture, & other things which 100 they caried as presents, (passing that way) to the king of Naples : the which were not only stayd in Sciene by the officers whom you cal Customers, but serched, ransacked, tossed & turned, & in the end exacted for tribute, as if they had bene the goods of a meane marchaunt. i°5 Du. Whither the diuell wil he ? is it possible that this geare 77-8 as . . . admiration 1 A 78 Fairara B 79 I ( C .• I (, .ff .• I, A 91 knowe A 93, 98-9 Conntie Hercule A : County Hercules CD 94, 106 Dn.] Du. [aside] H loi way to A 103 Customers all 28 SVPPOSES n. i appertaine any thing to my cause ? I finde neither head nor foote in it. Ero. O how impaciet you are : I pray you stay a while. Du. Go to yet a while then. no Ero. I proceeded, that vpon these causes the Duke sent his Chauncelor to declare the case vnto the Senate there, of whome he had the moste vncurteous answere that euer was heard : whervpon he was so enraged with all of that countrey, that for reuenge he had sworne to spoyle as many of them as euer should 115 come to Ferara, and to sende them home in their dublet and their hose. Du. And I pray thee how couldest thou vpon the sudden deuise or imagine suche a lye ? and to what purpose ? Ero. You shall heare by and by a thing as fitte for our pur- 120 pose, as any could haue happened. Du. I would fayne heare you conclude. Ero. You would fayne leape ouer the stile, before you come at the hedge : I woulde you had heard me, and scene the gestures that I enforced to make him beleeue this. 125 Du. I beleeue you, for I knowe you can counterfet wel. Ero. Further I sayde, the duke had charged vpon great penal- ties, that the Inholders and vitlers shoulde bring worde dayly of as many Sceneses as came to their houses. The gentleman bee- ing (as I gessed at the first) a ma of smal sapientia, when he 130 heard these newes, would haue turned his horse an other way. Du. By likelyhoode he was not very wise when hee would beleeue that of his countrey, which if it had bene true euery man must needes haue knowen it. Ero. Why not ? when he had not beene in his countrey for 135 a moneth paste, and I tolde him this had hapned within these seuen dayes. Du. Belike he was of small experience. Ero. I thinke, of as litle as may be : but beste of all for our purpose, and good aduenture it was, that I mette with such an 140 one. Now harken I pray you. 107 appertaineth /4 128 victualers Z5 141 you] thee ^ II. i SVPPOSES 29 Du. Make an ende I pray thee. Ero. He, as I say, when he hard these words, would haue turned the bridle : and I fayning a countenance as though I were somewhat pensiue and carefuU for him, paused a while, & 145 after with a great sighe saide to him : Gentleman, for the curtesie that (as I said) I haue found in your countrey, & bicause your affaires shall be the better dispatched, I will finde the meanes to lodge you in my house, and you shal say to euery ma, that you are a Sicilian of Cathanea, your name Philogano, father to me 150 that am in deede of that countrey and citie, called here Eroslrato. And I (to pleasure you) will (during your abode here) do you reuerence as you were my father. Du. Out vpon me, what a grosse hedded foole am I ? now I perceiue whereto this tale tendeth. 155 Ero. Well, and how like you of it ? Du. Indifferently, but one thing I doubt. ■Ero. What is that ? Du. Marie, that when he hath bene here twoo or three dayes, he shal heare of euery man that there is no such thing betwene 160 the Duke and the Towne of Sciene. Ero. As for that let me alone, I doe entertaine and will enter- taine him so well, that within these two or three dales I will dis- close vnto him all the whole matter, and double not but to bring him in for performance of as muche as I haue promised to 165 Damon : for what hurte can it be to him, when he shall binde a strange name and not his owne ? Du, What, thinke you he will be entreated to stande bounde for a dower of two thousand Ducates by the yeere ? Ero. Yea why not, (if it were ten thousande) as long as he is 17° not in deede the man that is bound ? Du. Well, if it be so, what shall we be the neerer to our purpose ? Ero. Why? when we haue done as muche as we can, how- can we doe any more ? 175 Du. And where haue you left him ? 145 paused] passed A 3° SVPPOSES II. i Ero. At the Inne, bicause of his horses : he and his men shall he in my house. Du. Why brought you him not with you ? Ero. I thought better to vse your aduise first. 180 Du. Well, goe take him home, make him all the cheere you can, spare for no cost, I will alowe it. Ero, Content, looke where he commeth. Bu. Is this he "i goe meete him, by my trouthe he lookes euen lyke a good soule, he that fisheth for him, mighte bee sure to 185 catche a cods heade : I will rest here a while to discipher him. Erostrato espieth the Scenese and goeth towards him : Dulipo standeth aside. Scena .ij. The Scenese. Paqvetto & Petrvcio his seruats. Erostrato. HE that trauaileth in this worlde passeth by many perilles. Pa. You saye true sir, if the boate had bene a little other more laden this morning at the ferrie, wee had bene all drowned, for I thinke, there are none of vs that could haue swomme. Sc. I speake not of that. 5 Pa. O you meane the foule waye that we had since wee came from this Padua, I promise you, I was afraide twice or thrice, that your mule would haue lien fast in the mire. Sc. Jesu, what a blockehead thou art, I speake of the perill we are in presently since we came into this citie. 10 Pa. A great peril I promise you, that we were no sooner ariued, but you founde a frende that brought you from the Inne. and lodged you in his owne house. 177 man CD s.D. Petrachio D Paqvetto . . . sernats £ rest: Favmlvs \for Famulus] his seruaunt A i in] it C 2 Pa. B rest: Fa. A and throughout scene * An . . . siipose B rest 12 but] than A sn- tish su- II. ii SVPPOSES 31 Sc. Yea marie, God rewarde the gentle yong man that we A dol- mette, for else we had bene in a wise case by this time. But 15 ■ haue done with these tales, and take you heede, & you also sirra, take heede that none of you sale we be Sceneses, and remember that you call me PMlogano of Cathanea. Pa. Sure I shal neuer remember these outladish words, I could well remember Haccanea. so Sc. I say, Cathanea, and not Haccanea, with a vengeance. Pa. Let another name it then when neede is, for I shall neuer remember it. Sc. Then holde thy peace, and take heede thou name not Scene. 25 Pa. Howe say you, if I faine my selfe dum as I did once in the house of Crisobolus ? Sc. Doe as thou thinkest best : but looke where commeth the gentieman whom we are so much bounde vnto. Ero. Welcome, my deare father PMlogano. 30 .5V. Gramercie my good sonne Erostrato. Ero. That is well saide, be mindefull of your toung, for these Ferareses be as craftie as the Deuill of hell. Sc. No, no, be you sure we will doe as you haue bidden vs. Ero. For if you should name Scene they would spoile you 35 immediatly, and turne you out of the towne, with more shame, than I woulde shoulde befall you for a thousande Crownes. Sc. I warant you, I was giuing the warning as I came to you, and I doubt not but they will take good heede. Ero. Yea and trust not the seruauntes of my housholde to far, 40 for they are Ferareses all, and neuer knew my father, nor came neuer in Sicilia : this is my house, will it please you to goe in ? I will follow. They goe in. Dulipo iarieth and espieth the Doctor camming in with his man. * A . . . supose B rest 41-2 neuer came CD 32 SVPPOSES ii.iii Scena .iij. DvLiPO alone. THis geare hath had no euill beginning, if it continue so and fall to happie ende. But is not this the silly Doctor with the side bonet, the doting foole, that dare presume to be- come a suter to such a peerlesse Paragone ? O how couetous- nesse doth blind the common sort of men. Damon more desirous 5 of the dower, than mindfuU of his gentle & gallant daughter, hath determined to make him his Sonne in law, who for his age may be his father in law : and hath greater respect to the abundance of goods, than to his owne naturall childe. He beareth well in minde to fill his owne purse, but he litle remembreth that his 10 daughters purse shalbe continually emptie, vnlesse Maister Doc- tour fill it with double ducke egges. Alas : I iest and haue no ioy, I will stand here aside and laugh a litle at this lobcocke. Dulippo espieth the Doctor and his man comming. Scena .iiij. Carion the doctors man. Cleander. Dvlipo. MAister, what the Diuel meane you to go seeke guestes at this time of the day ? the Maiors officers haue dined ere this time, which are alway the last in the market. Cle. I come to seeke Pasiphilo, to the ende he may dine with mee. 5 Ca. As though sixe mouthes and the cat for the seuenth, bee not sufBcient to eate an harlotrie shotterell, a pennieworth of cheese, and halfe a score spurlings : this is all the dainties you haue dressed for you and your familie. Cle. Ah greedie gut, art thou afearde thou shalt want ? 10 Ca. I am afearde in deede, it is not the first time I haue founde it so. 3 dare] dares dares C : dares D Scena .iiij. om. CD 7 shottrel C': shotrel D 11. iv SVPPOSES 33 Du. (aside) Shall I make some sporte with this gallant? what shall I say to him ? Cle. Thou arte afearde belike that he will eate thee and the 15 • rest. Ca. Nay, rather that he will eate your mule, both heare and hyde. Cle. Heare and hyde ? and why not flesh and all ? Ca. Bicause she hath none. If she had any flesh, I thinke 20 you had eaten hir your selfe by this time. Cle. She may thanke you then, for your good attendace. Ca. Nay she may thanke you for your small allowance. Du. (aside) In faith now let me alone. Cle. Holde thy peace drunken knaue, and espie me Pasiphilo. 25 Du. (aside) Since I can doe no better, I will set such a staunce betweene him and Pasiphilo, that all this towne shall not make them friendes. Ca. Could you not haue sent to seeke him, but you must come your selfe ? surely you come for some other purpose, for 30 if you would haue had Pasiphilo to dinner, I warant you he would haue taried here an houre since. An Cle. Holde thy peace, here is one of Damons seruaunts, of su. him I shall vnderstand where he is : good fellow art not thou pose.* one of Damons seruaunts ? 35 Du. Yes sir, at your knamandement. Cle. Gramercie, tell me then, hath Pasiphilo bene there this day or no ? Du. Yes sir, and 1 thinke he be there still, ah, ah, ah. Cle. What laughest thou ? 4° Du. At a thing, that euery man may not laugh at. Cle. What? Du. Talke, that Pasiphilo had with my master this day. Cle. What talke I pray thee ? Du. I may not tell it. 45 Cle. Doth it concerme me ? Du. Nay I will say nothing. 13 [aside] II * An . . . supose B rest 36 knamandement all 532 D 34 SVPPOSES II. iv Cle. Tell me. Du. I can say no more. Cle. I woulde but knowe if it concerne mee, I pray thee 50 tell mee. Du. I would tell you, if I were sure you would not tell it againe. Cle. Beleue me I will kepe it close : Carion giue vs leaue a litle, goe aside. 55 Du. If my maister shoulde know that it came by me, I were better die a thousand deaths. Cle, He shall neuer know it, say on. Du. Yea, but what assurance shall I haue ?' Cle. I lay thee my faith and honestie in paune. 60 Du. A pretie paune, the fulkers will not lend you a farthing on it. Cle. Yea, but amongst honest me it is more worth than golde. Du. Yea marie sir, but where be they ? but will you needes 6j haue me tell it vnto you ? Cle. Yea I pray thee if it any thing appertaine to me. Du. Yes it is of you, and I would gladly tell it you, bicause I would not haue suche a man of worship so scorned by a villaine ribaulde. 70 Cle. I pray thee tell me then. Du. I will tell you so that you will sweare neuer to tell it to Pasiphilo, to my maister, nor to any other bodie. Ca. {aside) Surely it is some toye deuised to get some money of him. 75 Cle. I thinke I haue a booke here. Ca, {aside) If he knew him as well as I, he woulde neuer goe aboute it, for he may as soone get one of his teeth from his iawes with a paire of pinchers, as a pennie out of his purse with such a conceite. 80 Cle. Here is a letter wil serue the turne : I sweare to thee by the contents hereof neuer to disclose it to any man. 63 vpon CD 79 pinsors C : pincers D II. iv SVPPOSES 35 Du. I will tell you, I am sorie to see how Pasiphilo doth abuse you, perswading you that alwayes he Jaboureth for you, where in deede, he lieth on my maister continually, as it were 85 with tooth and naile for a straunger, a scholer, borne in Sicilia they call him Roscus or arskisse, he hathe a madde name I can neuer hit vpon it. Cle. And thou recknest it as madly : is it not Erostrato ? Du. That same, I should neuer haue remembred it : and the 90 villaine speakelh al the euill of you that can be deuised. Cle. To whom ? Du. To my maister, yea and to Polynesia hirselfe some- times. Cle. Is it possible. Ah slaue, and what saith he ? 95 Dn. More euill than I can imagine : that you are the miser- ablest and most nigardly man that euer was. Cle. Sayeth Pasiphilo so by me ? Du. And that as often as he commeth to your house, he is like to die for hunger, you fare so well. 100 Cle. That the Deuill take him else. Du. And that you are the testiest man, & moste diuers to please in the whole worlde, so that he cannot please you vnlesse he should euen kill himselfe with continuall paine. Cle. O deuilish tong. 105 Du. Furthermore, that you cough continually and spit, so that a dogge cannot abide it. Cle. I neuer spitte nor coughe more than thus, vho, vho, and that but since I caughte this murre, but who is free from it ? Du. You saye true sir, yet further he sayth, your arme holes no stincke, your feete worse than they, and your breathe worst of all. Cle. If I quite him not for this geare. Du. And that you are bursten in the cods. Cle. O villaine, he lieth, and if I were not in the streete thou 115 shouldest see them. 86 Silicia D 90 same, ADH: same BC 91 villaine A C rest : villany ^ 102 diuers a// 108 thus] this CjO 114 bursen /} D 2 36 SVPPOSES II. iv Du. And he saith, that you desire this 3'ong gentlewoman, as much for other mens pleasure as for your owne. Cle. What meaneth he by that ? Du. Peraduenture that by hir beautie, you woulde entice many 120 yong men to your house. Cle. Yong men ? to what purpose ? Du. Nay, gesse you that. Cle. Is it possible that Pasiphilo speaketh thus of me ? Du. Yea, and much more. 125 Cle. And doth Damon beleeue him ? Du. Yea, more than you would thinke: in such sort, that loiig ere this, he woulde haue giuen you a flat repulse, but Pasiphilo intreated him to continue you a suter for his aduan- tage. 130 Cle. How for his aduantage ? Du. Marie, that during your sute he might still haue some rewarde for his great paines. Cle. He shall haue a rope, and yet that is more than he deserueth : I had thought to haue giuen him these hose when 135 I had worne them a little nearer, but he shall haue a. &c. Du. In good faith sir, they were but loste on him. Will you any thing else with me sir ? Cle. Nay, I haue heard to much of thee already. Du. Then I will take my leaue of you. 140 Cle. Farewell, but tell me, may 1 not know thy name ? Du. Sir, they call me Foule fall you. Cle. An ill fauored name by my trouthe: arte thou this countreyman ? Du. No sir, I was borne by .a castle me cal Scabbe catch 145 you : fare you well sir. {^Exif) Cle. Farewel. Oh, God how haue I bene abused? what a spokesman ? what a messanger had I prouided ? Car. Why sir, will you tarie for Pasiphilo till we die for hunger? 150 128 ere] yer C 136 a. &c AB : a, &c CD// 140 will I CD 144 countrey man A// II. iv SVPPOSES 37 Cle. Trouble me not, that the Deuill take you both. Car. These newes what so euer they be, like him not. Cle. Art thou so hungrie yet ? I pray to God thou be neuer satisfied. Car. By the masse no more I shal as long as I am your 155 seruaunt. Cle. Goe with mischaunce. Car. Yea, and a mischiefe to you, and to al such couetous wretches. Ftnis Actus .2. Actus .iij. Scena .j. Dalio the cooke. Crapine the lackie. Erostrato, Dvlipo. BY that time we come to the house, I truste that of these xx. egges in the basket we shall find but very few whole. But it is a folly to talke to him. What the deuill, wilt thou neuer lay that sticke out of thy hande ? he fighteth with the dogges, beateth the beares, at euery thing in the streate he findeth occasion to 5 tarie : if he spie a slipstring by the waye such another as himself, a Page, a Lackie or a dwarfe, the deuill of hell cannot holde him in chaynes, but he will be doing with him : I cannot goe two steppes, but 1 muste looke backe for my yonker : goe to halter sicke, if you breake one egge I may chance breake, &c. 10 Cra. What will you breake ? your nose in mine &c ? Da. Ah beast. Cra. If I be a beast, yet I am no horned beast. Da. Is it euen so ? is the winde in that doore ? If I were vn- loden I would tel you whether I be a horned beast or no. 15 Cra. You are alway laden either with wine or with ale. Dal. Ah spitefuU boy, shall I suifer him ? Cra. Ah cowardely beast, darest thou strike and say neuer a woorde ? 157 a bef. mischaunce CDH s.D. Crapino H 6 way, CDH 9 yonnker CD 9-10 halter sacke A 10 breake, &c.] breake. A II &c] arse ^ 14-15 vnloden a// 16 la.(ien att 38 SVPPOSES III. i Dal. Well, my maister shall know of this geere, either he shall 20 redresse it, or he shall lose one of vs. Ero- Cra. Tel him the worst thou canst by me. • ^Du. ex ^^°- What noise, what a rule is this ? impro- Cra. Marie sir, he striketh mee bicause I tell him of his uiso. swearmg. 25 Dal. The villaine lieth deadly, he reuiles me bicause I bid him make hast. Ero. Holla : no more of this. Dalio, doe you make in a readi- nesse those Pigeons, stock Doues, and also the breast of Veale : and let your vessell be as cleare as glasse against I returne, that 30 I may tell you which I will haue roasted, & which boy led. {Exit Dalio) Crapine, lay downe thai; basket and foUowe me. Oh that I coulde tell where to finde Pasiphilo, but looke where he commeth that can tell me of him. Dulipo j)^i^ What haue you done with Philogano your father ? 35 pied by Ero. I haue left him within, I would faine speake with Pasi- ^f' philo, can you tell me where he is ? strata. Du. He dined this day with my maister, but whether he went from thence I know not, what would you with him f Ero. I woulde haue him goe tell Damon that Philogano my 4° father is come and ready to make assurance of as much as he wil require. Now shall I teach maister doctor a schole point, he trauaileth to none other end but to catche Cornua, and he shall haue them, for as old as he is, and as many subtilties as he hath learned in the law, he can not goe beyond me one ace. 45 Du. O deere friend, goe thy wayes seeke Pasiphilo, finde him out, and conclude somewhat to our contentation. Ero. But where shall I finde him ? Du. At the feasts if there be any, or else in the market with the poulters or the fishmongers. 5° Ero. What should he doe with them ? Du. Mary he watcheth whose Caters bie the best meat. If any bie a fat Capon, a good breast of Veale, fresh Samon or any suche 22 Cra . . . me. oin. D 38 whether all 44 them; D 46 wayes, CDH 50 poulterers D III. I O V X 1 V^OJjO 39 good dishe, he followeth to the hoase, and either with some newes, or some stale lest he wi'i be sure to make bimselfe a geast. Ero. In faith, and I will seeke there for him. Du. Then muste you needes finde him, and when you haue done I \«ill make you laughe. Ero. \Miereat.' Du. At certaine sport I made to day with master doctor. 60 Ero. And why not now ? Du. No it asketh ftuther leysure, I pray thee dispatche, and finde out PasipMlo that honest man. Dulipo tarieth. Erostrato (with Crapind) goelh out. Scena .ij. Ih'LiPO, aUme. THis amorous cause that hageth in cotrouersie betwene Domine doctor & me, may be compared to the that play at primero : of who some one peradueture shal leese a great sum of money before he win one stake, & at last halfe in anger shal set vp his rest : win it : & after that another, another, & another, till 5 at last he draw the most part of the money to his heape : ye other by lide & litle stil diminishing his rest, til at last he be come as neere the brinke, as earst ye other was : yet again peradueture fortune smiling on him, he shal as it were by peece meale, pull out the guts of his fellows bags, & bring him barer than he him- id selfe was tofore, & so in play continue stil, (fortune fauoring now this way, now y* way) til at last the one of the is left with as many crosses as God hath brethren. O howe often haue I thoughte my selfe sure of the vpper hande herein .' but I triumphed before the victorie. And then how ofte againe haue I thoughte 15 the fielde loste? Thus haue I beene tossed nowe oner, nowe vnder, euen as fortime list to whirle the wheele, neither sure to wrme nor certayne to loose the wager. And this practise that 54 other CD 55 guest CD -.d. Eros . . . out B rest 3 some om. CD 17 wherle A come D\ 40 SVJfrUbJiiS "1.11 nowe my seiuaunte hath deuised, although hitherto it hath not succeeded amisse, yet can I not count my selfe assured of it ; for 20 I feare still that one mischance or other wyll come and turne it topsie turuie. But looke where my mayster commeth. Damon comming in, espieth DuKpo and calleth him, Scena .iij. Damon. Dvlipo. Nevola, and two mo seruanis. J Vlipo. Du. Here sir. Da. Go in and bid Neuola and his fellowes come hither that I may tell them what they shall goe about, and go you into my studie : there vpon the shelfe you shall find a roule of writings 5 which lohn of the Deane made to my Father, when he solde him the Grange ferme, endorced with bothe their names : bring it" hither to me. Du. It shall be done sir. {Exit') Da. Go, I wil prepare other maner of writings for you tha you 10 are aware of. O fooles that trust any ma but theraselues now adaies : oh spiteful fortune, thou doest me wjong I thinke, that from the depth of Hell pitte thou haste sente mee this seruaunt The to be the subuersion of me and all mine. Come hither sirs, and ^^"^^ heare what I shal say vnto you : go into my studie, where you 15 shall finde Dulipo, step to him all at once, take him and (with in- a corde that I haue laide on the table for the nonce) bind him hande and foote, carie him into the dungeon vnder the stayres, make faste the dore & bring me the key, it hangeth by vpon a pin on the wall. Dispatche and doe this geare as priuily as you can : 20 and thou Neuola come hither to me againe with speede. A^i?. Well I shall. l^Exit with servants) Da. Alas how shall I be reuenged of this extreme despite .'' if I punishe my seruant according to his diuelishe deserts, I shall heape further cares vpon mine owne head : for to suche detest- 25 6 deane CD 9 [Dul. ex.] H * The ... in ^ rest 20 Dispatch, CDH 22 Well] Well sir A in. Ill svi'i'u&Jtia 41 able offences no punishment can seeme sufficient, but onely death, and in such cases it is not lawful for a man to be his owne earner. The lawes are ordeyned, and officers appoynted to minister iustice for the redresse of wrongs : and if to the potestates I complayne me, I shall publishe mine owne reproche to the worlde. Yea, 30 what should it preuayle me to vse all the puinishments that can be deuised? the thing once done can not be vndone. My daughter is defloured, and I vtterly dishonested : how can I then wype that blot off my browe? and on whome shall I seeke reuenge ? Alas, alas I ray selfe haue bene the cause of all these 35 cares, and haue deserued to beare the punishment of all these mfs- happes. Alas, I should not haue committed my dearest darling in custodie to so carelesse a creature as this olde Nurse : for we see by common proofe, that these olde women be either peeuishe, or pitifull : either easily enclined to euill, or quickly corrupted 4° with bribes and rewards. O wife, my good wife (that nowe lyest colde in the graue) now may I well bewayle the wante of thee, and mourning nowe may I bemone that I misse thee : if thou hadst lined (suche was thy gouernement of the least things) that thou wouldest prudently haue prouided for the preseruation of 45 this pearle. A costly iewell may I well accompte hir, that hath been my cheefe comforte in youth, and is nowe become the coro- siue of mine age. O Polynesia, full euill hast thou requited the clemencie of thy carefull father : and yet to excuse thee giltlesse before God, and to condemne thee giltie before the worlde^ I can 50 count none other but my wretched selfe the caytife and causer of all my cares. For of al the dueties that are requisite in humane lyfe, onely obedience is by the parents to be required of the childe : where on ye other side the parents are bound, first to beget them, then to bring the foorth, after to nourish them, to preserue them 55 from bodily perils in the cradle, from daunger of soule by godly education, to matche them in consort enclined to vertue, too banish them all ydle and wanton companie, to allow them sufiBciente for their sustentation, to cut oif excesse the open gate of sinne, sel- 33 I BCHonly {as the Ital.) 40 to bef. pitifull A 51 self, D 57 consort B rest: comfort A 59 cut] cull C 42 SVPPOSES ill. Ill dome or neuer to smile on them vnlesse it be to their encourage- 60 ment in vertue, and finally, to prouide them mariages in time couenient, lest (neglected of vs) they learne to sette either to much or to litle by theselues. Fiue years are past since I might haue maried hir, when by cotinuall excuses I haue prolonged it to my owne perdition, Alas, I shoulde haue considered, she is 65 a collop of my owne flesh : what shold I think to make hir a princesse ? Alas alas, a poore kingdome haue I now caught to endowe hir with : It is too true, that of all sorowes this is the head source and chiefe fountaine of all furies : the goods of the world are incertain, the gaines (lille) to be reioyced at, and 7° the losse not greatly to be lamented : only the children cast away, cutteth the parents throate with the knife of inward care, which knife will kill me surely, I make none other accompte. Damons seruanis come to him againe. Scena .iiij. Nevola. Damon. Pasiphilo. Sir, we haue done as you badde vs, and here is the key. Da. Well, go then Neuola and seeke master Casteling the iayler, he dwelleth by S. Antonies gate, desire him too lend me a paire of the fetters he vseth for his prisoners, and come againe quickly. 5 Ne. Well sir. Da. Heare you, if he aske what I would do with them, say you ca not tell, and tell neither him nor any other, what is be- come of Dulipo. Damon goeth out. An (^Ne.) I warant you sir. Fye vpon the Deuill, it is a thing 10 5up. almost vnpossible for a man nowe a dayes to handle money, but pose.* the mettal will sticke on his fingers : I maruelled alway at this fellowe of mine Dulipo, that of the wages he receiued, he could maintaine himselfe so brauely apparelled, but nowe I perceiue 68 endue A 69 head source, D : head-source J/ 9 s.D. Damon . . . out B rest * An . . . supose B rest 10 Ne. D III. iv SVPPOSES 43 the cause, he had the disbursing and receit of all my masters 15 affaires, the keys of the granarie, Dulippo \iext,\Dulippo there, in fauoure with my maister, in fauoure with his daughter, what woulde you more, he was MagUter fadotuvi : he was as fine as the Crusadoe, and wee silly wretches as course as canuas : wel, behold what it is come to in the ende, he had bin better to haue 20 done lesse. Past. Pa. Thou saist true Neuola, he hath done to much in deed. zu n yy^^ From whence commest thou in the deuils name ? C7 zut~ prouiso Pa. Out of the same house thou earnest from, but not out of '^""^' the same dore. 25 Ne. We had thought thou hadst bene gone long since. Pa. When I arose from the table, I felte a rumbling in my belly, whiche made me runne to the stable, and there I fell on sleepe vppon the strawe, and haue line there euer since : And thou whether goest thou ? 30 Ne. My master hath sent me on an errand in great hast. Pa. Whether I pray thee .? Ne. Nay I may not tell : Farewell. (^Exit) Pa. As though I neede any further instructions : O God what An newes I heard eue now, as I lay in the stable : O good Erostrato 35 °'°^'' and pore Cleander, that haue so earnestly strouen for this damsel, pose.* happie is he that can get hir I promise you, he shall be sure of mo than one at a clap that catcheth hir, eyther Adam or Eue withinhir belie. Oh God, how men may be deceiued in a woman ? who wold haue beleeued the contrary but that she had bin a vir- 4° gin ? aske the neighbours and you shall heare very good report of hir : marke hir behauiors & you would haue iudged hir very maydenly : seldome seene abroade but in place of prayer, and there very deuout, and no gaser at outwarde sightes, no blaser of hir beautie aboue in the windowes, no stale at the doore for 45 the bypassers ; you would haue thought hir a holy yong woman. But muche good doe it Domtne Doctor, hee shall be sure to lacke 1 6 granair all in AC rest, oiii. B 18 fac totum A CD 29 line ABC// : lay'd D * An . . . supose B rest, opposite I. 38 C 36 strouen all 47 it you A 44 SVPPOSES "I- IV no COR NE in a deaie yere, whatsoeuer he haue with hir else: I beshrewe me if I let the mariage any way. But is not this the old scabbed queane that I heard disclosing all this geere to hir 50 master, as I stoode in the stable ere nowe ? it is shee. Whither goeth Psiteria ? Pasiphilo espieih Psiteria comming. Scena .v. Psiteria, Pasiphilo. TO a Gossip of myne heereby. Pa. What t to tattle of the goodly stirre that thou keptst concerning Polynesia. Ps. No, no : but how knew you of that geere .? Pa. You tolde me. 5 Ps. I .? when did I tell you ? Pa. Euen now when you tolde it to Damon, I both sawe you and heard you, though you saw not me : a good parte I promise you, to accuse the poore wenche, kill the olde man with care, ouer and besides the daunger you haue brought Dulipo and the 10 Nursse vnto, and many moe, fie, fie. Ps. In deed I was to blame, but not so much as you think. Pa. And how not so muche ? did I not heare you tell 1 Ps. Yes, But I will tell you how it came to passe : I haue knowen for a great while, that this Dulipo and Polynesia haue 15 lyen togither, and all by the meanes of the nurse : yet I held my peace, and neuer tolde it. Now this other day the Nursse fell on scolding with me, and twyce or thryce called me drunken olde whore, and suche names that it was too badde : and I called hir baude, and tolde hir that I knew well enoughe howe often she 20 had brought Dulipo to Polynesias bed : yet all this while I thought not that anye body had heard me, but it befell cleane contrarye : for my maister was on the other side of the wall, and heard all 48 els, C 1 1 fie, fie, fie. D 14 Yea CD 16 lyen BH : beene A : lain CD iii.v SVPPOSES 45 our talke, wherevpon he sent for me, and forced me to confesse all that you heard. 25 Pas, And why wouldest thou tell him ? I woulde not for. &c. Ps. Well, if I had thought my maister would haue taken it so, he should rather haue killed me. Pas. Why ? how could he take it ? Ps. Alas, it pitieth me to see the poore yong woman how she 30 weepes, wailes, and teares hir heare : not esteming hir owne life halfe so deare as she doth poore Dulipos : and hir father, he weepes on the other side, that it would pearce an hart of stone with pitie : but I must be gone. Pas. Go that the gunne pouder consume thee olde trotte. 35 Finis Actus. 3. w Actus ,iiij. Scena .j. Erostrato fained. Hat shall I doe ? Alas what remedie shall I finde for my ruefuU estate ? what escape, or what excuse may I now deuise to shifte ouer our subtile supposes ? for though to this day I haue vsurped the name of my maister, and that without checke or controU of any man, now shal I be openly discyphred, 5 and that in the sight of euery man : now shal it openly be knowen, whether I be Erostrato the gentleman, or Dulipo the seruaunt. We haue hitherto played our parts in abusing others : but nowe commeth the man that wil not be abused, the right Philogano the right father of the right Erostrato : going to seke Pasiphilo, and 10 hearing that he was at the water gate, beholde I espied my fellowe Litio, and by and by my olde maister Philogano setting forth his first step on land : I to fuge and away hither as fast as I could to bring word to the right Erostrato, of his right father Philogano, that to so sodaine a mishap some subtile shift might be vpo the 15 26 for, &c. CDH 28 me? ^ 35 Pas. [aside] H Go, C : Go:— Z>.- Go: H theeBJI: the ACD s.D. 3.] tertij. CD 1 3 to ftige all 1 5 vp5] on CD 46 SVPPOSES IV. i sodaine deuised. But what can be imagined to serue the turne, although we had monethes respite to beate cure braines about it, since we are commoly know'en, at the least supposed in this towne, he for Dulipo, a slaue & seruant to Damon, & I for Ero- slrato a gentleman & a student? But beholde, runne Craptne to so yonder olde woman before she get within the doores, & desire hir to call out Dulipo : but heare you ? if she aske who would speake with him, saye thy selfe and none other. Erosiralo espielh Psiteria comming, and settdeth his lackey to hir. Scena .ij. Crapine. Psiteria. Erostrato fained. HOnest woman, you gossip, thou rotten whore, hearest thou not olde witche ? Ps. A rope stretche your yong bones, either you muste liue to be as old as I, or be hanged while you are yong. Cra. I pray thee loke if Dulipo be within. 5 Ps. Yes that he is I warrant him. Cra. Desire him then to come hither and speake a word with me, he shall not tarie. Ps. Content your selfe, he is otherwise occupied. Cra. Yet tell him so gentle girle. lo Ps. I tell you he is busie. Cra. Why is it such a matter to tell him so, thou crooked Crone ? Ps. A rope stretche you marie. Cra. A pockes eate you marie. 15 Ps. Thou wilt be hanged I warat thee, if thou liue to it. Cra, And thou wilt be burnt I warant thee, if the canker con- sume thee not. Ps. If I come neere you hempstring, I will teache you to sing sol fa. 20 17 a bef. monethes A ii. 19 you] nowe A IV. ii SVPPOSES 47 Cra. Come on, and if I get a stone I will scare crowes with you. Ps. Goe with a mischiefe, I thinke thou be some deuill that woulde tempte me. (^Exif) Ero. Crapine : heare you ? come away, let hir goe with a ven- 25 geance, why come you not ? Alas loke where my maister Phi- logano commeth : what shall I doe ? where shall I hide me ? he shall not see me in these clothes, nor before I haue spoken with the right Erosirato. Erostrato espyeth Phylogano camming, and runneth a- bout to hide him. Scena .iij. Philogano. Ferraresk the Inne keper. Litio a seruanl. HOnest man it is euen so : be you sure there is no loue to be compared like the loue of the parents towards their children. It is not long since I thought that a very waightie matter shoulde not haue made me come out of Sicilia, and yet now I haue taken this tedious toyle and trauaile vpon me, only 5 to see my sonne, and to haue him home with me. Fer. By my faith sir, it hath ben a great trauaile in dede, and to much for one of your age. Phi. Yea be you sure : I came in companie with certaine gentlemen of my countrey, who had affaires to dispatche as far 10 as to Ancona, from thence by water too Rauenna, and from Rauenna hither, continually against the tide. Fer. Yea & I think y* you had but homly lodging by ye way. Phi. The worst y* euer man had : but that was nothing to the stirre that y^ serchers kept with me when I came aborde y^ ship : 15 Jesus how often they vntrussed my male, & ransaked a litle capcase that I had, tossed & turned al that Avas within it, serched my bosome, yea my breeches, y' I assure you I thought they s.D. commming >5 11 Ancona /4 ; Aneona ^CZ? 15 that »?«. CD 48 SVPPOSES IV. iii would haue flayed me to searche betwene the fell and the fleshe for fardings. 20 Fer. Sure I haue heard no lesse, and that the marchants bobbe them somtimes, but they play the knaues still. Phi. Yea be you well assured, suche an office is the inheritancee of a knaue, and an honest man will not meddle with it. Fer. Wei, this passage shal seme pleasant vnto you whS you 25 shall finde your childe in health and well : but I praye you sir why did you not rather send for him into Sicilia, than to come your selfe, 'specially since you had none other businesse ? per- aduenture you had rather endanger your selfe by this noysome iourney, than hazard to drawe him from his studie. 30 Phi. Nay, that was not the matter, for I had rather haue him giue ouer his studie altogither and come home. Fer. Why ? if you minded not to make him learned, to what ende did you send him hither at the first ? Phi. I will tell you : when he was at home he did as most 35 yong men doe, he played many mad prankes and did many things that liked me not very well : and I thinking, that by that time he had sene the worlde, he would learne to know himselfe better, exhorted him to studie, and put in his electio what place he would go to. At the last he came hither, and I thinke he was 40 scarce here so sone as I felt the want of him, in suche sorte, as from that day to this I haue passed fewe nightes without teares. I haue written to him very often that he shoulde come home, but continually he refused stil, beseching me to continue his studie, wherein he doubted not (as he said) but to profite greatly. 45 Fer. In dede he is very much commended of al men, and specially of the best reputed studentes. Phi. I am glad he hath not lost his time, but I care not greatly for so muche knowledge. I would not be without the sighte of hym againe so long,' for all the learning in the worlde, 5° I am olde nowe, and if God shoulde call mee in his absence, I promise you I thinke it would driue me into disperation. 20 farthings D 23 for bef. suche A 26 well and in health CD 37 I, thinking D 44 refnsed, styll CD 52 desperation ACD IV. iii SVPPOSES 49 Fer. It is commendable in a man to loue his childre, but to be so tender ouer them is more womanlike ? Phi. Well, I confesse it is my faulte : and yet I will tell you 55 another cause of my comming hither, more waightie than this. Diuers of my countrey haue bene here since hee came hither, by whome I haue sente vnto him, and some of the haue bene thrice, some foure or fine times at his house, and yet could neuer speake with him. I feare he applies his studie so, that he will 60 not lease the minute of an houre from his booke. What, alas, he might yet talke with his countrymen for a while : he is a yong man, tenderly brought vp, and if he fare thus cotinually night & day at his booke, it may be enough to driue him into a frenesie. 65 Fer. In dede, enough were as good as a feast. Loe you sir here is your sonne Erostraloes house, I will knocke. PM. Yea, I pray you knocke. Fer. They heare not. Phi. Knocke againe. 70 Fer. I thinke they be on slepe. Ly. If this gate were your Grandefathers soule, you coulde not knocke more softly, let me come : ho, ho, is there any body within ? Dalio comvieih to Ihe wyndowe, and there maketh them annvere. Scena .iiij. Dalio the cooke. Ferarese the inholder. Philogano. LiTio his man. WHat deuill of hell is there ? I thinke hee will breake the gates in peeces. Li. Marie sir, we had thoughte you had beene on sleepe within, and therefore we thought best to wake you ; what doth Erostrato ? 5 Ba. He is not within. 54 womanlike. CD 533 E so SVPPOSES IV. iv Phi. Open the dore good fellow I pray thee. Da. If you thinke to lodge here, }'ou are decerned I tell you, for here are guestes enowe already. Phi. A good fellow, and much for thy maisters honesty by our k Ladie : and what guestes I pray thee "i An- Da, Here is Philogano my maisters father, lately come out of sup!' 'S'2h72ff. pose.* Phi, Thou speakest truer tha thou arte aware of, he will be, by that time thou hast opened the dore : open I pray thee hartily. 15 Da. It is a small matter for me to open the dore, but here is no lodging for you, I tell you plaine, the house is full. Phi. Of whome ? Da. I tolde you : here is Philogano my maisters father come from Cathanea. 20 Phi. And when came he ? Da. He came three houres since, or more, he alighted at the Aungell, and left his horses there : afterwarde my raaister brought him hither. Phi. Good fellow, I thinke thou hast good sport to mocke mee. 25 Da. Nay, I thinke you haue good sporte to make me tary here, as though I haue nothing else to doe : I am matched with an vnrulye mate in the kitchin. I will goe looke to him another while. Phi. I thinke he be drunken. i'^ Fer. Sure he semes so : see you not how redde he is about the gilles ? Phi. Abide fellow, what Philogano is it whome thou talkest of 1 Da. An honest gentlema, father to Erosiraio my maister. Phi. And where is he ? 3; Da. Here within. Phi. May we see him ? Da. I thinke you may if you be not blind. Phi. Go to, go tel him here is one wold speake with him. Da. Mary that I will willingly doe. 4c 10 maisters AC rest: maister B * Another suppose B rest 3 2 I'ghted CD z6 sporte ..4 CZJ.' sporet BH other sup' IV. iv SVPPOSES SI Phi. I can not tell what I shoulde say to this geere. Litio, what thinkest thou of it ? Li. I cannot tell you what I shoulde say sir, the worlde is large Aq- and long, there maye be moe Philoganos and moe Eroslratos than one, yea and moe Ferraras, moe Sicilias, and moe Cathaneas : 45 peraduenture this is not that Ferrara whiche you sent your sonne vnto. Phi. Peraduenture thou arte a foole, and he was another that answered vs euen now. But be you sure honest man, that you mistake not the house .? 6° Fer. Nay, then god helpe, thinke you I knowe not Erostratos house ? yes, and himselfe also : I sawe him here no longer since tha yesterday. But here comes one that wil tell vs tydings of him, I like his counternaunce better than the others that answered at the windowe erewhile. 55 Dalio draweth his hed in at the wyndowe, the Sce- nese commeth out. Scena .v. ScENESE. Philogano. Dalio. WOuld you speake with me sir ? Phi. Yea sir, I would faine knowe whence you are. See. Sir I am a Sicilian, at your commaundement. Phi. What part of Sicilia ? See. Of Cathanea. S Phi. What shall I call your name ? See. My name is Philogano. Phi. What trade doe you occupie ? See. Marchandise. Phi. What marchandise brought you hither } 10 See. None, I came onely to see a sonne that I haue here whom I sawe not these two yeares. Phi. What call they your sonne ? See. Erostrato. 41 geere, Litio. H * Another suppose B rest 44 moe Ph] more Ph D 55 vs be/, at CD yer while C s.D. Philogano B E 2 S2 SVPPOSES IV. V Phi. Is Erosirato your sonne ? 1 6 See. Yea verily. Phi. And are you Philogano ? See. The same. Phi. And a marchant of Cathanea ? See. What neede I tell you so often ? I will not tell you a lye. 20 P^/. Yes, you haue told me a false lie, and thou arte a vilaine and no better. See. Sir, you offer me great wrong with these iniurious wordes. Phi. Nay, I will doe more than I haue yet proffered to doe, for I will proue thee a Iyer, and a knaue to take vpon thee that 25 thou art not. A See. Sir I am Philogano of Cathanea, out of all doubte, if I were gup. not I would be loth to tell you so. pose.* Phi. Oh, see the boldnesse of this brute beast, what a brasen face he setteth on it ? 3° See. Well, you may beleue me if you liste : what wonder you ? Phi. I wonder at thy impudencie, for thou, nor nature that framed thee, can euer counterfaite thee to be me, ribauld villaine, and lying wretch that thou arte. A plea- j)([. Shall I suffer a knaue to abuse my maisters father thus ? 35 sup. hence villaine, hence, or I will sheath this good fawchio in your pose.t paflch : if my maister Erostrato find you prating here on this fashio to his father, I wold not be in your coate for mo conney skins tha I gat these twelue monethes : come you in againe sir, and let this Curre barke here till he burst. 4° Dalio pulleth the Seenese in at the dores. Scena .vj. Philogano. Litio. Ferarese. ZItio, how likest thou this geere ? Li. Sir, I like it as euill as may be : but haue you not often heard tell of the falsehood of Ferara, and now may you see, it falleth out accordingly. * A . . . suppose, B rest 31 if] of /^ f A . . . suppose B rest 38 for] feer C IV. VI SVPPOSES S3 Fer. Friend, you do not well to slaunder the Citie, these men 5 are no Ferrareses you may know by their tong. Li. Well, there is neuer a barrell better herring, beetwene you both : but in deed your officers are most to blame, that suffer such faultes to escape vnpunished. Fer. What knowe the officers of this ? thinke you they know 10 of euery fault ? Li. Nay, I thinke they will knowe as little as may bee, specially when they haue no gaines by it, but they ought to haue their eares as open to heare of such ofFSces, as the Ingates be to receiue guests. 15 Phi. Holde thy peace foole. Li. By the masse I am afearde that we shall be proued fooles both two. Phi. Well, what shall we doe .? Li. I would thinke best we should go seeke Erosirato him 20 selfe. Fer. I will waite vpon you willingly, and either at the schooles, or at the conuocations, we shall find him. Phi. By our Lady I am wery, I will run no longer about to seke him, I am sure hither he will come at the last. 25 t true Li. Sure, my mind giues me that we shall find a new Erostralo "ose.* ere it be long. Fe. Looke where he is, whether runnes he? stay you awhile, I will goe tell him that you are here : Erosirato, Erosirato, ho Erostraio, I would speake with you. ,0 Erostrato is espied vppon the stage running about. Scena .vij. Fained Erostrato. Ferarese. Philogano. Litio. Dai.io. ■ Owe can I hide me no longer. Alas what shall I doe .? I will set a good face on, to beare out the matter. Fera. O Erostralo, Philogano your father is come out of Sicilia. n: 13 games AC rest : gaines, B 14 Inne gates CD * A . . . sup- pose B rest, opposite I. 28 CD 29 Erostraro B {tlie 2nd) i I can D hide ACD : bide BH 3 come, of A 54 SVPPOSES IV. vu Ero, Tell me that I knowe not, I haue bene with him and 5 seene him alredy. Fera. Is it possible ? and it seemeth by him that you know not of his comming. Ero. Why, haue you spoken with him ? when saw you him I pray you? lo Fera. Loke you where he standes, why go you not too him ? Looke you Phtlogano, beholde your deare son Eroslraio. Phi. Erostrato ? this is not Erostraio : thys seemeth rather to be Dulipo, and it is Dulipo in deede. Li. Why, double you of that? 15 Ero. What saith this honest man ? Phi. Mary sir, in deede you are so honorably cladde, it is no maruell if you loke bigge. Ero. To whome speaketh he ? Phi. What, God helpe, do you not know me ? 20 Ero. As farre as I remember Sir, I neuer sawe you before. Phi. Harke Litio, here is good geere, this honest man will not know me. A Ero. Gentleman, you take your markes amisse. iesse ■^''- ^^^ I "^^^ ^^ y°^ °f '•'^^ falsehood of Ferrara master ? 25 sup- Dulipo hath learned to play the knaue indifferently well since he ^ ' came hither. Phi. Peace I say. Ero. Friend, my name is not Dulipo, aske you thoroughout this towne of great and small, they know me : aske this honest 3° man that is with you, if you wyll not beleeue me. Ferra. In deede I neuer knewe him otherwise called than Erostrato : and so they call him, as many as knowe him, Li. Master, nowe you may see the falsehood of these fellowes : A this honest man your hoste, is of counsaile with him, and would 11 neede- fg^j,g yg (Jq^h that it is Erostrato : beware of these mates. Iesse sup- Fera. Friende, thou doest me wrong to suspect me, for sure pose.t J neuer hearde hym otherwise called than Erostrato. 1 1 You om. CD * A . . . suppose B rest, opposite I. 25 CDH 24 mark D f A . . . suppose B rest iv.vii SVPPOSES 55 Ero. What name could you heare me called b}', but by my riglit name ? But I am wise enough to stand prating here with 40 this old man, I thinke he be mad. Phi. Ah runnagate, ah viliaine traitour, doest thou vse thy master thus ? what hast thou done with my son villain ? (^Enter Dalio and other servants') Da. Doth this dogge barke here still ? and will you suffer him master thus to reuile you ? 45 Ero. Come in, come in, what wilt thou do with thys pestil ? Da. I will rap the olde cackabed on the costerd. Ero. Away with it, & you sirra, lay downe these stones : come in at dore euery one of you, beare with him for his age, I passe not of his euill wordes. 50 Erostrato iaketh all his seruantes in at the dores. Scena .viij. Philogano. Ferarese. Litio. ^Las, who shall relieue my miserable estate ? to whome shall lI complaine ? since he whome I brought vp of a childe, yea and cherished him as if he had bene mine owne, doth nowe vtterly denie to knowe me : and you whome I toke for an honest man, and he that should haue broughte me to the sighte of my sonne, 5 An are compacte with this false wretch, and woulde face me downe other (^jjj^j jjg ig Erostrato. Alas, you might haue some compassion of pose * mine age, to the miserie I am now in, and that I am a stranger desolate of all comforte in this countrey : or at the least, you shoulde haue feared the vengeaunce of God the supreme iudge 10 (whiche knoweth the secrets of all harts) in bearing this false witnesse with him, whome heauen and earth doe knowe to be Dulipo and not Erostrato. Li. If there be many such witnesses in this cofltrey, men may go about to proue what they wil in cotrouersies here. 15 Per. Well sir, you may iudge of me as it pleaseth you : & how 42 villain, D 47 cakabed CD 50 of] for CD s.D, dore CD * An . . . suppose B rest 8 ray CD 16 it om. CD A^ 56 SVPPOSES IV. viu the matter commeth to passe I know not, but truly, euer since he came first hither, I haue knowen him by the name of Eroslralo the Sonne of Philogano a Cathanese : nowe whether he be so in deede, or whether he be Dulipo, (as you alledge) let that be proued 20 by them that knewe him before he came hether. But I protest before God, that whiche I haue said, is neither a matter compact with him, nor any other, but euen as I haue hard him called & reputed of al me. Phi. Out and alas, he whom I sent hither with my son to be 25 jV his seruaunt, and to giue attendance on him, hath eyther cut his shrewde throate, or by some euill meanes made him away : and hath not pose.* onely taken his garmentes, his bookes, his money, and that whiche he brought out of Sicilia with him, but vsurpeth his name also, and turneth to his owne commoditie the bills of exchaunge that 30 I haue alwayes allowed for my sonnes expences. Oh miserable Philogano, oh vnhappie old man : oh etemall God, is there no iudge? no oflBcer? no higher powers whom I may complaine vnto for redresse of these wrongs ? Fer. Yes sir, we haue potestates, we haue fudges, and aboue 35 al, we haue a most iuste prince . doubt you not, but you shall haue iustice if your cause be iust. Phi. Bring me then to the Judges, to the potestates, or to whome you thinke best : for I will disclose a packe of the greatest knauerie, a fardell of the fowlest falsehoode that euer was 40 heard of. Li. Sir, he that wil goe to the lawe, must be sure of foure things : first, a right and a iust cause : then a righteous aduocate to pleade : nexte, fiiuour coram ludice : and aboue all, a good purse to procure it. 45 Fer. I haue not heard, that the law hath any respect to fauour : what you meane by it I cannot tell. Phi. Haue you no regard to his wordes, he is but a foole. Fer. I pray you sir, let him tell me what is fauour. Li. Fauour cal I, to haue a friend neere about the iudge, who 50 * A . . . suppose B rest 30 to] vnto CD 39 thou thinkest CD pact A 42 lawe] ciuill lawe A 43 aduocate] doctor A iv.viii .SVPPOSES 57 may «o sollicite thy cause, as if it be right, speedie sentence may ensue without any delayes : if it be not good, then to prolong it, till at the last, thine aduersarie being wearie, shal be glad to compound with thee. Fer. Of thus much (although I neuer heard thus muche in 55 this coQtrey before) doubt you not Philogano, I ^^■ill bring you to an aduocate that shall speedc you accordingly. Phi. Then shall I giue my selfe, as it were a pray to the Lawyers, whose insatiable iawes I am not able to feede, although I had here all the goods and landes which I possesse in mine 6° own countrey : much lesse being a straunger in this miserie. I know their cautels of old : at the first time I come they wil so i.xtoll my cause, as though it were already won : but within a seuCnight or ten dales, if I do not continually feede them as the crow doth hir brattes, Iwetie times in an houre, they will begin to 65 waxe colde, and to fmde cauils in my cause, saying, that at the firste I did not well instructe them, till at the last, they will not onely drawe the stuffing out of my purse, but the marrow out of my bones. Fir. Yea sir, but this man that I tell you of, is halfe a Saincte. 7° /-/'. And the other halfe a Deuill, I hold a pennie. Phi. Well sayd Lilio, in deede I haue but smal confidence in their smothe lookes. Fer. Well sir, I thinke this whom I meane, is no suche manner An of man : but if he were, there is such hatred and euil wil be- 75 ,„.,. twene him & this gentlema (whether he be Eroslraio or Dulipo, pom-.* \\.hat so euer he be) that 1 warrant you, he will doe whatsoeuer he can do for you, were it but to spite him. Phi. Why ? what hatred is betwixt them ? Fer. They are both in loue and suters to one gentlewoman, 80 the daughter of a welthie man in this citie. Phi. Why ? is the villeine become of such estimatiO that he dare presume to be a suter lo any gentlewomSi of a good familie? Fer. Yea sir out of all doubt. 51; Lawyers] doctors A * An . . . suppose /<' res/ S8 SVPPOSES IV. vui Ph. How call you his aduersarie ? 85 Fer. Cleander, one of the excellentest doctors in our citie. Phi. For Gods loue let vs goe to him. Fer. Goe we then. Finis Actus .4. sup- w Actus .V. Scena .1. Fayned Erostrato. Hat a raishappe was this ? that before I could meete with Erostrato, I haue light euen ful in the lap of Philogano : where I was costrained to denie my name, to denie my master, & to faine that I knew him not, to contend with him, & to reuile him, in such sort, that hap what hap can, I ca neuer hap well 5 in fauour with him againe. Therefore if I could come to speake ■with ye right Erostrato, I will renounce vnto him both habite and credite, and away as fast as I can trudge into some strange countrey, where I may neuer see Philogano againe. Alas, he that of a litle childe hath brought me vp vnto this day, and nou- 10 An- rished me as if I had bene his owne : & in deede (to confesse °' ^' the trouth) I haue no father to trust vnto but him. But looke where Pasiphilo commeth, the fittest man in the world to goe on my message to Erostrato. Erostrato espielh Pasiphilo comming towards hivt. Scena .ij. Pasiphilo. Erostrato. TWo good newes haue I heard to day alreadie : one that Erostrato prepared a great .east this night : the other, that he seeketh for me. And I to ease him of his trauaile, least he shoulde runne vp and downe seeking me, and bicause no man loueth better tha I to haue an erand where good cheere is, come 5 s.D. Finis Actus .4. POT. CZ) V.] quinti. /4 * Another suppose 5 rej^ H my AC rest : me B s.D. toward CZJ 2 prepareth Z) 3 trauell C/? V.u SVPFOSES 59 in post hast euen home to his owne house: and loke where he is. Ero. Pasiphilo, thou muste doe one thing for me if thouloueme. Pas. If I loue you not, who loues you ? commaunde me. Ero. Go then a litle there, to Damons house, aske for Dulipo, lo and tell him — Pas. Wot you what? I cannot speake with him, he is in prison. Ero. In prison ? how commeth that to passe ? where is he in prison? 15 Pas. In a vile dungeon there within his masters house. Ero. Canst thou tell wherefore ? Pas. Be you content to know he is in prison, I haue told you to muche. Ero. If euer you will doe any thing for me, tell me. 20 Pas. I pray you desire me not, what were you the better if you knew ? Ero. More than thou thinkest Pasiphilo by God. Pas. Well, and yet it standes me vpon more than you thinke, to keepe it secrete. 25 Ero. Why Pasiphilo, is this the trust I haue had in you ? are these the faire promises you haue alwayes made me ? Pas. { ) By the masse I would I had fasted this night with maister doctor, rather than haue come hither. Ero. Wei Pasiphilo, eyther tel me, or at few woordes neuer 30 thinke to be welcome to this house from hence forthe. Pas. Nay, yet I had rather leese all the Gentlemen in this towne. But if I tell you any thing that displease you, blame no body but your selfe now. Ero. There is nothing ca greue me more tha Dulipoes mis- 35 happe, no not mine owne : and therfore I am sure thou canst tell me no worsse tidings. An- Pa. Well, since you would needes haue it, I wil tell you : he piafn ^*^ taken a bed with your beloued Polynesta. ^"^ , \iyara,—DH:Uta.ABC 16 his] my /? 27 alwayes .4 C m/: homely ^^^ygg ^ * Another . . . suppose B rest pose.* 6o SVPPOSES v.ii Ero. Alas, and doth Damon knowe it ? 4° Pa. An olde trotte in the house disclosed it to him, whervpon he tooke bothe Dulipo and the Nurse which hath bene the broker of all this bargayne, and clapte them bothe in a cage, where I thinke they shall haue sowre soppes too their sweete meates. Ero. Pasiphilo, go thy wayes into the kitchin, commaund the 45 cooke to boyle and roast what liketh thee best, I make thee supra visour of this supper. Pa. By the masse if you should haue studied this seuennight, you could not haue appointed me an office to please me better. You shall see what dishes I will deuise. 50 Pasiphilo goelh in, Erostrato tarieih. Scena .iij. Fayned Erostrato alone. I Was glad to rid him out of the way, least he shoulde see me burst out of these swelling teares, which hitherto with great payne I haue prisoned in my brest, & least he shoulde heare the Eccho of my doubled sighes, whiche bounce from the botome of my heuy heart. O cursed I, O cruell fortune, that so many dis- 6 persed griefes as were sufficient to subuert a legion of Louers, hast sodenly assembled within my carefull carkase to freat this fearfuU heart in sunder with desperation. Thou that hast kepte my master all his youthe within the realme of Sicilia, reseruing the wind and wanes in a temperate calme (as it were at his com- 10 maunde) nowe to conuey his aged limmes hither, neither sooner nor later : but euen in the worst time that may be. If at any time before thou haddest conducted him, this enterprise had bene cut oflf without care in the beginning : and if neuer so little longer thou hadst lingred his iorney, this happie day might then haue 15 fully finished our drifts & deuises. But alas, thou hast brought him euen in the very worst time, to plunge vs al in the pit of per- dition. Neither art thou content to entagle me alone in thy 44 sowre AH: sorowe B : sorow C: sorrow D 2 qI om. AH v.ii SVPPOSES 6 1 ruinous ropes, but thou must also catch the right Erosirato in thy crooked clawes, to reward vs both with open shame & rebuke. 20 Two yeeres hast thou kept secrete our subtill Supposes, euen this day to discipher them with a sorowfuU successe. What shall I do ? Alas what shift shall I make ? it is too late now to imagine any further deceite, for euery minute seemeth an houre til I find some succour for the miserable captiue Erosirato. Wei, 25 since there is no other remedie, I wil go to my master Philogano, & to him will I tell the whole truth of the matter, that at the least he may prouide in time, before his sonne feele the smart of some sharpe reuenge and punishment. This is the best, and thus wil I do. Yet I know, that for mine owne parte I shal do bitter 3° penance for my faults forepassed : but suche is the good will and duetie that I beare to Erostralo, as euen with the losse of my life I must not sticke to aduenture any thing which may turne to his commoditie. But what shall I do ? shal I go seeke my master about the towne, or shall I tarrie his returne hither ? If I meete 35 him in the streetes, he wil crie out vpon me, neither will he harken to any thing that I shall say, till he haue gathered all the people wondring about me, as it were at an Owle. Therefore I were better to abide here, and yet if he tarrie long I will goe seeke him, rather than prolong the time to Erostratos perill. ^ 4° Pasiphilo returneth io Erosirato. Scena .iiij. Pasiphilo. Fayned Erostrato. YEa dresse them, but lay them not to the fire, till they will be ready to sit downe. This geere goeth in order : but if I had not gone in, there had fallen a foule faulte. Ero. And what fault I pray thee ? Pa. Marie, Dalio would haue layd the shoulder of mutton and 5 the Capon bothe to the fire at once like a foole : he did not con- sider, that the one woulde haue more roasting than the other. 21 supposes CZJ 36 sith CZJ master] M. C/5 29 thus] this // 30 better D 38 at om. D 2 goes CD 62 SVPPOSES V. iv Ero. Alas, I would this were the greatest fault. Pa. Why ? and either the one should haue bene burned before the other had bene roasted, or else he muste haue drawne them off lo the spitte : and they would haue bene serued to the boorde either colde or rawe. Ero. Thou hast reason Pasiphilo. Pa. Now sir, if it please you I will goe into the towne and buye oranges, oliues, and caphers, for without suche sauce the 15 supper were more than halfe lost. Ero- Ero. There are within already, doubt you not, there shal lacke strata , . , j' j j exit, nothmg that is necessane. (into Pa. Since I told him these newes of Dulipo, he is cleane beside house) himself: he hath so many hammers in his head, that his braynes 20 A Una- are ready to burst : and let them breake, so I may suppe with him mshe |-Q night, what care I ? But is not this Dominus noster Cleandrus pose.* that commeth before 1 well sayde, by my truth we will teache maister Doctor to weare a cornerd cappe of a new fashion. By God Polynesia shal be his, he shall haue hir out of doubt, for 25 I haue tolde Erostraio such newes of hir, that he will none of hir. Oleander and Philogano come in, talking 0/ the matter in controuversie. Scena .v. Cleander. Philogano. Litio. Pasiphilo. YEa, but howe will ye proue that h^ is not Eroslrato, hauing such presumptios to the cotrarie ? or how shall it be thought that you are Philogano, when an other taketh vpon him this same name, and for proofe bringeth him for a witnesse, which hath bene euer reputed here for Erostrato ? 5 Phi. I will tel you sir, let me be kept here fast in prison, & at my charges let there be some man sent into Sicilia, that may bring hither with him two or three of the honestest me in * A . . . suppose B rest ; opposite /. 22 C,\. IQ ff 23 corns CD troth CD V. V SVPPOSES 63 Cathanea, and by them let it be proued if I or this other be Philogano, and whether he \>t *Erostrato or Dulipo my seruant: 10 & if you finde me contrarie, let me suffer death for it. Pa. I will go salute master Doctour. Cle. It will aske great labour & great expences to proue it this way, but it is the best remedie that I can see. Pa. God saue you sir. 15 Cle. And reward you as you haue deserued. Pa. Then shall he giue me your fauour continually, Cle. He shall giue you a halter, knaue and villein that thou arte. Pa. I knowe I am a knaue, but no villein. I am your seruaunt. Cle. I neither take thee for my seruat, nor for my friend. 20 Pa. Why ? wherein haue I offended you sir ? Cle. Hence to the gallowes knaue. Pa. What softe and faire sir, I pray you, I pros sequar, you are mine elder. Cle. I will be euen with you, be you sure, honest man. 25 Pa. Why sir ? I neuer offended you. Cle. Well, I will teach you : out of my sight knaue. Pa. What ? I am no dogge, I would you wist. Cle. Pratest thou yet villein ? I will make thee. Pa. What will you make me? I see wel the more a man 30 doth suffer you, the worsse you are. Cle. Ah villein, if it were not for this gendeman, I wold tell you what I — Pa. Villein ? nay I am as honest a man as you. Cle. Thou liest in thy throate knaue. 35 Phi. O sir, stay your wisedome. Pas. What will you fight ? marie come on. Cle. Well knaue, I will meete with you another time, goe your way. Pas. Euen when you list sir, I will be your man. 40 Cle. And if I be not euen with thee, call me cut. Pas. Nay by the Masse, all is one, I care not, for I haue 23 pr£E, sequar CD : prassequar //! 3 a Ah] A A 33 I— DH ; I. ABC 64 SVPPOSES V. V nothing : if I had either landes or goods, peraduenture you would pull me into the lawe. (Exit.) Phi. Sir, I perceiue your pacience is moued. 45 Cle. This villaine : but let him goe, I will see him punished as he hath deserued. Now to the matter, how said you ? Law- Phi. This fellow hath disquieted you sir, peraduenture you yersare ^^ould be loth to be troubled am' further, neuer -' weary Ck. Not a whit, say on, & let him go with a vengeance. 50 '° s*^' ^ Phi. I say, let them send at my charge to Cathanea. Cle. Yea I remember that wel, & it is the surest way as this case requireth : but tel me, how is he your seruant ? and how come you by him ? enforme me fully in the matter. Phi. I will tell you sir : when the Turkes won Otranio — 55 Cle. Oh, you put me in remembrance of my mishappes. Phi. How sir ? Cle. For I was driuen among the rest out of the towne (it is my natiue countrey) and there I lost more than euer I shall recouer againe while I Hue. 60 Phi. Alas, a pitifull case by S. Anne. Cle. Well, proceede. Phi. At that time (as I saide) there were certaine of our countrey that scoured those costes vpon the seas, with a good barke, well appointed for the purpose, and had espiall of a 65 Turkey vessell that came laden from thence with great aboun- dance of riches. A Cle. And peraduenture most of mine. gentle p^^-_ g^ jj^gy boarded them, & in the end ouercame them, pose.t & brought the goods to Palermo, fro whence they came, and 70 amogst other things that they had, was this villeine my seruaunt, a boy at that time, I thinke not past fiue yeeres olde. Cle. Alas, I lost one of that same age there. Phi. And I beyng there, and liking the Childes fauour well, proffered them foure and twentie ducates for him, and had him. 76 46 villain,— DH * Lawyers . . . money B rest 5-; Otranto — DH : Otranto. ABC 56 mishap ; — D 58 towne, C : town : £> 6 1 S.] saint A f A . . . suppose B rest ; opposite I. 66 D 70 Paleino CD V. V. SVPPOSES 65 Cle. What? was the childe a Turke? or had the Turkes brought him from Oiranto ? Phi. They saide he was a Childe of Otranto, but what is that to the matter? once .xxiiij. Ducattes he cost me, that I wot well. 80 Cle. Alas, I speake it not for that sir, I woulde it were he whome I meane. Phi. Why, whom meane you sir ? A Liti. Beware sir, be not to lauish. j„p/ Cle. Was his name Dulipo then ? or had he not another 85 pose.* name ? Liii. Beware what you say sir. P^zUWhat the deuill hast thou to doe ? Dulipo ? no sir his name was Carina. Liti. Yea, well said, tell all and more to, doe. 90 Cle. O Lord, if it be as I thinke, how happie were I? & why did you change his name then ? Phi. We called him Dulipo, bycause when he cryed as Children doe sometimes, he woulde alwayes cry on that name Dulipo. Cle. Well, then I see well it is my owne onely Childe, whome 95 I loste, when I loste my Countrie : he was named Carina after his grandfather, and this Dulipo whome he alwayes remembred in his lamenting, was his foster father that nourished him and brought him vp. Li. Sir, haue I not told you enough of y« falshood of Feraral 100 this gentleman will not only picke your purse, but beguile you of your seruaunt also, & make you beleue he is his son. Cle. Well goodfellow, I haue not vsed to lie. Liti. Sir no, but euery thing hath a beginning. Cle. Fie, Philogano haue you not the least suspecte that may 105 be of me. Liti. No marie, but it were good he had the most suspecte that may be. 79 once all * A . . . suppose BH only 93 Children A C rest : Chrildren^ 95 he is mine CZ) 98 him and] him oot. CZJ 105 Fie Philogano, C: Fie, Philogano, D : Fie, Philogano I H 106 me? Z)ff 632 F 66 SVPPOSES V. V Cle. Well, hold thou thy peace a litle good fellow. I pray you tell me Philogano had ye child any remembrance of his "o fathers name, his mothers name, or y^ name of his familie ? Phi. He did remember them, and could name his mother also, but sure I haue forgotten the name. Liti. I remember it well enough. Phi. Tell it then. 115 Liti. Nay, that I will not marie, you haue tolde him too much al ready. Phi. Tell it I say, if thou can. Liti. Ca ? yes by y^ masse I ca wel enough : but I wil haue my tong pulled out, rather tha tell it, vnlesse he tell it first : doe 120 you not perceiue sir, what he goeth about ? Cle. Well, I will tell you then, my name you know alredy : my wife his mothers name was Sophronia, the house that I came of, they call Spiagia. Liti. I neuer heard him speake of Spiagia but in deede I haue 125 heard him say, his mothers name was Sophronia : but what of y' ? a great matter I promise you. It is like enoughe that you two haue compact together to deceiue my maister. Cle. What nedeth me more euident tokens ? this is my sonne out of doubt whom I lost eighteen yeares since, and a thousand 130 thousand times haue I lamented for him: he shuld haue also a mould on his left shoulder. Li. He hath a moulde there in deede: and an hole in an other place to, I would your nose were in it. Cle. Faire wordes fellow Litio : oh I pray you let vs goe talke '35 with him, O fortune, howe much am I bounde to thee if I finde my Sonne ? Phi. Yea how little am I beholds to fortune, that know not where my sonne is become, and you whome I chose to be mine aduocate, will nowe (by the meanes of this Dulipd) become mine '4° aduersarie .? 109 fellow AC rest: follow B no hath CD 124 they call om.CD 130 xviij. Ci3 131 since fl/?. times CZ) 138 little] small /4 139 choose Z) v.v SVPPOSES 67 \ right Cle. Sir, let vs first goe find mine : and I warrant you yours ™P" , will be foimde also ere it be lonor. Phi, God graunt : goe we then. Cle. Since the dore is open, I will neuer knocke nor cal, but 145 we will be bolde to goe in. Li. Sir, take you heede, least he leade you to some mischiefe. Phi. Alas Litio, if my sonne be loste what care I what become of me? Li. Well, I haue tolde you my minde Sir, doe you as you 150 please. Exeunt {into Erostrato's house) : Damon and Psileria come in. Scena sexta. Damon. Psiteria. COme hither you olde kallat, you tatling huswife, that the deuill cut oute your tong : tell me, howe could Pasiphilo know of this geere but by you ? I Psi. Sir, he neuer knewe it of me, he was the firste that tolde me of it. 5 Da. Thou liest old drabbe, but I would aduise you tel me the truth, or I wil make those old bones rattle in your skin. Psi. Sir, if you finde me contrarie, kill me. Da. Why ? where should he talke with thee '! Psi. He talked with me of it here in the streete. 10 Da. What did you here .? Psi. I was going to the weauers for a webbe of clothe you j haue there. (Da. And what cause coulde Pasiphilo haue to talke of it, vnlesse thou began the mater first ? 15 Psi. Nay, he began with me sir, reuiling me, bycause I had tolde you of it : I asked him how he knewe of it, and he said he was in the stable when you examined me erewhile. * A . . . suppose B rest ; opposite I. 140 CD, I. 144 H 142 go first D 143 ere] yer C 144 then. AC rest : then, B 145 neither A 18 yerwhile C F 2 SIOD.' 68 SVPPOSES V. vi Da. Alas, alas, what shall I doe then ? in at dores olde whore, I wil plucke that tong of thine out by the rootes one day. 20 (^Exit Pdteria.) Alas it greeueth me more that Pasiphilo knoweth it, than all the rest. He that will haue a thing kept secrete, let him tell it to Pasiphilo : the people shall knowe it, and as many as haue eares and no mo. By this time he hath tolde it in a hundreth places. Cleander was the firste, Erostrato 25 the seconde, and so from one to another throughout the citie. Alas, what dower, what mariage shall I nowe prepare for my daughter? O poore dolorous Damon, more miserable than The miserie it selfe, would God it were true that Polynesia tolde me *^'^' ere while : that he who hathe defloured hir, is of no seruile jo sup- •* pose estate, (as hitherto he hath bene supposed in my seruice) but brought tjjat he is a gentleman borne of a good parentage in Sicilia. Alas, conclu- small riches shoulde content me, if he be but of an honest familie : but I feare that he hathe deuised these toyes to allure my daughtres loue. Well I wil goe examine hir againe, my 35 minde giueth me that I shall perceiue by hir tale whether it be true or not. But is not this Pasiphilo that cQmeth out of my neighbours house ? what the deuill ayleth him to leape and laughe so like a foole in ye high way 1 Pasiphilo commeth out of the towne laughing. Scorn septima. Pasiphilo. Damok OGod, that I might finde Damon at home. Da. What the diuill would he with me } Pas. That I may be the firste that shall bring him these newes. Da. What will he tell me, in the name of God ? Pas. O Lord, how happie am I ? loke where he is. S Da. What newes Pasiphilo, that thou arte so merie ? " The . . . conclusion B rest 30 yer while C 33 me om. CD 34 that om. D s.D. towne so ABCD, A substituting house in ' Faults escaped' : house H vii. s.D. Pasiphilo] AJI: Philogano BCD 2, 4 Da. [aside] ff V. vii SVPPOSES 69 Pas. Sir I am mery to make you glad : I bring you ioyfuU newes. Da. And that I haue nede of Pasiphilo. Pas. I knowe sir, that you are a sorowfull man for this mishap lo that hath chaunced in your house, peraduenture you thoughte I had not knowen of it. But let it passe, plucke vp your sprits, and reioyce : for he that hath done you this iniurie is so well borne, and hath so riche parents, that you may be glad to make him your Sonne in law. 15 Da. How knowest thou ? Pas. His father Philogano one of the worthiest men in all Cathanea, is nowe come to the citie, and is here in your neigh- bours house. Da. What, in Erosiratos house ? 20 Pas. Nay in Dulipos house : for where you haue alwayes sup- posed this gentlema to be Erostrato, it is not so, but your seruaunt whom you haue imprisoned, hitherto supposed to be Dulipo, he is in dede Erostrato : and that other is Dulipo. And thus they haue alwayes, euen since their first ariual in this citie, exchaunged 25 names, to the ende that Erostrato the maister, vnder ye name of Dulipo a seruant, might be entertained in your house, & so winne the loue of your daughter. Da. Wei, then I perceiue it is eue as Polinesta told me. Pas. Why, did she tell you so ? 3° Da. Yea : But I thought it but a tale. Pas. Well, it is a true tale : and here they will be with you by and by : both Philogano this worthie man, and maister doctor Cleander. Da. Cleander ? what to doe ? 35 Pas. Cleander ? Why therby lies another tale, the moste for- tunate aduenture that euer you heard : wot you what ? this other Dulipo, whome all this while we supposed to be Erostrato, is founde to be the sonne of Cleander, whome he lost at the losse of Otranto, and was after solde in Sicilia too this Philogano : 40 12 sprites ^C; spirits/?^ 23 imprisoned, hitherto CZ) : emprisoned hitherto, ABH 70 SVPPOSES V. vii the strangest case that euer you heard: a ma might make a Comedie of it. They wil come euen straight, and tell you the whole circumstance of it themselues. Da. Nay I will first goe heare the storie of this Dulipo, be it Dulipo or Erostrato that I haue here within, before I speake 45 with Philogano. Pas. So shall you doe well sir, I will goe tell them that they may stay a while, but loke where they come. Damon goeth in, Scenese, Cleander and Philogano come vpon the stage. Scena .viij. Scenese. Cleander. Philogano. Sir, you shal not nede to excuse y^ matter any further, since I haue receiued no greater iniurie than by words, let the passe like wind, I take them well in worthe : and am rather well pleased than offended : for it shall bothe be a good warning to me another time howe to trust euery man at the firste sighte, yea, 5 and I shall haue good game hereafter to tel this pleasant story another day in mine owne countrey. Cle. Gentleman, you haue reason : and be you sure, that as many as heare it, will take great pleasure in it. And you Philo- gano may thinke, that god in heauen aboue, hath ordained your 10 comming hither at this present, to the ende I might recouer my lost Sonne, whom by no other meanes I coulde euer haue founde oute. Phi. Surely sir I thinke no lesse, for I think that not so much as a leafe falleth from the tree, without the ordinance of god. 15 But let vs goe seke Damon, for me thinketh euery day a yeare, euery houre a daye, and euery minute to much till I see my Erostrato, Cle. I cannot blame you, goe we then. Carina take you that gentleman home in the meane time, the fewer the better to be 20 present at such affaires. Pasiphilo stqyeth their going in. 45 haue here] heare A V. IX bVJfi'UbiiS 71 Scena .ix. Pasiphilo. Cleander. MAister doctor, will you not shew me this fauour, to tell me the cause of your displeasure ? Cle. Gentle Pasiphilo, I muste needes confesse I haue done thee wrong, and that I beleued tales of thee, whiche in deede I finde now contrary. - Pas. I am glad then that it proceeded rather of ignorance than of malice. Cle. Yea beleue me Pasiphilo. Pas. O sir, but yet you shoulde not haue giuen me suche foule wordes. ic Cle. Well, content thy selfe Pasiphilo, I am thy frende as I haue alwayes bene : for proofs whereof, come suppe with me to night, & from day to day this seuen night be thou my guest. But beholde, here cometh Damo out of his house. Here they come all togither. Scena decima. Cleander. Philogano. Damon. Erostra- TO. Pasiphilo. Polinesta. Nevola. and other seruaunts. WE are come vnto you sir, to turne your sorowe into ioy and gladnesse : the sorow, we meane, that of force you haue sustained since this mishappe of late fallen in your house. But be you of good comforte sir, and assure your selfe, that this yong man which youthfully and not maliciously hath committed 5 this amorous offence, is verie well able (with consent of this worthie man his father) to make you sufficient amendes : being borne in Cathanea of Sicilia, of a noble house, no way inferiour ix. S.D. Pasiphilo /^Z)^; Philogano 5C 14 corns CZ) a. s.d. Eros- trato all, i. e. the real E. cf. I. 5 ; Erostrato vero Ital. verse 72 SVPFUtJliS V. X vnto you, and of wealth (by ye reporte of suche as knowe it) farre exceeding that of yours. i° Phi. And I here in proper person, doe presente vnto you sir, not onely my assured frendship and brotherhoode, but do earnestly desire you to accepte my poore childe (though vnworthy) as your Sonne in lawe : and for recompence of the iniurie he hath done you, I profer my whole lands in dower to your daughter : yea and 15 more would, if more I might. Cle. And I sir, who haue hitherto so earnestly desired your daughter in mariage, doe now willingly yelde vp and quite claime to this yong man, who both for his yeares and for the loue he beareth hir, is most meetest to be hir husbad. For wher I was 20 desirous of a wife by whom I might haue yssue, to leaue that litle which god hath sent me : now haue I litle neede, that (thankes be to god) haue founde my deerely beloued sonne, who I loste of a childe at y^ siege of Otranto. Da. Worthy gentlema, your friendship, your alliaunce, and the 25 nobilitie of your birthe are suche, as I haue muche more cause to desire them of you than you to request of me that which is already graunted. Therfore I gladly, and willingly receiue the same, and thinke my selfe moste happie now of all my life past, that I haue gottS so toward a sonne in lawe to my selfe, and so 30 worthye a father in lawe to my daughter : yea and muche the greater is my contentation, since this worthie gentleman maister Cleander, doth holde himselfe satisfied. And now behold your Sonne. Ero. O father. 36 Pas. Beholde the naturall loue of the childe to the father : for inwarde ioye he cannot pronounce one worde, in steade wherof he sendeth sobbes and teares to tell the effect of his inward intention. But why doe you abide here abrode ? wil it please you to goe into the house sir ? 4° Da. Pasiphilo hath saide well : will it please you to goe in sir ? Ne. Here I haue brought you sir, bothe fetters & boltes. 19 his OOT. CZ) 39 intention ^^: inuention .5 ?-cri V. X SVPPOSES 73 Da. Away with them now. 2V«. Yea, but what shal I doe with them ? Da. Marie I will tell thee Neuola : to make a righte ende of 45 our supposes, lay one of those boltes in the fire, and make thee a suppositorie as long as mine arme, God saue the sample. Nobles and gentlemen, if you suppose that our supposes haue giuen you sufficient cause of delighte, she we some token, whereby we may suppose you are content. 5° Et plaicserunt. FINIS. 47 suppositorie all s.D. Et plauserunt. B rest THE BUGGBEARS THE BUGGBEARS Argument.— Foimosus, son of the Florentine burgher Amedeus, has by aid of her nurse obtained the love of Rosimunda, daughter of their neighbour Brancatius ; and she is now about to become a mother. He has pledged himself to marry her as soon as their fathers' consent can be obtained : but Amedeus insists on a dowry of 3000 crowns, which Brancatius cannot well raise ; and the latter therefore accepts the rival addresses of the wealthy old Cantalupo. To remove Formosus from his path Cantalupo offers him his daughter Iphigenia with the dowry his father requires, ignoring the previous engagement of her affections to Manutius. Amedeus readily consents ; but Formosus has a plan to defeat the scheme. Acting in concert with the servant Biondello and a friend Camillus, he persuades his father that their house is spirit-haunted, and betakes himself to sleep at Camillus' adjoining house. The old man, at first incredulous, is thoroughly alarmed by dancing and uproar on two successive nights in the loft above his bedroom, a loft which the conspirators enter from Camillus' house by a window. Their plan is to steal 3000 crowns from Amedeus' own chest by means of a false key, to make Amedeus believe it has been taken by the spirits in punishment for his medi- tated injury to Manutius, and to get a complaisant uncle of Rosi- munda's, Donatus, to offer it to Brancatius, as if his own gift, to serve as her dowry. On the morning when the play opens, while Amedeus goes to consult his confessor, a rogue Trappola is secured to act the part of astrologer, to pretend to exorcise the spirits but to explain their visi- tation in the required sense. At a first interview he easily imposes on the three old men, and engages also to cure Rosimunda's mysterious illness. He goes, however, to consult his familiar : in his absence Amedeus is terrified by a brilliant illumination in his bedroom, effected by candles, squibs, and coloured fires ; and the old men, timidly entering the house together, are fairly driven forth by the confederates, disguised in devils' masks : then the chest is robbed, and the friends undress. Trappola returning in the after- noon claims to have already purged the house ; but warns Amedeus that the spirits have taken something he most valued, and declares that Formosus is the destined husband of Rosimunda, as Manutius 78 THE BUGGBEARS of Iphigenia. Cantalupo's ardour has now been cooled by report of Rosimunda's condition, derived by his servant from Biondello. He decides to accept the astrologer's admonition, desists from his own suit, and, cancelling his agreement with Amedeus, resigns his daughter to Manutius. To Amedeus, despairing at the loss of his 3000 crowns, come Donatus and Brancatius with the timely offer of that sum (the coins have been changed) as Rosimunda's dowry. His consent to the match with Formosus is given : she is reported promptly as recovered: and the theft and trickery remain un- suspected. The MS. and its Treatment in this Edition. — On the first leaf of Lansdowne MS. 807 is a list of the titles of fifty-six plays, with the following memorandum by John Warburton, F.R.S., the original owner of the MS. 'After I had been many years Collecting these MSS Playes, through my own carlesness and the Ignorance of my Ser in whose hands I had lodgd them they was unluckely burnd, or put under pye bottoms, excepting y^ three which foUowes. J. W.' The three survivors of the catastrophe, the text of which is then given, are The Queene of Corsica, The Second Maydens Tragedy, and The Buggbears (titles included among the fifty-six) ; and there follows in the MS. the fragment of a fourth, not mentioned in the list, to wit Dr. Robert Wild's comedy The Benefice. From this MS. is taken the present text of The Buggbears, never, so far as known, printed in this country. It was edited, however, in 1897 by Dr. Carl Grabau in three numbers of Archiv fUr das Studium der neueren Sprachen und Litter atur en, Bd. 98 u. 99 (Elberfeld), with Introduction, textual footnotes, and a valuable essay on the form, date, authorship, and sources of the piece. Of this essay I have made full use, as also of Herr L. L. Schiicking's discussion of the play in his Studien ilber die stofflichen Beziehnngen der Englischen Komodie zur Italienischen bis Lilly, Halle, 1901, Kap. iii, pp. 36-55. "The MS. exhibits many different hands. After a careful con- sideration, aided by the expert advice of the Museum authorities, I accept almost entirely Dr. Grabau's distribution, as follows : Scribe A : ff. 57-60 (Act i, sc. i — 11. i), 73-5 recto (v. vi. 39 — v. ix end). Scribe B: ff. 61-3 (11. ii — 11. v. 77), 70-2 (iv. v. 48 — v. vi. 38). Scribe C : ff.64-6 r. (first half) (11. v. 78 — iii. iii. 124 mid.), 66 verso (ill. iii. 1 46 — HI. iv. end), 68 r. (last third)-68 v. (iv. ii. 79 mid. — IV. iii. 1 7 ), 7 5 V. (words of second, third, and fourth Songs, which INTRODUCTION 79 do not appear in their places in the MS,, but which I insert at the beginning of 11. iv, and iii. i, and end of in. iv, respectively), 76 r. (words accompanying the music to Iph.'s song, except those of the burden, which are in another hand), 76 v. (words accompanying music for final Chorus, the words being re- peated separately by yet another hand on the fragment of a leaf, the present f. 77). Scribe D: f. 66 r. (second half) (iii. iii. 124 mid. — 145). Scribe E: fF. 67-8 r. (two-thirds) (iv. i.-^iv. ii. 79 mid.), 69 (iv. iii. 18 — ^iv. v.). With Grabau I recognize C's hand along with his blacker ink in many corrections and additions outside his own part ; especially in B's part S. 62-3, in E's f. 69, perhaps again in B's fF. 71 v., 72, possibly once or twice in A's (i. 2). The nature of these correc- tions, and the reservation of iii. 3 for his own writing, incline me to believe C the author. Further Grabau points out that A's writing, coming at the beginning and end of the play, is seen to occupy three [more correctly four'] successive sheets, B's writing the next three sheets inward, while C, D, and E divide among them the three innermost sheets, if. 64-9. The musical parts (treble, &c.) to the chorus on f. 76 v. being written separately and successively (though combined in this edition) and the lowest of them left incomplete. Dr. Grabau argues with some probability to a missing outer sheet, on one half of which this lowest part was completed, while the other half, coming at the beginning, constituted the missing title-page with author's name and list of dramatis personae. The fragment of a leaf now numbered f. 77, on which the words alone of the chorus are written in a large straggling hand, may be a surviving portion of such outer sheet, or a substitute for it. Of fol. 61 half, unfortunately, is torn away, perpendicularly. In the Notes I have translated the corresponding scenes of the Italian original for comparison with the fragments of text that survive the mutilation. Two revising-hands, at least, are traceable, i. Using a fine- pointed pen and black ink, brackets passages in the margin for omission (i. ii. 55-65, 99-103. "• v. 19-24. iv. v. 37-47, 65-75, V. i (the whole), v (the whole), ix. 1-6, 24-72 Biondello). Excision occasions slight readjustment in 11. v. 19-24 (' cometh shee ', and ' A's four folios at the beginning are balanced by two and a half of his writing at the end, plus one and a half (ff. 75 verso, 76) written by C. 8o THE BUGGBEARS eleven words inserted) ; that of v. v. probably caused the change to ' Cantalupoes ' v. iv. 23; and the same hand, I think, interlined ' let me alone ' for words deleted i. ii. 1 57-8. The marginal ' Act ' IV. V. 65, ' wurse so,' ' ste,' y. ix. 24, 73 do not seem by this hand; which again is hardly that of the ' J. B.' who seems to write the poulter-couplet, v. ix. 73-4, to replace perhaps Biondello's speech bracketed at end of v. viii and lead up at once to the Chorus. 2. A contemporary hand using much fainter ink has supplied mar- ginal crosses (but not beyond f. 70) to mark a line divided between two speakers ; has inserted or expanded prefixes in many places (i. ii. 27, 30, 100; III. iii. 22, 27, 39; IV. ii. 34, 47, 54 ; v. i. 7, ii. 47, 81, 93, vi. 6, 29, vii. 11); and has interlined 'then' i. ii. 167; ' goe ' II. v. 40, ' called ' m. iii. 29, ' cola ' 65, ' grewe on ' iv. 25, 'let vs goe' IV. iii. 33, 'h' v. ii. 46, 'this' v. 18, 'and now I will . . . him ' vii. 61, ' a ' before ' wake ' ix. 2 1. I have noted all corrections and deletions which show a change of sense or of hand ; omitting a few where the scribe has corrected a shp of his own. As in Latin and Italian work the MS. places a list of speakers at the head of each scene, and leaves entry or exit to be inferred from dialogue. One or two exits, however, are inserted by a later hand. I have added such directions wherever required, following Gascoigne's practice. Prefixes in the MS. are usually, not invariably, given by the first letter only. For clearness' sake I have tacitly expanded them, adopt- ing a uniform prefix for each character, and noting any doubtful case below. Names in dialogue or at head of scene are sometimes italicized in MS., sometimes not : I have uniformly itaUcized those at head of scene, and the prefixes, following the MS. in dialogue cases. Contractions and their marks are retained, save p=«, and the mark through final // used by scribe A only, and that with great irregularity (once medially, Camillus i. i. 63). Every addition of mine to the MS. text, whether of stage-direction, prefix, word, or letter, is placed in angular brackets ( ). Punctuation in the MS. is fairly regular, with very common omis- sion of any stop at end of the line, even where required (so, too, in Misogonus MS.). There has been considerable addition to the stops first written, and these are often a gain: but in E's part (ff. 67, 68 r., 69) a reviser, perhaps scribe C, using a fine-pointed pen and blacker ink, seems to have allowed his pen to rest on the MS. at any point in the line, and a few like otiose touches are found earlier. While reproducing faithfully every original or later stop INTRODUCTION 8i that seems possible, I have felt obliged to reject these disfiguring unintentional points without noting them, as also those usually placed in the MS. before and after a prefix, or before and after a name occurring in dialogue ; retaining only the stop after a name when it closed a sentence, I have added no stop : and the very rare case where I have changed or suggested one is noted below. I retain ? whether used in the MS. as a note of interrogation or of exclamation. Date. — The main source of the play, Grazzini's La Spiritata, was published in 1561. Names of spirits, or gibberish in the pretended charm of Act iii, Sc. iii of our play, are borrowed from Johann Weier's De Prxstigiis Baemonum, the first edition of which (in five Books) appeared at Basle, in the first half of 1563, 80.^ The book, leading a reaction against the superstitious belief in witches and magic fostered by the Malleus Maleficarum, aroused wide interest, and may have been seen by our author in Switzerland, or in Italy where he would be most likely to make acquaintance with Grazzini's play. The only other point with a bearing on the date is the substitu- tion of Nostradamus for ' Aristomaco da Galatrona ' as the name assumed by the impostor (iii. iii. 133), and the following lines about him inserted by the English adapter (in. iii. 23-6) : — O sir you wold wonder what miracles I dyd heare Of those that dyd know hym yn Orleannce thys other yere & in paris what a cure he did on the french kyng (I wold have sayd the Queene) how he browght downe her teemyng. Nostradamus (Michel de Notredame), the French physician and astrologer, was invited to Paris by Catherine de' Medici in 1556, highly honoured by her and Henri II, and sent toBlois to cast the horo- scope of the three young princes : but no visit to Orleans is recorded of him, and before the second edition of his Propheties (or Centuries) 1558, he had returned to Salon in Provence, where he died July 2, ' First ed. 1563, 8°, 479 pp. : second, 1564, 8° : third (in six Books), 1566, 8° : fourth (' vennehrt und verbessert ') , 1568, 8° : fifth, 1577, 4° : sixth, 1583, 4° (804 pp.)— all these Latin eds. at Basle. A German translation of its five Books by J. Fiiglino was issued at Basle, 1565, 8°, and again at Frankfurt, 1566, 8°; while a later German translation appeared in 1586, fol. {Doctor Weyer . . . EinBeUrag . . . von Carl Binz . . . 5o«», 1885, 8°, pp. 23, 25-6). The earliest edition in the Brit. Museum is the third, 1566, from which (bk. iv. c. 7) I quote in the notes on iii. 3. As Dr. Binz (and also the Allgemeine Deutsche Bio- graphie) considers each edition to have received enlargement, I cannot be sure that the expressions reproduced in The Buggbears were not added by Weier in 1566, which would prevent our dating the play earlier than that year; but at least they occur well within the compass of the five books of the editio princeps. 532 G 82 THE BUGGBEARS 1566 (see Nouvelle Biog. G/ne'rale, and Life prefixed to the Centuries, ed. Eugfene Bareste, Paris, 1 840). The titles, of date 1 558-9, quote(J by Hazlitt {^Bib. Collections, 2nd Series), and the entry of 'an almanacke and pronostication ' of his to Henry Denham in 1565-6,1 show that something of his work and fame must have been known in England, but we need not suppose such knowledge precise. The mention of Orleans, apart from its repute for magic alluded to in my note, may be dictated by the importance the town had recently assumed as the centre of the religious struggle in France, a struggle sufficiently interesting to Elizabethan England. Since Henri II's death (1559) Catherine had been regent. Her long vacillation between suppression and tolerance was ended in 1562 by Huguenot outrages in Guienne, and in November the 'second troubles' began with the investment of Orleans by the Protestant Prince de Cond^. There on February 18, 1563, Frangois, Duke of Guise, was killed; and the peace, patched up a month later, suspended hostilities till 1567. The Hues quoted above, em- bodying as they seem to do a slander on Catherine (see note on the passage), would be appropriate enough in a Protestant play like ours, of 1564 or 1565; and the allusion to Nostradamus would be as proper before, as after, his death. Herr Schucking (op. cit. p. 36) is inclined to suppose the adapter influenced in his choice of matter and conduct by the successful example of Gascoigne's Supposes, and to place it accordingly not long after 1566, the year also of Nostradamus' death. But with Supposes in view our author would surely have written in prose; whereas he is at the trouble of rendering the prose of his original into the long irregular anapaestic doggerel (Knittelverse) common in 1550— 7O) with the exception of a single scene (iii. 4) in regular septenars. These septenars, or fourteeners, popularized by Phaer {Aen. i-vii, 1558), Sternhold and Hopkins (1562), the Seneca trans- lators (1559-63), and Golding (Metamorph. i-iv, 1565 ; i-xv, 1567 : see note on iii. 3. 53) form in the contemporary drama the transition from the irregular dancing doggerel to the rhymed decasyllabic. In the decade 1560-70 they come gradually into use for the ideal characters, the doggerel or anapaestic verse being reserved for the farcical. They are seen alternating with regular anapaests of four accents in the serious parts of Apius and Virginia (ent. S. R., 1567-8, acted c. 1563), and almost exclusively for those parts in Horestes printed 1567 (see Essay, p. Ixxxiii, and Brandl's Quellen, &c., Introd. pp. Ixxxiv-v). In the Marriage of Wit and Science (lie. 1569-70) regular septenars alternate with rhymed decasyllabics. • Stationer^ Register, ed. Arber, i. 303. IXMUKUDUUllUiN 83 Professor Brandl regards them as a dramatic novelty in the Prologue to Misogonus ; but that play can hardly date so early as Collier sup- posed (1560), and the verse of Gammer Gurton's Needle (? 1559-60) exhibits a distinct twelve- or fourteen-syllable basis. Their appear- ance in only one scene of our play, together with the irregularity of the doggerel, favour a date rather before than after 1566 ; and alike on metrical and historical grounds I assign the piece to 1564 or 1565- Authorship. — The author, who evidently read Latin and Italian, cannot be quite certainly identified ; but the only candidate in the field is the John Jefifere, not otherwise known, who wrote, in upright characters imitating print, at the end of Act v (fol. 75 r.), ' Johannus Jefifere scribebat hoc,' and, just above, in the same character repeated the motto already written in the hand of scribe A, ' Soli deo honor et gloria.' This repetition seems to show that Jeffere is not scribe A, the only scribe at all likely to have put his name there. Even if Jeffere were both author and transcriber, he would not write his motto twice. The Catalogue of the Lansdowne MSS. (1812) asserts, without giving reasons, that he was 'only the subsequent owner of the MS.'. It is more probable that 'scribebat hoc' means 'composed this play', as Warburton and Baker {Btog. Dram. i. 272) supposed; and that Jefifere repeated in regard to his own work as author the pious disclaimer just made by A as copyist, or chose to repeat in his own writing the motto A had already copied from his ori- ginal MS. Such subscription in artificial characters need not prevent our identifying Jefifere with scribe C, whose hand appears in nearly every part of the MS. It is quite improbable that either of the names on the verso of the fragmentary fol. 77, 'Thomas Ba. . .' (illegible) and 'Frances Whitton ', is that of the author : the former may, as Grabau sug- gests, be the ' T. B.' of a marginal stamp found on fol. 74 r. Ifiiles peperel for Iphigin ialjfol. 76 r.) probably informs us only of the name of the boy who took Iphigenia's part : the surname 'peperel ' seems clear enough, and no weight can be attached to Grabau's hesitating suggestion that the composer of the music may have been Nathaniel Gyles, the Chapel choir-master of later years, who was a choir-boy at Magdalen College, 1559-61, clerk of the same foun- dation in 1577, and Mus. Bac. in 1585. Herr Dibelius' recent revival of this suggestion in the same organ (cxii. 204), and assign- ment of a date after 1585 for the play, ignores all the metrical and linguistic considerations which clamour for a much earlier date. SIGLA Text and punctuation follow the MS. In the few cases of change the MS, reading is noted below. See further, pp. 79-81. Italics are reserved for the editor's comment. (7= Dr. Grabau's edition ; A, B, C, D, E refer to the several scribes of the MS. See above, pp. 78-9. Corrections noted without letter may be assigned to the scribe then writing, unless ' black ', ' faint ', or ' pale ' be appended. or precedes an alternative rendering of the MS. characters. J, I „ a suggested emendation. i. e. „ an interpretation. 6ef.='be{oie a/?. = after /A. = perhaps oot. = omitted alt.fr. = altered from iW^r/. = interlined «&/.■■= deleted THE BUGGBEARS (Dramatis Persons. Amedeus, an old miser, father of Formosus. FoRMOsus, his son, secretly married to Rosimunda. BioNDELLO, servant to Amedeus. Trappola, a knavish acquaintance of Biondello, the supposed ' As- tronomer' Nostradamus. Brancatius, father of Rosimunda. DoNATUS, his brother, an old bachelor. Cantalupo, a rich dotard, suitor to Rosimunda. Squartacantino, his servant. Manutius, in love with Iphigenia. Carolino, his servant. PicciNiNO, servant to Camillus. Iphigenia, daughter of Cantalupo. Catella, her attendant. Tomasine, Rosimunda's nurse. Phillida, servant in Brancatius' household. Persons necessary to the plot, who do not appear. Camillus, neighbour to Amedeus and confederate with Formosus. Rosimunda, daughter of Brancatius. Scene — Florence.) The Buggbears (f.57i-) Actus primus Scena i" Amedeus Biondello Ame. Now sure biondello y" art a worthie hinde to trust to at ned : I imagined in my mynd yt having yea wtli me I had an other hercules Bion. ye marie thoughe I be but a servant yet doubtles my life is as dere to me as yo"'^^ is to you. 5 Ame. I know thou didst here me when I calde thee : Eton. Very trew Ame. And yett woldst not answare nor ones peepe owt thie hed of all this live longe night sythe first y" wentst to bed. Bion. Why I praie yo" wold yo" wishe me to have risen in ye Darke & bine caught wtli those sprites ? that had bene a prettie warke lo Ame. Go go horson camell, by thy parsonage thou art bige enoughe to beare a standerd, yf thou hadst a good mans hart Bion. I give yo" leave to talke, but I praie you syr tell me whie cowcht yo" so close, & gat not vp to see what hurly burly was ther ? Am£. ah slave makest no difference 15 beetweene me & thie selfe .? Bion. yes yo" have store of pence & riddockes in great plentie, & I pore sole have none you are master, I am servant, but else of fleshe & bone I ame as well mad(e) as yo" Ame. thou myghtst have saide allso that I ame of reputatioti & thou for nowght doste goe ao The Buggbears] this title inserted by a later hand Ff. 57-60 i.e. down to end of ii. I written by scribe A seena »'"] MS. Acts and Scenes throughout divided as in MS. 6 trew broader pen after well deleted ^i or differance i.i THE BUGGBEARS 87 that I do good a brode & thou bringst no comoditie that I ame stricken in yeres & thou art yonge & lustye oh y' I had thie youthe, & those lymes y* thou haste to deale w*'' a dragon shold not make me agaste Bion. I am hyred w*^ yo^^ to do my symple servise 25 & not to fight w''^ bugbeares ; O what a noyse was this those shrikes those cries that cruell roringe fitte though the nyght be quyte past, ring in myne eares yett I do not mervaill I, thoughe yo"' sonne durste not tarrye but laie those ij nyghtes forthe, he had good reason marry 30 Ame. when my sonne told me fii'ste, y* night I hard nothinge but these ij nyghtes gon ther hathe binne an old rumblinge Bion. why ? in what sort was it : Ame. they bounsed on the floore right over my hed, y' I lokte every howre that the loft, the walles, the howse, & all wolde Downe 35 but He lie no more nights ther, yf I maie in all this towne find never so base a lodginge till yt clattringe be ended & streight I mynd to seke how y* mattar maie be mended (Bion!) what thinke yo« to do ? Ame. lett me here thie best counsell {Bion^ do yo" not remember what formosus did tell 40 {Ame.) I have halfe forgotten Bion. The astronomer Ame. Thou saiste trew {Bion.) how saye yo" ? is it' best I bringe hime to talke v/^^ yo" {Ame.) ye mary, do thou so, the while I will go & aske the advise of my neighbour Cantalupo {Bion.) why ? what can he helpe : Ame. why ? dost thou not know 45 that allwaies it is good to have ijo stringes to ones bow (f. 57 v.) Bion. the ffewer know yo""^ case the lesse they shall clatter but if yo" liste to tell him it makes no great mattar Ame. while I go, staie at home & loke to the howse 30 ionhe interlined ' by C G 39 (Bion.) this and the five prefixes brack- eted below are lost by mutilation of the edge. G as here 42 hime] i alt. from o 88 THE BUGGBEARS i. i Bion. to staie ther alone, mary our lorde deffend vs 50 Ame. Ah cowardlie wreche, who shall se my diner dreste Bion. Diner me no diners, Ame. whie thou dastard craven beast wilt thou have me fast to daie ? Bion. have yo" not chese & butter & a colde capons barne ? & more then I ned vtter that remaind of yesternight Ame. thou knowst I cannott eatt 55 except I have pottage & some good hot meat I never thinke I dine except I have some brothe Bion. this ones yo" mvst have patience, be yo" lefe or lothe Ame. then thou must be master this once, but what wilt do while I ame a brode ? Bion. I do meane to gett me to 60 yo"f Sonne formosus, & as sonne as he dothe rise we will fetch the astronomer Ame. Canst tho^ tell wher he lies Bion. here at the next howse w*!* yo^"" neighbore Camillus Ame. In the name of god do so, sythe thou darest not kepe the howse He folow thy mynd this ones & gett me gonne 65 but herest thou ? lett this man be browght hether a none w"^ all possybell spede Bion. it shall be done in hast Ame. In suche waightie matters I love no time to waste Bion. the wiser man yo" (Exit Amedeui) So so he is gon his waie withe a flea in his eare now farewell gentell gefferye 70 he hathe his arrand wtli him I warrant him he is sped in slide of toies he hathe bugbeares in his head he hopes by the helpe of this same astronomer to hawson those sprites, but yf we frame this gere we hope to hawson him Bie this counterfaict Kaie 75 well we lattlie lett make we will find suche a waie to his goldinges that he kepes in prison so cruelly that I trust yett er nyght they shall have a gaile delivery 72 or taies as G i.i THE BUGGBEARS 89 yf my counnyng do not faill me, especiallie yf formosus have pvided the Astronomer he talkt of vnto vs 80 But who comethe yonder ? Sceane 2" Trappola Bimdello Tra. lis not that my frend biondello Bion. Is not that my franion Trappola Tra. lett me see : is it he ? or n(o) Bion. what ? my Trappola ? the king of good felowes that didst lie wth the queene of beggars ? all haile to thie maiestie Tra. Biondello ? my old coapesmate ? of knaves y^ grand captai(ne) 5 not a knave of baser size, but a knave died in graine the warden of the company of ia veils, & the storehowse of suttelltie & falshod, most wellcom art thou to vs. Bion. how goeth the world w"' thee ? Tra. like a bowle very round Bion. Vpon an old razer wilt thou lend me xx'ie pound ? 10 and He paie thee againe when we '\]° be honest men (f. 58 r.) Tra. wilt do on thinge for me ? shalt see what He sale then Bion. what is that ? Tra. wilt thou do it ? Bion. yf I can Tra. Slope downe a low & kisse my round rivette while I clawe thine ellbowe Bion. three son burnde thistles, & a littell vrchines wolle 15 & of waspes & of hornettes on small pore bushell full & the divels nailes vnpared Tra. well lett these grettinges go canst helpe me to formosus ? Bion. that I cane Tra. Canst thou so ? where is he ? Bion. not far. of Tra. yesternight he bade me be 79 coHnnyng MS. 2 n(o) -o hidden by repair 5 coapesonate G (ne) hidden ^ repair 6 size aft. sort deleted 15 three] there MS. G 17 «arf vnpared — 90 THE BUGGBEARS i.ii this mornyng at his loging, but wherefore I cannot tell thee 30 Bion. then I can tell thee the astronomer thou must plaie to worke a certaine feate to serve his torne this daie Tra. he had haste when he melt me & so told me not wherefore but he wild me to come to him & then I shold know more Bion. I can tell thee the matter, for I devised it 25 Tra. what is it ? Bion. Go we in he will tell thee every whit Tra. he naie he slepes yet, if his old wont he kepe he wakes not so earlie Therefore while he dothe slepe declare me the circumstance Bion. Then harken Tra. I do so Bion. thou seeste that corner howse ? Tra. Very well Bion. Ther old brancatio 30 hath a passing pereles primrose to his dawghter whom formosus dothe love beyonde the moone ? Tra. It is fitt to be amorous for on of his yeres Bion. now almost a yere agone w* praiers & presentes, & bribes many a one that he gave to here nurse, he be haved him selfe so well 35 that he gate to here bed howbeit the trewthe to tell she yelded not vnto him till first he had plighted his faithe & trouthe vnto her, & ther he her wedded & bedded very closely, & put the weddinge ringe on her finger, her father & his ther of vnwittinge 40 & every boddie els, save her pore nurse a lone wher vpo commynge to her more times then that on he hath left his marke behind him, & mad her a mother Tra. See what comes of gamynge Bion. whiche knowne, by a brother 24 him substituted in MS. for heipe him for deleted 27 Tra. in another hand 27-8 he naie . . . dothe slepe bracketed in margin for omission 30 Bion'] Bi MS. in another hand, as Tra /. 2 7 i.ii THE BUGGBEARS 91 of her fathers he hath made a very earnest motion 45 to his & her father to have her : where vpon he wold mary her openlie againe ■w^^ new solemnitie in the face of the world whom before he marred prively Tra. what saie they ? Btm. Brancatius her father is content but my master Amedeus is so hellishely bent 50 on the muck of this world, on his pelfe & his drosse that of three thowsand crownes he wyll not bate a crosse of rownd redy payment in dowry to bringe w**! her Tra. O gredy gaping gourmoimd, O whinying drivelinge miser Bton. The damoyseU hathe a stocke of towe hundred potmd 55 & a ferme of her owne, but that soume cannot be found (f. 58 v.) her stock & her fathers cannot well reache so hie except he solde some land wct he will not til he die & then all is heres, for she is his only heire Tra. Treuly me thinkes her portion is faire 60 Bion. yet it dothe not content ou'' pinchefiste the old vecchio thoughe her fathers land be faire, & he welthy allso he loves not longe barefote for dead menes showes to stand rather wold he one birde redy cawght in his hand then two in the bushe Tra. Ther in he hath some reason 65 Bion. Ye & see an other myschefe . in this same very season our neighbour Cantalupo old graybeard lovethe hottely my yoflge masters wife Tra. what dothe he ? in myne eye she is as mete for him, as a glove for a horses nose old morell wold have a new bridell I suppose. 70 Bi'on. why fole ? when he happnethe to sneese in the nighte hathe he not ned of on to saie Christe helpe Tra. thou readest right Bi'on. And furder she will kepe his back warme now he is old Tra. I doubt shee will make him stammer & say I am a cucke- cucke cuckecold 48 marred] maried G 53 dowry. MS. 55-65 Bion. The . . . some reason bracketed in margin for omission 69 f deleted bef. mete 92 THE BUGGBEARS i.ii for old men speake hudell many times on that note 75 but forthe wth thy tale Bion. the old fole is so hole on that matche, that to stope my yonge master atide he tenderethe him his daughter, & offreith to provide the three thousand Crownes that ou"" vecchio dothe require well summe hathe so set my old master all on fier 80 that formosus must hav her, the bargaine is concluded the writinges are ingrosed, & yesterdaie weare they sealed Tra. and how then ? Bion. how then fole ? what shold formosus do but confesse he is maryd ? for he cannot mary towo Tra. and what harme of that Bion. he shall lose his fathers love 85 & he torned owt of dores And therfore it dothe behove leste he lose his inheritannce to kepe all thinges secret now this same cantalupoes dawghters harte is set on an other on manutius. Tra. but I praie the what remedie have ye shaped for those matters ? Bion. Theron the pointe dothe lie 90 flfirst formosus wife dothe faine her selfe sycke & kepes her chamber close, having gon a monthe quicke lest her father shold pseave her bellie to swell in woh case we ware forsed the hole matter to tell to her mother who to hide the thing mor cunninglie 95 hathe devised as it were for the ease of her malady that she shall to the farme here w*'' owt ye towns end to take y6 freshe ayer to see yf she will mend Tra. Oh thies mames are exigent thier daughters prankes to hide Bion. how finelie for the purpose & darkly she dothe pvide 100 to salve her dawghtrs sore & to bleare Brancatioes eye 86 \is\qy.? be 88 a\\ deleted before %et 91 taine substituted above for make deleted 94 hid deleted bef. tell 99-103 Oh thies . . . purpose bracketed in margin for omission. 99 exigent] yj/. .? excellent 100 Bio. in another hand as II. 27, 30. Qy. ? rather at I. loi or 102. I. ii THE BUGGBEARS 93 this dale aftar sopper she shall go thither closlye she hathe borowed a litter for the purpose. Tra. Thates alone. Eton, well, that feare is halfe past as sone as she is gone (f. 59 r.) Tra. But to breake the second mariag, how provide yo" for it ? 105 I meane w*'' Cantalupo ? Bion. peace I am not so fare yett This same rosimunda (so formosus wife is named) hathe an vncle a stale batcheler, whom we have framed to offer to geve for his nieces preferment these three thousand crownes, & farther is content no to make her his child, so she marye w' formosus Tra. will he disburse this mony ? Bion. No, that charge lies on vs for the iij thousand crownes to provid Tra. wher are they ? Bion. In my olde masters cofer, & here is a false key to helpe vs vnto them, her vncle onlye shall 115 take vpon him he dothe give it to helpe his niece w"i all Tra. Old grandsire will myse it & so smell owt the trayn Bion. for that we have a shifte : Tra. that wold I here faine Bion, we intend to bringe him in beleffe that Sprites did rob him Tra. what is his head so grosse that yo" thinke yo" can bob him lao Bion. why is it a thing vnpossyble or vnlikelie that sprites wil deall withe gold ? they are nimble & slie to convaie greater matters Tra. lett formosus be advised for doubt lest he pull an old howse vpon his head Bion. well, heare me owt, formosus gave out this other mornyng 125 that the howse was full of sprites, & that he hard a rumbling all the livelonge night, & fained a mervelous feare Tra. what said old amedeus ? Bion. he laughed at this geare 112 charge interlined 113 iij° iW5. W] ii interlined black 120 so deleted bef.hoh 122 vrithe interlined darker slie: MS. 12^ gave inter- lined darker 94 THE BUGGBEARS i. ii & cald his sonne fole, but at night went formosus to lie forthe of doors here at the next howse 130 wth our neighbor Camillus, from whence throughe a window wob I left vnbolted they gate in by lowe & so in to the cockelofte ou^ my old masters head ther they shaked Iron chaynes, & bounsed, & trampled & howled as a thowsand devels had bin there 135 Tra. Oh passinglie well Bion. my master had great feare when he hard that gastlie sture, vi'^ lasted till nere dale till formosus & camillus gat forthe the same wale by the wob they gat in Tra. oh ther was sport alon Bion. My master called me as sonne as night was gon, 140 and told me all the tragidie w"'' I knew better then he now this last night past he mad a pallet for me harde at his chambar dore, becawse I shold lie nere for I toke vpon me none of this stur to here Tra. now a knave put on thie cote ? Bion. halfe an hower aftar mydnight 145 formosus and his franions came againe that same waie right that they came the other tim, & mad like sture or more (yf more myght be made) then they made the nyght before he cald me, I laie winking, pretending for starke feare yf he gave me all he had that I durst not once come there 150 so that vp he cold not gett me till this mornyng at brode dale in the whiche we ijo parted, & he toke that same waie to talke wtli Cantalupo, & to tell him of this case (f. 59 v.) & I for the astronomer for formosus set a face as thoughe he knew wher to find a cunyng mane 155 to helpe all those matters by art : Tra. yf he can informe me what to do, then He counterfett for counyng 129 went interlined for when deleted 132 vnbolted interlined for open del. by or be 140 sonne MS. 148 made {botK) e added black 154 set] e alt.fr. a 157 then interl. faint 167-8 He . . . tellinge deleted and replaced by let me alone in another hand left unrhymed, though b-t is in- serted before the next line. i.ii. THE BUGGBEARS 95 to have eat a conyes tayle. but yet in all thy tellinge I see not to what end my art servethe to, to helpe those love matters Bion. Thoughe thou dost not yet I do 160 thou shalt know more w* in but to show the same brefBy thou must colour the taking of this mony by Nigromancie But go we in vnto him, se wher comes Cantalupo that lustie ould lover, & his man Squartacantino {Exeunt^ Scena f'. Cantalupo j Squartacantino Can. Do so Amedeus, I wishe yo" toke that waye lett him tell yo" his oppinyon, I have said what I can sale let me here of yo" againe, Now my Squartacantino am not I hapie trowest thou, yf my good frend brancatio kepe promyse w*'' me, and lett me have to wife 5 Rosamunda his daughter, the ladie of my life ? Sq. I shold thinke yo" did better to do yo"^ kindred good w* yo"' goodes, for they have ned, then thus to waxe home wood on a girle at these yeres : or to helpe me yo"'' survant w"^ som good afiuitie, then venus games to haflte 10 I doubt yo"r.younge wife will mark yo™ I wott how w"> Saint Cornelius badge. Can. ah caytife what saiest thou ? Sq. I have senne as mad a matter as that com to passe Can. he shall never pise in medow that fearethe every grasse Sq. Do yo" thinke these fros(t)y heares are fitte to matche w't her 15 Can. frostie heares ? Nay my boy, I never felt me lustier no'^ better disposed, tutt thou knowest not me yett .S"^. O syr gett yo" in, me thinkes you have a ffitte of an agew by your shiveringe & choughing so eagerly the cold ayre is nought for you Can. I an agew slave ? why ? 20 •S"^. how do you ? I parceve yoP- are not well in your head 161 more] re altered C from e i, 11, 16, 22 an (ant/. 22) added by broad black pen to C of prefix 5 me and lett me, MS. 7, 13, 15, 21 qat (qa /. 7) added by broad black pen to S of prefix 8 goodes G : goodeses MS. {symbol f repeated) 18 SQat supplied pale ink 96 THE BUGGBEARS i. iii Can. I ayle nothing I, but am very well desposed Sq. lett me fele yo«' pulses, you are harte sycke it semethe so Can. Awaie beast, dost thou thinke to make me Calandrino Sq. your braines are owt of tune, that yo" talke thus a dwelfe 25 of love trickes at your age Can. why ? knowest not horsone elfe that Amor vincit omnia i Oh rosimund my swetinge God send me thy favour, rather then to be a kinge be of good chere my girle when thou art on fot againe we will knocke vp this maryage Sq. I pceave this is plaine 30 not an agew, but a frensy Can. Then how currant shall I be Sq. we had ned of cordes or chaines to bind him I see an old man thus to doat ? Can. ■ how old am I slave ? I have yett in my head all Sq. your eies Can. my tethe knave Sq. me thinkes in you^ wooing you' take an akward waie 35 to draw it thus in lenght, & drive it from day to day (f. 60 r.) these women are all of the hastinges Can. blame not me if it laie in my powre to day it shold be rather then to morow, or els I wishe the gowt & the cowghe, & the cankers wold red me Sq. no doubt 40 but it maie be as yo" sale, yet sir this apparell is of so stall a fasshion it cannot like her well it makes yo" like a shepe Can. A shepe ? Sq. you are lapt in fur as a shepe is in wooU I wold kepe an old stoore wth the taylor for the fasshions, yf I were as you are 45 23 you] yo" MS. 41 yet interlined above But deleted 43 you are interlined above youie deleted 44 stoore qy. ? sturre i.iii THE BUGGBEARS 97 syns you \yiU nedes be a lover Can, thou woldst have me cut & square & hack & hew my clothes, & go stroot it like a tossepotte Sq, thers a meane twene starring & starke blinde you wotte Can. & bycause thou dost saye so, He go mend the matter streight Sq. why ? whether will yo go ? Can. to the tailours to wayte 50 what fasshion is newest to please my ladies eye & bedeckte in that sute, thou shalt se me by & bye Sq. you consyder it wisely Can. the while go thou & gett at ye poticaries shop some fine muske & syvitt to make me smell swettly, for He lead a lovers life 55 Oh what myght I do to wine her to my wife ? Sq. This geare askethe cost Can. cost ? what talkest of it & I had an whole Emprie, I woold spend it every whit to wyn my rosymonda. hold here this Crusado to by this gear w'!" all the while I will go 60 to the barbars to be triiiide Sq. to the diers rather gett yo^^ to die yo™ head & beard of an other fressher hewe But here yo" ? for yo^^ dawghters dowry yo° must care that yo" mary to formosus you had ned to save & spare it is a good round gobbett Can. tut I have mad my reconinge 65 for that matP all redie, & therfore I will synge lyThey sing^ Can. O love I die Sq, O fole I frie Can. O myne owne sweet hart Sg. O cockescombe that thou art 70 Can. O my queene & my ladie Sg. O my twichild & my babye Can. O my Empresse & my goddes Sg. O madnes & beastlines 54. shop. MS. 58 Emprie] i.e. empery, but qy. ? Empire 67-83 as eight lines MS. 532 H 98 THE BUGGBEARS i. iii Can. my hart wythe love dothe skipe 75 Sq. the dogboh lackes a whip Can. how it leapes in my body Sq. alack my pore noddie. Can. O the loye of my mynd Sq. O head full of winde. 80 Can. Singe hey trolly lolly Sq. ffarwell my filly folly. Exit Cant (.Sy.) now he that in on packett all follies wold binde lett him knit vp my masters, for doubtles in my mynd he cannot be so sped Sythe he hathe fallen in love 85 what gaudes & gamboldes of venus dothe he prove what toyes & frantick fittes do encomber his hed he is coombed, & slicked, & wasshed, & perffumed (f. 60 v.) & frizeled, & marquisotted, A mare wold break her halter to se how rosymunda his old vaine can allter 90 he lutethe he harpethe, & singethe all the day wtl" a voyse as swett as any as can braie he iettethe vp & downe before his laedies durre wtli his sonettes & his love laies he kepes a stinking sturre but sythe this folishe camell on the sodaine will wexe so feate 95 lett me go & provid this musk & this sivett diadogmatriton were fitter I suppose or a drame of pylgrim salve to clap to his nosse (Exit) Actus' Secundus' Scena 2'". Piccinino. Pice. I can scant hold vp myne eies, for why these ij nightes past I slept not halfe an howre, who ever saw suche a cast ? now the winters nyghtes be longe to die for lacke of slepe ties no wonder consydering what a bounsynge we did kepe over amedeus hed to put him in a feare 5 what a bustling of chaines & a rumbling mad we there ? 75 dothe] dethe C 83 "Eyil Coat added in a different hand 83 binde fl/?. finde deleted 84 knit] kint MS. G ma''sters MS. master G 85 read sped. 88 slicked] i alt.fr. e 93 laedies alt. black fr. laidees 97 Diadogmacriton G ■ 98 drame] drane MS. C II. i THE BUGGBEARS 99 god mend this world wth me, & send me to slepe my fill ■vjo^ I know I shall not doo by my masters will Trewly thies masters have but littell discresyoR 9 but had they first bin servauntes they had mended that condicion that I wear a master how happie were it then ffor those loly felows shold hap to be my men they shold have good rownd waiges well paid them at theyr day they shold lie well, & ffare well & have they^ tymes to play as well as to drudge, they shold have suche drinke & meatt 15 as shold be pvided for my parson to eatte 1 wold never chafe nor brawle, nor send them in the raine especially in the night, and in the heate a gaine they shold slepe ther vndertide, they shold not run & lackie like spaniells at my stirrop, but shold ride everye iornye 20 thoughe it weare but a mile, they shold go by time to bed & not rise to earlie ; thus shold they be handled yf I weare a master, but sythe I am a slave wtli camillus the contrary of all thies thinges I have : yet I cannot muche myslike, for my master for company 25 & formosus did take like paines or mor thane I these ijo nightes that ar gone but here is the myscheefe when I wold tak a nape rather then my life he sendes me owt of dores even quite beyond Arno to fetch cartain masking visers of rondeletio 30 but lett me trudge hence for I here on dup our durre yf my master toke me here, he wold kepe an old sturre {I^xi/.) {Scena 2" Biondello. Trappola) (fol. 61 r.) Bion. Co(me) ... Tra. A g . . And .... {Bion) ... 13 rownd] crownd G 15 have suche substituted in same hand abate not ran deleted 18 in^] in in MS. 27 gone substituted above in same hand for past deleted (Scena 2°) Ff. 61-3 written by B. F. 61 has been torn downwards leaving only the fragments of lines here reproduced, with initials for the speakers. See notes. i Co(me)] So t? ^ (Bion.) In many parts of the MS. a line divided between two speakers is marked with a cross in the left hand H 2 THE BUGGBEARS 11. u how . Tra. If he . he wo lest I . . , (5i Now m Thone Tra. I warr(ant) I haue y lett them but wher . . . (jBion^ that bothe They will ij Tra. Are they s Bion. ye & more, . . . (Tra^ greater mat(ters) Twentye tym(es) 1 haue brough(t) Althoughe in 1 . Bion. Theis matters o . & to tell them to . to make them to . Tra. The grosser ? Naye 25 But whye staye to lynger till they Bion. to Santa Maria Noi^ella) . . {Tra.) As thoue saiest, for y that I brought thee 1 30 but whoa Cometh yond(er) that wrought all this {Exeunt.) Scena ■f'- T{omasine, Formo«ts. Tom. I warraunt youe I, w . I will straight fynde hi(m) . If youe plucke vp your h(eart) margin: this enables us to restore the missing prefixes on the recto only of this mutilated leaf. 9 Thone] Thoue G II. Ill THE BUGGBEARS 101 And Causeles torment not y(ourselfe) And hearest thoue Phillida . the Cawdell that I made he . in the Dobnett on the fyer, let And gyve her of the brothe till I . that shee can fast so longe, but he(r) And her love cloyes her stomack, & Suche meates as are holesome and should (v)vott, fol. 6 1 V.) ht, 15 25 30 an fayne down, sownd) 35 1 tlie^] the* MS. 18 -ht] to arrive at the number of lines lost I have allowed space upwards, from I. 35 where the rhyme is first recovered, guided by the space left between the lines on the same leaf below. I am doubtful whether six, five, or four lines are lost between that ending in -ht and the top of the leaf ; but Grabau^s estimate agrees with text and with scribe B's average page ofj^S II. 24 -ie] or -ne as G 102 THE BUGGBEARS 11.111 . ownd : g ielousye, ye ymenting, the thing, 40 in distresse, hevynes not to goe r woe, . (fea)refu]l Case : 45 {Iphig)ema shall displace. . (pl)ighted love. . she will prove . alter. . ielous eares doth Clatter 50 (st)roke a bargayne, yt betwene them twayne (Iph)egema to his wief . endes her lyef, n see that matche proceed 55 that he meaneth in deed . (th)at he to her hath born depely hath he sworne (contr)arye) yett to appease her mynde That takes it so deapely, this onlye waye we fynde (fol. 62 r.) 60 To be able to help to bryng hym to her sighte whose onlie gladsom presence Can stynt her stormy fright. See what mightye wonders worketh love & mad ielousye in a womanes wilfuU harte. But yonder cometh luckelye Formosus that I talkt of. For. Well sayd my Camillus, 65 Syth all thinges for the purpose are redye in yo"^ house, the Counterfeit keye, the squybbes, the balls of fyer the Rosen, & the Candles, & whatt ells we desyer. 39 ymenting] the y is uncertain 43 not] no G 59 arye) G, but fh, arye I MS. 60 deapely substituted in blacker ink C for heavelie underlined II. iii THE BUGGBEARS i°3 doe youe sett all thinges in frame, the while I will flye In hast to Rosimunda. and retume by and by. 70 Tom. He talkes of my Charge For. To revive her agayne, whome the tale of my revolt poore wench hath wel nere slayne sorye be those toonges that delighte to devyse to sett vs twoe oute suche vncredible lyes. Tom. This beginnyng ys good For. And yt were not for pyttie 75 1 wold chide her a lyttle to beleve such a vanytie, Can I forsake her ? Can the fyshe live on land ? Can men live without breathe ? Can the heavens rolling stand ? Can the flaming fyer freese ? Can the Chilly ryvers burn ? Assone maye theis thinges hap, as Formosus faith maye turn. 80 Tom. O worthy true harte, now he is in this good mynd A better tyme vnto him then this, I cannot fynde. For. Whoe ys that, that talketh there ? what ? my foundresse Tomasine ? howe fares Rosamunda yo'' Charge, that swetest Saint of myne ? Tom. Never worse For. Oh my harte, how soe ? what hath hapned ? 8^ Tom. She ys sick w"> great sorow & wtli fear well nere dead For. Alas Alas why ? Tom. She heares that Iphigenia hath putt her oute of place For. To displace my Rosimunda ? my true & faithfull wief ? shold I so abuse her? No. never will I doe it Tom. youe would not refuse her 90 of yo'' self, she cold beleve, but yo' father hath agreed, & his word must stand For. my father had nede to recon twyse herin, for he recons vi^ out his host 73 toonges inserted above in blacker ink C 76 beleve G : h changed to r MS. 83 C notes that the mark is placed after the prefix F atid a similar mark at beginning of I. 132, and that as the intervening passage does not absolutely forward the action it was perhaps deleted on performance. 84 Rosamunda inserted above {'by C G) 89 faithfull del. bef. true I04 THE BUGGBEARS ii. iii if he recon suche a reconyng w* out me ; whom most that matter Doth touche. doth she thinke me such a dastard ? 95 so vnkynd ? so brutishe ? so Degenerat a bastard, from Comon humanytie ? to yeld to such a wrong ? that neyther her acquayntaflce, whome I haue known so long nor her most loyall love, nor my shame, nor her curtesye, nor our faithes in wedlock plight can stay me from suche vyllany ? loo Tom. I know she hath deserved to be remembryd of youe. For. Remembred ? o Thomasine ? Thomasine ? tis most true, & proufe the prynce of praise in tyme shall so trye that the memory of her, & her love shall never dye in this her harte & myne, The wordes that youe spake 105 when we twoe were maryed y* tyme that youe did take her hand & did putt it into myne, when with my Ryng I assuryd her vnto me & made open professing wtl" othes of my faith, that never from her shold flytt. Those yo" words in the mydds of this true hart are wrytt (f. 62 v.) Never can I forgett them. Formosus (quoth youe) in youe see thys my child, of whose love a long vyew & tryall youe haue taken, whome now youe see at eye to yeld the possession of hir self to youe francklye And make youe her husband, that ys to say protectour 115 & Soueraigne of her lief, of her fame, of her honoure of her self & all she hath, her vnto youe I giue, and youe vnto her together so to lyve that nothing never sunder youe, in gladnes & in sadnes in helth & in sicknes, in ioye, and in distresse, 120 in pouertye & in plentye from hencefourth yo" is shee from this tyme till death to her must youe be A husband, a frend, a tutour, or rather in steed of Brancaiius a loving tender father the high god be A wytnes of this yo'' wedlock band, 125 In whose name I beseche youe, & by this yo' ryght hand no are interlined C above ys del. 1 13 youe {botK)\ youe. MS. 125 band] a alt. black fr, u a iii THE BUGGBEARS 105 & by yor trouthe, plight faith, by the love of both of youe, that eache of youe to other in suche lyking will contynew I yelded & tooke her, and hur I mynd to haue. Tom, 1 trust so For. Till death shall lodge my Corps in grave 130 I Chose her, I lyke her, and oure Natures doe agree. At one word I am hers, & none but hers wilbe. Tom. Those wordes hath revyved me For. If I maye wyn my father to yeld to this matche his good will wold I rather, Then to haue him frown vpon vs. yf he will not Consent, 135 tis done, tys dispatcht, Choose him my mynd ys bent : Tom. Will youe come yo'' self to her, & tell her but so muche as nowe you haue vowed ? her earnestnes ys suche to see youe, that but youe nothing ells can apease her. For. I meane soe, & there I will furder for to ease her 140 of her drery drouping dumpes Disclose suche a practise, that if it take effect I trust all her Corrosies yett ere night shalbe souppled, & her greffes fully quallified & that w*!^ franck good will of C frendes on everye syde. But yond comes Piccinino. {Exeunt^ 145 Scena ■ 4"^. Piccinino. .2. the song for piccinino. cor"'. A sprityng a sprityng a sprityng go we with thys face & that face and yo" goodman good face syng hegh hoe lolye heygh hoe a sprityng go we i verce lyke buggbeares w"> vysardes to make old sootes dyssardes 5 w"" sowcynges w**" rowsynges w'*" bownsynges w"" trownsynges w*!* roorablynges w*^ loomblynges w*'' foomblynges w*^ toom- blynges w'k ramplynges w*!" tramplynges w*'' rappynges w* trappynges A sprityng &c 127 trongthe MS. the g del. 129 hnr alt.fr. our and followed by natures doe agree del. MS.: her G 136 read him, 2. the song . . . finis] inserted here fromf. 1%v. of the MS. where it appears' at the end of the play with the third and fourth songs, the concluding chorus appearing separately on f. •]•] v. G would place this at commencement of ii. i io6 THE BUGGBEA'RS n.iv 2 w"" fyrye flames flasshynges w*'' squibes lusty crasshynges lo w"> hyfFa, w*'' huffa, w*" ryp'rap, poff puflfa, w"" clattrynges, w*"* battrynges, w* pattrynges, w"" tattrynges w* wranglynges, w*'' langlynges, w"> banglynges, w* tanglynges A sprityng &c finis 15 Pice. I haue trottyd beyond Arno to fetche these Devells vysars, twas happye that Rondeletio was at home when I came, els I myght haue stayed a while & then o'^ Camillus would haue ben in A broyle, had I stayed never so lyttle, I had not ben here yett 20 for the man was going forthe, & then a brawlyng fytt we had ben sure of. oh howe he wold rave thou, wretch, thou, beast, thou ingram vacation knave, he hath store of sorye wordes to brawle with poore I, and I abyde all, & take what cometh pacyentlye 25 So I saue some lypp labour. Hertofore to my Cost I wold gyve him word for worde, then as hot as a tost he wold teache mee my lerrypoope, & make me to lend (f 63 r.) my words to a vengeable vsurye in the end for he repaid me treble, & for my words wold gelie me 30 store of wordes & deedes to, so waspyshe wold he be, yf I ruled not my Clack, wherfore nowe by experience I haue lernyd to putt vp my pipes, & vse patyence. well lett this taulke -passe. I will Carry in this Ware & hope for the end of this garboyle — I take care 35 lest yt be not rype yett, yf It hang long I double least for lack of my slepes I shall watche my eyes oute : But be it ended once, & that all turne to good I will vye slepes wtl* him that lookes oute of a hood but whoe Cometh yonder let me see, tis Manutio. . 40 he mournes of the chine by his Drouping chere it seeraes so. f:Exit>, 1 2 pattrynges] plattrynges G 17 those G 20 lyttle, C 26 sane] s alt. black fr. h .• haue G 27 then] in margin below Is he in large contemporary hand 35 care, Af5. -^a unintelligible stops at \>z. and hang, MS. n. V THE BUGGBEARS 107 Scena •/*". Manutius. Carolina, Iphigenia. Catella. Formosu{s!) Man. What sayest thoue Carolino ? shall Formosus haue my lady. Car. Tis too true Man. how canst tell? Car. for I mett Biondello lately who reportyd it to me Man. Ah myserable Manutius, betwen hope & feare, that so long hast hanged thus Now hope being gone, what remayneth but to dye 5 in deadly dispaire ? Car. Sr will youe doe wyselye ? sythe that that youe wishe for in no Case Can be wyshe for that that maye be Man. Iphigenia is my wishe. Car. Youe see for yo"" tooth she ys too dayntie a dishe. & therfore lett her goe Man. That loveth me so well ? lo Car. If it can not come to passe, tis but follye to dwell over long in hope of her, there are more maydes then malkyn youe know weddyng & hanging by Desteny are brought in Man. Thoue maist soner speak yt then I that fele it, do it. for thoue arte free from greef, & I am in my fytt 15 But syth it is so, that malgree her and me Formosus must haue her, & his she must nedes be my death shall make him Roome. But yond comes my Empresse. & the quene of this Corpes Iph. eare I sterve in this distres I first do determyn all sortes of salves to trye, 20 & then yf no help serve, perforce I yeld to dye, s.D, Manfltius G : Mlanutiiis MS. (M. alt. fr. P) 7 that'' inserted above line C 12 then om. G 18 comes my Empresse deleted MS. atid Cometh shee substituted in blacker ink. 19-24 & the queneaWw to Manutius are marked off in the margin as for omission, and at I. 24 instead of Bnt . . . Manutius. oh is inserted above the line He goe vnto her well mett my swete \pn well mett interlined 5] Iph. well met in blacker ink. io8 THE BUGGBEARS n. v And therfore Catella to Rosimunda will we goe to learn what she can tell me, to encrease or ease my woe But yond is my Manutius. oh thou Soueraigne of my hart how fareth the world ? must we twoe neds part ? 25 Man. So the Cruell sterres decree Tph. oh. heavens, o fates, thrise Cruell destenies that hurle suche heapes of hates, • and spette yo^ spytes at vs. yett doe the worst ye can, & lett my spytfuU father against kynde be the man, that on his poore daughter doth work yo^^ wreakfuU willes 30 As the mynister of yo' hate, & the Instrument of yo'" ylls : yet if wti" the lief youe denye me my Manutius (f. 63 v.) my death shall delyuer me from yo^ mallice so outragious ■ 1 will haue none but him the end shall trulye try That his I will lyve or ells his I will dye. 35 Man. Oh my ladye appease yo"' grief yf it maye be, yf not, yet refuse not A Companyon of me that haue vowed in yoi^ servyce to bear w'!* like good will what euer shall befall vs, be yt good or be yt yll & tell me whither goe youe ? Iph. to the giltlesse poore Rosimund 40 of whome I receve this gasllie grevous wound, & whome I haue goryd w^^^ the like wound againe eche cause vnto others of lyke reboundyng payne. my father Comaundes me to see howe shea dolh fare for they saye she ys sick, but my chefe & greatest Care 45 ys to lerne what she can tell me, & to frame betwen vs twoe some Remedie for this myscheff & what is best to doe for yt pyncheth her as hard, & as nere as yt doth me & therfore fare youe well for yonder Cometh he whome I lothe to see or heare, my bane & mortall enemye 50 the Cropp, & the roote, & the ground of o.'' myserye {Exit with Catella^ 24 thou] ou alt. black fr. e; the G 25. de del. bef. part 28. spytePi!/.?. 29 father del. bef, spytfiill 38 w"> substituted above in blacker ink for the deleted 40 goe substituted above for fare deleted poore interlined black C 43 others MS. G : qy. '1 other II. V THE BUGGBEARS 109 Man. what saiest thoue Carolina- shall I break to him my mynd It is wysdome ere one perrishe to seke all helpes to fynde Car. Take hede what youe doe. Man. I will crowche, & kneele, & pray & entreat & beseche yf anye waye I maye 55 gett grace at his handes For. I haue sett her in suche plight that nowe shee is revyved & her greef is banisht quight but yonder ys Manutms Man. how saiest thoue ? shall I goe & move him in this matter ? Car. I wishe youe to do so youe shall yett doe this good, if youe spede not as youe wold 60 youe shall make him to double youe, lest youe will make him Cuckold Man. hold thy peace whorson CaytifF For. my Manutius well i mett. Man. O Formosus all my hope & my helth in youe ys sett For. why what Can I help youe ? Man. wyll youe marye wtl> my love ? For. They sale soe Man. If youe doe so most true youe shall prove 65 That that daye shalbe my last For. how so ? Man. I do fraye To vtter yt to him. tell thoue what I wold saye Car. my m^ doth love yo' Ipht'genia For. Now trulye he is not of my mynd our opynions herin varrye hath he had no furder dealinge wtl" her then bare woing ? 70 Man. oh no good Formosus For. I wishe you had ben doing. Man. Nowe first of all old loves doe not wedd her, I pray youe For. I will swere I never mend yt 54 doe interlined 58 Man. how] M. interlined h alt. fr. 1 62 my nterlined black C 66 how, A«'. 67 tell' A«". 73 mend] d «//.//(./?-. t 110 THE BUGGBEARS ii.v Man. If your father wold way you to her, yett delaye ytt, tyll I wander in exyle, for I Cannott abyde to tarrye here the while 75 To see youe matche with her For. Manutius this I tell you To Crave heapes of thankes where no thankes are dew ys no frendly dealyng. here I flattly surrender (f. 64 r.) Iphigenia vnto yo", not for that I do tendere in thys case yo' sute, as though save to yo" 80 no man els shuld have her from me, for thys most true that rather wold I lose her then wyn her to my wyfT ye I seeke all meanes to scape her Man. yo" haue rendered me my lyfe wth thes cofortable wordes For. mary thys styll I say (thowgh I love yo" as my frend, & will pleasure you what I may) 85 yet heryn I crave no thankes, rather you will I thanke, yf yo" or yo' man can invent any pranke, or forge, or fynd out, or coyne, or devyse some feate that she may be yo" in any wyse : I my self will pcure that myne she shall not be. 90 Man. Tis inough, I aske no more For. yf yo" goe in wtJi me to Camillus howse, I wyll show yow there more what we have devysed, then you knew of before, to bryng her to yo' handes Man. leade me whither yt pleaseth yo". For. ye yo' healpe may do vs pleasure Man. Go before, I will folow. 95 Sirrah, get thee home the whyle, & if Bindus or Octaueus quere for me, thou shall have me here at Camillus house (^Exeunt.') 76 yo del. bef. her 78 Ff. 6^-66 r (treble them ill. iii. 124) written by C 81 thys i.e. this is 86 you interlined (? another hand) to replace yo" del. aft. I 88 aldel. bef. or^ 93 know G 94 yt pleaseth yo" substituted in MS. for ye will 97 me, G : me ? MS iii.i THE BUGGBEARS in Actus tertius Scena /". squartacantino. the 3. song squartacantino. cor"' I feare myne old master shall syng thys new note no foole to the old foole when he gynes to dote 1 he needes must be perfumed brave w*'' powdrs prowd of pryce w*** musk w* civet & w* trickes of new & rare devyce 5 w"" amber grece he must be grymed & such lycke costly geare wher I suppose a fyer warme for hym far fytter weare And therefore I feare hele sing this new note 2 hys whyte beard & hys golden teeth w"*" shyver in hys head w*'" her whyt teeth & golden lokes are even as fytt to wead ic as march w"> lusty may shuld match, wherfore I feare me much hys wooyng wil to woeyng turne yf that hys chaunce be such I feare myn old etc 3 and he w'l" martch from fysh to flesh shall march in march hys sygne & she w"" may, may taurus make to gemini resygne i j or playne my mynd to tell when she by bearyng one to manye may pearce my master to the hart, and gyve hys head eveny I fear myn old m"" etc finis Sq. Can any thyng be worse, then to serve as I do 20 an old amorous knight, and a dealing fole to ? that goeth in his last quarter, & yet the gray beard goinne daunceth, praunceth, & skippeth, & playeth friskoioly, & syngeth ; & fareth as he weare dame venus tideling, or as yf hys coltes teeth in his head were yet stiking. 25 but yf he match there, there may stick in hys head though not hys coltes teeth, becawse he ys over hayed, yet a fayre payre of homes, & I hope she wyll not fayle for hys further prferment to send hym in to Come wayle Seena MS. the 3 song . . . finis] inserted here from f. 75 v. of the MS., and so assigned G 3 gynes] gyues G 8 And . . . note in another hand for I feare myne old m' etc deleted 17 eveny or A veny (A is imposed on some other letter): ■ ve • • G 22 goinne] dissyll. i.e. goin-ne, perhaps for gonnie {cf. kinty&rknit I. iii. 84). ri2 THE BUGGBEARS mi he sent me even now for some Muske & some Sivette, 30 to make hys mashyp swete : with the poticarie when I met, & askt for soch trinkettes for my master, thou forgettest what thy master wold have (quoth he) it were best thow boughtest hym a box of vnguenium album for the itch & the skabbes, for that is very holsome, 35 and that hath he nede of, more then of muske & Sivette. souch grace very ofte was he woont here to fett, but he never vsed Muske. At the last I was fayne to tell hym of hys wooing, to make the matter playne. when he heard it, wtli laughing he was redy to burst, 40 w*** other odde copanyons. It were not the worst, yf thow wilt be rulde by me to cary hym (quoth he) A box of Assa featida. but at last he gave me thys swete ware to be grime our grandgosier w**! all now will I wind me home, lest yf our grandsire call 45 & mysse me, he will chide, for thes lovers be waspish when in venus aifayres thynges fall not as they wish yet have I further newes to hys fatherhood to tell, (f. 64 v.) that Biondello told me of that will not please hym well as we met in the streete, I beleve for all hys dotage 50 it wylbe a coolyng carde to abate the yoothes courage, concernyng Rosim(u)ndas disease that she feeles he told me out of dowt she is sick of two left heeles but mum. who comes yonder ? one of old Carons franions. oh tis signor Amedeo, one of my master's pott panions 55 {Exit.) See 2". Amedeus, Brancaiius. Canialupo. A me. Tristissia vestra : I fynd it true to day, I must trust to my self, & do the best I may in myne owne aflfayres, for help I get elswhere, I made moane to Cantalupo, who scant wold gyve an eare to harken to my talk, or abyde my half tale told, 5 I know why it is : though the hottie tottie be old, 37 grace] MS. G: qy.? grece 39 he del. bef. to^ 41 not interl. (? another hand) worst. MS. G i i. e. Tristitia 3 help] qy. ? no help iii.ii THE BUGGBEARS 113 yet he wooeth a yoong wyfe, that enchaunteth out hys witte, he can listen to nothyng, whyle he is in hys fitte I see love is blynd, yet I thought that our amitie (sith through our childrens mariage we enter in affinitie) 10 wold have moved hym to take some compassion of my case, and to help me w't hys cowncell. but all thys tooke no place in hys extravagant head ffrom hym streyght I went to my Conffessour, to intreat hym some remedy to invent agaynst thes wycked S(p)rites, he red me a pistle 15 & told a long round about not worth a whistle. that it was godes owne punishment for my synfuU life gone. he wisht me leave my Covetise, & bad me put on a new man, & leade a new lyfe, & then soothely God will put vp hys rodde, & be no more angrie, 20 & thes sprites wilbe fled, as thowgh that my Covetise (y/ch is cownted now good husbandrie) seemed ill in Gods eies. wold he have me kepe nothyng agaynst a raynye day ? I know god wold not so, what so ever he do say. but syth by bothe thes wayes no gayne to me doth ryse 35 He see what good helpe thys astronomer will devyse hath biondello brought hym yet ? I will see yf they be here. I will knoke, for alone I dare not go nere among those cursed ffeendes. howe ho? who is in the house? not a word, whates the matter ? that all ys husht thus ? 30 yet agayne. who ys w'*> yn ? they are not returned yet I marvell wher they are. I will knock another fitte no poynt speake ? what ho ? not a word ? thys is marvelous. but yond ys Cantalupo, & w*'' hym comes Brancatius Can. I am sory for my sweete hart, but I hope she shall do well 35 what ys her dissease I pray yow, can yo" tell ? Bran, partly the grene sicknes, a preparatyve to the dropsie, but her greatest disease ys a spice of the timpanye as my wyf doth in forme me Can. In what part lyes her sycknes ? Bran. In her belly moste of all, wli is swollen in great bignes 40 9 tought C 25 me inlerlined above some word del. 29 howe ««/6r- lined (? another hand) above hovil, del. 37 drophie C 532 I 114 THE BUGGBEARS m.ii Can. what myght be the cawse ? Bran. A distemperature of the liver woli bred of ye dregs of an evell cured fiver Can, well, I hope of amendment, & I wysh it very sone, that o' maryage, & my daughters may in one day bothe be done. 44 for I sytt all on thornes till y' matter take effect (f. 65 r.) the whyle for good physyke see yow do not neglect thowgh I beare ye hole charge Bran. I do purpose thys evenyng to have her to our farme, for they tell me the changyng of the ayre will do her good Cati. I wish it to be soe Bran, but I long much to heare how the matter doth goe 50 wtl> my neybur Amedius : yo" told me a thyng towchyng spirtes in hys howse woh hath bred me su woonderyng Can. ........... Bran, well mett Amedi(us : tis said that) sprytes do walk on nyghtes in yo'' howse is it so Ame. I wold it were not 55 these ij nyghtes to gether they frighted me I wotte all moste out of my witt Bran. good lord bless vs all thys ys the strangest case that ever I hard be fall In what sort do they troble yo" ? Ame. even over my head they so trample & turmoyle when I am layed in bead 60 & shake ther vngly chaynes, & roare, & yell, & crye, that vnneth for feare in my bed dare I lye. my sone for stark fright dare not sleepe w^i in ye howse but hath gott hym to lye wt^i o"^ neybour Camillus. Bran, and have yo^^ no help ? 48 our interlined [i another hand) above my del. 53 Can.] This and the two following lines are inserted along the margin of the leaf at right angles to the text. Of this line is left visible only the prefix C and some fragnunts at the beginning which may represent tis told, while the last word must have been talk. 61 vugly MS. G. or vrrgly qy. ? ougly Cf. Note iii.ii THE BUGGBEARS 115 Ame. I looke for a cunnyng man, 65 that hath promysed my sone to do the best he can to rid the house of them, for duryng thys stune I dare not for my lyff peepe my head wth in y^ durre : yet ones I was wont to laugh at such nycitie & thynk it old wyves tales, & lyes, & meere vanitie yo but what are those yonder ? Bran. The one is yo' Biondello. Ame. then the other in y^'gowne is th' Astronomer I beleeve so. Scena f'. Trappola. biondello, Cantalupo, brancaiius. Amedeus Tra. what are those that stand there .? Bion. Mary one of these three is my mr that we go toe. Ame. biondello .'' is that he that my sone told me of? Bion. Thys is the very same. Ame. Master doctor, double wellcu. trust me thers none that came to my howse thys good whyle better wellcome then are yo« 5 Tra. Are yo" he that is trobled w*l» shadowes .' Ame. Tis too true Tra. I am sory for yo' anoy, but feare not of the remedie Aim. mf doctor I comyt my self to yo" wholly & I pray yo" shew yo' cunnyng Tra. yoM shall not neede to stand to vtter me yo"" case, yo"^ sonne hath done yo^^ errand 10 so y* nought ys requyred, but y' yo" take the care to provide all those thynges that here to nedefuU are & to do that I prescrybe, & I will bringe to passe to warrant yo" yo"^ howse cleane dispatcht, as ever it was. & tyll my feate be wrought I will looke for no hyre 15 Ame. what will yo" have then? Tra. Nothyng will I requyre but sith yo" are a gentleman I will stand to yo»' curtesie 68 for, MS. 69 nycitie] excitie G 1 2 proved MS. G I 2 ii5 THE BUGGBEARS in.m to such as yo" are He do more for love then monye I love not to indent wth such as yo" be. Ame. I trust, I will please yo? how say yo"? he semes to me 20 by hys looke a worthy man. Can. And I take hym for such Bran. And I promise you his fashyon doth please me very much £wn. O sir yo" wold wonder what miracles I dyd heare of those that dyd know hym, yn Orleaunce thys other yere & in paris what a cure he did on the french kyng 25 (I wold have sayd the Queene) how he browght downe her teemyng Bran, is he then a phisiciah ? oh I have a sick daughter Tra. I will fyrst dispach thys, tKen He harken to yo" after Can. I promyse yo" m^ doctor hys dawghter is my wyfe (I meane she shalbe so, yf god lend me lyfe) 30 yf yo" sett her an foote & make her hole agayne 1 will doble doble doble consyder yoi" payne Tra. yo" shall say He deserve it (f. 65 v.) Ame, mr doctour fyrst vf^^ me I pray yo" begyn, that my frendes here may see some shew of yo'^ great skill Tra. before I can venture 35 to do any thyng, fyrst in talk I must enter at home w'^^ my fam(il)yer, Ame. how sone will yo" do soe ? Tra. As nere as it ys, before dyner will I go & bryng a parfyt answere. Bran. Then remember me too for my dawghter w'li one labore bothe thes thynges yo" may doo 40 Can. ye I pray yo" forget/not she ys well woorth yo' counynge Tra. yo" shall knowe all & more w*'' speede at my returnyng yet one poynt for yo'^ lernyng I wyll teach yo" ere I go thes spirtes are of sondry natures Ame. be they so 24 know, hym MS. 31 an] on G 42 knowe interlined blacker ink iii.iii THE BUGGBEARS 117 Tra. some are of y® fyre, & some of the ayre 45 some watrye some earthly, & some golden and fayre some lyke vnto sylver, some leaden, & of every mettall & they have sondry names by y^'^ we do them call som are C2!\tdi folletli, foraboscki, forasiepi, that ys woodcrepers, hedg creepers, & the whyte & red fearye 50 Can. what a rablement ys there Tra. some lovely & amyable some felowly & frendly, some constant some mutable- of hylls wodes & dales of waters & of brookes we coonyng in that art can ken them by ther lookes Can. Jesu god wher yo" can Tra. some fawny, some satiri 55 some Nymphes, hamadryades, & dryades that are slye puckes, puckerels, hob howlard, bygorn, & Robin Goodfelow. Can. oh Godd what is it that thys man doth not know ? Ame. ye be bold neyther Baldus nor Bartolus hath ihys skyll, Bion. ye have hard nothyng yet, Tra. then are there of the yll 60 that be called darke Shadowes, as Gundus, Egippias Chicheface & berith, Phalacrocorax, & sir Satanasse. Gnare, frare, lare, Vrlgo, Sors, & bors and hors, & myghtie Mors that confowndeth ye corse lorcoballus, Marcolappus, Geball, whoball, Sent, and Garret 65 Can. god save vs from harme Tra. hax. pax. and max ye varlet, Cacodeomon, diabolus, Oreus, Stryges, Tregende harpyes, Gogmagogs, lemures, and lamise tremendae, pluto, proserpina, and the three groyned Cerberus Tisiphone, Megeara, Alecto, and briareus 70 hermafrodites, herkinnalsons, Eatons, pickehornes, & lestrigoni, hob Goblin, Rawhead, & bloudibone the ouglie hagges Bugbeares, & helhoundes, and hecate the nyght mare 49 called interl. faint another hand for elypped {j.e. cleped) polettie dei,. 51 arablement MS. G 53 hylls"! ylls MS. G 55 wher MS. G: qy. ? what ! fawny MS. G for fawni 64 Mors. MS. 65 Marcolappus] cola interl. fainter above \oi:sl del. 68 lamia Tremende jWJ'. 6' 71 herklnnalsous, Eatous G 72 ouglie] or onglie {? o alt.fr. v) ct. ni. ii, 61 note ii8 THE BUGGBEARS m.iii Can. no more for godes love, yo" make my heare stare to heere these gastly monsters Ame. but to cfi to the poynt 75 what thynk yo" of my case Tra. though it be out of loynt yet take yo" No discufort I will bryng a redy answere, & assured healp vnto yo", when I talk w'l» my familiar The whyle do yo" take a greene hasell wand & thwite it fowre square. On the one side must stand 80 thys verse : Alpupencabas, tot habet, ninas quot habet gras Then Galbes, Galbat, Galdes, Galdat, fayre written as yo" can 85 On the syde vnder that wryte yo^" owne name, & then On the thurde syde thes wordes : Irioni, Kiriori, daries, dararies, Astararies, & wt*> it ioyntly thys verse : Arx, tridens, Rostris, Sphynx 90 prester, torrida Seps, Stryx on the fowrth syd set yo" downe y^ name of sfl frende, as one of thes lentlemen. That done, in the end in su secret cloce chamber make a fyer, then thus doe fyrst slend thys square sticke lengthwyse in to two 95 then each in other too. Then each of yo" throw (f. 66 r.) two lengthes in to the fyere Ame. all the other poyntes I trow I wyll beare well in mynd, but those hard names I cannot Tra. here I geve them yo" wryttyn, that they be not forgott & whyle they are burnyng, on yo"^ knees yo" must fall 100 tyll they be cosumed, speakyng thes wordes w*li all To l(i)mbo lakes ye hellish hagges be gone to Stix, & Coccytus, to Achaeron, & Phlegethon dare yow ventare to do it ? 11 No] N alt. 79 agreene ^l/i'. 81, 89 verse] vease MS. G The following words {smaller type) form in MS. one line with thys vease. 82 Alpipencabas G 91 stryx G 99 they be] yo" do MS. G 102 l[i]mbo lakes] liubo labes G 104 venture G in.iii THE BUGGBEARS 119 Ame. Must we do it here wtl» yn ? Tra. not there, for those Sprietes will not suffer yo" to be gyn, 105 but wyll lett yo" all they can Ame. Then I pray yo« Cantalupus will yo" help me to do it w^^^ yn, yn yor howse ? Can. I am very well content Tra. well, shall we play sure & put it out of doubt, that boldly yo" may dare to do that I bed yo", thowgh the Sprites do there worst ? no Avie. ye I pray yoV Tra. kneele downe then, & though they wold burst for anger, yet shall they want powre to come nye after thys Coniuration, it shall bynd them so myghtylye Miasior, Agniptos, Anlurgos, dolicoschios, Theostygis, Cantilios, Chrismodos, Inoflyx, paramoschos, 115 frenomoses, Gereos, Aphron, licnos, phalacros, parochros, sapros, hypnilos, phylargros :■ vos claudo in hoc circulo, constringo et vincio vos arguo, increpo, obiurgo, iubeo, impero, et omnes deamones a Sathana vsq^ ad Saraboth, 1 30 I coniure & bind yow be yo" lefe or loth, that yo" tooch not these gentlemen, nor ones come in place nor the hardest of yo° all once dare to show hys face to hynder or troble them vntill they have done now ffeare not, you ar safe the while I will ronne ij5 to speak with my ffamiliar Ame. but whear shall you be ffound Tra. If I tary somwhat long your man can come Round to my study send ffor me I will come at a trice Can. Then go we about it Bion, I will go and gyve advice of this matter Xo/ormosus and bring him whear you are 130 ffo^ he ffo'' this matter taketh marvelous Care {Exit) 112 anger, il^j". 114 Agniptos] cf.note Anturgos o;- Aiiturgos 115 Cantilios or Cautilios Inoflyx G : I noflyx MS. 116 frenomoses] es later licuos G 120 S. del. bef. Sathana 123 hardest MS. G. 124-45 vntill . . . sick written by scribe D, as G 120 THE BUGGBEARS iii.Iii Ame. well done M^ Doctour lett me Crave to knowe yor name Tra. my name is Nostradamus Ame. I have hard of yo' flfame ffor great skill in astronomy a great whill a gone you ar of Nepos race " Tra. I am on of that faction 135 Ame. O how famous is that Race and exelent in astro«omy and the arte of black magick Tra. be you sure we ar as privy ^th divels and w*** sprites as the brethern of syent pauU hear in Italie Can skill by a gift supernaturall of sarpentes and poysons and mad dogges and suche gear 140 Ame. Lett vs goe about our bussines Tra. Doo you so and have noe ifea(r) I warrant you it will ffall out very well {Exeunt the old men^ So so they ar gone They ar sped I can tell of their errand all Three and I hope to ffind som dogtric(k) if my Cflning do not ffaill me, ffor his Doughter that is sick 145 good god, who had thought they had bene of such (f. 66 v.) symplicitie 1 accownt it no great mastery to blynde & bleare there eye my coonyng ys corraunt wt^i such babes as thes be but yond comes a diamond I woonder what ys shee {Exit.) Scena 4'^. Iphigenia. Catella. Iph. I thynk my lourney well bestowed for th ease of my poore hart wch redy was ryght now to breake opprest ^"^ dea(d)ly smart I see it ys not good to be suspicius over much they breede ther bane & hatch there harme whos fryghtfuU feares are such I thought formosus went about to robb me of my feere 5 Alas such thowght vnto his hart god wot was nothyng nere my gelous feare in gendred had such hate ^^ in my heade that vnderservde a thowsand tymes I wysh(t) to see hym deade yet who so busyly seekes as he to gayne me my desyre 132 read done. — 138, ^ full stop at end of each MS. 146 f. 66 v. Scribe C resumes, to end of Act Hi. 5 feere] seere G iii.iv THE BUGGBEARS 121 who feares my hart who lothes my loss who fryes In equall fyer 10 but he whom as w'^ out all cawse I hated here to foer so now good cawse copelleth me to love so much the more thus can the heavyns rowle & turne, thus nothyng standes at stay thus done o'" thowghtes, or hopes, and happes, both chop & change away & when from ill the(y) turne to well that chaunce must nedes be good 15 and such good chaunce hath chaunced me whos case before so stoode that I in goolflf of deepe dispayre in daunger to be lost (so pitiously in waves of woe my balefuU bark was tost) ^ In haven of good hope now ryde, & safife at ancker lye through good -formosus frendly fayth w"^ hym moste tru doth try. 20 for loe, Catella, but ere whyle I fearde lest he wold take my fathers offer that he made, & Rosimond for sake, to whom I know he plyghted had hys fayth & truth of yore whose case yf he should cast her of, dyd greeve me very sore. so much the more for that my case & herse dyd lomp in o(ne) 25 for had she lost formosus, then manutius had byne gone . so both had lost o' cheeffest loyes but now it ys not so he wylbe heres that other myne who ever shall say no Ca/. And may yo'' wryte vpon hys wordes IpA. wtl* othes when they ar bound Cai. In perjured lovers othes & wordes ofte tymes lyke truth ys founed 30 Ipk yf othes sve not, then what wyll sve Ca/. I have hard y' god on hye doth lawgh when lovers breake there vowes, & from ther fayth doth flye Iph. yet have I better hope of hym 10 loss MS. G. 16 case, MS. 25 dyd lomp del. MS. and giewe on (i. e. one) inierlined faint by another hand, to end the line 3 1 sve] an s implying ser 122 THE BUGGBEARS iii. iv Cat. I ioy to here yo" syng that song, me thought yo" harpt before vpon to bad a stryng how yf yo' fathers wyll yo" force Iph. so fayre a plotte is layd 35 to wyn o"^ fathers to o^ wylles we nede not be afrayed Cat. I wysh it happe as yo" wold have, but gladly wold I lerne that plot yo" meane some thyng theryn phapps I cold desserne Iph. it ys to long to tell it now thys day or nyght shall try what fayth wtl^ in formosus wordes & constant truth doth ly 40 meane tyme w'li cheerefuU song I will assay to ioy my chaunce to syng old care away the song, lend me The 4 song/Iphiginia. 1 lend me you lovers all yo™ pleasaunt lovelye layes 45 come come w"* me reioyce come come gyve ladie fortune praes for she for she it ys that doth my state advaunce she she hath tumde my bale to blysse, my checkes to cheerefull chaunc(e) & therfore away care away away hence care 50 Away away hence away away & be gone care 2 my sowre ys tumde to sweete, my pitious playntes to play my clowdes of care to comfort clear my nyght to bryghtest day my feares to hopes, my teares to truce, my want to wyshed wealth my warr ys turnd to quiet peace my sycknes vnto helth 55 & therfore away care &c 3 Manutius ys the man whose love hath lent me lyff for now in spight of all dyspite I hope to be hys wyff. thus w"" delyght I say all care away to dryve I lyve, & love, I lyke my lucke & long in love to lyve 60 therfore away care, away away hence care Away away hence away away & begone care finis (^Exetmt.) The 4 song . . . finis inserted here from f, 75 v of the MS. 48 checkes] chockes G IV, i THE BUGGBEARS 123 Actus • quartus" (f. 67 r) Scena /". Tomastne. Biondello Tom. You shall know what I cane know ; if you wilbe of good chere I will do my diligence what hath hapned- then to heare Rosimunda sendes me forth to hearken for the astronomer & whether he hath wrought his feate ; an end of this geare the pore wretch wold heare, & yonder is Biondello- 5 how goeth this geare forward : Bion. how goeth it, as it sholde goo Tom. now thanked be god, tell me some piece of newes/ to Gary Rosimunda, that doth nought but lie & muse in her dumpes on this matter, & consumeth a way as the salt in the water, or the snow in Somers day : 10 Bion. Even as we cold wysh all hath hapt hitherto. the astronomer hath done as we wold have him do, he played his pageant finely Tom. The Astronomer : what is he ? Bion. A felow for the purpose as fitte, as fitte maye be' A merchant straungers Servaut, afi acquaintauncee of mine 15 whose master hath bene but a while yet a florentine. but I knew his mans qualicumes when we dwelt both in Venice. Go tell Rosimunda that I am sure by this the three thousand Crownes are where shee wold they shold be. even in formosus handes Tom. oh what newes thow dost tell me 20 Bion. Earewhile they were disguised in the chamber of Camellus frome whence by a window in the toppe of the howse they are got into our cockeloft, & from thence into the chamber : & have rifeled & mowsed the cofer that standes there, by a false kay thie made, O how horribly thie are clad 25 w* visars like develes, what a sort of lightes they had. what store of squibbes & firvvorkes, and of rosen punned fine, Actus quartus] Ff. 67-68 a written by Scribe E, doivn to oppen iv. il. 79, and so G 17 know G 25 horrible G 124 THE BUGGBEARS iv.i Tojn. who are those so disguised. Bion. shall I tell thee my Tomasine. &.YSt/ormosus & Camillus, then his man Piccinino then the foresayd astronomer & Manuttus, & no moe. 30 But I gate me forth, that if these old lads came I might find them tittle tattle while their practise did frame, but now. let them come when they lust Tom. loe where they be Canst fade them w'l" honyesoppes. Bion. Tutte care not for me Tom. Then will I returene to Rosimunda w*'' thies newes, 35 See y' thou in these matters good discretion do vse {Exit Tom) Bion. I will stand a shore a little & heare my babes talkinge, Sena. 2". Amedeus, Brancatius. Cantalupo. Biondello. Ame. I mervaile hereaboutes. I can see no man walking I doubt we stayde to longe, & that Doctour Nostradamus hath bene here & gone againe bicause he myst of vs. Bra. He wil not Deceyve vs I Trow. Can. I pray you stay This Talke, for by larninge he can Tell what we doo saye 5 ye & what we do thinke, Ame. If I shall my Judgment tell. I promise yo° both I lyke his Talk well. Bran, me Thinkes it were wisdome sith y* we have done, what he bade vs to do, & that it drawes to none. to get us to dener. (f. 67 v.) Bion. Nowe will I appere in sight 10 Ame. This matter sittes me nerier then to have my diner dight. parhaps he is wtl^ in in the howse -^{ihformosus, & there sitteth wayting & tarying for vs. 31 gate] gave G 34 honyeseppes G {£'s o like e) 35 returne G Rosimundo MS. : -e G 5 by] by a G 7 his] this G 8 y' interlined: that G II nerier G : nerierer MS. rer alt.fr. er ? IV. ii THE BUGGBEARS 125 Bion. God save you al three. Ame. where is dodo'' Nosiradamo". Bion. I left him -^"^ formosus : tis a good while agoe. 15 They wilbe here streight Ame. yet better it were to gett vs into the howse, & to tary for him there, Sittinge close by the fiere, then to stay in the colde and I pray yo'" Both two moste hartely that yo^ wold Take parte of my dener Bran. Content is agreed. 20 Can. I had thowght to goe home Ame. Nay the matter is decreede hold the kay here Biondello, go in & make a fiere {Exit Bion!) O good lord in my heart what a mervailous desier & a surpassinge longing on the sodayne is bred to have my wretched howse of these vile Sprites vncombered 25 & to See this cunning man bring this piece of work to passe These iBendes doo so vex my stomake {Re-enter Biondello.) Bion. A las, a las Master, O master, help ; help ; I die, I die, Am£. whats the matter, Can. what ayleth thee wherfore dost thow crie. Bion. oh our howse is al on fire Ami. on fire, God forbid? 30 Bion. It is al full of Sprites Ame, alas what hath betid/ Oh tell me what Sprites, or fire sawest thou there, Bion. Oh let me breathe a littele, I am al moste dead for feare. Bran. I see no smoke appeare Ame. Tel me, what didst thou see Bion. Soch a nomber of lightes, I Thowght my self to be 35 in Paradise there in your chamber above. Ame. why? what madest thou there ? Bion. I went to remove 29 ayleth interl. C 33 sowest MS. G 34 Bra . . . Km. fainter for E's B ...hdel. 126 THE BUGGBEARS iv.ii a blocke at the stayers, & drawinge some what nere I saw the dore wide open ; & soch a light appere that I can not expresse it, But sure I do doubte 40 lest the sodayne flasshinge of it wil put my eyes out Ame. Sawest thou any man wt^^ in? Bwn. Shal I tel you true : I was in so great feare I may say to you, as one quite astonied, & my eies where so daseled That I sawe nought but light, so sore was I amased. 45 Can. Some Bugbeare, or Pickehorn, or Gogmagog is there. Bran. Perhaps the Sonne shone in, & this Bugge cried out for feare Ame. In dede it may be so for the Cow is sore afrayd of every lettle thinge Bwn. If it be not as I sayd and that yo" thinke I lie, go your selves thither hardly. 50 and then you may perhaps prove Bugges as well as L Ame. I pray you let vs go (f. 68 r.) Can. If Brancatius will go too. I dare then be hardy to do as you two do. Bran. Content, go before. Ame. nay you shall leade the way. Can. Nay in fayth it shalbe youres Bran. I wil not go to day 55 except you go firste Can. you are owner of the howse. Ame. In this Case be you owner Bran. You are nothing couragious me thinke you are afrayd I will not go at all. Ame. And me thinke yo" are afrayd Can. what ever be fall lett vs in all at ones & hold handes to gether 60 {Exetml all except Bion!) Bion. God send you good shipping, at there returninge hither they will sing an other song, if they kepe their breeches cleane at this feast, I moch mervile these babyes do meane 63 read mervile. IV. ii THE BUGGBEARS 127 to prove me a Her, but the end maketh all they will prove them selfes iades harke harke I heare them calle 65 {Re-enler Amedeus, Cantalupo, and Brancatius.) Ame. 0. good Lord Can. out alas Bran. O. Jesu help me now. Can. Christ have mercy vpon me Bion. how goeth the world w'*' you. Ame. I am dead Bran. I am slayne Bion. I told you, did not I ? Can. O. my soule is departed. Bion. how say you did I lie ? nay be not afrayd they have shut fast the dore. 70 Ame. this is a doubell mockery Can. O there was a piteous sturre Ame. O sirs I am vn done, thow toldst me true Biondello. Can. O. that we had believed thee, what tyme thow toldst vs so in all my hole life I never felt like feare Bion. Beleve me an other tyme then, when I tell you of the bugge- bear 75 But why ranne they after you. Ame. A vengeaunce on them all Can. ye. a double very vengeaunce Ame. when we came into the hall we saw a sodaine light in my chamber Can. It seemed lo me like hel mowth wyde oppen ; or worse if woorse may be And the sprites did leape & dauce, & ranne vpon vs 80 that we tooke vs to o^ heeles 73-4 Can.] C. visible in MS. beneath a repair. G gives 72-4 to Amedeus. In the Italian both are assigned to Niccodemo (^Brancatius). 75 buggebear] a at end del. for rhyme MS. 79 or] here Scribe C resumes, down to IV. iii. 17 grace, and so G els del. bef. worse 128 THE BUGGBEARS iv.ii Bran. O the case was ieobercious Our legges served vs well Ame. ye vnto the very durre the carrayenes did pursue vs, thow sawest thy self how furre & shut the dore vnto them, & lockt vs quyte out. Bion. They sawe not me wtl^ in, nor I them Ame. Twas a doubt 85 lest thow hadst bene devoured, yf they had sett syght on thee, Can. ye & we scapte very fayre. O what ougly beastes they bee did yo" marke Amedeus how goffishly they dyd dawnce ? (f. 68 v.) Ame. So they fared two nyghtes before Can. It may be perchance they keepe some wedding there Ame. The devell to wed a wife ? 90 that a vengeace gnaw hys guttes. I had rather then my lyfe m' doctour weare come Can. will you go for the officer ? Bran. I thought on that devyce Bion. your matches saw I never how shall offycers deale I pray yo" wt^i the devell ? Ame. what then woldst thow have me doe ? Bion, In my mynd it were no evell 95 to stay for m' doctor, he wyll send the raskales packing yo" shall see when he cometh Can. I wold gladly see that thyng A me. when the devell wyll he come 1 Bran. In diebus illis Bion. he will not tary long Bran. The while my cownsell is that yo" go & dyne -^^^ me, & yo^ man stay at the howse 100 till the doctor do come, & bring him thyther to vs. Bion. Methynkes he speaketh well 87 ougly G: or ongly MS. 88 goffishly written above as alternative for an original gostly changed to gostishly ; gostishly G 94 offyces G, the r Molted in MS. 98 Bran.] B with rubbed space after MS. 100 yo"' man] you may G IV. ii THE BUGGBEARS 129 Ame. Then let vs even do so hearst thow ? when he cometh, bring hym streyght to Brancalio Bion. Very well, it shalbe done Can. I must part from yo" two a while about a matter, that nedes I must go do, 105 but I will not be long from yow {Exeunt (he old men.) Bion. I thynk they knew o' mynd to take the way they do. by there absence we shall fynd good leasure to determyne what furder must be done & to fynysh that remayneth. It is now about hye noone & yet thes mates come not. I am sure they are vndrest no what ever they stay vpon. He go for them it is best & make them make hast, but see where they are Scena f formosus. Trappola. Biondello For. we stayde I dowt to long Tra. Tyme inough take no care For. Biondello, whers my father ? Bion. At diner wtli Brancatius now sure I must comend yo^ handlyng of it thus oh it was old exelent. But who weare those twayne that came to the durre ? they made them gadde amayne 5 & sturre ther old stumpes at that grisely fearefuU Syght I am sure they weare never in so pitifull a plight For. Twas Camillus & hys man, & Manutius was there two Bion. I markt but only twayne. but what dyd yo^^ do ? For. The while in the chamber I & trappola did practise 10 the squ(i)bbes & the fyerworkes, that same was o' ofFyce & to teend vp the candels. havying brought that to frame we tooke the bagges of mony, & returnd that way we came Bion. It was very well handeled, & wher are the rest ? 106 thynk] thyng MS. G knew] know G 107 by] for del. before by 108 what. MS. 3 comment G 9 markt] r interl. faint ink .S32 K I30 THE BUGGBEARS iv.iii For. They have sett all thynges in order, & are gone to be vndrest 15 Bion. I saw yo' candles stick rownd about in every place & those pannes full of holes geve the thyng a gallaunt grace when the fire flamed wtl^ in them & those squibbes (f. 69 r.) were very brave & the hurdes, & Aquavita, & the flame that it gave was greeneshe pale & dimme, and terrible to be hold. ao But why burne we day light ? now yo" have gotte the gold, let vs mak vp their mowtes. & finish up this geare. But where is the mony, For. Be bold it is there. in Caniillus howse. Bion, then spend no tyme in wast. But send for Brancatioes brother in post hast, 25 to come & speake wtli you For. whom might I send thither Bion. Camillus man can bringe him to you hither For. Then He make his master send him. now this geare is set a broache & that the good hower and good end doth approache now Trappola plye the box Tra. Even as I have begonne. 30 For. I aske no better then alredy thow hast done. farewell. He go send for my swete hearts vncle streight {Exit) Bion. now my doctour let vs goe where these old laddes do bayte we will cutte out owr shares, & make our diner there. for ther are we lookt for. Thus far forth I like this geare. 35 Tra. thou hast sene nothinge yet, to that thou shalt see. for yet it lies & bledes. but I hope to be sturre me. thou shalt see in what sort Bion. I hope thou wilt do so. 18 F.d^ written by scribe E (to I v. v. 47), and so G 19 Aquavita MS. 22 mowth G 29 approache. MS. G. 33 let \s goe inter!, pale above go w"" me del. 36 that interl. C above what del. iv.iii THE BUGGBEARS 131 but lest we lose our diner, it is best that we goe. & visit yonder fathers for I am sharp sett now 40 Tra, and I for my parte have as keene an edge as thow. {Exeunl^ Scena .4°'. Picinino. Pic. I thinke sure my toyle will never be done. There is nothinge with my master, but packe, trudge, hie thee, runne. I was going to my bed to fetch owt my lost slepe when sodanily he did cale me, & such a coyle did kepe that nedes I must vp, it booteth not to lie 5 & lurdge my wery boanes when he doth gabble & crie for feare of afterclappes. But whether must I go, I have cleane forgot his name, he hunted at me so I see haste makes waste, for my master so hasted that he drave both the place & the man out of my head 10 Now a wild wannion on it. Oh I have it yet againe, Donatus, Donatus, I wold he were fiayen. tis Donatus w**" a vengeaunce. that must Come to formosus. cantie vantie in post haste, then best I stand not thus & trifle owt the tyme and tel a tale to the winde, 15 but wind me streight about it while tis fresh in my mind, lest againe I forgette it. To Donatus : to Donatus : Now I have him I will hold him. but yond comes Cant(al)upus. (Exit>, Scena . /". Cantalupus. Squartacantino. Can. Is the wynd in that dore or speakest it but in play. ■S"^. I tel you in good sooth as I heard Biondello say. Can. when .told he thee so .'' Sq. when you sent me for the Sivet and muske even now. in the streete w"i him I met. (f. 69 v.) 40 this verse needed for rhyme inserted C i toyle interl. C above byles or byle del. 6 lurdge] and so G boanes] o alt. black 7 asterclappes G 10 drave] draw G K 2 132 THE BUGGBEARS iv. v Can. did he tel thee my derling my Rosimund was with child ? 5 Sq. he sayd she had her errand, that she was not beguild Can. Then if I have the Cow I must have the Calf too. Sq. ye & the homes wtl" all Can. o. God, what shold I do Sq. what els but have her, she is best for your diett, I wold have her, & it were but to bring me out of quiet 10 you cannot lose by her Can. Is that thy best advise ? Sq. She is best for you now me thinkes, if you be wise. for now you shall have her dowble w*!" the advantage, That is two for one is not that a gainefuU mariage ? besydes yo" be sure she will not be barraine. 15 ye & further who ever it was that toke the paine lett him lose his labour. & do you take the chyld so you are sure to gayne and he to be begyld Can. I know not what to do, for I cannot remove so sone from my heart my former fixed love. jo .S"^. no mervaile ; sith she is a lovely loving lasse. it was love in a cloake bagge that brought this ffeat to passe Can, On the other side the daunger is terrible if I have her Sq. what dauger ? of a pore home inviseble Tutte, no man shall see it, nor you your self shall fele it 25 That we see not nor fele not, cannot greve vs a whitte Can. me thinkes. stile on end, it shold not be true. Sq. hope well & have well a good fayth shall save you Can. who so Saintelike as she .S"^. young Saint & old devell Can. now a dayes men are geven to suspect & thinke evell 30 Art sure he did tel thee ? or didest thou misseharken ? Sq. I am sure he did tel me agen & agen. Can. how heardst it ? Sq. wtli mine eares, it was not w*'' mine elbowes. 17, 18 & do . . . begyld inserted C to replace & he to be beguild del., E having om. & do . . . gayne IV. V THE BUGGBEARS 133 Can. I am sure that the varlett telleth more then he knowes. he myght hear a lie Sq. Then for a lie take it. 35 I promise you sir I heard it, I did not make it Can. That Rosimund is with child Sq. her bely doth swell perhappes she hath eate Rattesbane Can. wth Child Sq. I cannot t(ell) what you cal being w*!^ child, She hath trode her slipper a wrie Some one or other lookt babies in here eie, 40 She hathe playd false at tabelles, & berne a man too manie The tailour hath curtald her clothes too short before, She hathe falne vpon feathers & hath brused her very sore, She hath stoUen her mothers apern. She is stung w*!^ a lizart She bredeth yownge boanes. The termes of that art 45 I cannot well skill of: but in plaine wordes he did say fBattely she was w*t child, that was his tale too day Can. did he saye my Rosimunda. there are more of that name (f. 70 r.) Sq. No, he said not yo^ Rosimunda. but he ment the very same That youe wold haue to be yo''^, mary whither youers she be 50 or his that did the feate I wold haue yo"" self tell me Can. what the Daughter of Brancatius ? Sq. Nay I am not so connyng padventure Brancatius him self knowes not that thing, but her for whose nursing Brancatius did paye Can. I will straight gett me thither, to se whether he did saye 55 the soothe, or did lye, Sq. If youe do so take hede that youe move in the matter no more words then nede Lyttle sayd, sone amended, the truth youe shall best trye If youe here & see, & say nought, but looke aboute & prye And Couertlye demeane youe ells a broyle shall youe stere, 60 37-47 bracketed in margin for omission 41 the line rhyming with this is wanting 134 THE BUGGBEARS iv.v & the truth shalbe smothered & youe never the nere. Can. As I trye so will I trust, goe gett the home the while & looke to the howse ? If they thinke to beguyle or geve me suche 9. gleke, they must aryse earlye exit Sq. He ys gone, fare he well, for this matter what care I Act, whether it be true or false ? phaps the slye Biondello 66 To help Formosus to her wold haue vs weene tis so & so wold I too. for yf he once marrye, A yong Wief, then farewell his former liberalitie. She will make him spare & pynche. new brome clean work doth make 70 All is to litle for her, shee wilbe good w*'' a rake Then my thryfte is laid on soake. On thother syde Manutius maye haue o"^ Iphigenia if Rostmund haue Formosus. Those matches are meter, & so ytt shalbe. yf my mr wilbe ruled and pswaded by me. {Exit) 75 Actus quintus. Scena . /". Donatus. Piccinino. Don. Is it true ? Pic. ye owte of doubte Don. hadd youe such a noble sturre ? Pic. I wold youe had sene howe we sent them out of durre tis no syne to saye they were afrayd. I promys youe It past all other medycins to ryd them of the Agewe. Don. I wold I had sene yt Pic. If youe had sene that fytte, 5 the longst daye of yo"^ lief youe wold haue remembryd itt. 64 exit-i so MS. in two other hands: exit l)yC(T), Act probably by the omission- 65 Act J marker 65-7,5 marked down the margin for omission 69 liberalitie] /ri?«(ferf in MS. by Lybertie del. 72 thrylte] thryste G laid MS. Scena i"] whole scene marked in margin for omission v.i THE BUGGBEARS 135 Don. And haue they wrought their feate ? Pic. They haue brought it aboute Don. Arte sure Pic. my m'' badd me tell youe so oute of doubte & that he lackes but yo" help. I know not what to doe. but he praied youe to come in post hast to them twoe. 10 Don. Then make we hast vnto them, & that so muche the rather for that I see coming my brother, & Formosus father. (^Exeunt into Camillui house!) Scena . 2"- Amedeus. Brancalius. Cantalupo. Trappolo. Biondello. Ame. Whye feare youe in the house to open your mynde Tra. youe know womens Clackes will walke w* euery wynde I wold not that the maydes nor the Mystresse of the howse In theis so waightie matters shold hap to vnderhear vs. (f. 70 v.) Ame. ye & wyselie consideryd. but tell vs somwhat no we 5 Tra. with a verye good will, fiirst this I must tell youe I haue ben w* my spryte, & from poynt to poynt haue hard the Cause of all those matters that makes you thus aferd Youe remember I told youe y* of sprites are sondry sortes. Can. very well Ame. o ye good sir Tra. my famylier reportes 10 that the sprytes of yo'' house are of the worst race that are Called dark shadowes Ame. now god send vs of his grace. Tra. They are called Caccubeoni Ame. Thats a develishe name in dede Bion. The sownd of that name makes my heare to stare for dread Ame. What is it ? I haue forgott Tra. I told you Caccubeoni. 15 y Don.] Vi pale for V del. Pic. interl.pah 2 Clackes] clarkes G, but cp. II. Iv. 32. 5 tell written over lett del 7 f bef. & MS. 9, 11 sprite p MS. 14 makep MS. 136 THE BUGGBEARS v.ii Bion. oh horryble name, yt will make a Dogg bee on payne of my lief, as he were stark stone dead if but thrise in his eare that wicked name be read Can. I promys youe that name ys terrible & monstruous Ame. see my maisters what m'"chant wee breed in o' house 20 Tra. naye, saye youe haue bred Ame. whye? are they fledd so quickly Tra. They are gone & dispatcht I warrant yo of my honestye I haue taught them their daddies daunce they will neuer come there more Ame. Ah good m^ doctor, now blest be youe therfore Can. Aske hym whye theye did trouble you Ame. ye mary. why was that? 25 . Tra. All that can I tell youe, my famylier told me somwhat. know youe not a yong gentleman called Manutio, Can. I know him very well Tra. my Spirit did name him so. he named an old gentleman Cantalupo. Can. I am he. Ame. what a wonderous thing is this? Tra. Then youe haue as he told me 30 A Daughter Can. It is true Tra. Iphigenia is her name as he said vnto me Can. o good lord it is the same, Tra. This Manutius doth loue her Can. o lord howe shold that Spryte knowe ? Bion. why ? Sprites know our deedes & C thoughtes Can. So I trowe Bion. ffor those same dark shadowes wayte vpon vs contynually 35 though till the sonne do shyne they apeare not to eye. Can. Thou hast reason 21-2 so quickly . . . honestye substituted in MS. for & gone | so quicklye? T. They are dispatcht & hnrt they haue done none which G reads 34 toughtes G v.ii THE BUGGBEARS 137 , Bion. And therfore what so euer you doe yo'' shadow must neds know it & will do the same thing tooe Tra. youe wold rob this Manutius . as my spryte doth tell. of this gentleman's daughter, & thence growes this quarrell 40 Ame. I wonder at his Conning for in deed it is true. I cannot denye it Tra. It is true I Dare warrant youe, by a right redye token, of frenche Crownes three thowsand Ame. o god what newes ys this ? Tra. That are offeryd to yo'' hand by the gentlewomans father Can. whye ? I think he knoweth all thinges 45 T^a. Hath entyced youe to Consent to this open wrong doing Say Naye if youe can Bran. The matter is to playne Can. \ Tis as true as tr uth it self) it booteth not to fayne. Ti-a. WelTTwarraunt youer house never troubled more againe. Ame. I thanke youe m' doctour, I will deserv your payne 50 Tra. but beware of yor liefe, & yo^ sonnes, & of as manye As shall giue their Consentes herafter to that Iniurye. (f. 71 r.) Can. Mary ? god save me than Ame. God saue me and my sonne Can. I praie youe lett the bargaine againe be vndone Twene your sone and my Daughter Tra. next theyl set yo^ house on fyer. 55 if that matche do procede Can. good syr at my Desyer, will youe warraunt my house, as youe haue done his ? Tra. Naye softe, he heares not yett the worst of this practyse All his penauce ys not past, ffor that he did alredye- they haue tane awaye the thing that best pleased his fantasye. 60 Ame. what ys that on gods name Tra. That sytes on youe to looke youe knowe what youe loued best, that same haue they tooke. Ame. Twas a picture of my swete harte, whome I fancyed in my youth. 46 Hath]/«a/ h in faint ink upon B's e : Hate G 47, 81 Bran] ran added faint by another hand 56 Desyer. MS. 138 THE BUGGBEARS v, ii Bion. God saue yo' scarlett gown Ame. Nay nay but of truthe. I know now what it is I doe think. I had a booke. 65 of Orlando Furioso, wheron I loved to looke. as ofte as I had leysure w* passyng great delyte. Bion. what should devills do w* bookes ? they are not for their apetite Tra. It maye be the same, if youe think youe loued it best. but had youe nothing ells that youe loved aboue the rest ? 70 Ame. Nothing els save my money Tra. Love youe money so well ? Ame. What a question ys that ? do not very manye sell their soules & all for monye ? Tra. Then sure that is it. Ame. oh my harte, oh my herte, theis wordes of yo" do slytt my brest like a Dagger, & rent my harte quyte oute. 75 tis to muche to loose Tra. The more the greater doubte Ame. O my poore three thowsand Crownes Bion. O syr I wold counsell youe to goe looke in your Cofer, padventure it is not true. Tra. Then Call me hardlie Cutt, yf my Arte deceyve me soe. yf he fynde them in his Chest, Doe youe hang me eare I goe. 80 (^Exit Amedeus with Bion^ Bran. He is flong into the house in a mervelous furye. Now good Mr, what say youe to my poore daughters malady ? Can. ye mary Mr doctour, I praye youe hartelie tell. Tra. Neuer doubt youe of the matter, yo'' daughter shall do well. the Cause of her greff was love and vnkyndnes 85 Can. It is I she is in love wt^ Tra. This is most of her sicknes Can. Then will I be her phisitian. Tra. ' And furder she hath a spyce. of the fallyng evill, but I haue A devyse. to ryd her of them all, but to talke particulerlye for her love youe Can help that better then I, 90 Can. ye I can & will help her 65, 66, 87, 88, 91 del. MS. full stop at end v.ii THE BUGGBEARS 139 Tra. No, her father best can. in this Case aboue all men be her best phisitian. Bra. how so ? Tra. To help her to him that she doth love whome yf she haue not, of force yt doth behove that youe lose her in short tyme. for I tell youe as my brother 95 Cure her love decease, and youe Cure all the other. Can. Then He Cure her I warrant youe Tra. youe wold matche her wtl* age And that ys the Cause of all her grevous rage (f. 7 1 v.) she is yong & therfore do youe matche youth wtl^ youth Can. 1 lyke not that sore saieng Tra. she will mend of very truth 100 twene her & one He tell youe thinges are so farre gone that they cannot be revoked without her Destruction. Can. Why ? how farre haue they gone ">. Tra. I maye not tell yt youe, for some inconvenyence that therof maye ensue. Can. This makes my mans tale good. I muse who that shold be 105 Tra. Theis mysteryes of women are not for youe to see. Can. Tis sure as he sayd, she hath troade her shoe awrye I praye youe whome loves she ? Tra. (Do) youe not know Can. not I ? Tra. youe shall hear more herafter, yett thus muche He tell youe. she loves youe no whytt, therfore bydd her Adiew. no but this I doe see by the sterres, and by my spryte, that she shall matche wtl^ him in whome she doth delyte I know whome & howe, yea & that very shortlye & she wilbe hole, els He defye all Nigromancye Can. will you make her to love me ? Tra. And youe knew that I do, 115 youe wold think that she were not for youe to seke vnto, the sterres threat suche danger 93 phisition MS. G 93 Tra. added margin pale 96 decease] /. e. disease cf. I. 120. ^^ prefix Trap, repeated MS. (J later) Sc om. G 103 not interl. C? 108 an unfinished \i hef. T. 115 know G 140 THE BUGGBEARS v. ii Can. how so ? Tra. There lay a strawe. All we Astronomers amonge vs haue a lawe not to vtter all we know, but where it shold be vtteryd. But touching her decease certaine thinges must be prepared 120 As I will prescribe : we will make Suffumigation. Then will I gather herbes, to make a ffomentacion & then an Incantation. Then He hang about her neck this wryting y* shall geue the ffalling yll a Counter check Gasparfert Mirrhani. Thus. Melchior. Balthasar. aurum. 125 It is wrytt in vyrgin pchement. youe shall se a Strang Cure yet before yt be night I dare youe assure, I will tell youe a great deale more w'li in the house the while I will Crave this gentleman to spare vs. (Exeunt Trapp. and Bran.) Scena . j"- Canialupo. Can. I am shorne in the neck. It is even so. As I hard even now of my Squartacantino. Lett her goe ; lett her goe. is she bagd ? farwell she let her lover hardly haue her, she is not for me I trust to spede as well. But sure yf the Coffer 5 be robd by the devill, tis a noble Astronomer, that can tell so quyckly. I will in & se the truthe : Truly Amedeus case doth move to ruthe If thinges fall owte so as Nostradamus doth tell, my daughter & Formosus maye not matche very well. 10 nor none maye safely haue her, but only Manutius : Be it so. She shalbe his. syth god appoyntes it thus I will in to Amedeus, and gett all vndon & Cancell the bandes twene my daughter and his sone 14 and for myne owne mariage, I hope to fynde some other (f. 72 r.) but yonder me thinkes I see Brancatius brother. {Exit.) 120 decease] i. e. disease cf. /. 96 122 gather. MS. 6 robd written ver roubd del. 15 owne, mariage MS. other] o alt, black fr. c V.iv THE BUGGBEARS 141 Scena , 4^. Donatus. Do. Youe shall not nede to praye me, anye one the very leest of all theis yo' Causes will make me to be earnest eyther youe altogether, or anye one of youe for this & muche more to our frendshipp is due. & my sick Neeces Case must neds make me bent 5 to do what I Can to further her preferment very well. I shall wynne this daye a great fame of a liberall vncle (if god send o'^ plott to frame) w* out anye Cost or anye payne at all I will take it vpon me, & if it hap to fall 10 as we haue devysed, the Case is suche trulye, that easelye therof a man might rnake a Comedy well then He aboute it for the money by this into ducates & Crusadoes very nere transformed is that it maye not be knowen. nowe will I make a proffer 15 of this money to my brother, whoe will sone accept my offer I will tell him that nature did move me to tender my neeces peteous Case, being sure he wold render the like vnto me, yf o' Cases turned were & that my neece durst not declare to him for fear 20 so muche of her mynd as she hath done to me This colour will show well. But what meaneth he to Come leaping forth from Amedeus house? {Exit.') Scena . /". Biondello. Formosus. Manutius. Bion, O cherfull hap, o practise most venturous how well it falles oute ? now I wishe my youthes did hear theis newes I haue to tell them to amend their drouping chear but yond I se them comyng. For. Are the Costes clere abowte "i Man. I can se no bodye of whome we ned to doubte S s.D. Donalius MS. 14 ducates, MS. 23 Amedeus del. MS. mid Cantalnpoes subsiiluUd in blacker ink above Scena 5^] •whoU scene marked in margin for omission 142 THE BUGGBEARS v.v For. Then I wold we had Biondello to tell vs some good newes Man. That all thinges are so still it maketh me to muse For. but yond I see the knav Bion. now my masters make reconing that fortune will make cache of youe this daye a kyng & will lull youe in her lapp For. I praye thee dispatche, lo & tell vs what thou bringest Bion, nay soft I did watche & long loockt for this to wyn by the bargayne A beverage for my newes Man. Acounte yt as certayne As yt were in thy purse Bion. I will thanke youe when I haue it I will not declare what a cruell stormye fytt 15 your father had within when he sawe his money gone how he flong, & he fared, & fumed, and toke on but to come to yo^ matter : In the mydes of all the rage in came Cantalupo to vndoe the former mariage betwene youe & Iphigenia. for the wordes of the Astronomer 20 had fryighted him sore, by & by your father delyuered him the wry tinges, & Cancelled they were. (f. 72 v.) For. O good newes thoue hast ryd me of a wonderous deale of feare Man. And I fele my harte lighter by a pound at the least Bion. what will youe then saye when I tell youe of the rest? 25 he told in playne words, that Manutius shold be his sone & none other Man, oh worthy newes for me I will streight to Iphigenia, because shee hath nede & to Comfort her harte He tell her how we spede For, youe shall so do very well {Exit Man.) Bion. Looke youe syr who comes yonder 30 Brancatius & his brother. & our doctour, the Astronomer. 12 loockt cf. V, ix, 51 18 yo'] this interl. faint above. 19 mariage. MS. v.vi THE BUGGBEARS 143 Scena . 6'^. Brancatius. Donatus. Trappola. Formosus. Bran. Nurse looke to the medycins, & when they are boyled, take the sponge & applie it as the Doctour hath appointed Tra. ye good nurse in anye Case haue a Diligent eye to my pacyent yo' Charge, & loke that youe applie yo'" Doses as I told youe, & I hope she shall mend 5 as nere as nyght is yett, eare this day do end Bran, now swet brother I do thanke youe, brother qdal rather I must cownt youe & take youe for euer for a father ye & more then a father Bon. theis thankes let them be what nede all theis ceremonyes betwene youe & me 10 whoe shold haue my goodes but youe I haue no Wief Tutt I make more acounte of my dere neces lyfe Then of all the trashe I haue. When I am dead & gone whoe shold be my heire ? whoe els but she alone she is all y' youe haue & y' I will euer haue 15 shold anye pryce lett me her lief to vs to save Tra. The teares will not let the father speak for ioy Bon. but I must blame youe bothe, her for being so Coy not to tell me till this mornyng the Cause of hir Anoy & youe that youe put so small trust in me 20 that youe wold not Crave the mony, in what danger you see yC nycenes hath cast (you) Bran. shame lettyd me to come. To demaund vnderseruyd so great & hugye a some Bon. well brother I forgive youe. but be so strange no more Lett vs goe to Amedeus whose harte I know is sore 35 w*'' the losse of his money but in any case take hede Say I lent youe but pte of yt yt shall not be my dede Bran. I am loth to dissemble & hyd your Lyberalytie Bon. It is best for many Causes For. I will goe & fayne Curtesy 18 Coy] shy G 29 For.] Trappola MS. G interl. by another hand above an erasure ■which G thinks may have been F : Tra del. and a faint for undeleted are also visible cf. Note fayne del. MS. and strayne interl. 144 THE BUGGBEARS V.vi To them bothe, god save youe, what Seignmr Donatus 30 Tell me howe youe fare. Don. loke brother who comes to vs ? Looke brother well vpon him. this brother, this ys he that must haue my nece if youe wilbe rvlyd by me. Tra. Shall I tell youe my famylier did apear in a glasse with this Very face suche A Countenaflce yt was 35 As ryght as maye be when I moved yo"^ daughters Case Concernyng her husband this is even the very face Bran. See the CvJiyng of that man. Tra. my spryt did flatly saye that that very face shold have her ons this day (f. 73 r.) Bran, yonder comes Amedeus For. I will slinke asyde closely 40 & not shew my selfe till I see opertunitie. Scena.j"'. Amedeus. Trappola. Cantalupo. Biondello. Brancatius Donatus. Formosus. {Ante) O good Lord, I am dead, & yet I do talke I am out of this world, & yett here I walke I am throwne & thruste downe, & yett I stand vpright my limes hang together, yett am I vndon quite O my mony, O my mony Tra. I pray yo" have patience 5 Ame. patience? how can I & my mony taken thence ? Tra. yf youe crie never so muche, it is quite past all remedie Ame. Ah wicked findes? they ar fled & dare not lustifie ther fact be fore the cunstable O god that I had powre to reveng me on those hagges, & it wear but on hower 10 Love they mony wtl" a vengaunce ? Bran. Sorow makes him to rave Bion. On thing makes me to muse how the hangvppes cold save, the chest, & not open it, nor break it 34 Tra.] Tro MS. 38 that alt.fr. this 39 Ff. 73-75 r {i. e. to end) written by A 9 ther] MS. : thee G i : Bran.] ran inserted aieve line in paler ink : G would assign speech to Bion. and the next to Bran. v.vii THE BUGGBEARS 145 Ame. aske not me : the devill is in them, they can do now I see what ever they lust Tra. I told yo»e they cane sucke 15 the hart owt of ones bely, ye be bold they can pluck mony owt of ons chest, the breath owt of ones body as it wear an old Gibbe catte, ye & these same Caccubioni drawe the drinke owt of the barell, & the meat owt of the potte ye what is it that those Caccubioni cannot ? 20 Ame. Ah wreche y* I am. go go & gather good for those Cruscabecconi, they will have my hart blood Tra. Thanke god & be content, & saye you sped well had they taryed tyll to morow your hole howse had fell vpon a light fire, they had burned you all 25 Ame. Mercy Lord Tra. your son knowes what was said when I did call my famylyer in my studdie, but I sent the knaves packinge I taught them thier lerrie & thier poop to for thier knacking Ame. Ah ribaldes & theves, to have a way my gold I see they myght robbe every man yf they wold 30 Tra. no sir. every thing hathe an end & so have they Ame. why then dyd they more to me I pray yo" say then to a thousand other ? Tra. right now I told you why bicause you wold do Manutius that iniurye for lucre of mony. Sythe mony tempten you 35 to ponishe yo" in mony is gwerdon most dwe Can. Those Sprites had som reason, I am warned & armed by this his example to escape from being harmed For. It is now a fitt time in his sight to appere father, I beseche yo» to be of good chere. 4° Ame. formosus thou knowest not how these Sprites have spoyled vs those Caccamusoni have ransackt all my howse. those same Cornabuloni have rifeled vp my chest {f. 73 v.) 28 them] then MS. G 35 is smeared out after mony' MS. S32 L 146 THE BUGGBEARS v.vii For. yf the have yett good father sett yo'"' hart at rest while your selfe are saf throughe the heipe of this good man 45 for myne owne pt I am glad, & I wishe you as you cane to take the matter light, as longe as yo" live, let these Sprites do their worst, the lesse it shall me greve Avie, Dothe it seme alight matter? three towsand crownes of gold? For. while our house and all the rest w"' safetie we shall hold, 50 now nede we not to doubt them, had they burned vs vp quite where had we bene then ? that had bene a worse spite Bran. Amedeus ? my brother & I wold talke w*'' you yf thies folkes wold give vs leave ? Ame. formosus go thou w* m' Nostradamus be fore in to the house 55 Biondello make a fier. {Exeunt Form. Trapp. and Biond.) now Donatus & Brancatius what wold ye Don. we are come my brother here and I to breake a matter to you concerning affinitie where in we wold loyne Can. Sith you are in earneste talkeing I care not yf I leave yo" & home warde gett me walking 60 & conclude wt^ Manutius. {Exit) Don. my niece and your sone have longe loved cache other Ame. Indede so have they don Don. And silhe yo" reffused that matche for greater wealth from that tim to this, my Niece had not her helthe I am bold to break my mynd, the pore girle for shame fi.i till this mornyng strong grefe forced her to shew the same to me that am her vncle, she doorst not to my brother neither yet as I think in my consyence to her mother when I sawe want of mony was like to part thier love well wold worke my nieces deathe, then nature did me move 70 60 walking] after this word a line left uiirhymedioi my soone in lawe ManutiiU stayes for me has been inserted in MS. (6' says ' later by the same srribe') with change of I, 61 by the faint ink corrector to and now T will [conclude with] liim. As usually', I have preferred the earlier form. v.vii THE BUGGBEARS 147 to pitlie her case, to be short here is the monye wch ones yo" required, my brother here & I have laid ou' stockes to gether, & he stands bound \'nto me to pay me as he cane. Ame. my masters bothe yo° be very wellcom vnto me, & you' sute is as wellcome 75 (provided allwaies 70" have brought wtJ» yo" the some «*•> was three thousand crownes). Dm. youf piaiment shalbe redye in my brothers bowse yo" shall have present mony Ame. It comes in good tim my late lose consydred & this matche comes in season for the covenatmtes ar canceled betwene me & cantallupo. & all thing is vndon 81 & quite & cleane reversed. Don. will yo" call forthe you' sone to here how he likes it ? Atru. formosns come away & talke w** thies gentillmen, what formosus I saie (^Re-enter Fokmosus, Trappola and Biokdello) For. what wold ye ? Ame. you saie they ar iumpe three thowsand ? 85 Dm. I have twise told them ouer. Ame. then geve me here thy hand loyne handes wth brancatius. now speak you Donatus and tell him ou^ conclusyon Dm. how say yo" formosus will you take Rodmunda di Medici to yo™" wyfe ? for saking all others, & lead w* her your life ? 90 Vpon soch a dowrie as your father wil agree {f. 74 r.) For. I yeld my full consent yf my father say ye Ame. I am pleased Bran. I assent. Dm. god geve them bothe his blessyng. Ame. Embrace thy new flFather For. O sir this is the thinge that I ever wished for. O swete father Brancatius 95 L 2 148 THE BUGGBEARS v. vii Tra. He goloke to my patyentt, sythe all thinges fall owt thus {Exit^ For. O good vncle Donatus, ther is cawse I shold love yo» Don. Say yo^^ so ? then will I make my promyse good & tretle that I have promised my Nice, yo" know I am a batcheler & now past date of maryage, therfore here I create her roo of all my landes & all my goodes my onlie child & heire make the writinges when yo^^ will. For. I assure yo° it is faire what lose yo" by yo"'' Sprites. Ame. oh how sweet & how hapie after al these stormes & sturrs is this sodaine prosperitie O most frendly Donatus :. O my brother brancatio 105 & that most worthy patron m^ doctour Nostradamo now in earnest I triumpthe. but what sturr have we there ? Bran. God leve my daughter do well : I stand in feare Scena 8" Tomasine Philida. Trappola Sf the others Tom. Thou shalt not Ph. but I will. Tom. Thou shalt not sure go furste Ph. I will Tom. but thou shalt not. Alas it is a curst she is stept owt be fore me. Ph. A beverag Tom. A beverage Ph. o sir I clayme it first Bran. what means this sodaine rage Tom. good newes my charge rosimunda is on foote 5 Ph. hole & sound and ailethe nothinge Tom. now good heale be her boote Ph. She lookethe as livelye as she never had bine sycke Tra. you' daughter is well even as I ded pronostick Bran. O blessed be god & our good doctours cofiynge Ame. I hav lived sythe I was borne, yet I never saw suche a thinge 10 9 blessed] bressed MS. G v.viii THE BUGGBEARS 149 Bran, how chaunst it ? tell it vs. Ph. A littell while agoe Tom. It was but now right Tra. did not I point it so ? Ph. As we gave her the confection Tom. as we gave her the complection Ph. She gave a sodaine braide Tom. hold thy pease and be gone I can tell it w't owt thee Ph. And I as well as you 15 & sodenlie she stert vp. Tom. now blessed be lesu (quoth she) I am hole, go gentle Nurse go Ph. Naie she saide go good Phillidaie, & tell my fifather so Tom. Thou liest she said nurse. Ph. I can tell who dothe lie althoughe it be not I Tom. then belike it is I ? 20 Ph. He sale as you say Tom. thou wast nurtured.in hast few wordes wold do better & those better plaste. Ph. yo" will give me leave to speak, yo" ar not my mistres Tom. thou art sibbe to a parrot, thou canst chatter w^^Ii a wittnesse Ph. why shold not I tell it ? Tom. to be guiell me of my beverage 25 Bran. Is that all the matter ? then I wishe yo" to asswage you' coUers, & be quiet you shall bothe have you' hier for bringing me suche newes as chiefely I did desyer O worthy Master doctour, I cannot expresse (f. 74 v.) how depely yo" have bound me for helping of her sicknesse 30 Tra. I am glad for all yo^ sakes Bion. who wold have geven creadit to suche an other wonder, except he had sene it .' 15-17 opposite these in right-hand margin a circular p-inted stamp with initials TB 27 coUers] second 1 alt.fr. y: colhers G 31 Bion.] B. MS.: Brancatius G, but to his three preceding speeches in this scene MS. prefix is Br. ISO THE BUGGBEARS v.viii Tra. Lett vs go in vnto here, wherfore do w(e) linger ? It will make her Duble whole these loyfuU news to bring her Ame. well said lett vs go. Bion. He go see the ioyfull grettinge 35 that wilbe betwene formosus & his swettinge {Exeunt) Scena^'^. Manutius Carolina. Biondello Man. He go see how the world dothe fare w'l' formosus & tell him of my loy. O ffortune most gratious how muche am I bound to honour thee sweet laidie ? thou hast hoyst me vp to heaven, where I fleete in felicitie & swime in bathes of blise. yf my stat weare immortall 5 I wold not change my chaunce wtli the loyes that are celestiall but yonder comes my man Car. I mervaile muche of this that my master stales so long but loke wher he is Sir, Bindus & Octavius were at our house righte now : to loke yo" : they tell me they will come againe to morow :o Man, That is well, but wotst thou what hath hapned Carolino ? Car. I shall when yo" tell me Man. I shall live Car. I trust so Man. Iphigenia is myne owne Car. I am glad yf that be trew Man. her father gave her me Car. her father gave her you ? Man. him selfe in to my handes Car. who browght that thing to pase ? 15 Man. him selfe mad the offer Car. That was strange Man. So it was Car. I praie yo wher was this ? J3 or hei'' 35-6 Bion . . . swettinge bracketed in MS. : but cf. V. ix. 24-61 73-4 1-6 He go . . . celestiall marked in margin for omission 14 Car.] C. MS. alt. fr. he v.ix THE BUGGBEARS IS' Man. At home at his howse we shall marye when I liste Car. this gear is miraculous Man. her dowrye dothe excede Car. I like that pointe well Man. That formosus shold have had Car. this gere makes me marvell 20 but sir I praie you a wake Man. A wake why so beaste ? Car. ffor you dreame as yo" wold have it Man. no I speake in good earnest Car. yett at last lady lucke cane fourd you some good hap Man. but yonder is biondello (Enter Biondello) Eton. Dame ffortune in her lape sittes lulling of Formosus in rosymundas licknesse 2$ she dothe cull him & kisse him, & for great excesse of ioy that she feeles she raynethe in his bosom droppes of Love in abundaunce that from her eyes do come bedewing her derling, who claspethe her fast, vnto him in his armes ? & as on quite agaste 30 he knowes not yf he dreame, or els be brode a wake yf he be a live or dead, so far for her swett sacke is he gone beyond him selfe. thus I lefte him when we parted yet I thinke by this on thinge that he is not sure deade for he bade me commend him to his frendes when he went 35 But yonder is Manutius ; unto him am I sent above all the rest to in formne him of this geare Man. Biondello? where is formosus ? tell me (f. 75 r-) Bion. where ? in the armes of rosymunda, w**" in her fathers howse 24 biondello deleted and brancativs written above it in blacker ink : cf. II. 39, 69. 24-74 Dame ffortune . . . owt sende] these ffty-one lines apparently including the closing couplet are heavily scored over in the MS., though the letters ste {,= sXttl) to the left of the closing couplet may possibly apply to the whole passage so deleted. Opposite II. 24-5 in right-hand margin is an illegible comment {? Wurse so) apparently by the same scratchy pen as ste and the deletion marks 37 qy. ? infowrme 1S2 THE BUGGBEARS v. ix Man. Is that matter concluded ? Bion. ye & old Amedeus 40 hathe his mony that he lost redie paid in to his hand Man. Is he ware how the case of the mony dothe stand ? Bion. no her vncle dothe lend it, or at least he thinkes so Man. then hathe he no wronge how ever the matter go Bion. he is paid, he is pleased, he is eased, & all is well 45 ou' Astronomer is exalted to the skies for his counsell & to morow they shall mary Man. Sithe ou' luckes thus iumpe in on, I have to loy huddell that I shall not loy alone Bion. why how standes yo^ case ? Man. In as good plight as his & whether goest thou now ? Bion. my lornye shortened is 50 alyttell by yo", I was sent to locke yo^i owte to will yo" to come to him. Then must I trudge a bout to bid Camillus com. then cookes I must gett for her father dothe meane to make a royall banquet The rest of his gueastes I must bid vp & downe 65 Go, gett yo" vp vnto him. & He into the towne. {Exeunt Man. and Car.) he is gone. Now my masters before I come againe these stompes must be stur them, & take alittell paine to trotte for small pence, & pvide for this weddinge & to bid the gueastes, wyll yo" tarrye my retornynge 60 to see what cates I bie ? & yo" will do yo" so but yett I suppose it weare better for yo" no perhapes I shalbe longe & kepe yo" fro yo"' reste the law is in yo™ handes, you male do what likes you best wyll yo" follow a foles counsell } he that hathe any meate 65 in store in the ambrie, let him gett him home to eate he that hath not, lett him gett him to the cookes, or els to bed & sleepe owt his soopper : it is holsom for the hed 47 in 0711. G 60 Bion.] M. MS. 51 locke cf.\.y. 12 60 relorm- ynge MS. 66 home] hence G v.ix THE BUGGBEARS 153 I had quite and cleane forgot, my master & brancatius do praie yo° to morow to come to thier howse 70 to this weddinge, tis no matter whether yo° do or no yett I pray yo** vouchesafe vs a plaudite eare yo" go ste (well saide & sith ou"" greeffe groese to such loyfuU end) f^ (let vs in songe in loy therof som loyfuU notes owt sende) The last song 75 Chor'. Syth all ow' grefF is turnd to blyss we all w*^ icy reioyce at this The olde folkes care hath end at last The young fookes must needes ioyfuU bee we boyes ar glad ow' payne is past 80 & yo we trust take all in gree Syth &c. {Exeunt.') Soli deo honor 4' gloria Soli deo honor et gloria Johannus Jeffere 85 scribebat hoc. 73-4 well saide . . . sende bracketed in MS. and written in different hand and blacker ink, probably inserted by J. B. to replace II. 35-6 of sc. viii cf. p. 80 73 IoyfuU interl. above lucky del. 74 to right of JB JB staiids stet heavily del. 75 The last song etc.] given with music, single parts, on f. 76 v. of MS. and written out separately by yet another hand on f. 77 r. 83 Soli deo . . . gloria in A's hand 84-6 Soli deo . . . hoc written in printing characters and blacker ink 154 THE BUGGBEARS m. iv Giles peperel for Iphiginia (f-76r.) i d= ^^^ ~j~j j--~i 22= ^^ 2=^ lendf me yo" lo vers all yo' plea - saunt love - ly love-ly i ^ ~?':r- -o-=- layes Come come w"" me re ioyce Come g ^^^^^3=g ^ S Come gyve la die for - tune pra yse for she ^ ^^^ g^^ P for she it ys that dooth my ad i s^ shee shee hath turnd my bale to i s^ o 1^- — cliere - full chaunce blysse my checkes to and Another part ^^ lltE^^L ^ |ii^ ther - fore a and 3= Eg way caret ther fore a waye care way care ^ =E g i ( The minims twice as quick as before.) 3=3=p:^ ^ =p=F i a - way a - way way care henc care way a - way henc way care a -way ^E^ ^ S^^Ie a^ * ^//c;- careful collation of the music of the MS. I have accepted the modernized notation supplied by Dr. Max Friedldnder in Dr. Grabau's edition, at the same time transposing all into the G clef in which only ' Another part ' is written in MS. t fVords lend . . . care written by C, the rest of btirden and Another part in another hand. THE BUGGBEARS IS5 henc a way a wai way way a - way a - way hence E^E; $ (^Tempo prima. ) ^ ^ ^^^= ^ 53E liziJt 2dl way way i way a - way & a - way & be - gon -s>- be - gon care care f--H-p =p:^ E^g :t it: this second way is for the t(w)o last v'se* ^£^^&i:£3 *^ my sowre ys tumd to sweete, my pi - tious playntes to play, fT^Y± ^ ^ ie± i myclowdesof care to com-fort clere my nyght to bright-est \ r ^=^ 3 ^ ici: =P ^ :e= day my feares to hopes my teares to trnce my want to *my warr is tumd to peac my sicke-nesse ^---'Uj ^ ^- ~o~ ^ wysh - ed wealth vn to helth my warr ys tumd to quy - et peace my my feares to hopes my tears to truce iny ^sg^g -^ ifcbz t. syck - nes vn to helth & ther - fore a want to wish - id wellth way care ( ^ - ) * this . . . v'se in the olhtr hand, which also adds the alternative words below, deleting the upper which are written like the rest by C 156 THE BUGGBEARS V. IX - mnst needes Joy full be we boyes are glad 3^^ =^— =^ 22zzs2Z32^ rsz -?2_ EE i 3b3S(5>Z ^ rjs: * g 3=P=g: ^ ^ payne ys past and yo" I trust take all in gree (sith)* ^^^- ^ -rr- ^ ^ ^=F^=r^ :23j *syth all o' greefe &c. ^ iz2r quere+ fi ri r=W"=f=r -yn-. * After the rest the MS. places marks of repetition ://: under the first of the following notes (£)), with words syth all o' greefe &c. deleted. The intention was, I believe, to begin the Chorus at once after gree, but to add here alternative music for its last two bars we | All with icy re- | ioyce at thys. t qnere in the other hand: queve G MISOGONUS MISOGONUS Argument. — Philogonus, a wealthy landowner of Laurentum in Italy, laments to his friend Eupelas the insolence and loose courses of his only son Misogonus, of whose misdemeanours he hears from his trusty servant Liturgus. His mother had died a week after his birth (hi. i. 183), and the father recognizes too late the fruits of the indulgence and idleness in which he has been brought up. Eupelas undertakes to remonstrate with him ; but Misogonus is warned by the Fool, Cacurgus, a shrewd knave and the evil genius of the house, who passes with Philogonus for a ' natural '. Eupelas' admonitions are ill-received, and he retreats before threat of violence from Misogonus' ribald attendants, Oenophilus and Orgelus. Misogonus' anger at their tardy arrival is diverted by Cacurgus and by their proposal to visit the courtesan Melissa. A long scene of dicing and dancing in which Sir John, a scandalous chaplain, joins, ignoring a summons to evensong, is interrupted by Philogonus with Eupelas : but his protests and threat of disinheritance are met with con- temptuous defiance by Misogonus and his disorderly crew, who after a long dispute adjourn to finish the night at a tavern, while the un- happy father closes the second Act with a despairing appeal to God. His prayer is answered. In the next Act it is revealed to him by his old tenants, Codrus and Alison, the latter of whom assisted at Misogonus' birth twenty-four years before, that on that occasion Philogonus' wife had really borne twins (iii. i. 185), though on the advice of ' a certaine learnde man ' (ib. 226), who foretold his fortu- nate destiny, she sent away 'the eldest' (227) to her brother in Apollonia. Of this disposal of him Alison alone was cognisant, but to the fact of his birth two other old women, who were present and are still living, can testify (242-5). Philogonus, overjoyed at the news, at once dispatches Liturgus to Apollonia. Cacurgus, who has overheard their conference, informs Misogonus, and plots to deter the old women, Madge Caro and Isbell Busby, from giving evidence. In the guise of a travelling physician and astrologer, to whom Madge applies to cure her toothache, he first impresses them by his accurate knowledge of all the circumstances, and then warns them under penalties to deny what they know, inasmuch as the supposed twin was really a fairy's child, laid with the other with intent S3' M i62 MISOGONUS tochange them, butremoveda week afterwards(iii.iii. 99-106). The crones promise silence : but, on the return of Liturgus with the missing son Eugonus, their anxiety to secure a reward, and their jealousy of Alison and Codrus, induce them to come forward; and Eugonus is satisfactorily identified by his likeness to his mother, by his possession of a superfluous toe on the right foot (iv. i. 1 1 7), and by his age, twenty-four, which tallies with Alison's calculation of the date of his birth (ib. 1 29-48), while Crito who has travelled with him from Apollonia produces a letter from his uncle who has brought him up. Philogonus joyfully acknowledges him ; and, having now a worthy heir to his property, treats with scorn the vain attempt of Misogonus to bully him and oust the new-comer, but is willing still to allow him ' a childes part ' on condition of his reformation. The ribald servants, seeing how the land lies, forsake the prodigal ; his ally and mentor Cacurgus is turned out of service ; and, at length, convinced of his own weakness and full of remorse, he is prevailed upon by Liturgus to crave his father's pardon. — "The MS. breaks off before the close of the fourth Act. The MS. and its Treatment in this Edition. — My text is from a transcript made throughout by my own hand from the MS. be- longing to the Duke of Devonshire and by his most kind permission deposited for my use and editing in the care of Dr. Warner at the British Museum. The MS. consists of twenty-four folios, a good deal mutilated, especially at the bottom corners, but not, as the reader will see, to a degree which makes the action or course of the dialogue at all doubtful in the bulk surviving. Comparatively few whole lines are gone. One interior leaf, however, that which Immediately followed the sixth and contained the greater part of Act i, sc. v, is missing (cf. my note on the scene) ; and some further matter is wanting at the end of the play, which breaks off abruptly in the course of Act IV, sc. iv. But the action has so nearly reached a natural close that it is improbable that the loss exceeded one or two leaves. A four-act play would at this date have been rather an anomaly ' ; but the fifth Act may well have been confined to a single banquet- scene (cf. Prol. 1. 36), as in the Persa of Plautus. The MS. was unpaged, if one may judge from the single leaf (fol. 16) of which the top corner remains almost entire: on the recto the writing extends almost to the edge, on the verso the clear space is without a number. Two complete transcripts of the MS. have already been made. The first, for J. P. Collier, must have been made before he wrote ' Kirclimayer's Pammachius , however, printed in Germany 1538, performed at Christ's College, Cambridge, 1545, and translated by John Bale before 1548, cldsed with the fourth Act. See Herford's Lit. Relations, pp. 119, 129. INTRODUCTION 163 his account of the play in his History 0/ Dramatic Poetry (1831), ii. 368-83. It is now bound in one volume with, and immediately after, the MS. itself, and bears the following note in Collier's hand- writing — ' N.B. This transcript was made by a person not very com- petent to read the original and it therefore contains errors. J.P.C — a remark which does the transcriber, whoever he was, somewhat less than justice, for it is on the whole a very careful piece of work, though it fails in some diflScult cases, renders by a simple j the character representing final -es, and sometimes nods. To judge by the altera- tions and corruptions in the passages quoted in the History of Dramatic Poetry, it is a great deal more accurate than any that would have emanated from Collier himself. Made at a time when the MS. was less worn than now, it preserves at the beginning or end of many lines words or letters which have since disappeared ; and, where the lines were then imperfect or wholly wanting, it marks the omission with scrupulous care and judgment. Very rarely do the surviving portions of letters then perhaps more perfect prompt me to differ from the transcriber : in many cases he has offered in square brackets (in his text) a suitable completion of lines he found imperfect, and has appended in the margin or at the foot an occasional emendation or interpretation of some word the characters of which were not doubtful. Whatever the damage sustained by the MS. since his transcript was made, the process of wear and decay has in recent years been arrested by skilful mending, and the text is now safe. The second transcript was made in or shortly before i89'7 for Professor Alois Brandl by Miss A. F. Parker at the Bodleian, and forms the basis of Brandl's edition of the play in his Quellen des weltlichen Dramas in England, 1898. My collation of the latter with the MS. enables me to testify to the care of this transcript also. It corrects many a slight error or carelessness of the former, and succeeds in solving a good many puzzles, especially in cases where the original MS. has been altered by a nearly contemporary corrector. When I first thought of including the play in this volume I solicited and obtained the courteous leave of Professor Brandl and his publisher, Herr Trubner, to reprint bodily his text and footnotes ; but, later, the number of doubtful points in this highly dialectal play, coupled with the Professor's acknowledgment of some hindrance in the task of revising his text for the press, and my own strong curiosity about the MS., decided me to be at the pains (if I could procure permission) of making an entirely fresh transcript. Made as this has been with expert advice ever at hand, and assisted by continual reference to Dr. Joseph Wright's indispensable Dialed Dictionary, I venture to hope it offers a solution of almost M 2 i64 MISOGONUS every outstanding diflSculty. I have found much help .pot only in Biandl's notes — the greater difficulty to the first commentator has been a little overlooked by his critics — but also in the remarks and suggestions of Professor John M. Manly, of Chicago University, in the Journal of Germanic Philology (1898), vol. ii, pp. 389-428, and of Professor F. I. Carpenter's review in Modern Language Notes for May, 1899 (vol. xiv, No. 5). The addition of stops by Professor Brandl or his printer was not always happy. Here nothing, not a stop, not a capital, has been admitted into the text that does not appear in the MS. ' All the few stops which appear there have been reproduced, though many of these are added in blacker ink, perhaps by the contemporary corrector, perhaps far later. Wherever insufficient punctuation made sense or syntax doubtful, I have brought a word down from the text into a foot- note, preceded by read, and with the needful stop affixed. Words or letters appearing in my text within square brackets are not addi- tions ; they are, as in Brandl, an integral part of the original text, preserved as such (unbracketed) in the Collier transcript, but since faded or worn away. All merely suggested completions, from whatever source, are relegated to the footnotes within square brackets, those without initial being my own ; and where it was necessary to bring down an already bracketed portion of original text, the text-brackets are abandoned in the footnote, so that no confusion might arise. I have not reported in the footnotes every difference between my text and that of the Collier transcript or of Brandl ; but the absence oi C ox B from any footnote implies the agreement of either, or both, on that point with my text, save in the matters of punctuation or initial capitals, wherein they have assumed a liberty I decline. One or two names, or words, idly inscribed in the margin of the MS. and obviously forming no part of the text, have been relegated to the footnotes, e. g. ' Anthony Rice ', title-page ; ' Thomas Warde Barfold 1577', at the foot of the prologue-page; ' W. Wyllih ', II. iv. 104-5; ' John York Jesu', III. I. 144-5; 'iothe' (?), iii. i. 242; 'Love hy ho ', iii. ii. 61-6 ; and something illegible, iii. iii. 5-7. I have retained, as in Buggbears, all the abbreviations of the MS. save final -es : I have reproduced as exactly as possible the space required for missing words or letters at the beginning or in the interior of a line — a matter indispensable to any attempt at restora- tion : and I have also reproduced the slight space which, except in the first 44 lines of scene i, divides the stanzas or the speeches — such division often supplying the place of a full stop. ' The numbering of the folios, and one or two unavoidable notes at lacunae, appear within angular brackets. INTRODUCTION 165 In the handwriting of the MS. the letters n and u are indistinguish- able, and I have used whichever seemed most appropriate : also d and e sometimes, c and / often, / and / occasionally, are indistinguish- able, but not so often as to absolve one from the attempt to dis- tinguish. For the rest the writing, that of the latter part of the sixteenth century, is fairly clear. The Museum experts profess considerable doubt whether the hand (or hands) of the Prologue and the play could be as early as 1560, the date suggested by Collier for the authorship. Apart from the casual names and scribblings enumerated above, the MS. exhibits two hands, with the possibility of a third, (i) The title-page is all in one hand, using blacker ink and a finer-pointed pen than is used in prologue and play : it is probably that of Barjona, whose name is written on the title-page ; and the same hand, using the same blacker ink and finer pen, seems to reappear in many corrections throughout the MS., sometimes interlineated, sometimes written upon another word already written by the original scribe. The most noticeable case is three lines (i. iii. 51-3) wholly sup- plied by this corrector, in space apparently left for the purpose, though the prefix Ca. at 1. 52 is in the hand and paler ink of the original scribe, whose own corrections of his slips or omissions are easily distinguishable. My text invariably adopts the correction, to whomsoever due, noting in a few cases the superseded word or words. Although the title-page hand is in general character a little earlier than that of the rest of the MS. it is difficult to suppose it was not, in fact, written practically at the same time, whether a little before or a little after; for a man would hardly copy the title-page of a play and then allow ten, twenty, or more years to elapse before adding, or procuring the addition of, the play itself. (2) The second hand, using the paler ink, appears on the verso of the title-page with the Prologue. It is small, pointed, sloping, written, one would say, hurriedly, though clearly ; and the Pro- logue's 44 lines are crowded together and occupy less than three- quarters of the page. About four lines' space below (ij in.), in the centre, is the name ' Thomas Rychardes ', fairly written in a contemporary, more upright and leisurely hand, which yet somewhat resembles the writing above, while the T and d are different. Some six lines' space below, again, comes the name ' Thomas Warde ' with ' Barfold ' (a place-name) underneath, all larger and in a dis- tinctly seventeenth-century hand ; and, to the right of the name, the date 1577, of which the 5 (not of a sixteenth-century shape) has been imposed on an original 7. (? 3) Then, on fol. 2 recto, begins the play, without other head- ing than 'Actus prim . . ■ ' &c, (there would hardly be space for a 1 66 MISOGONUS title, even were the leaf entire), in a hand somewhat larger, more rounded and upright than that of the Prologue, presenting a sensible difference to the eye, and a nearer resemblance to Rychardes' signa- ture. But this hand soon becomes, on ff. 4 V.-5 r. and 6 V.-7 r., with- out marked break or change, smaller, more pointed and sloping : then, its earlier character is resumed, until a more distinctly marked reversion to the pointed character occurs on f. 9 r. immediately after the song, at 11. ii. 209. This greater likeness to the Prologue-hand continues for many folios, yet on ff. 15 v.-i6 r. it is impossible not to see the likeness to the other, e. g. to that of the song just mentioned. Fols. 18 V.-20V. approximate very closely indeed to the Prologue- hand. Fol. 2 1 r. (opening of Act iv) seems slightly different ; but at the bottom of f. 2 1 v. the difference disappears-, and in the re- mainder of the MS. (ff. 22-24) I find it impossible to recognize any distinction from the Prologue-hand. In fine, if two scribes are here, the respective limits of their work cannot be marked. I incline rather to regard it as all, save the title-page and corrections, the work of one scribe, writing sometimes in haste as in the Prologue and closing leaves of the play, sometimes at leisure, as at the open- ing, and now with a broader-pointed, now with a finer, pen. It does not follow that the hand is that of Rychardes. The position of his name, indeed, suggests it as meant for a signature to the Prologue, but the signature might be merely copied along with all the rest. Authorship. — For Mr. Fleay's theory {Hist, of the Stage, pp. 58, 60, and Biog. Chron., i. 163) that Misogonus was the work of Richard Edwardes, identical with a play acted by the Chapel Children on 31 Dec. 1559, which gave offence'' — the subject of satire by Ulpian Fulwell in Like Will to Like, ? 1562-3, and of allusion by Edwardes himself in the Prologue to Damon and Pithias, 1564 — , I can find no adequate evidence. It is true that Like Will to Like exhibits some parallels of phrase and motive to Misogonus ; yet these may as well be reminiscences by our poet, or part of the common stock of playwrights at the time. Moreover, the date of the production of Fulwell's piece (printed 1568 — he seems to have lived till 1586) is quite doubtful ; and Edwardes, if disgraced at all, was evidently in favour again by 1564. It is true that his prologue mentions previous dramatic work of his which had been too much occupied with 'young desires', and the dancing at the end of Misogonus 11. iv might very possibly have given offence to the queen : but Damon and Pithias presents no points of parallelism with our play save the insistence on friendship (cf. our first scene) and the verb 'colpheg' ('colfeke' iii. 254). Its verse and style represent, I think, a slightly earlier, its power of handling, vrai- 1 Collier's Hist. Dram. Poet., i. 169, quoting Cotton MS. VitelUus F. v. INTRODUCTION 167 semblance, and characterization a considerably earlier, stage than that of Misogonus ; and its allusion to one who preached against large breeches is far more likely to refer to some sermon than to Newfangle's claim in Like Will to Like to have invented such, ' as big as new barrels '. I have searched Fulwell's piece most care- fully for all that might illustrate Mr. Fleay's theory (cf. my notes on I. ii. 9, I. iii. 1-3, II. i. 57, 11. iv. 140, 206, 247, 11. v. 42, iv. i. 82, 154), but I cannot feel there is sufficient evidence to support his structure of connected plays. Falling back upon the MS. itself it will be seen from the facts about the handwriting recited above that there are only two claimants in the field. The ' Anthony Rice ' who defaced Barjona's title- page is merely a man trying his pen : had the name stood there in 1577, Barjona would have begun lower down. ' Thomas Warde ' is written perhaps a century later, and the adjoining date probably a century later still. The position of ' W Wyllfii ' and ' John York ' entirely excludes them. There remain Rychardes and Barjona. Ostensibly, Rychardes signs the Prologue, and Barjona the play as a whole : but there would be no impropriety in Rychardes, as author of the play, signing the Prologue, and nothing in the latter compels us to distinguish its author from the playwright — nay, its exordium of sixteen lines, apologizing for want of polish in a first attempt at versification, would be of disproportionate length if re- ferring merely to the Prologue, and, referring to the play, seems something too uncomplimentary to come from any but the modest author. Further, the style of the Prologue, its rhetorical phrases and classical mythology, is just that of certain passages where the play most desires to be serious and poetical, e.g. Philogonus' lament in II. V. (3rd St.), Eugonus' speech, iv. i. 65-8, Philogonus' ib. 149- 60 — a style found, indeed, much earlier than 1577 in Edwardes' Paradise of Dainty Devices (pub. 1576, but compiled by Edwardes himself before his death in 1566), yet extant in the beginning of 1588 when Hughes and others wrote The Misfortunes of Arthur. Recognizing the strong probability that the authors of Prologue and play are one, Rychardes, whether his name be written by him- self or by the scribe, is quite possibly he. In that case Barjona is merely the reviser, procuring a copy to be made of a play already known to him — a friend's work, perhaps, to which he had made some additions — correcting the copy so made, filling in the title- page, distributing the parts, and putting his own name at the bottom, whether as owner or reviser. Nothing can be argued with certainty from his corrections, or even from his addition of the lines (i. iii. 51-3) left blank by the scribe. The passage may simply have been illegible in the original copy ; but Barjona might 1 68 MISOGONUS know the right words, or ascertain them from the author, or simply fill the gap with words of his own. Even the number of passages which mark it as a school-drama (Prol. 38-40, i. i. 61-96, 11. ii. 73-6, iii. 57-64, 69-72, V. 93-100, 127-36, 157-66, IV. iv. 33-40) is not conclusive to Barjona's authorship, though he was probably a schoolmaster preparing the play for his scholars. He might still utilize another's work, written possibly for some earlier Cambridge occasion, himself adding Prol. 38-40 and perhaps other passages. If the Cabbalistic term ' tetragrammaton ' in 11, iv. 258 and the discussion whether the name Eugonus is Greek or ' Ebricke ', iv. i. 100-4, slightly favour Barjona's claim, yet the close and vigorous reproduction of rustic life, language, and character seems to de- mand an English rather than a Jewish author, however long domi- ciled in England. Still, of Barjona we do know that he edited the piece and put his name prominently outside it, that he was living some fourteen months later at Kettering and was such a man as might conceivably compose a play : while we cannot be sure that Thomas Rychardes was more than a later owner of the MS., a Prologist writing in a tone requested, or even the scribe, copying the Prologue last in the hurried hand in which he had finished the play, and appending more carefully his own name as scribe. The marked predominance of Yorkshire dialect, and Madge's words, ' Waunt (warrant) him as bene at Cambridge ' (iii. iii. 74), war- rant us in a like opinion as regards the author. Professor Kittredge, inquiring into the authorship (^Journal of Germanic PhiloL, 1901, vol. iii. 335-41), was informed of a Thomas Richards, of Trinity College, Cambridge, who proceeded B.A. in 1571. By age and status he would be qualified for author ; but with a name so com- mon we cannot, on this information alone, feel the least certainty of his identity with the signer of the Prologue. He mentions another Thomas Richards, who applied for his B.A. at Oxford on Dec. 7 of the same year, 157 1 (Reg. of Ox/. Univ. ed. A. Clark, vol. 2, pt. iii. 10). The only Thomas Richards known to the Did. Nat. Biography is a Devon man, B.D. Oxford 1515, qualified as B.D. Cambridge 1517, who was prior of Totnes 1528, rector of St. George's, Exeter, after the dissolution of his monastery, and died 1563 or 1564. He seems too old, and hardly likely to have drawn Sir John : there are but few Devon forms in our play, and we know not that the prior had any connexion with Yorkshire. But of Barjona Kittredge showed that he was the author of a little Latin treatise of twenty-two leaves, a copy of which is in the British Museum, published by Robert Walley, 1578, 4", and entitled Come- tographia quxdam Lampadis aeride que 10. die Nouemb. apparuit, Anno a Virginia partu. ijyj. A prefatory epistle to Edmund, INTRODUCTION 169 bishop of Peterborough, signed and dated ' Vale Ketteringa[e] lan- uarij 20. i578[-9]. Tuje amplitudinis studiosiss. Laur. Bariona', sufficiently establishes him as the ' Bariona ' of our title-page. In the epistle he says the treatise was written to please some friends during a recent brief holiday (' a publicis negotiis aliquantulum liberatus ') : he sends it to the bishop in token of his gratitude (' vt hoc pacto voluntatem meam gratam tibi significarem ') and to get his opinion — if he finds any offence in it, let him burn it. In the treatise he speaks modestly of his 'exiguum ingenium et ex- perientia quam puerilis ' (sig. D j red.), and in an apostrophe to Elizabeth professes himself ' abiectissime conditionis et sortis ' (sig. Kj vers.); but it is an able and scholarly pamphlet showing a knowledge of the Latin poets, though Plautus and Terence are not quoted. He treats the portent from the side of natural philo- sophy, declining that of theology (D j r.) which has already been dealt with ' a Theologis ipsis, suis concionibus ' ; but he expresses a hope of the conversion of Eastern lands to Christianity, and his strong sympathy with the queen's restoration of Protestantism in England. Noticeable perhaps in the passage about the East is his avoidance of the word ' ludasos ' (' Turcas, et alias super- stitiosas gentes, quae Asiam, Affricam et Grseciam Europae partem amcenissimam, antiqua ilia Christianas Religionis domicilia inco- lunt ', F j v.). Professor Kittredge, who started with the hypothesis that he was Laurence Johnson the Martyr, associated with Cam- pion and the Jesuits and hanged at Tyburn in 1582, considered ' Bariona ' to be a pseudonymous anagram (Bar = son of, iona = John, — 'Johnson'), and held to the pseudonym even after the examination of the treatise showed the author to be a strong An- glican without the slightest reason to conceal his name. I should rather suppose him one of a family of converted Jews,' or at least himself a convert, who owed to Edmund Scambler, bishop of Peterborough 1560-85, some post, lay or clerical, in connexion with the diocese, probably the mastership of Kettering Grammar School. Inquiry at Kettering, where he evidently lived in 1577-8, shows that he was not rector. Mr. Frederick William Bull, the historian of the town, kindly informs me that Anthony Burton was presented about 1560; on his death Robert Cooke was instituted, March 2, 1575-6; on Cooke's resignation in 1576 John Dammes followed; his successor was David Thompson in 1598; then ' It may be worth mention that a ' Johannes Bariona ', evidently a Chris- tian, Supplied an index and short Latin address to the reader to a manual of Catholic doctrine on the IVtass, entitled Enchiridion Sacerdotum (Cologne, 1532), by Petrus Blomevenna of Leyden, Prior of tiie Carthusians at Cologne, to wliose pulpit-eloquence Bariona testifies. 170 MISOGONUS Thomas Harries, 1633.' ^^^ the Grammar School was founded in June, 1577, out of lands once belonging to the dissolved mon- astery of Peterborough : the master was to be nominated by trustees, but approved by the bishop." The first master's name has not come down. It may have been Laurence Barjona; and the play prepared by him for performance before the Christmas holidays of that year, though the recency of his appointment makes against his sole authorship, unless the piece were written earlier. In spite of ' experientia quam puerilis ' in the Cometographia, the somewhat earlier character of his handwriting suggests that he was not a very young man in 1577. Date. — Of definite allusions that may help us there are but few. The evidence of Protestantism in the ascendant is abundant — ' Its poperye to vse fasting ', 11. ii. 100 ; Eupelas describes the rakehell priest of the old school. Sir John, as an ' Idolatrous beste ', 11. v. 37 ; and prayers for the dead, excluded from the Burial Service in 1552, are expressly discouraged, iii. i. 154—7. At the same time expressions like ' this new start vp rabies ' (11. iv. 64) for Protestants or Puritans, the mention of an ' avy ' as part of the service, 11. iv. 245, Codrus' description of Philogonus as 'oth new larninge', in. i. 158, 'Crileson', i.e. Kyrie Eleeson (classed with pardons and masses in Jos. Lilly's Ancient Ballads, p. 268), 111. i. 196, and 'last shrift', iv. i. 34, seem to show that the changes were tolerably recent. — Nothing can be inferred with certainty from the introduction of the name of Will Summer or Somers, who retired from Court in 1547 and died in 1560. — Collier took the allusion to 'the risinge rection ith north,' iv, i, 131 (i.e. the Pilgrimage of Grace, 1536), coupled with the fixing Eugonus' age at twenty-four, as clear evidence that the play was written in 1560: and though Professor Kittredge points out that we cannot as a matter of course identify the date assumed for the action as that also of composition, still in allusions to recent events the playwright, if he specifies an interval, generally reckons from the year then present to his audience, because to do so assists the vraisemblance. Kittredge further notes that in spite of Codrus' suggestion of 1536 as a terminus a quo (Codrus does not say how long after), Alison arrives at her number, twenty-four, quite independently, by recollecting that Eugonus was born a year before ' our Tom '. Yet her independent calculation is no reason why the year imagined for the action should not still be 1560, and we may note that the season imagined in the play (not long before Christmas, ' See also Bridges' Hist, of Northamptonshire, 1741, ii. 241-4. '^ Hist, of Kettering Grammar School, by Fdk. Wm. Bull, Northampton, 1907, pp. 1-2. INTRODUCTION 171 III. i. 27, 65; IV. i. 58) tallies with the actual occurrence of the rising in the autumn of 1536. There is much, however, which makes against so early a date as 1560, at any rate for the completed piece. The evidence of metre would suggest some year about 1564-8 : the fourteener, which first appears in drama in Gammer Gur Ion's Needle, 1559-60 (e. g. Acts iii and v, used irregularly with Alexandrines and with the doggerel), but is employed almost consistently for the dignified characters and serious action throughout Hores/es, pr. 1567, is used in Misogonus only in moments of strong emotion (in. i. 121-4, 273-80; iv. i. 65-8, 149-68); while there is not a single decasyllabic line in the piece, although there are a few together in Dam. and Pith., 1564 (Dods. iv. 89), and they are adopted for the opening speech by Nature in The Marriage of Wit and Science (ent. S. R. 1569-70, perhaps acted 1567-8). See further. Essay, pp. 68-70, under Buggbears. The use of alternate rhyme, not couplets, in the four- accent doggerel which forms the staple, suggests a date nearer 1570 than 1560 — Horestes arranges its doggerel sometimes in couplets, sometimes in Chaucer-stanzas, e.g. 11. 1-170, 1164-1205. The poetic style of the Prologue and the fourteener passages (see above, p. 167) is much that of Horestes, though with a greater frequency of alliterative phrase. A strong argument, however, for a date as late as 1577 for the piece as we have it is its marked superiority over the average work of 1560-70 in skill of management, veri- similitude of effect, and power of individual portraiture. Such vigour and truth to life despite some dulness, such steady develop- ment of the action, such fulness of satisfactory and natural detail, are things incredible to me in 1560-70; and lead me to suggest that our text, whether by Barjona or another, may be a rifacimento in 1576 or 1577 of work originally written some ten or twelve years before. The Prologue, the songs, and the metrical scheme of the earlier version were probably retained, while the whole was subjected to close revision and some scenes almost wholly rewritten. The disorder and illegibility thus produced in the original MS. would necessitate a fresh transciipt, which gave us our surviving MS. SIGLA Text (with punctuation) is invariably tliat of MS. Square brackets enclose words or letters visible when the Collier transcript was made, but now illegible or worn away. The transcript used square brackets to indicate earlier losses : earlier losses recognized by the present editor are indicated by dots, corre- sponding where possible to the supposed number of letters. Angular brackets enclose the numbering of the folios, which are unnumbered in MS., and an editorial note or two of loss. Footnotes. Italics are reserved for the editor's comment. Square brackets enclose suggested completions of imperfect lines or words : those, and other notes, without initial are the present editor's. or precedes an alternative rendering of the MS. characters. read ,, a proposed emendation, or insertion of a stop. .'' „ a doubtfully proposed emendation. i. e. „ an interpretation. bef. =■ before : om. = omitted. C = the transcript for J. P. CoUier, now bound with MS. Coll. = J. P. Collier's Hist, of Dram. Poetry, ed. 1879 (ist ed. 1831). B = Prof. Alois Brandl's text or notes in Quellen des vieltlichen Dramas in England, 1898. M = Prof. John M. Manly's review of Brandl in The Journal of Germanic Philology, vol. ii, 1898, Chicago. Car. = Prof. F. I. Carpenter's review of Brandl in Modem Language Notes, May, 1899, Baltimore. See, further, above, pp. 164-5. A mery and p[lea]. . Misogonus ^ The names of the speakers '^ 1 Prologus Philogonus pater Eupelas fidelis patris vicinus Cacurgus morio Misogonus filius domesticus Orgelus servus miso. Oenophilus conservus eius Liturgus servus Philo. Melissa meretrix S' Johne sacerdos Jacke, Clarke Ceister Codrus rusticus Alisone eius vxor obstitrix Isbell Busbey\ Testes Madge Caro J vetulse Eugonus filius peregrinus Crito peregrinus Epilogus Phplogonus I.J Eupela[s 2.] Misogonus [3.J Cacurgus 1 Prologus I [4.] Eugoniis ) Codrus Sr John Epilogus . Orgelus ) Isbell P Oenophilus f ) -1 Madge [ ^ "^ Meliss[a] ) Crito Alison ) Jake )9 Liturgus 10 ^Iw Laurentius Baricona * Ketthering ^ die 20 Novembris Anno 1577 ' pleafsannt Comedie called] C ^ In the space between Misogonus and The names etc. are written, probably rather later, in a different hand and paler ink the words A mery, several AAAias though the writer were trying his pen, and then quite clearly Anthony Rice {the ce a little uncertain), followed by what may be a flourish or part of some capital letter interrupted now by the mutilation of the leaf. ' In the space between The names etc. and Prologus is a brown smear of erasure through which some quite undecipherable lettering is faintly discernible. * Bariwna B ^ On ring is written in paler ink Warde presumably by the person signing second after the Prologue. < Prologus > -«arfkitchin the deleted bef. haule 38 [A Foole] C 40 rearf thoughe? i.e. then? 46 get?.e.jet 49 his parti? 52 ?. c. ha't 58 read nonet i86 MISOGONUS i. ii As for my pinnes ile bestowe them of Jone when we sitt by y" fier and rost a crabb 60 she and I haue good sporte when we are all alone by the mas I may say to yow she is an honest drabb. Nothinge greues me but my yeares be so longe my master will take me for balames asse yf I can lie tye the doune with a thonge 65 yf not I will tell him I haue good kinge Midas. Intrat Miso. Actus primus. Scena tertia. Mis. Bodye of god stande backe what monster haue we heare an antike or a munke a goblinge or a finde some hobbye horse I thinke or some tumblinge beare Yf thou canst speake & declare me the kinde. Ca. My yonge master ho ho ho 5 Mis. Passion of me it is robin hoode I thinke verelye I will let fiye at him if he speake not furthwith speake lubber speake or lie kill the presentlye Nay then haue at the shalt near dye other death. Ca. Godes armentage godes denti deare 10 can my yonge master florish so fine Mis. The devill take the and all thy fonnde geare a moringe lighte one that foules face of thine. Ca. What pacyfye your selfe sir or well haue an ostler Your mannes harte I knowe & your cuninge in i . . . . 15 . . . [ar]e a fenser & a verye fine wresler . . de d . . d . 65 tye the C 66 haue i/ie h deletedin blacker ink am? above have C: am B for Midas ' ; judas C : nidas B 2 i. e. monkey . . . fiend 4 readthk 9 read the_: i. e. ne'er 13 i. e, murrain 15 in i . . .] in . . . CB 16 [Yow] are a tenser C 17 ade .... god Cu C infencil: B leaves blank i.iii MISOGONUS 187 [Mis. If] thou hadst not spoke when thou didst as I am trwe (Fol. 5 v.) gentleman Shouldst near a gone furr but even like a cowe At my foote oute of hande thou shouldst haue bene is]l[a]yne 20 I woulde haue bene thy preist I make god avow[e.] [C]a. Sanke ye by my tosse for your sparinge so longe yow are coragious I [knowe] but what care I hearke If yow had stricke I woulde haue kepte y^ thronge and there haue bene gropinge some maydens in the darke 25 Mis. Thou art as full of knaverie as an egge is full of meate I beleve the by the masse but how gattest y" these eares thou were abowte some skoggingly feate tell me I pray the shall no bodye heares. Ca. Will yow nedes knowe whi then lay your head to myne 30 Mis. What thou lyest villayne thou be his naturall fy of all foUye how blearest thou his eyne is my father to fooles become so liberall ? but did he thinke thou wert a foole in deede he were never so foolishe to thinke so of the 35 Ca. Your selfe may iudge that by my foolishe wede both my capp and my cote he bestowed on me. Nay I am become his counsayler I can tell yow newes whatsoever he speakes he giues me leaue to hear my company at no tyme he will refuse 40 I will tell yow a lest if yow will giue good eare. Mis. Whats that for love of god tell me good boy Yf it be for my wealth and for my advauntage thou shalt be my chaplinge I sweare by S' Loy or if thou canst be prested He giue the a persnage. 45 22 yt CB ^3 carej I inserted above blacker read care I ? 29 the ; shall 5; .?ther shall «. «. hear ns 31 rca(^ villayne ! . . . naturall! 41 good om. C i88 MISOGONUS i. iii Ca. I thanke yow by my hallidome I wer fit for that office I coulde mumble my mattinges & my durge w"* the best and if it were not for y^ impostin in my kodpesse to lift at a chery I haue a buminge breaste. Mis. Tushe, tell me the newes thou talkedst one of late 50 and thou best a goodfellow tell me w^i spede Ca. Your fathr was comoninge w'J' a yomanae his mate Her in this place as hevy as lede. And wote yow why the poore man were so sadde forsoth for his sonne that he fearde was past grace 55 O (quoth he) its a parlousse vnthriftye ladde Your gentlemanshipp vtterly he did deface Feare not sayth the other I will bringe him to corn [Yo]w are to blame what yow his father [Y]f yow suffer him heil make yow a starke foollorii 60 . . . him tast of the rodde & ride byard rather Ca. Nay stay a wh[ile and] th[en] showe your manhodde (Fol. 6 r.) Your father was pleaste but he dourste not so deale no sayth the other yow are then but a cowarde Yf I was as yow my feste he shoulde fele. 65 Mis. Goges woundes. Ca. Ye haue not all yet if this gentleman dourste Your father enquired to nourture him then Dare I (quoth he) he is not so courste He hamper him I warrent yow & all his men. fo 46 wer inserted blacker above that altered blacker from the 49 i. e. Kyrie benninge C 51-3 Added in blacker ink in a different and scratchier ha«d resembling Bariona's 52 goman, ane his B 58 read tome as B 59 readh\xcai: what, . . . father! 61 [Let] C ride in corrector' s hand mier oi deleted (>2 del. Co.. repeated at head of new fol. — tiothing lost 6j read yet : dourste. B 68 read enquired, I. iii MISOGONUS 189 Mi. By his soule & sydes by his death & his life He make ye olde churle repente this talke hamper me (quoth you) where is my knife He sticke him by the mas if this waye he walke. Ca. Your knyfe fye for shame yow shoulde say your dagger ^5 Codes my armes sticke not to drawe your sworde. Mi. (Will I) i that I will a fartte for the bragger he shall downe if he giue me but one bouggish worde Ca. Now I cun yow thanke that is spoken like a man Yow to be brought of such a loute vnder 80 Mi. I defy him I with all that he can Let my father takes parte & He both of them cunger. Ca. Well sayde olde ladde but stay your wisdome a while Its here in fayth ile go playe a prety pranke I knowe the waye how yow may him revile 85 and so vse him that agayne heil neare be so cranke ML Hoe cacurgus ile performe the my promisse tell me the way and make thy selfe priste and of my honestye thoust haue my best benefice^ and ever hereafter in my favoure be highest go Ca. Prepare your selfe then in a readynes oute of hande where be your sarvinge men call the knaves oute here in this way together all stande at laste they may helpe to face out the loute Mi. And what wilt thou doe wilt thou get the hence 95 wilt thou forsake me when I haue most nede Ca. Its bed tyme nowe I will goe to my wench fare thou well for this tyme god sende the good speede 72 his C£ 76 oute deleted bef, your 89 benefite B 19° MISOGONUS I. iii Mi. And thou wilt nedes be gone then fare well froste All thy mynde I perceave is of Jone loo Ca. I did but ieste He to take vp the rest & cause this gentleman to come oute alone exit Cacurgus. Actus primus scena 4. Mi, What hoe Orgalus what oenopholus I say Where be thes knaves come out with a vengeance .... forth when I bidde yow what tarrye you d . . . . . . [AJnone I come sir stande by [rome I] say (Fol. 6 v.) 5 I am sir come to knowe your werishipps pleasure I were busied w^li brushinge your velvet gaskins [Mi.] Youil come when yow list sir, o your a tresure I knowe yow of olde yow are none of y^ hastlinges [0]r. He doe no more till next tyme I prayeyow forgiue me 10 He be reddie here after to wayte at your heles Mi. Yow can capp now yow were beste capp I tell yow I may hapge for yow the lett all go a wheles Or. Yf hanginge be the worste youst do well I hope I haue ben hangde twenty tymes & cacht no harme is I care not for hanginge soe my mynde like y^ rope hangings but a pastyme so it be vnder your arme Mi. Now by me trwlye thou art a knave an grane but wheres Oenophilus your fellowe become 102 & on come ; Which C 3 [Come] . . . [away] C; .?[I pray] 4 [attendance] S.D. [Enter Orgalus] C 5 [Or.] C readhyX 10 read doe it M, but cf. II. i. 68 13 read y* ; read ye M. The scribe probably mis- took an original y^for y' 14 i. e. you will 15 catcht C .• catht B 'for cacht ' 1 6 so over thoughe deleted except e: to C : o B r in roj^e on orig. 1 .■ lope C 18 read my : C marked an omission after me me, £ knave, ^ I. iv MISOGONUS 191 Or. I thinke he is at Alhouse a likeringe ones brayne 20 I ame sure for this halfe howre he has taken a rome Mi. That desperat dick must 1 nedes haue I am to fight a match An olde cankred churle doth me chalings and deare Or. Yow are able your selfe a dosin to dispach Year a man by S Sampson ery length of a spare 25 Mi. But how if he bringe w't him buckler & sworde what fence shall I vse my hede for to saue Or. Your conninge is good man care not a tourde Year able to canvas the dasterdly knave Mi. Thou werte wonnte to tell me pretye feates of warr 30 My venues to giue and my vauntage to take. Or. For your fensuar I warrent yow nede not to care with your manly lookes yow will make him to quake. Mi. Nay but I pray the shewe me one crosse capur and how I shoulde warde my head and my harte 35 were I not best if nede be to drawe out my rapier tell me by the masse or ile make y^ to farte. Or. Crosse capur, crosse legges I tolde yow the fence throwe the knave downe & w'l» him plucke a crowe Mi. thou wert wonnt to talke of crossinge legges wtl* a wenche 40 and make hir mine vnderlinge meane yow not soe Or. Yow vnderstumble me well sir yow haue a good witte I must nedes comend your good remembraunce Mi. bith same token thou taughst me can yow not hit it but goe fetch me the fellowe least I be in some combraunce 45 Or. To doe your commaundemente sir I am redye but yow nede no more men I am sure for this dust ix chalings] so CB : ?chalinge but cf. iv. ii. 7 read&z.st 25 try C Wspeare 32 ^o^fensure 38 legges, ^ " 45 the] rfiarfthie or f mistaken by scribe for y" I over he deleted ; he C ; be also deleted by mistake 192 MISOGONUS I- IV Mi. Go when I bidde you & come againe spedye .... your cockescome by my hallidome He bruste. [exit Orglus] (A whole leaf wanting) [Eu.J Its trwe I see well that Philognus sayde (Fol. 7 r.) the gallowes grones for this wage as iust rope ripe alas good man thou must nedes be ill apayde Its no marvail thoughe sorrowes doe greatly the grip[e] But my thinke I heare a ruffirigly dinn 5 I shall be mischefd verely if here I do staye He tarrye no longer but gett my selfe in the bickeringes a bredinge I see by my fay Actus secundus Clamitant intus servi scena prima Where is he lay houlde on him knoc[ke] downe w''' him I will haue one ioynt [of] some ons fleshe. M. See yow not by the masse the knaves slipt away my knighthodd is vtterly stanid for ever a thousand pounde I had rather haue lost by this day then this shoulde haue chaunced Ide haue fought my selfe lever. Fye one yow beggars brattes what a praye haue we lost s a shame take yow slaves how haue you me vsed Marry sir this Jacke prate will go boste and say he hath cowde me. shall I thus be abused Or. I had rather haue found fortye pens my selfe that I had If I take him right for* ile pay him oth peticote lo Oe. Ys he gone gads sides, this is too badde lie giue him his olde fippens if it lye in my lote 49 [Else] ; [If] C in pencil s.D. Clamitans intus (exit) C knocke ... 5, but no room for loss ? ioynt or 2 or staind .• stainid C 5 beggars the s superimposed on an original ye i, e. prey 1 2 lyes C II. i MISOGONUS 193 Mi. Yow valiant vacabonndes why taiied yow so longe aledge a good cause or He rape you oth rages Oe. We coulde not but we must haue sustained great wronge 15 and shamed your worshippe with my beggarly Jages Mi. Why is not thy cote made of goode spanishe clothe will not this livery your carcasse besime (E. To tell yow my selfe I am some what loth I am so frayde that youle fall in a fime 20 Mi. Tel me then Orgalus as you feare my displeasure Nay tell me in dede w^^out any laughter CE. Good Orgelus tell him if thou hast so much leasure if thou nedst ile doe as much for the hereafter Or. Ith morninge to reviue his spirites I thinke 25 and to breade some goode bloude toth alhouse he went and there calde in for a gallonde of drinke meaninge a shillinge perhaps to haue spent As he satt there a while a makeshift comes in Offeringe to be partaker in the shote 30 to fill the cuppes (Enophilus a freshe doth beginn when as the cosiner a fardinge had not As I came & founde CEnophilus oth ale benche [My master] sendes for yow (saide I) you must n .... [one] worde (quoth he) & then Ile goe 35 Whats the shote ostis he says Ile be gone (Fol. 7 v.) Ten groates and year welcome he lookt for his purse This cusner had filtcht it & left him alone to pay for the reckninge and that werse. 4° 18, 20 besime ... a fime e changed to i in both : be seme . . . some sinne C M i. e. shot, reckoning 34 n[edes runne] .• [now come] or [runn] C 35 [Hear] . . . [hence] C 36 one line lost 38 i. e. ye are 40 werse] i. e. worse as CB 53J O 194 MISOGONUS ii-i Wth that when he sawe how the case w* him stode he requested his ostice to trust him a weke. not I Sr (quoth she) He none of that bith rode so may perhaps my money goe seke. Thers no remedye says he I my se]fe am beguild 45 this pickpurse hath gotten my money & is fledd she sayd nothinge but snatcht away w'^i a wilde his best liverye cote & in coffer it layde. For his manner is when he waxeth once warme to cast of his cote and take some colde aire. 5° sometyme perhaps he layst vnders arme after one ginger bole he seldome doth it were When I saw how vnluckely this matter fell out and the charge that yow gaue to bringe him in hast I was faigne to goe trie my frendes all about 55 and so by this chaunce the lyme I did wast For trwly if he had come in his doublet ands house he would haue made everie one your mastshipp to scorne that old churle I am sure would haue borde you throughe nose this trusse in all partes were so fouly tome 6o Mi. Thou disardly dronkerd thou besillinge beast He bum fiddle the in faith ile swaddle your skinn must you be w"* your cherye boles makinge a feast when one me yow should tende will you never linn. CE. O myne armes o my sides youle kill me bith mas 65 alas alas alas I praye yow strike not so sore O my bones o my ribes a ladie & alas Yf youle spare me this tyrae ile never doe more. 43 i.e. by the rood 49 once altered from ? cure: ouer 5 51 i.e. lays it 52 he] and ^ 58 one om. C 60 His C «.«. trousers, breeches 64 read tende? hinn ^ 67 a bodie ^ 68 cf. i. iv. 10 11- ii MISOGONUS 195 Actus secundus sena 2 Intrat Cacurgus. Ca. Gods sokinges houlde your handes stay ith quenes name He be his suretie what spare him this once haue a knave betwext you then fy stay for shame Gods bodye what will yow lay me oth bones M. Nay thou art well served for takinge his parte 5 dost thou drinke all thy thrift thou swilbold swadd Ca. Yow hatt me oth costarde I beshrewe your hart Yow beginn to be as curst as ere was your dadd. CE. I deserved mine & more to I confesse willinglye Yow strike I am sure but of corage & might 10 [I h]ope to see yow past the nine worthies verelie [I w] . . . ent yow w'Mn this yeare yow shall be dubd a knight Mi. Ah sirra yow beginn to knowe your dewty nowe (Fol. 8 r.) I must nedes loue the i faithe thart as good as ere twangde Oe. I thanke yow that yow sparde my braynes & my browe 15 if I can helpe sure the old carle shall be hangde. Ca. What did yow not feake him fye thats a shame Yow promisd me that youe wolde when I sent him out Oe. Cacurgus I must nedes confesse my selfe was to blame but let me alone ile come mete w*!" the loute 30 Mi. Well sayde i faithe but tell me my men how shall we spende this hole after noone CE. Marry S' I had thought to haue told yow eren then I can helpe yow to huntinge of too legged venicin Mi. What canst thou my sonne marry thou art worth twentye 25 6 0?- swilbole ; swibbold 5 1 1 read -passe M 12 vf[a.rr]ent: viene CB, hardly fills the space 1 7 «.«. thrash 1 8 that youe wolde a^oiic to dust him deleted (youe uncertain) 23 ?even as C O 2 196 MISOGONUS II- ii Or. Yf thou canst (Enophilus tell my master in hast Oe, lie bringe ye to a morsell that is tender & dentye sheis not so much as my spann in hir wast Ca. By the mas I knowe hir sheis a good smogly lace she a hundred tymes better then any scemish rigg 30 Mi. Giue me thy hand thoust haue a house & bringe this to passe I woulde aske no more of hir but one Scottish gigge. Oe. But one He promisse ye the gettinge of a bastarde Yest haue one night at lest & more if I can Ca. Yf ye be shamefast sheile counte vow but a dastarde 35 Yow must sticke to her & stande to it like a man Or. Sheis a smurkinge wenche in dede I knowe her of olde. but when did she make the this promisse tell vs Oe. And yow knewe hir yow woulde say so she is dapper & bolde Right nowe man in the way as I went to the alhouse 40 Mi. What saide she Oenophilus if thou loust me tell trwe lett me heare hir owne wordes as y" wouldest haue me doe for ye Oe. Come y" or thy frend at any tyme due Or thy frendes frende saide she I thinke she did dore me Mi. Gods fishe lettes be gone me thinke now I haue hir 45 till I see hir Oenophilus I shall thinke the tyme longe Ca. What softe yow S"^ yowe may yet say god saue hir before I goe hence I must nedes haue a songe. Mi. A songe w"^ a horsenightcappe singe they at liste Till I see my trule He nether singe nor say 50 Ca. Alas good man he must nedes nowe be kiste what I pray yow for my sake a litle yet stay Oe. Lettes hate then quickly Cacurgus or He be gone too & lettes haue such a one that will slie vpp delight 30 She[s] C 33 read one ? 39 read bolde. 44 dere C 45 fishe a/ier soking deleted 46 see] doe C 49 at i. e. that ; as C 53 i- e. ha't .• ha'te C H or stie as B : read stir as C II. ii MISOGONUS rg; Mi. Go to I am content then singe one & no moe 55 beginn you Cacurgus & take your tune righte Ca. fa fa fa sol sol sol cods thats too low la la, la, me, me, re, bith masse thats as hye Mi. Take hede S' yow goe not to low for the crowe (Fol. 8 v.) Ca. & take hede S^ yow goe not to hye for the pye 60 Or. None of hus to tell the truthe can singe well meane to hie or to lowe we singe everye one Ca. Well then bycause you take me for your deane He apoynt the partes my selfe by saint John You shall singe the false kinde I meane yow know what 65 & thoust here y^ bas because thou art rustye the counterfet tener is youres by youre lott my selfe will singe ye truble & that very trusty A songe to the tune of hartes ease Singe care away, with sport & playe, pastime is all our pleasure 70 Yf well we fare, for nought we care, in mearth consist our treasure. Let snugis lurke & druges worke, we doe defie their slauerye he is but a foole, y* gois to schole 75 all we delight in braverye. What dotht awaile, farr hence to saile and lead our life in toylinge Or to what end, shoulde we here spende, Our dayes in vrksome moylinge. 80 55 (»- moo as CB 57 over too is perhaps to signify repetition 65 {^ieYm&Q: over tea'Cast deleted {^sXa slightly uncertain) : first endeC/ fr.e. . isB 66 rustye a t deleted hef. r 72 consists C 73 sungir CB 74 slandrye C {corrected Coll.) -jc,, •j'j, -jg del. commas 76 knaverye 5 77 ;.e. floth it .• dothe availe C tgS MISOGONUS "•" It is the best, to liue at rest, and takt as god doth send it To haunt ech wake, & mirth to make and w*'' good fellowes spend it. Nothinge is worse, then a full purse, 85 to niggardes & to pinchers they alwais spare & liue in care thers no man loues such flinchers The merye, man y/i^ cupp & cann liues longer then doth twentye 90 The misers wealth, doth hurt his health, examples we haue plentye. Tza bestly thinge, to lie musinge, With pensivnes and sorrowe For who can tell that he shall well 96 liue here vntill the morowe We will therfore, for evermore, while this our life is lastinge [Eat] drinke, & sleape, & lemans keepe [Its] poperye to vse fastinge, 100 In cardes & dice, our comforte lies (Fol. 9 r.) In sportinge and in dauncinge Our mindes to please and liue at ease and sometime to vse praunsinge. With bes & nel we loue to dwell 105 In kisinge and in hakinge. But whope hoe hollie, with troUye lollye to them well now be walking. 81, 85, 89, 93, loi del. commas 82 take C 86 read pinchers: 91 del. oinma a wealth 93 T's C II. ii MISOGONUS 199 Ca. Gods breadlings are the knaves gone & lefie me behinde them I woulde they were vp tothe necke ith brooke all three iic I may looke longe inoughe or ere I shall finde them, so god helpe me my master doe you thinke he did not heare me. Actus Secundum Scena tertia. Intrant philogonus et [Litur] gus. Phi. Is it true Liturgus that yow tolde me of my sonne Li. Its too trwe I feare me I harde a great noyse Phi. Alas a a gods will then I am vtterlie vndone art thou sure thou hardst my frende Eupelas voyce Li. I am sure he mett with your sonne in the waye 5 and advertised him to doe his dewtie to yow after that I am sure there was here fought a fraye. and one as had ben stickt did crie out and lowe. Ca. Ha ha ha ha ha I must neds laughe in my slefe the wise men of gotum are risen againp 10 Peter poppum doth make his master beleiue that Misogonus his soone hath Eupelas slayne. Phi. Woe worth the tyme that ever I begatt him such a one I thinke was never yet breade Li. He did but cuggill him a litle & rate him 15 the worste I hope is but a broken heade Ca. I woulde it were broken & thine to by my trothe thou maist chaunce haue thine if thou takst not good hede how the pickethankes doth make the olde man wrothe when as yet god wott he hath litle nede 20 112 read me, ray master ! thinke — B 3 /. e. Alas ! ah, of God's will 8 /. e. as if he had 12 read sonne 19 pickthankes] es om. C: s om. B 200 MISOGONUS II- 111 Phi. Was ever man so accurst and vnhappye as I but one sonne ith whole worlde and so gracelesse to be how he shoulde scape hanginge I can no wayes spie or from vtter dampnatione how he should be free Alas good frende Eupelas art thou art thou also beaton 25 my harte is sicke trulie I shall never Hue longe Ca. Die when thou wilt weil haue an oxe eaten the soner the better thoust doe vs lesse wronge. Phi. What harte of flynte coulde abyde this mishaps [No]t one in all Europe I thinkes in my case 30 Ca. Nay softe thouste haue yett some more thunder claps (Fol. 9 v.) He make him defie the even face to face Phi. Theirs no man I am sure that loues his sonne better or that woulde fayner bringe him to honest livinge a thousande pound gladlye I would wishe my selfe detter 35 if yet at the lengthe he woulde tourne to some thrivinge Li. Why Sr he hath not yet sowne all his wilde otes he is but yonge trulie he must nedees runne his race Ca. Heile shortlye make the singe the cuccolds notes thy wife loues him well in space cometh grace 40 Phi. A Liturgus remembres thou what thou wert wonnt to tell me when he was but yonge Li. My worde is no gospell for all that I thinke not but he will returne to vertue or longe Phi. I praye god he may but I am quite out of hope 45 What companie vseth he tell me in faithe Li. Such companye as in deede will bringe him toth rope Yf he leave them not the scripture so saithe 25 read art Ihou 07ily once as B 29 read theis 31 yett sowe B 35 xae. B 38 read nedes as CB 41 i>-ra(f remembrest ^^ read that, semicolon at gospell B 48 read not ; n. Ill MISOGONUS 201 Ca. The scripture yow Jack sauce a scripp & a staffe were more meter for such a clumpertone as thou arte 50 tauke thou of rubbinge horses and of such risse raife. the souterlye thikscinn came but last yeare fromth cart Phi. Well there is no remedye heil be my death I knowe I may suffer a while but I can not longe indure Li. Gods aboue all thoughe you thinke him past whoo 65 He may yet reduce him therof be you sure Phi. O that I had provided him tuters in youth. that in vertue I had him first traynde Education is the best thinge that can be of a truthe Good lorde what hartes ease therby had I gaynde. 60 Yf it were to doe agayne I knowe what to doe 1 woulde disple him i faythe [I woulde tute him a good he should lacke for no masters and governoures to he shoulde haue whippinge inoughe be sure that he shoode. Ca. A curste cowe hath shorte homes what downe great harte 65 be good in your office woulde yow whipp him in dede he shoulde fynde some frende that woulde take his parte for your whippinge I warrent yow, yow shoulde haue smale mede Phi. He that spareth the rode hates the childe as Salamon writes Wherby in sparinge him nowe I perceiue 70 I hatid him much for with hate he requites my loue thoughe a while he did me deceiue. [Yet I] marvaile with him how Eupelas hathe spede fayne knowe Liturgus I pray the inquire [tajlke he semes rather to be dead 7,s [therfore fulfill my des] . . . 50 or cluraperetone; clumpestone C5 ^1 read riSe raife as CB 52 cart alUred in MS. from part ; cf. II. v. 54 ; part CB 55 read all : 62 read disiple as B: disple C 72 me] not h 74 [I would] 75 [By your] 76 des[ire] C 202 MISOGONUS "• "1 Li. I warrent yow I heis nether wounded nor slayne (Fol. lor.) had a litle girmumble I thinke & no more exit Ca. Ha ha. now will I goe playe will sommer agayne and seme as verie a gose as i waz before 80 musche a douche yow, vounder. Phi. The foole thinkes trulye I am still at supper what will sommer frome whence comest thou Ca. Cha bene so farr y' cham sore in my crupper cha bene sadlinge my gofe cuccolds cowe 85 Phi. A wise reason god helpe him y* ye noddy bringes out. but tell me didst thou see thy yonge master alate Ca. He was here right now and w''' Jack nophiles fought cham may say to yow vounder there were a grate bate Phi. Nay thou art decevd it were Eupelas thy cosin 90 waste not he that I called to supper at night Ca. Vye vye no can knowe him from a dosin twore he that before put my master to flighte. Phi. Art thou sure of that will marry thats good nuse did he put thy master to flighte canst thou tell 95 Ca. Otes a grumme horsonne vounder he made him to muse and put him quite to zilens he looked so fell Phi. The fooles wordes doth my hart yet somewhat releive but I praye the will whether is thy M' nowe gone Ca. And youl giue me some dingdonges to hange at my sleife 100 He tell yow by my trothe both whether and when Phi. Mary that thou shalt or He pull them from my hose holde the & tell me true to, & thoust be my lurdinge Ca. Aha this a trime one in dede has a golden nose He tell ye vort, a went in right now a burdinge lo.s 78 t^\\. faint in M S. : om.CB Si t in xawsdae a little doubtful 85 gosse C 89 i. e. strife 9 2 read no ! 96 0th grumine C; Otes (i. e. o (l)t es) a grimme S 11. Ill MISOGONUS 203 Phi. A burdinge like inoughe I thinke to calhe a buntinge had he any dogges wtb him or no knowst thou well Ca. I am sure I heis gone a very horehuntinge had a brase of houndes v/^^ him that were good oth smell Phi. But how shoulde I knowe when he comes agayne home 1 10 wilt thou here rema3me & then bringe me worde Ca. I can tell that thoughe I be but a mome but cham not fotherdd for all night, had nothinge at board Phi. What welcome Liturgus thou hast well hide howe doth my frende Eupelas ? is he well and in health ? 115 Li. Heis well sir, but at home a while heile abyde anone heile come see yow thoughe it be by stealth Phi. Weile go home ith meane space then & rest vs both twane to watch for thy master thoust tarry her still Ca. By my fathers soule I had rather go and come againe 120 Cham a hungred by my veckinges chil haue my zoule y* I will exeunt omnes Actus secundus. Scena quarta. (Fol. 10 v.) • Interloquitores • Misogonus. Eupelas. Oenophilus. Melissa meritrix. Mis. Come one my swete harte how fare yow be merye what slandes your minde to speake and weile gett it ahe my harte of goulde as swete as a cherye what iste yow fansye speake one shall goe fett it. Mellissa. There is nothinge my trwe loue that I can desire 5 I haue inoughe onely when yow I imbrace 106 tathe C 108 astWe IT3 for all night (/. iv. i. 124 [Intrat Liturgiis] 114 i.e. hied 121 ? read zouse i.e. souse M s.B. for EupeUi read Oigains B 2 or standes as CB readtol 204 MISOGONUS n. iv Or. Gods populorum she hath sett him one fyer in hir loue tickes the quene has a passinge good grace Mis. Tell me fare ladye will yew range in the feilde will yow heare the birdes singe & smell the swete floure lo Melissa. I knowe the delits that the medowes can yeilde I had rather and it please yow stay here in this bowre Mis. What then my harte route will yow drinke some more wine Oenophilus goe fetche me heare a whole hogeshedd CE. Yow shall haue in haste of the best muschedine 15 Orgalus yt will be goode to supple my codesheade Mellissa. Its nedlesse (my none) I pray yow sende him not I haue dronke so muche that my bellie ene grones Mis. What will yow then haue some thinge shalbe gott that will please yow while youe haue a cast at the bones 20 Me. And yow will my darlinge I am therwith contente I playde not beleive me this many a day Mis. Here ye my youthes gett me dice incontinent at what game faire mayden doe yow moste loue to play Me. I care not at what so you haue a smale stake 25 Money I tell yow w*'* me now & than draweth lowe Mis. Money woman thers money playe that for my sake Yf yow lacke any money looke that I knowe Or. Thers nether of vs tow hath a dye more or lesse we were never in our lives I am sure worse storde 30 Mis. Gods bodye gett me dice or I shall yow blesse Yf I haue them not quickly He swaddle yow vi^^ a corde Or. A man may goe all this towne rounde aboute and fynde not a dye I thinke of my conscience 8 ««(/trickes 13 z. e. root 17 i. e. myne owne B 20 while] reaei will M i. e. dice 32 i. e. thriish, as 11. i. 62 II- IV MISOGONUS 205 Mis. Packe yow ye villane or ile slitt you thorowe snout 35 and doe your deede quicklye without any dalience Me. It were good also (my Joy) yf some mate he coulde get that would beare vs companye and make vs some sport Or. So I might perhaps thoroughe all the stretes Jett [And] losinge my laboure, soyle my selfe in the durste 40 [Mis.] . . . [whe]n I byde the and gett the some one [of] seruice ile turne the like a beg[gerlye Jacke] CE. Harke a worde Orgalus what saist thou to S^ John (Fol. 1 1 r.) nether cardes nor dice I am sure he doth lacke Mis. What shoulde I doe y/^^ ye preist thou bussardly best 45 lie haue some younker & there be any ith towne Or. How doth he differ I pray yow from the reste heis no more a prist then yow ar & he were out of his gowne Oe, Disdayne yow S^ John as good as yow will haue his companye as the fellowlist prist that is in this shire 50 To all the lusty guttes he is knowne for his honestye has not one dropp of pristes bludd in him my thinke I durst swere Me. Of all loues I pray let your man fetch him hether I haue harde a good reporte of him & it be he that I meane Mi. Ey, goe for him Sirra & come agayne together 65 yf he be such a one I would speak v/^^ him fayne Oe. I am acquainted v!^^ him sir and yow please lie goe call him both at cardes and dice I knowe him to be skilfuU heile not stick to daunce if company befalle him in Game w't a gentleman heile never be wilfuU. 60 Or. He S"" I am sure heis not w'l"out a dosin pare of dice I durst Jepert heis now at cardes or at tables A bible nay soft youe heile yet be more wise I tell yow heis none of this new start vp rabies. 39 i. e. jaunt, as I. ii. 46 40 read durte as C 41 [Goe] C 43 [Or out of) B 49 read John ? Disdayne yowV B 61 John bef. I C 62 i. e. jeopard, wager 63 readhihlsl : bible, B 2o6 MISOGONUS "• iv Thers no honest pastime but he putes it in sure 6S not one game come comes vpp but he has it bith backe everye wench ith townes a quaited with his lure its pittye (so god helpe me) that ever he shoulde lacke Me. I shall thinke the tyme longe till I see him come in I was beholden to him I remembre whent was 70 Mi. Thoughe the drumbledary be longe at length heile him bringe I am sure my bony wench heile take no nays Intrat Cacur[gus.] Ca. Gadds baddy so soone haue yow founde out your minion Is this my mistrisse y* shall be now saynt cuccold blesse yow this a smurkinge wenche in deede this a fare mayde marion 75 sheis none of thes coy dames sheis as good as brown bessye Or. I be foole your harte Sirra yowr to full of your prate her names dame Melissa my masters owne spouse Ca. Pardone good maddame will ye haue a nutmugge to grate a minsinge las a honey swete blowse 80 Mis. How likst thou hir Cacurgus is she not like a diamant in thy eye is she not a sparkinge one dost thou not thinke hir angell Ca. Woulde yow giue me leaue to gett an eare one hir I would doe it by [& by] I woulde doe it v/^^ a trisse I sweare by the vangell Mis. Out arrande hore master woulst thou meddle w*!' my woman 85 What your none mistrisse your masters none wife Ca. I crye me mercye S' I hade thought she had bene yo[ur] I praye god sende yow many & a louely longe lif[e] [Mel.] What (my (croute) let him alone this is yowr j [se] . . . [It doth] me good to heare some ons mery 90 65 read in 's ure 66 del. come .■ om. B : to'me C 73 2. e. body B 74 read be 1 read ye M for rhyme 75 i. e. fair B this i.e. this is 79 Pardone over I crye yow mercye deleted read grate ? 80 raising C blowse z. e. trull, wench 82 hir over sheis an deleted: read hir &n as B 83 i. e. a near B 87 [leman] C 88 many sc. children 89 j {an undecipherable mark a little to right above) : y se ... C : jes[ter] B rightly 90 ons i. e. of his ; ones B [conceits] B cometh . . . . C 11. iv MISOGONUS 207 Mis. I faythe (my conye) yow may knowe that by his vesture (Fol. 1 1 v.) the knaues full of bitcherie has a buggitfuU of cheites Intrat Oenophilus. Oe. Ife bene for yon man oth churche & wotte your where I had him ith alhouse at whipperginnye as close as a burr. Mis. And why broughtes him not w* the, Oe. I warrent yow I badd him 95 & hadd pleade but thie trickes heile come as round as a purr Or. Did not I tell you ? I woulde he were vnpristed by Jis theirs to fewe such as he is, he would make you a fine mann heile not bash to grope a trul to, smacke & to kisse we haue daunct & carded a hole weke & nere blanne 100 Me. Good Lorde how it greveth me yt so longe he doth linger till he come I shall thinke ereye minnit seven yeare Oe. He hath come twenty tymes at the beckinge of my finger with a whope lie haue him now by and by here What hoe S' John S' John 105 Sir J. Here ostice here ostice I come quater Oe. Come one S' John you haue bene in some forsett my mistrisse sendes in hast your pase yow must mende Sir J. I was so fast in that I coulde not thens gett but where is y^ gentlewoman yt for me did sende no Oy. Here I haue brought him at your worshipps requeste and this be not a right man your selfe be iudge Mi. Welcome S' John now sure heis a beakinge prist its pitty by my chrissondome thou shouldst be such a drudge 92 ». ^. budget full 5 93 you[r] man C: you,man,5 yom reati yon as C£ 95 reati broughtest (thou deleted aft. broughtes) 96 read thei i. e. they, those ; thre C come a rounds gg read tml, to : cummaom.CB 102 e'rye C; erye B 104-S "« margin W Wyllm 106 quater s.d. I come to be said four times, cf. iv. i. 18 107 foriett CB iii Oe. C 2o8 MISOGONUS "• iv S'. Yf your worshipp lack a gamster ame a gamster very fayre 1 15 for a pound or tow He kepe yow company by day or by night at cardes dice or tables or anythinge I will not spare to kepe a gentleman compa[ny] I doe greatly delighte. Me. Now surely my cockeril this was good lucke that so honest a copsmate were fetched vs to day 120 Ca. What master ficker I must nedes chalinge this booke theirs no remedy He haue it and my lesson go say Or. Bestowe them one him sir John ites a good mery greke thes bookes by profession of right he must haue Ca. He fynde out my lesson or He over all seke 1 25 o here I hate now hers .K. for a knave. Me. What game master person do yow now most acquynt lets haue some fine game that came latest vp S' J. I haue many good games madame as ruff, mawe, & saint or god a mercy goodfellowe when aboute goes the cupp ijo Me. Nay but Ide rather at the dice haue a cast haue yow any dice let vs see master ficker Sr J. Dice I haue plenty yow shall see them in hast heirs even my study, if I hit of good licker Mis. What games can yow play at lets haue thos yow vse weekly 135 we trifle ye tyme let vs sticke to our tacklinge Si'. . . . k tack mume chaunce or novunce come quicly .... hinge any thinge its my dayly f[ac]k[Ung] Ca. nun[cle] Good vnckle drawe a carde and thou lovest me (Fol. 1 2 r.) drawe what thou wilt for a penney ites thy brother. 140 S'. What I beleue for my cuninge thou pro vest me my gowne to thine it will fall out another ti5 and ^ 117 tables «'. e. backgammon 126 j. e. ha't 134 i.e. Here's 135 «.<;. weekly oj C 137 [Tic]k o>- novnnce J. s. novum /. 147 .■ nounce B 138 [Anyt]hinge (?) "• IV MISOGONUS 209 Ca. Done S"" John, twenty pound I haue wonn the preistes gowne looke here my masters doe yow not knowe him bi his shankes CE. Gods chekinge the pristes sland Ide rather a loste a crowne 145 the foole has beguild him wf^ his knavish prankes Mi. Come let vs make the mach to novu we fiue prepare your selves everie one in even battell rowe Ca. On then a gods name as many as will thrive I praye you giue the preist leave to haue ye first throwe 150 Sr. Sett then my masters a good lucke I beginn rise winnings luckelye seven is my caste Or. By the mas I see well the preist is like to winn soft frende giue me the dise your turne is paste Me. Hafe stake betwine yow & me this tyme Mr vickar 155 at all this Orgalus now happely rise Mi. Throwe & thou wilt throwe why throwst thou no thiker throwe dreminge dissarde or else giue me the dise Oy. Gods sacringe I haue lost a noble at two settes why dise no lucke to night will all be gone 160 Or. By the mas Mr I thinke y® vickar will beates forty shillings I am sure at least he hath wone Mi. How now mine owne blossum how like yow this sporte doth not reioyse yow such pastime to vse Me. They can haue no better I am sure of the courte 165 I had rather be your wife then one of the stwes. S^. Now Markus Marcurius helpe thy master at a pinch its myne and there were fortye poundes at the stake Oy. The preistes handes ith mustardpott the knave throwe at ninch has some dise of vauntadge myne oth I durst take 170 145 slan'd C 147 or novB {the contraction mark is accompanied by two dots) cf. I. lyi : novns B 148 or in treu as C 149 then in C 151 ?.«. Stake 154 ?-«a(/Soft, frende, 156 rss^Orgalns ! 159 reorfOe. .- Or. C 161 Oe. C ?. e. beatns 164 i.e. doth 't not 169 readOe. i. e. throwes as C knave, throwe B i. e. an inch as CB (an is deleted bef. ninch) 532 P 2 10 MISOGONUS II. IV Or. What luck wilt thou neV tourne why bones what meane ye I thought twould come at lenghe masse this was well drawne S^ Sett lustilye my boykins or else I will stayne ye by the motherkine a god that was knavlshlye throwne Me. God haue mercy for that good disse yet that came ith nicke 175 one good stake in an houre is worth a meny driblinges S'. What faynte ye my children fye thats a cowardes tricke let me haue round game He none of thes niblinges Ca. Howe winnes now my masters howe pays here toth box[e] what is the preist hande ith honye pott yet 180 [Or.J Thoust gett nothinge here vnlesse it be knokes except at this tyme I can haue a good hite [Mis.] How now vickar ha how goeth the world on your side (Fol. 1 2 v.) what doth dame fortune begin now to frowne S''. A pox consume it It will now all slide rSs at everie cast I lesse a noble or a crowne Oy. Prist downe with that ruddake or He giue over He not throwe ath bare borde sett and thout play. S"". By god & all the world I shall never this recover ther tis be lucky yet, its gone without stay igo Or. Nay He none of that frende yow play not now w'** boys ery little wagpasty coulde say nought stake nought drawe Oy. Tut preste bringt out thou hast it weile none of thes toys we are no such sucklings to take lubuii lawe S'. By ye body of our Lorde Jesus Christe — their all hab or nabes 195 ether now come or the devill & his dame go w* all Or. 1st my tourne be true to your master then my babes O liuely lucke I haue wone a whole ryall 179 8. 1?. Who . . . who 182 C leaves d U. space at bottom of f, 11 r: ill. lost are possible, htt rhymes are against it, 184 -aow doubtful 186 z.e. lose 187, 193 read Oe. 188 readhozie ; igo read ther tis : be Incky yet! 192 ery over when I was a deleted 195 i, e. there's all ; II. iv MISOGONUS 21 r Me. By S Mary I beshrowe you your play is too sore. Your men haue a quarrill against me and the prist 200 Mi. Theist goe like a couple of knaves I promisse them therfore but let them doe their worst thoust not lacke by gods bleste S"'. Gods sydes will yow not trust me theirs my gowne for a pledge He not leaue bith fyne woundes while I am worth a gree groat Ca. VVhats his gowne gone too then he may go hange oth hedge 205 has the Marchant a shillinge so sone to nine pence brought. Mi. Care not man He be thy surtie theist doe the no wronge Orgalus playe fare yow are but a Jangler Ca. By S Sunday me thinkes I here the saunce bell goe ding donge Oh sir John byth mattings yow must out for wrangler 210 S''. He play still come ont what will He never giue over ith lurtch Let them ringe till their arses ake I knowe the worste Oy. Away prest by this tyme they are all come toth churche for shame gett the hence prest thout be bonably curste Mi. Gods body is a right man in dede. preist kepe thy farme 215 is worth you all byth mas now I see heis no starter theirs money sticke to ut I warrant thoust haue no harme Yf thou nedst ath ordinarye He get the a charter S'. By god I thanke you S' my parishioners I am sure be content to misse service one night so they knowe I am well occupied 220 Ca. Its no matter person so they come of a good intent I ame sure they care not how litle they be nodefyed S''. Ha then for all Christen soules a man or a mouse 1st winn all at this cast I durst lay my benifice Or. The preist nowe againes as busy as a body louse 225 He kepe my monney while I hate P pray he go to s^vice. 203 not om. C 204 ? ff^fyue {the n seems marked) : fyve C 205 Ca. am. B J. «. What ! has his 211 come out C.5 211 read 0&. 214 thout ... curste over thou shouldst haue bene first deleted bonably i.e. abominably Car. bountiblyC 218 madst 5 222 «.«. edified 224 «'.«. Ishall^ readcs&t, 226 r] read I as CB he or ye to spice C P 2 212 MISOGONUS "-iv Cla. Disc hie dise hie (Fol. 13 O Is S^ John here at dise can any man tell my gaffers be all come a prety while since What Sr John did you not heare when I fidled the bell 23° their all come i good fayth I pray yow goe hense Me. My boy tell them he is now busy v/^^ his frende he would come full fayne thou maist see if he might S'. Pray the say so Jake holde the theirs somewhat to spend and theile nedes hate theist haue a couple y^ next Sunday night 235 Mi. Thart but a foole prest to be so obedient I would make my clarke serue this once & I was as the S''. Yow say well sir as longe as tis not y^ holy tyme of lent an thou wilt say Jake or theist haue none for me Me. Tell him what he shoulde say then & lett him be packinge 240 the fellowe would doe it as well as thou I warrant him for a nede S'. Fayth Jake its no matter an all thy lessons be lackinge say a magnificat nunc dimittis an even end w''^ the crede Or. What shall he leaue out ye saumes and his pater noster what good will y^ crede doe without thos and his avy 245 Ca. Yf theile aske where S' John is wear all here one a cluster fyve knaves besides my master & my mistris god saue ye Cla. He patert as well as I can but if yow knewe who were there Youde leavth dise with all your hart for one wanton looke Sr. Is susan swetlipps come mas Jack He goe sear 350 pray you S' giue me leaue but even go to tourne him my booke Oy. Now S' thays blesse ye woudst thou goe to the trull Why man hers womans flesh and that be the worst 227 read Bice (Zat.) 234 read Jake: holde the, 239 read v/ilt, say, Jake ; I ief. Jake C 243 an '/or and ' B, cf. ill. i. 263, 267 ever C 248 !.«. patter it 250 readcaxat'i mass, «'. e. seeher 252 read Oe. II. IV MISOGONUS 213 S'. I haue dist so longe now that my senses be even dull Gad when I came hether I thinke I was courst 255 Me. Gett yow hence Jacke and thy selfe doe the best care not for thy money man and thou loust me tarry still Ca. By tetragranaton and the blacke santas I do the rest Yf thou goest a foote farr thy braynes I will spill Me. Let vs excersise some new pastime now this is stale 260 the preist and I am wearye weile no more of this trashe Mi. Content my minikin chose what yow will at no game I will fayle what say yow to dauncinge shall we daunce a litle crashe Me. Thers none better (my deare) come dare yow lead me a daunce lead yow me first and I hope the vickar wilbe nexte 265 Sr. By S. paterike damsell for your sake lie out vaunce Its good to fetch a friske once a day I fynde it in my texte. Mi. Trifle not the tyme then say what shall we haue what countrye dauncis do you now here dayly frequent Ca. The vickar of S. fooles I am sure he would crave 270 to that daunce of all other I see he is bent S^. Faythe no I had rather haue shakinge oth shetes or sund or cachinge of quales or what faire meliss[a] [Me.j . . . foole I see by him is geuen [holy to scorm] . . 275 [Or.] Preste kepe your sincopasse and foot it oth best sorte (Fol. 13 v.) now closse q^ curyer come aloft Jacke w*'' a wim warn Oy. O liuely y/^^ hie childe and tourne the ah this is good sporte How ist preist hers for thy larninge a chim cham Sr. Howe fare you Melissa what me thinkes yow waxe wearye 280 will yow not pause a while alas too sore yow doe trace 254 dise C 258 tetragramaton C do the rest i.e. make thee stay 259 or fare ; fore C .• sore 'for sure ' B 266 out] one C for advaunce B 270 brave CB 272 or] on C 273 V [will] 274 [The] C see by him cf. III. iii. 88 scorm . . . C : perhaps for scorn . . . as B 275 one line lost 278 readOe, 214 MISOGONUS ii-iv Me. Ime well I thanke yow S' John how doe yow are yow merye Of all the preistes that ere I knewe he treads the best pase Mi. Ahe mine owne henbourde I must nedes lay the oth lipps well vauntid byth mas preist thats worth a whope 285 Or. Bith marye god howe lustelye the lubber nowe skipps gods precious the skabb w"» my mistrisse doth tupe Ca. This a close carver bith mas heis a right cocke oth kinde the knaves flesht yow may see he bittes like a cur a man might racke hell and scase such a crewe finde 290 how the stoned preist doth kepe vi^^ yene gossipe a slur Houle laughe now my masters and yow will He make yow laughe He serve them a trust as coltish as they are I can anger them all & but tourne to a scofe yest see a hurricampe straight way He set all at a Jar 29s By promisse as yow knowe the old Jochum I should certifye when his soone from burdinge home did retire He goe tell him now the deed it selfe my wordes will verifye If I make yow no good sport say Ime a Iyer. exit Cacurgus. Intrant Philogonus, Eupelas, et Liturgus. Actus secundus. Scena quinta. Phi. O mercifull lorde god what a company is here matt what a rablement of rascoles & rackhels haue we here why soonne thes pnicious practisses wilt thou never forgett alas Misogonus wilt thou never leaue this geare Mi. What doe yow fale in your fustinge fumes at the first 5 not the worste of vs but for our honestye w^t your selfe will compare 2gi or yone as CB 292 i.e. Who'll 294 read tourne 't to 296 lochmen C u. V MISOGONUS 215 Eu. Why Misogonus into such lewde languish dare you burst what not your father a litle can you spare Mi. What are yow his spoksman meddle yow v/^^ your old showes and he were my father ten tymes heist haue as good as a bringe 10 Phi. Stay a while Eupelas I knowe our laboure we shall lose but yet He tell the vnthrift of his detestable dealinge Calsta this honest company or is this an honest sporte to be revelinge and bousinge after such a lewde fashion I thinke hell breake louse when thou gatst ye this porte 15 foure such thou coudst scase fynde in a whole nashion Me. Why father what dishonestye can yow lay to our charge [Th]ers none of vs woude you should knowe nether theves no[r ho] . . . [Phi.] . . . [h]erst thou me strumpitt ? I ? speakst thou so large . . . [o]f my sight quene or He cart the by gods [bones] 20 Oy. Take hede what yow say master she comes of a good (Fol. 14 r.) parentage misvse hir not I tell yow sheis of worshipful! bloude Li. What come yow in w* your seven egges if I cache yow oth vauntage houlde your pease when year well frende or else ye were as good Sr. What if this gentlewoman and your Sonne I haue marled 25 may they not then come together w'liout any offence Phi. Ide rather thou wert hanged theife & he to his graue caried thou to marye him (varlat) without my licens Eu. Hast thou maried him preist then vnknitt me this knott darst thou kepe company with another mans wife 30 thou abhominable sodomit thou execrable sott so god shall iudge me pild Jacke its pittye of thy life 7 i, e. language as C 9 i. e. shoes 10 i. e. he shall have 14 i. e. boozing 15 this route C iS z. e. us, [I] would as iv. i. 157 .• vs woude, B knowe OOT. C ho[res] C 19 [Fat]herst M rightly, cf. iv. ii. ii.- [What]herst C; [Bot]herst ^ 20 [Out] C 21 readOe. 22 worshipful! ^ (vvor umerlain in MS.): a gentlemans C {deleted in MS.) 24 i.e. you're well, friend, 27,28 read caiiei. licens! 2i6 MISOGONUS n- v S''. Why not S'' as longe as he him selfe is in place whatsoever I doe proceds of pure loue I doe but what I shoulde doe thats a cleare case J5 to loue all & hate none it doth prelatts behoue. Eu. Dost thou but what thou shouldst doe y" Idolatrous beste shouldst thou be the ringleader in dauncinge this while A good minister would be at church now attendinge one gods heaste Of all wreches that ever I knewe thou art most vile 40 Mi. Art thou so cocked againe what hast thou to doe to speake the preist shall live beside the prate till thy belly ake Phi. Sausy boy dost thou thinke to put vs to wreke Yf thou dost not amende this a drudge He the make Mi. Doe your best and your worst I care not a pinn for yow I 45 ile kepe both hir and the rest in mauger your bearde Eu. Now of truth ites marvaile the house fall not downe sodeinely he speakes so outragiously he makes me afrayde Phi. Kepe them kepe hogges theife lie cut the full short thoust never enioy one jott of my lande 50 Mi. With your great wordes I tell yow doe yow greatly me hurt when your dead let me see who dare me withstande Phi. He gitt away for god sake rather to them that haue nede when thou shalt then wistell and be glad go toth carte Mi. For god sake mary so might yow doe a good deede 55 git who you will gitt lie hate spite of your harte. Me. Care not for him husband he speakes but in dotage he may say what he will he can doe yow no harme Phi. O Christ how the drevell doth awnswere me in mockadse a couckstole (sowe) thoust be mad thy tounge for to charme 60 37 but what thou written twice in M. 46 in manger B : read in manger, mauger 48 read afearde as C 53 i.e. gi't, give it 55 read sake'V 60 Sonne CB but nn in MS. has been turned into w ;. e. made II. V MISOGONUS 217 Mi. Houlde your handes yow were best and lett hir alone Wear able to make yow & your too men to faynt [Or.] Gods croust both we your selfe and trusty S"" John we foure could anger him an he were a verye Saynt [Eu.] A man were as good met a she beare in y® wood[ds] 65 [Wit]h hir whelps at hir heles now roringe for h[u] .... [storjridd vp w'l» such a [furious mode] . . Phi. In thy youth thou never hadst such helhoundes at (Fol. 14 v.) thy backe thadst other manner of fellowes soonne in thy yonge days 70 S'. That was but bycause discretion he did lacke its not best for youe sir any of vs to dispraise Li. Thers no mischeife as they say comonly but a preist at one end it were thy parte to admonish him his father to obay S'. When soever I mele yow sir looke your head that yow fend 75 a fart for yow all come Melissa ile away Me. I praye yow Philogonus no longer contende Yow haue geuen them a threde which theil never vntwist Mi. Its but a folly in deed wench more wordes to spende let him say what he will He do what I list 80 Come then lets be gone lie never strive w*!" him more his lands are myne as sure as a clubb Naue let the world wagge Oy. Wele foUowe to Michole one afore one afore lie quaf perhapps first though here I be lagge Phi, Did yow ere here of man in more miserye then I 85 was there ever sily soule that was so contemnede thers no way but one Eupelas I shall surely dye my calamities will not sease till my life hath an ende 66 hu[Dger] C 68 one line lost 70 i. e. son 73 you C : one B 77 Philogonus] >-ga(^ Misogonus C 83 read Oe. one afore i.e go on ahead 84 i. e, laggard 2i8 MISOGONUS "• V Eu. I am as sorye for your case as if it were myne owne Your anguise & vexation is to me a great smarte 9° but consider Philogonus to what end should yow grone seing thers no remedy why should yow take it at your hart. Phi. And Eupelas consider if your sonne were like myne could yow chose but lament and sith very sore Eu. I coulde not chose indeed Philogonus I must nedes whine 95 then he should be such a one I would wish him dead before Phi. All yow that loue your children take example by me lett them haue good doctrine and discipUne in youth correct them be tyme least afterwarde they be frowarde & contempteous & so bringe yow to great ruth 100 Li. Good master yet I pray yow make not tow sorrowes of one but beare it as patiently as possibly yow may Eu. The best is for yow to trust in Christ Jhesus alone and by faith in his mercy your selfe for to stay Phi, Its verye trewe Eupelas in him is all my ioy 105 if it were not so certes I had done or this longe Eu. Be yow sure Philogonus it can not yow greatly anoy his power in weaknes is ever most stronge. Phi. I am sorye that yow Eupelas so often I haue troubled depart home now I praye yow & make merye w^^ your wife no [Eu.] If I coulde doe yow good I would wish my paynes doubled but fare yow well my prayers for yow shalbe rife . . . ett the home also Liturgus He will foUowe thee straigh[t] . . greife here to the Lord in a dolefull ditty [will I vow] Li. Swete M' your selfe doe not over much frett. {Fol. ig r.) 115 at your comaundement I am readye I will goe my ways nowe. 93 read Ah 94 ?'.«. sigh 106 «'. e. long ere this 113 [Phi. G]ett C (/«/. will 114 [My] C "v MISOGONUS 219 The songe to the tune of Labondolose hoto O mighty Jove some pitty take one me poore wretch for christis sake Greif doth me gripe, payne doth me pinch willful! dispite my harte doth wrinch 120 Christ thou art my onely ayde if thou helpes not Ime quite dismayde Spite doth my mynde so sore oppresse that this my care will be endlesse Except thou suckorest me at nede 125 and sende some sufFerayne salme w'b spede. My sinnes I willingly confesse Hath oft of right deservd no lease 1 was the cause of this my care the rodd alway sith I did spare 1 30 If I in tyme had him coiTecte Ide never binn this sore aflfecte tis I tis I that am too blame My selfe my selfe deserveth shame I am o Lorde alone in faughte 135 by sufferinge this selfewill he caughte. Yf Phoebus forst was to lament when Phaeton fell from the element, Yf Dedalus did wale and wepe when Icarus in seas was deape 140 Yf Priamus had cause to crye when all his sonnes was slayne in Troy Why should not I then wofuU wight complain in a more piteous plight myne doth not onl' him selfe vndoo 145 but me full oft doth worke great woo s.D. Labondolose Hoto CB : Labandoloschote Coll. H. D. P. ii. 377 126 i.\e. sovereign read salue as C : Vbalm B note 133 binn tlius C 135 faulte C 145 onl' CB MS. does not use superscript commas but has an abbreviation mark aft. 1 MISOGONUS II. V The losse of landes I could well beare or what thinge else some love most deare on worldly wealth I doe not stay god gaue and he may take away 15° disdainfull tauntes I coulde haue borne of any else that woulde me scorne Ye I coulde heart an hundred fold better to see him laid ith molde than thus his life in leudnes spende «S5 wherof distruction is the ende. A good example here yow see all parentes o take hede by me if yow detest vnquietnes or if yow loue trwe happines i6o Nurture your youth in awe & feare [e]m their dwetyes often heare hade I obtaynd .... m . . . . e Wheras now sithes my soule doth sift (Fol. 15 v.) 165 and ruthfull sobes my harte doth rift To the o Lorde I doe retourne here in this miserye as I mourne Desiringe if it may the please my paynes a little to appease 1 70 thoughe it be fair beyonde my faith Yet thou canst helpe thy gospell saith Helpe Lorde helpe Lorde helpe yet in tyme and lay not to my charge this cryme pardon for that is past I crave 175 wth hope some helpe of the to haue. Exit Philogonus. 163 [Let th]em C 163-4 fragments surviving at side, lines left blank CB 165 i.e. sighs cf. I. 94 168 mlseryes C III. i MISOGONUS 221 Actus tertius) scena prima) Codms. Po, po, po, come Jacke, come Jacke, Heave slowe heave slowe how now my mosters did none of yow see my sondid sowe thers nere a one in our end oth towne Ime sure hath worse happe. when I sett hir out to mast woude I had put hir to my pesse mowe. This lucke in dede both bullchinge and sowe gone all at a clappe. 5 Now god & swete S Antonye sende me my sowe againe and she be gone ist neare be able this winter to kepe house if I shoulde alwais eat curdes and buttermilke it would be my baine Ist not liue a weeke without puddings and souse. What a cockaloudlinge make ys horesonne woude yow nedes begonn 10 He giue ye to one that shall spit yow I wannt yow bith marikins will yow not leaue your cacklinge youle be quarkned anone by my litle honesty I thinke thers some foulill havnts you ho god be here where be yow maidens god be here. What is there no body to take my rent hens 15 Ca. Harke how like a calfe thers one speakes what foule haue we ther He know what that wisard a gods name intendes Co. Voole I was the wisest that my mother had & we were nintene I haue bin lected for my scretion five tymes constable Ca. Yff yow had bene but once more tow fooles toth tyth there had binn 20 a good liter mary, and men to serve a prince well able Co. What William what William giue me that hand of youres I say. why tell me William how hast thou done this seven yeare I Heave slowe heave slowe added different hand blacker ink : heare stewe heare stowe C: Heaue slowe, heaue slowe. B 2 i. e. sanded M: soudid B 4 i. e pease-mowe ; past mowe C 5 i. e. This is . . . bnll-calf 9 i. e. I should or shall as B 10 cockalondlinge CB 11 wannt or waunt above for warrant "•• Ca. Its a good while agoe Codrus since we tow eat a bottell of hay but tell me olde sincaunter what quick cattell hast thou heare 25 Co. Cha brought a couple of -baskettes in my capenes to my aude mas[ter] against Christmas now to make merye with his frendes [Ca.] Thy witte runnes before thy tounge thou conceaved Custe[r] thou list olde minsimust they are a couple of hens [Its] a good stumble near horst I ame sure then they w[ere gel] . 30 . . [ur]st pose oth bible booke Alison gropte vor th [stones] [hor]sonne koxcome didst near see [hens felt] [as true as a] . Co. Nay but heares to William wout doe one thinge for me (Fol. 1 6 r.) and thaw . . wout tell my master heres ty gof Custer would speake w'l» him vayn 36 and thou will william thoust be a good boy & ile ge the a new nothi[ng] lie ge the a fine thinge that cam from London for your paine Ca. Giue me thy basket ile liver them like a tall fellow my selfe and desire him to come to the here in this station Co. Sett it then when thast done oth cubbord or oth shelfe 40 I hope with him now to haue some excomunication. Yf he come I can tell what to say lie spurr him a whestion lie tell him grace a god an my mumbraunce doe not faile me what a tauke I harde betwene mage mvmblecrust & our Alison I am sure an a knew all the price of my sowe it woulde vaile me 45 Ye may lay your life heil be glad when he heares of his tother for my yonge masters as verye a dingthrift as ere went one gods yer 25 i.e. cinquanter, 50 year old 26 baskettes on some other word my & master C 30 [Co.] . . . gel[t] C Wasa perhaps deleted 31 [I d]urst C i.e. depose B 32 [Ca.] C [What o;- Thou] j)/ 34 «. e. hear'st thou wone C : wont S 35 wont C£ i. e. fain 41 ex- inserted above, om C. 45 an I CB 47 i. e. earth B III. i MISOGONUS 223 heile not care an aglet for him when he heares of his brother and no matter by S cutbearde he keps such a stur. Intrat Philogonus. Ca. Here he comes custar holde ta deliver them w'l' thie owne handes 50 heile giue the somewhat and thou makst cursy downe toth grounde Co. De good deene master cha brought yow twe whochittalls in my maunde doe yow not heare of no bodye that my zondid sowe hath vou[nde] Phi. God haue mercy Custar ile make the one day a mens what be they I pray the are they a couple of capens 55 Co. Bum vay I said so & mast William makes me beleive they be hens gods dinty chil be plaine to yow I tooke them ene as it happens Phi. Take them thou will and carye them forthwith toth cooke and bidd him fatt them well against I make a feast Ca. They were capens till I chaungde them he that list may go looke 60 a shillinge by this match I haue gott at the least Co. Howe ist with yow master me thinke yow looke zadde what I woude haue yow vse mirth and reioynce your hart nowe youd be sorye in deede if my cagin yow hadd my bulchinge tournde vp his heiles at Martimas and now I lost my [sowe] 65 Phi. Thats a great losse for a poore man but mine is much more woude I hadd lost all that ere I hadd condicion I hadd founde one Co. To lose all by S George master that woude go sore belakins no sir one might showe the gouse an all were gone Phi. God helpe me Custar I knowe not well what I speake I am so troubled in my mind 70 my Sonne my sonnes so vngratious I knowe not what to say Co. Why ist not possible some poUicye to fynde I would not blin an I were in your coat till I had tried erye way 54 /.?. amends 58 «a^ thou, Will, 63 reioynce j5 65 Martinmas C^ 224 MISOGONUS "I- Phi. I haue tried erie way with him hies quite past grace woude I coude trie some way now to bringe my selfe consolation 75 Co. He bringe yow some I or else He giue yew my cowe -w*^ wh[ite] I can do it and that wightly I speake wthout semblation Phi. Canst thou do it Custar now I would to god thou could in that condition I gaue the the price of tenn swy[n] . Co. Yf I doe it not let me never hereafter come in y[ou] 80 by godes zacriment if I do it not He be bound ....;.. Phi. Lett me heare then Custar what comfort cans[t] . . . Doubt [no]t of my promise thou knowst me of . . . [Co.] An yow knewe__as much as I knowe Ime sure youde (Fol. 16 v.) both laughe and sing[e] youde be in iocundare cum amicis an yow had all toulde 85 Phi. Why what is it Codrus I pray the tell me without delay beside that i giue the ile be thy frende all the dayes of thy life Co. Yf I say I can tell I can tell in deede, what day is to day. how longe ist since the death of my mistrisse your" wife Phi. Is this the comforte Ist haue by thy takle thou makst me in a greater quad[ary] 90 this thy remembraunce of hir Custar is a corsy to my harte Co. A god rest hir soule, god haue mercy of hir soule and S Mary is there a quamminge come over your stomacke I wannt yow youst bearte Phi. Thy foolish wordes haue made me more heavy then ever I weare tell me to what ende of my wife thou madste mencion 95 Co. I wottle well inoughe, howe she servde yow did your never heare thoughe I be a foole i my tauke chaue alwais some tention 74 heis C 76 [face] C 77 «. e. quickly semblation /oydissimnla- tion B 78 could[st j [^^^f «3 79 swyn[e] 80 you[r j ^'^^^f'^' 81 [in hempen twyne] 82 [thou bringe] 83 [olde] B go read lalke . . . quadary (Me lasi as B) 93 i. e. qualm . . . warrant 96 did you C : did yow B 97 cham C i. e. intention in. i MISOGONUS 225 Phi. Why howe did she serve me declare it me plaine praye the tell me quickly w'hout tractinge of tyme Co. He goe fetch our Alison & come straight way againe 100 she ha witt inoughe to tell yow hir capidossitye is better then mine Phi. Alas good silly soule has tould me a tale here oth mann ith moone some matter he taukes of if I knewe what he mente Co. Mosse He tell yow thoughe I lacke retorumes, & sheist mend it soone why moster mine did never heare yet whether your sonne was sente 105 Phi. Sente. why whether shoulde he be sente ne never wente abroade I wene thou art tipse didst not come from thallhouse alate Co. Yeaye faith he has benne far then ere yow haue on Taleon grounde he near trode and for biblinge I woud yow shoulde knowe I do it foully hate Phi. Be not angrie Codrus thou hast brought me truly in a great suspence no I pray the speake so at one worde as I may vnderstande Co. He speake plaine English nowe heis gone a thousand mile hence and yowle not trust me call Alison and heare the matter scande Phi. That is vnpossible to be vnlesse thou taukst of an other thou makst me w^hout doubt wonderfully to mase 115 Co. Why gods denty moster I ment all this while the tother doe yow thinke that such loudlye Custer Codrus coulde face Phi. What other meanest thou, I had never moe sonnes then one I am at my wittes end w* thy talke by gods mother Co. Why an youle not beleive me He goe fetch our Alison izo yow shall see and she doth not tell yow that my yonge master has a bro[ther] 99 J. e. prolonging 104 Scorn. C 108 ?. c. Yea, i'faith ilf i.e. farther, cf. u. iv. 259 how haue B : read haue: 117 i.e. loud lie 120 not om. B 53a <2 226 MISOGONUS ni. i Phi. Ther never was poore mariner amids y^ surginge seas catchinge a glimeringe of a port wherunto he would saile so much distract twixt hope of health & feare his life to lease as I even no we w* hope do hange and eke w*'' feare doe faile 125 Co. Alison what Alison what meanst woman sites all day bith fire come thou makst good hast thus thou woudst serue me an I lay a gods my armes Alison shouldst tricke the v/^^ thy best tyre thou lookst as thoughe thou hadst bene in some heape of ashes la[ying] ... . hy whats the matter that thou woudst haue me so fine 130 . . . u wert wonnt to l[i]ke me well inough[e in my] Co. For that sowe thats gone He heipe the to ten if the fair (Fol. 1 7 r.) be no come thou must goe to my moster he sendes for the by cocke Ali. What didst tell him of the matter we taukt on last weke how many miles he were hence & that he were his eldest sonne 135 Co. I clard it as well as I coude and he woude nedes haue me the goe & se[eke] prove it trwe and weist haue sowes inoughe Alison come let vs run[ne] Loe here she is now S^ simple thoughe she be for the faut of a better sheis not bookish but shell place hir wordes as scretly as some of [those] that be Phi. Thats no matter a rush Codrus an she know near a letter 140 if she can make manifest this thy talke thats inoughe for me 127 ^-^a^hast ; thus.' hast thus; B [dying] C : {part o/d survives) 128 i.e. attire/? iig recui lying 130 [Ali. W]hy C [drasst ?] : [dresst] ? 5 131 [Tholu C [old frock] > B: [smock] l>e/ler, as M 132 no[t past] ?: iio[t ceast].' B 135 & om. C 139 i.e. discreetly B : cf. I. 19 that be carried to next line MS. 141 thy om. C in. i MISOGONUS 227 Ali. I am gladd to see your worships wershipfull M'shipp in good heale what is the cause savinge your reverence that for me yow doe send if it be for your owne commoditie or for the common weale I will tell you w'h all my hart as god shall me mutteraunce lend 145 Co. Nay sheis aligant in deed shewdd chaunt this exlrflpery a hole day I had rather then the best shepe I had my tounge were but halfe so nemble Phi. Thy husband here tauntes of my wife and of a sonne I haue gon a great wa[y] speake in this case what thou knowest & do not dissemble Ali. My swete mistrisse now our swete Lady of Walsinga be w*!" hir swetly swe[t] soule 150 I haue bid many a prayer for hir both early and late Co. Faith and so haue I, thers near a day but I haue hir in my bede role I say a deprofundus for hir erie night accordinge toth olde rate Phi. Pray for hir no more but rather giue god praise your praiers are but superstitious & she I hopes at rest 1155 yow loue hir it semes so did I, & shall doe all my daies but now to praye for our selves here while we liue I count it best. Co. Low yow Alison wer Moster is oth new larninge did not I tell yow before Codrus youle not be ruled yow, ye nere larnde that of me Phi. Some other tyme of thes matters yow may debate more 160 whether thy talke tends Alison let me now see Ali. Custar did yow tell my M' any thinge before I cam hether speake if yow haue when yow made an ende He beginn Co. as well as my mother witt would serue me I toulde him all ye circiilanse togeth[er] I did it prattely well but He haue the dote vine vine. 165 144 John York written in left margin in contemp. character and faded ink, but dcrabtful if the scribe's hand: between John and if in another hand Jesu(?) 145 unutteraunce C 146 shewed C: she wocld.ff.' «. e. she would i.e. extempore 148 or tanntes or tamites (?) .• read taukes; taw[k]ith C 158 VIST B: we C: read ov/er 159 Coiiu% prefixed again by mistake Q 2 2 28 MISOGONUS ni-i Ali. A Master it was as loue childe as ever woman boure it went to my hart when I sawe it sente quite away Phi. Why whether was it sente Alison my childe was ever y/^Hn dore your talke doth so astonish me I can not tell what to say Ali. Goodly lorde are yow so ingrll did yow near heare of Polona lande 1 70 and did yow never knowe your wifes brother that there doth dwell Phi. Yes mary that I doe all this I doe well vnderstande but what meanst of that country & of my brother me to tell Ali. What mean I mary thether your sonne and heire was s . . . Phi. What my sonne ? Ali. Yea your sonne I tell yow I am in no drunken f . . 1 75 Phi. Sais thou that my sonne and heire to woman to [Ali.] I said it I. ... . . [that] saying thoue m[a]kst me [almost] out of [m] Co. How say yow now Mr doe not our Alison and I agree (Fol. 1 7 v.) in one tale Jump[e] ye may see we are as trwe as steile we both ons loore to lye Ali. Care not M' yest not nede for this exstorie to be in a dumpe 180 this a trwe as the Gospell thers moe can tell as well as I. Phi. Thou saist its trwe but how cant be trwe I had never moe wives the[n one] & she after Misogonus was borne w^i^in a weke tooke hir death Ali. I tank not of Sogonus I, I tank of your tother sonne what a blindation are yow in why my mistris had two babes at a bi[rth] 185 Phi. O mercifuU Lorde god if I may craut w'hout offence graiit that thes tydinges may be trwe w«h I heare 166 ?rea- cyne .• eyne C ; Cyne B z6 Vimie uncertain whether de deleted 49 or Agwe as B Massels i. e. measles 51 maidnes B 54 read faine to as C 238 MISOGONUS III- 1" Neither doe 1 care for any great gaynes wininge I doe all for god sake and not for any gaine & before I do deale if any man doubt of my cfiinge that they may knowte I will tell their thought certayne 60 [F]or by my liberality I haue in visiogmony . [c]an tell the cogitations & thought of the mynde .... [y] my great speclation I haue in Exstronomy [g]e past & thinges to come of men I doe finde Therefore if there be anye man or woma in this cuntrey (Fol. 20 r.) that would haue their paynes & aches now cured 66 Lett them come I will Judge of it onely by palmastry V!°^ if I can, that I can helpe them they may be assured, Is. et . what a wise man lis, what a learnd, what a fa . travild man lis. 70 Is. O Leard Leard wone woude take him for a foole by his gowne & his capp and he is to fuls a profundiditis as any is ith whole woaude Ma. Won woud thinke as so pra pra practisd a came from go go god a mightens lap[p] wannt him as bene at Cambridge good laude good laude Is. Bith meckinse madge He go put in one my halliday face 75 and whestone wtl^ him for thy tothach & thoust tary be hind God spede yow M' Phisicarye god saue your docterships grace I besech yow to my symplication let your eares be inclind. Ca. Good wife did yow not heare when I mad protestatione of my intelligible experience in the art medicinale 80 to the intent to heale good folke & I shewed that declaratione for I ken nowe all thinges by conninge artificiall 62 [I] C 63 [And b]y C 64 [Both thin]ge C 68 read assured. 69 i. e. Is. et [Ma.] as C : Is. B ' read Ma.' in note far B : om. C 72 to read so(=as) «.«. world ; woande ^ 73 as e. «. a's=he's 74 z. e. warrant him he has (a's) lande B 75 in inserted above 78 symplication in another hand over sublimation deleted 8 1 folkes C delete & as C III. iii MISOGOXUS 239 Yow come not for your selfe but for a neighboure of yours wch is payned in hir mandible wf» a wormetone toth sister come near sister 1 will helpe yow w">in this three houres 85 yf yow doubt me I will tell your verye thought in good souih Is. A taukes so father millerlye twode do the good at hart rout come Tib I see by him heis a wise man in deede Ma. He be your bedewomane M' Doctor and youle dout ze ze ze zech ye yf ye can dout w'i spede 90 Ca. Yf I can saistowe why of my cuinge dost thou doubt He tell the all thou hast done sinse day thou wast borne and even at this present what thou now gost about Yf nede be I can prophesy what thou shalt do to mome Is. What we intend now S' by your skill are yow wotlinge 95 weile say year an excessd docterable man if that yow can rede Ca. To beare witnes yow ar now both toward your londlord trottinge that his wife of tow children at once [w]as brought to bede but take hede what yow doe lest yow dame your selves quite for y« one was not a christen child as yow thought it to be 100 but a certaine ferye there did dasill yowr sighte & laid hir changlinge in the infantes cradell trwlye Hopinge therby your mistrisse child to haue gott and to leaue hir changlinge there in the stead which when she saw in a weke she coud nott 105 she fetcht it away when yow thought it were dede An overwhart neighboure to of yours now alate tels him whether twas sent as though trwe it had ben. but sheis a gayte yow knowe well & a very make .... and the fery from that day to this was near se . . no 84 or wonnetons imt cf. iv. i. 36 87 i. e. familiarly 88 Tib C in margin has ? Madge.- cf. I. i^ see by him cf. II. iv. 274 90 i.e. beseech .... do it zeth C 96 excesse CB 108 be[ne] C 109 make [bate] and so M : make f waight] '! C in pencil : make B 1 10 se[ne] C 240 MISOGONUS III- 1" But take yow hede both I giue yow good warnin . . least yow be stricken hereby either lame or de . . [Yf you] will by cunieratione I will shewe [you] [Is.] Nay good Mr leaue your magication crafte (Fol. 2ov.) 115 ites as trwe I knowe as it had corned out of gods owne mouth Ma. I gi gi giue defiaunce to yow so so so so saft saft Ide rather youde tell me some drinke for my toth Ca. Dost thou beleiue that I can heale the now speake Yf thou dost thy payne w'hin three houres I will qualifye 120 Ma. I am sure yf you list yow can mende my lothake and I que que quest yow to do it & not dalifye. Ca. Open thy mouth then let me fele wtli my instrument what is the cause that workes the this payne Ma. Youle ga ga gage me by gods testament 125 your mo mo moukeforke doth make me so gayne Ca. I haue cured a thousand of thes in my dayes this I can cure vi^^ the value of farthinge know yow not an herbe cald envy that growes bith high ways and hipocrase that growes in ery garden 130 Ma. I knowe them well I vse them ery day in my porrige go go gossupe Busbey this fellowe hits naile oth head Is. And wert not good also to take a litle burrige she might fare well so and crume them vi^^ breade. Ca. Fy no take them I tell yow v/*'^ tow drames of lecherye 135 on drame of venus here Infidelitye & stone rewe Is. Do yow not meane that hearb wo^ we cuntrie folkes call siphory I near went to leachcraft but I knowe that to be trwe Ca. That same that same mixt all thes w'l* an ownce of poperye then boyle them in maidens water y/*'^ a fire of haste 140 III warni[nge] C ii2 de[fourmed] 113 [a thing] 117 fast fast C 124 workes by this B 1 26 monkeforke B 1 36 1. e. Venus' hair .' Venus, here, .5 nev/e B 137 sixhery C in. m MISOGONUS 241 Is. Thats a wede I thinke we lay people call popye 1st not that yow meane v/°^ the good corne doth wast Ca. That tat tat tat by my faith thou hast good skill Vse them but one night and thoust mend then a pase. and herafter I will warraunt the thoust never fele ill 145 so bet thou near vsest aqua vitse and herb a grase Ma. Yeaue in wenye likt me whole we your tauke whole yow take for your paines my thinke I spea,ke a great deale be be be better then I did Ca. sister I doe not respect my markett or any gaines but onely the comoditie of them that be afflicted 150 Ma. Now god & our blessed Lady e reward yow for your good Phisication He pray for yow trwly & bitterly fort once a day Ca. Yf thou best askt as I know thou shalt by pronosticatione whether he had tow sonnes or no looke thou saist nay. [Ma.] Nay as sure as that good face of yours I do beholde. 155 I nait and nait againe & a fousand tymes nayt . [n]d before I sait He both raile and scole .... [y] well restrayne me but I will near sait. ye do a godles & vncharitable worke [w] well for this tyme I must depart i5o [cjlose it ant were toth great turke [m]e to Madge art thou better then [thou wart] Actus quartus. Scena prima. (Fol- 2 1 r.) Eupelas et Philogonus. Eu. Now surelye Philogonus but that I knowe gods providence in shewinge mercye to his servauntes is alwayes vsiall this wonderfuU thinge I coulde not credite by any humaine evidence it is so straunge that otherwyse I woulde perceauer in deniall ■i57rA]ndC read scold as C 158 [Itma]y .? 5 159 [Ca.]C; [Ca. If ye say it].? 5 160 [Now fare yo]w C 161 [Ma. I'll near disclose] iio/n.B X62 [Is. Nay I'll co]me 3 by om. B 4 i.e. persevere.- perceaue B 532 R 242 MISOGONUS IV. i Phi. In deede Eupelas but that we must not marvaile at ye workes of the Lorde 6 It is so straunge that the like I thinke were never barde yf we shoulde all histories of auncient writers recorde nether I dare say the like shall be sene once afterwarde Eu. Praysed be ye lorde that ever is in mercies most rich and w*in his apoynted tyme his chosen folke doth ayde lo Phi. In tyme in deede Eupelas or otherwise Ide bene ith backhouse dich Yea rather if he had not helpt in graue I had bene layde Eu. I greatly doe reioyce that yet at lenghte your sorrowes are dispatcht & that doble & treble ioyes your calamities do requite Phi. I ioy likewise but vnder hope my chickings are not hatcht 15 I nil to counte of him as yet for so presume I mighte Ali. A comes a comes a comes sexies. Phi. Me thinkes one sais my sonne doth come my spirites are in a dampe now truly Alison hath waighted at the townes end for his comminge Co. He go tell my M"^ He go tell my M' quater 20 Eu. Without doubt Philogonus my harte is in a soden crampe beholde is not this father Codrus woh is hither runinge Co. Whale ye whale ye whale whale giue me Mr & He tell yow newes of your s[onne] will yow not say fa Custers a good boy an he come at townes end Phi, I will say that thou all my ioyes and hartes ease hast begone 25 and He geue the inoughe to spend one yeare spend while thou wilt spe[nd] Co. I am sure Turgus is come for I saw his brindell dogge and our Alison saw a brasse of striplings come wt^^ him 8 once inserted above : om. B 10 or w""" in as C 13 lengthe CB ig «arfhope; as B 17 sexies j-.(/. ; (sexies) ,5 18 z. «. depressed 20 qasXsr s.d. : (quater) B 21 trampe B 23 Whale i.e. What'll Car. IV. MISOGONUS 243 Eu. It is vnpossible this silly thinge shoulde either lye or cogge 29 w'hout double Philogonus in that he spoake yow may beleiue him Is. Now Margerye yow haue served me a trust yeames woud all thy teth were [o] . . ant had not bene for the saddlebackt grombole Ide gott well by this shifte Ma. Woud thy tounge were out witherd wich didst not thou kepe all the rout ites all aboute towne faus ge ge gib what saidst to S' John at last Is. Wert not longe of the sufukes that I went not to my master 35 twod a bin in my way xx« thicke thou woreton morell Ma. Longe a me thou list that thou dost twer longe oth wate[r] Didst not go of thyne owne mind thou grombold [go] [Is.] The Devill cast him and the to like vile wretches a[s] He nether trust the nor such as he is fort while I [h] ... 40 Thy tounges mad oth devils thinge or else thou wo[u] [That scurvy] scrub wont ne[ar leave thy fe] [Co.] Loe yow marke moster how yone coietous scoles (Fol. 2 1 v.) here chide it g[re]ives them that they did not tell, bycause now ites knowne Phi. That I may here what theile say He stand a litle aside 45 Eupelas I woud we had some chers here to sitt downe Co. Woud I had my settel & my boust stoule ye shoud both sitt ye shall se howe wisly He saman them I coud a chopt logetes wones 31 thy] this C o[ut] C 32, 35 read the, i.e. thee, Car. 32 i.e. grumbler 34 [shrifte] B 35 susuks C: snsukesB: read {nsukes 36 way a x^ C read vroim-etoa B, cf. in. iii. 84 37 water [caster] C 38 go [to hell] 39 as [ye are] C 40 h[ave breath] ? 41 [Ma.] as fart of hb. s speech CB woii[d forbear] C 42 fe[ace til death] ? 48 i- '■ examine . . . logic once R 2 244 MISOGONUS iv. i Is. An I were as yonke as er I were that Scottish knaverye I woud quit and yow too Granome. Ma. Woud yow I might chaunce rottle your bones 50 Co. Why how now neighboures whates matter ha whers your woman- hoode leaue this brawlinge & waulinge for shame gupe kisarse will yow none Is. Yow mought haue tolds when yead gone yet & yed had any neighbourhood wesl gett nothinge for yow nowe yes a litle w'** a spone Co. Why faith Isbell what taukes 1st not haue past a couple of shotes 55 & thou knowest what casualties I had in my beasts last hallowmas Ma. Bith meke Isbell I woud thinke I were happy and I coud gett a couple of groates and I woud fare the better fort too ery day this Curstmas Is. Bow wow why shoud we haue lesse then he are not we the nediar and did not we when he were borne both rocke him and cradell him 60 Co. Weale and youle be content Isbell I may chaunce helpe yow to a breder thoughe I did not our Alison a sennit together did swaddell him Intrat Liturgu[s] Li. Now yow be welcome Eugonus as I may sait into Laurentu towne behold at yone same turrit woi yow see is your fathers place Co. Who how my yonge Mr is come in deed nowe by gods nowne 65 ken him well does he not saumple my maistris in plexion & his face Eugonus. O high Jehova wot dost rule wtl» thy almightye power all thinges w^l^in the sacred skies & eke in seas & lande I giue to the redoubted kinge in this so lucke an howre all thakes for that thou hast me plast vppon my country sande 70 52 i.e. gi' up.- gure C 54 i.e. we shall but perhaps read West as CB 61 i.e. breeding sow 62 s.D. [and Eugonus] IV. 1 MISOGONUS 245 Co. Year welcome home M' ge me your hande how ha ye done this many a day I am as gladd for yow as twer ether for my Robin or Tome LL This is one father Custar my M' Tenant he loves yow well I dare sa[y] he was the first man I tell yow that causd yow to be fetcht home Co. I am more then hauf your father M' I causde yow to be fatcht 75 by cocke & pye I diswadid him to send Turg^s for yow Is. Year welcome to our towne. did ye not remember sine I satt by yow & watcht when my maistrisse lay in & we sange luUey by baby & bore ye Eu. I can say nothinge but by information of nuncle & my naunte & y® testificats w"^ Liturg^s from my father did bringe 80 His membres were but slipperye then foole thoughe he be now aD a flannte wherfore & yow sait wexle haue some gbabilation of ery thinge. Intrat C[r] . . . Well said father lets haue out of hand some vndoubted trialt [Tejll thy M"^ Philogonus y* he may heare ye matter discust be longe what Alison what Alison, so me thinkes vA^ lye & all 85 wtJ" a wannion to my M' here thou comst as thadst no lust. Saint Swithun blesse him has even my maistrisse face vp & downe e as bould as ere I was by my troth ye shoude be kist now quite out of all your knowledge growne what name I had given me when I was babtist 90 ome. yi dout B 81, 85 [Co.] C 82 probabilation B : pbubilation C s.D. Cr[ito] C 83 [Crito] B 85 [Is not] M: [Dont] B lye] or tye as C 86 [Come quick] 87 [Ali] C [Now good] / [God and] M Swithin CB 88 [If I wer]e B 89 [Eng.] C [I must be] ? B 90 [Can ye tell] ; and so M 91 [Ma.] C 246 MISOGONUS iv. i Co. Yow moughte lett your betters speake before ye (Fol. 22 r.) Margerye [be] your goodman was but Thurdbarer as goodlye as yow makte Ma. Be go go go good in your office I speake by my masters leave thou sekst to haue all tyth dost if thou canst haue all takte 95 Eug. Giue hir leaue to speake to Codrus it may happe she knowes that thou dos[t] .... to take thy neighboures varditt in such a case thou must not sticke Ma. It speakes in our mother tounge y' yow were a go go good sonne well I wott but I ca ca ca ca cannot thinke onte for twere a vile harde word in ebric[ke] Ali. Ebricke nay it was but greke yet as god woude haute 100 as cuninge as yeare ye mist cushinge once yet Margerye Co. Towa Alison towa towa houre. Crito. As longe as she hites interpretation thoughe she misse y^ name its no great fau[te] Co. No maye but tis to say Ebrickes for greke its playne doggerye Ali. First letter of your names Eue bith same token Custar of my bruckle faste eu[e] 105 tother parte as I takte is ene much like my younge Moster Sognus Li. By my fayth Alison thats well remembred all this is trewe canst thou tell if I name him Ali. Ey Li. How saist wert not Eugonus. Ali. Twas in dede. Is. Twas so no Ma. Faith twas Co. Gods drabes a hayte Eugonus in deed 92 be[lieve] .''5 93 j. e. third borough .5 96 [nott] C 98 It i. r. the name Eugonus 100 read greke yet, 102 i.e. To her, whore! 104 maye i. e. marry ! 105 bruckle fastene C : knuckle fasteen B n 3 Goods B i.e. hight, is called B IV. i MISOGONUS 247 Crito. But can ye tell whether year mistrisse sonne had any privie marke if ye can awnswere me to this poynte He say heis his sonne w'hout fail[e] Is. All we can tell had a too more then a should ha. & so can the preist & the clarke 1 1 5 Co. Shall she Alison shall she. take hir vp for haltinge, god I woud she were ith [J] • • • Ali. An ye be my maistrisse sonne gentleman yeave six toes oth righte foute I haue toulde them many a tyme & often they stand even all by dene Eug. It can n[o]t otherwise be Ime even ye same ye talke one w^hout double & for a ci^tainty if ye will yeist haue my fout sene 120 Co. Maye content Moster come a gods name dauf me of year hose Alison remember thy selfe well & take thy marke righte Eug. Ide rather ye woud for this tyme ripp them & so vewe my toes Ide be loth to haue them pluckt of till I gote bedd for all night Co. Here Alison take my penknif then ites as sharpe as a racer 125 Looke thou ripst it ith seeme & take hede thou hurtes not his foute. Is. Gods blwe hood lets see to I pray yow what were your father a glacier letes haue some rome to or else I may chaunch giue the an arsebutt. Crito. How many yeare a go ist since he were borne can any of ye tell, lay all year heades together & make trewe acownt. 130 Co. It were after the risinge rection ith north I remember well where was come then Alison letes see how that will mounte 116 Jfaile] C 119 Ive C 1 2 1 Maye ?. e. marry ! «. c. doff me off .• dans me of B 124 for all night cf. 11. iii. 113 "7 blwe] blive C 132 come] tome C how] you C 248 MISOGONUS iv. i Ma. I gatherd pe pe pe pescods at bau bau bau baules bush then Ime sure & brought them to my maistrisse when she was w^t child Co. Thou wert nether oth court nor oth counsaile speake Alison how saist were not pipers hill then the rye feilde 136 All. Ey maye wante. Co. why vmbert then ites at least a score Three & three, three & three, whats- all that Ali. Threet no more I hate now heis twentye & fo . . . our torn were borne but a yeare aftere I can te . . . 14° [Lit.] This agreis beleue me to what should we say ... . [Co.] Why she has augru in hir she woud tell ye whates (Fol. 22 v.) thirty & thirty [tymes] . . . Crito. What tyrae oth yeare wert, when year maistrisse him bore Co. Ime sure Alison when thou camst from hir laboure y^ wert all [to be] ... . Ali. Custar Custar dost remember we clementid when she were b . . . 145 & y" best rememberd a saint Clemens day I were sent her gossups to ... . Co, Mas ites trwe & we had peny dole yth honer of S Nicolas whe sh an a good token S Stevens day that year fell iust in Curstmas [w] . . . Eug. Say no more heres prouf inough depart yow a gods n[ame] home I will se that my father shall yow liberally content 150 Crito, Codrus go you tell yi' M' that his sonne now is come ha heres a letter y/<'^ his brother from Apolonia hath sent 133 i.e. Ball's Bush M 135 [houre] cf. 102 137 i.e. Ay, marry, I warraunt; Ey mayd waute C vmbert i. e. number it aj ^ 139 fo[ure] C 140 te[ll flat] i? i? 141 read to: [more] 142 [thirty].? 144 to be [dirty] ? i. e. dirtied ; [full of snow] B omitting to be to be C without mark of omission 146 [seke] C 147 yth honer] xxxner C whe] in llie C 148 w[eke] C IV. 1 MISOGONUS 249 Co. Letter good god where be my wittes I coud once a letter my patnuster I ha sounge yet cu spiritu tuo w* preist ith kirke, when wer howlinge and what said my father ? what said a may thoust be a man one day Cust[er] 155 gods ludd I near left my booke till I cam to the houre a catar waulinge Ali. An thou woudst not another woud I coud a had woud shoudst knowe as good as tow I coud a had as vp right a fellowe as ere trod on netes lether Co. why & all the wenches ith towne were yearnest & breame of me thou knowst well inough when I were in my lustistes there a come to me twenty wo silli- boukes togeather 160 Phi. I can suffer no longer Eupelas. Co. Here he comes. Li. Accordinge to your worships comaundement. Phi. I hard all Liturgus o welcome my sonne 165 Eug. o my father Phi. O my Sonne Eugo. Blesse me my father Phi. God blesse the my sonne. Eternall god wol» onely guidst thimperiall pole aloft 170 & also this terrestriall globe w* all humaine affaires thoughe frouninge fortune w't hir force doth tipe & tourne vs oft thou canst miraculously helpe thy servaunts vnawares If twenty tounges & twenty mouthes I had to sound thy praise or if I had kinge davids vaine or Nesters eloquence 175 they would not serue me at this tyme due thankfulnes to raise towards me for thy vnspeakable & wonderful! benificence 155 reacf-what said a? may, i.e. marry, i";6 read the, houre, cf. I. 102 157 woud^ i.e. I would {cf. 11. v. iS).' om. B 159 pronounced enow 160 read xao lo ith tether C : together B 163 rea;/ commaundement — 2SO- MISOGONUS 'V. 1 welcome home my sonne my sone my comfort & my ioy thou art the lenghtner of my life the curar of my care here of my house possession take & all my lands 6ioy i8o 1 thinke my selfe as happy now as if a duke I wear use haue I Lorde to reioyce whom thus thou hast pi-servde [a]nd landes even from my youth fare from my native soy[le] .... [pjtunes rage & Eolus force I might haue well bin starvd not bin ready e at nede to helpe at ery broyle. 185 [And no]w when I am home redust such a fathe[r (Fol. 23 r.) [who] tendrethe me so lovingly that one me he doth be his landes & countes it happynes he is to me so kinde O father deare, O father deare what shall I say or do 189 Phi. I am able to speake no more my harte for gladnes s[o] doth melte Eupelas I praye yow & the rest to accompany vs [in] Eu. The like inward motion of all your well willers here Is felte our gaudeamus I speake for vs all is not now to begin Actus 4 scena 2 Intrat Misogous Orga[lus &] Oenophilus. Mi. Gods precious boddy this counterfett skippthirft is come all ready, drawe your weapons like champions & kepe him from possession. Eugo. Liturgus is this my brother thou taukst one that come this way so heady lorde what meaneth he will he barr my father from his habitation Phi. Away away thou branlesse foole wilt thou never be wise 5 stand out of my way wagghalter or I will britche the nakte Mi. Whatsomere he be that chalings anye thinge here He indite him at the sise ist kepe yow from settinge a foute within this thresolde as stout as ye m[a] . . . 180 ». e. enjoy as C, altered, by Barjona {?),from orig. anoy 182 [Eug. Great ca]use C 183 [On sea] B 184 [By Ne]ptunes B 185 [If thou hadst]j5 186 [dolfinde].- [tofindejC 187 be[stowe] C it.e. skipthrift (>V3.yom.B 7 chalings j«C.5, «/■. I. iv. 23 8 ma[kte] C IV. ii MISOGONUS 251 Eugo. Alas brother I come for no landes I cume to see my father I & to doe my deutye vnto him as it doth me become 10 Mi. Brother thou landleper thou runagat roge ey brothers! me by all the devils in hell I will surky the thome Eupe. Fye vppon the Misogonus wilt thou not yet be wiser shame the devill rather & repent ye of thy wickednes. Phi. Hange & thou wilt knave I care not I be a karder & a dicer 15 He near knowe the for my sonne herafter bycause thou art so graceles Co. Gods trunnion Alison go thy wayes & fatch me hether my gose spitt Sognus will near be well till he has some ons wild bloud lett out Li. Good Maisters both lett me request one thinge at your handes yet youe to forgiue year sonne S^ & yow to doe your deuty as ye ought 20 Phi. So heile aske me forgiuenes ile pardon this ones him Ime content & he shall haue a childes part too for all this his stubbernenes Mi. A childes parte q^ ye and aske forgiuenes nay soft I near yet that .... ame I now come to my childs parte nay ther yeist haue more frow[e] Phi. Go shake thy heiles then wt** a devils name come foUowe me my ma . . . 35 weile be mery w'^^in Ile near take so much thought as I ha done Exeunt Philogonus. Eupe. Eugo. Li. Crito. Co. Al[y.] Mi. ha ye let them slipte by ye yow hedgecrepers come lie teche ye to did I trust yow to kepe this waye & yow lett them be gone 12 surky or surty; surly CB : ? sur kythe <:/. note 15 be i.e. by, for 2: i. e. him this ones as C 23 [ment] C 24 ther] then CB frowe [rdnes] C 25 ma[tes] s.D. [Is. Ma.] 27 2>. slip tell ye C ; telle ye B to [break pates] 252 MISOGONUS IV. u [Or.] Holde your handes when year well Sr what man near be so ... ■ ites a shame for ye woud ye haue vs to do that your selfe d . . 3° [Oy.J Ye may fly vp toth roust wtl^ Jacksons hens, come go singe benedicite giue me one blowe bith mas [Mi.] Ye hennardly knaves yow crye me a mercy or ile what ye coystriles awnsweare ye me thus your . . As fare as I see your selfe may now go a delvin[ge] 35 [W]e a begginge wear worthy to b[e en]tertained a[t] .... [a]re yow in year pilats voyce still ile n[ot takt (Fol. 23 v.) as I did] . . . [s]hall neds serve ile serve for some vauntadge [ey I will] . . [Yo]w catchinge caterpillers either doe hereafter as I [shall ye bid] [Or] else avoyde even presently & gett ye hence toth devill 40 . . Mary their woud I hate cume Oynophilus I knowe whether to [goe] thers a gentleman w'hin this mile & halfe hath sent for vs thrise . . Thers near a gentleman in this shire but will be glad of the worst of vs [too] yf they woud not wear able to liue man with coginge at cardes & at dice Exeunt Orgalus et Oenophil[us] Mi. How say ye to these vipers haue I brought them vp to this end 45 when they haue trayned me to this state then like white liver Jakes to flye Yf god be god ile be revenged thoughe all that I haue I spend happen whotwill tone of them or my brother shall surelye dye 29 [curst] 30 d[are not] 31 i.e. Oe. [strike if thou durst] 32 [He showe the 1 care not].'' 33 [break your head] 34 [own lord] 35 [Or.] C fare] fine C5 ; [for bread] 36 at [a word] 3? [Oe.] C [What] 38 [If I] 39[Mi.]C 41 [Or.] C 43 [Oe.] ^'S i.e. how 'twill ; whot will : £ IV. ii MISOGONUS 253 What Hercules coude abid to be thus trodden vnder foute the devils a sleape I thinke harte all all goes against here 50 to humble my selfe to my father now it woud nothinge me bout & to gote lawe w* this newe comer I shoud be near the nere. god, o devill, o heaven, o hell, my harte now rents in twaine a comes, a comes, a comes I shall dye in desperation to hange my selfe surely I thinke now I must be fayne 55 1 haue sinned so much that Ime quite past hope of salvation. exit miso. Actus 4 scena 3 Intrat Cacurgus. Ca. Alta voce, Eay laud laud laud (decies) how shall I doe (toties) Eay well a d[ay] (sexies) Ime vndone (toties) gravi voce (o o o) tanqua castrator porcoru vociferaru emuge nasfl et singulties clama aliquando. 1st be tournd out a s'vice now ery bodye sales 5 & why? maye bycause I haue bin an old s^'vaunt ith house trusty & trewe when I do all that I can foam they make me a foole i. my old days theile ha the old foole no more now they say theile haue a newe What were I best to do now S^s w<=t on yow can tell is there any good body amonge ye will take me in for god sake 10 & there be ere a gentleman here woud haue a foole w'^" him dwell lett him speake an a my worde a shall a verye foole take And I might be but winterd this yeare I woud near care A god helpe te William now thart put to thy nede will no body take pity one a stray foole, here longe inoughe I ma[y] stare 15 & ther were yet a crier to helpe me at a proelimation to rede CO here c>- hire fii i.e. boot 52 i. e. go io i \axiA only twice in B I read singultiens as M : singultier C 7 i. e. for 'em 12 i. e. and on my 15 skare C 254 MISOGONUS IV. Ill Is ther near a cryer amonge yow good laud what luks tis. an yow knewe my pperties some body woud ha me Ime sure He crye as well my selfe as I can & I pray yow pardon me a[n I] . . . I dare swere it woud wine your hart & ye hard me but l[u] . . 20 O o o o yes . [h]eir be any gentleman [n]y gentlewoman . [ow]ne or oth cuntrie .... [f]or Saint charitie 25 [strjaye fool[e] .... [here on this s]to[ole] Tha[t c] (Fol. 34 r.) & y' can [pele] .... That can chair[e .... 30 & y' can peke pies That can rocke ye cradle & y' can bare a bable That can gether stickes & that can chopp lekes 35 That can tourne spitt & yt can bith fier sitt That can ringe a bell & that can tales tell That can whope at noone 40 & daunce when dinners done That can washe dishes & yt can make ringes a rushes That can houlde a candeli & that can babies dandell 19 [mis] C 20 lu[re] B 22 [Yf t]hejr C 34 [Oth t]owne C 25 [That will] C 26 [Receve a] [One is] B 28 c[an] C 45 23 [Or a]ny C 27 [Sittinge].- 255 so IV. Ill MISOGONUS That can thresse maulte & that can chope saulte That can hold his finger in a hole and therby linger That can lay downe maidens bedds & that can hold ther sickly beds That can play at put pin blowe poynte & near lin That can knowe my right hande & tell twenty & near stande 55 That can find a titmuns nest & keape a Robin redbreste That can eat & drinke & play singe songes both night & day That can go toth winde mill 60 & that can doe what sere ye will And now for all this my taske small wages I will aske A cape onelye once bith yeare & some prety cuUerd geare 65 And drinke when sere I will & eat my belly full For more I will not seke he that will haue me lett him speake. What say ye Maisters, speake will no body take me vp for poore p[itty] 70 no body care forth poore now. poores alwayes thrust toth wall fooles now may go a begging ery boddyes become so witty now a gods name ye woud laughe I thinke & ye shoud see me fall 3 i. e. ne'er cease 55 i. e. without stopping 66 will altered from wuU 256 MISOGONUS IV. lii Alas good William how doe thy elbowes what more anger yett faith what remedye, I knowe none I but ene patience 75 Ey but for all that y" wert wont after a fall to haue a good hi[tt] this is ene that last tyme of askinge. speake & yeile ha me or h[e] . . . Well yeile not ha me ye say. bare witnes then Ime .... let me see now william w"^ way standes the wi[n] . Is ter near a wisard amonge yow can tell He ... . 80 JVTasse this geare will not coten I must another wa[y] .... Stande I praye the I woud but ene see w«l» w [They] say it[s good] lucke to seke ons fortune [I thinke I] must pl[ay y]e [foole] sti[ll] ..... .... 8s we yong[e Maister (FoL 24 v.) . . . [will not] away some [pelfe] . . . [when I ha done if a]ny body[e] nd their wenches to [me I t]each a sewpng] . . . [this tyme cfe] ene haue anymore for me yeist sait y[ea]r selfe exit [Cacurgus] Intrant Liturgus et Misogonus. Actus 4 sc[e] . . . I w[ar]rant yow I fayth Mr I my selfe dare vndertake that youre father shall forgiue yow even from his very harte he loues yow full dearly Miso. both for your owne & my maist[risse sake] Doubt yow not he will interpret ech thinge in ye best parte . . What a vilane ame I Liturgus that haue him so lightly estemed 5 nay that haue reviled him & derided him to his teth O Christ how often haue I ye blessed name of gods maiesty blasphem[ed] that I am now deservedly in state of pdition every man seth 77 that reorf the he[nce] .5 79 win[d] C 81 [find] 83 ene] ere 5 w[ay the wind is] 83 ons] our C [ith West] ? 84 [Tis East] I thinke, I . . . still [I wis] 86 , . . we] or [ou]re 88 [will se]nd B 89 & yon hant C : 81. you haue B s.D. -Cacurgus C's insertion^? space betw. eval and worn edge MS. s.D. sce[na 4] C i [Lit.] C 5 [Mis.] C IV. iv MISOGONUS 257 Nay good M"" Miso . let such fansies go out of your head take harte of grace man that was but a cast of youthfuUnes 10 thoughe yow were by the fralnes of your flesh in your sins almost de[ad] Yet yow may as S. Paule saith by y« spirit of god liue againe vnto right[eousnes] Thou puttest me in good comfort Liturgus I will never dispare my trust I thanke Christ in his merites is assuredly fixte but my life hath ben so lewdly ledd, y* I shall neare be w'hout care 15 I can haue no mirth but it will be v/^^ miseries continually mixte Yow harpe all of one stringe I praye yow leaue that fonde speache thoughe your brother he hath found he loues yow near a whitt lesse I knowe what he hath saide to me since him home I did fetche if he knewe yow repentid yow might haue at his handes even what ye woud w[yshe] 20 I am so ashamed that I dare near come more in his sighte & Ime striken w* such a terroure y' I dare not giue him one worde Yeist be as well entertaind as ere ye were He warrant ye this nighte humble but year selfe to him & yow shall sit downe p^sently at his owne board [Mi.] I dare not, I dare not, I dare not. praye the speake one it no more 25 I will rather rufi quite away before He go w'l* the [Lit.] Why He intreate him for yow & then to yow bringe him out a dore if I do not reconcile yow, lay all the blame in me . . God giue grace yt my fathers anger by his perswation may be mitigated if heile now take me to mercy He never hereafter displease him any more 3° g TLit.] C 12 S JoaneC 13 [Mi.] C i? [Lit.] C 21 [Mi.] C 23 [Lit.] C 28 in so MS. CB 29 [Mi.] C 532 ^ 2S8 MISOGONUS iv. iv Who would ere haue thoughte y' my couradge so sone should haue bin aba[ted] a vilde wretch Misogonus coudst thou not haue taken heed of this [before] O all ye youthfuU race of gentle bloude take heed by this my fall trust not to much to your heritadge & fortunes vayne alurements take heed of ill company, flye cardes & dice, & pleasures bestiall 35 eshcewe a hore as ye woud a scorpian & beware of hir intisments Children obay your parents v/^^ dwe reverence & feare care not for your vaine pastymes for they be but momentarye schoUers your maisters good lessones often reed & heare beside godliness & learninge all thinges in this worlde are but transitorye 40 Intrant Phi. et. lit. , . Will he thinkes the Liturgus wth all his harte Mr e sinned in the sight o[f] god & against yow deare father most g .... tymes in stubber . e misvsinge of you both in worde & deed . . . . now I repente & ye w^li I lament most bitterly 45 [e] thoughe v[n]worthy yow to fo[rgive] me & helpe m [spe]ake [from] thy h[ar]te Mi[sogonus my s , . . . {Here the MS. breaks off) 32 i.e. ah! vile C 36 read eschewe as CB vj reference B 41 [Mis.] C: [Phi.] B 42 [Lit. Yes] B 43 [Mis. I hav]e C ^^^^^^}7J ^■' g["evonsly] B 44 [Many] C stubber[n]e .• slubberly C 45 fWhich] C 46 [Beseching]e .• [Pardon m]e C m[e in my nede] C 47 [Phi.] C [Dost thou] my hane CB {but the uf per fart of t}iy is clear) my s[onne] : Mis . . . CB {but it is a small m) 48 only this line wanting at bottom offol. 24 V. ■■a NOTES SUPPOSES The number following the page-number indicates the numbered line of text. ' Ar. I ' = Ariosto's prose form. ' Ar. 2 ' = „ verse „ ' Ar. ' = both forms. The Italian edition followed for both is that of F. L. Polidori, 1857, as reprinted 1894. P. 11. Title. SVPPOSES : explained by Gascoigne in the Prologue as mistaken suppositions (the form in use to-day) ; though his instances confirm the sense of Ariosto's title Gli Suppositi, 'The Substitutes,' with a glance at the notion of supposititious children or changelings, and in both authors the title is meant to include the personation of Erostrato's father by the ' Scenasse ' and the substitution of Philogano for the servant's real father, Cleander, by protection in childhood and by the servant's pretence at Ferrara. ' Supposes ', i. e. suppositions, was also the name of a social game : Steevens on Taming, v. i. 120 quotes Greene's Metamorphosis (Pref.) 'After supposes, and such ordinary sports, were past, they fell to prattle.' 9. The names of the Actors : from the list in Ar. 2, with slight change of order and spelling, but none of name save the substitution of ' Paquetto & Petrucio ' for the single ' Servo del Sanese '. Gascoigne makes slight additions to the brief descriptions which Ariosto appended only to his second list. 10. Balia : ' Nutrice ', Ar. i. Gascoigne's ' the ', prefixed to his de- scription of the first four characters, seems to recognize nurse, young woman, doctor, and parasite as stock personages of Italian comedy ; ' pantaloon ' would be unjust for Cleander (see below). 11. Polynesta : ' Polimnesta ' Ar. i, ' Polinesta ' Ar. 2. 15. Dvlypo, fayned seruant "I : in S.D. and prefixes Gascoigne, like 16. Erostrato, fayned master i Ariosto, calls the real master Dulipo throughout until v. 10, where he appears as ' Erostrato ' ('Erostrato vero ' Ar. 2, v. 11). For clearness' sake Gascoigne, unlike Ariosto, assigns them their feigned names also in this list, and appends ' fained ' to Erostrato in several S.D. of Acts iv and v. The three quartos of Gascoigne all use indiflferently the spellings 'Dulipo' (Ar. i)and ' Du- lippo ' (Ar. 2). < , . 17,18. Dalio &= Crapyno: specified as 'cuoco' and 'ragazzo mAr.2. 19. Scenase : ' Sanese ' Ar., a Sienese. 21. Petrucio : a name perhaps first found in Reuchlin's Latin play, Henno ; ist ed., entitled Scenica Progymnasmata, 1498. Shakespeare borrowed the name, with much else, from our play: but the form 'Petru- s 2 26o NOTES DR. PERS. chio'jused in Fol. 1623 to guide English readers to the correct pronuncia- tion (we should consistently have had also Luchentio and Lichio), does not appear in Supposes before Hawkins's edition, 1773. This character is mute. See note on ii. 3. S.D. 23. Neuola; as Ar. 2; 'Nebbia' Ar. I. 25. Phylogano, a Scycilian : so spelt almost uniformly, obscuring the meaning, 'child-lover,' apparent in Ar. ('Filogono,vecchio '),who equally locates him at Catanea in Sicily. Cf. Philogonus of Misogonus. 26. Lytio : ' Lico' Ar. i, ' Lizio ' Ar. 2, ' Licio' as borrowed in Shake- speare's Taming. 27. "a« Inkeeper: Ar. 2 merely ' Un Ferrarese' ; and in iv. 7, for ' this honest man your hoste ', ' Questo giovene, Che nostra guida e sc6rta dovrebb' essere,' of whom Filogono says iniv. 8 that he thought he had made a perpetual friend. The sole points in Ar. that support the idea of Host is his remark (iv. 3) about the bad lodging on the way from Ravenna, and Lizio's, iv. 6, about the open inn-doors. P. 12. The Prolosr ^ ue : a mere piece of word-play, an early instance, on the title ; borrovved in substance from the prologues of Ariosto, who claims that his changing of old men is a novel addition to the old theme of child-changing ; disclaims alike any kinship between his ' supposi- zioni ' (pun on ' postures ') and those described in the licentious books of the classical Elephantis, and any sophistical dialectic purpose ; and (in the prose) acknowledges some debt to the Eunuchus of Terence and the Captiviot Plautus, writers whom he chooses as his special models. 3. trauayles : labours ; but Gascoigne had seen some travel in France, c. 1563-4 (Z>. N. B.). presently : at once, now, as II. ii. 10. 6. meaning of our supposes : i. e. sense of the title. . An unrecognized word would hardly be chosen as such. Cf. note on title above. 7. percase : perchance, a favourite Latinism with Gascoigne. 8. sophisticall, &c. : i. e. that they are in for a display of logic or dis- puting, such as are found in Heywood's Play of the Wether, Pardoner and Frere, and parodied in Lyly's Sapho S^ Phao and the grave-diggers in Hamlet. II. shadowes: pictures. In Lyly's Ca;«/aj/i?, i. 3 ' to shadow a lady's face ' is to paint her portrait. Allusion to the allegorical emblems with which rooms were sometimes decorated, e.g. those at Hardwicke House reproduced in Nichols's Progresses ofEliz. ii. 124, and cf. the interpreta- tion of such in the Quarrendon Entertainment, ib. iii. 200, 206. 13. Suppose : prostitute ; cf. Ariosto's allusion to the courtesan Elephantis. this our Suppose . . . a freeman : closely combined from the two Italian prologues. 1 7. the stranger . . . the familiar '. the ' Scenasse ', and Philogano. 21-3. hearde almoste . . . suffi.se : not in Ar., and not true, each ' sup- pose ' being adequately explained as the play proceeds. P. 13. Actus primus. Scena i. : the division into Acts and Scenes is that of all editions. In Act i it follows that of Ar. I ; in Acts ii, iii that of Ar. 2, though splitting iii. i (the division of Act iii in Ar. 1 is widely diflferent) ; in Act iv it agrees with both ; and in Act v with the prose, I. i SUPPOSES 261 save in sec. 9, 10. For the text of Act i G. uses both Italian forms in sec. I, 2, 3, and the verse for se. 4. He translates sense rather than words, but closely, with some exception in the two soliloquies of sc. 3. I. Here: Hawkins alone, 1773, inserts a prefix for the first speaker in each scene. It is hardly needed. 3. portals : recesses or partitions, not doors, which are substituted below for the jars or cooking-vessels of the Italian, Gascoigne missing Polinesta's pun on the ears (i. e. handles) of pitchers. In Heywood's Proverbes (reprint 1 906, p. 65) ' small pitchers have wyde eares'. Cf. Rich. Ill, II. iv. 37. 15-16. marie . . . my cappe: not in Ital. The brooch fastened the feather in the cap. P. 14, 27. personage: person. Cf. Bug. I. i. 11 note. 39. In deede . . . loue : (3 11.) not in Ital. 43-4. pitie . . . pater noster : preserving Ar.'s alliteration ' nfe per compassione o pensione, nfe per prece o prezzo '. Cf. Euphues, ii. 28 1. 30 ' nothing shall alter my minde, neither penny nor Pater noster '. 49. tell u. wise tale : ' dir qualche pazzia,' say what I should be sorry for. 56. yet : after all, as II. i. 56. P. 15, 65. make . . . deintie: make a difficulty, as Rom. and Jul. I. v. 21. So ' make strange ' 1. 68. 80. whiche ? : Ital. il quale (not interrog. quale f) justifies Haw- kins in inserting dash. 84. studie in this Citie : the un iversity was founded in 1 264, reorganized by Leonello d'Este 1442, closed in 1794, and reopened in 1824. Fer- rara in Ariosto's day had a population of about 80,000. 85. in the street: ' nella Via Grande,' an actual street. 88. apply his study : so iv. iii. 60, and Taming, I. i. 18 'philosophy Will I apply '. 91. only : in Ar. I only. Crapino and Dalio are Ferrarese, not in the secret (11. ii. 40-1). 92. with the ticrning of a hand \ aLga.mRoist.Doister,u. in. 6; 'quel di medesimo ' Ar. I only. P. 16, 99. profited: see 11. i. 47-8, and compare the natural talent of the lost well-bom in Shakespeare's Perdita, Marina, and Cymbeline's sons. 108-9. Doctor Dotipole : i. e. blockhead (' il dottoraccio ' Ar.), as if from dote, N. E. D. quoting an instance of 1401, though no earlier association of it with 'Doctor', which appears again 1581 and in The Wisdom of Doctor Dodypoll, anon. 1600. 1 10. lye vpon: a Latinism (instare). It. 'con ogni instanzia pro- cura'. Cf. II. iv. 85 'heth on my maister continually', i.e. urges him, and our ' incumbent on '. r , . 111. luskie yonker: 'galante giovene' Ar. 2. Luskte, properly ' sluggish ', fr. sb. lusk, sluggard, is like luskish associated with desires!; cf N E. D. Yonker, again ill. i. 9, fr. lA.'D'cA.joncker. in Coystrell: bearer of a coustille (O.F.) or poniard, then with idea of mean degree, and knavery (Nares). Lyly's Moth. Bomb. II. i. 48 'such double coystrels ' 262 NOTES I- ' 115. S.D. a worde or two to the doctor: this and all unbracketed S.D. (and marginal notes) are Gascoigne's. Placed usually at end of scene, they sometimes refer to a previous line ; this refers to the aside II. iv. 4, also G.'s insertion. The Italian lacks all S.D. save an occasional descriptive word like ' servo ', or ' solo ', attached to a character's name in Ar. I. Scena 2 . . . Balya, Nourse : not present in Ar. I. Were these dames, &c. : was it ladies I saw ? P. 17, 5-6. best poynt in his tables : i. e. be made a cuckold, meta- phor from backgammon. Cf. 'play'd false at tabelles ' Bug. iv. iv. 41 note. 14. telles: counts. 22. Chiromancer: cf. H. C. Agrippa's De Incert. &=_ Van. Scientia- rum (1530), c. 35 for a list of learned writers on palmistry. The line of life (merely ' linea ' Ar.) points to the first finger ; the mount of Venus is the rounded lump of muscle at the base of the thumb. Cf. M. Bomb. II. iii. 54 ' The line of life is good, Venus mount very perfect ; you shall haue a scholler to your first husband '. 23. What is not Pasiphilof: noi'm Ax. Cf. the ' Graeculus esuriens ' Juv. Sat. iii. 74-8 ' Augur . . . magus . . . omnia novit '. 30-1. Bibler . ..Bibbeler: Ar. 2 ' dotto nella Bibia (local pronunc. of Bibbid) ... ma ne la bibia \quasi bibita] Ch' esce fuor della botte '. P. 18, 52. Otranto : taken 1480, by Pasha Achmet, officer of Mohammed II, with 4,000 men; a sequel to their overthrow of the Eastern Empire (1453), and subjection of Greece (1458-60). See Machiavelli, Star. Fior. viii. 4. 53-4. by reading: i.e. lecturing; 'a leggere Fui qui condotto' Ar. 2. 54. within twentie yeares: in V. v. 130 he lost his son 'eighteen yeares since', and so Ar. i. 55. Ducats: of very varying value. The Venetian gold ducat of 1284 was worth about gj. N.E.D. n. 'pickling: may be identical with pigling (C), 'trifling'; Ar. 'ciance'. Burns's Halloween, 'a pickle nits,' a small quantity (Whitney). 60. The trade of Lawe, &c. : G. translates freely Ar.'s Latin, ' Opes dat sanctio lustiniana ; Ex aliis paleas, ex istis collige grana,' taken, says Cleander, ' d' una nostra glosa elegantissima ', i. e. from some com- mentary on the Pandects. On the other hand Lyly quotes as an 'olde verse' — 'Galen gyueth goods, lustinian honors'- Euph. i. 251 1. 34- boystrous: massive, bulky. King John, iv. i. 95 'what small things are boisterous there ' (in the eye). 61. royst: riot, bluster ; needy ruffianism opposed to elegant ease. 70. fiue yeres old : now, therefore, aged twenty-three. P. 19, 74. gayson: rare. Euph. i. 195 1. 19 'Neyther is that geason, seeing ... it is proper to all ', &c. . 92. came but from thence since : i. e. I have come straight from there. But ' since ' is used thrice in Hoist. Doist. (i. iii. 79, iii. iii. 149, III. V. 5) for ' at once'. I. 11 SUPPOSES 263 95-6. father yet aliue : so Gremio in Taming, ii. 396 ' An old Italian fox is not so kind, my boy '. P. 20, 113. Saincts euen : eve or vigil of a saints-day. 117. a dead mans faste: i.e. one never broken; Oleander's fare is always poor. G. changes Ar.'s imperative 'Parla coi morti, che digiunano altresl '. 121. come if thou wilte: in Plautus's Captivi, i. 3 Hegio, after lamenting his son's capture, asks the parasite to dine in much the same terms. 123. not to seeke : i.e. an adept at getting dinners. 2. S. Nicolas : see under Date. Launce invokes the students' saint to aid Speed's reading, Two Gent. ill. i. 106. 2-3. bicause . . . as though : ' why ... on the pretext that ' (a true one, 1. 9) ; Ital. ' perch^ . . . quasi ch' io abbia a mangiare con la sua bocca ', i. e. as if it were necessary for me to fast along with him. P. 21, 9. his oivne dishe : again Gascoigne seems to misunderstand ' senza altri vantaggiuzzi che in uno medesimo desco (table) ha sempre da me '. 12. trauell: travail, as yet indifferently spelt. 16. points . . . but three, &c. : metal-tagged laces to hold up trunk- hose. G. alters Ar. 2 ' Due ' in order to introduce ' codpeece '. 19-20. mo pastures to passe in : same metaphor Glasse of Gouern- ment, iv. 3 ' change of pasture maketh fatte calues '. In Ar. he com- pares himself to otter or beaver, ' in acqua e in terra pascere Mi so.' 20-1. of housholde with: in Glasse of G. iv. 5, expressly implying admission to the same table. 23. see their Caters, &c. : cf. ill. i. 52-5. 38. bring so many : in Plant. Menaechmi, I. iv. 4-5 Cylindrus, bid prepare for three, replies ' lam isti sunt decem ; [ Nam parasitus octo hominum munus facile fungitur'. P. 22, 58. a^^ects : ' desideri,' ' tormenti,' Ar. 64-8. /(7r as the fiie . . . owne consumption: and 71-4 / haue free libertie . . . desire, not in Ar. 66. colling: embracing, Fr. accoler {col) ; 'cull,' Bug. v. ix. 26. P. 23, 79. buzard: poor kind of hawk, useless for falconry, so ' stupid ', as Taming, ii. 206. 81-7. I know . . . dolours : not in Ar. 87. Mumpsimus: 'tisico' (consumptive) Ar. 2. 97. state : estate, income. 104. prolong my life : by affording hope, as in Ar. 2. 106. S.D. a sticke in Ms hande : G.'s addition, cf. ill. i. 4. P 24, I. in his skinne: substituted for the untranslatable play— ' D. che h di Erostrato ? (i. e. where is he ?). C. Di E. sono libri, veste, denari,' &c. . . _. , , 4 Finde him f . . .by the weeke, &c. : 1. e. board hmi, as Sim. t ish s SuPfilicacyon for Beggers (c. 1529), p. 3 'Well glotons to finde at home ' In Ar. ' i? che m'insegni E. (direct me to). C. A compito, o a distesa ? ' (teach you by the lesson, or as regular tutor). Dar da mangiare a compito ' is used of board allowance. 15-16. Casket . . . basket : giving the assonance but not the swear- 264 NOTES I- IV word' of 'capeslro . . . canestro' Ar. 2. The basket reappears, III. i. 1-2. - , . , ^ . 11 17. Duies Palace : ' alia porta del Duca ' Ar. 2 only, i. e. the Castello Vecchio, the great four-towered fortress adapted as a ducal residence by Pietro di Benvenuto in 1477 (E. G. Gardner's Dukes and Poets m Ferrara, p. 151 note), and now used for municipal purposes. Ihe contemporary Duke (until 1505), complimented IV. viii. 36, was Ercole 1. The play was produced at his son's Court (Alfonso I) 1509. 20 S.D. commeth in agayne : merely to show the continuity with Act ii. ■ u ■ Act II : in sec. i, iii, iv the Italian prose and verse are both in use, in sc. ii the verse only. There is occasional slight abbreviation, insertion of English proverbial phrases, and adaptation of allusions. 2-3. euery streete . . . by lane : ' or per la piazza, or pel Cortil' Ar. P. 25, 13-14. Parat . . . crie knappe . . . knaue : not in Ar. Knap (OE. cnapa, boy, knave) is given in Dial. Diet, as ' impostor', 'cheat', Yks., Notts. The proverb is not in Heywood. Cf. the refrain in Roist. Doist. III. iii. 80 'Good night Roger old knave, knave knap'. — So Philocrates exhorts his disguised servant Tyndarus, Captivi, II. i. 44-52. 19. won the wager: merely, carried our point, ' vinto il partito' Ar. P. 26, 48-9. books . . . tosse: i.e. Polinesta. Euph. i. 241 1. 23 'I will to Athens ther to tosse my bookes'. ' Tossing-irons," in Fletcher's Woman's Prize, ii. 5, are tuming-'nons, i. e. toasting-forks. 60-2. when . . . of shame : not in Ar. 69-70. rode . ..to solace . .. the foorde, &c. : in the Italian he rides out (drives, Ar. 2) by the Porta del Leone (' Porta degli Angeli ' Ar. 2, the present N. gate) and crosses the Po, some three miles to N., with a definite mission beyond it— in Ar. 2 he meets the Sienese on S. bank. G. keeps the river and large towns, but deletes the minor topography. No St. Antony's gate is known at Ferrara, or in Stow's London. 71-2. as . . . none of the wisest: inserted by G. from the servant's later statement, 1. 130, which is found in Ar. P. 27, 79-80. tremblyng voyce : said, less well, of the Sienese, Ar. 2. 93. Coimte: 'duca' Ar., where this imaginary embassy is rather returning from Naples with presents. G. also deletes the reference to the duchess : see Introd., under Date. 103. Customers: ' questi pubblici Ladroni,che doganieri si chiamano ' Ar. 2. Cf. Philogano's indignation in IV. iii. 15-24. Ariosto returns to their abuse in // Negromante, iii. 4. The inconvenience and loss must have been heavy in a country of so many small states. They are not quite unrepresented in Latin comedy. In Ttinummus, iii. iii. 66-8 the absence of the seal on a forged letter is to be attributed to its opening by the ' portitores ' ; and in Menaech. l. ii. 5-9 the husband of ajprying wife says ' Portitorem domum duxi '. Cf. also Phormio, I. ii. 100. P.28,107-8. headnorfoote: 'caponfevia' Ar. l,'caponfe coda' Ar.2. II 6-1 7. dublet and . . . hose : ' spoliare a la camicia ' Ar. i , ' fino a le brache ' Ar. 2. 123. otter the stile, &c. : not in Ar. ; ' Ye would be over the stile ere II. i SUPPOSES 265 ye come at it,' Heywood's Proverbes, p. 97, ed. igo6. Cf. Pamphilus's impatience with Davus' long account, Andria, 11. ii. 16-24 ' Quorsum- nam istuc ? '. P. 29, 169. by the yeere: G.'s addition. Ar. 2 has ' Per dua milia ducati, e per tre milia Di sopraddotte ', i. e. pin-money, to match Cleander's addition in i. 2. P. 30, 185-6. he thatfisheth . . . cods heade : not in Ar. I S.D. Paqvetto &-» Petrvcio : G. adds the mute Petrucio because the Sienese's ' two or three men ' of 11. i. 71 (' con tre cavalli ' Ar. l) are all to lodge with Erostrato (11. i. 177-8), and have not yet found their quarters. At 1. 16 below Ar. I has ' voi altri ', Ar. 2 ' e cosl anco tu '. 3. at the f erne : the ' foorde ' of 11. i. 70, 'al ponte del Lagoscuro ' Ar. I. A railway-station on the S. bank preserves the name. P. 31, 20. Haccanea : substituted for the non-reproducible ' Cas- tanea' Ar. I, ' castagna ' Ar. 2, chestnut. 27. house of Crisobolus: so Ar. 2 ('un'altravolta' Ar. l), in allusion to the earlier comedy, La Cassaria, iv. 7, where the impostor Trappola, caught by Crisobolo, feigns dumbness. Tortoli suggests that the two parts may have been played by the same actor. P. 32, Sc. iii. 3. with the side bonet : coming full sail. See N.E.D. s. v. bonnet, 2. G. adds this metaphor for confident bearing : contrast ' to vale bonnet '. 5-6. desirous of the dower: 'per non dotare ' Ar. Damon wants to save the dower he would have to make to a less wealthy son-in-law. 6. gallant: ^k/A i. 199 1. 31 'this gallant gyrle' — of beauty; 'costu- mata' (finished) Ar. i, ' bella' Ar. 2. 12. with double ducke egges : with double 00 ; ' de li suoi doppioni ' Ar., an obscene joke connected with a play on ' purse '. 13. lobcocke : lubber (fr. lob, spider, N.E.D). Again, Roist. Doist. III. iii. 18. Sc. iv. 2-3. the Maiors officers . . . market : tipstaves or constables, the last to go home after the morning's public business is concluded — the Mayor's caterers would be the earliest : ' ogni banchiere, ogni ufficial di camera . . . piazza ' Ar. 2. 7. shotterell : pike of the first year (Whitney) ; ' luccietto ' Ar. 8. spurlings : or ' sparlings ', smelts ; for ' venti sparagi ' Ar. P. 33, 24. In faith now let me alone : ' Lascia lascia fare a me ' Ar. — ' let me tackle him '. 26. staunce : the same as stance (It. stanza), position, or space, distance (Whitney). 31. if you would haue had Pasiphilo : i. e. if you had wanted P., changing ' se egli ha voglia di mangiar teco ' Ar. I. In fact P. is at Damon's. P. 34, 61. fulkers: pawnbrokers, usurers ; 'gli Ebrei' Ar. 74. toyedeuised: G. omits ' da parte diquestagiovene', i.e. Polinesta. 76. a booke: bible. Ar. 'carta', ' lettera ', the Italian oath being taken by touch of the legal documents (Polidori). P. 35, 85. lieth on : ' insta ' Ar. Above, I. i. no (note). 87. Roscus, &c. : ' Rossorasto, o Arosto ' Ar. I , ' Arosto, o Rospo, o Grosco ' Ar. 2. 266 NOTES 11. iv 98. by me : of me, as in. i. 22. loi. That the Deuill, &.C. : Ar. 2 'Oh, che'. Again 1. 152, and III. V. 35, V. vi. I ; £u£-g. IV. ii. 91 ; also in W. W.'s Menaechmi (1595. 4°), iii. I ' That I would he . . . were hang'd ' (' Qui ilium Dii omnes perduint ', &c.). 102-3. diners to please: uncertain, 'fastidioso' Ar., in whom this speech and ' die for hunger ', above, relate to Polinesta's married pro- spects, not to Pasiphilo. 108. more than thus : added with loss of effect. In Ar. the cough suddenly disproves his denial of it. 109. murre: catarrh; 'the pose, mur, and such like rheumes' is quoted fr. Holland's Plutarch, p. 685. P. 36, 123. gesseyou that : sparing us the explicitness of Ar. I. 127. m.ore than you would thinke : 'piu ch'al Credo ' Ar. 135. hose: trunk-hose, breeches. Cf. Glasse of Gouern.'w. ^ ' poore Skollers, who thinke a payre of cast hosen a greate rewarde '. 136. a.&'c: left, as in ill. i. lo-li and v. 26, to the actor's vitupera- tive powers : not in Ar. 137. loste on him : better than Ar. 2 ' he will lose a lot '. 142, 145. Foule fall you, &c. : ' Maltivenga . . . castello nomato Fusttiocciso ' Ar. i, ' Maltivenga . . . castel . . . Fossucio . . . nel terri- torio Di Tagliacozzo ' Ar. 2. Cf. note on in. iii. 6 ' lohn of the Deane ', and the insulting names reeled off by Sagaristio in Persa, iv. vi. 18-23. P. 37. Act III : the translation is marked by greater freedom throughout, especially in soliloquies and long speeches. The verse is used for sec. i to iv, ' I can't goe . . . yonker,' being the sole point peculiar to Ar. i ; and the prose for sc. v, though ' heart of stone ' is from Ar. 2. 2-4. basket . . . sticke: continuing i. 4. In Capt. iv. 2 a Boy describes Ergasilus's ravages in Hegio's kitchen ; but Plautus's cheekiest specimen is Paegnium in Persa, ii. 2 and 4, v. 2. Of his many cooks the best are in Aulul. ii. 4-8, Merc. iv. 4, and Pseudol. III. iii. l-loo ; while in Mil. Glor. Carlo and his knife are called in to deal with Pyrgo- polinices. 4-5. beateth the beares : dancing bears led by a chain, ' scherzare conl'orso' Ar. l. G. omits Crapino's tricks on 'porter, peasant, or Jew' (Ar. i) because, says Schiicking, Jews were rare in England between their banishment (1290) and return under Cromwell, and refers to Gascoigne's translation of 'Ebrei' by 'fulkers' in 11. iv. 61. But ' fulkers ' might still be Jews ; and, had the latter been so rare, we should hardly have had either The Jew of Malta or The Merchant of Venice. 6. slipstring: truant, as Beau, and Flet. A King and no King II. ii. 75. 9-10. halter sicke: determined to be hung, a typical character in Heresies, pr. 1567. 1st ed.'s reading, 'halter sacke' (sack for hanging up), is the usual later form. 13. horned beast : joke on 'horns', slightly altering, I think, Ar.'s on ' frasca ' and ' becco ' (he-goat), and so below, 1. 43, ' to catch Cornua.' 14-1 5. vnloden ; ' loden ' occurs Etiph, ii. 45 1. 31. III. i SUPPOSES 267 16. ale: substituted for Ar. i 'bastonate', Ar. 2 'mazzate'. 18-19. strike and say neuer a woorde: in Ar. 'blaspheme inwardly and dare not outwardly '. P. 38, 23. what a rule ; i. e. what unruliness ; cf. Misog. in. i. 205. 30. vessell : plural sense (' masserizie ' Ar. 2) as Chaucer, Menkes Tale, 158 (of Nebuchadnezzar) 'The vessel of the temple he with him ladde '. Cf. Ballio's orders to his servants in Pseudolus, I. ii. 29-31. 31 S.D. Exit Dalio: 'foUoweme' seems to forbid Crapino's exit till end of scene. 38. whether: whither, Ar. 'dove' 43-4. he shall haue them : this addition of G. gives a more general sense to ' horns ', i. e. fool. 50. poulters : so M. Bombie, ii. 3. Cf. ' Caters ', ' roister '. Ariosto improves here on Latin comedy, where parasites cater for their rich friends (as Pasiphilo in v. iv. 14-15); cf. Plant. Capt. in. i. 14, and Gnatho's description of his importance with the tradesmen in the market, Ter. Eun, 11. ii. 24-8. P. 39, 3. primero : a bluffing game, a favourite with Elizabeth, played with six cards of which the ace of spades was most important ; 'bassetta o zara' Ar. i. G. somewhat develops this soliloquy. 5. his rest: his stake ; but, like Ar.'s ' il resto ', of staking all he has left. This speech follows rather Ar. 2, but with developments. 12-13. <^s many crosses . . . brethren : for ' netto piii che una bambola di specchio ' Ar. I, ' povero ' Ar. 2. P. 40, 6. lohn of the Deane : i. e. of the vale ; ' Ugo da la Siepe ' Ar. I. The Grange {graxiaxy) ferme is 'il Serraglio' Ar. i, and the deed has been drawn by ' Lippo Malpensa', names intended ominously, as Herr Schiicking remarks. 17. /or the nonce: for the occasion, properly 'for then ones', as Chaucer. 19-20. hangeth . . . on the wall: the key, handed to Nevola in Ar. I, is left in the lock Ar. 2. 25-6. for to . . . death and 28-9 The lawes . . . wrongs are G.'s additions. P. 41, 29. potestates: suggested, as in IV. viii. 35, by It. podestA — ' S'al podestk, s'al duca o a' secretarii ' Ar. 2. In Bercher's Nobylytye off Wymen, 1559 (Pref.), Petriolo had 'a Palace of Potestate'. Cf. Chaucer, Sumpnours Tale, 309 ' Whilom ther was an irous potestat '. 31. preuayle me: availme, as Heywood! s Johan Johan, 59 'Nought shulde prevayle me . . . she wolde be my mayster '. 38-41. for we . . . rewards : on nurses, substituted for Damon's wish (in Ar.) that he had kept no menservants. 43-P. 42, 63. if thou hadst liued . . . by themselues : 20 11. unrepre- sented in Ar., save 48-9, ' O Polinesta . . . father' : and the rest of the speech very freely translated. This moralizing passage, intended perhaps to redeem the lax tendency of the piece, is G.'s only serious addition ; and is imitated by Lyly in Euphues, i. 243-4 (Ferardo and Lucilla), and in M. Bombie, i. iii. 164 sqq. (Prisius and Livia) : see collop below. 49-50. to excuse . . . to condemne, Sec. : while I excuse . . . and con- 268 NOTES "i-"i demn, &c. Cf. locasta, iii. I (ed. Haz. i. 307) ' To lose mine owne, I liste none other saue ' (on the condition of losing my own). 57. matche . . . consort : find them society, not of marriage. P. 42, 66. collop : slice, rasher ; phrase repeated Lyly's M. Bomb. I. iii. 164 and i Hen. VJ, V. iv. 18. Heywood's Prov. ed. 1906, p. 28, ' it is a deere coUup That is cut out of th'owne flesh.' 2-3. Casteling the iayler: 'PaoHn da Bibula' Ar. 2 has a different sense; ' Nomico da Perugia' Ar. I. 3. S. Antonies gate : see note on II. i. 69-70 ' rode ', &c. ; ' presso a Con l|'*"o*i /^pcf*rt /VT 2 P. 43, 18-19. M^ «J ^^ Crusadoe, &c. : the Italian shows the coin (marked with a cross) to be meant — 'egli d' oro finissimo, Di Jango eramo noi altri, e di polvere' Ar. 2. Crusadoe in Bugg. I. iii. 59, V. iv. 14. 36. strouen : form not quoted. 38. mo than one at a clap: the Italian differs slightly— 'Chi la torrk, potrk trovarle vergine | Creatura nel corpo, o maschio o fem- mina, f Se ben ella non h: Cf. Bugg. iv. v. 13-14. 45. stale: bait. P. 44, 49. let the mariage : hinder her marriage with Cleander, as shown by Ar. i. 2. stirre . . . keptsi : again, IV. iii. 15. Cf. ' The frozen snake ... a stinging stur will keepe ', Mar-Martine, st. 4. VJ. this other day: 'questa mattina' Ar. I, 'questa mane' Ar. 2; yet Damon, overhearing the quarrel, at once (' subito ') calls Psiteria into the stable, where their interview is overheard by Pasifilo, who is napping there after dinner. Gascoigne's change makes the little slip worse. P. 45, 35. thai the gunne pouder, &c. : see 11. iv. loi note, 'may you die a violent death.' trotte: hag. Again V. ii. 41. Cf. Taming, l. ii. 80 'an old trot with ne'er a tooth in her head '- Act IV : uses both the prose and verse, and closely, in every scene, save the first and third, which are freer and show no conclusive trace of the prose form. 3. shifte ouer . . . supposes : prevent detection of our exchange, 'nas- condere la fallacia ' or ' fraude ' Ar. E.'s speech considerably develops the original. 5. controll: rebuke. Lyly's Pappe (Wks. iii. 410 1. 6) 'canst not controU for learning, nor accuse for ill life '. 1 1, the Watergate : in Ar. the ' harbour ', outside the ' porta di San Paolo ', i. e. the modern P. Reno near the church of S. Paolo. The Po di Volano, parting from the main stream some miles W. of Ferrara, skirts the city on the SW. and formed the natural mode of access to the sea. Hence Shakespeare, transferring the scene to Padua, makes it a port {Taming, 1. i. 42). Pasiphilo's mission to the quay is from Captivi, III. i. 36-7. In Ariosto the servant sees a bark approaching, with Lizio and his master on board. 13. tofuge: ' Ho voltato subito le piante' Ar. x, ' In dietro "subito vengo ' Ar. 2. Hawkins notes ' perhaps took fuge, took flight ' : but IV. ii SUPPOSES 269 N.E.D. regards fuge here as verb, ' flee,' and the same asyntactic infin. to express suddenness occurs in Classe of Gouern. v. 1, where Dick Drum relates his escape from arrest: 'that sawe I, and to go,' i. e. ' and — flight ! ' P. 46, 19-20. teache . . . sol fa : i.e. to scream, as Taming, I. ii. 17 ' I '11 try how you can sol fa, and sing it '. Ar. z ' dar6 una bastonata '. P. 47, 21. scare crowes with you: disfigure you to a scarecrow. Ar. 2 ' spezzi quel capo di scimia '. I S.D. the Inne keper : see note on Dram. Pers. 10. affaires, &c. : in Ar. a pilgrimage to Loreto. 11-12. from Rauenna . . . tide : i.e. along the coast and up the Po di Volano, some 70 miles. 15. serchers: ' gabellieri' Ar., the ' Customers ' of ii. i. 16. vntrussed my male : unpacked my trunk ; capcase,'^iox^\ex^ Pii. Nash'sPref. Xa Astrophel and Stella 1591 'hange theliplikea Capcase halfe open '. P. 48, 20. fardings : farthings, i. e. goods on which to levy such ; ' robba da dazio ' Ar. 22. bobbe: ridicule, jeer at, befool, as Bugg. i. ii. 120. Ar. 2 has ' e che i mercatanti vi assassinano '. 38. know himselfe : i. e. his right bearing. 42. fewe nightes without teares : this touch, and that of his blood dancing as he knocks at his son's door (not in G.), were added in Ar. 3. Ariosto probably remembered Menedemus in Heautont. i. i, and perhaps young Charinus in Mercator i. I. P. 49, 72. your Grandefathers soule : ' tua madre ' Ar. This point of bettering a knock at a door is from Latin comedy, e. g. the Parasite and the boy in Bacchides, iv. i. 6-10. P. 50, 10. much . . . maisters honesty : ' Sufficiente famiglio, da fare onore ad ogni padrone ! ' Ar. I. 14. truer . . . aware of: A. Y.L.I. II. iv. 58, one of many proverbial phrases added by G. 22-3. the Aungell : ' la Corona ' Ar. i, ' all' Angelo ' Ar. 2, the latter being (says Barotti) a posting-house near the Porta di San Paolo. 27-9. I am matched . . . while: G.'s addition (2 11.). P. 51, 8. occupie : use, ply, or work, generally of manufactures or mechanical trades, e. g. Euph. ii. 32 1. 2 ' The brasse y' they occupy ', i. 196 L 12 ' Beeche easier to be earned and occupyed then . . . Boxe '. So 'a man of any occupation', a mechanic, _/«/. Caes. 1. ii. 269. P. 52, 23. iniurious : insulting, as Cor. ill. iii. 69. 31. what : why.? as Taming, iv. i. 90, and often. 36. goodfawchion : ' schidone ' (spit) Ar. 37-9. prating. . . twelue monethes : G.'s characteristic addition, Cf. Lyl/s Midas, I. ii. 89 ' I would not be in your coats '. 38-9. conney skins : perquisites of the cook, who sold them to the pedlar. One of the Roxburgh Ballads (1640), iii. 184 'The Joviall Pedlar ', represents him as wanting to buy cony-skins, and offering the contents of his pack in payment. Rabbits' fur is used for academic hoods. 40. this Curre barke: 'gracchiare questo uccellaccio' Ar. i. 2 70 NOTES IV. V 3. falsehood of Ferara : ' a common saying' Hazlitt notes (vol. ii. 345), easily, and without instance. Some Italian cities had a proverbial repute, e.g. 'Genova la superba ', ' cortesye of Siena' ; but I Q" not find this of Ferrara. In Ar. Licio merely says that he ' doesn t like ms name Ferrara, which quite accords with what they find . The point is made clear by the remark, no doubt in allusion to this passage, ot Cardinal Rangoni to the Ferrarese envoy after the Vatican performance — ' La vostra fe rara', to which Paolucci replied ' Molto bene, Mon- signor,la fede rara h quella che h preclara et pretiosa' (cf, his letter to Alfonso in Campori, and Capelli (Letiere di Lod. Ar., Doc. xvi). So in sc. 7, after the servant's brazen denial of Philogano, Licio says 'Did I not tell you we were in Ferrara? Eccovi la/e del vostro Dulippo ... the city has infected him with its own evil '. This is not conclusive to a proverbial repute. G.'s insertion of ' falsehood ' in both passages gives the sense, but turns what seems merely Ariosto's pun (made perhaps by others) into a proverb. P. 53, 5-6. these men are no Ferrareses : only true of the Sienese, for Erostrato described his servants as 'all' Ferrarese (ll. ii. 41, and so Ar.). Perceiving the oversight, Ariosto corrects ' questi ' of the prose to ' costui ' in the verse. 7. neuer a barrell better herring, &c. : confused form of the proverb (Heywood, ed. 1906, p. 102) 'In neither barrel better herring', on which is quoted Bale's Kynge Johan, ' Lyke Lord, lyke chaplayne, neyther barrel better herynge.' Again in Gosson's Schoole, p. 32, ed. Arber. 23. at the conuocations : ' al circulo In vescovato ' Ar. 2. Barotti (1741) says that public disputations, or meetings of Doctors, would alike be held in the bishop's palace, near the Cathedral ; and that the public schools were not then held in one place, but some at S. Fran- cesco, others at S. Domenico, and others at S. Crespino. 26. giues me : tells me, as in V. vi. 36. Set N.E.D. s.v. £ive, 22. So Glasse of Gouern. iii. 5. 30. s.D. runnitig about : i. e. seeing them at a distance he has turned in confusion to make off. P. 54, 17. honorably cladde : Ar. 2 adds 'tu pari un dottor', Ar. i has ' vestito di lungo '—evidently of academic dress. 24. markes : aims (in archery) : ' m'avete preso in cambio ' Ar. 35. your hoste : see note on Dram. Pers. P. 55, 47. cackabed: coarse sense, see N.E.D. and Wedgwood's Diet. Eng. Etymol. s. v. cack. ' Rabbioso' Ar. i, 'fametico ' Ar. 2. costerd: head, properly an apple. 50. passe not of: care not for, as in Bercher's Nobylytye offWymen (Roxb. Club) Pref. ' passethe for no more ', and often. ' To pass ' in this sense seems to mean ' stir for ', ' be moved or affected by ' : but perhaps the negative with which it seems always associated became needed only when original unfavourable senses ('pass with indifference ', ' tolerate ') were obscured by later favourable ones (' sanction ', ' give value to ', ' excel '). 6. compacte: compacted, confederated (Lat. compacisci). Again, 1. 22, V. V. 128, and cf. ' packe ' (pact, plot), 1. 39 of this scene. N. E. D. IV. viii SUPPOSES 271 quotes Meas.for Meas. v. i. 242 ' pernicious woman, Compact with her that's gone '. This speech and the next of the Ferrarese are somewhat freely rendered. ^- 56, 35. potestates: magistrates, see ill. iii. 29 note. 36. most mste prince: Ercole I, Duke of Ferrara 1471-1505, and father of Ariosto's immediate patrons, Cardinal Ippolito d'Este and Alfonso I. 40. fardell : bundle, suggesting a pun in ' packe ' 42-3. foure thinges : they are ' ragion prima, chi la sappia dire, favore e chi te la faccia ' Ar. i ; in Ar. 2 ' e terzio, Chi la [ragion] faccia ; e favor poi ' — no mention of bribing. P. 57, 55. neuer heard, &c. : ' bench^ qui non si usi ' Ar. : the Ferrarese seems to mean that Cleander, a foreigner, may be trusted for legal tricks which would be beneath the honour of Ferrara. 62. cautels : artifices. Fr. cautele, Roman legal term cautela, ' cos- tumi ' Ar. Ariosto's satire on lawyers finds some anticipation in the Advocati of the Poenulus, iii. i, their slowness, professional indepen- dence, &c. Cf. III. ii. 10 'si nihil est litium, lites serunt ' : and for venal defence of an unjust cause, Menaech. iv. ii. 1-30. 64-6. if I do not . . . waxe colde : added by G. in allusion to the ' refreshers ' or intermediate fees paid to counsel in the course of a suit. 71. hold: wager, as Triall of Treasure (Dods. iii. 272) 'I hold you a pound', alsoZz;^^ Will To Like (lb. p. 317), Taming, in. ii. 85 'I hold you a penny '. 73. their smothe lookes: 'che portano il coUo torto' Ar. I {'capo' Ar. 2), of wilful inability to see straight, or pretence of not seeing the bribe placed in their hands. P. 58. Act V : throughout this Act both forms are in use, though the verse (somewhat abbreviated from the prose) the more frequently. Save in the third sc. G.'s developments are inconsiderable. 10-12. and nourished . . . but him : G.'s insertion, to prepare the reader for the discovery that he is Cleander's son. Sc. ii. I. Two good newes : ' Due buone novelle' Ar. i. P. 59, 10. Go then a title there : ' Va costk un poco ' Ar. 2. 24. standes me vpon : is incumbent on me. 28-9. this night . . . doctor : G.'s insertion, referring to Cleander's invitation of i. 2, which must be taken of the evening meal since II. iv. 4 shows he was not expected at the midday one. P. 60, 41. trotte : see in. v. 35. 44. sowre soppes . . . sweete meafes: of penalty for self-indulgence in Heywood's Prov. ed. 1906, p. 19 ' Sweete meate will have sowre sawce ' ; ' faranno de' peccati lor durissima penitenzia ' Ar. Through- out G. is ready to substitute some racy English proverbial or allitera- tive phrase, e. g. 42-3 ' broker of all this bargayne ' for ' consapevole ed adiutrice '. 47. supra visour, &c. : so Hegio to Ergasilus, Capt. iv. ii. 115 ' Tu intus cura, quod opu' st. | Sume, posce, prome quidvis : te facio cella- rium '. 48. studied this settennight : in Ar.'m'avessi iaXiogittdice de' savi', i.e. 2 72 NOTES V. iii chief municipal magistrate of Ferrara, a title borne by Ariosto's father (Polidori) ; equivalent to the Gonfaloniero in other cities (Barotti). Sc. iii. The first half of E.'s soHloquy is translated with much freedom, and addition (as in i. 3, iii. 2) of the peculiar and tasteless alliteration of the time, e. g. ' which bounce . . . heuy heart ', ' careful carkase . . . desperation ', ' pit of perdition ', ' crooked clawes ', ' sorow- ful successe', are quite unrepresented in Ar. ; while ' pratica' becomes ' drifts & deuises ', and ' laccio ' ' ruinous ropes '. With E.'s despair, here and iv. i, compare Tyndarus (Capt. iii. 3) at the prospect of being unmasked by Aristophontes. 4. i5o««i:e : of explosive noise. iV.£'.Z'. quotes Huloet, 1552, 'Bouncen or cracke, crepo.' Qi locasta, v. 3 ' our brests With bouncing blowes be all be-battered '. 5-6. dispersed . . . Louers : Ar. merely ' if scattered over many years would have sufficed to make a man's life wretched '. 9-10. reseruing the wind, &c. : with conuey — perhaps reminiscent of Charmides' safe voyage in Plaut. Trinummus, iv. I. 12. worst time that may be : the following eight lines freely developed. 15. lingred: deferred, see N.E.D. P. 61, 22. successe : sequel, result ; as Lyly's Midas, ill. i. I 'as vnaduised in thy wish, as in thy successe vnfortunat.' Frequent in Mabbes's translation (1640) of Cervantes' Novelas Exemplares. 22-3. What shall I do ? E.'s perplexity and resolve to risk confes- sion are exactly reproduced from Parmeno's in face of Chaerea's danger indoors— ' dicam hercle, etsi mihi magnum malum Scio para- tum ; sed necesse est, huic ut subveniam' {Eunuchus, v. iv. 46-7). 38. wondring . . . Owle: G.'s addition. I. Yea dresse them, &c. : to Dalio off the stage, as he enters — the frequent trick of Latin comedy, e. g. Menaech. i. 2, and of Buggbears. 6. Capon : more credible here than Ar.'s 'li tordi ', though G. forgets to change ' them ' 1. 10, and omits to say they were on the same spit. 7. woulde haue : should have, as should, 1. 9, for would, 12. or rawe : ' o mal cotti' Ar. i, ' e dispiacevoli 'Ar. 2. P. 62, 15. caphers . . . sauce: added to Ar.'s 'melarance ed ulive' (Schiicking). 17. s. D. Er. exit \ento his housed : where he confesses to the old men (v. J end ; cf. Pasiph. in V. vii. 7 sqq.). 20. hammers in his head, &c. : ' ha tanto martello, che si crepa ' Ar., of preoccupation and beating out a scheme. So M. Bombie, II. i. 59 ' my head is full of hammers '. 24. cornerd cappe : Ar. 2 'porremoli II cimier delle coma omnino in capite ' ; instead of which legal head-dress G. makes the English college-cap the vehicle of the joke on horns (cf. iii. 4 ' lacke no come in a deare yere '). The Italian legal wear would be the * berretta lunga' of i. I, a black cap of cubic shape. P. 63, II. i/you . . . death for it : G.'s addition ; finde 7ne contrarie again, v. vi. 8. 19. knaue, but no villein : in Ar. 2 Oleander has called him ' perfido, ghiotto, ribaldo ', and P. confesses to gluttony. ^•■^ SUPPOSES 273 yourseruaunt : only in a polite sense, 'servitore ed amico ottimo ' < r ^' 7j T*^ ^ P'^y '" Cleandert answer; though in i. iii. 52, 1 would I were his man,' P. almost asserts an explicit dependence. _ 23-4. sa/ie . . . elder: P.'s retort is merely 'pianamente' Ar I, sempre vi ho auto in riverenzia ' Ar. 2. IprcE, sequar, frequent in Latin comedy, occurs M. Bomb. 11. iv. 20, Enchm. III. ui. 156. 38. meete with you : be even with you. Cf. Misoe. 11. ii. 20 ' ile come mete with the loute ' (see note). 41. call me cut: (' mutami nome' Ar. i) = ' call me horse ', disparage me as you like. See on Bugff. v. ii. 79. P. 65, 79. once : ' enough that '— ' una volta ' Ar. I = finalmente ( lommaseo and Bellini) : cf. Bugg. v. vi. 39 note. 88. What . . . hast thou to doe? what business is it of yours? as Taming, I. ii. 226, III. ii. 210. 100. falshood of Ferara : as above, iv. vi. 3 note, omitting Ar.'s further pun on ' Bari '. P. 66, 123-4. Aouse, &.c. : 'la casata (family-name) mia si chiamava della Spiaggia' Ar. i. 128. compact: compacted, plotted, as in iv. viii. 6 : cf. 'beguile you of your seruaunt ', 101-2. 130. eighteen yeares since : so Ar. I, ' venti anni ' Ar. 2 : cf. above, I. ii. 54 ' within twentie yeares '. 132. mould: corruption of ' mole ' wart, as ' mole ' (the creature) is of mould-warpe, earth-thrower. 140-1. become mine aduersarie : i. e. he will try to shield his son. P. 67, 145. the dore : i. e. of feigned Erostratd's house, cf. v. iii. 39 and Pasiphilo v. vi. 37-8. I. kallat: callett or callot, the same as 'drabbe' 1. 6. For 'that', to express a wish, cf. 11. iv. loi and Bugg. iv. ii. 91. With Damon's roughness cf. Euclio's to old Staphyla, Aulularia i. i and 2. 2-3. howe could P. know : P. has been talking to others, who have since commiserated with Damon. 8. finde me contrarie : as v. v. xi. P. 68, 35. vjas the firste: mere conjecture, 'sark stato ' Ar. In III. iv. 49, V. iv. 25 Pas. decided not to tell Cleander. 35. examine Mr againe: 'lui ancora' {him too) Ar. I, 'lo' Ar. 2. 36. giueth me : tells me ; as in iv. vi. 26. 38, leape : see Bugg. v. iv. 22 note. 39 S.D. th£ towne : i. e. one of the stage-houses representing it, viz. Erostrato's, cortected to house in first ed. ' Faults escaped '. 3. firste . . . bring . . . newes : a recognized claim to a bounty. Cf. Tomasine and Phillida in Bugg. v. 8, and Ergasilus in Captiui, iv. i. 12 'Coniiciam in coUum pallium, primo ex me banc rem ut audiat: Speroque me, ob hunc nuntium, astemum adepturum cibum '. 5. loke where he is : this failure of characters to see each other at first entrance is familiar in Latin comedy, e. g. Eunuch, iii. $> v. 6. Cf. Buggbears. P. 70, I S.D. Pasiphilo and feigned Erostrato (now Carino) are also present, as also Philogano in sc. ix, though unmentioned because 532 T 274 NOTES V. vui mute- the regular use, e.g. Ter. Eun. iii. 2 where Chaerea disguised and the Ethiopian are also present : but see Polinesta in sc. x. 3. take . . . well in worthe : in good part, en grd (favour), in gree ME. and Bugg. concluding chorus. The Cent. Diet, quotes take it in good worth' from Latimer's 3rd Sermon, 1549. 14-15. not... a leafe, &c. : Polidori claims Filogono's pious remark as an Italian proverb. 19-20. Carino take . . . home : addressed to his new-found son (v. V. 96), but Pasiphilo's intervention may be supposed to arrest their going, as well as that of the fathers. P. 71, 4-5. I flnde now contrary: disabused, presumably, by his son ; though in fact the latter was merely told that Dulipo had 'made sport with master doctor ' (in. i. 60), and neither Cleander nor his son has seen Dulipo since. 14 s.D. Here they come all togither : i. e. to those already on the stage enter Damon, the true Erostrato, and Polinesta, inserted in the following list, though mute, because in Ar. Damon verbally presents her with ' E questa h vostra nuora ', which G. omits. Nevola, as the Italian shows, enters only at the end. P. 72, 18. quite: quit. 36. of the childe : reversing Ar., who makes Filogono speechless with joy. P. 73, 47. a suppositorie : medical remedy, applied as suggested Ar. I. Cf. Fletcher's Loyal Subject, I. iii. 251 ' I see your lordship's bound; take a suppository' : in Ar. 2 he is told to fasten the fetters on himself, and in Ar. the speech is given to Pasifilo. 49. shewe some token : see end of Bugg. (note). THE BUGGBEARS P. 85. Dr. Pers. 2. Formosus . . . secretly married: see i. ii. 47-8, 105 ; 11. iii. 107-8, notes. 3. Biondello : joker in Dec. ix. 8, ' medico ' in Aretino's comedy, Lo Ipocrito (1542), and borrowed by Shakespeare in Taming. 4. Trappola . . .acquaintance, &c. : see IV. i. 15-17 'a merchant straungers Seruaunt', &c. The name (It. trappola, trap, snare) is borrowed from the ' Trappola, barro ' (cheat, rogue) of Ariosto's La Cassaria. 6. Brancatius : in Grazzini's Cene, i. 9 is a ' Brancazio Malaspini ', which the Italian editor pronounces a ' corruption of Pancrazio '. 12. Piccinino: the name of a series of great condottieri. Niccol6 Piccinino, prominent in the wars between Milan and Venice, died 1445, leaving two soldier sons, Francesco and Jacopo, the latter of whom was recognized as the first general of Italy. His imprison- ment and murder with his son by Ferrand King of Naples in 1465 (Machiavelli, bk. vii. c. 2), formed the subject of a Latin tragedy by Laudivio da Vezzano (Ward's Eng. Dr. Lit. \. 169, D'Ancona, ii. 18-19). 13. Iphigenia: 'Effiginia A Tragedye showen on the Innosentes daie at nighte by the Children of powles ' 1572 {Rev. Accts. ed. A. Feuil- lerat, p. 145) is too late: Jeffere takes the name from Dec. v. i. II THE BUGGBEARS 275 i^. Catella: the name of the character in Bandello's novel xxxvi, Apollonius and Silla (1554), who corresponds to Olivia in Twelfth J^ight. Bandello's Catella is a close reproduction of the Isabella of GT Ingannati, her scorn of Flamminio's suit, and her fruitless love for the supposed page (Lelia) who comes as his messenger. (See Variorum Twelfth Night, Preface, pp. xv, xx.) Isabella's servant in the play is called Pasquella : in the novel no name is allotted her. Our English author must have known the latter in the Italian, for Riche's adapta- tion did not appear till 1581. ig. Rosimunda : Giov. Rucellai of Florence wrote a tragedy in verse entitled Rosmunda, of which the earliest known edition was published at Siena, 1525, 8vo. With our heroine's absence from the scene, com- pare that of Phanium in Terence's Phormio, and of Laura in Cecchi's UAmmalata. See Essay, pp. xxxix-xl. P. 86. Scena f-. The dialogue slightly amplified from La Spiritata, I. i, save that Amedeus goes to consult his neighbour Cantalupo, while Giovangualberto goes to Fra Buenaventura at Santa Croce, and that Biondello's closing soliloquy, 11. 69-81, is added. 3. had . . . hercules : ' d'aver meco Orlando,' Grazzini. 11. cdmell: for a hulking follow, Tro. and Cr. 11. i. 58 ' Do rudenes, do Camell, do, do ' [N. E. D.). Again, i. iii, 95. parsonage: person. Lyly's Euphues, ii. 119 1. 8 'all woemenne are not allured with personage '- 12. beare a standerd: ' io crederei che tu fussi andato contro all' Artiglieria,' Grazzini. Cf, Euph. i. 247 1. 6 ' standerd bearer in Venus campe ', of one specially amorous. 17. riddockes: robin redbreasts, slang for gold pieces. ' Ruddake,' Misog. II. iv. 187. P. 87, 27. roringe fitte : spell of roaring. 32. old: excessive. 41. astronomer: astrologer; ' negromante,' Grazzini. P. 88, 50. deffend: forbid, prevent. 54. capons bame: chicken; barne occurs Wint. Tale, III. iii. 70. 58. lefe: willing. 'Lefe or loth,' III. iii. 121. 63. next howse, &c. : in La Spir. Giulio, while really taking up his quarters next door, pretends he has gone to stop with a friend on the other side of Arno. ^o. flea in his eare: earliest in N.E.D. 'c. 1430'; Heywood's Proverbes 1546, ed. 1906, p. 35. farewell gentell gefferye : used in Heywood (p. 36) by one who makes another look foolish — ' Now here is the dore and there is the way : And so, (quoth hee), farewell gentle Geffray. Thus parted I from him, being much dismayde.' 71. hathe his arrandw''^ him: i. e. has got what he wanted ; ironi- cally of a misfortune, as if sought : so iv. v. 6, of Rosamund with child, ' he sayd she had her errand, that she was not beguild ' : III. iii. 144 ' They are sped ... of their errand' — 'sped' ironical, as here and Taming, v. ii. 186. 72. toies: whims; 'if the toy take him to close with thee,' &c., Lyly's Pappe {Works, iii. 400 1. 33). T 2 2 76 NOTES I- i 74. hawson : conjure. N. E. D. gives halsen, adjure, quoting Prior- esses Tale, 193. TJ. goldinges : properly a kind of apple. P. 89, Sceane z" : expanded from La Spir. i. 3 with some changes, e. g. Albizo, the original of Trappola, being ' scolare, amico grandis- simo di Giulio' (Formosus) in La Spir. iv. 2, our I-17 are there unrepresented (cf. Plaut. Asinaria, 11. ii. 30-42) ; and the English author (65-112) omits the pretended possession of Maddalena and dilates on the coarser details of the story— the heroine's pregnancy is not a feature of the Italian. 2. franion : comrade, as 146 and ill. i. 54 (of Amedeus) ' one of old Carons franions ', and often in early drama, e. g. Dam. and Pith. {Dods. iv. 60). 3-4. didst lie . . . beggars f allusion not traceable in Lm. Cassaria, where there is abusive chafF between Trappola and Volpino, II. ii, as often in Latin comedy. 5. coapesmate: partner, confederate; again Misog. II. iv. 120, and Harvey's Works, ed. Grosart, ii. 131 'such madd Copesmates ', i.e. Lyly and Nash. 7. iavells : rascals ; early fourteenth century and Spenser, M. Hub- berd, 309. N. E. D. Cf. Apius and Virg. (Dods. iv. 1 50) ' And now for all my jaunting made a javel '. 12. on : i.e. one. So 16, 33, 42, II. i. 31, &c. ; but one 34, 64 (cf. alone 1. 103, alon 1. 139). The labializing pronunciation (wun) was not yet general : ' it does not appear to be oldSr in literature than about A.D. 1500' (Skeat). Cf. T-wo Gent. 11. i. 1-2 'Not mine; my Clones are on.' Sp. ' Why then this may be yours : for this is but one.' 14. clawe thine ellbowe. a synonym for complaisance; Barclay's Shyp of Folys, ii. 29 ' He loueth to be flatered and clawed by the sleue ' (Dial. Diet.) : and so Nature, I. iii. 28 ' What clawest thowe myne elbowe pratlinge merchaunt ? walke '- 15-17. three son burnde . ..vnpared: parodying the absurd recipes for charms, cures, love-philtres, &c., in books of magic. Cf. III. iii, notes. 15. -vrchines wolle: hedgehogs' wool ! 17. lett these grettinges go : so Libanus after similar chaff, j4«'«i3:na, II. ii. 41 'Verbivelitationem fieri compendi volo'. P. 90, 30. brancatio : for rhyme's sake, as 'Nostradamo' for ' Nostra- damus', IV. ii. 14 : but also interior, ' Brancatioes brother', iv. iii. 25. Cf. note Dram. Pers. 32. beyonde the moone : of excess, as often, e. g. Welth and Helth (1557)) '• 21 ' ye prayse your selfe aboue the moone'. 35. here nurse: i. e. Tomasine. The Italian adds to the nurse ' un medico domestico di casa ', who later teaches Maddalena how to feign diabolical possession. 44. a brother, &c. : i. e. Donatus, as below, v. i and iii. P. 91, 48. marred: I retain the MS. reading, which suggests a pun. 52. three thowsand crownes : 'tremila scudi contanti,' Grazzini. 55-6. stocke . . .ferme: ' un podere, e forse dugento scudi,' Grazzini. Cf. Two Gent. ill. i. 307 'a stock with a wench', capital sum, dowry. I. ii THE BUGGBEARS 277 With some inappropriateness the English author calls her v. vii. 90 ' Rosimunda di Medici '. Grazzini had dedicated his comedy to a member of that wealthy family named Rafaello. 61. pinchefiste: close-fisted, not open-handed. The pleonasm, 0/^ vecchio, perhaps assmnes the unfamiliarity of the Italian type : again 1.79. 70. old ntorell : OF. morel, inoreau, dark-coloured ; as name of a horse in the popular poem The Wife lapped in Morels skin, c. 1550-60. ' Thou woreton (worm-eaten) morell ', of old Madge, Misog. IV. i. 36. P. 92, 75. speake hudell: i.e. confusedly, as result of shivering: of many speaking at once in Coverdale, 1564 {N.E.D.). Cf. 'to Joy huddeir, V. ix. 48. 77. atide : awhile, or perhaps ' in time '. 84. he cannot mary towo : ' non potendo la fanciuUa aver due mariti,' La Spir. See Essay, pp. Ixviii-lxxi. 99. mames : madams. Rosimunda's mother and the proposed with- drawal ' to the farme ' are borrowed from Grazzini's mention here of Giulio's mother as absent 'in villa'. exigent: urgent, OF. exigent: earliest in N.E.D. 1670. P. 93, 103. Thates alone : i. e. matchless, cf. 1. 139 and Two Gent. II. iv. 167 ' She is alone '. 108. stale: favourable sense, ' ripe,' as Like Will to Like (Hazlitt's Dodsley, iii. 330) ' noppy good ale As clear as crystal pure and stale '. 120. bob : cf. 'bob vs like asses \Moth. Bombie, II. i. 100, and Supp. IV. iii. 22. 1 24. pull an oldhowse, &c. : the metaphor occurs in the prose Patient Grisel 1619 (but of c. 1590), Percy Soc. E. E. Poetry, No. 18, p. 23. Cf, 'tirerete la rovina adosso', Florio's Second Frvtes, 1591, p. 173. P. 94, 130. at the next howse : in La Spir. he pretends to move •dilkd'Amo'. 132. gate in by lowe : sixteenth-century form of ' below'. In iv. i. 22, and in both places of the Italian, the window is in the roof. 133. cockelofte : 'sala, dove si fa il pane,' La Spir. 134. shaked Iron chaynes : the Englishman's addition. 139. alon : see note on 1. 103 : cf. Apius and Virg. 'that was sport, yea and sport alone '. 154. set a face : made a show. 157-8. counyng . . . eat a conyes tayle: the pun justified by a ME. variant. Skeat s. v. cony quotes Wright's Vocab. i. 188 ' Hie cuniculus, a conynge'. The phrase seems parallel to 'putting salt on a bird's tale' : sense of 'gull', ' dupe ', is later. P. 95, Scenaj''. : Grabau indicates the original in Gl'Ingannatz, 1. 4, where old Gherardo exults over the prospect of marrying Lelia and is mocked by his servant Spela as feverish or mad. (See also Essay, p. Ixx.) Our text keeps pretty close to the Italian, where are found the needy relatives, Calandrino, ' Omnia vincit amor ', furs making him like a sheep, the order for civet, &c., and some short rhymed lines near the close : but Clementia, Leila's nurse, shares in the dialogue, and Squartacantino's closing soliloquy begins the Italian sc. 5. 2 78 NOTES I. i" 1. Do so Amedeus : spoken back as he enters— the close of the con- ference intended I. i. 44. See Essay, p. xlvi (2). 2. him: the confessor, to whom Amedeus goes immediately, cf. III. ii. 14. 8. horne wood: horn mad, properly of infuriated cattle. 12. Saint Cornelius badge: the centurion of Cassarea (Acts x. l) affords a pun on 'horns' not in the ItaUan. Cf. ' Corne wayle' HI. i. 10, 24 (note). 12-15. ah caytife . . . match w"" her : not in the Ital. 16-17. Inever ...better disposed: not in the Ital. here, but suggested by a similar remark of Gherardo to Virginio in i. i. disposed: amatory sense, as L. L. L. 11. 250 ' Boyet is disposed', where Dyce quotes Peele's Edward I {Works, ed. Dyce, p. 391) ' Q. Elin. I pray, let go ; ye are dispos'd, I think. Longsh. Ay, madam ; very well '. 20. nought for you : bad, unwholesome, as ' a naughty night to swim in ', K. Lear, ill. iv. 116. Cf. Curculio, I. i. 17 ' Caruitne febris te heri, vel nudius tertius ? ' P. 96, 24. Calandrino : the unfortunate blockhead oit\ieDeca7nerone, viii. 3. 6, ix. 3. 5. ' Calandrini o Grassi legnajuoli ' are alluded to in Grazzini's Cene, ii. 6. ' Calandro ' is befooled in Bibbiena's comedy La Calandria. 25. adwelfe: madly, mistakenly ; obs. adv. (here perhaps of local or mistaken form) from OE. dwela, error, heresy, madness ; see N. E. D. s. V. dwale. Under adwole it quotes Owl <&-= Night. 1775 ' demth adwole '. 27. Amor vincit omnia : ' Omnia vincit amor ; et nos cedamus amori ', Virg. Eel. x. 69. 28-30. God sende . . . this maryage : not in the Ital. 31. currant: sound, sterling, here of health. N. E. D. quotes Euph. i. 219 1. 14 ' Thoughe others seeme counterfaite in their deedes, yet . . . Euphues will bee alwayes curraunt in his dealinges '. 37. the hastinges : not in the Italian ; properly of fruits or vegetables which mature early ; of persons in a hurry, Heywood's Proverbes 1546 (ed. 1906, p. 42) ' approue you to be none of the hastingis '. N. E. D. Also in Misogonus, i. iv. 9. 44. kepe an old stoore : make a fine stir ; cf. 94, II. i. 32. Misog. 11. iv. 291. 44-8. I wold kepe . . .you watte: not in the Ital. P. 97, 47. stroot : swagger. Misog. I. ii. 46 ' get ( jett) stroute and stare'. 48. twene starring &= starke blinde : the first of haying to look hard. Cf. Heywood's Proverbes 1546 (1906, p. 82), and Euph. i. 189 1. 35 ' the greate diflference betweene staringe and starke blinde '. In Gas- coigne's epistle ' To the Reuerend Diuines', prefixed to his Posies 1575, occurs sig. iriT ' being indeed starke staring blind '. 56-9. Oh what . . . rosymonda : not in the Ital. 59. Crusado : a Portuguese coin, ' marked with a cross ' ; originally of gold, later also of silver. Harrison's Descrip. of England, II. xxv ' Of forren coines we haue . . . ducats . . . crusadoes ', &c. {N. E. D.). •• "i THE BUGGBEARS 279 Cf. V. iv. 14 ' the money by this | into ducates and Crusadoes very nere transformed is': also S-upp.lw. iv. 19. 60-6. to by this gear . . .1 will synge : not in the Ital. 67-82 are suggested by ten similar short lines in the Ital., though only the first four attempt translation ; the Ital. has no hint of singing, and the commission to buy civet follows, not precedes, them. 65. gobbett: portion, lump. 72. twichild: one in second childhood ; Davies's Scourge of Folly, p. 2 1 8 ' grow twychiJd ' {Cent. Diet) . P. 98, 76. dogbolt : term of contempt, quoted as of 1465. Cf. Lyly's Campaspe, I. ii. 8 ' Manes that dogbolt'. 85. be so sped: be matched with Rosimunda ; not in the Ital., but the rest of 83-95 's fairly close. 86. gatides and gamboldes : pranks and gambols. Cf. Taming, Ind. ii. 140. 88. slicked: sleeked, smoothed, smeared. Cf. Euph. i. 254 1. 33 ' the sleeking of theire faces ', and Comus, 882 ; Taming, iv. i. 93 ' sleekly '- 89. marquisotted : Neumann and Baretti's Spanish Diet, gives marquisa and rnarguida as vulgar terms for a prostitute. 93. iettethe : struts. Heywood's Play of the Wether, 883 ' get the stretes '. Misog. i. ii. 46, II. iv. 39. Maydes Metamorph. (1600) ill. ii. i ' locido, whither iettest thou ? ' 95. cdmell: cf. I. i. 11. feate : neat : of clothes, Tempest, 11. i. 273. 9&-8. not in Italian. 97-8. diadogmatriton . . . pylgrim salve : the latter an ointment of swine's grease and isinglass, and in 1670 a euphemism for ' ordure ' (JV.E.D.) ; ' a lump of Pilgrims salve ' is coupled with 'a glyster-pipe ' in Percy's Reliques, 2nd series, Bk. ill. xiv ' The sale of rebellious household stuff', an anti-Puritan ballad of Restoration times. Diadog- matriton, perhaps burlesque for poison given to an old dog, or (?) for ' saying his prayers '. Act II. Scena f'. Piccinino: almost translated from the soliloquy of Guagniele in La Spir. ii. 2. Cf. the soliloquies on a servant's lot of Strobilus (Aulul. iv. i) and Messenio (Menachmi, v. 6). In Hecyra, V. iii. 16-17 Parmeno grumbles at having spent the whole day running to and fro. 2. cast : example, case. M. Bombie, v. iii. 396 ' shew a cast of your office*. 3. winters, &c. : fires mentioned IV. ii. 18, 22, v. vii. 56. Cf. I. ii. 74-S- 16. parson : person, myself. Cf. ' parsonage ' 1. 1. 3. P. 99, 19. vndertide : of the midday siesta— in the Ital. ' n& anche la state in su la sferza del caldo non gli farei venirmi dietro correndo alia staffa'. So, too, Spenser's Fa. Qu. lli.viii. 13 ' He, coming home at undertime ', where stanza 2 has told us ' all the day before the sunny rayes | He us'd to slug, or sleepe in slothful shade '. The time would vary, in England at least, with that of the midday meal. In the AS. translation of the Gospels, c. 1000 (Matt.xx. 3— parable of the Labourers) 28o NOTES "• 1 ymbe undern-tid is used for ' about the third hour ' ; and so Malory's Morte Darthur, xx. 12 ' on the mom at undorne Sir Arthur was ready in the field '. In Chaucer's Clerkes Tale, E. 260 ' the tyme of vndem is fixed for the marquis's wedding, i.e. lo.o-ll.o a.m. , , . ,, . 29. beyond Arm: 'nellaviade'Servi,' Grazzim— noRondeletio(1.3o) mentioned. . 31. dup: open, contraction for ' do up ', iV. E. D. quotmg Ed wardes s Dam. andPithias, c. 1564 (Dodsl. iv. 69) 'Will they not dup the gate to-day?' and Hamlet, iv. v. 53 'And dupp'd the chamber-door ; | Let in the maid ', &c. (See Essay, p. xlviii (6).) \Scena 2"^. Biondello. Trapfold\ : this mutilated scene corresponds to La Spiritata, ii. 3, where Albizo and Trafela, issuing from Amerigo (Camillus) 's house, discuss Albizo's disguise and the proposed hoax. I translate the Italian as the safest guide to what is lost. ' Albizo. This robe doesn't suit overwell with this headgear. Trafela. Why, you look quite beautiful. Alb. If they knew me at all, I shouldn't say so. Tra. Don't grumble : a dress like this has a dignity of its own, let alone the hood. Alb. Pray heaven it may ! anyway you'll be there to hear, Trafela. Tra. I know you'll play the part to perfection. Alb. But where are we to find them ? Tra. I wonder there isn't one of them at least hereabouts. Alb. Keep a look out, you : I don't know any of them. Tra. If we wait here, we shall see one of them coming any minute. Alb. Are the fellows really such dolts and blockheads as Amerigo and Giulio say ? Tra. Yes, and twice as bad. Alb. Then the thing's done: we run no risk. But how shall we make a Pisa scholar believe us ? the man used to be well-read, and well-spoken. Tra. Like other folk he has his craze : just now he has taken up a belief in sorcery and witches, in spirits and incantations^you may say his judgement is gone. Alb. Especially when three or four people agree in insisting that, be he who he may, he's in a mess. Folk are taken in in a way to astonish one. Tra. Havn't I seen proof of it in the matter of Maddalena ? Alb. All the better. — But here's not a soul coming. Tra. Why not take a short turn from S. Maria de' Fiori as far as the Servi, and back ? likely enough we shall meet one of them. Alb. By all means ; and put in a little practice meantime.' P. 100, 9. Thane : i. e. The one, but Grabau may be right in read- ing 'Thoue'. Scena j"'. T[omasme, Formosus'\ : 82-130 derived loosely from Ter. Andria, I. v. 30-63, and 130-6 from IV. ii. 13-18, in both of which Pamphilus protests to Mysis his fidelity to her mistress, who in the earlier is not aware of the match proposed. Grabau notes also that Tomasine has a soliloquy before 1. 65 ; and probably this portion of the scene is suggested by La Spiritata, iv. I, where dialogue between "• "1 THE BUGGBEARS 281 the Nurse and Lucia is followed by a soliloquy of the Nurse, just as in LaSpir. v. 9 we have the germ of our v. 8. I translate the Italian, as guide to I-3S (see especially our 6-8), omitting thirteen following lines about Maddalena's feigned possession, which seem replaced (35-65) by an account of Rosimunda's jealous fears (in the Italian no other match is contemplated for Giulio), though 1. 63 recalls the phrase ' Ma che cosa e che non faccia una fanciulla innamorata ! ' 'AcTo Quarto. Scena I. Balia, Lucia. Nurse. And if he comes back in the middle, tell him I'm gone out by the spirit's orders, and shall be in directly. Ltic. And suppose he asks me what the spirit wants ? Nitr. Tell him you don't know, and leave me to invent all that. Luc. Oh, this spirit ! this spirit ! what are you hoaxing him into with this spirit of yours ? Nur. Now look here ! you hold your tongue and mind your own business, d'ye hear ? You're a little feather-brain ! what call have you to bother, except to do as you're bid ? Luc. Oh, very well ! I only like a little talk. Nur. [oracularfy]. I tell you, mischief always comes o' mischief; and contrariwise, if a thing 's good, everyone 's glad of it and knows about it. Luc. At that rate. Nurse, you're to have all the being glad and the knowing, and I'm to be left with hands empty. Nur. You've just hit it ! / know what I'm talking about. Luc. Remember one hand washes the other, and both the face : but I'm used for any rubbishing work. Nur. Keep a good temper, my girl ! if things go right, as I expect, you'll get your reward : but now shut the door ; go upstairs and tidy up a bit : then watch and see that the stewpot boils, so as we can make that jelly. Liic. All right : I'm going. Nur. My word ! in this world one never gets a minute's rest or quiet. I suppose I'll never live long enough to be my own mistress ; still, if we're lucky enough to bring our scheme off, I may expect something tidy, for Giulio 's promised to buy me a cottage for life, and Maddalena's willing to add as much again to my little savings, to get me quarters in some good fat almshouse: and so there may come a time when I'll be independent, that 's to say when I shan't live with other folk. How I am worked to death with this poor child Maddalena ! I brought her up from long clothes, for, soon as she was born, her mother was took to another world, and she left on my hands ; and from that day to this it's me as has brought her up, and that's just seventeen years last Candlemas. But in those days who'd ever have thought of her turning out so fine— let the good doctor have the thank and reward of it ! for all that I've done 's been done for pure love and goodness. But that father of Giulio, covetous brute ! he 's made all the mischief. Oh, what a girl and a half, what an angel, is Maddalena ! how she did pretend at being spirit-ridden ! ' &c. 1-4. / warrmmt youe, &c. : spoken back to Rosimunda, off the stage, about Formosus (cf. Essay, p. xlvi (2)) ; not in the Italian. 282 NOTES II. iii P. 101, 5 sqq. Phillida : also within, though in the Italian Lucia enters. 7. Dobnett: It. 'pentola', evidently some cooking utensil. The Dial. Diet, gives Dobbett, sb. (Dor.) 'a dipping bucket'. P. 102, 60. deapely: C.'s alternative to 'heavelie' suggests him as the author. 62. stynt her stormy fright : for the alliteration, cf. I. ii. 31, 54. 65-72. Well sayd my Camillus, &c. : spoken back as he enters (cf. I. iii. 1-3) ; though we may suppose 73-80 spoken to himself. 68. Rosen : turpentine. P. 103, 73. so9ye be, &c. : i.e.' sorrow on them ! ' Cf. Andria, IV. ii. 13-18, quoted below, on 1. 129. 74. sett vs . . . oute : i. e. at odds ; cf. Jul. Cces. I. i. 19 ' be not out with me'- 78. heavens : i. e. heavens'. 83. Joundresse : supporter, benefactress. So in Misogonus (1560), I. i. 193 Cacurgus addresses his patron Philogonus as 'Founder'. Grafton's Chronicle (1568), ii. 898 '[Parkin] retourned againe to the Lady Margaret his first foolish foundresse ', N. E. D. 84. Saint: of a mistress, as Euph. i. 215 1. i. 90-105. No. never . . . spake : corresponding to Andria, I. v. 41-9 ' Non faciam. My. Haud vereor si in te solo sit situm : Sed vim ut queas ferre. Pam. Adeon' me ignavum putas ? Adeon' porro ingratum, aut inhumanum, aut ferum, Ut neque me consuetudo, neque amor, neque pudor Commoveat, neque commoneat, ut servem fidem ? My. Unum hoc scio, hanc meritam esse, ut memor esses sui. Pam. Memor essem ? o Mysis, Mysis, etiam nunc mihi Scripta ilia dicta sunt in animo Chrysidis De Glyceric : ' &c. — the resemblance nowhere so close, though the English scene is much enlarged. P. 104, 107-8. with my Ryng I assuryd her vnto me, &c. : the ' assurance ' or betrothal-ceremony was held as binding as the marriage-rite in church : see I. ii. 47-8, 105. P. 105, 129-36. hur I tnynd to haue, &c. ; closely from Andria, IV. ii. 13-18 ' Hanc mihi expetivi, contigit : conveniunt mores. Valeant, Qui inter nos discidiura volunt. Hanc, nisi mors, mihi adimet nemo. Ch. Resipisco. Pam. Non ApoUinis magis verum, atque hoc responsum est. Si poterit fieri, ut ne pater per me stetisse credat, Quo minus haec fierent nuptije, volo : sed, si id non poterit. Id faciam, in proclivi quod est, per me stetisse, ut credat.' 136. Choose him, &c. : let him take what course he will, my mind is made up. 142. Corrosies: 'corrosives,' fretting cares; 'corsy' in Miso^. in. i. 90. 143. souppled: made supple, eased. Scena 4 . Piccinino : Grabau suggests no original for this scene, "•iv THE BUGGBEARS 283 which is probably the English author's. 'I will carry in this Ware' 1. 19, is, however, represented by ' Ma lasciami andare a casa a portar queste maschere rinvolte, accioche io non avessi del romore ' in La Spirit, ii. 5, coming at the end of a love-scene Ijetween Guagniele and Lucia ; and Piccinino's complaint of Camillus' abuse is probably sug- gested by Guagniele's list of such terms applied to himself, in iii. 4, and by similar soliloquies of slaves in Plautus, e.g. Milphio in Pisn. iv. I. 3. goodman good face : ironical of one of the ' Devells vysars ', 1. 13. 5. sootes: sots. dyssardes : fools ; from the professional jester, as one who talked (OY.disour), or danced (dizzy). Ci. A Whip for an Ape, 1589 'A dizard late skipt out vpon our stage '. P. 106, 23. ingram vacation knave : ignorant holiday substitute : ingram a contraction from the legal ' ignoramus' (Cent. Diet.) ; or cor- ruption of ' ignorant' through ' ingrant ', cf. ' vagrom ' and ' vagrant ', N.E. D. citing Wilson's Rhetorike (1553), 20 'a poore yngrame soule to beare the name of a person (parson) for xx markes '. ' Ingrum ' occurs Misog. III. i. 170 : ' Ingramnesse ', Mar-Martine, 1. 96. 27. hot as a tost: Heywood's Proverbes, 1546 (Reprint, p. 54) ' Where love had appeared in him to her alway Hot as a toste, it grewe cold as kay '. Cf. Euph. i. 247 1. 2. 28. my lerrypoope : teach me what 's what, or to know my place, as Like Will to Like, Dodsl. iii. 322. Cotgrave, 'qui sgait bien son roulet,' ' one that knows his liripoope.' In Lyly's Sapho andPhao, I. iii. 6 the courtier Criticus tells the scholar Molus ' Thou maist be skilled in thy Logick, but not in thy Lerypoope', while in Moth. Bomb. I. iii. 128 it is opposed to ' learninge ' : originally, however, from liripipium, the university hood. Again, v. vii. 28. 29. vengeable : merely emphatic, like ' with a vengeance '. 32. Clack : tongue, or chatter, as of a senseless machine : cf. V. ii. 2 • womens Clackes will walke w'*" euery wynde '. N.E.D. quotes Edwardes, Dam. &= Pith. ed. 1564 (Dodsl. iv. 97) ' Abandon flatt'ring tongues, whose clacks truth never tell '. 35. garboyle: disturbance, found as late as 1864. 39. vye slepes . . . hood : sleep for a wager with any lazy monk of them all. Cotgrave gives ' envier {au jeu), to vie '. In Lyly's Pappe ( Works, iii. 399 1. 1 1) 'play three a vies wits . . . drop vie stabbes ' = ' match three wits against thine . . . match thee at stabbing '. Cf. the song in Gam- mer Gurton, 11. i ' I cowde dryncke | With him that werythe an hoode '. 41. mournes of the chine : Petruchio's horse {Taming, in. ii. 51) is ' like to mose in the chine ', a recognized synonym. Fitzherbert's Boke of Husbandry, 1523 (ed. Skeat, p. 66) says the disease is 'incurable, and . . . appereth at his nosethryll like oke-water ' : G. Markham's Maisterpeece (x6lo), ch. 42 ' a cold, which after grows to a poze, then to a glaunders, and lastly to this mourning of the chine ', a discharge from the nostrils ' darke, thinne, reddish '. The phrase seems to connect cold and rheumatism. I take mourn for a corruption, due to a turned u, of OF. morve, ' snivel' (Cotg.). P. 107. Scena j'" : the talk between Manutius and Carolino 1-15, 284 NOTES "■ V and between these and Formosus 52-91, is taken closely from Ter. Andrta, ii. i (37 11.), with slight amplification, and insertion of the inter- view between Manutius and Iphigenia 18-5 1. 7-8. sythe that that . . . wishe : 1. 7 left unrhymed, or meant to form a triplet with 5-6 ; cf. triplet in v. vi. 17-19. A line ending e. g. 'be counselled by me ' might be lost before 1. 7, but the Latin is simply ^ Byrr. Quffiso, edepol, Charine, quoniam non potest id fieri, quod vis, I Id velis, quod possit. Char. Nihil volo aliud, nisi Philumenam '. 12. more maydes then malkyn : in Heywood's Prov. (repr. p. 32). Mall-kin, little Mary. 13. weddyng Sr' hanging, &c. : Heywood's Prov. (repr. p. 9) ' wedding is destiny, And hanging likewise ' ; also in The Schole-hous for Women, 1541. 14-15. Thou maist . . . fytt : ' Facile omnes, cum valemus, recta con- silia segrotis damus. | Tu si hie sis, aliter sentias,' And. 11. i. 9-10. Cf. Much Ado, III. ii. 28 ' every man can master a grief but he that hath it ', and Leonato's vigorous protest, v. i. 3-38. ig. Corpes : of the living body as late as 1707 ; if dead, usually with epithet to mark the fact (N. E. D.). sterve: die. P. 108, 29. kynde : nature. 30. wreakfull : ' wreak ' as sb. (revenge, resentment) is common, e. g. Misog. II. v. 43 : ' wreakfull vengeance ' is quoted from Tit. Andr. V. ii. 32, 43. reboundyng : as of a weapon that returns to injure the thrower. P. 109, 57. her : Rosimunda, from whom he is returning. 59. I wishe youe, &c. : ironical, as Andr. II. i. 15-16 ' Byrr. Quidni ? si nihil impetres, | Ut te arbitretur sibi paratum mcechum, si illam duxerit '. 62. i mett : the p.ptcp. prefix, later y, and so revived archaically by Spenser {N.E.D.). 66. fraye : obsolete intr. use as Skelton's Image Hypocr. 509 ' Yow fray not of his rod', and a letter of 1638 {N.E.D.). The teasing ambiguity of Formosus' first answers is borrowed from the Latin. 71. ben doing: sexual sense, as probably ' I would fain be doing'. Taming, 11. i. 74. 72. first of all old loves, &c. : ' Nunc te per amicitiam et per amorem obsecro, | Principio ut ne ducas ' {Andr. II. i. 26-7). Again Misog. 11. iv. 53. Cf. W. W.'s translation of Plaut. Mencechmi, v (Sh. Libr. II. i. p. 28) ' desire him of all love to come over quickly'. N.E.D. compares Cooper's Thesaurus, Amabo (1655) ' Of felowshippe : of all loues : I pray the', &c., and M.N.D. 11. ii. 1 53 ' Speake of all loues '. O/^ merely intensive. P. 110, 73-4. way you to her : forward you, make your v?ay easy to her. The Cent. Diet, quotes Selden's Table-Talk, p. 39 'a horse that is not well wayed [trained to the road] ; he starts at every bird ', and an instance of ' weigh ' (transitively, of a ship) as ultimately the same. 88. or forge, &c. : ' Facite, fingite, invenite, efficite, qui detur tibi. ] Ego id agam, mihi qui ne detur' {Andr. 11. i. 34-5). 91-7. For. yfyd^goe, &c. : unrepresented in the Latin. 95. ye: yea, as i. i. 4, in. iii. 59, &c. "• V THE BUGGBEARS 285 96. Bindus or Octaueus: these two unessential characters are re- ported as calling to see Manutius in v. ix. 9. Charinus in the Andria has no such acquaintance, nor do they appear in La Spiritata, ed. 1582. It may be worth suggesting that in Heautontim. ill. ii. 89 an engagement with ' Simus et Crito ', not elsewhere mentioned, calls Chremes from the stage for a moment. 97. quere : enquire. P. 111. Act III . Scena i"" . squartacantino.: the original, as Grabau points out, is GV Ingantiati, ii. 5, given here complete ; it corresponds to our 11. I s-38 only. ' Spela seruo di Gherardo, solo. Spe. Pvo esser peggio al mondo che seruire k un pazzo ? Gherardo mi inanda k comprare il zibetto ; quando lo domandai al profumiere, & dissi ch' io non haueua piu d'un bolognino, cominci6 k dire ch'io non haueua tenuto k mente, & che Gherardo doueua hauer detto un bussol d' unguento da rogna, che n' haueua bisogno, che sapeua, che no usaua zibetto. Cominciaigli k dire accioche egli mel credesse, di questo suo amorazzo, et su per crepar di ridere con certi gioueni, che eran 15, & uoleua pur ch'io gli portasse un bussol d' assafetida ; tal che cosi di- leggiato me ne partij ; hor se '1 padrone il uuole, diami piu quattrini ' (ed. ' Venetia, mdliiii.'). It will be seen that, besides the introductory song, 22-9, 44-55 are unrepresented in the Italian. 6. amber grece : ambergris, a secretion of the sperm whale used in perfumery and cookery. grymed: smeared, as 1. 44. 9. golden teeth : of the stopping in them. 14-15. and he liP* martch . . . resygne : ' march hys sygne ' is the boisterous Aries, which the sun enters about the vernal equinox (Mar. 21), passing out of Pisces, i. e. 'from fysh to flesh ', with allusion to the close of Lent (earliest possible Easter, March 22), when Cantalupo hopes to be married. After Aries the sun traverses Taurus (allusion to ' horns ') and enters Gemini (cf. 1. 15) in the latter part of May. a/'* may, either of the time of Rosimunda's delivery, or simply to identify her with the youthful month. 16. bearyng one to manye : see last note ; but for ordinary sense cf. IV. v. 41 note. 17. eveny : perhaps a late instance of the obsolete sb. evene, matter, material, found {N.E.D.) in Cursor Mundi, 335 ' of himself he toke his euen }>at he of wroght bath erth and heuen ', and Kingis Qiihair (1423), clxxxii ' Quhat nedis me, apoun so litill evyn. To writt all this ? ' — the material here being horns added to the head. 22. goinne (or gonnie) : booby, simpleton, still in northern dialect. N.E.D. quotes R. Anderson, Cumberland Ball. (1804) 116 ' She dance ! what she turns in her taes, thou peer gonny '. 23. friskoioly : no instance quoted. 24. tideling: to 'tiddle ' is to fondle. (Johnson.) 25. colfes teeth : of unbridled youthful desire. Euph. ii. 172 1. 25 ' I had not thought that as yet your coltes tooth stucke in your mouth, or that so olde a trewant in loue could hetherto remember his lesson '. 286 NOTES ni. i 27. over hayed: surfeited; B. Taylor's North. Travel. (1858) 143 ' The postilion stopped ... to hay his horses ' {N. E. D.\ 29. Come wayle : i. e. to bewail his horns ; cf. ' Saint Cornelius badge ', I. iii. 12. The pun, though not in Gl' Ingannati, is found in 0«. Fur. xxviii/24 ' Corneto ', xlii. 103 ' se porti il cimier di Comovaglia . P. 112, 31". mashyp: mz.st^rshi^,a.s].YityviooA'sPlay of the Wether, 235 ' your maship hath a mery life '- 43. Assafeatida : ' resinous gum ... an anti-spasmodic ' (N.E.D.). 44. grandgosier : Grangousier {gosier, throat), the drunken father of Gargantua in Rabelais, Bk. I, 1532, is old and weak in c. xxviii. 45. wind me home: implying secrecy or circuitousness. Cf. W. W. s Mencech. (Sh. Lib. v. p. 22) 'could not winde my selfe out till now', Toumeur's Rev. Frag. iii. I 'some trick ... To winde our yonger brother out of prison'. Again, iv. iv. 16. 51. a coolyng carde: 'cooled with a carde of tenne,' Euphues, ii. 93 1. 15 shows the metaphor to be from cards, not from a chart or manual. Again, Misog. ill. ii. 23. 53. two left heeles: not among the popular euphemisms of IV. v. 39-45. ' Short heeles' is not infrequent for frailty. 54. franions : see I. ii. 2. 55. pott panions: boon companions, with pun. See. 2" : the opening soliloquy is that of La Spir. iii. I ; 11. I-26 being practically new — in the Ital. he merely says he found his confessor unwell — while a few lines of the remainder (35-72) are from La Spir. iii. 2 where Giovangualberto is joined by Niccodemo. I. Tristissia vestra : recalling S. John xvi. 20 in the Vulgate — ' plorabitis et flebitis vos, mundus autem gaudebit : vos autem con- tristabimini, sed tristitia vestra vertetur in gaudium' — sorrow amid an unsympathetic world is the point Amedeus wishes to recall. 3. for help, &c. : ' for all the help ' ; or ' no ' is lost before ' help '. 6. hottie tottie : of amorousness. A parallel slighting reduplication is ' Hankyn Hoddydody ' in Roist. Doist. I. i. 25, with which Flugel compares ' Handy-dandy ' (a bribe) in Piers Plow. v. 68. P. 113, 33. no poynt speake : no speech at all, not a jot of speech, Fr. ne . . . point. Cf. The Triall of Treasure, pr. 1567 (Haz. Dodsley, iii. 263) ' For of a man's living here there is no point endentus ' (i.e. eniendu, transposed to rhyme with 'Juventus'), also ib. p. 277 'Non point parle frangois, non, par ma foy': lack lugeler (Dodsl. ii. 130) ' Thou art no point Careaway '. 37. grene sicknes: anaemia: Capulet couples 'green sickness carrion' {Rotn. &= ful. III. V. 157) with the epithet ' tallow-face'. 38. timpanye : drum-like inflation, dropsy (Gk. rvfinavins) : cf. Dryden's MacFlecnoe, ' thy mountain belly . . . 's but a tympany of sense.' P. 114, 45. sytt all on thomes till: in Heywood's Prov. (repr. p. 27). Cf. Lyly's Moth. Bomb. iv. i. 56 ' There 's a girle stands on pricks till she be married '- 47. / beare ye hole charge : in Gl. Ing. i. i Gherardo offers to pay the charges of the wedding. "I- ii THE BUGGBEARS 287 61. vngly : not recognized, but repeated in. iii. 73 (vnglte or onglie or oiiglie), and cf. iv. ii. 87 ongly or ougly. All three cases in C.'s writing. 62. vnneth : scarcely , ' unnethes ' in Shep. Kal. Jan. 6. P. 115, 69. nycitie : folly ; the earlier sense, as Chaucer, Pari, of Foules, 572 ' Now parde, fool, yet were hit bet for thee | Have hold thy pees, than shewed thy nycete '. Scena^: follows La Spirit, m. -^ fairly closely, adding Cantalupo and the competition for the necromancer, with addition also to the names of spirits, charms, &c., for some of which Grabau refers us to Johann Weier's (1513-1588) De Prastigiis Damonum, lib. v. ch. 8 [so in 6th ed. Basilese, 1583 : but lib. iv. c. 7 in 3rd ed. Basilese, 1566, the earliest accessible to me], 'Magicae et svperstitiosas morborum curationes, adhibitis quandoque carminibus, plerunque uerbis ignotis '. The book was written in 1562, and published by Oporinus at Basle 1563. 16^. dispatcht: rid. Florio (1611) translates It. ^j^accw 'a dispatch, a hastning, a riddance ', and Spacdatamente ' dispatchedly . . . with riddance or much speed '. JV. E. D. P. 116, 19. indent: make formal contract. 24-6. yn Orleaunce, &c. : 23-33 not in Italian. No exploits of Michael Nostradamus (L 133), the famous physician (i 503-1 566 July 2), at Orleans are recorded ; nor does Cornelius Agrippa (ob. 1533 or 1534), with whom he might in English notions be confused seem to have had any special connexion with that place {Corneille Agrippa: sa vie et ses ceuvres par M. Auguste Frost, Paris, 1881. 2 torn.). But in the undated piece printed (4° bl. lett.) by Wynkyn de Worde (ob. IS34) and entitled 'A Mery Geste of the Frere and the Boye ', it is said of the piping boy, 427-8 ' He is a grete nygromancere | In all Orlyaunce is not his pere' (W. C. Hazlitt's Early Pop. Poetry 1866, iii. 79). Possibly the association of the town with magic may be due to English memories of Joan of Arc. — The life of Nostradamus by Eugtee Bareste (Paris, 1840) narrates his brilliant success in combating the plague at Aix and Lyons (1530) : but it was his fame as an astrologer — he had published his first seven Centuries of pro- phecies at Lyons, 1555, 8".— that induced Catharine de' Medici to invite him to Paris, 1556, where he was highly distinguished by herself and Henry II, and sent to take the horoscope of the three young princes, her sickly sons, at Blois, a delicate mission which he discharged with discretion. (See further under Date, p. 81.) Catha- rine's 'teemyng' is probably a Protestant slander. Brantome (Les Dames Illusires), no very impartial witness perhaps, testifies to her irreproachable life from her marriage in 1533 until her husband's death in 1559, when, at forty, she became regent. He relates, however, that the Huguenots in the second civil war (begun 1567) named a large culverin ' la reyne m^re ', in allusion to her big figure. 37. liP^ my familyer : ' lo non posso dirvi nulla, se prima non favello col mio spirito', Grazz. Joh. Weier, De prcestigiis dmmonum, lib. i (ed. 1583, col. 116) 'Familiares quoque referuntur demones, pri- vatorum hominum se nutum obseruare simulantes. Tali consiliario fretus legitur Socrates ' ; and he goes on to cite the doe of Q. Sertorius and Numa's nymph Egeria. A little black dog, of which Cornelius 288 NOTES I"- "1 Agrippa made an unreasonable pet at Antwerp (c. 1531), assumed in popular imagination the same character : the nails on its collar were said to be arranged to form magic symbols, and Paulus Jovius (Elogta doctorum virorum . . . Antverpice, 1557, pp. 223-4) repeats the tale that Agrippa on his deathbed broke out angrily—' Abi perdita bestia, qua me totum perdidisti', whereupon the animal, which had never left him, plunged into the Sa6ne and was drowned. A similar dog is assigned to Friar Bungay, and to Dr. Faustus (Ward's Old Eng. Drama, p. 115). Agrippa, De Vanit. et Incert. Scient. c. 45, speaks of ' they whiche ... do feede spirites in glasses, by whom they auaunte to prophecie '. Albizo in Grazzini's play keeps his familiar ' costretto in uno oriuolo da sole' (sun-dial). Cf. Hey wood's Prov. p. 63, 'the devil in th' orologe.' 43. lernyng: instruction : cf. Ps. xxv. 4 and Lyly's M. Bomb. II. v. 48 ' my Sonne . . . whom I haue brought vp at Oxford, and I thinke must learne heere in Kent at Ashford '- 44. thes spirtes are of sondry natures : that the reader may see exactly which names or classes can be identified in the Italian, I copy the remainder of the scene {La Spirit, iii. 3) from the modern edition of Fanfani (Florence, 1859, 8°) which corrects a few misprints of the ed. of 1582. '■Albizo. . . . E a fine che voi intendiate meglio, gli spiriti sono di piu varie e diverse spezie, come ignei, aerei, acquatici, terrei, aurei, argentei, folletti, foraboschi e forasiepi, amabili, dilettevoli, sociali, e vattene Ik. Giovang. O potenzinterra ! voi mi fate strabiliare di tanta e cosl fatta scienza. Niccod. Questa h altra dottrina che quella di Bartolo, Cino e Baldo. Traf. Siii : voi non avete inteso nulla. Alb. Ben dice il vero, questi son quelli solamente della luce : ci restano gli spiriti delle tenebre, che sono demonj, diavoli, orchi, streghe, tregende, setanassi, versiere, arpie, ermafroditi, lestrigoni e infiniti altri. Giov. Odi qua: io mi sento raccapricciar tutto quanto a sentirgli ricordare. Nice. Vegniamo all' effetto oggimai, e cominciamo a dire. Ah ! che dite voi, maestro ? Alb. Dico che prima che io dica altro, mi convien favellare alio spirito, che io ho alia stanza, costretto in uno oriuolo da sole ; et a voi intanto bisogna andare ad un religiose ; ma che ? andretene a maestro Innocenzio [the 'medico' who had coached Maddalena in her part as possessed] e fatevi copiare (intendete bene) quell' incanto, che fece per monna Checca; e poi che egli ve ne ark copiato un per uno, fatelo star ritto, e leggerlo ad agio e forte, e voi ve gli inginocchiate ai piedi, e cominciate a far pezzolini di quella carta nella quale egli ark copiato detto incanto ; e non restate mai infino che egli non I'ha fornito tutto di dire : e dipoi rizzatevi, e guardate di riccor bene tutti quel pezzolini, e gittateli in sul primo fuoco che voi trovate. Daravvi il cuore di far questa faccenda ? Giov. Sta bene. "i-iii THE BUGGBEARS 289 Alb. E a voi ? Nice. Benissimo ; ma poi dove ci ritroverem noi ? Alb. Sar6 qui fra un' ora il piu lungo. Ma che ? costui sa la stanza : se non ci fussi quando voi tornate, mandatelo per me, e io ne verr6 subito a voi. Giov. Al noma di Dio, faremo a cotesto mode. Nice. Andianne in tanto a trovare maestro Innocenzio. Alb. E io me ne andr6 alio spirito. Giov. Bene avete detto. Tu, Trafela, che farai intanto ? Traf. Accompagnerb il maestro; e andrommene poi a trovar Giulio ; e verrencene in qua, che doverrk essere otta di desinare. Giov. Tu 1' hai pensata bene ; ma ditemi, maestro, come vi fate voi chiamare ? Alb. Aristomaco da Galatrona. Giov. Voi dovete dunque essere della schiatta di Nepo ? Alb. Di quella casata son disceso al piacer vostro. Giov. O che grandi uomini ! per incanti e per malie non hanno pari. Nice. Voi dovete essere come C}uelli della casa di San Pagolo. Alb. Cosl semo noi co gli spiriti, e co i diavoli, come sono essi coUe tarantole, e co i cani arrabbiati. Nice. Orsvi, non piu parole. Giov. A rivederci fra un' ora, o qui, o in casa. Alb. Cosi sia. Nice. Andianne a maestro Innocenzio. Giov. Andianne. Tra/. Voi di costk ; e noi di qua.' P. 117, 49. folletti : since, in the translation offered us in the next line, ' woodcrepers ' must be appropriated to forabosehi and ' hedg creepers' to forasiepi, we are left with 'the whyte & red fearye' to represent folletti, which are properly wind-spirits, little mischievous gusts and eddies (LaX. /ollis), though also used of dancing ignes fatui. But the passage from Bacon's Sylva quoted in 1. 65 shows the white and the red fairy to be identical with ' Garrett ', and the change from white to red which Bacon notes as the accompaniment of darkness might also be produced in smouldering wood under the action of wind or bellows. Pulci, Morgante Maggiore, xxv. 9, contrasts folletti with the infernal spirit Astarotte — ' Non h spirito folletto, egli h piu nero ' — on which J. A. Symonds (Renaissance, iv. 396) notes, ' This distinction between the fallen angels and the spiriti folletti deserves to be noticed. The latter were light and tricksy spirits, on whom not even a inagician could depend. Marsilio sent two of them in a magic mirror to Charlemagne (xxv. 92), and Astarotte warned Malagigi expressly against their vanity (xxv. 160, 161). Fairies, feux follets, and the lying spirits of modern spiritualists seem to be of this family.' Com- pare the distinction in Northern mythology between white and black fairies, between elves and gnomes : Ennemoser's Hist, of Magic (trs. W. Howitt), pp. 1 09-1 1. 53. of hylls wodes " THE BUGGBEARS 293 p. 42), where Gull the fairy says ' Many times I get on men and women, and so lie on their stomachs, that I cause them great pain ; for which they call me by the name of Hagge or Night-mare'. The function is not usually assigned to Hecate, though Mab or Abonde (Habundia), to whom Shakespeare allots it, is also a queen. P. 118, 74. make my heare stare: again, v. ii. 14. Cf. 'stare', of aggressive bearing, Misog. i. ii. 46. 79. greene hasell wand : in Euphues, ii. 1 1 9 1. 29, Psellus, the Italian physician in England, of whom Philautus asks a love-charm, ridicules such ' fonde deuices of olde dreames, as an Apple with an Aue Marie, or a hasill wand of a yeare olde crossed with six Characters, or the picture of Venus in Virgin Wax, or the Image of Camilla vppon a Moulwarpes skinne '. Weier (bk. iv. c. 7) mentions ' quidam ' who for intermittent fever ' uirgas duas parallelas uei'borum ui medijs partibus committit '. 80. thwite itfowre square : trim it with a knife to make it four-sided. Halliwell gives thwite as ' cut, notch', quoting Palsgrave, s. v. f. 390 ' I thwyte a stycke, or I cutte lytell peces from a thynge.' Cf. Chaucer's Hous of F. 1938 ' twigges . . . Swiche as men to these cages thwyte ' ; Heywood's Prov. (repr. p. loi) 'a mill post Thwitten to a pudding prick'. kS>.pwitan. Cf. Skeat, s. v. ■wMile. 82-4. Alpupencabas . . . gras : not among the charms recited by Agrippa, Weier, or Scot. 85. Galbes . . . Galdat : reported in Weier, iv. 7, as a charm against toothache. fayre written as yo^ can : such writing, or even cutting, on four sides of one wand being of course impossible. 87. Irioni, Kiriori: Weier, iv. 7 ' Contra canis rabidi morsum pani inscribitur : Irioni khiriori essera khuder fere, inde uoratur '. 88. daries . . . Astararies : Weir, ib. ' Catoni luxata membra (sanat) cantio hasc Danata, daries, dardaries, astararies, & reliqua'. 95. slend: tear, rend. Dorset (Halliwell). is/^w^, tear, rend, split, splinter {Dial. Diet. Dor. Som.). 102. To Umbo lakes, &c. : Scot, bk. vii. c. 11 'the woman of Endors spirit . . . with mother Alices divell at Westwell . . . are now bewraied and fled togither to Limbo patrum '. Litnbus (border, edge) being the place on the outskirts of Hell assigned to holy men and fathers who died before Christ's death, ' limbo lake ' came to be used for ' pit of heir (Vulgate laais), N.E.D. quoting Phaer's ^«. iii. (1555-8) and Fa. Qu. I. ii. 32. Cf. Apius and Virg. c. 1563 ' The furies fell of Limbo lake '. Here ' lakes ' is used of the classical rivers of hell. Hagges, spirits, as V. vii. 10; used of fairies in Lyly's Endim. iv. iii. 27. P. 119, 1 14. Miastor, &c. : some of these names are good Greek, others not. Considering the speaker, and the date, we are not justified in emending the text ; but I give the sense intended, with the nearest Greek equivalent. H. Stephanus's Thesaurus was not printed till c. 1572, but of course there were earlier lexicons, e. g. Craston's (Hallam's Lit. of Eur. i. 221). Miastor {luda-Tcop), crime-stained: Agniptos {iavnrros or nymnros), uncleansed ; Anturgos, opposer, but perhaps we should read Auturgos (airovpyis), independent : dolicoscMos {hoKixoaKws), 294 NOTES III. iii caster of the shadow : Theostygis (6iotrrvyr)s), god-hated : Cantilios or Cautilios (? Kavaiixnn, fit for burning, ? Kav(rTiK6s, inflammatory) : C/iris- modos (? smeared, XP'-'^V' — \ o"" should we read \piarn\m\os, enemy of Christ? Inoflyx, prob. ntVmrX^f, stinger: parmiioschos (I irapdnovaos, discordant, or irapaiioix6s, adulterer) : frenomoses (? (ppivoiuipfie, rnad- dening) : Gereos (? Kepa6s, horned) : Aphron {&fSj>pav), fool ; licnos (Xi'xvofj.glutton: phalacros {(l)!i\aKp6s),ha.\d-heiid: parochros(ndj>a)xpos), paleface): sapros {(rarrpSs), rotten: hypnilos (? \mvriK6s or \mvr\p6s), sluggard : phylargros (^CKapyvpoi), covetous. 118-20. vos claudo . . . Saraboth : ' I shut, constrain and bind you in this circle : I charge, threaten, adjure, order and command you and all the devils from Satan to Saraboth', (Sic. I do not find the latter name. In Weier ' lao Sabaoth ' is given as a charm in fishing. 122. come in place : present yourselves. J. Heywood's Play of the Wether , 340 ' Syr, yonder is a nother man in place. P. 120, 133. Nostradamus : substituted, as better known, for ' Ari- stomaco da Galatrona ' of the original. See note on 1. 24. 135. of Nepos race : ' della schiatta di Nepo ' Grazz., his editor, Fan- fani, remarking ' Nepo da Galatrona : un negromante che il Lasca mette in iscena altrove '. Giovangualberto, a student of necromancy, recognizes the surname, but I find nothing of this Nepo, 138. the brethern of syent paull, &c. : see the Italian, quoted on 1, 44, Cf. Scot's Discouerie, bk. xii, c. 15 (p. 206 Nicholson's reprint) ' Here is to be remembred, that manie use to boast that they are of S. Paules race and kinred, shewing upon their bodies the prints of serpents : which (as the papists affirme) was incident to all of them of S. Paules stocke. Marie they saie herewithall, that all his kinsfolks can handle serpents, or anie poison without danger.' The superstition is founded on the incident of the viper at Mclita, Acts xxviii. 3-6. In Castiglione's // Cortigiano, bk. i. (trs. Hoby 1561 , Tud. Tr. p, 36) the bite of the tarantula in Apulia is said to be cured by playing on different musical instruments. Scena ^" . Iph. Cat. : no source known, 5. feere : mate. P. 121, 10. my loss: i.e. that I should lose Manutius ; but love would be easier. 14. done: i. c. ddn, M.E, plural, ' do,' 29. "wryte vpon : rely on, though I find no instance. Originally, perhaps, of having a contract in writing. 31-2. god on hye doth lawgh, Sec: 'lupiter ex alto pcrjuria ridet amantum,' Ov. Art. Am. i. 633. P. 123, Act IV. Scena /»: closely from La Spir. iv. 2. Grabau wrongly includes sc. i of the Italian, which has nothing to do with this. See note on 11. iii. I. You shall, &c. : spoken off, to Rosimumia, whom she is leaving. IS- A merchant, &c. : altered from the Italian, ' Fiorentino,ma alle- vato in Pisa; et h scolare, amico grandissimo di Giulio, e fra due giomi se ne torna a studio,' &c. 17. qitalicUmes : qualities ; perhaps from a bad phrase in letters of recommendation, ' guali cum (indole, animo, &c.) sit.' IV. i THE BUGGBEARS 295 24. mowsed: rummaged; surviving, rarely, in America. 'Amous- mg, learned New Hampshire lawyer,' H. C. Lodge's Dan. Webster, p. 107 ; ' literary odds and ends, moused from rural attics,' New Yk. Evangelist, Oct. 20, 1864 {Cent. Diet.). 26. sort: heap, quantity. 27. punned: variant of 'pounded'. Cent. Diet, quotes Hakluyt's Voyages, iii. 272 'The roots . . . being punned into floure, will make good bread '- P. 124, 37. stand a shore : stand aside, ' discostare ' La Spir. : It. costa, Fr. cote, Eng. coast, all bearing the same double sense. N.E.D., however, explains ' dogges . . . stode aschore when thei schuld barke ' as ' a-straddle ', from ' shore ', prop, support. Scena 2" : in action and purport closely from La Spir. iv. 3, with slight changes in the dialogue. Cantalupo unrepresented in the Ital. II. sittes me nerier: cf. v. ii. 61 and Chaucer's Book of the Duch. 1220 ' hit sat me sore '. P. 125, 19. Both two : same pleonasm, Bemers' Froissart (1523), I. 621, and 'all both' Fortescue's Forest, 1571 (N.E.D.). Cf. Hey- wood's Play of the Wether, 715 ' nother of them both ', and W. W.'s MencEchmi, v. ' neither of us both '. 20. Content is agreed: Florio, Second Frvtes IS91, p. 28 translates the Italian proverb 'chi si contenta gode' by 'content is pleased': or for is we might read I'm or Is't. 36. in Paradise : ' che ella pare il paradiso di San Felice in Piazza,' La Spir., alluding to the Rappresentazione o{ the Annunciation given in that church. D'Ancona, Origini, i. 506-8, describes Brunelleschi's elaborate devices for the Paradise in that play, the innumerable lights for stars, &c. Amedeus' illuminated chamber is repeated from Le Cene — Essay, p. Ixxiii-iv. Did Grazzini recall Amphitruo, V. i. 44 ' Aedes tots confulgebanl tuas ' ? P. 126, 61. Bion. God send you good shipping: so his namesake. Taming, v. i. 43. P. 128, 81. ieobercious : )e.o^&rAoViS. "RtyviooA's Play of the Wether, 926 'jeoberd all thyne honestie ' ; Spider and Flie, c. 9 ' wyn my ieoberdee '. 83. carrayenes: carrions: ' careyne' four times, 'carayne' once (So^/^. IV. ii. 144), in Chaucer for ' corpse'. Cf. Sim. Fish's Suppl.for Beggers, c. 1529 (E.E.T.S. p. 13) 'declaring suche an horrible carayn of euyll against the ministres ', &c. 88. goff,shly : with mad abandon, ' pazze,' Grazz. N.E.D. s. v. goff, quotes Levins' Manip. (1570) 156/37 ' A Goffe, foole, morio, tardus', and connects with F. goffe, awkward, stupid. 89. fared: behaved, as v. v. 17 and Chaucer's Troilus, iv. 1087 ' Ey ! who seigh ever a wys man faren so .' ' 91. that : to express a wish (Ital. che), as Supposes, v. vi. i ' that the deuill cut oute your tong'. The Italian has ' questa andrebbe bene ora al palio ', ' would beat everything '. 92. for the officer : ' pel Bargello' (Grazz.), at whose official residence, still called by his title, would be found the ' sbirri ' of Trafela's next speech. 296 NOTES IV. ii 98. when ...In diebus illis : Grazz. ' Gtov. E quando diavol verra ? Mcc. Poi m diebus illis ', referring probably to the ' tribulation of S. Mark xiii. 24 ' Sed in illis diebus ', &c. (Vulgate). P. 129. Scena j" : represents La Spir. iv. 4, with a touch of 5, and changes in the latter part 25-41. I. we stayde: i.e. in Camillus' house, where they have deposited the money, 1. 13. 4. old: intensive adverb. 12. teend: light, kindle, usually spelt tind at tine: cf. 'tinder' and Norwegian tdndstickor, matches. P. 130, 17. pannes full of holes: i.e. barbers' fumigators, with pierced convex covers ; cf. Taming, IV. iii. 91 ' Here's snip, and nip, and cut, and slish and slash. Like to a censer in a barber's shop '. 19. hurdes : or hards, balls of hemp or tow. N.E.D. quotes Barth. Anglicus VIII. xliii ' hurdes set Jierto beth tende and set on fyre '. At school, I remember, for fifth of November celebrations, fireballs of this material, tightly bound up with string and soaked in turpentine long before, were lit and thrown about, producing a rush and roar of flame. 22. mak vp their mowtes : properly of staying or satisfying appetite, as Gam. Gurt. Needle, ill. iii. 49 ' Take this to make up thy mouth, til time thou come by more ! ' ; and, figuratively, in Cambyses (Haz. Dodsley, iv. 175), Sisamnes, resolving to use his office to his own profit, says ' According to the proverb old my mouth I will up make ', also Dam. and Pith. ib. p. 40. Here, ironically, ' finish them off,' Graz- zini's ' cavianne le mani ' (' let us take our hands from it ', of an artist who has given the last hand to his work) is rendered rather by ' finish up this geare'. Having the gold, they can now get Amedeus' consent to the match. 24. spend. . .inwast: so^w/^. i. 238 1. 28 'spend your winde in wast'. 30. plye the box: not in Grazzini. ' Box ' in Misog. 11. iv. 176 seems used for the pool at card-games : though in both cases the reference may be to collecting money. The sense here is ' don't be slack ', as Pacient Grissill, pr. 1565 (Malone Society, 1909, 1. 953) 'Brought a Bed all readie, they have plyed the box in deed '. 33. bayte : feed, refresh themselves. 34. cutte . . . shares : from the joint. 37. it lies 6-' bledes : i. e. needs bandaging up, rounding off. P. 131. Scena 4'^. Picinino : unrepresented in tlie Italian, where Giulio goes himself to find the uncle (v. 2), but suggested by Guag- niele's grumblings about food in iv. 5-6. 6. lurdge: to ease, akin to 'lurk', 'lurch', to idle, loaf, sneak about, and formed from the north country adj. and sb. lurgv, idle, lazy. Cf. Dial. Diet. 8. hunted at me : hunted me. N.E.D. quotes Merlin (E.E.T.S.) ii. 247 ' to hunte at the herte and other deer'. II. a wild wannion on it: probably a later form of waniand, waning, i.e. of the moon, taken to imply ill luck. (Cent. Diet.) Again, Misog. iv. i. 86, Apius and Virg. Dods. iv. 122, Eastward Ho IV. iv THE BUGGBEARS 297 iii. 2 ' Westward with a wanion t'ye '. For wild cf. Heywood's Play of the Wether, 430 ' A mischyefe upon them, and a wylde thunder '- 14. cantie vantie : onomatopoeic for ' at a canter '. 16. wind me straight about it : cf. ' wind me home', III. i. 45. Here perhaps an oxymoron ; certainly with pun on winde, 1. 15. Scene j^. Cant. Squart.: 'has no original' says Grabau: but the general idea of Squartacantino telling his master on Biondello's authority that his lady-love has been intriguing with another, is clearly suggested by GF Itigannati, ii. 8, where Crivello tells his master Flaminio, with close cross-questioning by the latter (as here), how Isabella has kissed and embraced the (supposed) page Fabio, and mentions another servant, Scatizza, as able to corroborate him. The actual dialogue, however, is entirely the Englishman's. P. 132, 6. she had her errand, &c. : see i. i. 7 1 note. 9 sqq. : All ironical — Squar. desiring anything but the match. 22. love in a cloake bagge : our ' portmanteau '- Apparently of light love, soon put off or on. 26. That we see not, &c. : so Philautus in Euph. ii. 63 1. 7 ' to weare a home and not knowe it, will do me no more harme then to eate a flye and not see it ' ; and Othello. 27. on end: on the whole, after all. 28-9. hope well &» have well . . . young Saint Sr" old devell : pro- verbs, the first in the form of 'Beleeve well and have well' is in Haywood (repr.), p. 90, the second ib. p. 27. P. 133, 39. trode her slipper a wrie : Halliwell quotes Cotgrave, ' A woman to play false, enter a man more then she ought, or tread her shooe awry.' Perhaps at first of mere gadding, wearing down the shoe : cf. Heywood's Epigrammes, 1562, no. 513 ' My wife doth euer tread hir shooe awrye. | Inward, or outward ? nay, all outwardly : | She treadth so outward, that if she out wyn, | She wyll by hir wyll, neuer treade foote within.' 40. lookt babies in here eie : of amorous ogling, explained, perhaps needlessly, of the tiny reflection in the pupil of any one near at hand. Cf. Fletcher's The Woman's Prize, v. i 'No more fool. To look gay babies in your eyes, young Rowland, And hang about your pretty neck ' (of the estranged Li via). 41. play'd false at tabelles: i.e. cheated at backgammon. In Sup'p. I. ii. 7 the Nurse uses 'ouersee the best poynt in his tables' of a pro- spective cuckold. Cf. Lyly's Sapho &= Phao, ill. ii. 49 ' the same time did Mars make a full point '. berne a man too manie : cf ill. i. 16 : properly a phrase at ' tables'. Heywood's Epigrammes (1562), no. 53 'Eche other caste thou bearest a man to many '. 43. vpon feathers : i. e. on a bed. 55. thither: to Brancatius' house. 60. stere : stir ; spelling perhaps accommodated to the rhyme, but cf. 'here' for 'her', I. ii. 35-6, iv. v. 40, v. viii. 33. P. 134, 61. thenere: properly a comparative, OE. neah + r. 67. haue vs weene, &c. : its truth, however, is shown by I. ii. 43, III. iii. 144-5- 298 NOTES IV. V •J I. wilbe good to'* a rake : of one who collects even the droppings from the hayload. 72. my thryfte is laid on soake: my profit is indefinitely deferred, perquisites and presents being cut off. So 'Thy thryfte is layde a sonnynge ' of feeding a hawk extravagantly) Johan the Euangelist, 492. Grabau's reading thryste (for 'thirst) would suit 'soak' (= to become dry) noted by H alii well. But MS. is clear. Act V. Scena /" Donatus. Pice. : unrepresented in the Italian ; see note on iv. iv, and on v. iv. 6. the longst daye : i. e. the most distant. P. 135, 10. them twoe: Formosus and Camillus (iv. iii. 24-7). Scena 2" : from La Sfir. v. I, omitting some two pages which deal with the girl's possession and substituting 23-59 about Manutius and Cantalupo, and 82-129 about Rosimunda's illness. 2. Clackes : tongues, as 11. iv. 32 (note). 4. vnderhear : no instance quoted. 13. Caccubeoni : ' pretty topers ', apparently a coinage of Grazzini's ; 'Cuccubeoni' in La Spir. v. I, 'cuccobeoni' in Grazzini's Cene, ii. nov. 6, see Essay, p. Ixxiv. For Amedeus' difficulty with the name, see V. vii. 22 note. 14. heare to stare : above, III. iii. 74. P. 136, 17. he were . . . dead: 'ispirita', bewitched, Grazz. 20. what m!' chant : ' che genia ' (rabble), Grazz. 23. taught . . . datmce : i. e. expelled them, as Satan from heaven ; not in the Italian. P. 137, 46. Hath : the subject is ' three thowsand ', 1. 43. 61. sytes: sits, behoves; cf. I v. ii. 11. P. 138, 65 sqq. : a booke of orlando, &c. : substituted, with some loss of point, for ' un quadro d'una Madonna di mano d' Andrea del Sarto : ma che hanno a fare i diavoli delle Vergini Marie ? '— perhaps, as Grabau suggests, as better known in England. 75. rent: recognized variant of rend. Cf. Lyly's Endim. v. iii. 42 ' my rented and ransackt thoughts '. 79. Call me hardlie Cutt: say boldly, I am done for, no use. Hardly again v. iii. 4, Johan the Euangelist, 447, Heywood's Play of the Wether, 867 ' yes, hardely ', Roist Doist. I. ii. 175 ' Yea now hardly lette me alone'. 'Cut' was a term of insult, properly of a gelded horse, or one whose tail has been cut. Nares' Gloss, quotes ' call me cut ' from Tiv. Nt. 11. iii. 203, and ' If I tell thee a lie, spit in my face, call me horse' (i Hen. IV, 11. iv. 215) as equivalents; and two in- stances from Gam. Gurton's Needle. Cf. Supp. V. v. 41. 88. the fallyng evill: epilepsy, but with double entente; cf. the pun Jul. CcEs. I. ii. 258. P. 139, 96, 120. decease : disease. Cf. Euphues, i. 245 1. 22 ' if you be angrye bicause I am pleased, certes . . . you woulde be content if I were deceased' i. e. diseased (so spelt 9th ed. .''1597), of trouble in general, but applied to love as here, ib. p. 236 1. 16 ' Did not Apollo conuerte himselfe into a Shepheard ... to heale hys disease ? ' 101. one He tell youe \ one whose name I'll give you. 114. defye: distrust (Fr. defier). v.u THE BUGGBEARS 299 116. seke vnto: cf. 'sought to Solomon', i Kings x. 24. P. 140, 117. There lay a strawe: imperative. The Cent. Did. says It occurs in Holland's tr. of Camden, p. 141, in the sense of pause and make a note'. But doubtless the use as a warning origi- nated in a superstition alluded to as late as Addison's paper on Witchcraft, No. 117 'If she [Moll White] chanced to stumble, they [her neighbours] always found sticks or straws that lay in the figure of a cross before her'. In Heywood's Proverbes (repr. p. 92) occurs ' Ye stumbled at a straw, and lept over a block '. 121. Suffumigation: fumigation; in connexion with sorcery, Chau- cer's Hous of F. 1264 {Cent. Diet.). 125. Caspar fert Mirrham, &c. : the names of the three Magi naturally figure in charms. Grabau pointed to Weier iv. 7 (1566) ' Magics & superstitiosse morborum curationes ' — ' cujusmodi hi usur- pantur rhythmi contra epilepsiam : Caspar fert myrrham, thus Melchior, Balthasar aurum: Haec tria qui secum portabit nomina regum, Soluitur a morbo Christi pietate caduco '. Scenaj'^. Cantalupo: the scene added by the English author. I. shorne in the neck : where the wool is thickest. 3. bagd: pregnant, see iV. ^. Z*. 4. hardly : boldly, roundly, as v. ii. 79. P. 141. Scena 4"^. Donatus : the scene unrepresented in the Italian ; but the opening lines show that the English adapter connected our kind uncle with the part played by Crito in the Xiia-is of the Andria, V. iv. 1-2 ' Mitte orare : una harum quasvis causa me ut faciam monet ; | Vel tu, vel quod verum est, vel quod ipsi cupio Glycerio '. 1-6. Spoken back, to Formosus, whom he went to see in Camillus' house at end of sc. i. 14. transfortned : changed, from the crowns of V. ii. 77. In Grazzini, too, V. V, the coins are new, and in two bags, not the three of Giovangualberto. 22. he : Biondello, who went in with Amedeus, v. ii. &o, to see if the money was really stolen. The reviser's substitution of Cantalupoes for Amedeus, 1. 23, which was meant to square with his omission of sc. V, still leaves an inconsistency. Leaping forth recalls Ter. Eun. V. vii. 6 ' quidnam hie properans prosilit ?' So Supp. v. vi. 38. Scena j". Bion. Form. Man. : unrepresented in the Italian. 4. comyng: from Camillus' house (v. i. 10 note, iv. iii. 8, 15). P. 142, 13. A beverage : poitr boire, as v. viii. 3 (note), 25. \']. flong: danced or rushed about. Cf. Roist. Doist. 11. 3. 27 ' Well Trupenie, never but flinging .' A. And frisking ? ' fared: behaved, as iv. ii. 89. 21, bySr'by: at once ; ' the end is not by and by, ' Luke xxi. 9. P. 143. Scena 6": unrepresented in the Italian. Biondello is also present (he speaks v. vii. 12, a scene continuous with this) but is omitted in the enumeration, because silent in this scene. Cf. Supp. V. viii. Pasiphilo omitted, v. ix. Philogano om. ; and Plaut. Capt. iii. 2. Aristophantes om., v. i. Stalagmus om. ; Ter. Eun. iii. 2 Cha^rea and the Ethiopian om., Phormio, ii. 3 Demipho's friends om., &c. 300 NOTES V. VI 17-19. ioy . . . Coy . . . Anoy : for the triplet cf. II. v. 5-7. 33. htigye : ' this hugie court," locasta, Act I. Found 1728 (N.E.D.J- 29. For.: undoubtedly the speech belongs to Formosus, who ad- vances and greets the old men as if the meeting were pure accident. Some one misunderstanding ' fayne courtesy' seems to have transferred the speech to Trappola, overlooking the unnaturalness of his greeting of Donatus, an entire stranger to him. Hence, probably, the further alteration ' strayne curtesy ', a phrase for abrupt departure, e. g. M. Bombie, III. iii. 34 ' I must straine cursie with you ; I haue busines, 1 cannot stay ' : but Trappola, who has no motive for going, in fact remains ; and the failure to insert For. before ' god save youe ' only made the inconsistency worse. Formosus advancing and greeting them might be supposed to arrest Trappola's intended exit ; but it is better to re.a.Afayne and give the whole speech to Formosus. P. 144, 34. apear in a glasse : i.e. in a mirror (cf. note on III. iii. 37), or else in a crystal as in Scot's Bk. xv. c. 12 ' How to enclose a spirit in a christall stone'. The pretended indication by the spirit of Formosus as the husband is borrowed from I. iii. and V. i. of the Italian, where the spirit possessing Maddalena insists on the marriage with Giulio. 39. ons : a future use now obsolete. Cent. Did. quotes Bp. Hall ' acquaint David with that court which we shall once govern '. But cf. Stipp. V. v. 79 note, where it means ' in fine '. Scena 7". Amedeus, &c. : combines La Spir. V, sec. iv. v, follow- ing the Italian somewhat less closely ; 96-107 added. 10. hagges : spirits, as ill. iii. 102. 12. hangvppes: fit for hanging, like 'halter-sack', 'rope-ripe', &c. P. 145, 16. ye be bold: 'yea, be assured,' as III. iii. 59. 18. Gibbe catte: 'Gib [i.e. Gilbert] our cat' occurs Like Will to Like. 21. gather good: save money. In the Ital. ' Povero me ! va' ora e ' fa' masserizia (economize) : e per chi ? per i Cruscabecconi ! ' 22. Cruscabecconi: cf. 42-3 ; Ital. 'Cruscabecconi', ' Cacamusoni ', ' Cornamusoni '. Amedeus — Giovangualberto's difficulty about the name is no doubt suggested by that of Massimo in 11 Negromante, iii. 4, where he perverts Jachelino's ' pentacoli ' into ' pentole ', ' pennacchi ', and ' spantacchio '. 24-5. fell vpon a light fire : blazed alight with fire, like ' all on a gore (of) blood'. Again, The Birthe of Hercules (c. 1606?) 2340, 2496 (ed. Malone Society) 'our house did shyne as yt had bene on a light fier '. 28. taught . . . lerrie . . .poop to : cf. II. iv. 28 (note)— the separation, a common vulgarity, suggests a supposed connexion with lere, learning. ' Insegnava loro rodere i ceci ' Grazz. (' gave them beans '). for thier knacking : in return for their noise, or mockery ; see N.E.D. s. V. Knack, v. Roist. Doist. III. ii. 58 'in good knacking earnest ', of emphatic thump or stamp. 31. end: object. 35. teinpten : plural with a collective. The -en of OE. pres. subj. pi. replaced the -aih of pres. indie, pi. in early ME. of the Midland dialect. v-vii THE BUGGBEARS 301 and became general in later ME. (Sweet's New Eng. Gram. (1900) pars. 1230, 1247). Cf. done, ill. iv. 14. P. 146, 60-1. The unrhymed line reported in footnote seems inserted by the faint ink corrector merely to obviate some abruptness in ' & con- clude with Manutius ', with whom no interview has been fixed. But Charinus in the Andria lies even more outside the action : see there, V. V. 7. 67. she : i. e. ' the pore girle ', left hanging, 1. 65. P. 147, 71. here is the monye: contrast 1. 78. In Grazzini (v. v.) it is handed him ' in these two bags ', the old man quieting a touch of sus- picion by reflecting that his lost hoard was in three ; and at 1. 85 our author, following the Italian, seems to forget 1. 78. Yet, spite of 1. 71, he may not intend the money to be actually brought on to the stage. 84. S. D. and Biondello] : he has two speeches at the end of sc. viii, at the outset of which only the fresh entries are named, Biondello being included among the ' others ' already on the stage. 85. iumpe: exactly, as Misog. ill. i. 178, N.E.D.'s earliest instance being of 1 5 39 : ' to be lump with Alexander ' is used of flattering echo of words in Lyly's Campaspe, i. iii. 130. 86-7. geve 7ne here thy hand, &c. : to Formosus ; intended to sug- gest the formal ceremony of ' assurance ', though Rosimunda should also have been present. Cf. Taming, iv. iv. 57-9. 89. di Medici: no surname given in La Spirit. The adapter's eye may have caught Grazzini's dedication to Rafaello de' Medici. P. 148, 98. mypromyse: see I.ii. lio-ii, v. vi. 13-14. This further, and only real, provision is not made in La Spiritata. 102. faire : handsome ; cf. ' very fairly bound ' (of books), Tatning, 1. ii. 146. 107. in earnest : in anticipation. 108. leve : give leave, grant, as Chaucer, Troilus, i. 597. Scena 8^ Tomasine Philida, &c. : in La Spir. v. 6 the necromancer announces Maddalena's recovery, and Niccodemo goes to acquaint her with the contract ; but the quarrel between the servants is suggested by La Spir. v. 9 where Lucia and the Nurse accompany her to Giovangualberto's house. The actual dialogue is the English author's. 3. beverag: pour boire, tip. as v. v. 13. In the drinking-scene. Piers Plowman, A. v. 189 ' Bargeyns and beuerages, bigonne to aryse ', it may carry the sense of ' wetting a bargain '. For the competition between servants to bring good tidings, cf. Roist. Doist. ii. 3 end, and Pasiphilo in Supp. V. vii. 3, from Ergasilus {Capt. iv. i. 12). Essay, p. xlix (7), 6. good heale be her boote : thorough recovery be her help. P, 149, 14. braide : start, as 1. 16, or perhaps outcry. See N. E. D. 21. nurtured in hast : i.e. you're a blind puppy. 'Canis festinans caecos parit catulos,' Erasmus' Adagia, p. 315, ed. 1574. 22. better plaste : i. e. not spoken now at all. 30. helping of her sicknesse : in the Italian the possession was feigned ; here, since the pregnancy is real, the recovery must be feigned. Trappola, HI. iii. 144-5, could only promise us ' som dogtrick ' for this purpose, which must be sought in Toraasine's fictitious excite- 302 ' NOTES v.viu ment. Philida's is merely emulous of hers ; and the patient herself does not appear. , P. 150, Scena p". Man. Car. Bion. : dialogue almost wholly the Englishman's. Grabau refers us to Ter. Andr. v. S where (and in sc. vi) Pamphilus exults over his good fortune, imparts it to Davus, and takes Charinus into the house, while Davus bids the audience not wait for their return : but we may compare also Chserea and Parmeno in Ter. £uft. V. 8. Further, La Spir. v. lo closes with Giulio's commission to Trafela, as here, to provide good cheer and invite guests to the ban- quet ; and quite the nearest parallel to Biondello's licenzia is afforded by the few words of Stragualcia at the end of GP Ingannati, see note on 57-end. The deletion marks over 24-74 seem made with a view to the substitution of other matter for what was felt as an unsatisfactory ending ; ' brancativs ' for ' biondello ', 1. 24, a change inconsistent with 39, 69, heralding perhaps an alteration never carried out, and the marginal comment (? Wurse so) referring to the effect of simple dele- tion. See Introd. pp. 79-80. 2. my Toy : he comes from Cantalupo, cf. v. vii. 60-I, v. 28. 4. fleete : float, OE. fliotan. N. E. D. quotes Chancers Dreme (bef. 1500), 1962 'Fleting they were in swich wele', &c. Cf. Gasc. and Kinwelmarsh's locasta, Act I (chorus) ' Then should he swimme in seas of sweete delight '. 5. yf. . . immortall, &c. ; suggested by Andria, V. v. 3-4 ' Ego Deorum vitam propterea sempiternam esse arbitror, Quod voluptates eorum proprise sunt : nam mihi immortalitas Parta 'st ', &c. 9. Bindus (S-» Octavius : see II. v. 96 note. righte now : still American, in the sense ' at once '. 10. to lokeyo'' : Euph. i. 194 1. 32 • to looke it ' ; A. Y.L.I. 11. vi. 33. P. 151, 19. excede: not used absolutely, the object following in 1. 20. 22. dreame . . . have it: Andr. v. vi. 7-8 ' Num ille somniat Ea, quae vigilans voluit ? ' 23. fourd : afford (cf. N. E. D.), because so unkind hitherto. 26. cull: embrace, Fr. accoler (col). Cf. Supp. I. iii. 66 'kissing and colling ', and Euph. ii. 5 1. 4. 29. derling : rhymes with werlyng in Heywood's Prov. (1562), 65. P. 152, 48. huddell: adv. ' in a heap ' ; ' to joy ' is vb. Cf. note on I. ii. 75. S7-end. my masters, &c. : reproducing and enlarging the brief licenzia or dismissal of the 'spettatori' or 'ascoltatori', found at the end of La Spir. and all Grazzini's comedies, as of Bibbiena's Calandria and Ariosto's Lena and Negromante. The Andria, follow- ing the Cistellaria, closes with ' Ne expectetis, dum exeant hue : intus despondebitur ; Intus transigetur, si quid est, quod restet. Plaudite'. Plautus' brief epilogues are usually entrusted to ' Grex ' or ' Caterva ' ; but that of Dasmones at the end of the Rudens bears some likeness to this. See Essay, pp. xlvii-viii. I translate the close of GV Ingannati : ' Spectators, don't wait for them to come out again ; that will make a long play very long indeed. If you like to come to supper with us, I'll expect v-ix THE BUGGBEARS 303 you at the Fool (the inn) : but bringlyour purses, there 's no one to frank you. If you don't care to come— and I fancy you don't— stay where you are and good luck to you, and do you, Intronati (' Thunderstruck ', the name adopted by the Academy), show your approval.' Trafela's closing words in La Spir. are—' Spectators, it will be a good while before I come back with so many errands to go : so, that you may suflfer no inconvenience, get you home, for the fun is over; and show your pleasure by your applause.' 59. small pence: little pay. 66. ambrie : or aumbry, cupboard. P. 153, 80. we boyes : indicating composition, or performance, as a school-drama, or by one of the Children's companies. 81. in gree: in good part. MISOGONUS P. 173, Title Page. The names : the English reader will not, perhaps, resent being told that most of them are of Greek etymology and significant, e.g. Philogonus (child-lover), Eupelas (good neigh- bour), Cacurgus (mischief-maker), Misogonus (properly child-hater, but meant as parent-hater or bad son), Orgelus (passionate, Gk. opy'CKos), Oenophilus (fond of wine), Liturgus (good for service), Eugo- nus (meant for ' good son ', cf. IV. i. 98, as Misogonus for ' bad son ') ; that ' morio ' means Fool, ' obstitrix ' (obstetrix) midwife, ' peregrinus ' foreigner, and ' testes vetulse ' old women witnesses ; and (from Manly) that ' Ceister ' (or ' Custer ' in the play) is short for Christopher. Bariana : i. e. Barjona, as Kittredge. The contemporary MS. w differs in shape from this Greek a), for the use of which in printed work the Italian Trissino had a fancy, as Collier notes {Hist. Dram. Poet. ii. 368). P. 174, Prologue. 13. Yow . . . moste excellente: distinguishing some individual (the Queen, Vicechancellor of Cambridge, some local dignitary), or merely gentle from simple. 16. I ment it not: i. e. meant not to claim poetic fame by appearing with laurel wreath. Lines 1-12 are spoken in the person of the author of the play, 13-20 in that of the speaker of the prologue, 37-44 as one of the company of actors. No such confusion occurs in any prologue of Plautus, Terence, or Ariosto : however varied its function, it is con- sistently written as the utterance of the speaker, not of the poet. 19-20. in Homers hewe, &c.: as chief of narrative poets. He appears as a kind of narrative Chorus at intervals throughout Thomas Heywood's Silz/er Age, printed 1613, but probably a revision before Dec. 14, 1601, of Martin Slaughter's First Part of Hercules, produced by the Lord Admiral's men. May 7, 1595 (cf. Henslowe's Diary, ed. W. W. Greg). 'As custome is' refers not to 'Homers hewe' but to the recitation of the Argument : ' ever was,' true of most prologues of Plautus, is untrue of Terence's or Ariosto's. It is true of Gammer Gurton, untrue of Roister Doister. 304 NOTES PROL. 21-2. Laurentu . . . Italye . . . troiane kni^htes: the reference is obviously to the Mmid. So ' Apolonia', III. ii. 35) "s a classical, not a sixteenth-century, town. P. 175, 36. toy &» bankett : this alone is wanting to the play as it stands. A fifth Act may have given the feast in one brief scene, in- cluding possibly the establishment of better relations between the brothers, the reward of Liturgus, an application of Cacurgus, Oeno- philus and Orgelus for grace, and something to dismiss Melissa and Sir John. The 5th Act of Plautus' Persa is occupied with a banquet : cf. Siichiis, V. iv. 38. musicall : artistic ; here of histrionics. The line makes against the performance of the play by any recognized company. 42. pagins : pageants (Lat. pagina). P. 176, 21. demerites : merits, 'frequent in plural,' N.E.D. Plautine Latin ; Pseud. 11. iv. 14. P. 177, 37. condinge : (cf. Respublica ill. ii. 19, ed. Brandl, p. 308) condign, equal in worth, also Plautine, Amph. I. iii. 39. P. 178, 66. happing : N.E.D. ' Hap v''. i. trs., to cover up or over', with instance 1560. 75. I esteme not gramer, &c. : suggests the scholastic origin of the piece : cf. 11. iii. 57-64, &c. 82. nuslinge : to ' nuzzle ' is to thrust the nose into, fondle, hence confused with ' to nurse ', Cent. Diet. P. 179, 95. inande: manned, escorted, attended: Gosson's Schoole of Abuse, ed. Arber, p. 35 'such manning them home'. P. 180, 131. he will not, &c. : if you say 'he will not', you are unreasonable. P. 182, 185. Children &'fooles, &c. : in Heyv/ood' s Proverbes, 1562, Pt. I. ch. xi. Cf. Lyly's Endimion, IV. ii. loi. P. 183, 193. Founder: patron; cf. Buggb. II. iii. 83 ' my foundresse Tomasine ', i. e. benefactress, and Fletcher's Rule a Wife, &c., IV. ii. 5 ' A fellow founded out of charity '. 196. creake: obsolete form of croak', N.E.D. 198. Alas what meane yow : Philogonus is teasing his fool by pre- tending not to hear, or by hiding behind Eupelas. 199. will summer: the name seems used generically. Henry VI II's Fool, whose shrewd wit placed him as far as possible from the ' natural ', retired from Court on the king's death 1547, and died himself 1560. It is perhaps worth noting that he is said to have been formerly a servant in the household of Richard Fermor of Easton Neston in Northants (some twenty miles S.W. of Kettering), who brought him to Court 1525. Cacurgus seems to resent the name, III. ii. 19-20; but is hailed as ' William ' by his old acquaintance, Codrus, III. i. 21 ; and calls himself so, iv. iii. 14. 200. ganser: 'from grandsire', Brandl. The Dial. Diet, gives ' granser ' as W. Yks. form. 215. supper its [nigh five o'clock]: in Lovers Lab. Lost, I. i. 240, 6.0 is named as the usual supper-time ; in Merchant, 11. ii. 122 Bassanio fixes 5.0 as an early hour (Schmidt), and this latter suits the case better here, for 11. iii. 82 shows that to the end of Act II we are still in I- i MISOGONUS 305 the same day. At I. iv. 97 Cacurgus pretends ' its bed tyme ', but goes m to cause Eupelas to come out from supper : there follows the latter's interview with Misogonus and escape (end of Act l). Act 11 is closely continuous with the preceding, and at 11. i. 22 Misogonus, whose day may be supposed to begin late, inquires ' How shall we spende this hole after noone ? '. Thereafter (11. iii. 104) Cacurgus reports him as gone 'a burdinge', though really gone to visit Melissa. The long scene, 11. iv, at 1. 9 of which Misogonus proposes a walk in the fields, is interrupted by the bell for evensong, 1. 207, after which there is dancing, and (11. v) the entry of Philogonus ; and the roisterers depart to finish the night at ' Michole's ', 1. 83. But at this date, and till 1590, time and place were quite elastic to the dramatist's momentary need. P. 184, 1-5. The position of these fragments is as I have given them, not, as in Brandl's text, far to the right. Possibly 'ee', 1. 4, reported by Collier's transcript, should be ' . . ne ', some rhyme with 'gone', 1. 2 : but 1-4 may be prose. There is nothing wanting in 1. 7. 9. ha ha ha: the customary utterance of the Vice ; cf. 1. 12, I. iii. S, II. iii. 9, 79; and Iniquytie in Kyng Darius (1553), 170, 468, 524; Newfangle in Like Will to Like (Dodsley, iii, pp. 309, 332, 337). 17. waliumes cal/e : 'As wyse as Waltoms calfe' occurs Skelton's Colyn Cloute 811, referred to by Brandl, and in Hey wood's Proverbes, Ft. II. ch. iii, on which Mr. Farmer cites 'wiser than Waltham's calfe that ranne nine miles to sucke a bull-' (Harl. Misc. vii. 535 ' Dis- closing of the great Bull ' 1567). 26. none sonne : own son, the familiar corruption from ' mine own ' (cf. IV. i. 79 ' of nuncle and my naunte '), rightly explained by Brandl on II. iv. 17, though here (and 11. iv. 86) he explains as ' «iVA/-Sohn '. P. 185, 46. get stroute b' stare : jet (jaunt or swagger), strut, and bristle (of aggressive demeanour) or outface. 'Jett' occurs below (11. iv. 39), and Buggb. I. iii. 93. For ' stare ' cf. Whip for an Ape, ' sweare and stare as deepe as hell.' 49, 50. ' which (madness) would so cut Philogonus (if he knew of it) to the heart, that he would injure Misogonus by lamenting it to friends.' 55-8. poyntes . . . take them then boyes : cf. 1. 33 : ' will ' and ' dick ' are the servants named, I. i. 205. At 'take them then boyes' he throws them among the audience. If this were a custom, it might account for the tiresome frequency of puns on the word (e. g. Lyly's Gallathea, I. iv. 40-2, 51, II. iii. 40-2), and connect itself with the introduction of pedlars, as in Heywood's Four PP (Essay, p. Ixxxv) and Medusa in The Two Italian Gentlejnen, iv. iv, where in Halliwell's Extracts she uses Cacurgus' word— 'A thousand knackes I haue to utter, which I must bestow, Because they are so secret as becomes not you to knowe' — but ' bestow ' might mean ' conceal ', and the Malone Society's ed. prints ' haue, to vtter, which I must be slow ', &c. P. 186, 59. pinnes : obscenity intended, as Manly notes, comparing Heywood's Four PP, 243-52. 63. yeares : the projecting ears of his fool's dress. 66. haue good kinge Midas : I retain haue with the Collier transcript, 532 X 3o6 NOTES I. ii suspecting the deletion of the h in MS. to be due to some one's failure to perceive that Midas (small capital m) is possessive. ' 1-3. wMt monster haue we heare . , . tumblinge beare : in Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 310) Newfangle the Vice, seeing the Devil enter, says 'Sancte benedicite, whom have we here? Tom Tumbler, or else some dancing bear? Body of me,' &c. Cacurgus must be supposed to have his face hidden, being occupied as suggested in i. ii. 65, hence ' robin hoode ' of 1. 6. For some notice of popular Robin Hood plays see C. M. Gayley's Representative Eng. Comedies, pp. xl-xli. 10. Codes artnentage, &c. : possibly a corruption of some oath like ' God's our 'uauntage' induced by ' Codes my armes ' (1, 76 below, and III. i. 128), and ' God's arms ', Dam. and Pith. (Dods. iv. 80). With ' godes denti deare ' cf. ' Gods dinty ', iii. i. 56, ' gods denty ', ib. 115. Brandl explains as ' divinity ', fetching a far allusion to Robin Hood in ' deare ' (deer). Manly regards it (better) as adj., and ' denti ' as ' dignity ', comparing ' By goddes dignitee ', Cant. Tales, C. 701, and the received derivation of ' dainty ' from Lat. dignitatem. 14. well haue an ostler: ' Hausknecht, zum Bandigen,' Brandl : but Cac. could hardly count on such help. Perhaps a variant of ossle, which Dial. Diet, gives as N. Yks. vb. and sb. for ' hustle' : from 11-12 he seems to be making show of resistance. Cf. his interference, 11. ii. i. P. 187, \().Jurr: 'further', Brandl, comparing 'farre'=' farther' (e.g. Taming, iv. ii. 73 and Wint. Tale, IV. iv. 442 'farre than Deuca- lion off'). Cf. II. iv. 259. O^.feorr, far, appears no impeachment to a contracted comparative. 21. bene thy preist: i.e. performed thy funeral, hysteron-proteron for ' killed '. Cf. Roist. Doist. iv. viii. 53 ' Away loute and lubber, or I shall be thy priest ', and Euph. and his Eng. p. 102, 1. 4 ' in steed of a sword supply a salue, and thinking to be ones Priest they become his Phisition'. 22. Sankefhym^y tosse: Brandl explains Sanke as child's-speech for ' Thank ' (here ironical) ; and tosse for ' toes '. I prefer to take tosse as the fool's bauble, often tossed in air and caught. 24. kepte y' thronge: 'lost myself in the crowd of spectators' (Brandl). ^ 27. how gattest . . . eares : Misogonus may have been absent for a few days, cf. I. ii. 64, 28. skoggingly : the Cent. Dict.'s only instance is from Bishop Hall, 'this scoganly pen'. John Scoggin or Scogan, Edward IV's fool, is said to have flourished 1480 : his supposed Jests ' Gatherd by An. Boord ' (?) were pub. 1626, i6mo : but ' the geystes of Skoggon gathered to gether m this volome' were licensed to Thos. Colwell 1565-6 (S. R. ed. Arb. i. 299). 44. by S' Loy: St. Eligius, goldsmith to Clotaire II ; a common oath, but chosen here perhaps with reference to 1, 43. See Skeat's Chaucer, C. T. note on Prol. 1. 120. P. 188, 47. durge : Lat. dirige, the first word of the antiphon in a Roman Catholic service for the dead {N.E.D.). i-i" MISOGONUS 307 i,^. impostin: imposthume, swelling: kocipesse, for corpus, Brandl (Ixxxiii. 1. 12), and to explain this as a distortion suits the next line better than to take ' codpiece ', with Manly, as fully intended. 49. to lift . . . breasts : Brandl, who explains ' Crileson ' rightly, III. i. 19s, takes chery here as=cherry, and interprets of ' a fat benefice ' ; but it clearly means 'kyrie'. Breast is frequent for 'voice', e.g. Tw. Night, ir. iii. 20, and htminge is a north-country word for ' dron- ing ', ' humming ', though N.E.D. quotes an instance from Marston (1599) = ' notable ', ' worth listening to '. 60. foollorh : forlorn, ruined. 61. ride byard: i.e. Bayard — 'be horsed for whipping'; mock- heroic, Bayard being the horse given by Charlemagne to Renaud or Rinaldo ; and so Manly : but no instance is quoted of this sense, only the humorous ' ride Bayard of the ten toes ' = ' go a foot ', N.E.D. and D.D. 67-8. enquired governs if this . . . dourste : to nourture him = ' by way of egging Eupelas on '- P. 189, 71. his : i. e. Christ's, as often, e. g. Respublica, I. ii. 6, 8. 75. knyjfe . . . dagger: the knife was for eating. In Beaumont and Fletcher's King and No King (lie. for acting 161 1), ill. ii. 151 sqq., Bacurius restores the 'knife' attached to the sword he has forced Bessus to surrender, with the words ' Cherish yourself with it, and eat hard, good captain ' In Johnson's Journey to the Western Islands, lyjA (ed. Morley, p. 69) occurs — ' Thirty years ago the Highlander wore his knife as a companion to his dirk or dagger, and when the company sat down to meat, the men who had knives cut the flesh into small pieces for the women, who with their fingers conveyed it to their mouths.' Cf. Nature, ii. 756 (Brandl, p. 139) ' Dager sword nor knyfe he had'. 78. bouggish : menacing, terrifying, like a bug (goblin). 82. cunger : conjure, in sense of paralyse, render helpless. 86. cranke : lusty, high-spirited, in aggressive sense (N.E.D.). 94. at laste : the same sense as ' at least ', as Florio's First Fruites 1578, f. 79'^- P. 190, 99. fare well froste : proverb to express indifference or pleasure at parting; as Lyly's Mother Bombie, 11. iii. 98. Ray (1678, p. 243) gives it as ' Farewell frost. Nothing got nor nothing lost '. loi. take vp the rost = xtmoye^ from the table the 'pigge' of I. i. 201, and so suggest to Eupelas to take his leave : I find no instance of a figurative sense like ' bring things to an issue ' 7. gaskins : wide trunk-hose or breeches, perhaps of a kind actually worn in Gascony (N.E.D.): ' gascoins ' occurs Moth. Bomb. iv. ii. 39. 9. none of f hastlinges : see Buggb. I. iii. 37 note. 13. lett all go awheles: shirk your duties. Origmally, I thmk, of servants putting burdens on cart or trolley ; hence, of taking life easily, as Launce (Two Gent. III. i. 312), 'Then may I set the world on wheels, when she can spin for her living ' ; whence, perhaps, ' let the world slide ' or ' slip ' (Taming, Ind. 144), as a phrase for careless gaiety. Cf. Ant. and Cleop. 11. vii. 96-8 and Taylor the Water-poet's pamphlet, The Worlde rtcnnes on Wheeles (1623). 3o8 NOTES I- iv 15. cacht: sometimes ^ and / are indistinguishable in the MS., but in II. iii. 105, in. ii. 59 I have felt obliged to read cathe and cath. 18. by me trwlye: 'by my truly' given in Dial. Diet, as a mild expletive (Yks.) = ' Upon my word '- Cf. ' trullit ', in. i. 265. knave an ^rane : i. e. in fasi scarlet colour, as Dam. and Fttli. (Dods. iv, p. 20). P. 191, 23. doth me chalings and deare : deare (old northern torm of dare) is recognized as substantive, so the sense may be ' maketh me challenges and defiance' : chalings is 3 pers. sing, of vb. in iv. ii. 7. 25. ery length of a spare : ery = every, a whole spear's length, a 'tall ' fellow of your hands. 29. canvas: drub. N.E.D. 31. venues : attacks in fencing. li.fensuar: '1552 Huloet ; Fence or fensure, vallum^ N.E.D. : here as ' art of fence '. 47. dust : fray, disturbance, N.E.D. quotes instance from Marriage of Wit and Science, 1570. P. 192, Sc. v. The missing leaf, judging from the eight ensuing lines of soliloquy, must have contained an interview in which Eupelas, enter- ing during Orgelus' absence, remonstrates with the prodigal, who angrily repudiates his counsel and goes out to bring his men to chastise him. From II. i. 4, iii. 20, he seems to have offered no personal violence : and the disturbance which Liturgus reports (ll. iii. 7-8) was Misogonus chastising Oenophilus (11. i. 61-8). 3. apayde : pleased, satisfied, Fr. apaier. s. D. ioynt: limb, as Respub. v. vii. 30 'ieoperde a ioncte'. 10. If I take him right for' : catch him in fit place and time. Again III. ii. 60. Cf. Lyly's Moth. Bombie, I. ii. 25 ' wert thou in place where I would teach thee to cog'- pay him oth peticote : a name for a short coat worn as armour in fifteenth century {N.E.D.). Cf. Respub. v. x. 79 ' have att thye peticote '- Here merely alliterative, like ' rape you oth rages ', 1. 14. 1 2. giue him. his oldefip>pens : olde is intensive : fippens is not con- fined to the north : the point, as in ' as fine as fippence ', lies in its excess over the groat. P. 193, 16. fages : shreds, rags, tatters, cf. 1. 60. 20. fime : fume, as II. v. 5 ; ' in a fume ' pretty common in sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. The author has little scruple in changing a vowel to cover up a false rhyme, cf. ' nemble . . . dissemble ', in. i. 147. 27. gallonde : Yks. and Midland form of gallon. 33. oth ale benche : where he has sat since the ' morninge ', 1. 25, till now, late afternoon. 40, werse : i. e. heavier by what the cozener had drunk. P. 194, 47. w"' a wilde : cf. in. ii. 59. Probably neither for ' wile ' (Brandl) nor ' will ' (Carpenter), but an imprecation, scil. ' wannion ' : cf. Buegb. IV. iv. II note ; ' The wylde worm ', Nature, i. 307 (Brandl, p. 126). 57. house: pronounced ' hose ' to rhyme with 'nose', 1. 59, same spelling I. ii. 11. Oenophilus' loss may be compared with the entry in Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 346) of Ralph Roister and Tom Tosspot 11- i MISOGONUS 309 in doublet and hose, after losing coat, cloak, and hat at dice, or leaving them as a pledge. 59. horde you throughe nose : scored off you, as Fletcher's 5/a««A Curate, IV. v. 43 'laugh'd at, scorn'd, Baffled and board' (cited N.E.D.), but neither N.E.D. nor D.D. instances ' through the nose '. Cf. II. iv. 35. For boring through the ears as a mark of servitude cf. Moth. Bombie, 11. i. iii. 61. disardly : like a dizard or dancing fool : instances of 1 594 and 1607, N.E.D. besillinge : ' drinking, revelling, squandering ', N.E.D. s. v. Bezzle vb. 62. btim fiddle : play a tune on that organ, kick or beat. swaddle : D.D. gives phrase ' to swaddle a person's sides ', beat him soundly, with instance of 1695. Again II. iv. 32. 63. cherye boles : perhaps ' cherry (-brandy) bowls ' ; no inst. of adj. 'cheery' before Cotgrave, 161 1. 64. limi : or blinn, cease. ME. linnen. Again {Hn) IV. iii. 53. P. 195, I. Gods sokinges : cf. 1. 45 footnote. Brandl explains as corruption of ' sobbings '. 6. To Oenophilus : swilbole (swill-bowl) is recognized: swadd, clown (northern and W. Yks.)-; Lyly's Midas, iv. 3 ' Some country swad '. 7. halt: pt. tense oi hit in Nth. and W. Yks. {D.D.). 14. twangde : the D.D. gives as a Yks. sense ' tread the shoes on one side'. The phrase is therefore a synonym for ' trode on neats leather ' ; and so no doubt in Harvey's Pierces Supererogation, of John Lyly, ' a mad lad as ever twang'd ', which I have hitherto supposed to mean ' fiddled '. 20. come mete, w^^^ : the Z'.Z'. s. v. ;«f^^ gives 'come meet (or 'meets') with ' as Lanes, and Yks. for ' get quits with ' (modem slang ' get even with '). ' To meet with ' occurs in just this sense in Supposes, v. v. 38, and Beaum. and Flet. King and No King, II. ii. 75 ; Night-Walker, i. I end. 22. this hole after noone : see note on I. i. 215. 23. eren: not a recognized form of ijrf, and probably the scribe's error for even, as Manly suggests. In the MS. the outward curl of the r distinguishes it from v. P. 196, 29. smogly lace : smart-dressed lass. D.D. gives smugly as obs. Sc. : smug is applied to herself by a meretrix in Cambyses (Dods. iv. 183). No instance of lace as ' tight-laced girl '. 2,0. scemish: squeamish; 'skeymishe'in j?«/«i5/z(ra, I. iii. 124. 'Ryg' occurs in Gammer Gurton for 'wanton' III. iii. 18, and 'riggish ' in Ant. and Cleop. II. ii. 248. 44. dore: given as a form oidare (Caxton's Reynard, 1481, N.E.D.), better than = ' adore'. Harington's 'dord' for 'mi spaventi', Ariosto V. 39, is perhaps ' dared ', ' daunted ', rather than ' fooled '. 49. horsenightcappe : i. e. halter {N.E.D.). 54. slie : read stir. The D.D. recognizes sly only as intrans. vb. ' slip away ' or ' look at slyly '. . , , , , P. 197, 65-7. false kinde, &c. : i. e. falsetto, which should mean alto, were it not for count erf et tener, 1. 67 (' the counter tenor a natural male alto a highly developed falsetto ', Grove's Diet, of Music). The deleted 3IO NOTES "■ ii ' tenther ' seems to show that ' false kinde ' here represents the tenor part, which, if boys are the actors, is sung by a treble voice. S. D. tune of hartes ease : ' printed with two settings in Chappell s Old Eng. Pop. Music, 1893, i. 97 ff.' (Brandl). Cf. Rom. and Jul. iv. 5. Some lines in Turbervile's Booke of Faulconrie, 1575, resemble these. 72. consist : imperative. 73. snugis : (' snudges ') sneaks, low fellows, used of a peasant in Misfortunes of Arthur, 1588, Chorus to Act iii ' How safe and sound the careless snudge doth snore '. This, Manly's excellent emendation oisungir, is supported by the MS. {u and n are quite convertible, and the last letter is much nearer s than r), and confirmed by the echo in druges. Collier {H. D. P. ii. 374) read lu7igis. P. 198, 106. hakinge : the reader must choose between ' loitering idly', 'sneaking', 'prying', or 'teasing', all given as senses of this north and east country word. P. 199, 10. the wise men ofgotum : of whom follies are recorded in C Mery Talys and elsewhere. II. Peter foppum: i.e. pop 'em, 'blab,' 'annoy,' 'startle' (Nthpton., W. Yks.) D.D. ; here of sensation-mongering. P. 200, 40. in space cometh grace : among Ray's Scotch proverbs. Cacurgus satirically misapplies Liturgus' last remark. P. 201, 49. scripp &" a staffe: a beggar's, properly a pilgrim's, equipment. 50. clumpertone : clown, clodhopper, JV.^.i?. 52. souterlye : low, vulgar, properly ' like a cobbler '. came . . . fromth cart : from rough farm work. Cf. II. v. 54 ' be glad go toth carte '. 55. pastwhoo : out of hearing. Probably Manly is right in explain- ing as a call to horses f^ho is W. Yks. for wo ! or woa /), quoting Heywood's Proverbs, p. 152 ' Thou art one of them to whom god bad who, God tooke thee for a carte horse ' The sense of excess in ' Out of all crie', 'out of all whooping' {A.Y.L.I. ill. ii. 204) is no doubt secondary. 62. tute him a good : tutor him plentifully. Two Gent. iv. iv. 161 ' I made her weep agood '. 65. A curste cowe, &c. : Brewer's Diet. Phrase and FaMe explains ' angry men cannot do all the mischief they wish ', and gives as the Latin proverb ' Dat Deus immiti cornua curta bovi ' : the English fonn occurs Much Ado, II. i. 22. 66. be good in your office : i. e. mind your own business. Again IV. i. 94. P. 202, 78. girmumble : ' Jurmungle, obs. sb., Yks. A mess, con- fusion.' D.b, : also as obs. Scotch vb. and sb. Jurmummle, crushing, disfiguring. 81. musche a douche yow : perhaps for ' (I) must a-do (a)s you ', i. e. eat and drink, cf. 1. 113 ; but 1. 82 rather suggests a garbling of 'mus- cadine ' (spelt muschedine, 11. iv. 15), offered as if still waiting at table, in which he had gone to bear a hand at end of l. iii. 85. gofe : i. e. goff, rare for ' godfather ', here ' gossip '. Cf. lii. i. 35. 88. nophiles : for ' Oenophilus ' (Brandl). ii.iii MISOGONUS 311 94-5- PhilogonuSjdisregardingCacurgus' supposed mistake, imagines Eupelas to have discomfited Misogonus. 103. lurdinge : or lurdan, implying idle rascality, here as pet name. P. 203, 106. buntinge: yellow-hammer, but Philogonus suspects his true game. 112. rnome: North-country for ' fool', ' blockhead ' D.D. Wi. fotherdd: North-country for ' foddered ' D.D. 121. veckinges : fay-kins, cf. ' bodikins ' {Merry Wives, ii. 2), ' mari- kins ', m. i. 12 (Brandl). P. 204, 7. Gods fopulorum : Respub. v. viii. 34 ' by his precious populorum '. 8. loue tickes: occurs Heywood's /"roi/^r^^j, ed. 1906, p. 54, perhaps for 'touches' rather than 'tricks'. P. 205, 35. slittyou thorowe snout: cf. Taming, V. i. 134. 53. Of all loues : see note on Buggb. 11. v. 72. 62. at tables: backgammon, as Supp. I. ii. 8, Buggb, iv. iv. 41. 64. this new start vp rabies : i. e. Protestant Puritanism, with its emphasis on the Bible and dislike of games. P. 206, 71. drumbledary : dromedary, as ill to manage. Cf. ' horson camell ' Buggb. I. i. 11. 76. brown bessye : i. e. she of ' Come o'er the bourn, Bessy ', quoted Lear, ill. vi. 25, and called in Dorothy Welde's Lute Book (MS. c. 1600) ' Brown Bess6, sweet Bess6, come over to me ' (Chapell's Old Eng. Pop. Music, i. 121). 79. a nutmugge to grate : probably proverbial = ' don't be rough with me '. 82. sparkinge : i. e. sparkling (properly the frequentative). 84. vangell : ' (e)vangel(ium) ', Brandl. 86. none : own, as I. ii. 26. 89. croute : D.D. has ' crooty ', adj. fr. vb. crout or croot, 'grumble ', Sc. Yks., cf. route = root, 1. 13 ; but also croot sb. Sc. ' a feeble child ', ' youngest bird of a brood '- P. 207, 94. whipperginnye : ' Whip-her- Jenny,' a game at cards, borrowed from the Welsh ' — Halliwell. 96. &= hadd . . .piirr : i. e. an he had played but those tricks he'll come for a certainty. A pear would be no proverb for exactness, nor is the spelling noted : but D.D. gives purr as ' codlin ' (Orkney), or (better) a round bit of wood or iron (Nthants.). 99, bash : shame, as in S.Johan the Evangelist, I.98 'in the lane of besynesse loke thou not basshe '. 100. blanne : past tense of blin, cease, which occurs ill. i. 73- lOT.forsett: perhaps error iox forfeit (cf. 1. 109) ; but N.E.D.j^. forsat quotes The Compleat Gamester, 1674 ' to play at forsat (Fr. au forqaf), i. e. the rigour of the game, which would give us the sense ' they've held you to it '. , , , , 113. beakinge : the D.D. has a N. country vb. beei 'to warm , e. g. ' she sat beeakin hersel afoor t'fire '- P 208, 120. copsmate : comrade, as Buggb. 1. 11. 5. 121. this booke: i.e. the pack of cards, instead of the prayer-book he should carry. 312 NOTES II- iv 123. mery greke : mixture of ' Grasculus esuriens ; and boon-com- panion as in Roister Doister. 127. acquynt: OF. acointer or accointer, 'to affect the acquamtance of (Cotgrave). , , ■ ^ , 129. ruff, mawe, &* saint: 'ruffe or trumpe ' (Florio), the prede- cessor of whist : maw, played with a piquet pack of 36 cards by two to six players (Halliwell) : saint, properly cent, so called because 100 was the game (Nares). In Joseph Lilly's Ancient Ballads and Broad- sides, 1867, p. 123, are sixteen rules for maw, entitled ' The Groome- porters lawes at Mawe, to be obserued in fulfilling the due orders of the game '. n. d. 135. -weekly : weekly ; Manly compares 11. 127, 138, 269. 137. \Tic\k tack. Sec. : tick-tack was a kind of backgammon played with men and pegs. The Compleat Gamester, 1674, explains as = ' touch and take ' : mume chaunce, a card or dice-game, at which silence was essential (Nares) : novum or novem was played by five or six, the two chief throws being nine or five ; cf. Loves Lab. Lost, v. ii. 547 (,Cent. Diet). 138. ... hinge: may be the name of another game. 140. ites thy brother: i.e. a knave. Cf. Like Will to Like (1568), Dods. iii. 309—' Here entereth Nichol Newfangle the Vice, laughing, and hath a knave of clubs in his hand which, as soon as he speaketh, he offereth unto one of the men or boys standing by. New. Ha, ha, ha, ha ! now like unto like : it will be none other, Stoop, gentle knave, and take up your brother.' P. 209, 143-4. No doubt Brandl is right in supposing the gown actually stripped from him, yet at 1. 203 he pledges it again. Cacurgus appeals^to his stockinged legs as proving him a knave : in the Descrip. Cat. of Playing Cards in the Brit. Mus., Plates xv, xvi, and xviii (German and French cards of middle and end of sixteenth cent.), the knaves have short tunics and close-fitting hose, the kings a flowing robe. 145. Gods chekinge: probably = checking, the mockery and 're- proof' of the Passion. the pristes stand: stand \s undoubtedly the present MS. reading, though two letters (? ed or er) are blackly deleted at the end of it, a correction which seems to forbid further emendation, e.g. to shamd. Manly's ingenious suggestion, flaud = ' flawed ' (a pretty frequent sixteenth cent, spelling of ' flayed ') in the sense of ' stripped ', is not quite convincing. 147. make the mach to novti : make sides for, or begin playing at, novum, the game mentioned 1. 137. wefiue : Cacurgus is perhaps left out, though his remarks, 11. 149, 179, 258-9, seem those of a player rather than spectator. L. 205 might be opposed, and see on 1. 247. 155. Hafe stake, &c. : i.e. she proposes to share the fortune of the coming throw with the lucky vicar. 156. at all this: 'throw at all this.' now happely rise: like 'rise winnings luckelye', 1. 152. 157. ihiker: i.e. more quickly: the fasterthethrowing, the more throws. 1 59. sacringe : consecration. The noble was of gold, worth ds. Zd. n. iv MISOGONUS 313 167. Markus Marcurius : Mercury, god of gain as of eloquence, is invoked (with humorous or popular prefix) as a kind of familiar by the gambling priest. 169. at ninch : closely (to the best throw). P. 210, 178. round game : high stakes to throw at ; cf. 187-8. 179. toth boxe : perhaps of forfeits paid to the pool, or simply to himself as collector of his winnings by the throw : see on ' plye the box ', Bugg. IV. iii. 30. 181-2. Orgelus refuses to pay unless he wins on the next throw. 187. ruddake : gold coin, properly robin redbreast : Lyly's Midas, II- J- 75 ' golden ruddocks in his bagges '. 192. wagfasty: -pasty perhaps inceptive, 'in the moulding'; or implies ' fond of tarts ' : Jack Juggler (Dods. ii. 141) ' this wage-pasty is either drunken or mad '- 194. take hihm lawe : accept the rule of children'^ games, without stakes or serious forfeits. The Dial. Diet, gives lubin sb., a children's game in many parts of England, with dancing and accompanying chorus in which ' lubin loo ' is often repeated. 195. their all hab or nabes : there's all I have left, hit or miss ! (A,S. habban or ne habban, as Brandl.) Cf. Euphues, ii. 123 1. 11 ' Philautus determined, hab, nab, to send his letters '. 198. ryall : worth \os. when first coined by Edward IV {Cent. Diet.). P. 211, 202. by gods bleste: i.e. the saints; or supply 'cross', ' sacrament ', &c. ; or possibly for obsolete bless = blessing. Again Gam. Gurton's Needle, 1. 241 (cited Swaen). 203. theirs my gowne, &c. : see note on 143-4. As Cacurgus, 1. 205, raises no objection, the priest may have won it back or redeemed it. 204. a gree groat : a grey groat ; cf. Dam. and Pith. (Dods. iv. 76) ' the fair white groats '. 205. hange oth hedge : probably = become a hedge-priest, join the unfrocked disgraced clergy. 206. has the Marchant, &c. : cf. Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 344) 'Hath increased a noble just unto ninepence' and Florio's Second Frvtes, 1591, p- 143 : Heywood's Prov. Pt. 11. ch. v, p. 66 ' He maketh his marts with merchants likely To bring a shilling to sixpence quickly'. 209. satmce bell: sanctus-bell, here the ordinary church-bell, as in Raleigh's poem on Love, ' It is perhaps that sauncing-bell That tolls all in to heaven or hell.' 210. must out for wrangler: must cease to be a player. 2 1 1. ith htrtch : at utter loss, in its original gaming sense ; cf. N.E.D 215. kepe thy farme: stay on it, stick to your occupation. 216. no starter: not inconstant ; in Euphues, i. 222 1. 10 of Jason. 218! ath ordinarye . . . charter : secure you indulgence at the bishop's hands in case of complaint. , ... 223. a man or a mouse : highest or lowest. Manly quotes Apius and Virginia ' It is but haphazard, a man or a mouse' (a line I do not find there) : his quotation from The Schole-House of Women gives rather the common opposition of courage and cowardice. 314 NOTES "-1^ P. 212, 227. Cla. Disc hie : i. e. ' Clark. Speak here ! ' 244-5. saumes . . . avy: in the Roman Breviary Matins and Prime commence with the Paternoster, Ave Maria, and Apostles' Creed. Edward VI's first Prayer-Book (1549) had reduced the number of daily psalms and omitted the Ave Maria (Procter and Frere's Hist, of Book of Com. Prayer, pp. 52, 373) : Orgelus is of the old persuasion, 1. 64, though we need not suppose his interest intense. MT-fyve knaves besides, &c. : cf. 'three knaves in a cluster', Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 331). With Melissa, but without the Clerk, six people are present. Cacurgus excludes himself as Fool, not kriave, and as an afterthought pretends to except Misogonus and Melissa ; or including himself and excluding the woman, pretends to add Miso- gonus to the exception ; or, really excepting them, counts Sir John as two, after a proverbial phrase found in Dam. and Pith. (Dods. iv. 20) ' You lose money by him, if you sell him for one knave, for he serves for twain '. 25 1, tourne him my booke : find him the places. 252. $'■ thays: 'SO (Mat)thays' (Brandl) — but probably rather a canonization for the nonce of the famous courtesan (and so Manly), with the same aptness to the accompanying remark as in ' saynt cuccold ' 74, ' S. Sunday ' 209, and ' S. Samson ' I. iy. 25. P. 213, 258. By tetragranaton, &c. : i.e. by God and the Devil I (will) make thee stay. Tetragranaton is for tetragrammaton, the Cabbalists' ' ineffable name ' of God, i. e. the four consonants JHVH (Jehovah), pronounceable only by interweaving the vowels of the separate word ' Adonai ' (Lord). Cf. Cornelius Agrippa's De Nobili- taie . . . Feminei Sexus (Antwerp, 1529), ed. Lyons, 1531, p. 519 'ex Cabalistarum mysticis symbolis, ipsum nomen mulieris ['Eva' or ' Evah '] plus aflfinitatis habere cum nomine ineffabili divinae omnipo- tentiffi TerpaypdiifiaTov, quam nomen viri '. The blacke santas (sanctus) = St. Satan (as fallen angel), though the term later denoted a profane hymn to him, or any noisy disturbance. iy). farr: farther ; cf. I. iii. 19 note. 263. crashe : given Nares and D.D. as ' entertainment ', ' noisy feast ' ; here evidently ' romp '. 270. The vickar of S. fooles : perhaps not an actual dance, but might be a derivative from the Fools' Dance mentioned by Strutt {Sports and Pastimes, e.A. Cox, 1903, p. 183, and plate, p. 138). The ' shaking of the sheets ' occurs often as a dance-name, with double entente, as here and Lyly's Pappe (vol. iii, p. 411) : on that of 1. 273 it may be noted that ' quail ' was a cant term for a prostitute. 276. sincopasse: cinque-pace; cf. 'sincaunter' for ' cinquanter ', III. i. 25. 277. closse g^ curyer : ' " Close ! " quoth the currier ' — of hides, or horses, as Manly. Wim-wam, freak, flourish. 281. trace : used transitively of dancing in the very similar scene of Beau, and Flet.'s Scornful Lady (161 1), 11. ii. i ' trace out thy darling '. P. 214,. 284. henbourde: .''bridal merriment' or ' merry bride '. Hen- is a Yorkshire word compounded with others to denote ' wed- ding—' {Dial. Diet). II. iv MISOGONUS 315 285. vauniid: for ' vaulted ', or correctly for some special movement. 287. iupe: copulate. 291. stoned preisi ; quasi 'stallion-priest' : yene (the first e is per- haps a blotted o), yen in D.D. is not Yks. but W. Somt. {ax yon : a stur is object, not adverb, cf. Buggb. 1. iii. 44. 293. serve them a trust : the Dial. Diet, gives trust sb. as Lanca- shire for ' leap-frog ' ; the sense, then, may be trick or surprise, as of one who tumbles another over by leaping unexpectedly over his shoulders. Again iv. i. 31. 295. hurricampe : ? stampede — not in N.E.D. separately, nor s.v. hurricane. 296. Jochum : Brandl suggests the Biblical Joachim. Sc. V. 5. in your fustinge fumes : into your ranting (fustian) rages. P. 215, 9. your old showes : to express ridicule or contempt, in Fletcher's Rule a Wife, ii. 2 end ' I thank you For your old boots ', and Mad Lover, III. iii. 15 ' all to liquor thy old boots, wench '. 15. parte: train, as in Respublica, I. iii. 156, probably Taming, l. i. 208, and perhaps Welth and Helth, 156. 20. bones : the surviving traces suggest a doubt if C is correct. 23. your seven egges : N.E.D. s.v. egg, sb. 4 gives ' come in with five eggs ', to break in fussily with an idle story. 32. pild Jacke: Manly derives from OY.piller, adding 'frequent in the phrase " poll and pill " '. Skeat says ' Prob. not the same word as pilare, to strip of hair ' ; but here it = ' shorn ' as in ' the pylde preest ', Johan Johan, 289, or alludes to his lack of his gown : ' thou pyld knaue' is used (?to a servant) in Nature, Pt. II. 523. P. 216, 42. live beside the: cf. Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 351) ' if severity should not be executed One man should not live by another'. 43. put vs to wreke : make us pay penalty, or (perhaps) compel us to use force. 46. kepe . . . in mauger : ' kepe in ' for ' support ' is quite unnatural. Probably manger 'board' has been omitted by the scribe before mauger. 54. go toth carte: work as a farm-labourer, cf. 11. iii. 52. 59. drevell : slut, a variant of drivel (N.E.D. sb.' obs. 3). 60. couckstole : cucking-stool, for a scold. P. 217, 63. Gods croust : probably for ' crust ', i. e. the sacramental bread. 82. a clubb Naue : the knave of clubs (Pam) is of special importance in certain games. Cf. III. ii. 52. 83. to Michole: Michael's tavern (Brandl). P. 218, 94. sith : sigh, cf. I. 165 ; ' sight ' being another recognized variant, e.g. Lyly's Sapho andPhao, III. iv. 71 (Q'). P. 219, 116. S.D. tune of Labondolose hoto : I find nothing m F. J. Childs' Eng. and Scottish Ballads nor in Chapell's Old Eng. Pop. Music, which notes the mention of ' Heart's ease ' in our play (ll. ii. 68) : but in Joseph Lilly's Ancient Ballads and Broadsides, 1867, p. 78, is 'A brief sonet declaring the lamentation of Beckles, a Market Towne in Suffolke, which was in the great winde vpon S. Andrewes 3i6 NOTES "-v eue pitifully burned with fire . . . 1586. To the tune of Labandalashotte' : and its dolorous character is supported by the S.D. in the Latin univer- sity play Hispanus, 1596— 'Dum ex ffidibus exeat tibicinem iterum incipe | vel hominem in desperatione vel Doctorem Faustum | vel Doctorem Lopezzium, vel Labandalashottum ' (Churchill and Kellers art. in Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xxxiv. 300). Is it a relic of the Italian actors who between Feb. 28-Nov. 1, 1574, ' ffolowed the progresse and made pastyme fyrst at Wynsor and afterwardes at Reading ' (Docu- ments Relating to the Revels, ed. Prof. Feuillerat, 1908, p. 225, and Collier, H. D. P. i. 226). (? La banda da Scozia, Lo bando lo ciotta, L'abbandonato ciotto (cripple), L'abbandona-scotto) ; or Spanish (El abbandonado soto (grove)) ? 136. by sufferinge : by being suffered or indulged. 138. the element: sky, properly atmosphere: cf. Euphues, i.-293 1. 23 'firie impressions in the Elemente ', ib. 1. 31 'the beautifulnesse of the Element '. P. 221, I. Heave slowe heave slowe: added in a different hand. Possibly ' hearestowe ' (hear'st thou) is meant in one or the other case ; but undoubtedly in one, or both, we have the carter's call to horses given in Dial. Diet, as hauve vb. Yks. Der. Not. Lin. (Yks. forms arve, auve, haave, harve, hoave, orve) meaning ' turn to left ' — ' turn to right' being, I am told, 'gee' or 'yeat'. 2. sondid sowe : cf. 1. 53. Manly supports his explanation ' sanded ' (i.e. yellow or white) by ' I'll give him the sanded sow', Reversby Sword Play, 161, 'Your sandy sow,' Gam. Gurt. Need. IV. i. 22. 4. out to mast : to feed on acorns, beechnuts, &c. 9. puddings and souse : i. e. black puddings and broth. 10. cockaloudlinge : so Manly, = cockadoodling ', cf. N.E.D. 12. quarkned: 'the cook '11 "quarken" you.' D.D. gives quark as W. Yks. for qttawk, caw, croak. 20. towfooles toth tyth : i. e. two in the tithing or parish, one besides himself : apparently alluding to some proverb which declared it folly to hold the office six times. 21. ^0 serve a prince: as keeper of the king's peace, cf. Much Ado, III. iii. 69 ' You, constable, are to present the prince's own person '. 23. this seven yeare : merely ' this long time '. P. 222, 24. eat a bottell of hay : were asses together. 26. baskettes . . . capenes : Codrus puts the cart before the horse again, 1. 30. 28. conceaved: no doubt about MS. Brandl, p. Ixxxiii, says 'for conceited'': but query.' 'thou bom lout', connecting 'Custer' with ' custron ' or ' coistrel ' (cf. N.E.D.). 29. minsimust : ' for mutnpsimus', Br. p. Ixxxiii, applied to Cleander, Supposes, I. iii. 87. 30. good stumble, &c. : confusion for ' good horse that ne'er stumbles ', Heywood's Prov. Pt. I. c. viii (Manly). 34. wout : i. e. wilt ; Manly quotes Hamlet, ' Woo't weep ? woo't fight ? ' 42. sptirr . . . whestion : ask . . . question. A.S. spyrian, Sc. speir. iii-i MISOGONUS 317 With pun in Lyly's M. Bomb. iv. i. 20, ii. 185, &c. 'Whestone' occurs III. iii. 76. 44. mage mvmblecrust : her real name is Madge Caro, 1. 252. The alliterative nickname (of. ' Marion . May-be-good ', Cambyses, Dods. iv. 224) may be far older than Roister-Doister. Cf. Piers Plowman, B. ii. 108-11, ' Waryn Wisdom ', iv. 26, &c. P. 223, 48. aglet : tag of a point, Fr. aiguillet : • aglet-baby,' i. e. image carved on it, occurs Taining, I. ii. 79. 52. De good deene : corruption of ' God gi' ye good even ' : time, ME. t-wey, A.S. twegen : whochiltals {who for ho, ' she ') ' she-chickens ' — all as Brandl, who compares 'wo silliboukes ', iv. i. 160 (but see my note). Manly questions the fem. who, and explains as = ' whatchu- callums ', Codrus being now doubtful of their sex. Maunde, basket. 57. gods dinty : see note on I. iii. 10. 64. cagin : ? for ' catching ', i. e. fortune, ease, like ' taking ' : but more probably ' occasion ', as Prof. Carpenter. Manly cites Lear (Qq), IV. vi. 240 ' without vurther cagion '. 65. tournde vp his heiles : died ; N.E.D. s.v. heel, 22. 6g. showe the gouse : i. e. shoe the goose, as Manly, referring to Dyce's note on Skelton's Colyn Clotite, 198 : ' spend one's time on trifling or unnecessary labour', N.E.D. (s.v. goose, i. d). 73. blin : cease, as 11. iv. 100. P. 224, 85-. in iocundare cum amicis : Codrus' Latin need not wholly surprise us: cf. iv. i. 1S3-6, where he represents his courtship as something of a blow to his intellectual life. The Vulgate in Luke XV. 29 (the Prodigal) has ' ut cum amicis meis epularer '. lucundare is used by St. Augustine. 91. corsy: corrosive, 'corrosies', Bugg. 11. iii. 142. 96. wottle : originally ' wot well ', here = ' wot ', as the following ' weir shows. P. 225, 102. tale . . . oth matin ith moone : of idle talk or tale, as in Prol. to Lyly's Endimion. 104. Mosse : for ' Mass ' (by the mass) or ' Master ' - retorumes, rhetorical terms. P. 226, 129. in some heape of ashes, &c. : she has probably been using some lye or detergent made from ashes for washing. Cf. iv. i. 85. P. 227, i^^. yotcr praiers are but superstitious: prayers for the dead, retained in the First Prayer Book of Edward VI (i 549), were removed from the Burial Service in the Second (1552). (Procter and Frere, Hist, of Bk. ofComm. Prayer, p. 82.) Philogonus is ' oth new laminge', i. e. Protestant. In Bale's Kyngejohan (? 1547-52) Act a, the Pope, enlisting the Nobility against the reforming king, grants them plenary indulgence on condition that ' from the new lernyng ye are wyllyng for to fle '. 163. when : at the point at which, or a (have) may be omitted before made : Manly would read wher, i. e. where. P. 228, 166. loue: ' I suspect should be loule for "lovely" ' (Carpenter). 170. ingru : for ' Ingram ' = ignorant : cf. on Buggb. 11. iv. 23. 178. Jumpe : adv. ' exactly', as Buggb. v. vii. 85. 179. both ons loore to lye : in the MS. ons is written over are deleted, 31 8 NOTES I"- » the / of loore is in the scribe's ink, the other letters in the corrector's blacker ink, and ye deleted stands before lye : an original both are total to ye seems to have been altered as tautological. P. 229, 193. pounder, &c. : if you ponder the matter. 196. blothernales : from 'blood of the nails' (Br.), i. e. nails of the cross. W,4«^ Aarfwej/ow, i. e. how did I hurt you? Crileson : ' kyrie eleison, antwortgesang ' (Br.). Manly adds ' slang for a scolding : cf. Dame Coy's threat to give her husband " a kyrie ere he went to bed " in Jack Juggler '. 1 98. list thou me : dost give me the lie ? memorandum : for ' memory '. 201. ill kivinge : there's ill brewing ! Keeve (Sc. kive) vb. ' to ferment '. 202. bomination : the first letter has a loop, which the scribe's capital C lacks : it closely resembles b in boy, 1. 204, and elsewhere. Gome : ' godmother ' (Br.). I suspect = ' Go home ! ' ; but ' gome ' occurs at least three times in the York Mysteries for man, fellow, e. g. xxxiii. 305. 203. descry : proclaim, make known. OF. descrier. 204. to7ne boy tome : I should explain as a rallying-cry, ' To me, boy ! to me ! ' ; but rhyme seems against it. Probably t is meant for c. 205. Judge : must = Jade, though unrecognized N.E.D., D.D. P. 230, 210. Joulle : Manly proposes dolte for the rhyme's sake ; doulte is a recognized contemporary spelling. 211. e^' . . . collwpte: Manly notes the pun on the dish 'eggs and coUops ', i. e. rashers of bacon. thou mightes yet chese : it was open to you (not to notice it). 226-9. ^^ '^'^ counsaild, &c. : this wholly inadequate explanation is the only one offered : cf. 1. 249. P. 231, 253. Jacke a male : ' perhaps iorjack-am^nd-allzs the rebel Jack Cade (1450) was called in ridicule ' (Br.), appropriately, if the form would allow it, but more probably ' Jack of (or in) the trunk ', of sudden appearance : cf. p. 47, 1. 16. P. 232, 256. Bith mouse Joote : ' by the (God's) mouth and foot ' (Br.) : again Apius and Virg. (Dods. iv. 151). 265. trullit : I think a corruption of ' by my truly ' I. iv. 18. 266. somewhat oneward: something by way of earnest. 279. demise : dismiss, a Latinism (dimittere). P. 233, 3. y' wethercocke of poles : the earlier mishaps of this un- fortunate bird are chronicled in Stow's Survey, ed.Strype, Bk. iii, p. 143. From p. 149 it appears that the steeple was again fired by lightning June 4, 1561, and, with the roof, consumed ; nor was the steeple restored in Elizabeth's time. Allusions to the cock are found in Skelton's Colyn Clout, i,o-'2,, and Triall of Treasure, pr. 1567 (Dods. iii. 267) ' The same year the weathercock of Paul's caught the pip'. 6. cokes : ninny, simpleton N.E.D. q. in hugger mugger : ' in hugger mugger to inter him ', Ham. IV. v. 80, i. e. obscurely. 12. heare : in his brain. 16. olde trot: i. e. Alison : usually of a woman, as Supp. in. v. 35 and Taming, i. ii. 80, and supported by hir. ni. ii MISOGONUS 319 23. a cowlinge carde : see note on Buggb. ill. i. 51. P. 234, 29. golia : Goliath, champion. 48. crabtrefast: i.e.faced, wrinkled hke the bark or fruit of the crab- apple. Cf. Taming, 11. i. 228. P. 235, 50. tale of a tubb : in Haywood, Pt. 11, c. ix, where Farmer quotes an mstance from Bale's Tkree Laws, 1538. 52. sure as a clubb: cf. II. v. 82. 54. colefeke : the same as ' colpheg ' Dam. and Pith. (Dods. iv. 60), where Steevens suggested ' colaphize ', Cotg. colaphiser, to buffet. 59. some wilde: 'for ivile^ (Br.), but I think rather adj. as sb. ' violence '. Cf. 11. i. 47 ; and for take him right, 11. i. 10. Mithere, for ' mother ', calling Codrus an old woman ; though possibly reproducing his carter's call to his horses. (Mither = ' come hither ' in the south, Dial. Diet. s. v. Mather.) 63. •uP' ajleete : fleet vb. is Yks. and N. Mid. for ' skim ' ; but the sb. \s fleeter, so I prefer _/Zj/, sb. Yks. ' flash '. P. 237, 28. my garment is pyde : Cacurgus has to find excuse for his motley: cf. I. iii. 36-7, and below, 53-5, 71. 34. cynd: Scinde or Sinde ; 'the river Indus, still called Sinde', Purchas his Pilgrivies (1625), ed. 1905, i. 76. 50. the Morphewe, &c. : the scurvy, the boil, blain and wheal. 51. pose : cold ; hichcocke, hiccough (Manly). P. 238, 69-70. Placed as in our text, and extra-metrical, representing interjections by the women at intervals during the preceding speech. 72. to fuls a: i. e. so (= as) full of his ; to the scribe's mistake for so, fuls a Isbell's transposition iaxful a 's. 72, 74, woaude . . . laude: i. e. world . . . lord, seem preferable to woande (conn, with wunian, woning) . . . lande, though the American euphemism ' good land ' (for ' Lord ') might possibly have an Eliza- bethan origin. Cf. IV. iii. I, 17. 75. meckinse: i. e. Marikins (Br.). P. 239, 107. overwhart : overthwart, perverse : Skelton's Magny- fycence, 562 ' angry and ouerwharte '. 109. gayte : ? = gad-about, gossip : muke-bate (strife) occurs Rls- publica, V. ix. 41. P. 240, 117. deflaunce: for affiance, confidence. I understand so so ... safe, like Manly, as ' s-s-soft ', i. e. ' stay ! ' Madge trying to prevent the ' instrument ' of 1. 123 being put into her mouth. 126. moukeforke : i. e. muck-fork. Gayne (for gane ?) = yawn, A. S. ganian, Du.janen (Br.). 130. hipocrase: with pun on 'hypocrisy'. The passage 1 29-^46 mingles moral allegory with ridicule of the charms and mock prescrip- tions given by quack pretenders to medicine and magic. Cf. Buggb. iii. 3 and Euphues ii. (1580), 116. 136-7. venus here : Venus' hair, ' a delicate little fern ' Cent. Diet. Stone rewe, 'stone-raw' or '-rag', a lichen. Siphory, prob. 'succoury ', chicory. . . ,-, , , P. 241, 147. Yeaue in wenye, &c. : ' you ve m verity liked me ; Brandl, who explains the next words as a distortion of, followed by a correction to, ' what will you take ' ; but I prefer ' liked me well (or i __.-_ii..>\ ...:»u ..„„-t,11, . ,„Viot'H «nn tatj. ' ,^'r Tf ' Whale '. IV. i. 2^. 320 NOTES IV. 1 P. 242, II. ith backhouse dich: in the privy's cesspool,jn the worst possible position. But cf. III. iii. 3. 23. Whale ye: Prof. Carpenter rightly explains as contraction tor 'What will ye ', comparing 'whole' = what will, III. iii. I47- . P. 243, 31. served me a trust : i. e. a trick ; see note on 11. iv. 293 : yeames, ' yea, mass ! ' (Br.). 32. saddlebackt: of a horse whose back incurves too much, probably of Madge's figure as she leans forward on her staff. 33. kepe all the rout : make all the fuss and delay. 34. at last [shrifte] : auricular confession, i. e, privately to a priest, e. g. at Shrove-tide (probably intended here), was enjoined by the Six Articles 1539, but made voluntary in the Prayer Book of iS49' . 35. sufukes: transposition ioxfusukes: I should have explained as ' physic(s) ' ; but Manly (better) suggests a \oczAv&, fussocks, the sing, meaning ' donkey ' or ' stupid person', given in Dial. Diet, as a Yks. term of contempt for a coarse, fat woman. 36. xjr" thicke : a solid or good 20 shillings : morell, name for a horse, as Buggb, l. ii. 70. 43. coietous scales : Codrus' corruption for ' covetous scolds ' as Br. 47. boust stoule : bolster-stool (Br.), i.e. with a cushion. Manly sug- gests ' box-stool ', N.E.D. boust. P. 244, 49. that Scottish knavery e I woud quit : pay out that Scotch rogue, i. e. Cacurgus. (' Scottish ' quasi foreign.) 52. will yaw none : equivalent to ' will you not.' ' 54. ' Because of you we shall get nothing now, or only a spoonful or so.' 55. couple of shotes : probably ' two years' rent '. 57. Bith meke : ' by the marikin ' (Br.) : Manly thinks may be adj. with ellipse of some sb. : cf. ill. iii. 75. 65. gods nowne : merely one of the varieties of ' God's wounds ', as Swaen, Eng. Studien, xxiv, p. 54, cited by Manly, who aptly quotes R. Greene's pun, 'began ... to sweare and to rap out goggs Nownes and his pronouns, while (until) at voluntarye he had sworne through the eight parts of speech in the Accidence ' ( Works, x. 99). P. 245, 76. by cocke Sr" pye : ' by God and Pie ', the latter being the Ordinal of the Rom. Cath. Church, so called from its pied or confused look to the eye (Lat. pica, magpie). N.E.D. 78. sange lulley by baby : ' see Ritson's Ancient Songs, new ed. I. Iv, for the music of this old burden from a MS. of the reign of Rich. II or Henry IV ' (Collier's H. D. P. ii. 379). 79. nuncle &^ my naunte : see on I. ii. 26. 81. membres: memories. 82. Intrat Cr[ito] : in Dram. Pers. described as ' peregrinus'. He may be supposed a comrade or fellow-voyager of Eugonus (cf. 1. 28 ' a brasse of striplings ', and 1. 152) and represents the Peregrinus who in Prodigal-plays (e. g. Macropedius' Asotus, v. 2) sometimes brings the father news of his absent son's distress. In justice to Fleay's theory of a connexion oiMisog. with Like Will to Like I note here Newfangle's arbitration between Ralph Roister and Tom Tosspot (Dods. iii. 324) ' If thou provest thyself the verier knave by good proof, | Thou must be the elder brother and have the patrimony.' IV. i MISOGONUS 321 85. w"' lye &• all : spite of 11. 17, 19 Alison seems to have returned to her washing, and has the soap or lye made from ashes in her hand, or the suds about her. Cf. his reflection on her previous appearance, III. i. 128-g. 86. w"' a wannion : see note on Buggb. iv. iv. II. 87. vf (Sr» downe : all over, exactly ; as Two Gent. 11. iii. 26. P. 246, 94. Be . . . good in your office : mind your own business ; cf. II. iii. 66. 95. to haue all tyth dost : to be master of all the parish, thou dost. 1 01. mist cushinge: explained of the cushion-dance by Br. (but they could see it as they knelt), of a mark in archery by Carpenter (but no such sense of ' cushion ' N.E.D.), and of missing an ordinary seat by Manly, who quotes Skelton's Colyn Clout, 997-8 ' And whan he weneth to syt. Yet may he mysse the quysshon '. Again, Euphties, v. 237 1. 22, and Heywood's Prov. Pt. 11, c. ix ' Ye missed the cushion for all your haste to it '. 105. First letter ofyotir names Eue : the common joke of giving a whole syllable or the whole name under this formula originated, no doubt, in rustic misstatement. ^r«f^/e/fl!j/« e«« : 'black- or dirty-faced ewe'- Brtickle \% %\vt.xv in D.D. and N.E.D. as a N. country vb. 'to make dirty', ptcp. ' bruckled' quoted as late as 1691. 112. Gods drabes : God's bloodstains. Dial. Diet, gives drab as Sc, Yks., Lanes, for spot, stain, sb. and vb. P. 247, 116. take Mr vp for haltinge: find some mistake in what she says, an aside to Alison : Codrus' jealousy is admirable. 118. bydene: ME. fo'rt'««^, together (Br.). See N.E.D. s.v.bedene,a.Av. 127. Gods blwe hood: i.e. God's blue hood, not ' boyhood ' or ' bloody head' Manly, who gives Dyce's inst. 'By gods blew hood' {To7n Tyler and his Wife, p. 5, ed. 1661) quoted on Skelton's Magnyfycence, 1128 ' For Gods cope thou wyll spende '. The ed. by R. Lee Ramsay (E.E.T.S. 1908 1. 11x6) treats 'God's cope ' as an exclamation = ' hood ' ; and I take it that ' God's blue hood ' is simply the sky. were your father a glacier : i. e. you're not a pane of glass. N.E.D.'s earliest inst. as ' window-glazier' is of 1408. In 1439 or 1447 the contractor for the windows of the Beauchamp chapel at Warwick binds himself not to use English glass {Enc. Brit. s. v. Glass). 131. after the risinge rection ith north : must refer to the Pilgrimage of Grace at the end of 1536. P. 248, 137. vmbert then : number it, reckon it up then ; suggested also by Manly. Dial. Diet, gives umber sb. as War., Sufif., Dev. for 'number ' : it must have been a Yks. vb. in 1577 or before. Brandl's ' umpired ' is not very natural, nor is the matter yet decided. 142. augrii: or augrim,= 2\%ov&m, Arabic numeration, here 'arith- metic ' (N.E.D. and Manly). Cf. in Two Ital. Gent. 628 ' names of Augrem ' for magical names. 145. we clementid: Carpenter's proposal seems best— w^rr/^w^^A'rf, i. e. it were St. Clement's tide (Nov. 23) ; but D.D. gives ' elementing' for a children's custom of soliciting apples, sweets, or pence on St. Clement's night, and the verb may possibly have been applied to some 322 NOTES IV. i dole (1. 147) to their elders. St. Nicholas day is Dec- 6, St. Stephen's Dec. 26. P. 249, 154. cu spiritu tuo: among the Responses at Prime in the Roman Breviary— in the First Prayer Book Cranmer compiled Morn- ing Prayer from the Roman Matins, Lauds and Prime. Codrus has served as clerk. There maybe here a reminiscence of drunken Hance in Like Will to Like (Dods. iii. 328) : ' Ich le-le-lerned zome La-La-Latin when ich was a la-la-lad; Ich ca-ca-can zay Tti es nebula, ich learn'd of my dad, And ich could once help the p-p-priest to say mass: By gods, ma-man, ich ha' been cunning, when 'twas.' 116. gods ludd : = ME./«rfrfo<:/J, hip, thigh (Br.) ; but perhaps a cor- ruption of ' blood '- Manly suggests ' lid '. catarwaulinge : 'whining', used for 'love-making' in J. Haywood's Johan Johan, no (A. W. Pollard in Repres. Eng. Comedies, p. 68). 159. yearnest &= breame of: earnest and eagerfor. Breame = breme, brim (N. country). 160. wo silliboukes : sillibouke or sillibauk is sillabub (custard) or rich cake {D.D.) : they are offerings by Codrus' admirers ; and wo is not for a fem. form who = .wo(men), but a mere mistake for mo, ' twenty or more.' P. 250, I. skippthirft : getter of wealth without work. 6. britche: breech, flog, as Marlowe's Edw. II, v. iv. 55 'Aristarchus . . . whose looks were as a breeching to a boy ' : cf ' a breeching scholar ', Taming, III. i. 18. 7. chalings : = challenges (Br.) ; the same form, though perhaps as plural sb. I. iv. 23. P. 251, 1 1, landleper : leaper into land. So in Welth and Helth, 751 Hance, the intruding foreigner, is bidden ' in ander land lopen '. 1 2. surky the ihome : Br. reads surly, and explains thome as ' thumb ' ; but there is no such use for ' beat ', ' hustle ', and the fourth letter, if an /, seems deleted. As it stands it is k or t. the stands close enough to ky to be meant perhaps as kythe, a N. country vb. i. show, 2. appear, 3. grow friendly : and I suggest doubtfully ' I will sur(e) kith thee home (thome) ' (' kith ' metonymy for ' drive ', satirizing his claim of relation- ship) ; or ' sur(e)ty thee home ', the thome being pleonastic like ' ith thy tale ', ill. i. 235. 17. Gods trunnion: God's tri-union (Br.) : 'by Saincte Tronnion ' occurs Respublica, v. ix. 32, and ' by Saint Thomas of Trunions ' Ap. and Virg. (Dods. iv. 151 J. 22. haue a childes part : in Nature, 1. iii. 24 Avarice says ' I wilnot bee behinde to gette a childes parte '. 27, hedgecrepers : sneaking vagabonds. P. 252, 33. hennardly: i.e. hen-heart + ly; N.E.D. gives 'henne harte ! ' (for coward) from York Mysteries, xxxiii. 198. Possibly ' Hens, thou haynyarde ! ' in Skelton's Magnyfycence, 1725, has the same sense. 34. coystriles : knaves. 37. year pilats voyce : the part must have been played in the same tyrannous vein as Herod ; cf. Respublica, in. iii. 1 5 ' Lord Jhese Christe, IV. ii MISOGONUS 323 whan he was I pounst and I pilate [y-Pontius'd and y-Pilated] Was ner 30 I trounst, as we have been of years late '. Cf. Pilate's opening speech in York Mysteries, xxxii, 9 ' sir Pilate of pounce as prince am y preued '. P. 253, I. laud : see note on ill. iii. 72, 74. P. 254, 31. peke pies: 'I suppose = pick pease' (Carpenter). 40. ivhope at noone : prob. to inform the homestead of the dinner- hour. P. 255, 52-3. ptct pin : or ' push-pin ', the child's game mentioned L. L. L. IV. iii. 169 — a pin was won each time a push or jerk caused one to lie across the other : ' Blow-point was probably blowing an arrow through a pipe at certain numbers by way of lottery.' Strutt's Sports and Past. ed. Cox, p. 312 : lin, cf. II. i. 64. 73-6. Probably he is actually doing some tumbling-feat, pretends to have hurt himself (1. 74), and complains (74, 76) of the audience's want of sympathy. P. 256, 81. cof^ : or cotton, form a nap (in clothmaking), so ' succeed ' — found repeatedly. 82. Stande I pray e the : perhaps seizing one of the occupants of stools on the stage, with intended joke on his lightness. CxLOSSARY Keference is to page ami numbered line of text: n indicates that the word is discussed in a note. A dwelfe, adv., madly, 96. 25. A shore, aside, 124. 3711. Acquynt, to, 208. 12711. Affects, desires, 22. 58. Afterclappes, 131. 7. Aglet, tag of a point, 223. 48. Alone, matchless, 93. 103, 94. 139. Ambrie or aumbry , cupboard, 152. 66. Apayde, pleased, 192. 3. Apply study, to, 15. 88, 49. 60. Cf. 21. 28. Armentage, 186. ion. Atide, in time, 92. 77. Augru, arithmetic, 248. 142. Backhouse, bakehouse, or privy, 236. 3, 242. II. Bagd, pregnant, 140. 3. Barne, chicken, 88. 54. Bayte, feed, 130. 33. Beakinge, 207. 113 n. Bed, bid, 119. no : cf. Red. Besill, to, swill, 194. 61. Beverage, pour-boire, 142. 13, 148. 3, 25- Bibler, reader of the Bible, 17. 30. Blin, to, cease, 223. 73 : blanne, pt. p. 207, 100. Blothernales, 229. 196 n. Blow poynte, game, 255. 53. Blowse, trull, 206. 80. Bobbe, jeer, befool, 48. 22, 93. 120, Bonably, abominably, 211. 214. Bonet, a sail, 32. 3 n. Borde through nose, 194. 59, Bouggish, 189. 78. Bounce, explode, 60. 4. Bousinge, boozing, 215. 14. Boust sloule, 243. 47 n. Boystrous, massive, 18. 60. Braide, outcry or start, 149. 14. Breame, eager, 249. 159. Breaste, voice, 188. 49. Britche, flog, 250. 6. Brucklefaste, black-faced, 246. 105. Bullchinge, bull-calf, 221. 5, 223. 65. Bumminge, 188. 49 n. By dene, together, 247. 118. Call me cut, 63. 41, 138. 79. Cantie vantie, at a canter, 131. 14. Capcase, 47. 17. Carrayenes, carrions, 128. 83 n. Cast, example, 98. 2, 257. 10. Caters, caterers, 21. 23, 38. 52. Cautel, artifice, 57. 62 n. Ckarettes, carts, 27. 99. Chery, kyrie, 188. 49. Clack, tongue, 106. 32, 135. 2. Clatter, chatter, 87. 47, 185. 36. Clementid, 248. 145 n. Clumpertone, clodhopper, 201. 50. Coapesmate, confederate, 89. 5, 208. 120. Cokes, ninny, 233. 6. Cole/eke, buffet, 235. 54. Coll or cull, to embrace, 22. 66, 151. 26. Collop, slice, 42. 66. Coltes teeth, youthful desire, in. 27. Compacte, confederate, plotted, 55. 6, 56. 22, 66. 128. Consort, company, society, 41. 57. Contentation, content, 17. 34, 23. 86, 38. 47, 72. 32. Contrary, find me, find me untrue, 63. 11,67. 8, 71. 6- Contrail, rebuke, 45. 5. Connate, carry off, steal, 93. 123. Coolyng card, 112. 51 n, 233. 23. GLOSSARY 325 Conierd cappe, college cap, 63. 24. Corpes, living body, 107. 19. Corrosie or corsy, corrosive, fret, 105. 142, 224. 91. Costerd, head, 55. 47, 195. 7. Gotten, succeed, 256. 81. Coystrell, 16. 113 n, 252. 34. Crackehalter, 24. 6. Cranke, lusty, 189. 86. Crashe, romp, 213. 263. Creake, croak, 183. 196. Crileson, 229. 196 n. Croute, pet, 206. 89. Crusadoe, a coin, 43. 19, 97. 59 n, 14T. 14. Ctmger, conjure, 189. 82. Customers, customs house officers, 27. 103. Deare, dare, 191. 23. Zfc^flw, disease, 139. 96, 140. 120. Demerites, merits, 176. 21. Demise, dismiss, 232. 279. Denti, 186. 10 n. Diadogmatriton, 98. 97. Discipher, detect, 30. 186, 45. 5, 61. 22. Discrive, describe, 177. 52. Disple, disciple, 201. 62. Disposed (amatory sense), 95. 17 n. Dobnett, loi. 67 n. Dogbolt, term of contempt, 98. 76. Doing, 109. 71 n. Dore, to, dare, 196. 44. Drevell, slut, 216. S9- Dup, do up, open, 99. 31 n. Dust, bay, 191. 47 ; (vb.) 235. 27. Dyssarde, fool, 105. 5, 209. 158: dis- ardly, 194. 61. Ealeth, ails, 183. 204. Ery, every, 191. 25, 207. 102, 223. 73- Eveny, matter, 1 1 1 . 1 7 n. Fackling, employment, 20S. 138. Fardell, bundle, 56. 40. Farding, farthing, 48. 20, 193. 32 : cf. Ftirder: contrast 203. 113. Fare, behave, 128. 89 n, 142. 17. Farr, farther, 213. 259. Feake, to, 195. 17. Feate, neat, 98. 95. Feere, mate, 120. 5. Fenstiar, fence, 191. 32. Fitne, fume, 193. 20. Finde, to, support, 24 4. Fippens, five pence, 192. 12. Fitte, spell, occasion, 87. 27, 113. 32, 134- S- Fleete, vb., float, 150.4: (sb.) flash, 335- 63- Forsett, 207. 107 n. Foundresse, patroness, 103. 83 ; foun- der, patron, 183. 193. Franion, comrade, 89. 2, 94. 146, 1 12. Fraye (intr.), fear, 109. 66. Friskoioly, iii. 23. Fuge, to, to flee, asyntactio infin., 45. 13 n. Fulker, pawnbroker, 34. 61. Furder, farther, 109. 70, 129. 108, 138. 87 : cf. Farding. Furr, further, 187. 19. Fustinge, ptcp. = mouldy, or = fus- tian, 214. 5. Gambolde, gambol, 98. 86. Ganser, grandsire, 183. 200. Garboyle, disturbance, 106. 35. Gaskins, breeches, 190. 7. Gaude (diss.), prank, 98. 86. Gayne, gape, 240. I26n. Gayson, rare, 19. 74. Gayte, ?gad-abont, 239, 109. Girmumble, disordering, 202. 78. Gleke, scorn, 134. 64. Gloses, commentaries, iS. 63. Gobbett, lump, 97. 65. Gofe, gossip, 202. 85. Goffishly, 128. 88. Goinne (diss.) or gonnie, simpleton, III. 22. Goldinge, gold piece, 88. 77. Golia, Goliath, 234. 29. Gome, ? go home !, 229. 203. Grandgosier, 112. 44 n. Groyned, branched, 117. 69. Gtipe, give up, 244. 52. Hob or nabes, 210. 195 n. Hagges, spirits, 118. 102, 144. lo. Haltersicke, 37. 10. Hake, to, 198. 106 n. Hammers in one's head, to have, of preoccupation, 62. 20. Hangvppes, gallows-birds, 144. 13. 326 GLOSSARY Hap, to, cover up, 1 78. 66. Hardest, hardiest,!!?. 123; cf.A^a?' .38- Pott pamons, 112. 55 n. Poulter, poulterer, 38. 50. Preuayle me, avail me, 41. 31. Punned, pounded, 123. 27 n. Purr, ?o7. 96 n. Put pin, game, 255. 52. Pylgrim salve, 98. 97 n. Qualicumes, qualities, 123. 17. Quark, to, crow, 221. I3. Quere, enquire, no. 97. Read, to, leccture, iS. 54. Red, to, rid, end, 96. 40 : cf. Bed. Rent, rend, 138. 75 n, Riddocke, gold piece, 86. 1 7 : ruddake, 210. 187, Ride byard, 188. 61 n. Royst, riot, 18. 61. Ruff, card-game, 208. 129. Sacringe, consecration, 209. 159. Saint (cent), card-game, 208. 129. Santas, sanctus, 213. 258. Saunce bell, 211. 209. Scemish, squeamish, 196. 30. Scene, Siena, 31. 25. Set a face, pretend, 94. 154. Set vp his rest, stake his all, 39. 5. Seuennight, week, 57. 64, 60. 48, 71. i3i 233- 18, 244. 62. Shadowes, pictures, 12. 11 n. Shote, payment, 193. 30, 36, 244. 55. Shotterell, young pike, 32. 7. Sibbe, kin, 149. 24. Silliboukes, sillabubs, 249. 160, Sincaunter, cinquanter, 222. 25. Since, 19. 93 n. Sincopasse, cinquepace, 213. 276. Sith, sigh, 218. 94, 220. 165. Sitte or syte on, to, concern, 134. n, 137. 61. Skippthrift, 250. I. Skoggingly, 187. 28 n. Stand, 2og. 145 n. Sleepe, on, 43. 28, 49. 3. Sletid, split, 118. 95- Slick, to, smooth, smear, 98. 88. Slipstring, truant, 37. 6. Sinogly, smart, 196. 39. Smigis, sneaks, 197. 73 n. Sokinges, 195. i n, 196. 45 Sondid, zondid, sanded, 221. 2, 223. Sort, quantity, 123. 26. Souse, broth, 221. 9. Souterlye, 201. 52. Spette, spit, 108. 28. Sfurlings, smelts, 32. 8. Spurr, ask, 222. 42. Stale, lure, 43. 45. Stale, ripe, 93. 108. Standes me vpon, it, is incumbent on me, 69. 24. Stare, stand up, 118. 74 n, 135. 14; swagger, 185. 46. State, income, 23. 97. Staunce, space, 33. 26. 328 GLOSSARY Sterve, die, 107. ig. Stirre, to keep a, 44. 2, 47. 15, 96. 44, 98. 94, 99. 32, 214. 291. Stocke, capital, 91. 55, 57, 147. 73. Stroot or stroute, to, strut, swagger, 97-47. 185.46. Successe, sequel, 61. 22. Suffumigation, alchemic term, 140. 121. Sufukes iorfusiikes, 243. 35 n. Suppose, prostitute, 12. 13. Supposes, II. in, I2.4,&c. Suspecte, suspicion, 65. 105, 107. Sustentation, sustenance, 41. 59. Swadd, clown, 195. 6. Swaddell, to, swathe, 244. 62. Swaddle, to, beat, 194. 62, 204. 32. Take on, to, show grief or auger, 142. 17. Take well in worthe, in good part, 70. 3 : of. ' take in gree ' 153. 81. Teend, to, light, 129. 12. Tempten, terapt, 145. 35 n. Tetragranaton, 213. 258 n. Thwite, trim, 118. 80. Tkk tack, dice-game, 208. 137. Tickes, touches, 204. 8. Tideling, darling, iii. 24. Timpanye, dropsy, 113. 38 n. Tosse, turn, 26. 49; ?banble, 187. 22. Toye, trick, 34. 74, 68. 34; whim, 88. 72, 98. 87. Trace (vb.), of dancing, 213. 281. Tract, prolong, 225. 99. Trotte, hag, 45. 35, 60. 41, 233. 16. Trullit, 232. 265 n. Trunnion, trinity, 251. 17. Trusse, trouser, 194. 60. Trtist, to serve one a, 214. 293 n, 243- 31- Tupe, copulate, 214. 287. Turning of a hand, with the, 15. 92. Tute, tutor, 201. 62. Twang, to, tread shoes awry, 195. 14 n. Twichild, in second childhood, 97. 72. Ure, use, 206. 65. Vangell, gospel, 206. 84. Vaunt, to, ? vault, 214. 285. Vecchio, old man (It.), 91. 61, 92. 79. Veckinges, fay-kins, 203. 121. Vengeable, intensive adj., 106. 29. Vessell,f\.z'S. ion. Vilde, vile, 258. 32. Vnderhear, overhear, 135. 4. Vndertide, 99. 19 n. Vngly, 114. 61 n: cf. 117. 72, 128. 87. Vnloden, pp. of unload, 37. 15. Vnneth, scarcely, 114. 62. Vntruss, unpack, 47. 16. Vrchine, hedgehog, 89. 1 5. Vye, wager, 106. 39 n. Wagghalter, 250. 6. Wagpasty, 210. 192 n. Wannion, 131. 11 n, 245. 86. Way, to, forward, no. 73 n. Webbe of clothe, a, 67. 12. Wenye, ? verity, 241. 147. Wer, our, 227. 158 : cf. wold, old, 236. 13. Whestion, question, 222. 42, 238. 76. Whether, whither, 53. 28, 202.99. Whipperginnye, card-game, 207. 94. Whochittals, 223. 52 n. Wightly, quickly, 224. 77. Wilde, with a, 194. 47 n : cf. 235. .sgn. Wim warn, flourish, 213. 277. lyind, wend, 112. 45 n, 131. 16. Woreton, worm-eaten, 243. 36. Wottle, wot, 224. 96 n. Wrea/ifuell, revengeful, 108. 30. Wryte vpon, to, rely on, 121. 29 n. Ye, yea, 86. 4, no. 95, 117. 59. Yet, after all, 14. 56, 26. 56. Yonker, young man, 16. in, 37. 9, 205. 46 : yonke, young, 244. 49. INDEX Reference is to page and line as numbered, or to page alone : n refers to Notes or footnotes. For full analysis of Introductory Essay, see Contents Table. Acolastus, xcvii-ix. Address of audience, xlvii (5). Agrippa, H. Cornelius, Ixxiil, ex, and notes on 116. 24-6, 37, 117. 55. 61, 69, 70, 72, 2J3. 258. Aretino, Pietio, vi, xix, xxii, xxvii, xxix. Ariosto, Lodovico, xvii, xxi, cxvii; Orl. Fur., xc, 138. 66 n ; La Cassa- ria, xvii-xviii, xxi-ii, xxvi n, xxxiv, xliii n, xlvi, xlvii, li, Ixi, Ixxv, 31. 27 n, 85. 4n; / Suppositi, xvii- xviii, xxviii, XXX, xxxiv, xliv n 2, its two forms, li-ii, sources, lii-v, merits, Ixi-ii, cxvii, French trans- lations of, Ixiii ; La Lena, xvii, xl, xli ; // Negromante, xvii, xxxiii, slcetched, xxxiv-v ; La Scolastica, xvii, xxvii, xxix, xxxvii, xl. Arrivals announced, xlvi (i). Asides, xlvi (4). Asotus, xcv-vi. Astrology and imposture, in Italy, xxxi-iv; in Buggbears, Ixxii-iii; in Misogonus, cix-xi. Audience, address of, xlvii (5), 184-6, 253-6 ; dismissal of, see Licenzia; objects thrown among, 185. 56-8 n. Baldus and Bartolus, Ixxix, 117. 59 n. Barjona, Laurence, 165, 167-70. Bibbiena, Cardinal, La Calandria, xvii-xviii, xxi, xxxiv. Braggart, xxvi-vii, xxx n, ciii, cxvi. Brandl, Dr. Alois, viii, ix, 83, 163-4, and notes on Misogonus passim. Buggbears, The, Ixvii, ex ; compared with La Spiritata, Ixviii-lxxx table of sources for, Ixxvi-vii ; hands in MS., 78-80; verse of, Ixxxi, Ixxxvi. Cacurgus, ciii, cix-xi, cxvii, 161, 182- 7, 195-203, 206-14, 221-2, 233, 236-41, 253-6. Card-games : primero, 39. 3 n ; whip- her-jenny, 207. 94 n ; ruff, maw, saint (cent.), 208. 129 n, 209. 143 n. Cassaria, La, see Ariosto. Cecchi, G. M., xix, xxii, xxviii-ix, xxxiii, cxi ; GV Incantesimi, xxxiii ; Lo Spirito sketched, xxxvi-vii ; L' Ammalata, xxxvii-viii, xli, Ixxv, cxi; // Figliuol Prodigo, xli, xlii n 2, 1, cix. Church, the, and friars, xxvii. Cinthio, Giraldi, xxxix n, xlii n 3, xliv n I, xlvii. ' Comedies ', allusion to, xlviii. Commedia delV arte, cxv n i, xxii, cxi, Commedia erudita, see Italian Renais- sance Comedy. Cooks, 1 (11); Warburton's, Ixvii, 78; and boys, Iv, 37. 2-4 n, 52. 38 n. Cunliffe, Dr. J. W., vii, ix, Ixiii. Currens senius, xlix (8). Custom-house officers, 27. 103 n, 47, I5sqq. Decameron, xxxiv, xc, 85. 3 n, 13 n ; 96, 24 n. Dice-games : tick-tack, mume chanch, novem, 208. 137 n. Disguised girls, xxxix- xl. Disobedient Child, The, Ixiii, cv-vi. 330 INDEX Doctors, xxviii-ix. Doggerel, the, Ixxxiii-xc. ' Doors, talk of, xlviii (6). Dreams, 1 (12). Education-drama, xv, xciii sqq., ci-ii. Ferrara, xx-xxi, 15. 84 n, 24. 1711, 26. egn, 30. 311, 45. II n, 50. 22 n, 52- 3°. S3- 231. 60. 48 n. Fool, the, 161, 183. 199 n; his dress, 186. 237 ; position, 183-4, ^°^ '< functions, 182-3, 190. loin, 202. 81 n, 222-3, 253-5. Forgetting a name, xlix (9). Fourteener, the, Ixxxi-iii, Ixxxvi-vii. Furnivall, Dr. Fdk. J., ix-x. Gammer Gurton, verse of, Ixxxii, Ixxxvi. Gardner, Mr. E. G., xvii u, 1 u, 24. 1711. Gascoigne, George, Iv, 6-9 ; his Ital- ian, Ivi ; his alliterative Euphuism, lix-lx ; his Certayne Notes, Ixxxviii. Girls disguised as men, xxxix. Glasse of Gouernement, The, cvii, cix-x. GV Ingannati, xix, xxix, xxx, Ixx. Gnaphens, Will., xcvii-ix. Good news, bringerof, xlix (7). Grabau, Dr. C., ix, 78-9, and notes on Buggbears passim. Grazzini, A. F. (II Lasca), xix-xx, xxii, xxxiy ; his La Sfiritata, Ixvii- ix, Ixxvi-lxxx, and notes to Btigg- bears passim ; Le Cene, Ixxiii-iv. Hazlitt, Mr. W. C, iv, Ivi, cxii-xiii, 5,81. Herford, Prof. C. H., ix, xv, xxxii n 4, xcv, ci n I, ciii n 2, cix, cxiii, cxiv n I, 162. Heroine's seclusion or absence, evaded by disguise, xxxix-xl, Ixix. Hey wood, John, his anapsestic rhythm, Ixxxiv-v ; hiijohanjohan. Innkeeper, xxxvii-viii, Iv, Italian comic dramatists, xix-xx, xxii, cxvii. See also Aretino, Ariosto, Bibbiena, Cecchi, Grazzini. Italian Renaissance Comedy, iii, v-vii ; writers and plays, xvii-xxiii ; its adaptation of its Latin original in circumstance and characters, xxvi- xli, in form and technique, xlii-1 ; vehicles of, xlii ; scenery, xlii-iii ; example for English work, cxvii. .See also Ariosto, Grazzini, Cecchi, GP Ingannati. Jacob and Esau, cvi. Jeffere, John, probable author of Buggbears, Ixx, cxvii, 83. Jest-books, xvi, Ixxiv, cxiii-xv. Jocasta, Iv, Ixiii n 4, 7-8. John, Sir, xcii, cxii-xiv, 205, 207-17, 243- 34- Knife for eating, 189. 75 n. Lsetns, Pomponius, xviii, xxi. Latin Comedy ; reproductions of, in Supposes, lii-v, in Bugbears, Ixxi- ii, in Misogonus, ciii-iv ; general idea of plot in, xxv-vi ; stereotyped effects in, xlvi-1 ; place in the Edu- cation-drama, xciii. See also Plautus, Terence. Lawyers, xxviii, 18. 60 n, 56, 57. 62 n. Licenzia, the, xlviii,lxx, 152. 57-end n. Like Will to Like, Ixiii, cvii, cxi 166-7, 178- 79> and notes on 57. 71, 9J. 108, 184. 1-5, 186. 1-3, 194. 57, 205. 140, 211. 206, 212. 247, 216. 42, 245. 82, 249. 154. Local colour, in Supposes, Iviii (see Ferrara), in Buggbears, Ixxix, in . Misogonus, xci-ii. Machiavelli, Niccol6, xviii : Le Mas- chere, xviii ; Mandragola, xviii, xxii, xxvii, xxxiv ; Clizia, xviii, xxii. Macropedius, George, xcv-vii. Maid-servant, xl-xli. Malleus Maleficarum, xxxiii-iv, 81. Metres, Ixxxi sqq. Misogonus, authorship, 166 sqq, cxyii- xviii, date of, xc, 170-1, verse of, Ixxxi-iii, xc, hands in MS. 165-6. Names ; forgetting, xlix (9); burlesque or punning, Iv, 35. 87 n, 36. 142 n, 40. 6n, 42. 2-3 n, 52. 3n, 65. loon; in Misogonus, cii n, English, xci, INDEX 331 significant classical, 173 n; in Taming, Ixvi n ; in Buggbears, whence derived, 274-5. See also Spirits. New Comedy, writers of, xxii, xxiii n, xxiv. Nice Wanton, The, cvi. Nostradamus, Michael, Ixxv, ex, Si -2, 116. 24-6 n, Nnrse, xl. Objects thrown among audience, 185. 65-8 n. Old suitor, xxx-i. Otranto and the Turks, xxiii, xxvi n i, 18. 52 n, 64. Palmistry, 17. 22 n. Parasite, xxxviii, liv, and notes on 20. 121, 21. 38, 38. 50, 60. 47, 148. 3. Pedant, xxix-xxx. Petriscus, xcix-c. Pigna, G. B., xxxix n, xlvii. Pinzochera, the, xxviii. Place, xlii-v ; in Supposes, Ixi ; in Bugbears, Ixxix n ; in Misogonus, xlv. Plautus, iv, XX, xxii, xxiv-vii ; im- postors, xxxi, xlix, liv, Ixxv ; ser- vants, xxxix ; old lovers, xxx, Ixx-i ; epilogues, xlviii, Ixx, 152. s7-end n ; Asiiiaria, Ixxii ; Aulularia, Ixxii, 37. 2-4 n, 67. I n, 98. II. i n ; Bac- chides, 49. 72 n ; Captivi, lii-iv, 20. 121 D, 25. 13-I4n, 37. 2-4n, 45. 1 1 n, 60 (sc. iii n), 68. 3n ; CurcuHo, xlix, 95. 20 n; MencBchmi, xxi, xxxii n 2, 21. 38D, 27. I03n, 57. 62n; Mostellaria, xxxvii, xlvn; Persa, 36. 142-5 n, 175. 36 n; Panulus, Ixvi, 57. 62 n, 105. sc. ivn ; Pseii- dolus, 38. 30 ; Rttdens, xxxi, 1, civ ; Trinummus, civ, 27. 103 n, 60. 9 n. Political conditions, Greek and Italian, xxii-vi. Pregnancy as motive, xxv. Prodigal Son, the; in drama, xciv sqq. ; English Prodigal Plays, civ- viii ; Cecchl's II Figliuol Prodigo, 1, cix ; allusions in Shakespeare, cviii n 2. Prologue, function of, .303. Prose or Verse, xlii, Ixiii, Ixxxix-xc. Proverbs and phrases, in Supposes, Ix ; in Buggbears, Ixxviii ; in Miso- gonus, cxiv. Rebelles, xcix. Reuchlin, xcv, xcvii n i. Rhyme, loose in Bugbears, Ixxx; its effect on rhythm, Ixxxvi n 2, Ixxxviii. Roman Catholic and Protestant, in Buggbears, Ixxx; in Misogonus, xcii, 188. 47 n, 198. 100, 205. 64, 211. 18, 212. 244-5 n (service), 215. 32, 2i6. 37-9, 227. 150-9 n (prayers for the dead), 240. 139, 243. 34 n (confession), 245. 78, 249. 153-6 n (Codrns chanting). Rychardes, Thomas, 165-8. Sacre Rappresentazio7ii, xviii-xix, xli, xliii n, Ixxx, xciv. Scenery, movable ; use of perspec- tive, xlil-iii. Schiicking, Dr. L. L. , ix, Ixvii, Ixxviii, civ, 37- 4-5 ". 82. Scogan, John, cxi, cxiv, 1S7. 28 n. Servant, his position, xxxviii, Ixixn; abuse (mutual), 1 (10), (by masters) 99, 106, 131. Songs, in Buggbears, Ixxvi ; music, 79> 83. 154-7; in Misogonus, 197, 2i9n. Speaking back on entering, xlvi (2), Ixxii. Spiritata, La, see Grazzini. Spirits, names or classes of, Ixxii, and notes on 116. 44, 117-119, 288- 94. I.15- 1.3, 145- wa- stage-blindness, xlvi (3), Ixxii. .Summer, Will, 183. 199 n. Supposes, 1, compared with / Suppo- siti, Iv-lx, Ixii, with A Shrew, Ixiv-v, with The Shrew, Ixvi-vii, meaning of title, 259-60, marginal notes in, 262. Supposili, I, see Ariosto. Terence, iv, xjjv, xlj, xlix, xciii-iv; Andria, liv, Ixxi, Ixxvii, 63. 23-4, 100. sc. iii n, 103. 90-105 n, 105. 129- 36n, 107. sc. V. 7-8n, 14-15 n, 109. 59n, 72n, no. 88n, 96n, 14T.sc. ivn, 146. 60-1 n, 150. sc. 9, 5 n, 151. 22 n, 152. 57-end n ; Adelphi, Ixxii ; Eunuchus, lii-iii, 38. 50 n, 61. 22- 332 INDEX 3n,' 68. 5n, 70. in, 141. 22 nj Heautoniimorumenos, Ixxii, civ, 48. 42 n ; Hecyra, Ixxii, 98. II. in; Phormio, 27. 103 n, 85. 19 n. Time, xlii-v ; in Supposes, Ixi ; in Buggbeafs, Ixxix n ; in Misogonus, xlv, 183. 2i5n. Tottell's Miscellany, influence on dramatic verse, Ixxxii, Ixxxv, xc. Unities, the,. and their results, xlii-v. Waldis, Burchard, his Parabell, xciv, xcvii. Wallace, Prof. M. W., v, cv n. Weathercock of St. Paul's, 233. 3 n. Weier, Johann, his De Prastigns Damonum, Ixxiii, 81, and notes on 115. sc. iii, 116. 37. "7- 62,66, 68, 118. 79, 82, 85, 87, 88, 119. 118, 140. 125. Wife, xli, Ixxii. Oxford : Printed at the Clarendon Press by Horace Hart, M.A. >.z '■••^■1