Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/144

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is specially designated as an Admiral's man. Kempe, at any rate, and probably also Pope and Bryan, were in Leicester's service in the Low Countries during 1586, and all three were together during the same year in Denmark. Whether they had belonged, as has sometimes been supposed, to Leicester's long-enduring company of Court players is less certain. Pope and Bryan passed from Denmark to Germany, and may have joined the Admiral's or Strange's on their return. They also were acrobats as well as players.[1] Kempe, however, seems to have parted company from the others in Denmark, and may have joined Strange's independently, presumably before 10 June 1592, when A Knack to Know a Knave, in which he played 'merrimentes', was produced. Heminges may possibly have been a Queen's man.

Some details of the 1593 tour and the names of two or three more members of the company are found in the familiar correspondence of Alleyn with his wife, whom he had married on 22 October 1592, and with Philip Henslowe, who was her step-father.[2] On 2 May he writes from Chelmsford, and on 1 August from Bristol. Here he had received a letter by Richard Cowley and he sends his reply by a kinsman of Thomas Pope. At the moment of writing he is ready to play Harry of Cornwall. He asks that further letters may be sent to him by the carriers to Shrewsbury, West Chester, or York, 'to be keptt till my Lord Stranges players com'. He does not expect to be home until All Saints' Day. A reply from Henslowe and Mrs. Alleyn on 14 August is in fact addressed to 'Mr. Edwarde Allen on of my lorde Stranges players'. This mentions an illness of Alleyn at Bath during which one of his fellows had had to play his part. With these letters is one written to Mrs. Allen on behalf of a 'servant' of Alleyn's, whose name was Pige or Pyk, by the hand of Mr. Doutone, possibly Edward Dutton, but perhaps more probably Thomas Dowten or Downton, who was later a sharer among the Admiral's men. The provincial records, subject to the confusion of company nomenclature already noted, appear to confirm the visits to Bath, Shrewsbury, and York, to indicate others to Southampton, Leicester, Coventry, Ipswich, and Newcastle, and to show that some temporary alliance had been entered into with the purely provincial company of Lord Morley.[3] After 25 September 1593 Strange's men of course became Derby's men.*

  1. Cf. W. W. Greg in Henslowe, ii. 70.
  2. Dulwich MSS. i. 9-15 (Henslowe Papers, 34); cf. Henslowe, i. 3.
  3. Their patron was Edward Parker, Lord Morley (Murray, ii. 54). I suspect the Morden of the York entry and the Norris of the Bath entry