Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/424

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departed from their own principles by licensing Oxford's and Worcester's men to play at the Boar's Head. Henceforward three companies of men players were regularly tolerated, and when a draft licence was prepared for Worcester's, or as they had then become Queen Anne's, men early in the following year the Curtain and the Boar's Head were named as 'there now usuall howsen'. The Curtain is also specified for them in the Council's warrant for the resumption of plays on 9 April 1604. About 1606 they also took into use the Red Bull, and thereafter but little is heard of the Curtain. The Queen's men, however, played Day, Wilkins, and Rowley's The Travels of Three English Brothers there at some time before its entry on 29 June 1607. It was still theirs in April 1609, but may perhaps soon have passed to the Duke of York's men. It is mentioned, with the Globe and Fortune, in Heath's Epigrams of 1610, and plays heard 'at Curtaine, or at Bull' and 'a Curtaine Iigge' are objects of ridicule in Wither's Abuses Stript and Whipt of 1613.[1] It was used by an amateur company for a performance of Wentworth Smith's Hector of Germany in 1615, and it is obscurely referred to in I. H.'s This World's Folly of the same year.[2] Malone gathered from Sir Henry Herbert's office-book that it was used by Prince Charles's men in 1622, and soon thereafter only by prize-fighters. It was still in use in 1624, and still standing in 1627.[3]


viii. NEWINGTON BUTTS

A theatre, of which the history is very obscure, but which may have been built soon after the Theatre and Curtain, stood at Newington, a village one mile from London Bridge, divided from the Bankside by St. George's Fields, and reachable by the road which continued Southwark High Street.[4] Here there were butts for the practice of archery. Plays at Newington Butts, outside the City jurisdiction, are first mentioned in a Privy Council letter of 13 May 1580 to the Surrey justices. A similar letter of 11 May 1586 speaks more precisely of 'the theater or anie other places about Newington'. A third letter, undated, but probably belonging to 1591 or 1592, recites an order of the Council restraining

  1. Heath, Epigram 39; Wither, Abuses, i. 1; ii. 3.
  2. Cf. App. C, No. lix.
  3. Variorum, iii. 54, 59; Ordish, 106, from Vox Graculi (1623) and Jeaffreson, iii. 164.
  4. A writer in the Daily News for 9 April 1898 identifies the site of the theatre, without giving any evidence, as 'between Clock Passage, Newington Butts, Swan Place, and Hampton Street'; cf. 9 N. Q. i. 386.