Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/567

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The Fortune tire-house was to have 'convenient windowes and lightes glazed'. Some of these may have looked into the auditorium, and have been used for scenic purposes. But the maps show external windows here and there in the walls, and these would be necessary to light both the tire-house and the galleries. We have a picture of Burbadge leaning out of an upper window to greet with abuse the disturbers of his peace at the Theatre in 1590. The yard and the stage itself were, of course, lit, in the absence of a roof, from above. Performances were ordinarily by daylight; before the end of the sixteenth century the time for beginning had been fixed at 2 o'clock.[1] The stage-directions point to a frequent enough use of lamps and tapers, but always to give the illusion of scenic darkness. Plays, however, lasted at least two hours, sometimes half an hour or even an hour longer, and there was the jig to follow.[2] It must therefore be doubtful whether, in the depth of winter, daylight could have served quite to the end. Webster complains that the ill-success of The White Devil was due to its being given 'in so dull a time of winter, and presented in so open and black a theatre'. Perhaps the shorter plays were chosen for the shorter days, or the jig was omitted. But it is also possible that some primitive illumination, in the form of cressets, or baskets of tarred and flaring rope, was introduced.[3]

  • [Footnote: room over the tire-house was disused by spectators (cf. p. 537) it became

indifferently available for actors and for music, and that here, rather than, as is possible, higher still in the scenic wall, was the normal place for the seventeenth-century music, when it was not needed elsewhere, or the space needed for other purposes. The introduction of the high proscenium arch at the Restoration caused difficulties, and various experiments were tried in placing the music above (Lawrence, i. 91, 161; ii. 160; W. G. Keith, The Designs for the First Movable Scenery on the English Public Stage in Burlington Magazine, xxv. 29, 85), before the modern situation was adopted.]

  1. Cf. ch. x.
  2. R. J., prol. 12, 'the two hours' traffic of our stage'; Alchemist, prol. 1, 'these two short hours'; Hen. VIII, prol. 13, 'two short hours'; T. N. K., prol. 28, 'Sceanes . . . worth two houres travell'; Heywood, Apology, 11 (Beeston's c. v.), 'two houres well spent'; Barth. Fair, ind., 'the space of two hours and a half and somewhat more'. Perhaps plays tended to grow shorter. Fenton (1574) and Northbrooke (1577-8) give 'two or three houres', and Whetstone (1578) three hours (cf. App. C), but Dekker (cf. p. 533, n. 3) seems to regard three hours as an exceptionally long period.
  3. Cotgrave, French-English Dict. (1611), s.v. Falot, 'a cresset light (such as they use in playhouses) made of ropes wreathed, pitched and put into small and open cages of iron'; cf. Lawrence, ii. 13, who thinks the cressets were part of the lighting of private houses. But would they not smoke and smell badly, if used indoors? There is no particular reason for translating the lucernae of Christ Church hall in 1566, with Schelling and Lawrence, as 'cressets'.