Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 3).pdf/284

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(xxii) Robert II or The Scot's Tragedy.

With Dekker, Jonson, and possibly Marston (q.v.), Sept. 1599.

(xxiii) Patient Grissell.

With Dekker (q.v.) and Haughton, Oct.-Dec. 1599.

(xxiv) The Orphan's Tragedy.

Nov. 1599-Sept. 1601, but apparently not finished, unless Greg rightly traces it in Yarington's Two Lamentable Tragedies (q.v.). (xxv) The Arcadian Virgin.

With Haughton, Dec. 1599, but apparently not finished.

(xxvi) Damon and Pythias.

Feb.-May 1600.

(xxvii) The Seven Wise Masters.

With Day, Dekker, and Haughton, March 1600.

(xxviii) The Golden Ass, or Cupid and Psyche. With Day and Dekker, April-May 1600; on possible borrowings from this, cf. s.v. Heywood, Pleasant Dialogues and Dramas. (xxix) The Wooing of Death.

May 1600, but apparently not finished.

(xxx) 1 Blind Beggar of Bethnal Green.

With Day (q.v.), May 1600.

(xxxi) All Is Not Gold That Glisters.

March-April 1601.

(xxxii) King Sebastian of Portingale.

With Dekker, April-May 1601.

(xxxiii), (xxxiv) 1, 2 Cardinal Wolsey.

Apparently Chettle wrote a play on The Life of Cardinal Wolsey in June-Aug. 1601, to which was afterwards prefixed a play on The Rising of Cardinal Wolsey, by Chettle, Drayton, Munday, and Smith, written in Aug.-Nov. 1601 (cf. Greg, Henslowe, ii. 218). Chettle was 'mendynge' The Life in May-June 1602, and on 25 July Richard Hadsor wrote to Sir R. Cecil of the attainder of the Earl of Kildare's grandfather 'by the policy of Cardinal Wolsey, as it is set forth and played now upon the stage in London' (Hatfield MSS. xii. 248). (xxxv) Too Good To Be True.

With Hathway and Smith, Nov. 1601-Jan. 1602; the alternative title 'or Northern Man' in one of Henslowe's entries is a forgery by Collier (cf. Greg, Henslowe, i. xliii). (xxxvi) Friar Rush and the Proud Women of Antwerp.

Written by Day and Haughton in 1601 and mended by Chettle in Jan. 1602.

(xxxvii) Love Parts Friendship.

With Smith, May 1602; identified by Bullen with the anonymous Trial of Chivalry (q.v.). (xxxviii) Tobias.

May-June 1602.