Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 3).pdf/332

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

The introduction of Moll Cutpurse suggests rivalry with Dekker and

Middleton's Roaring Girl (also c. 1610-11) at the Fortune, which theatre is chaffed in ii. 1 and iii. 4.

Later Play The Fatal Dowry (1632), a King's men's play, assigned on the title-page to P. M. and N. F., probably dates from 1616-19. C. Beck, Philip Massinger, The Fatall Dowry, Einleitung zu einer neuen Ausgabe (1906, Erlangen diss.), assigns the prose of II. ii and IV. i to Field. There is an edition by C. L. Lockert (1918).

Doubtful Plays

Attempts have been made to trace Field's hand in Bonduca, Cupid's Revenge, Faithful Friends, Honest Man's Fortune, Thierry and Theodoret, and Four Plays in One, all belonging to the Beaumont (q.v.) and Fletcher series, and in Charlemagne (cf. ch. xxiv).


JOHN FLETCHER (1579-1625).

Fletcher was born in Dec. 1579 at Rye, Sussex, the living of his father Richard Fletcher, who became Bishop of Bristol, Worcester, and in 1594 London. His cousins, Giles and Phineas, are known as poets. He seems too young for the John Fletcher of London who entered Corpus Christi, Cambridge, in 1591. After his father's death in 1596, nothing is heard of him until his emergence as a dramatist, and of this the date cannot be precisely fixed. Davenant says that 'full twenty yeares, he wore the bayes', which would give 1605, but this is in a prologue to The Woman Hater, which Davenant apparently thought Fletcher's, although it is Beaumont's; and Oliphant's attempt to find his hand, on metrical grounds, in Captain Thomas Stukeley (1605) rests only on one not very conclusive scene. But he had almost certainly written for the Queen's Revels before the beginning, about 1608, of his collaboration with Beaumont, under whom his later career is outlined. It is possible that he is the John Fletcher who married Joan Herring on 3 Nov. 1612 at St. Saviour's, Southwark, and had a son John about Feb. 1620 in St. Bartholomew's the Great (Dyce, i. lxxiii), and if so one may put the fact with Aubrey's gossip (cf. s.v. Beaumont), and with Oldwit's speech in Shadwell's Bury-Fair (1689): 'I knew Fletcher, my friend Fletcher, and his maid Joan; well, I shall never forget him: I have supped with him at his house on the Bank-side; he loved a fat loin of pork of all things in the world; and Joan his maid had her beer-glass of sack; and we all kissed her, i' faith, and were as merry as passed.' I have sometimes wondered whether Jonson is chaffing Beaumont and Fletcher in Bartholomew Fair (1614), V. iii, iv, as Damon and Pythias, 'two faithfull friends o' the Bankside', that 'have both but one drabbe', and enter with a gammon of bacon under their cloaks. I do not think this can refer to Francis Bacon. Fletcher died in Aug. 1625 and was buried in St. Saviour's (Athenaeum, 1886, ii. 252).

For Plays vide s.v. Beaumont, and for the ascribed lost play of Cardenio, s.v. Shakespeare.