Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/153

This page needs to be proofread.

takings. The negotiations with Langley which they describe seem to have taken place during October. About the covenants entered into with Henslowe as far back as the beginning of August they said nothing, and whether either Langley or the court ever found out about these, and what the ultimate decision of the court on the main issue was, must remain uncertain. But certain loans entered in Henslowe's diary suggest that in March 1598 Langley was in a position to arrest Bird, and that in September of the same year some kind of agreement was arrived at, under which Langley received £35, as well as £19 or more for a rich cloak (i. 63, 72, 73, 95, 96). It is possible that a 'sewt agenste Thomas Poope' of the Chamberlain's, for which Henslowe (i. 72) made a personal advance of 10s. to William Bird on 30 August 1598, may also have been connected with the shiftings of companies in 1597.

The names of the two or three members of the company to whom Langley gave back their bonds are not stated in the pleadings. Perhaps one was Jonson, and the other two might conceivably have been Humphrey and Anthony Jeffes, since the name of 'Humfrey' stands with that of 'Gabriel' in stage-directions to 3 Henry VI, and Henslowe's list of the reconstituted Admiral's company as it stood in October 1597-January 1598 contains 'the ij Geffes', who are not traceable in the 1594-7 company and may well have come in with the five Pembroke's men. Langley tells us that certain 'fellows' of his opponents had taken a more reasonable line than theirs and returned to the Swan. How long these men remained there we do not know, but probably they secured Pembroke's patronage after the five had been definitely merged in the Admiral's, for by the end of 1597 there was clearly a distinct Pembroke's company again. Provincial records yield the name, not only at Bath in 1596-7 and at Bristol in September 1597, which may point to a tour of the undivided Swan company during the period of restraint, but also at Bath in 1598-9, at Bristol in July 1598, at Leicester between October and December, at Dover on 7 October, at Coventry on 12 December, and at Bewdley on 22 December. They were at Norwich in April 1599, at Coventry on 4 July, and at Bristol in July. They were at York on 21 January 1600, Bristol in April, Marlborough in May, and Leicester before Michaelmas. In October they were in relationship with Henslowe, who notes 'my Lordes of Penbrockes men begane to playe at the Rosse', and records performances of Like Unto Like and Roderick on 28 and 29 October respectively.[1] The former

  1. Henslowe, i. 131; cf. ch. xxiii, s.v. Fulwell.