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as 'Henry Condye' in the verses on the burning of the Globe in 1613. He is assigned 26s. 8d. to buy a ring as Shakespeare's 'fellowe' in his will of 1616, and appears also as a legatee in the will of Augustine Phillips in 1605, as trustee in that of Alexander Cooke in 1614, as executor and joint residuary legatee in that of Nicholas Tooley in 1623, under which also his wife and his daughter Elizabeth receive legacies, and as executor in that of John Underwood in 1625. By 1599 he was married and apparently settled in St. Mary Aldermanbury, where he held various parochial offices during 1606-21, and the register records his children: Elizabeth (bapt. 27 February 1599, bur. 11 April 1599), Anne (bapt. 4 April 1601, bur. 16 July 1610), Richard (bapt. 18 April 1602), Elizabeth (bapt. 14 April 1603, bur. 22 April 1603), Elizabeth (bapt. 26 October 1606), Mary (bapt. 30 January 1608, bur. from Hoxton at St. Leonard's, Shoreditch, 24 March 1608), Henry (bapt. 6 May 1610, bur. 4 March 1630), William (bapt. 26 May 1611), Edward (bapt. 22 August 1614, bur. 23 August 1614).[1] Subsequently he had a 'country house' at Fulham, at which on 10 September 1625 a pamphlet written by certain players on their travels during the plague, as a reply to Dekker's A Rod for Run-awayes, under the title of The Run-awayes Answer, was addressed to him, with an expression of gratitude for a 'free and noble farewell' which he had given the writers. At Fulham, too, on 13 December 1627, he made his will, leaving to his widow Elizabeth, his sons Henry and William, and his daughter Elizabeth, wife of Herbert Finch, much household property at Aldermanbury and elsewhere in London, including 'rents and profits' by 'leases and terms of years' of 'messuages houses and places' in Blackfriars and on the Bankside, which were to pass for a time to William and ultimately to the widow.[2] Condell had not been an original sharer in the house of the Globe, but by 1612 had acquired an interest jointly with Heminges; of the Blackfriars house he was an original sharer in 1608. The Sharers Papers of 1635 indicate that Mrs. Condell had held four-sixteenths of the Globe and one-eighth of the Blackfriars, but had transferred two-sixteenths of the Globe when Taylor and Lowin were admitted as sharers. A minor legacy in Condell's will is to his old servant, Elizabeth Wheaton, of her 'place or priviledge' in the Globe and Blackfriars. Heminges and Cuthbert Burbadge are named as overseers. Condell was buried on 29 December 1627, and his widow on 3 October 1635, both at St. Mary Aldermanbury.[3]

COOKE, ALEXANDER, has been conjectured to be the 'Sander' who is cast in the 'plot' of The Seven Deadly Sins as played by Strange's or the Admiral's about 1590-1, for the parts of Videna in Envy and Progne in Lechery. But, as far as this goes, he might just as well be the 'San.' who took the part of a player in Taming of a Shrew (1594), ind. 1, which was a Pembroke's play. Malone 'presumes', with some

  1. Variorum, iii. 199, 476; Collier, iii. 367; P. C. Carter, Hist. of St. Mary Aldermanbury, 9, 11, 21, 58, 86, 87.
  2. Variorum, iii. 200, from P. C. C.; Collier, iii. 376.
  3. Collier, iii. 376, 380.