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the document, but its whole basis is in the service which the boys may be called upon to do the Queen in music and singing. Under Giles the company appeared at Court nine times during four winter seasons; on 26 February 1587, on 1 January and 2 February 1588, on 27 December 1588, 1 January and 12 January 1589, and on 28 December 1589, 1 January and 6 January 1590. The title-pages of Lyly's Endymion, Galathea, and Midas assign the representation of these plays at Court to a 2 February, a 1 January, and a 6 January respectively. Endymion must therefore belong to 1588 and Midas to 1590; for Galathea the most probable of the three years is 1588. Mother Bombie and Love's Metamorphosis can be less precisely dated, but doubtless belong to the period 1587-90. At some time or other, and probably before 1590, the Paul's boys performed a play of Meleager, of which an abstract only, without author's name, is preserved. It is not, I think, to be supposed that Lyly, although he happened to be a grandson of the first High Master of Colet's school, had any official connexion either with that establishment or with the choir school. It is true that Gabriel Harvey says of him in 1589, 'He hath not played the Vicemaster of Poules and the Foolemaster of the Theatre for naughtes'.[1] But this is merely Harvey's jesting on the old dramatic sense of the term 'vice', and the probabilities are that Lyly's relation as dramatist to Giles as responsible manager of the company was much that which had formerly existed between John Heywood and Sebastian Westcott. Nevertheless, it was this connexion which ultimately brought the Paul's plays to a standstill. Lyly was one of the literary men employed about 1589 to answer the Martin Marprelate pamphleteers in their own vein, and to this end he availed himself of the Paul's stage, apparently with the result that, when it suited the government to disavow its instruments, that stage was incontinently suppressed.[2] The reason may

  • [Footnote:

accomplisshing thereof from tyme to tyme as you and everie of you doe tendar our will and pleasure and will aunswere for doinge the contrarye at your perilles. Youen vnder our Signet at our Manour of Grenewich the 26^{th} Day of Aprill in the 27^{th} yere of our reign.

To all and singuler Deanes, Provostes, Maisters and Wardens of Collegies and all Ecclesiasticall persons and mynisters and to all other our officers mynisters and subiectes to whome in this case it shall apperteyne and to everye of them greetinge.'


No other commission for the Paul's choir is extant, but their rights are reserved in the commission for Windsor (q.v.) of 8 March 1560.]

  1. Harvey, Advertisement for Pap-Hatchet (Works, ii. 212). Lyly was still Oxford's man but writing for Paul's, c. Aug. 1585 (M. L. R. xv. 82.).
  2. Cf. ch. ix and App. C, No. xl, especially Pappe with an Hatchet (Oct. 1589).