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1603 (Grosart, i. 116), has 'Galen could do no more good, than Sir Giles Goosecap', and though 'goosecap' is a known term for a booby, e.g. in Nashe's Four Letters Confuted of 1592 (Works, i. 281), the play seems to be responsible for the 'Sir Giles'. The phrase 'comparisons odorous' in IV. ii. 64 echoes Much Ado, III. v. 18. The later part of the period 1601-3 would perhaps best fit the allusions to the Family of Love (II. i. 263), as to which cf. s.v. Middleton's play of that name, and to the baboons (I. i. 11), the memory of which is still alive in Volpone (1606) and Ram Alley (1607-8). Probably these had already amused London before 1605, as on Oct. 5 of that year the Norwich records (Murray, ii. 338) note that 'This day John Watson ironmonger brought the Kyngs maiesties warrant graunted to Roger Lawrence & the deputacion to the seid Watson to shewe two beasts called Babonnes'. So, too, Kelly, 247, has a Leicester payment of 1606 'to the M^r of the Babons, lycensed to travell by the Kings warrant'. There is a story of a country fellow who wanted to go to a market town 'to haue seene the Baboones' as late as J. Taylor's Wit and Mirth in 1629 (Hazlitt, Jest Books, iii. 43). Fleay's identifications of Chapman himself with Clarence and Drayton with Goosecap hardly deserve consideration. Grim the Collier of Croydon. 1600

[Alleged prints of 1599 (Chetwood), 1600 (Ward, i. 263), and 1606 (Jacob) probably rest on no authority.]

1662. Grim the Collier of Croyden; Or, The Devil and his Dame: With The Devil and Saint Dunston. [Part of Gratiae Theatrales, or, A choice Ternary of English plays. Composed upon especial occasions by several ingenious persons; viz. . . . Grim the Collier . . . a Comedy, by I. T. Never before published: but now printed at the request of sundry ingenious friends. R. D. 1662, 12^{mo}.]

Editions by W. Scott (1810, A. B. D. iii), in Dodsley^4, viii (1876), and by J. S. Farmer (S. F. T.).—Dissertation: H. D. Sykes, The Authorship of G. the C. of C. (1919, M. L. R. xiv. 245).

Of I. T. nothing is known. Greg (Henslowe, ii. 213) regards the play as clearly of the sixteenth century on internal evidence, and points out that Henslowe, on behalf of the Admiral's, paid Haughton 5s. on 6 May 1600, 'in earneste of a boocke which he wold calle the devell & his dame'. The entry was subsequently cancelled, and presumably Haughton transferred the play to another company. Sykes calls attention to analogies with Englishmen for my Money, which confirm the probability of Haughton's authorship. It is only the ascription of 1662 to I. T. which causes hesitation. Farmer (Hand List, 19) suggests that this was John Tatham. Grim and the Devil both appear in the Like Will to Like of Ulpian Fulwell (q.v.), but I do not understand what kind of indirect connexion Greg thinks may have existed between Haughton's play and a possible revival of Fulwell's by Pembroke's men in Oct. 1600.