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hath laine this twelue moneth in the bottome of a coalehouse' (25). 'The Authors wit' (48) has stood 'hammering upon . . . 2 schollers some foure (1606, whole) yeare' (37). This is the third play of a series (76):

In Scholers fortunes twise forlorne and dead
Twise hath our weary play earst laboured.
Making them Pilgrims to Pernassus hill,
Then penning their return with ruder quill.

Belvedere (1600) is published (179) and Nashe is dead (314). The Dominical letters are C, or for the Annunciation year D and C (1105), and the moon is in 'the last quarter the 5 day, at 2 of the cloke and 38 minuts in the morning' (1133). These indications fit Jan. 1602 (Lühr, 15, 105). The siege of Ostend, which extended from 1601 to 1604, has begun (1333). Jonson has 'brought vp Horace giving the Poets a pill' (1811), and Kempe is back 'from dancing the morrice over the Alpes' (1823). Both events took place in 1601. It is still Elizabeth's reign (1141).

A quite clear conclusion as to date is not possible. The calendar references, the four years of hammering (in 3), and the probability that the writer would try to have his allusions to literary events up to date, suggest performances at the Christmases of 1598-9, 1599-1600, and 1601-2. This allows for a twelve-months' delay, followed by a good deal of revision, in the performance of 3. On the other hand, the difference between four (in 1) and seven (in 2) years of pilgrimage points to 1598-9, 1601-2, and 1602-3. On the whole, I lean to the first alternative.

So far as we know, the association of Kempe with the Chamberlain's men was out of date either in 1601 or 1602; conceivably he returned to the company for a while in 1601, but he was certainly of Worcester's in 1602.

Moore Smith thinks that the 'ruder quill' of the prologue to 3 implies that the author of 2 and 3 was distinct from the author of 1. But the same prologue speaks clearly of a single author. Hales took the account of his troubles in getting his degree literally, and pointed out that foreign students at German universities were called 'Käsebettler' and 'Käsejäger'. Moore Smith doubts, and thinks the degree may have been given at Cambridge by the influence of William Holland, senior fellow of St. John's, and his name glanced at in 'Germanie'. The absence alike of matriculation books and college admission registers for the period makes identification difficult. Corney found a copy of the print of 3 with the inscription 'To my Lovinge Smallocke J. D.', which he thought in the same hand as the Lansdowne MS. of John Day's Peregrinatio Scholastica. Bullen was inclined to support Day's authorship on internal grounds, but Day was a Caius man, whose university career closed in disgrace, and is not very likely to have written plays for St. John's some years later. And it is but a slight connexion with Cheshire that 'dey' means 'dairy' in the dialect of that county. Cheshire ought to be our clue. Charles Chester was not, so far as I know, a writer. Hales seems to have thought