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Tom Tyler and his Wife > 1563

S. R. 1562-3. 'These ballettes folowynge . . . an other of Tom Tyler.' Thomas Colwell (Arber, i. 210). 1661. Tom Tyler and His Wife. An Excellent Old Play, As It was Printed and Acted about a hundred Years ago. The second Impression. [Prologue and 'concluding Song'. There is no imprint, but as most of the extant copies have a variant t.p. with the additional words 'Together, with an exact Catalogue of all the playes that were ever yet printed', and as Kirkman's catalogue of 1661 is appended, he was doubtless the publisher.] Editions by F. E. Schelling (1900, M. L. A. xv. 253), G. C. Moore Smith and W. W. Greg (1910, M. S. R.), and J. S. Farmer (1912, T. F. T.). The S. R. entry may refer to a ballad based on the play, or may possibly be a loose description of the play itself. In any case there is no reason to doubt the existence of a print of about that date. The evidence of the 1661 title-page is confirmed by the entry of 'Tom tyler' in Archer's play-list of 1656 (Greg, Masques, cxii). Chetwood, who cannot be relied on, gave the date as 1598, and an inaccurate reproduction of this seems to be responsible for the 1578 of other writers. The text of 1661 has been shown by C. P. G. Scott (in Schelling's introduction) to be a rendering into seventeenth-century orthography of a play whose vocabulary may be put, with decreasing certainty, within the limits 1530-80, 1540-70, and 1550-60. The prologue says that the play is 'set out by prettie boyes', and the 'concluding Song' has a prayer for the preservation of the queen, 'from perilous chance that hath been seen'. Fleay, ii. 295, somewhat arbitrarily thinks the Chapel 'more likely' to have presented it than Paul's. A misinterpretation of Kirkman's list of 1661 led E. Phillips, Theatrum Poetarum (1675), to assign the authorship to W. Wager (M. S. C. i. 325). The Trial of Chivalry c. 1600

S. R. 1604, Dec. 4 (Pasfield). 'A book called The life and Deathe of Cavaliero Dick Boyer.' Nathaniel Butter (Arber, iii. 277). 1605. The History of the tryall of Cheualry, With the life and death of Caualiero Dicke Bowyer. As it hath bin lately acted by the right Honourable the Earle of Darby his seruants. Simon Stafford for Nathaniel Butter.

1605. This Gallant Caualiero Dicke Bowyer, Newly acted. [Another issue.]

Editions by A. H. Bullen (1884, O. E. P. iii) and J. S. Farmer (1912, T. F. T.).—Dissertation: C. R. Baskervill, Sidney's Arcadia and the T. of C. (1912, M. P. x. 197).

Bullen thinks this may be Love Parts Friendship, written by Chettle and Smith for the Admiral's in 1602; Fleay, ii. 318, that it may be the Burbon brought to the Admiral's by Pembroke's in 1597, as the Duke of Bourbon is a chief personage, and also the Cutting Dick to