Governor, The

Revision as of 16:35, 13 June 2024 by Misha Teramura (talk | contribs) (Created page with "Cornelius Formido (1637) ==Historical Records== ===King's Company Bill=== A bill presented by the King's Company for 22 plays presented at court between Eastern Monday 1636 to 21 February 1637 lists the play as the 21st, presented on 16 February 1637: :Playes acted before the Kinge and Queene :this present yeare of the lord. 1636. :[…] :21 The 16<sup>th</sup> of ffebruary at S<sup>t</sup> James. the Governour. :(National Archives, AO 3/908/22; qtd. Adams...")
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Cornelius Formido (1637)


Historical Records

King's Company Bill

A bill presented by the King's Company for 22 plays presented at court between Eastern Monday 1636 to 21 February 1637 lists the play as the 21st, presented on 16 February 1637:

Playes acted before the Kinge and Queene
this present yeare of the lord. 1636.
[…]
21 The 16th of ffebruary at St James. the Governour.
(National Archives, AO 3/908/22; qtd. Adams 75–76; facsimile in Law, facing p. 39


Records of Henry Herbert, Master of the Revels

Herbert's records, as printed by Malone, list the play's performance on 17 February 1637"

The Governor, by the K. players, at St. James, the 17 Febru. 1636.
(Malone 3.290; Bawcutt, #364)


Stationers' Register

Humphrey Moseley entered the play on 9 September 1653.

The Gouernour. by Sr Cornelius Formido.
(Liber E, p. 285; Eyre, 1.428)


Warburton

Theatrical Provenance

Performed by the King's Men at St James's Palace on either 16 or 17 February 1637.


Probable Genre(s)

Tragedy (Wiggins)


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

Unknown.


References to the Play

(Information welcome.)


Critical Commentary

Extant Manuscript?

A manuscript in the British Library (MS Add. 10419) bears the title The Governor. However, it is unclear whether this is the same play that was performed by the King's Men. The main complication is that the first page of the manuscript reads:

The Governor
A Tragi Comedy 1656
Scene Barcellona
Samuel

While some critics have taken "1656" as a date of composition and the word "Samuel" as the name of the author (Harbage, "Notes," conjectures the interregnum writer Samuel Holland), thereby disqualifying its identity with the play performed by the King's Men, others have considered the possibility that this may be the date at which the manuscript was transcribed and that its copy may have been a Caroline play. However, much depends on how one understands the evidence of the Warburton list.

Greg (BEPD, 4.981) noted that the MS also bears an inscription "This Play formerly belonged to John Warburton, Somerset Herald," but added that "there is no reason to suppose that this possess independent authority"—that is, the inscription may have been added to the manuscript later by someone who knew about a play of that name in Warburton's destroyed collection. Contra Harbage, Greg described the name "Samuel" as written in a "childish hand" and that it should not be taken as evidence about the name of the manuscript's author.

Bentley (3.465–68) acknowledges "some uncertainty" from the evidence of "whether one, two, or possibly three plays" with the same name existed. Given the number of other dramatic manuscripts that entered into Moseley's possession from the King's Men, Bentley found it "natural" to assume that the manuscript he entered represented the same play that the company performed at court in 1637. Less clear is how the extant British Library manuscript relates to these earlier records. As Bentley noted, the attribution of "The Governor" to Formido in the Warburton list at least suggests that the play in his possession derived from Moseley's stock, as did The Second Maiden's Tragedy (pace Greg's reservations about the Warburton list's parallels with the Stationers' Register). When the extant manuscript in the British Library was sold in the 1836 Heber sale (Vol. 9, Part XI, 135), however, it was described thus:

The Governor, A Tragi Comedy, 1656. This play is one of the very few which Warburton's Servant spared. It is to be regretted that instead of being by Sir Corn. Formido, it was one of those written by our older dramatists.

Again, this note may simply reflect someone's assumption about the provenance of the manuscript based on separate information about the Warburton list. The catalogue's disqualification of Formido's authorship may have been based on the presence of the name "Samuel" on the manuscript, which (as Greg noted) does not seem to be in the same hand that transcribed the rest of the manuscript. In Bentley's jusgement, the manuscript play's allusions to wars in the Low Countries (including the Siege of Ostend) and Puritans, as well as its specific references to staging practices of the commercial theatre, all "contradicted" 1656 as a date of composition although were not quite enough to prove that the play was the one performed by the King's Men.

Wiggins (#2541), however, finds throughout the manuscript a revising hand that not only corrects mistakes made by the main transcriber but also inserts three new lines in the first act, suggesting that this was the play's author. Wiggins's reasoning—"If these amendments were indeed authorial, then the extant text cannot be the play performed in 1637, whose author died in 1638"—leads him to categorize Formido's "The Governor" as lost.


For What It's Worth

(Information welcome.)


Works Cited

Adams, Joseph Quincy, ed. The Dramatic Records of Sir Henry Herbert, Master of the Revels, 1623–1673. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1917.
Harbage, Alfred. "Notes on Manuscript Plays." TLS (20 June 1936): 523.
Law, Ernest. More about Shakespeare "Forgeries". London: G. Bell & Sons, Ltd., 1913.


Site created and maintained by Misha Teramura, University of Toronto; updated 13 June 2024.