London Merchant: Difference between revisions
(Created page with "{{Play |playwright=John Ford |historicalRecords=On 29 June 1660, the publisher Humphrey Moseley entered a group of thirty-seven plays into the Stationers' Register. Among the...") |
No edit summary |
||
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
The Royall Combate. a Comedy. } | The Royall Combate. a Comedy. } | ||
An ill beginning has a good end, & a bad } by Iohn Forde. | //An ill beginning has a good end, & a bad | ||
}} | |||
by Iohn Forde. | |||
beginning may have a good end. a Comedy. | beginning may have a good end. a Comedy. | ||
The London Merchant. a Comedy } | The London Merchant. a Comedy } |
Revision as of 21:17, 20 June 2018
([[]])
by Iohn Forde. beginning may have a good end. a Comedy. The London Merchant. a Comedy }
"The London Merchant" is included in Warburton's List (c.1682-1759) of play-manuscripts allegedly destroyed when his cook, Betsy, used them as paper linings for pies. |probableGenres=Comedy |worksCited=Greg, W. W. “The Bakings of Betsy.” The Library, 3rd series. 7.11 (1911): 225-259. }}