Sir Bombarduccio
"An Excellent Gentlewoman" / Anon. / ?Mary Sidney? (before 1593)
Historical records
- Her old Comedy, newly intituled.
- My Prose is resolute, as Bevis sworde:
- March rampant beast in formidable hide:
- Superrogation Squire on cockhorse ride:
- Zeale shapes an aunswer to the blouddiest worde.
- If nothing can the booted Souldiour tame,
- Nor Ryme, nor Prose, nor Honesty, nor Shame:
- But Swash will still his trompery advaunce,
- Il'e lead the gagtooth'd fopp a new-founde daunce.
- Deare howers were ever cheape to pidling me:
- I knew a glorious, and braving Knight,
- That would be deem 'd a truculentall wight:
- Of him I scrauld a dowty Comedy.
- Sir Bombarduccio was his cruell name:
- But Gnasharduccio the sole brute of Fame.
- L'Envoy.
- See, how He brayes, and fumes at me poore lasse,
- That must immortalise the killcowe Asse.
Harvey, Works, 2:17-8.
Theatrical Provenance
Unperformed?
Probable Genre(s)
Comedy featuring a miles gloriosus
Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues
None known
References to the Play
None known beyond this pamphlet
Critical Commentary
The problem revolves around two pamphlets by Gabriel Harvey, both published in 1593: Pierces supererogation or a new prayse of the old asse; and the New letter of notable contents. Both of these are part of the larger controversy between Harvey and Thomas Nashe, and in both of them Harvey repeatedly claims to have the support of an unnamed and mysterious "excellent Gentlewoman", several of whose writings against Nashe are quoted within the pamphlet. In addition, this gentlewoman is said to have written “certaine Discourses of regard, already dispatched to my satisfaction, & almost accōplished to her owne intention”, which Harvey expects to be issued in the near future as a pamphlet against Nashe. Harvey explicitly attributes to the Gentlewoman’s own pen around a thousand words of vituperative prose and three striking polemical sonnets, including the one listed above from Pierce's Supererogation.
There are currently three main interpretations of Harvey’s Gentlewoman.
Fictitious
She is entirely fictitious. This is a point of view put forward by Nashe, or rather a speaker in Nashe's pamphlet Have With You to Saffron Walden: “I am of the minde that, for all the stormes & tempests Haruey from her denounceth, there is no such woman, but tis onely a Fiction of his.” (Nashe, 3.111, 113). The problem with this hypothesis is put succinctly by Nashe’s twentieth-century editor, R. B. McKerrow: “the device would be so pointless” (Nashe, 5.89).
Mary Sidney
She is Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke, whom Harvey praises fervently throughout both these pamphlets. As A. B. Grosart suggested: "Our Glossarial-Index references under ‘gentlewoman’ and under ‘Pembroke’ will satisfy the critical reader that the two were one - that is, that Harvey wished to convey that idea... possibly his ‘wish’ was father to the thought.": (Harvey, Works, 3.xxiv). Variants on this position have been taken up by recent critics including Henry Woudhuysen, Penny McCarthy, Matthew Steggle, and Margaret Hannay, whose influential biography of Mary Sidney argues, “Whether the countess herself took any part in this quarrel, Harvey apparently wanted his readers - particularly Nashe - to think that she did" (140-2). This group of critics disagree over whether Harvey merely hints at or actually claims the involvement of Mary Sidney, and they also disagree over, or maintain an agnosticism about, whether or not Mary Sidney really was involved. Penny McCarthy, for instance, argues both that Harvey does unequivocally claim the involvement of the Countess, and that Mary Sidney participated as Harvey describes, writing the poems that the pamphlets attribute to the Gentlewoman: “Why should the sonnets and the rumbustious prose not be Mary's? For no reason but the overdelicate sensibilities of modern critics, it would seem.” (34)
Someone else
She is real, but someone other than Mary Sidney. This is the position taken by R. B. McKerrow and Charles Nicholl, among other writers. No specific candidate has yet been put named.
If the Gentlewoman is not merely an invention of Harvey's, and did indeed write the sonnet credited to her, then, regardless of who she actually is, the sonnet is evidence for a lost play. This would be perhaps the earliest recorded original play by an Englishwoman, and particularly unusual by virtue of being a female-authored comedy. It featured the still untraced Sir Bombarduccio, "a glorious and braving knight". The possibilty that the Gentlewoman is Mary Sidney, of course, would make the lost Sir Bombarduccio all the more interesting, but the problem awaits fuller investigation.
For What It's Worth
(Information welcome)
Works Cited
Grosart, A. B., ed., The Works of Gabriel Harvey, 3 vols (London: privately printed, 1884).
Hannay, Margaret P. “Herbert [Sidney], Mary, countess of Pembroke (1561-1621),”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, (Oxford: Oxford UP, 2004), http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/13040
Hannay, Margaret P. Philip's Phoenix: Mary Sidney, Countess of Pembroke. New York and Oxford: Oxford UP, 1990.
Harvey, Gabriel. A new letter of notable contents (London: John Wolfe, 1593).
Harvey, Gabriel. Pierces supererogation or A new prayse of the old asse (London: John Wolfe, 1593).
McCarthy, Penny. "'Milksop Muses", or Why Not Mary?" Studies in English Literature 1500-1900 40 (2000): 21-39.
Nashe, Thomas. The Works of Thomas Nashe, ed. Ronald B. McKerrow, rev. F. P. Wilson, 5 vols (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1958).
Nicholl, Charles. A Cup of News: The Life of Thomas Nashe (London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1984)
Steggle, Matthew. "Gabriel Harvey, the Excellent Gentlewoman, and the Sidney Circle", Sidney Journal 22 (2004 for 2006): 115-30.
Woudhuysen, H. R. Sir Philip Sidney and the circulation of manuscripts, 1558-1640. Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996).
Site created and maintained by Matthew Steggle, Sheffield Hallam University; updated 13 October 2011.