Marriott's List (1653)

Background

In late 1653, the printer John Marriott entered twenty-one plays on the Stationers' Register. The entry is dated 29 November, although it appears between entries dated 22 and 30 December, so that it may well be misdated by a month. Of the twenty-one plays he registered that day, eighteen are lost.
The three extant plays are:

•[Henry Glapthorne], Revenge for Honour, a tragedy printed by Richard Marriott in 1654. (Bentley, 4.489-93).
The Eunuch, which Bentley identifies with William Heminge's tragedy The Fatal Contract, printed by "J.M.", probably John Marriott, in 1653. This identification has been accepted by Carol A. Morley in her recent and definitive edition of Heminge (239-54). Interestingly, this had the same dedicatee as did the printing of Revenge for Honour; James and Isabella, Earl and Countess of Northampton.
•The pastoral tragicomedy The Thracian Wonder, printed in 1661 by Francis Kirkman with a (generally doubted) attribution to John Webster and William Rowley.

The other eighteen are lost, although at least five of the titles are also known from other references to those plays (The Proxy, A Fool and Her Maidenhead Soon Parted, The Younger Brother, The Noble Trial, and The Florentine Friend). "All in all, the list is an odd one which, taken as a whole, throws no light on any of the individual titles. One would like to guess that the list represents part of the repertory of some company, but the evidence is against it… In the absence of evidence one can only assume that Marriott had assembled a miscellaneous group of manuscripts which he intended to publish, but that he later abandoned nearly all of them" (Bentley, 5.1446).

Transcription

Cited from Bentley, 5.1445. Stationers' Register, 29 November 1653.

Rich: Marriott Entred for his copies the severall playes following (vizt)
The Paraside or Revenge for honor. by Henry Glapthorne.
The fflorentine friend
The Proxe or Loues after Game
The Eunuch a Tragedy
The Conceits
Salisbury Plaine a comedy.
The Womans Master Piece
Pitty the Maid
The Royall Choice by Sr Robt. Stapleton.
The Noble Rauishers
A Foole & her maiden head soone Parted
Supposed Inconstancy.
The Womans Law.
The Diuorse
The Bond Woman
Castara or Cruelty without hate
The Thracian Wonder
The Blacke Wedding.
The Law Case
The Younger Brother
The Noble Triall

Discussion

Table of plays
Play title (standardized and hyperlinked) Date Company provenance Venue Author Genre
Parricide, The / Revenge for Honour after 1637 Queen Henrietta's Men Salisbury Court Glapthorne T
Florentine Friend, The 1638 Queen Henrietta's Men Salisbury Court Brome C
Love’s Aftergame, or The Proxy 1634 King's Revels Salisbury Court
Eunuch, The 1633-1637 Queen Henrietta's Men Heminge T
Conceits, The
Salisbury Plain ?1635 ?amateurs ?St John's College, Oxford ?Speed C
Woman's Masterpiece, The
Pity the Maid
Royal Choice, The Sir Robert Stapylton
Noble Ravishers, The
Fool and Her Maidenhead Soon Parted in repertory 1639 Beeston's Boys Cockpit ?Davenport C
Supposed Inconstancy
Woman's Law, The
Divorce, The
Bondwoman, The
Castara, or Cruelty Without Hate ?after 1634
The Thracian Wonder 1607-25? (Rowley's career) ?Rowley and ?Heywood TC
Black Wedding, The T
Law Case, The
Younger Brother ?1617 ?Prince Charles (I) ?Red Bull C

The problem with the above table is that there are simply too many gaps to enable firm conclusions to be drawn. The best one can do is to draw attention to possible connections on the list.

First of all, those plays on it which are most securely datable appear to be from the 1630s. The clearest dates of composition on the list are for Revenge for Honour (certainly after 1637, when its main source was published); The Florentine Friend (licensed 1638); and Love's Aftergame (licensed 1634). Also useful, but less cast-iron, are the observations that Castara seems to be dependent on a poem collection published in 1634; that Glapthorne's The Noble Trial can hardly be much earlier than 1630, the start of his known career; and that Salisbury Plain, if it were the same as Stonehenge/The Converted Robber, would be no earlier than 1635. At least six of the twenty-one, then, seem to be from the 1630s. Conversely, pre-1630 dates of composition appear to be indicated for only two - The Thracian Wonder and, potentially, The Younger Brother. The overall flavour, then, tends towards the 1630s.

As for company provenances: the list contains two plays which external records associate with the impresario Richard Heton's operation at Salisbury Court in the 1630s.

Love's Aftergame (from 1634, when his company was known as the King's Revels);
• Brome's The Florentine Friend (from 1638, by when his company had partially absorbed the old Queen Henrietta's Men and taken on their name).

Heton can also be associated with two other plays on the list using internal evidence.

• Heminge's The Fatal Contract belonged to Queen Henrietta's Men, according to its title-page: its first performance has variously been dated to 1634, before the Heton merger, or to 1637, after it. It was seen into print by "A.P." and "A.T.", often identified as Andrew Pennycuike and Anthony Turner. Turner certainly was an actor for Heton (though not certainly "A.T."), and Pennycuike might have been an actor for Heton, although there is a danger of circular reasoning here since the printing of The Fatal Contract is the main prop of the argument that he was.
• Glapthorne's Revenge for Honour was printed with a dedication by William Cartwright the younger and Curtis Greville, both of whom worked with Heton at Salisbury Court through the 1630s (Bentley, 1.404-5, 451). On the strength of that, it could be identified as a play belonging to the Heton-era Queen Henrietta's Men. As a further indication of connections to the world of Queen Henrietta's Men, both The Fatal Contract and Revenge for Honour carry dedications to the Earl of Northampton, who is known to have been a patron to other ex-members of the company in the 1650s.

On the other hand, Marriott's List also contains one play which external evidence places firmly, in the late 1630s, in the possession of Heton's rivals the Beestons: A Fool and Her Maidenhead Soon Parted. This would seem to prevent the too-easy conclusion that the whole list is simply a repertoire from Queen Henrietta's Men. Indeed, Salisbury Plain hails (possibly) from the world of academic drama, rather than from a known performance at any professional theatre.

To sum up: some of this list - in fact, the four plays at the head of it - can be linked to the King's Revels/Queen Henrietta's Men, under the leadership of Richard Heton, at the Salisbury Court Theatre in the 1630s. For the other, often entirely unknown, plays on the list, this theatre company and this era is marginally the leading suspect.

For what it's worth

As Bentley said, this list is tantalizing.

At least five of the twenty-one plays seem to have an identifiably female eponymous character; at least five more seem to have an eponymous act of love, sex, or marriage. It's hard to translate these statistics into meaningful terms, but do they suggest a repertoire unusually interested in women?


Works Cited

Heminge, William. The Plays and Poems of William Heminge, ed. Carol A. Morley. Madison: Farleigh Dickinson University Press, 2006.


Site created and maintained by Matthew Steggle: updated, 20 May 2010.