Cox of Collumpton: Difference between revisions

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===Simon Forman's Notebooks===
===Simon Forman's Notebooks===
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Simon Forman saw "Cox of Collumpton" at the Rose playhouse on 9 March 1600 and wrote a description of it in his casebooks (MS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v). The following is copied from Cerasano (pp. 157-8):
Simon Forman saw "Cox of Collumpton" at the Rose playhouse on 9 March 1600 and wrote a description of it in his casebooks (MS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v).  
<blockquote>“Item the plai of Cox of Cullinton &amp; his 3 sonns henry peter and / Jhon on S<sup>t</sup> Mark''es'' dai Cox him selfe shote an Arrowe thorow / his vnkells head to haue his Land &amp; had it and the same dai 7 yers / on M<sup>r</sup> Jaruis shot cox throughe the hed &amp; slue him. and on saint / markes dai a year after his older sonn henry was drowned / by peter &amp; jhon in his Xan [Christian] fate. and on S<sup>t </sup>Mark''es'' dai a year after peter &amp; Jhon both slue them sellues for peter be / ing fronted w<sup>th</sup> the sight of a bear v''iz'' a sprite apering to Jhon &amp; / him when they sate vpon deuisio<sup>n</sup> of the land<sup>es</sup> in likenes of a bere / &amp; ther w<sup>th</sup> peter fell out of his wit''es'' and way lyed in a darke / house &amp; beat out his braines against a post &amp; Jhon stabed him self / &amp; all on S<sup>t</sup> Mark''es'' dai &amp; remember how m<sup>r</sup> hammons sonn / slue him &amp; where he way sleying of his father his father entreating / for m<sup>er</sup>cy to his sonn could find no mercy whervpon he p<sup>ro</sup>mised / that his sonn should betray him selfe by laughing &amp; so he did / was executed for yt/ 1600 9 of march at the Rose”</blockquote>
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<!--newThumb-->[[Image:Bodleian_Ashmole_236%2C_77v.jpg|250px]]<!--/newThumb-->
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(Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 236, fol77<sup>v</sup>, reproduced with permission of The Bodleian Libraries, The University of Oxford)
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:It''e''m in the plai of Cox of Cullinton &amp; his 3 sonns henry peter and
:Jhon on S<sup>t</sup> Mark''es'' dai Cox him selfe shote an Arrowe thorow
:his vnkells head to haue his Land &amp; had it and the same dai 7 yers  
:on M<sup>r</sup> Jaruis shot cox throughe the hed &amp; slue him. and on saint  
:markes dai a year after his older sonn henry was drowned  
:by peter &amp; Jhon in his Xan [Christian] fate. and on S<sup>t</sup> Mark''es'' dai  
:A year After peter &amp; Jhon both slue them sellues for peter be  
:ing fronted w<sup>th</sup> the sight of a bear v''iz'' a sprite Apering to Jhon &amp;  
:him when they sate vpon deuisio''n'' of the Land''es'' in likenes of a bere  
:&amp; ther w<sup>th</sup> peter fell out of his wit''es'' and was lyed in a darke  
:house &amp; beat out his braines against a post &amp; Jhon stabed him self  
:&amp; all on S<sup>t</sup> Mark''es'' dai &amp; remember how m<sup>r</sup> hammons sonn  
:slue him &amp; where he was sleying of his father his father entreating  
:for mercy to his sonn could find no m''er''cy whervpon he p''ro''mised  
:that his sonn should bewray him selfe by laughing &amp; so he did &
:was executed for yt/ 1600 9 march at the Rose
 
:(Cerasano 157-8, with corrections from Lupić, fn5)
 
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== Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues  ==
== Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues  ==


'''Greg''' cited John Payne Collier as having identified the play with “a murder committed at Collumpton in Devonshire,” but Greg himself ws “not aware of any record thereof” ([http://www.archive.org/stream/henslowesdiary02hensuoft#page/206/mode/2up II, item #188, p. 207]).  
'''Greg''' cited John Payne Collier as having identified the play with “a murder committed at Collumpton in Devonshire,” but Greg himself was “not aware of any record thereof” ([http://www.archive.org/stream/henslowesdiary02hensuoft#page/206/mode/2up II, item #188, p. 207]).  
 
[[category:John Payne Collier]]
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== References to the Play  ==
== References to the Play  ==
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== For What It's Worth  ==
== For What It's Worth  ==
===A Collier Forgery?===
:'''Race''', offering a contrarian opinion, argues that the entries by Forman in his casebooks, including that for "Cox of Collumpton" are forgeries by John Payne Collier, abetted by Peter Cunningham: “My suggestion is that when Collier and Cunningham were engaged on the Shakespeare accounts they challenged one another to produce a nonsense story, and this was Collier’s effort” (14). He is particularly hard on "Cox" as a theatrical piece, asserting that “the plot is so fantastic that it is perfectly clear that the play could never have been put on the stage” (13), and that “as a narrative it reaches the depths of illiteracy” (14). <br><br>
===St Mark's Day===
:St. Mark’s Day, 25 April, is an unlucky day.  Fairly obviously, this is true for the Cox family, but it is also true elsewhere in early modern belief, where St. Mark’s Day functions almost as a secondary Halloween, six months apart from it in the calendar.  Traditionally, St. Mark’s Eve is a night when one can see visions identifying which neighbours are to die in the next twelve months.  On the day itself it was considered unlucky to work, and in particular unlucky to work the land.  Early beliefs around St. Mark’s Day are conveniently collected in, for instance, Robert Chambers's [http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/april/25.htm ''Book of Days''] and William Hone's [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gWcKAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA262 ''Every-Day Book''] (1869), 261-3. 


:'''Race''', offering a contrarian opinion, argues that the entries by Forman in his casebooks, including that for "Cox of Collumpton" are forgeries by John Payne Collier, abetted by Peter Cunningham: “My suggestion is that when Collier and Cunningham were engaged on the Shakespeare accounts they challenged one another to produce a nonsense story, and this was Collier’s effort” (14). He is particularly hard on "Cox" as a theatrical piece, asserting that “the plot is so fantastic that it is perfectly clear that the play could never have been put on the stage” (13), and that “as a narrative it reaches the depths of illiteracy” (14).
:Hone's account includes the following description:


:St. Mark’s Day, 25 April, is an unlucky day.  Fairly obviously, this is true for the Cox family, but it is also true elsewhere in early modern belief, where St. Mark’s Day functions almost as a secondary Halloween, six months apart from it in the calendarTraditionally, St. Mark’s Eve is a night when one can see visions identifying which neighbours are to die in the next twelve months.  On the day itself it was considered unlucky to work, and in particular unlucky to work the land. Early beliefs around St. Mark’s Day are conveniently collected in, for instance, Robert Chambers's ''Book of Days'' http://www.thebookofdays.com/months/april/25.htm and William Hone's ''Every-Day Book'' (1869), 261-3.  https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gWcKAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA262
::This was a great fast-day in England during the rule of the Romish church. An old writer says, that in 1589, "I being as then but a boy, do remember that an ale wife, making no exception of dayes, would needs brue upon Saint Marke's days; but loe, the marvailous worke of God! whiles she was thus laboring, the top of the chimney tooke fire; and, before it could bee quenched, her house was quite burnt. Surely," says this observer of sainted seasons, "a gentle warning to them that violate and profane forbidden daies"… On St Mark's day blessings on the corn were implored. According to a manuscript of Mr. Pennant's, no farmer in North Wales dare hold his team on this day, because they there believe one man's team that worked upon it was ''marked'' with the loss of an oxA Yorkshire clergyman informed Mr. Brand, that it was customary in that county for the common people to sit and watch in the church porch on St. Mark's Eve, from eleven o'clock at night till one in the morning. The third year (for this must be done thrice,) they are supposed to see the ghosts of all those who are to die the next year, pass by into the church. When any one sickens that is thought to have been seen in this manner, it is presently whispered about that he will not recover, for that such, or such an one, who has watched St. Mark's Eve, says so. This superstition is in such force, that, if the patients themselves hear of it, they almost despair of recovery. Many are said to have actually died by their imaginary fears on the occasion. (Hone, 261-2)


:Hone's account includes the following description:
:This complex of ideas is clearly relevant to our play.  As is implicit in Hone's account, too, St. Mark’s Day lay also on one of the fault lines of the Reformation.  Henry VIII abrogated the observance of St. Mark’s Day, and there were at least two separate provincial disputes in the 1530s arising from controversy over whether or not to obey Henry’s instructions in this respect (Shagan, ''Popular Politics'', 57-9). This might remind one of other domestic tragedies such as ''Arden of Faversham'', where Arden's status as an indirect beneficiary of the Reformation seems to be in some way linked to his horrible (and supernaturally flavoured) fate.


::This was a great fast-day in England during the rule of the Romish church. An old writer says, that in 1589, "I being as then but a boy, do remember that an ale wife, making no exception of dayes, would needs brue upon Saint Marke's days; but loe, the marvailous worke of God! whiles she was thus laboring, the top of the chimney tooke fire; and, before it could bee quenched, her house was quite burnt. Surely," says this observer of sainted seasons, "a gentle warning to them that violate and profane forbidden daies"… On St Mark's day blessings on the corn were implored.  According to a manuscript of Mr. Pennant's, no farmer in North Wales dare hold his team on this day, because they there believe one man's tea that worked upon it was marked with the loss of an ox.  A Yorkshire clergyman informed Mr. Brand, that it was customary in that county for the common people to sit and watch in the church porch on St. Mark's Eve, from eleven o'clock at night till one in the morning. The third year (for this must be done thrice,) they are supposed to see the ghosts of all those who are to die the next year, pass by into the church. When any one sickens that is thought to have been seen in this manner, it is presently whispered about that he will not recover, for that such, or such an one, who has watched St. Mark's Eve, says so. This superstition is in such force, that, if the patients themselves hear of it, they almost despair of recovery. Many are said to have actually died by their imaginary fears on the occasion.
===Cullompton or Colyton?===


:This complex of ideas is clearly relevant to our play.  As is implicit in Hone's account, too, St. Mark’s Day lay also on one of the fault lines of the ReformationHenry VIII abrogated the observance of St. Mark’s Day, and there were at least two separate provincial disputes in the 1530s arising from controversy over whether or not to obey Henry’s instructions in this respect (Shagan, ''Popular Politics'', 57-9).
:Since this is thought to be a true-crime play dramatizing recent events, it would be desirable to nail down its historical basisNo such historical basis is known, apart from J. P. Collier's vague claim that there was such a murder.  But if this is indeed a true-crime play, is it possible to make any progress towards identifying its point of origin?<br><br>
:First of all, as the entry above shows, the place-name is spelt differently across the early records, so much so that Wiggins (1215) even wonders if the different spellings demonstrate uncertainty about whether or not to use a real place-name. Most critical discussions of the play standardize on "Cullompton" as the spelling, and see it as referring to the small town of that name in mid-Devon, twelve miles north of Exeter.  The problem is that that place has no known link to any family called Cox.  For instance, the FamilySearch website, [http://www.familysearch.org www.familysearch.org], seems not to have any records of Coxes living in Cullompton before the date of the play.    <br><br>
:However, the process of following up this lead reveals a different possibility, in the shape of another small town, also in Devon, with a similar nameThis is the town whose name is now generally standardized as Colyton, about twenty miles east of Exeter, near the coast and not far from Axminster. There are plentiful traces here, from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, of a numerous and well-established yeoman family by the name of Cox.  The [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015014300159;view=1up;seq=6 parish register] records sixteenth-century Colyton Coxes bearing first names including Peter (1557), Harry (1575), and John (1577, 1599).  It also shows the relatively uncommon first name "Jarvis" cropping up in baptisms of 1579, 1607, and 1635, suggesting that this too might be a Colyton name.  And there is even a numerous local family called Hayman.  Clearly, given the freedom with which early true-crime drama treats factual details such as names; and given the fact that our knowledge of the play's names themselves is almost all through Forman, whose accounts where they can be checked are often inaccurate; it would be a brave scholar who put too much weight on this connection as it stands.  Nor does it (yet) lead to any more specific records of events that might underlie this play.  Nonetheless, if one were setting out to search hard for information about the historical originals of these fictional characters, the Coxes of Colyton might be a family to consider.


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  [[category:True crime]] [[category:Domestic tragedy]] [[category:Fathers and sons]] [[category:Simon Forman]] [[category:Holiday]] [[category:Bear]]  [[category:Suicide]] [[category:Henslowe's records]][[category:all]]
  [[category:True crime]] [[category:Domestic tragedy]] [[category:Fathers and sons]] [[category:Simon Forman]] [[category:Holiday]] [[category:Bear]]  [[category:Suicide]] [[category:Henslowe's records]][[category:all]]
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<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Forman, Simon. MSS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v (Division of Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library). </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Forman, Simon. MSS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v (Division of Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library). </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Gurr, Andrew. ''Shakespeare’s Opposites: The Admiral’s Company 1594-1625''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Gurr, Andrew. ''Shakespeare’s Opposites: The Admiral’s Company 1594-1625''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Hone, William. ''The Every-day Book: Or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements''.  [London]: [William Tegg], 1868.  https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gWcKAAAAIAAJ </div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Hone, William. ''The Every-day Book: Or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements''.  [London]: [William Tegg], 1868.  [https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=gWcKAAAAIAAJ GoogleBooks]</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. “Toe to Toe Across Maid Lane: Repertorial Competition at the Rose and Globe, 1599-1600,” in June Schlueter and Paul Nelsen (eds) ''Acts of Criticism: Performance Matters in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries'' (Madison &amp; Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2005), 21-37. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Knutson, Roslyn L. “Toe to Toe Across Maid Lane: Repertorial Competition at the Rose and Globe, 1599-1600,” in June Schlueter and Paul Nelsen (eds) ''Acts of Criticism: Performance Matters in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries'' (Madison &amp; Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2005), 21-37. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Lupić, Ivan. "Simon Forman and the Early Performances of ''Sir John Oldcastle''." ''N&Q'' 65 (2018): 98–99. DOI: [https://doi.org/10.1093/notesj/gjx206 10.1093/notesj/gjx206]</div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Pitcher, John, “‘Fronted with the Sight of a Bear’: ''Cox of Collumpton'' and ''The Winter’s Tale''.” ''Notes and Queries'', 41 (1994): 47-53. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Pitcher, John, “‘Fronted with the Sight of a Bear’: ''Cox of Collumpton'' and ''The Winter’s Tale''.” ''Notes and Queries'', 41 (1994): 47-53. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Race, Sydney, “Simon Forman’s ‘Bocke of Plaies’ Examined.” ''Notes and Queries'', 203 (1958): 9-14. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Race, Sydney, “Simon Forman’s ‘Bocke of Plaies’ Examined.” ''Notes and Queries'', 203 (1958): 9-14. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Rowse, A. L. ''Simon Forman: Sex and Society in Shakespeare’s Age''. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1974.</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Rowse, A. L. ''Simon Forman: Sex and Society in Shakespeare’s Age''. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1974.</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Shagan, Ethan H. ''Popular Politics and the English Reformation''. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003.</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Shagan, Ethan H. ''Popular Politics and the English Reformation''. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003.</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Skinner, A. J. P. ed.  ''The register of baptisms, marriages & burials of the parish of Colyton, Devon, 1538-1837''. Exeter: The Devon and Cornwall record society, 1928.  Online facsimile at [http://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=mdp.39015014300159;view=1up;seq=6 Hathi Trust]. </div>
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Traister, Barbara Howard. ''The Notorious Astrological Physician of London: Works and Days of Simon Forman''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001.</div>  
<div style="padding-left: 2em; text-indent: -2em">Traister, Barbara Howard. ''The Notorious Astrological Physician of London: Works and Days of Simon Forman''. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001.</div>  
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Site created and maintained by [[Roslyn L. Knutson]], Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; updated, 7 February 2012.  Additions by Matthew Steggle.
Site created and maintained by [[Roslyn L. Knutson]], Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; updated, 23 January 2018.  Additions by Matthew Steggle.
[[category:Admiral's]] [[category:Rose]][[category:Roslyn L. Knutson]][[category:Simon Forman]]
[[category:Admiral's]] [[category:Rose]][[category:Roslyn L. Knutson]][[category:Simon Forman]][[category:Bodleian Library]]
[[category:Plot summary]][[category:William Haughton]][[category:John Day]][[category:Drowning]][[category:Madness]]

Revision as of 09:17, 16 September 2019

William Haughton, John Day (1599)


Historical Records

Payments to Playwrights (Henslowe’s Diary)


F. 31 (Greg I.59)

          The 1 of novmb[er] 1599
W. Haughton receiued of mr.
Hunslowe in parte of payement. of the
the tragedie of John Cox the some
of ... [iij] 20s.


Willyam Haughtonn receyued of mr Hinchloe in part
of payment of the Tragedy of Cox of Collunpto[n]
the som of ... 20s
          pd & quite. John Daye


F. 65 (Greg I.113)

Lent vnto Robart shaw the 1 of novmb[er] 1599
to lend vnto wm harton in earneste of a
Boocke called the tragedie of John cox some of ... xxs


F. 65v (Greg I.114)

Lent vnto wm harton & John daye at
the appoyntment of Thomas dowton in earnest
of a Boocke called the tragedie of cox of
collinster the some of ... xxs


          the xiiijth of nouember 1599
Receued of mr phillipp Hinchlow to pay
to William hauton & Jhon day for the
tragedy of Cox of Collomton the
som of three pownd receued  ... iijli
                              in full



Simon Forman's Notebooks


Simon Forman saw "Cox of Collumpton" at the Rose playhouse on 9 March 1600 and wrote a description of it in his casebooks (MS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v).

Bodleian Ashmole 236, 77v.jpg

(Bodleian Library, MS Ashmole 236, fol77v, reproduced with permission of The Bodleian Libraries, The University of Oxford)


Item in the plai of Cox of Cullinton & his 3 sonns henry peter and
Jhon on St Markes dai Cox him selfe shote an Arrowe thorow
his vnkells head to haue his Land & had it and the same dai 7 yers
on Mr Jaruis shot cox throughe the hed & slue him. and on saint
markes dai a year after his older sonn henry was drowned
by peter & Jhon in his Xan [Christian] fate. and on St Markes dai
A year After peter & Jhon both slue them sellues for peter be
ing fronted wth the sight of a bear viz a sprite Apering to Jhon &
him when they sate vpon deuision of the Landes in likenes of a bere
& ther wth peter fell out of his wites and was lyed in a darke
house & beat out his braines against a post & Jhon stabed him self
& all on St Markes dai & remember how mr hammons sonn
slue him & where he was sleying of his father his father entreating
for mercy to his sonn could find no mercy whervpon he promised
that his sonn should bewray him selfe by laughing & so he did &
was executed for yt/ 1600 9 march at the Rose
(Cerasano 157-8, with corrections from Lupić, fn5)



Theatrical Provenance


In 1599, when paying Haughton and Day for "Cox of Collumpton" the Admiral’s Men were anticipating the move to their soon-to-be-built playhouse, the Fortune, in Middlesex; they were also looking across Maid Lane at their competition in the form of the Chamberlain’s Men, newly moved from Shoreditch to the Globe.

The play was still in production on 9 March 1600 (a Sunday), when Simon Forman saw it at the Rose and recorded a reaction to it in one of his casebooks (see below).

Probable Genre(s)

Tragedy (Harbage)

Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

Greg cited John Payne Collier as having identified the play with “a murder committed at Collumpton in Devonshire,” but Greg himself was “not aware of any record thereof” (II, item #188, p. 207).

References to the Play

See Simon Forman's commentary on the play, above (Historical Records).


Critical Commentary

Cerasano discusses Forman’s visit to the Rose in detail. She provides a transcription from the casebook (see above) and a context of theater history. She points out that "Cox of Collumpton" would have been “fairly new” when Forman saw it (157) and in a note to that observation she adds that, “[g]iven the time required to rehearse and mount the production, Forman might well have attended one of the earliest performances …” (157n). Cerasano describes Forman as not having “any particular critical insight” into the plays he saw, or he might “have noticed some relationship between the bear in Cox of Collumpton and that in The Winter’s Tale" (which he saw in 1611) or “some similarity between Cox’s Peter, who dashes his brains out against a post, and Bajazeth in Tamburlaine the Great, Part I, one of the most popular plays of the period” (158).


Traister comments on Forman’s visit to the Rose, calling the play Cox of Cullinton, a.k.a., Cox of Collumpton, but provides no further information or transcription beyond the citation of MS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v.


Rowse reads the date of the performance seen by Forman as 4 March 1600 (26).


Pitcher addresses the interrelationship of stage business in the playing of bears across "Cox," Mucedorus, and The Winter’s Tale. He finds particularly fruitful the echo of a bear-spirit in added scenes to the 1610 quarto of Mucedorus, where the clown, Mouse, claims to have just seen a bear that was really “some Diuell in a Beares Doublet” (I.ii; qtd in Pitcher, 50).


Knutson observes that “Forman was fascinated more by the coincidence that the murders all occurred on St. Mark’s Day than by the murders themselves” (27); she appends a note to a summary of Forman’s synopsis in which she adds two points: (1) Forman’s apparent interest in family murders, implied by his digression to the Hammon father-son murders, and (2) Mucedorus, Chamberlain's Men, Q1598, as a theatrical precedent for the Admiral’s Men, should they have decided to dramatize that bear (36n).


Gurr connects "Cox of Collumpton" with the cluster of true-crime plays in the Admiral’s repertory for 1599, describing it as one of two “plainly journalistic accounts of sensational murders in London” although it is not apparently set in London (38). In the Appendix (item 137), Gurr repeats Henslowe’s entries, footnoting Forman’s entry using Cerasano’s date of 9 March 1600 for the show and providing a transcription of Forman’s entry (Gurr's transcription has minor typographic differences from Cerasano's).



For What It's Worth

A Collier Forgery?

Race, offering a contrarian opinion, argues that the entries by Forman in his casebooks, including that for "Cox of Collumpton" are forgeries by John Payne Collier, abetted by Peter Cunningham: “My suggestion is that when Collier and Cunningham were engaged on the Shakespeare accounts they challenged one another to produce a nonsense story, and this was Collier’s effort” (14). He is particularly hard on "Cox" as a theatrical piece, asserting that “the plot is so fantastic that it is perfectly clear that the play could never have been put on the stage” (13), and that “as a narrative it reaches the depths of illiteracy” (14).

St Mark's Day

St. Mark’s Day, 25 April, is an unlucky day. Fairly obviously, this is true for the Cox family, but it is also true elsewhere in early modern belief, where St. Mark’s Day functions almost as a secondary Halloween, six months apart from it in the calendar. Traditionally, St. Mark’s Eve is a night when one can see visions identifying which neighbours are to die in the next twelve months. On the day itself it was considered unlucky to work, and in particular unlucky to work the land. Early beliefs around St. Mark’s Day are conveniently collected in, for instance, Robert Chambers's Book of Days and William Hone's Every-Day Book (1869), 261-3.
Hone's account includes the following description:
This was a great fast-day in England during the rule of the Romish church. An old writer says, that in 1589, "I being as then but a boy, do remember that an ale wife, making no exception of dayes, would needs brue upon Saint Marke's days; but loe, the marvailous worke of God! whiles she was thus laboring, the top of the chimney tooke fire; and, before it could bee quenched, her house was quite burnt. Surely," says this observer of sainted seasons, "a gentle warning to them that violate and profane forbidden daies"… On St Mark's day blessings on the corn were implored. According to a manuscript of Mr. Pennant's, no farmer in North Wales dare hold his team on this day, because they there believe one man's team that worked upon it was marked with the loss of an ox. A Yorkshire clergyman informed Mr. Brand, that it was customary in that county for the common people to sit and watch in the church porch on St. Mark's Eve, from eleven o'clock at night till one in the morning. The third year (for this must be done thrice,) they are supposed to see the ghosts of all those who are to die the next year, pass by into the church. When any one sickens that is thought to have been seen in this manner, it is presently whispered about that he will not recover, for that such, or such an one, who has watched St. Mark's Eve, says so. This superstition is in such force, that, if the patients themselves hear of it, they almost despair of recovery. Many are said to have actually died by their imaginary fears on the occasion. (Hone, 261-2)
This complex of ideas is clearly relevant to our play. As is implicit in Hone's account, too, St. Mark’s Day lay also on one of the fault lines of the Reformation. Henry VIII abrogated the observance of St. Mark’s Day, and there were at least two separate provincial disputes in the 1530s arising from controversy over whether or not to obey Henry’s instructions in this respect (Shagan, Popular Politics, 57-9). This might remind one of other domestic tragedies such as Arden of Faversham, where Arden's status as an indirect beneficiary of the Reformation seems to be in some way linked to his horrible (and supernaturally flavoured) fate.

Cullompton or Colyton?

Since this is thought to be a true-crime play dramatizing recent events, it would be desirable to nail down its historical basis. No such historical basis is known, apart from J. P. Collier's vague claim that there was such a murder. But if this is indeed a true-crime play, is it possible to make any progress towards identifying its point of origin?

First of all, as the entry above shows, the place-name is spelt differently across the early records, so much so that Wiggins (1215) even wonders if the different spellings demonstrate uncertainty about whether or not to use a real place-name. Most critical discussions of the play standardize on "Cullompton" as the spelling, and see it as referring to the small town of that name in mid-Devon, twelve miles north of Exeter. The problem is that that place has no known link to any family called Cox. For instance, the FamilySearch website, www.familysearch.org, seems not to have any records of Coxes living in Cullompton before the date of the play.

However, the process of following up this lead reveals a different possibility, in the shape of another small town, also in Devon, with a similar name. This is the town whose name is now generally standardized as Colyton, about twenty miles east of Exeter, near the coast and not far from Axminster. There are plentiful traces here, from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, of a numerous and well-established yeoman family by the name of Cox. The parish register records sixteenth-century Colyton Coxes bearing first names including Peter (1557), Harry (1575), and John (1577, 1599). It also shows the relatively uncommon first name "Jarvis" cropping up in baptisms of 1579, 1607, and 1635, suggesting that this too might be a Colyton name. And there is even a numerous local family called Hayman. Clearly, given the freedom with which early true-crime drama treats factual details such as names; and given the fact that our knowledge of the play's names themselves is almost all through Forman, whose accounts where they can be checked are often inaccurate; it would be a brave scholar who put too much weight on this connection as it stands. Nor does it (yet) lead to any more specific records of events that might underlie this play. Nonetheless, if one were setting out to search hard for information about the historical originals of these fictional characters, the Coxes of Colyton might be a family to consider.



Works Cited

Cerasano, S. P., “Philip Henslowe, Simon Forman, and the Theatrical Community of the 1590s.” Shakespeare Quarterly, 44 (1993): 145-58.
Chambers, Robert. The Book of Days (1869), etext at Hillman’s Hyperlinked and Searchable Book of Days, http://www.thebookofdays.com
Forman, Simon. MSS Ashmole 236, fol. 77v (Division of Western Manuscripts, Bodleian Library).
Gurr, Andrew. Shakespeare’s Opposites: The Admiral’s Company 1594-1625. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2009.
Hone, William. The Every-day Book: Or, Everlasting Calendar of Popular Amusements. [London]: [William Tegg], 1868. GoogleBooks
Knutson, Roslyn L. “Toe to Toe Across Maid Lane: Repertorial Competition at the Rose and Globe, 1599-1600,” in June Schlueter and Paul Nelsen (eds) Acts of Criticism: Performance Matters in Shakespeare and His Contemporaries (Madison & Teaneck: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press, 2005), 21-37.
Lupić, Ivan. "Simon Forman and the Early Performances of Sir John Oldcastle." N&Q 65 (2018): 98–99. DOI: 10.1093/notesj/gjx206
Pitcher, John, “‘Fronted with the Sight of a Bear’: Cox of Collumpton and The Winter’s Tale.” Notes and Queries, 41 (1994): 47-53.
Race, Sydney, “Simon Forman’s ‘Bocke of Plaies’ Examined.” Notes and Queries, 203 (1958): 9-14.
Rowse, A. L. Simon Forman: Sex and Society in Shakespeare’s Age. London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1974.
Shagan, Ethan H. Popular Politics and the English Reformation. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2003.
Skinner, A. J. P. ed. The register of baptisms, marriages & burials of the parish of Colyton, Devon, 1538-1837. Exeter: The Devon and Cornwall record society, 1928. Online facsimile at Hathi Trust.
Traister, Barbara Howard. The Notorious Astrological Physician of London: Works and Days of Simon Forman. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2001.



Site created and maintained by Roslyn L. Knutson, Professor Emerita, University of Arkansas at Little Rock; updated, 23 January 2018. Additions by Matthew Steggle.