Hot Anger Soon Cold: Difference between revisions

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Site created and maintained by [[Domenico Lovascio]], University of Genoa; updated 05 March 2015.
Site created and maintained by [[Domenico Lovascio]], University of Genoa; updated 05 March 2015.
[[category:all]][[category:Domenico Lovascio]][[category:Admiral's]][[category:Henslowe's records]][[category:Rose]]
[[category:all]][[category:Domenico Lovascio]][[category:Admiral's]][[category:Henslowe's records]][[category:Rose]]
[[category:Henry Chettle]][[category:Ben onson]][[category:Henry Porter]]
[[category:Henry Chettle]][[category:Ben Jonson]][[category:Henry Porter]]

Revision as of 19:22, 4 November 2020

Henry Porter, Henry Chettle and Ben Jonson (1598)


Historical Records

Payments to Playwrights (Henslowe’s Diary)

F. 49r (Greg I.94)

lent vnto the company the 18 of aguste 1598 to }
bye a Boocke called hoote anger sone cowld of }
mr porter mr cheattell & bengemen Johnson in } vjli
fulle payment the some of }


Theatrical Provenance

Presumably performed by the Admiral's Men at the Rose in the summer or autumn of 1598.

Probable Genre(s)

Comedy (Harbage).

Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

The title suggests the play may have been about humours.

References to the Play

None known.

Critical Commentary

Carson speculates that the play was "almost certainly completed" (49) and that Jonson may have been "brought in as 'coadjutor' in a relatively subordinate role" to help Wilson and Chettle, who had recently collaborated on "Black Bateman of the North, Part 2" (62).

Donaldson points out that "[a]nger was a subject of some interest to Jonson, whose surviving commedies often depict wrathful eruptions of the kind indicated by this title...; and also to Porter" (1:110).

For What It's Worth

The title looks like a pun on the two common proverbial expressions "Hot love is soon cold" and "Soon hot, soon cold".

Works Cited

Carson, Neil. A Companion to Henslowe's Diary. Cambridge: CUP, 1988.
Donaldson, Ian. "Hot Anger Soon Cold (lost play)." The Cambridge Edition of the Works of Ben Jonson. Ed. David Bevington, Martin Butler and Ian Donaldson. 7 vols. Cambridge: CUP, 2012. 1:110.



Site created and maintained by Domenico Lovascio, University of Genoa; updated 05 March 2015.