Palamon and Arcite, Part 2: Difference between revisions

(Created page with "Richard Edwards (1566) ==Historical Records== ===BL Add. MS 26737=== A song entitled "An Elegie on the death of a Sweetheart" and followed by an attri...")
 
Line 67: Line 67:
==Probable Genre(s)==
==Probable Genre(s)==


Tragedy (Harbage); comedy (contemporary reference); history (contemporary reference); romance (Wiggins).
Tragedy (Harbage); comedy (Stow); history (contemporary reference); romance (Wiggins).
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
<br>
==Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues==
==Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues==



Revision as of 01:25, 19 April 2017

Richard Edwards (1566)


Historical Records

BL Add. MS 26737

A song entitled "An Elegie on the death of a Sweetheart" and followed by an attribution to Edwards and the note "The song of Emelye", is preserved in a seventeenth-century manuscript:

Add ms 26737 f106v thumb.jpg


British Library Add. MS 26737, fo.106v, reproduced by permission.



Jones, The Arbour of Amorous Devices (1597)

A printed version appeared in Richard Jones, The Arbour of Amorous Devices (1597, STC 3631), sigs. B1r-v, under the title ["A Lady's Complaint for the Loss of Her Love". See the Open-Access version of EEBO-TCP:

A Ladies complaint for the losse of her Loue.


COme follow me you Nymphes,
Whose eyes are neuer drie,
Augment your wayling number nowe
With me poore Emelie.

Giue place ye to my plaintes,
Whose ioyes are pincht with paines
My loue, alas through foule mishap,
Most cruell death hath slaine,

What wight can wel, alas,
my sorrowes now indite?
I waile & want my new desire
I lack my new delite,

Gush out my trickling teares,
Like mighty floods of raine,
My Knight alas, through foule mishap
Most cruell death hath slaine.

Oh hap alas most hard,
Oh death why didst thou so?
Why could not I embrace my ioy,
for me that bid such woe?

False Fortunu out, alas,
Woe worth thy subtill traine,
Whereby my loue through foule mishap,
Most cruell death hath slaine.

Rock me a sleepe in woe,
You wofull Sisters three,
Oh cut you off my fatall threed,
Dispatch poore Emelie.

Why should I liue, alas,
And linger thus in paine?
Farewell my life, sith that my loue

Most cruell death hath slaine.      Finis.




Theatrical Provenance

Performed at Christ Church, Oxford before the Queen on 04 September 1566.


Probable Genre(s)

Tragedy (Harbage); comedy (Stow); history (contemporary reference); romance (Wiggins).


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

Chaucer's The Knight's Tale.


References to the Play

<List any known or conjectured references to the lost play here.>


Critical Commentary

<Summarise any critical commentary that may have been published by scholars. Please maintain an objective tone!>


For What It's Worth

<Enter any miscellaneous points that may be relevant, but don't fit into the above categories. This is the best place for highly conjectural thoughts.>


Works Cited

Jones, Richard. The arbor of amorous deuises VVherin, young gentlemen may reade many plesant fancies, and fine deuises: and thereon, meditate diuers sweete conceites, to court the loue of faire ladies and gentlewomen by N.B. Gent. Imprinted at London : By Richard Iohnes, dwelling at the signe of the Rose and Crowne, neere Saint Andrewes Church in Holborne, 1597.




Site created and maintained by David McInnis, University of Melbourne; updated 19 April 2017.