Richard Whittington: Difference between revisions

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''Chapman, Jonson, and Marston, ''Eastward Hoe'' (1605)'''
'''Chapman, Jonson, and Marston, ''Eastward Hoe'' (1605)'''


:I cannot containe my selfe, I must tell thee, I hope to see thee one o'the Monuments of our Citty, and reckon'd among her worthies, to be remembred the same day with the Lady ''Ramsey'', and graue ''Gresham'': when the famous fable of ''Whittington'', and his ''Pusse'', shalbe forgotten, and thou and thy Actes become the Posies for Hospitals, when thy name shall be written vpon Conduits, and thy deeds plaid i'thy life time, by the best companies of Actors, and be call'd their ''Get-peny''. This I diuine. This I Prophecie. (sig. G2v)
:I cannot containe my selfe, I must tell thee, I hope to see thee one o'the Monuments of our Citty, and reckon'd among her worthies, to be remembred the same day with the Lady ''Ramsey'', and graue ''Gresham'': when the famous fable of ''Whittington'', and his ''Pusse'', shalbe forgotten, and thou and thy Actes become the Posies for Hospitals, when thy name shall be written vpon Conduits, and thy deeds plaid i'thy life time, by the best companies of Actors, and be call'd their ''Get-peny''. This I diuine. This I Prophecie. (sig. G2v)

Revision as of 07:04, 1 August 2014

Anon. (1605?)


Historical Records

Stationers' Register

8 ffebruarij [1605]
Thomas Pavyer.     Entred for his copy vnder th[e h]andes of the Wardens. 'The
history of RICHARD WHITTINGTON of his lowe byrthe. his great
fortune' as yt was plaied by the prynces servantes . . . . . vjd

(Arber 3.282)


Theatrical Provenance

Prince Henry's at the Fortune.


Probable Genre(s)

Psuedo-History (Harbage)


Possible Narrative and Dramatic Sources or Analogues

The play was surely based on the story of Richard Whittington (c. 1350–1423), the celebrated merchant, philanthropist, and mayor of London. An entry in the Stationers' Register for "A ballad, called. The vertuous Lyfe and memorable Death of Sir RICHARD WHITTINGTON mercer sometymes Lord Maiour of the honorable Citie of London" is dated 16 July 1605 (Arber 3.296).


References to the Play

Beaumont, The Knight of the Burning Pestle (1607)

Cit. No sir, yes sir, if you were not resolu'd to play the Iacks, what need you study for new subiects, purposely to abuse your betters? why could not you be contented, as well as others, with the legend of Whittington, or the life & death of sir Thomas Gresham? with the building of the Royall Exchange? or the story of Queene Elenor, with the rearing of London bridge vpon wool-sackes? (sig. B-Bv)


Critical Commentary

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


For What It's Worth

Possible References

Heywood, If You Know Not Me, You Know Nobody, Part Two (1605)

  Now: This sir Richard Whitington three times Maior,
Sonne to a Knight, and Prentise to a Mercer,
Began the Librarie of Gray-Friars in London;
And his Executors after him did build
Whittington Colledge, thirteene Almes-houses for poore men,
Repair'd S. Bartholmewes in Smithfield,
Glased the Guild-hall, and built Newgate.
  Hob. Bones of mee then I haue heard lyes,
For I haue heard he was a scullion,
And rai'sd himselfe by venture of a Cat.
  Now: They did the more wrong to the gentleman.

Part 2 entered in Stationers' Register on 14 September 1605 (Arber 3.301). See The Knight of the Burning Pestle below.


Chapman, Jonson, and Marston, Eastward Hoe (1605)

I cannot containe my selfe, I must tell thee, I hope to see thee one o'the Monuments of our Citty, and reckon'd among her worthies, to be remembred the same day with the Lady Ramsey, and graue Gresham: when the famous fable of Whittington, and his Pusse, shalbe forgotten, and thou and thy Actes become the Posies for Hospitals, when thy name shall be written vpon Conduits, and thy deeds plaid i'thy life time, by the best companies of Actors, and be call'd their Get-peny. This I diuine. This I Prophecie. (sig. G2v)

Entered in the Stationers' Register 4 September 1605 (Arber 3.300). The play was performed in late July or August of 1605, a response to Westward Ho. The combination of Gresham and Whittington appears in The Knight of the Burning Pestle.


Dekker, The Seuen Seadly Sinnes of London (1606)

"Prouidence was but of meane birth, the ladder by which he climbd to such high fortunes, as to be a councellor to Money, being made by himselfe, much giuen to study, yet no great scholler, as desiring rather to be free of the City, then to serue a long threed-bare Prentiship in the Uniuersities. He is rarely seene in Minerals, and distillations, and will draw Aurum potabile, or fetch quick-siluer out of horse-dung, he will grow rich, and be in time the head warden of a company, though he were left by his friends but three shillings three pence stocke to set vp, such another he was as Whittington, a very cat shall raise him if he be set vpont" (sig. D3v)



Works Cited

Beaumont, Francis. The Knight of the Burning Pestle. London, 1613.

Chapman, George, Ben Jonson, and John Marston. Eastward Hoe. London, 1605.

Dekker, Thomas. The Seuen Seadly Sinnes of London. London, 1606.

Heywood, Thomas. The Second Part of, If You Know Not Me, You Know No Bodie. London, 1606.


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