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[J. PLYMSELL, Printer, Leather Lane, Holborn, London.}

931 1803

V.15

KING HENRY VIII.*

VOL. XV.

B

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*KING HENRY VIII.] We are unacquainted with any dramatick piece on the fubject of Henry VIII. that preceded this of Shakspeare; and yet on the books of the Stationers' Company appears the following entry: "Nathaniel Butter] (who was one of our author's printers) Feb. 12, 1604. That he get good allowance for the enterlude of King Henry VIII. before he begin to print it; and with the wardens hand to yt, he is to have the fame for his copy." Dr. Farmer, in a note on the epilogue to this play, obferves, from Stowe, that Robert Greene had written somewhat on the fame ftory. STEEVENS.

This hiftorical drama comprizes a period of twelve years, commencing in the twelfth year of King Henry's reign, (1521,) and ending with the chriftening of Elizabeth in 1533. Shakspeare has deviated from hiftory in placing the death of Queen Katharine before the birth of Elizabeth, for in fact Katharine did not die till 1536.

King Henry VIII. was written, I believe, in 1601. See An Attempt to afcertain the Order of Shakspeare's Plays, Vol. II. Dr. Farmer, in a note on the epilogue, obferves, from Stowe, that "Robert Greene had written fomething on this ftory;" but this, I apprehend, was not a play, but fome hiftorical account of Henry's reign, written not by Robert Greene, the dramatick poet, but by fome other perfon. In the lift of "authors out of whom Stowe's Annals were compiled," prefixed to the last edition printed in his life time, quarto, 1605, Robert Greene is enumerated with Robert de Brun, Robert Fabian, &c. and he is often quoted as an authority for facts in the margin of the history of that reign. MALONE.

PROLOGUE.

I come no more to make you laugh; things now, That bear a weighty and a serious brow,

Sad, high, and working, full of state and woe,
Such noble scenes as draw the eye to flow,
We now prefent. Thofe that can pity, here
May, if they think it well, let fall a tear;
The fubject will deferve it. Such, as give
Their money out of hope they may believe,
May here find truth too. Thofe, that come to fee
Only a fhow or two, and fo agree,

The play may pass; if they be ftill, and willing,
I'll undertake, may fee away their fhilling
Richly in two short hours. Only they,
That come to hear a merry, bawdy play,
A noise of targets; or to see a fellow
In a long motley coat,' guarded with yellow,
Will be deceiv'd: for, gentle hearers, know,
To rank our chofen truth with fuch a fhow

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→→→→or to see a fellow

In a long motley coat,] Alluding to the fools and buffoons, introduced in the plays a little before our author's time and of whom he has left us a small taste in his own. THEOBALD.

In Marfton's 10th Satire there is an allufion to this kind of drefs:

"The long foole's coat, the huge flop, the lugg'd boot, "From mimick Pifo all doe claime their roote."

Thus alfo Nafhe, in his Epiftle Dedicatory to Have with you to Saffron Walden, or Gabriel Harvey's Hunt is up, 1596: "-fooles, ye know, alwaies for the moft part (especiallie if they bee naturall fooles) are futed in long coats." STEEVENS.

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