Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/110

 10 December. The pageants in his honour at Utrecht, Leyden, and the Hague were remarkable. Stowe records festivities at Utrecht on St. George's Day, 23 April 1586. These included an after-dinner show of 'dauncing, vauting, and tumbling, with the forces of Hercules, which gave great delight to the strangers, for they had not seene it before'. It is a reasonable inference that the performers in ''The Forces of Hercules'' were English. And on 24 March 1586 Sir Philip Sidney, writing to Walsingham from Utrecht, says:

'I wrote to yow a letter by Will, my lord of Lester's jesting plaier, enclosed in a letter to my wife, and I never had answer thereof I since find that the knave deliverd the letters to my ladi of Lester.'

That the 'jesting plaier' was William Shakespeare is on the whole less likely than that he was the famous comic actor, William Kempe; and this theory is confirmed by a mention in an earlier letter of 12 November 1585 from Thomas Doyley at Calais to Leicester himself of 'Mr. Kemp, called Don Gulihelmo', as amongst those remaining at Dunkirk. Leicester returned to England in November 1586. 'Wilhelm Kempe, instrumentist' and his lad 'Daniell Jonns' were at the Danish Court at Helsingör in August and September of the same year; and so, from 17 July to 18 September, were five 'instrumentister och springere' whose names may evidently be anglicized as Thomas Stevens, George Bryan, Thomas King, Thomas Pope, and Robert Percy (cf. ch. xiv). Some or all of these men are evidently the company of English comedians referred to by Thomas Heywood as commended by the Earl of Leicester to Frederick II of Denmark. Stevens and his fellows, but not apparently