Page:The Elizabethan stage (Volume 2).pdf/79

 company moved house. The greatest difficulty is Jonson's Epicoene (S. R. 20 September 1610). No edition is known to be extant earlier than the Folio of 1616, in which Jonson ascribed the production to '1609' and to the Children of the Revels. According to the system of dating ordinarily adopted by Jonson in this Folio, '1609' should mean 1609 and not 1609-10. Yet the Children were not entitled to call themselves 'of the Revels' during 1609. Either Jonson's chronology or his memory of the shifting nomenclature of the company has slipped. The actor-list of Epicoene names 'Nat. Field, Gil. Carie, Hug. Attawel, Ioh. Smith, Will. Barksted, Will. Pen, Ric. Allin, Ioh. Blaney'. Amongst these Field is the sole direct connecting link with the Chapel actor-lists of 1600 and 1601. Keysar's pleading shows us that from 1600 to 1610 the company had maintained a substantial identity throughout all its phases, as successively Children of the Chapel, Children of the Queen's Revels, Children of the Blackfriars, Children of the Whitefriars; but part of his grievance is its dispersal, and possibly the continuity with the second Children of the Revels may not have been quite so marked. 'In processe of time', say the Burbadges in the Blackfriars Sharers Papers of 1635, 'the boyes growing up to bee men, which were Underwood, Field, Ostler, and were taken to strengthen the King's service'. This, which is written in relation to the acquisition of the Blackfriars, is doubtless accurate as regards Ostler and Underwood, and their transfer may reasonably be placed in the winter of 1609-10. But it was not until some years later that Field joined the King's men.

The career of the second Queen's Revels, but for the temporary suppression of Epicoene owing to a misconstruction placed on it by Arabella Stuart, was comparatively uneventful. They are recorded at Maidstone as the Children of the Chapel about March 1610. They made no appearance at Court during the following winter, and were again travelling in the following autumn, when they came to Norwich under the leadership of one Ralph Reeve, who showed the patent of 4 January 1610, and at first claimed to be Rosseter, but afterwards admitted that he was not. As he could show no letters of deputation, he was not allowed to play, although he received a reward on the following day, which was recorded, not quite correctly, as paid to 'the master of the children of the King's Revells'. By 29 August Barksted and Carey had left the company to