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 six of our period got into print before 1623. From the Queen's men we have rather more, perhaps sixteen in all; but we do not always know whether these were given at the Red Bull or the Curtain. Nor do we know whether any structural improvements introduced at the Globe and Fortune were adopted at the Red Bull, although this is a priori not unlikely. From the Swan we have only The Chaste Maid of Cheapside, and from the Hope only Bartholomew Fair.

At the Globe, then, the types of scene presented are much the same as those with which we have become familiar in the sixteenth century; the old categories of open-country scenes, battle scenes, garden scenes, street scenes, threshold scenes, hall scenes, and chamber scenes will still serve. Their relative importance alters, no doubt, as the playwrights tend more and more to concern themselves with subjects of urban life. But there are plenty of battle scenes in certain plays, much on the traditional lines, with marchings and counter-marchings, alarums for fighting 'within', and occasional 'excursions' on the field of the stage itself. Practicable tents still afford a convenient camp background, and these, I think, continue to be pitched on the open boards. The opposing camps of Richard III are precisely repeated in Henry V. There are episodes before the 'walls' too, with defenders speaking from above, assaults by means of scaling ladders, and coming and going through the gates. I find no example in which*