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 all only cover comparatively few years out of the whole period. And there is a great discrepancy in the proportions in which the various types are represented. The morals, which were obsolescent at Court, are far more numerous in print than the classical and romantic histories, which were already in enjoyment of their full vogue upon the boards. My definite impression is that these early printed morals, unlike the prints of later date, were in the main not drawn from the actual repertories of companies, but were literary products, written with a didactic purpose, and printed in the hope that they would be bought both by readers and by schoolmasters in search of suitable pieces for performance by their pupils. They belong, like some similar interludes, both original and translated, of earlier date, rather to the tradition of the humanist academic drama, than to that of the professional, or even quasi-professional, stage. There are many things about the prints which, although not individually decisive, tend when taken in bulk to confirm this theory. They are 'compiled', according to their title-pages; sometimes the author is declared a 'minister' or a 'learned clerke'. Nothing is, as a rule, said to indicate that they have been acted. They are advertised, not only as 'new', 'merry', 'pretty', 'pleasant', 'delectable', 'witty', 'full of mirth and pastime', but also as 'excellent', 'worthy', 'godly', 'pithy', 'moral', 'pityfull', 'learned', and 'fruitfull', and occasionally the precise didactic intention is more elaborately expounded either on the title-page or in a prologue. They are furnished with analyses showing the number of actors necessary to take all the parts, and in one case there is a significant note that the arrangement is 'most convenient for such as be disposed, either to shew this comedie in priuate houses, or otherwise'. They often conclude with a generalized*