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 character of a melancholy knight, headed 'A Copie of my Lord of Combrlandes Speeche to y^e Queene, upon y^e 17 day of November, 1600'. This was printed by T. D. Whitaker, History of Craven (1805, ed. Morant, 1878, p. 355), and reprinted by Nichols, Eliz. iii. 522, and by Bond, Lyly, i. 415, with a conjectural attribution to Lyly. In 1601 Cumberland conveyed to Sir John Davies a suggestion from Sir R. Cecil that he should write a 'speech for introduction of the barriers' (Hatfield MSS. xi. 544), and in letters of 1602 he promised Cecil to appear at the tilt on Queen's Day, but later tried to excuse himself on the ground that a damaged arm would not let him carry a staff (Hatfield MSS. xii. 438, 459, 574). Anne Clifford records 'speeches and delicate presents' at Grafton when James and Anne visited the Earl there on 27 June 1603 (Wiffen, ii. 71). JO. COOKE (c. 1612). Beyond his play, practically nothing is known of Cooke. It is not even clear whether 'Jo.' stands for John, or for Joshua; the latter is suggested by the manuscript ascription on a copy of the anonymous How a Man may Choose a Good Wife from a Bad (q.v.). Can Cooke be identical with the I. Cocke who contributed to Stephens's Characters in 1615 (cf. App. C, No. lx)? Collier, iii. 408, conjectures that he was a brother John named, probably as dead, in the will (3 Jan. 1614) of Alexander Cooke the actor (cf. ch. xv). There is an entry in S. R. on 22 May 1604 of a lost 'Fyftie epigrams written by J. Cooke Gent', and a 'I. Cooke' wrote commendatory verses to Drayton's Legend of Cromwell (1607). ''Greenes Tu Quoque or The City Gallant. 1611''

1614. Greene's Tu quoque, or, The Cittie Gallant. As it hath beene diuers times acted by the Queenes Maiesties Seruants. Written by Io. Cooke, Gent. For John Trundle. [Epistle to the Reader, signed 'Thomas Heywood', and a couplet 'Upon the Death of Thomas Greene', signed 'W. R.'] 1622. For Thomas Dewe.

M. Flesher.

Editions in Dodsley^{1-4} (1744-1875) and by W. Scott (1810, A. B. D. ii) and J. S. Farmer (1913, S. F. T.).

Heywood writes 'to gratulate the love and memory of my worthy friend the author, and my entirely beloved fellow the actor', both of whom were evidently dead. Satire of Coryat's Crudities gives a date between its publication in 1611 and the performances of the play by the Queen's men at Court on 27 Dec. 1611 and 2 Feb. 1612 (cf. App. B). In Aug. 1612 died Thomas Greene, who had evidently played Bubble at the Red Bull (ed. Dodsley, p. 240):

Geraldine. Why, then, we'll go to the Red Bull: they say Green's a good clown.

Bubble. Green! Green's an ass.

Scattergood. Wherefore do you say so?

Bubble. Indeed I ha' no reason; for they say he is as like me as ever he can look.