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 academic year 1599-1600, 'Aula Clarensis. Club Law fabula festivissima data multum ridentibus Academicis, frustra Oppidanis dolentibus'. The play is a satire on the townsmen, and especially the anti-gown mayor of 1599-1600, John Yaxley. Fuller says that the townsmen were invited to the performance and made to sit it through, and that they complained to the Privy Council, who first 'sent some slight and private check to the principall Actors therein', and then, when pressed, said that they would come to Cambridge, and see the comedy acted over again in the presence of the townsmen. The fact that there is no record of these letters in the extant register of the Council hardly disproves the substance of Fuller's story. Hawkins ascribed the play to Ruggle (q.v.) on the authority of an eighteenth-century memorandum.

Sir Clyomon and Clamydes c. 1570

1599. The Historie of the two valiant Knights, Syr Clyomon knight of the Golden Sheeld, sonne to the King of Denmarke: And Clamydes the White Knight, sonne to the King of Suauia. As it hath been sundry times Acted by her Maiesties Players. Thomas Creede. [Prologue.] Editions by W. W. Greg (1913, M. S. R.) and J. S. Farmer (S. F. T.), and in collections of Peele. Subtle Shift 'the vice', Providence, and Rumour are among the characters. Dyce ascribed the play to George Peele on the strength of a manuscript note 'in a very old hand' on a copy of the 1599 edition. Bullen thinks it of earlier date than Peele. Greg agrees, regarding it as about contemporary with Common Conditions. L. Kellner, in Englische Studien, xiii. 187, compares the language and style at great length with Peele's and concludes against his authorship, unless indeed he wrote it in a spirit of parody. His arguments are challenged by R. Fischer in Englische Studien, xiv. 344. Fleay, 70, assigned it, with Common Conditions, to R. Wilson. Later (ii. 295), he substituted R[ichard] B[ower]. He noted a parallel to Thomas Preston's Cambyses, and suggested as a date 1570 or 1578, the years, according to him, of the original production and of a revival of Cambyses. G. L. Kittredge, in Journal of Germanic Philology, ii. 8, suggests that Preston himself was the author of Sir Clyomon and Clamydes. If the 'her Maiesties Players' of the title-page means the later company of that name, the play, if not written, must have been revived 1583-94. Fleay, ii. 296, further identifies it with The Four Kings licensed for Henslowe (i. 103) in March 1599; but an old Queen's play would not have needed a licence. An Anglo-German repertory of 1626 includes a 'Tragikomödie vom König in Dänemark und König in Schweden' (Herz, 66, 72). Common Conditions > 1576

S. R. 1576, July 26. 'A newe and pleasant comedie or plaie after the maner of common condycons.' John Hunter (Arber, ii. 301). [Clearly 'maner' is a misreading of the 'name' of the t.p.]