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 1599. A Pleasant Conceyted Comedie of George a Greene, the Pinner of Wakefield. As it was sundry times acted by the seruants of the right Honourable the Earle of Sussex. Simon Stafford for Cuthbert Burby.

Editions in Dodsley^{1-3} (1744-1825), by W. Scott (1810, A. B. D. i), F. W. Clarke (1911, M. S. R.), and J. S. Farmer (S. F. T.), and in collections of Greene.—Dissertation: O. Mertins, Robert Greene and the Play of G. a G. (1885, Breslau diss.). Sussex's men revived the play for Henslowe on 29 Dec. 1593 (Greg, Henslowe, ii. 158). The Chatsworth copy has on the title-page the following notes in two early seventeenth-century hands: 'Written by a minister, who ac[ted] the piñers [p=]t in it himself. Teste W. Shakespea[re]', and 'Ed Iuby saith that the play was made by Ro. Gree[ne]'. These, though first produced by Collier, appear (M. S. C. i. 288) to be genuine. Greene's authorship has been very commonly accepted. Fleay, i. 264, ii. 51, supposed first Greene and Peele, then added Lodge, but, although the text has been abridged, there is no evidence of double authorship. Oliphant's suggestion (M. P. viii. 433) of revision by Heywood only rests on the inclusion of the play next his in the Cockpit list of 1639 (Variorum, iii. 159). R. B. McKerrow thinks (M. S. C. i. 289) that the 'by Ro. Greene' of the note may mean 'about Ro. Greene' as a leading incident is apparently based on an episode of Greene's life. An allusion in i. 42 to Tamburlaine gives an anterior limit of date. ''Sir Giles Goosecap. 1601 < > 3''

S. R. 1606, Jan. 10. (Wilson). 'An Comedie called Sir Gyles Goosecap Provided that yt be printed accordinge to the Copie wherevnto master Wilson's hand ys at.' Edward Blount (Arber, iii. 309). 1606. Sir Gyles Goosecappe. Knight. A Comedie presented by the Chil: of the Chappell. John Windet for Edward Blount.

1636. A Comedy lately Acted with great applause at the private House in Salisbury Court. For Hugh Perry, sold by Roger Bell. [Epistle to Richard Young of Woolley Farm, Berks. Signed 'Hugh Perry'.]

Editions by A. H. Bullen (1884, O. E. P. iii), W. Bang and R. Brotanek (1909, Materialien, xxvi), J. S. Farmer (1912, T. F. T.), and T. M. Parrott (1914, Chapman, ii).—Dissertations: G. L. Kittredge, ''Notes on Elizabethan Plays (1898, J. G. P. ii. 10); T. M. Parrott, The Authorship of S. G. G. (1906, M. P.'' iv. 25).

Bullen thought the author, who is stated in Perry's epistle to be dead in 1636, might be some imitator of Chapman. Fleay, ii. 322, suggests Chapman himself. This view receives elaborate support from Parrott, and appears very plausible. As 'your greatest gallants, for men, in France were here lately' ( i. 47) the date is after the visit of Biron in Sept. 1601 and possibly after that of Nevers in April 1602. It cannot be later than the beginning of 1603, as 'She is the best scholar of any woman, but one, in Europe' ( i. 140) points to Elizabeth's lifetime. Moreover, Dekker, in his Wonderful Year of