Page:The Lives and Characters of the English Dramatick Poets.djvu/126

106 Publick Wooing, a Comedy, fol. 1662. Two Scenes and two Songs at the End of this Play, with divers Speeches therein, are writ by his Grace, the Duke of Newcatle.

Religions, a Tragi-Comedy, fol. 1662.

Several Wits, a Comedy, Fol. 1662.

The Sociable Companions; or, The Female Wits, a Comedy, fol. 1668.

The Unnatural Tragedy, fol. 1662. The Prologue and Epilogue of this Play, were writ by his Grace, the Duke of Newcatle.

Wits Cabal, in two Parts, a Comedy, fol. 1662. The Epilogue of the firt Part was alo writ by his Grace, the Duke of Newcatle.

Youth’s Glory, and Death’s Banquet, in two Parts, a Tragedy, fol. 1662. Two Scenes, and the Speeches of the firt Part, as alo the Songs and Veres in the econd Part, were alo writ by his Grace, the Duke of Newcatle.

Beides thee Dramatick works, he has writ divers other Pieces; as, The Life of the Duke of New-Catle, 1667. also the ame in Latin, 1668. Philoophical Fancies, 1653. A Volume of Poems, 1653. Philoophical Opinions, 1655. Nature’s Picture, drawn by Fancies Pencil, to the Life; at the End of which was her own Life, 1656. A Volume of Orations, 1662. Philoophical Letters, 1664. Two hundred and eleven Sociable Letters, 1664. All which Volumes are printed in fol.

NE of the Tranlators of Seneca, in the Reign of Queen Elizabeth, he tranlated one entirely, and club’d with Japer Heywood and Alexander Nevile in the ret; but publih’d them all together, with a Dedication to Sir Thomas Henage, then Treaurer of her Majety‘’s Chamber. Philips, in his Theatrum Poetarum, acribes one other Play to this Author, call’d, Tamberlain the Great, which is none of his, but Marlo’s.

Thebais, a Tragedy, 4 to. Tranlated from Seneca, as before intimated, it has no Chorus, and is the hortet of all that Author’s Tragedies.

Hese Twin Authors liv’d in Queen Elizabeth’s Reign, the latter was Lord Buckhurt, and 1 Jac. created Earl of Doret, Mar. 13. 1603. Ferrex