[456] W. You Will, IV. 373, after a dance, ‘Celia. Will you to dinner?’ ... (V. 1) ‘The curtains are drawn by a Page, and Celia (&c.) displayed, sitting at dinner’.
[457] II. 1, ‘One knocks: Laverdure draws the curtains, sitting on his bed, apparelling himself; his trunk of apparel standing by him’ ... (127) ‘Bidet, I’ll down’; II. ii. 1, ‘Enter a schoolmaster, draws the curtains behind, with Battus, Nous, Slip, Nathaniel, and Holophernes Pippo, schoolboys, sitting, with books in their hands’.
[458] I. 110, ‘He sings and is answered; from above a willow garland is flung down, and the song ceaseth’.
[459] Satiromastix, I. ii. 1, ‘Horrace sitting in a study behinde a curtaine, a candle by him burning, bookes lying confusedly’.
[460] V. ii. 23, where the ‘canopie’, if a Paul’s term, may be the equivalent of the public theatre alcove (cf. pp. 82, 120). The ‘bower’ in IV. iii holds eight persons, and a recess may have been used.
[461] Shorthose says (V. i. 60) ‘Thou lean’st against a poast’, but obviously posts supporting a heavens at Paul’s cannot be inferred.
[462] Westward Ho! uses the houses of Justiniano (I. i), Wafer (III. iii), Ambush (III. iv), the Earl (II. ii; IV. ii), and a Bawd (IV. i), the shops of Tenterhook (I. ii; III. i) and Honeysuckle (II. i), and inns at the Steelyard (II. iii), Shoreditch (II. iii), and Brentford (V). Continuous setting would not construct so many houses for single scenes. There is action above at the Bawd’s, and interior action below in several cases; in IV. ii, ‘the Earle drawes a curten and sets forth a banquet’. The s.ds. of this scene seem inadequate; at a later point Moll is apparently ‘discovered’, shamming death. Northward Ho! uses the houses of Mayberry (I. iii; II. ii) and Doll (II. i; III. i), a garden house at Moorfields (III. ii), Bellamont’s study (IV. i), Bedlam (IV. iii, iv), a ‘tavern entry’ in London (I. ii), and an inn at Ware (I. i; V. i). Action above is at the last only, interior action below in several.
[463] B. d’Ambois, II. ii. 177, ‘Tamyra. See, see the gulfe is opening’ ... (183) ‘Ascendit Frier and D’Ambois’ ... (296) ‘Descendit Fryar’; IV. ii. 63, ‘Ascendit [Behemoth]’ ... (162) ‘Descendit cum suis’; V. i. 155, ‘Ascendit Frier’ ... (191) ‘Montsurry. In, Ile after, To see what guilty light gives this cave eyes’; V. iv. 1, ‘Intrat umbra Comolet to the Countesse, wrapt in a canapie’ ... (23) ‘D’Amboys at the gulfe’.
[464] The Q of 1641, probably representing a revival by the King’s men, alters the scenes in Montsurry’s house, eliminating the characteristic Paul’s ‘canapie’ of V. iv. 1 and placing spectators above in the same scene. It is also responsible for the proleptic s.d. (cf. ch. xxii) at I. i. 153 for I. ii. 1, ‘Table, Chesbord and Tapers behind the Arras’.
[465] Blurt Master Constable has (a) Camillo’s (I. i; II. i) with a hall; (b) Hippolyto’s (III. i) where (136) ‘Violetta appears above’, and (175) ‘Enter Truepenny above with a letter’; (c) a chapel (III. ii) with a ‘pit-hole’ dungeon, probably also visible in II. i and III. i; (d) Blurt’s (I. ii) which is ‘twelve score off’; (e) Imperia’s, where is most of the action (II. ii; III. iii; IV. i, ii, iii; V. ii, iii). Two chambers below are used; into one Lazarillo is shown in III. iii. 201, and here in IV. ii he is let through a trap into a sewer, while (38) ‘Enter Frisco above laughing’ and (45) ‘Enter Imperia above’. At IV. iii. 68 Lazarillo crawls from the sewer into the street. In IV. i and IV. iii tricks are played upon Curvetto with a cord and a rope-ladder hanging from a window above.