[506] K. B. P. II. 71–438; III. 1–524; IV. 76–151.

[507] The certain plays are Epicoene, Woman a Weathercock, Insatiate Countess, and Revenge of Bussy. I have noted two unusual s.ds.: W. a W. III. ii, ‘Enter Scudmore ... Scudmore passeth one doore, and entereth the other, where Bellafront sits in a Chaire, under a Taffata Canopie’; Insatiate C. III. i, ‘Claridiana and Rogero, being in a readiness, are received in at one anothers houses by their maids. Then enter Mendoza, with a Page, to the Lady Lentulus window’. There is some elaborate action with contiguous rooms in Epicoene, IV, V.

[508] Cf. pp. 98, 117.

[509] I have noted bedchamber scenes as ‘perhaps above’ at Paul’s in A Mad World, my Masters and A Trick to Catch the Old One, but the evidence is very slight and may be due to careless writing. In A Mad World, III. ii. 181, Harebrain is said to ‘walke below’; later ‘Harebrain opens the door and listens’. In A Trick, III. iv. 72, Dampit is told that his bed waits ‘above’, and IV. v is in his bedchamber.

[510] Cf. p. 116.

[511] Cf. Dr. Dodipoll, 1 Antonio and Mellida, The Fawn, and Bussy d’Ambois for Paul’s, and Sir Giles Goosecap and Fleir for Blackfriars. The early Court plays had similar scenes; cf. p. 43.

[512] C. Revels, ind. 54, ‘First the Title of his Play is Cynthias Revels, as any man (that hath hope to be sau’d by his Booke) can witnesse; the Scene Gargaphia’; K. B. P. ind. 10, ‘Now you call your play, The London Marchant. Downe with your Title, boy, downe with your Title’. For Wily Beguiled, cf. p. 126.

[513] Duff, xi.

[514] Ch. ix; cf. Mediaeval Stage, ii. 221.

[515] Pollard, Sh. F. 2. ‘Cum priuilegio’ is in the colophons of Rastell’s 1533 prints of Johan Johan, The Pardoner and the Friar, and The Wether, and ‘Cum priuilegio regali’ in those of his undated Gentleness and Nobility and Beauty and Good Properties of Women.