[*128.] Gildersleeve, V.C. Government Regulation of the Elizabethan Drama. New York, 1908.
Globe. See Nos. [38], [49], [51], [72], [97], [117], [119], [125], [150], [152], [165], [166], [167], [171], [176], [191], [205], [206], [207], [208], [211], [212], [213], [223], [233], [236], [237], [240], [241], [251], [257], [266], [292], [297], [299], [300], [301].
[129.] Godfrey, W.H. An Elizabethan Playhouse. (The Architectural Review, London, April, 1908; reprinted in No. [61]. See also the Architect and Builder's Journal, London, August 16, 1911, and The Architectural Review, London, January, 1912, for descriptions of Mr. Godfrey's model of the Fortune. This model is now in the Dramatic Museum at Columbia University, and a duplicate is in the Museum of European Culture at the University of Illinois. See also Nos. [8], [38], [61], [116], [211].)
[130.] Goodwin, A.T. Court Revels in the Reign of Henry VII. (The Shakespeare Society's Papers, i, 47.)
[131.] Grabo, C.H. Theatres of Elizabeth's London. (Chautauquan, November, 1906.)
[*132.] Graves, T.S. The Court and the London Theatres During the Reign of Elizabeth. Menasha, Wis., 1913.
[*133.] —— A Note on the Swan Theatre. (Modern Philology, ix, 431. See No. [135].)
[134.] —— The Shape of the First London Theatre. (The South Atlantic Quarterly, July, 1914.)
[135.] —— Tricks of Elizabethan Showmen. (Ibid., April, 1915. Deals with The Swan. See No. [133].)
[*136.] Greenstreet, J. The Blackfriars Playhouse: Its Antecedents. (The Athenæum, July 17, 1886, p. 91, January 7, 1888, p. 25.)