[202] History of English Dramatic Poetry (1879), iii, 131.
[203] Dasent, Acts of the Privy Council, xiv, 99.
[204] Greg, Henslowe's Diary, ii, 50, 73.
[205] Greg, Henslowe Papers, p. 42.
[206] Ibid., pp. 43-44.
[207] There is no evidence that Henslowe owned the house at Newington; he might very well have rented it for this particular occasion.
[208] Wallace, The First London Theatre, p. 2.
[209] Page 1004.
[210] W. Rendle, in The Antiquarian Magazine and Bibliographer, viii, 60.
[211] For the earlier history of the Rose estate see Rendle, The Bankside, p. xv, and Greg, Henslowe's Diary, ii, 43. "The plan of the Rose estate in the vestry of St. Mildred's Church in London marks the estate exactly, but not the precise site of the Rose Playhouse. The estate consisted of three rods, and was east of Rose Alley." (Rendle, The Bankside, p. xxx.)