Sir you
Must no more call it York-place, that is past;
For since the Cardinal fell, that title's lost:
'Tis now the King's, and called Whitehall.
[661] Book vi, page 6.
[662] Winwood State Papers (1725), ii, 41.
[663] See Cunningham, Extracts from the Accounts of the Revels, pp. xiii-xiv.
[664] John Nichols, The Progresses of James, ii, 466.
[665] See The Dramatic Works of Thomas Heywood (1874), vi, 339.
[666] Whether he merely made over the old Cockpit which Henry VIII had constructed "out of certain old tenements," or erected an entirely new building, I have not been able to ascertain. Heywood's Speech indicates a "new" and "lasting" structure.
[667] Vertue conservatively dates the survey "about 1680"; but the names of the occupants of the various parts of the palace show that it was drawn before 1670, and nearer 1660 than 1680.
[668] Reprinted here by the kind permission of Mr. Bell and the editors of The Architectural Record.
[669] Lord Chamberlain's Office-Book, C.C. Stopes, "Shakespeare's Fellows and Followers," Shakespeare Jahrbuch, xlvi, 96.