The Yorkshire Tragedy. 1604 (attributed to Shakespeare); Sir John Oldcastle, 1600, (? by Munday and Drayton); The Widow of Watling Street, [The Puritan, or The Widow, etc.], 1607 (? by Wentworth Smith). See The Round Table, vol. I. p. 353, et seq., for Schlegel and Hazlitt on these.

Green’s Tu Quoque, by George Cook. Greene’s ‘Tu Quoque,’ 1614, by Joseph Cooke (fl. c. 1600). Greene, the comedian, after whom the play is called, died 1612.

[290]. Suckling’s melancholy hat. Cf. p. 270 ante.

Microcosmus, by Thomas Nabbes. 1637. Thomas Nabbes flourished in the time of Charles I.

[291]. What do I see? Act IV.

[292]. Antony Brewer’s Lingua. 1607. This play is now said to be by John Tomkins, Scholar of Trinity, Cambridge (1594–8).

Mr. Lamb has quoted two passages. Specimens, vol. I. pp. 99–100.

[292]. Why, good father. Act II. 4.

[293]. Thou, boy. Act II. 1.

The Merry Devil of Edmonton. 1608. The author is unknown.