CHRISTOPHER MARLOWE (1564-1593)

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23. The Famous " Tragedy " Of " The Rich Ievv " Of Malta. " As It Was Playd " Before The King And " Queene, In His Majesties " Theatre at White-Hall, by her Maje?ties " Servants at the Cock-pit. " Written by Christopher Marlo. " [Printer's ornament] London; " Printed by I. B. for Nicholas Vava?our, and are to be ?old " at his Shop in the Inner-Temple, neere the " Church. 1633.

Marlowe probably wrote the play not earlier than 1588, because the line in the opening speech of Machevill, "And now the Guize is dead," refers to the Duc de Guise, the organizer of the Massacre of Saint Bartholomew, who died in that year. The tragedy was acted many times before it was entered in the Stationers' Register by the two publishers, Nicholas Ling and Thomas Millington, in 1594; but for some reason it was not printed even then. When finally issued in the form shown here, it was under the editorship of Thomas Heywood, the dramatist, who explains his connection with the work in his dedication to Thomas Hammon:

"This Play, compo?ed by ?o worthy an Authour as Mr. Marlo; and the part of the Jew pre?ented by ?o vnimitable an Actor as Mr. Allin, being in this later Age commended to the Stage: As I v?her'd it into the Court, and pre?ented it to the Cock-pit, with the?e Prologues and Epilogues here in?erted, ?o now being newly brought to the pre??e I was loth it ?hould be publi?hed without the ornament of an epistle...."

Quarto.

Collation: A-K2, in fours. Without pagination.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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