The place of publication is London unless otherwise indicated. I. TEXTS 1607, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois: A Tragedie: As it hath been often presented at Paules. London, Printed for William Aspley, [B. M. C. 34. c. 12.] 1608, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois: [&c. A reissue of the 1607 edition, with the date altered. B. M. 644. d. 41.] 1613, 4o. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois. A Tragedie. As it hath beene often presented at the private Play-house in the White-Fryers. Written by George Chapman, Gentleman. London. Printed by T. S. and are to be solde by Iohn Helme, at his Shop in S. Dunstones Church-yard, in Fleetstreet. [B. M. C. 34. c. 16.] 1641, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois: A Tragedie: As it hath been often Acted with great Applause. Being much corrected and amended by the Author before his death. London. Printed by A. N. for Robert Lunne. [B. M. 644. d. 42.] 1646, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois: [A ... London, as in 1641 edition.] Printed by T. W. for Robert Lunne and are to be sold at his house next doore to the signe of the Crane on Lambeth Hill at the end of old Fishstreet. [B. M. 644. d. 43. A reissue of the 1641 edition with the imprint altered.] 1657, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois: A Tragedie: As it hath been often Acted with great applause. Being much corrected and amended by the Author, George Chapman, Gent. Before his death. London, Printed, for Joshua Kirton, at his Shop in St. Pauls Church-yard, at the sign of the Kings-Arms. [B. M. 644. d. 44. Another reissue of the 1641 edition, with a new title-page.] [Baker in his Biographia Dramatica (1812) ii, 73, mentions an edition of Bussy D'Ambois in 1616, but no copy of such an 1691, 4o. Bussy D'Ambois or the Husbands Revenge. A Tragedy. As it is Acted at the Theatre Royal. Newly Revised by Mr. D'Urfey [quotation from the Satires of Horace]. London. Printed for R. Bently in Covent Garden, Jo. Hindmarsh over against the Royal Exchange, and Abel Roper at the Mitre near Temple Bar. 1814, 8o. Old English Plays; being a selection from the early dramatic writers. [Volume iii contains Bussy D'Ambois, together with Monsieur D'Olive, and Dekker's The Wonder of a Kingdom and Old Fortunatus. A short life of Chapman is prefixed to Bussy D'Ambois. The text is that of the edition of 1641, in modernised spelling. The notes contain some of the variants in the Q of 1607, and explanations of many difficult phrases. The editor, though his name does not appear, was C. W. Dilke, afterwards editor of the AthenÆum, and grandfather of the present Sir C. W. Dilke.] 1873, 8o. The Comedies and Tragedies of George Chapman. Now first collected, with illustrative notes and a memoir of the author. In three volumes. London. John Pearson York Street Covent Garden. [Vol. ii contains Bussy D'Ambois and The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois, together with Byron's Conspiracie and Tragedie and May-Day. The text of Bussy D'Ambois is, where differences of reading occur, that of the edition of 1641, the variants of 1607 being given (with some inaccuracies) at the foot of the page. Otherwise the spelling of 1607 is followed, and the title-page of the 1607 Quarto is faultily reproduced. The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois is reprinted from the 1613 Quarto, in the original spelling, and with a faulty reproduction of the title-page. The explanatory notes to both plays are very slight, but there is a valuable introductory memoir to vol. i, giving extracts from previous criticisms of Chapman.] 1874-5, 8o. The Works of George Chapman: edited with notes, by Richard Herne Shepherd. [Vol. i, Plays, vol. ii, Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, vol. iii, Poems and Minor Translations, Chatto and Windus. An edition in modernised spelling, and with merely 1895, 8o. George Chapman edited, with an Introduction and Notes, by William Lyon Phelps, M.A. Ph.D. London: T. Fisher Unwin. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. [This volume of the Mermaid Series contains Bussy D'Ambois and The Revenge, together with Byron's Conspiracie and Tragedie and All Fools. The text is reprinted from the edition of 1873, but with the spelling modernised. There is an introductory memoir containing an "appreciation" of Chapman as a dramatist, and brief explanatory notes are added at the foot of the text.] II. WORKS AND ARTICLES USEFUL FOR STUDY OF THE PLAYS 1681. Dedication of the Spanish Friar, J. Dryden. Reprinted in W. P. Ker's Essays of John Dryden, vol. i, pp. 244-50, Oxford, 1900. 1691. The Lives and Characters of the English Dramatick Poets, G. Langbaine. Oxford. 1691. AthenÆ Oxonienses, Anthony À Wood: vol. ii, pp. 575-81 (edition continued by Ph. Bliss, 1815). Short life of Chapman. 1808. Specimens of English Dramatic Poets, Charles Lamb. Lamb quotes the following passages from Bussy D'Ambois: ii, 1, 33-135; i, 1, 5-17; i, 1, 20-23; i, 1, 134-9; i, 2, 10-33. Further extracts, together with several from The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois, were added in 1827. 1818. Lectures on the Dramatic Literature of the Age of Elizabeth. W. Hazlitt. Lecture iii, On Marston, Chapman, Decker, and Webster. 1821. The Retrospective Review, vol. iv: Article on Chapman's Plays. This Article deals with the Tragedies and gives long extracts from Bussy D'Ambois and the two "Byron" plays. It concludes: "The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois we regret to say 1841. The Edinburgh Review, April: Article on Beaumont and Fletcher and their Contemporaries. 1865. Chapman in seinem VerhÄltniss zu Shakespeare, F. Bodenstedt. Shakspere Jahrbuch, i, Berlin. 1874. The Cornhill Magazine, July: article on Chapman's Dramatic Works. 1875. George Chapman: A critical essay, A. C. Swinburne. A reprint of the Introductory Essay to vol. ii of the Edition of Chapman's works edited by R. H. Shepherd. Chatto & Windus. 1887. The Dictionary of National Biography, vol. x, Article on George Chapman by A. H. Bullen. 1891. A Biographical Chronicle of the English Drama, F. G. Fleay, vol. i, pp. 50-66. Reeves and Turner. 1899. A History of English Dramatic Literature to the death of Queen Anne, A. W. Ward. New and Revised Edition, vol. ii, chap. vi, 408-450. Macmillan. 1892. Der Blankvers in den Dramen George Chapmans, Emil Elste. Halle. 1897. Quellen-studien zu den Dramen George Chapman's, Philip Massinger's und John Ford's, Emil Koeppel. An account of this important monograph, which is the 82d volume of the Strassburg Quellen und Forschungen is given in the Introduction, p. xxxi. 1900. George Chapman und das Italienische Drama, A. L. Stiefel. Shakspere Jahrbuch, xxxv. Deals chiefly with the relation between Chapman's May-Day and A. Piccolomini's Alessandro. 1901. Letters and Documents by George Chapman, Ben Jonson, etc., Bertram Dobell, printed in The AthenÆum, Nos. 3830-3833. These "letters and documents" form part of a 1903. The Source of Chapman's "The Conspiracie and Tragedie of Charles, Duke of Byron" and "The Revenge of Bussy D'Ambois," F. S. Boas, in The AthenÆum, No. 3924, Jan. 10th. 1903. Shakespeare and the Rival Poet, Arthur Acheson. John Lane. An attempt to identify Chapman with "the rival poet" alluded to in Shakespeare's Sonnets. MS. Chorus Vatum, Joseph Hunter, British Museum Addit. MSS. 24488, vol. v, pp. 61-66. Article on George Chapman. III. HISTORICAL AND BIOGRAPHICAL WORKS RELATING TO BUSSY D'AMBOIS 1604-20. HistoriÆ sui temporis, J. A. De Thou. The earliest editions, published in 1604, do not mention Bussy. That of 1609, which carries on the narrative to the year 1584, only mentions (lib. lii, p. 132) his proceedings during the Massacre of St. Bartholomew. It is the edition of 1620, published at Geneva, and embracing events till 1607 that includes (lib. lxviii, p. 330 ff.) the narrative of Bussy's murder, in printed Appendix A, and (lib. cxiii, p. 558) of RenÉe D'Ambois's meditated revenge (cf. Introduction, p. xxxvi). The most convenient edition of De Thou's History is that published by S. Buckley in 1733. 1615. Les Histoires Tragiques de Nostre Temps, FranÇois de Rosset. The story of Bussy's love for the Countess of Montsoreau, and his murder forms the subject of the 17th Histoire, De la mort pitoyable du valeureux Lysis, the most important parts of which are printed in Appendix A. 1621. Journal de Henri III, P. de L'Estoile. Paris. 1628. Memoires et lettres, Marguerite de Valois. Paris. The edition published by F. Guessard for La Societe de l'Histoire de France (1842) is the most convenient. 1666. Discours sur les couronnels de l'infanterie de France, Pierre de Bourdeille, Seigneur de BrantÔme. Leyden. 1722. Discours sur les Duels, Pierre de Bourdeille, etc. Leyden. 1877. Le Maine, l'Anjou et Bussy D'Amboise, Arthur Bertrand. Le Mans. 1885. Louis de Clermont, Sieur de Bussy D'Amboise, Gouverneur D'Anjou, AndrÉ Joubert. Angers and Paris. A full and interesting study of Bussy's career based upon first-hand materials. 1888. Bussy D'Amboise, Leon Marlet. Paris. A sketchy memoir. IV. HISTORICAL WORKS RELATING TO EPISODES IN THE REVENGE OF BUSSY D'AMBOIS 1597. Inventaire GÉnÉral de l'Histoire de France, Jean de Serres. A later edition in 1603 continues the narrative to the peace of Vervins in 1598. Paris. 1605. Histoire de France durant sept annÉes de paix du regne de Henry IV, Pierre Matthieu. Paris. 1605. Chronologie Septenaire de l'Histoire de la Paix entre les Roys de France et d'Espagne, P. V. Cayet. Paris. 1607. A General Inventorie of the History of France, Edward Grimeston. From the beginning of that monarchie unto the treatie of Vervins, in the yeare 1598. Written by Jhon de Serres, And continued unto these times, out of the best Authors which have written of that subject. Translated out of French into English. [A second edition, in 1611, continues the narrative till 1610.] Upon this volume see Introduction, pp. xxxii-xxxv. |