A Collection of Old English Plays, Volume 3 by Various
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but by some unlucky chance my marginal pencilling was imported into the
text. I now implore the reader to expunge the line. On p. 116, l. 12 (in the same volume), for _with_ read _witt_; p. 125 l. 2, for _He_ read _Ile_; p. 128, l. 18, for _pardue_ read _perdue_; p. 232, for _Is_ read _In_; p. 272, l. 3, for _baste_ read _haste_; p. 336, l. 6, the speaker should evidently be not _Do_. (the reading of the MS.) but _Sis_., and _noble Sir Richard_ should be _noble Sir Francis_; p. 422, l. 12, del. comma between _Gaston_ and _Paris_. Some literal errors may, perhaps, still have escaped me, but such words as _anottomye_ for _anatomy_, or _dietie_ for _deity_ must not be classed as misprints. They are recognised though erroneous forms, and instances of their occurrence will be given in the Index to Vol. IV. 5, WILLOW ROAD, HAMPSTEAD, N.W. January 24, 1884. INTRODUCTION TO SIR GYLES GOOSECAPPE. This clever, though somewhat tedious, comedy was published anonymously in 1606. There is no known dramatic writer of that date to whom it could be assigned with any great degree of probability. The comic portion shows clearly the influence of Ben Jonson, and there is much to remind one of Lyly's court-comedies. In the serious scenes the philosophising and moralising, at one time expressed in language of inarticulate |
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