Notes and Queries, Number 56, November 23, 1850 by Various
page 10 of 60 (16%)
page 10 of 60 (16%)
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different author. I have a copy of the edition of 1598 now before me, in
which the name is filled up, in a cotemporary hand, S[imon], R[obson]. And I find in Lowndes' _Bibliographer's Manual_, that the work in question is entered under the latter name. The compiler adds,--"This piece is by some attributed to Dr. Simon Robson, Dean of Bristol in 1598; by others, most probably erroneously, to Samuel Rowland." An examination of the biography of Dr. Robson, who died in 1617, might tend to elucidate some particulars concerning his claim to the authorship of this and several other works of similar character. Samuel Rowland's earliest publication is supposed to have been _The Betraying of Christ_, &c., printed in 1598. If it can be proved that he has any claim to _The Choise of Change_ (first printed in 1585), we make him an author _thirteen_ years earlier. In the title-page of the latter, the writer, whoever he was, is styled "Gent and Student in the Universitie of Cambridge." This is a fact of some importance towards the elucidation of authorship and has, I believe, escaped the notice of those writers who have touched upon Samuel Rowland's scanty biography. But I can hardly conceive that either of the publications above alluded to came from the same pen as _Humours Ordinarie_, _Martin Mark-all_, _The Four Knaves_, and many others of the same class, which are known to have been the productions of Samuel Rowlands. Respecting Samuel Rowlands it may be regarded as extraordinary that no account has been discovered; and though his pamphlets almost rival in number those of Greene, Taylor, and Prynne, their prefaces--those fruitful sources of information--throw no light upon the life or circumstances of their author. The late Mr. Octavius Gilchrist considered that "Rowlands was an ecclesiastic [?] by profession;" and, inferring his zeal in the pulpit from his labours through the press, adds, "it should seem that he was an |
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