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SHAKSPERE'S ENGLAND.
VOL. II.
LONDON:
Printed by SPOTTISWOODE & Co.,
New-street- Square.
CHAPTER X.
THE THEATRE.
-
--
The Ancient and Modern Stage. Strolling Players. Tarleton,
the Comedian, a Guest of Elizabeth's. — Actors of the Day. -
High Standing of many. Scenery and Dress.-Private Theatres.
- Actors' Profits. Prices of Plays. No Female Actors.
Playhouses of London.-Troops of Actors.-The Globe and its Con-
temporaries. Puritan Outcries.—The Actors individually known.
The Seven chief Theatres. — Playbills. — Days
Actresses. The Gallant on the Stage. The
-Note Takers. - The Pit. Furniture of the
- Ben Jonson.
of Performance.
Fop and the Critic.
Stage.
Play..
· Prologue. ·
The Play and the Jig. — How to go to the
The Water Poet. Coaches and Waggons. Strolling
Players. Sketch of the Elizabethan Age. — Shakspere's Contem-
poraries. — Men he must have seen. - His Elizabethan Manners.
- Dress, Scenes, and Characters. — Food. — Parallelisms. — Few
Facts of his Life. - A Dozen Dates. - Traditions of him. - His
Learning. His Individuality. Allusions to Acting.
The
Dramatist and Manager. Amateur Acting. — Humiliation of the
Actor. - Self-Accusation, Remorse. Mystery of Sonnets.
Urging Friend to Marriage. Love, Poems, and Repentance. -