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The little thief
The little thief












the little thief

Andrew Crooke issued a second quarto edition in 1661. The Night Walker was published in quarto in 1640, printed by Thomas Cotes for the booksellers Andrew Crooke and William Cooke the title page assigns it to Fletcher alone, and does the dedication. The play was revived early in the Restoration era Samuel Pepys saw it on 2 April 1661. Shirley's revision was acted by Queen Henrietta's Men at the Cockpit Theatre in 1634. Both plays also reveal the influence of Ben Jonson's Epicene ( 1609). The bell was new in 1611, and The Woman's Prize dates from that year. Fletcher alludes to the sound of "Tom o' Lincoln," the great bell of Lincoln's Cathedral, as being like a scolding woman, as he does in his The Woman's Prize. įletcher's original, which might have been titled The Little Thief, perhaps dates to 1611.

the little thief

Cyrus Hoy, in his study of authorship problems in the canon of Fletcher and his collaborators, argues for this breakdown in the play:įletcher – Act I, scenes 7 and 8 Act II, scene 1 Fletcher and Shirley – Act I, scenes 1–6 Act II, scenes 2–4 Acts III, IV, and V. The most blatant example occurs in the final scene, when the Lady calls out "Home!.Home, child!" – though the scene takes place in her own house. Inconsistencies in the text also reveal the revision.

the little thief

Shirley even gave an inadvertent guide to the extent of his revision: he changed the name of Fletcher's protagonist from Wildgoose to Wildbrain – but neglected to make the change consistently in the portions of the play he didn't revise. In his records, Herbert specifically describes it as "a play of Fletcher's, corrected by Shirley." The revision is readily datable, since Shirley includes a reference to William Prynne's diatribe against the theatre, Histriomastix, which was published in 1632. The play enters the historical record on, when it was licensed for performance by Sir Henry Herbert, the Master of the Revels. The Night Walker, or The Little Thief is an early seventeenth-century stage play, a comedy written by John Fletcher and later revised by his younger contemporary James Shirley. For the 1964 movie starring Barbara Stanwyck, see The Night Walker (film).














The little thief