Volume I Part 5 (1/2)
A Farewell to the world.
A feigned Fancy of the Spider and the Gaul.
A doleful Discourse of a Lady and a Knight.
The Road into Scotland, by Sir William Drury.
Sir Simon Burley's Tragedy.
A lamentable Description of the Wars in Flanders in prose, and dedicated to Walsingham secretary of state.
A light Bundle of lively Discourses, called Churchyard's Charge 1580, dedicated to his n.o.ble patron the Earl of Surry.
A Spark of Friends.h.i.+p, a treatise on that writer, address'd to Sir Walter Raleigh.
A Description and Discourse on the use of paper, in which he praises a paper-mill built near Darthsend, by a German called Spillman.
The Honour of the Law 1596.
Jane Sh.o.r.e, mistress to King Edward IV.
A Tragical Discourse of the unhappy Man's Life.
A Discourse of Virtue.
Churchyard's Dream.
A Tale of a Fryar and a Shoemaker's Wife,
The Siege of Edinburgh Castle.
Queen Elizabeth's reception into Bristol.
These twelve several pieces he bound together, calling them Churchyard's Chips, which he dedicated to Sir Christopher Hatton. He wrote beside,
The Tragedy of Thomas Moubray Duke of Norfolk.
Among the rest by fortune overthrowne, I am not least, that most may waile her fate: My fame and brute, abroad the world is blowne, Who can forget a thing thus done so late?
My great mischance, my fall, and heavy state, Is such a marke whereat each tongue doth shoot That my good name, is pluckt up by the root,
[Footnote 1: Winst. 61.]
JOHN HEYWOOD
One of the first who wrote English plays, was a noted jester, of some reputation in poetry in his time. Wood says, that notwithstanding he was stiled Civis Londinensis, yet he laid a foundation of learning at Oxford, but the severity of an academical life not suitng with his airy genius, he retired to his native place, and had the honour to have a great intimacy with Sir Thomas More. It is said, that he had admirable skill both in instrumental and vocal music, but it is not certain whether he left any compositions of that sort behind him. He found means to become a favourite with King Henry VIII on account of the quickness of his conceits, and was well rewarded by that Monarch.[1] After the accession of Queen Mary to the throne, he was equally valued by her, and was admitted into the most intimate conversation with her, in diverting her by his merry stories, which he did, even when she lay languis.h.i.+ng on her death-bed. After the decease of that princess, he being a bigotted Roman Catholic, and finding the protestant interest was like to prevail under the patronage of the renowned Queen Elizabeth, he sacrificed the enjoyment of living in his own country, to that of his religion: For he entered into a voluntary exile, and settled at Mechlin in Brabant.
The Play called the Four P's being a new and and merry interlude of a Palmer, Pardoner, Poticary, and Pedler--printed in an old English character in quarto, has in the t.i.tle page the pictures of four men in old-fas.h.i.+oned habits, wrought off, from a wooden cut. He has likewise writ the following interludes.
Between John the Husband and Tib the Wife.
Between the Pardoner and the Fryer, the Curate and neighbouring Pratt.