Editing Bloody Banquet, The

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The date of composition remains uncertain, but probably falls within the range 1608-10.
The date of composition remains uncertain, but probably falls within the range 1608-10.


[[File:Bloodiebanquettr00tdac0013.jpg|alt=Title page of 1639 Quarto.|thumb|Title page of the 1639 Quarto. Barton Collection, Boston Public Library (G.3810.11). [https://archive.org/details/bloodiebanquettr00tdac/page/n11/mode/2up Internet Archive]]] In Gary Taylor and John Lavagnino’s companion to the 2007 ''Collected Works of Middleton'' (colloquially known as ''The Oxford Middleton''), a date of 1608–9 is given (2007a: 364). Stylistic evidence is offered showing that versification and verbal parallels in the shares of both authors indicate a date of composition at the end of the first decade of the seventeenth century. As pointed out elsewhere by Taylor, whereas Dekker’s rate of rhymed lines as proportionate to lines of verse follows no clear pattern, Middleton’s rate began clearly dropping after the composition of ''A Mad World, My Masters'' in 1605: the rate in the Middleton scenes of ''The Bloody Banquet'' (21%) places that play within Middleton’s 1605–11 range (2001: 4–5). Their other evidence for dating is also taken from Taylor’s analysis, specifically: references to court drunkenness (2.1.37–41), which would have been particularly topical in light of the Jacobean court’s reputation for drunkenness, particularly after 1606 (2001: 8); references to a dearth in harvests (2.1.43–6; 2.2.2–10), which would be topical in 1608-9 due to the high corn prices of those years leading to rioting in England (2001: 8–9); and an apparent reference to pirates (2.1.70–3), which would have been particularly topical from 1609 onward, following King James I’s ‘Proclamation against Pirats’ of 8 January 1609 (2001: 10). From this convergence of evidence, 1608-9 arises as the most plausible date range for the ''Oxford Middleton'' editors.
[[File:Bloodiebanquettr00tdac0013.jpg|alt=Title page of 1639 Quarto.|thumb|[https://archive.org/details/bloodiebanquettr00tdac/page/n11/mode/2up Title page of 1639 Quarto]. Barton Collection, Boston Public Library  (G.3810.11).]] In Gary Taylor and John Lavagnino’s companion to the 2007 ''Collected Works of Middleton'' (colloquially known as ''The Oxford Middleton''), a date of 1608–9 is given (2007a: 364). Stylistic evidence is offered showing that versification and verbal parallels in the shares of both authors indicate a date of composition at the end of the first decade of the seventeenth century. As pointed out elsewhere by Taylor, whereas Dekker’s rate of rhymed lines as proportionate to lines of verse follows no clear pattern, Middleton’s rate began clearly dropping after the composition of ''A Mad World, My Masters'' in 1605: the rate in the Middleton scenes of ''The Bloody Banquet'' (21%) places that play within Middleton’s 1605–11 range (2001: 4–5). Their other evidence for dating is also taken from Taylor’s analysis, specifically: references to court drunkenness (2.1.37–41), which would have been particularly topical in light of the Jacobean court’s reputation for drunkenness, particularly after 1606 (2001: 8); references to a dearth in harvests (2.1.43–6; 2.2.2–10), which would be topical in 1608-9 due to the high corn prices of those years leading to rioting in England (2001: 8–9); and an apparent reference to pirates (2.1.70–3), which would have been particularly topical from 1609 onward, following King James I’s ‘Proclamation against Pirats’ of 8 January 1609 (2001: 10). From this convergence of evidence, 1608-9 arises as the most plausible date range for the ''Oxford Middleton'' editors.


In his entry for ''The Bloody Banquet'' in ''British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue'' (#1624), Martin Wiggins (in association with Catherine Richardson) pushes this slightly later, to 1610, observing that 1608–9 is ‘inherently less plausible owing to theatre closures in those years’. Wiggins notes that the reference to Lapyrus as the ‘devil in the vault’ (2.2.36) associates him with a description often applied to Guy Fawkes, suggesting that the play must at the very least post-date the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot in November 1605, but he also points out that there were a cluster of such allusions in 1610-11, including, perhaps most relevantly, in Thomas Dekker and Thomas Middleton’s ''The Roaring Girl'' (1611) and Dekker’s ''If This Be Not a Good Play, The Devil Is In It'' (1611).
In his entry for ''The Bloody Banquet'' in ''British Drama, 1533-1642: A Catalogue'' (#1624), Martin Wiggins (in association with Catherine Richardson) pushes this slightly later, to 1610, observing that 1608–9 is ‘inherently less plausible owing to theatre closures in those years’. Wiggins notes that the reference to Lapyrus as the ‘devil in the vault’ (2.2.36) associates him with a description often applied to Guy Fawkes, suggesting that the play must at the very least post-date the foiling of the Gunpowder Plot in November 1605, but he also points out that there were a cluster of such allusions in 1610-11, including, perhaps most relevantly, in Thomas Dekker and Thomas Middleton’s ''The Roaring Girl'' (1611) and Dekker’s ''If This Be Not a Good Play, The Devil Is In It'' (1611).

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