The Tragedy of Dido Queene of Carthage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about The Tragedy of Dido Queene of Carthage.

The Tragedy of Dido Queene of Carthage eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 52 pages of information about The Tragedy of Dido Queene of Carthage.

The Tudor Facsimile Texts

Under the Supervision and Editorship of John S. Farmer

The Tragedy of
Dido Queen of Carthage

Written by
Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Nash

1594

Issued for Subscribers by the Editor of

THE TUDOR FACSIMILE TEXTS

MCMXIV

The Tragedy of Dido Queen of Carthage

Written by Christopher Marlowe and Thomas Nash

1594

This play is facsimiled from the Bodley copy.  Other examples (says Sir Sidney Lee, but unrecorded by Greg) are at Bridgewater House and at Chatsworth; the Devonshire Collection of Plays has recently been disposed of to an American collector.

For other and bibliographical details see D.N.B.  I have included in this facsimile the page of manuscript in the Bodley example inasmuch as it contains matter of interest to the student.

The reproduction from the original was made by The Clarendon Press, Oxford.

JOHN S. FARMER.

[Transcriber’s Note:  The following paragraphs have been transcribed from a handwritten page.  Some text is illegible, and this has been marked with asterisks where appropriate.]

The tragedy of Dido is one of the scarcest plays in the English language.  There are but two copies known to be extant; in the possession of D^r Wright and M^r Reed.

M^r Warton speaks in his Hist. of Eng.  Poet (III. p. 435) of an Elegy being prefixed to it on the death of Marlowe; but no such is found in either of those copies.  In answer to my inquiries on this subject he informed me by letter, [crossed-out text] that a copy of this play was in Osborne’s catalogue in the year 1754, that he then saw it in his shop (together with several of M^r Oldys’s books that Osborne had purchased), + that the elegy in question—­“on Marlowe’s untimely death” was inserted immediately after the title page; that it mentioned a play of Marlowe’s entitled The Duke of Guise and four others; but whether particularly by name, he could not recollect.  Unluckily he did not purchase this rare piece, + it is now God knows where.

Bishop Tanner likewise mentions this elegy in so particular a manner that he must have seen it.  “Marlovius (Christopherus), quondam in academia Cantabrigiensi musarum alumnus; postea actor scenicus; deinde poeta dramaticus tragicus, paucis inferior Scripsit plurimas tragedias, sc.  Tamerlane.-Tragedie of Dido Queen of Carthage.  Pr.  Come gentle Ganymed.  Hanc perfecit + edidit Tho.  Nash Lond. 1594. 4^to.—­Petrarius in praefatione ad Secundam partem Herois et Leandri multa in Marlovii commendationem adfert; hoc etiam facit Tho.  Nash in Carmine Elegiaco Tragidiae Didonis praefiso in obitum Christop.  Marlovii, ubi quatuor ejus tragidiarum mentionem facit, nec non et alterius de duce Guisio.” Bib.  Britan. 1740.

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