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Topic: Henry Chettle


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  §6. Henry Chettle’s early life: his Tragedies: "The Tragedy of Hoffman". XIII. Lesser Elizabethan ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
It is natural, after considering Munday’s work and personality, to proceed to the consideration of Henry Chettle’s dramatic activity; but this implies discussing the tragedy of our group of dramatists before we treat of their comedy.
Chettle’s style is to be looked for mainly in the second of the Two Lamentable Tragedies, which represents The Orphan’s Tragedy, otherwise called The Italian Tragedy, of Henslowe’s diary.
Chettle, however, by the time he wrote Hoffman, had improved upon the workmanship of Matilda’s Tragedy, and his coarse but powerful melodrama was appreciated, probably, by a large public.
www.bartleby.com /215/1306.html   (2511 words)

  
 Henry Chettle - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Henry Chettle (1564?-1607?) was an English dramatist and miscellaneous writer of the Elizabethan era.
The son of Robert Chettle, a London dyer, he was apprenticed in 1577 to a stationer, and in 1591 became a partner with William Hoskins and John Danter.
It is thought Chettle may have been co-author of the Q1 of Romeo and Juliet and there is strong evidence that he was a coauthor of Sir Thomas More.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Henry_Chettle   (916 words)

  
 Henry Chettle   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Henry Chettle (1564 ?- 1607 ?) wasan English dramatist andmiscellaneous writer of the Elizabethan era.
The son of Robert Chettle, a London dyer, he was apprenticed in 1577 to a stationer, andin 1591 became a partner with William Hoskins and John Danter.
It is thought Chettle may have been co-author of the Q1 of Romeo andJuliet and there is strong evidence that he was a coauthor of Sir ThomasMore.
www.therfcc.org /henry-chettle-299302.html   (886 words)

  
 Henry Chettle -- Facts, Info, and Encyclopedia article   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Henry Chettle (1564?-1607?) was an (An Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries) English (Someone who writes plays) dramatist and miscellaneous writer of the (Click link for more info and facts about Elizabethan era) Elizabethan era.
Agamemnon, by Henry Chettle and (English dramatist and pamphleteer (1572-1632)) Thomas Dekker, June 1599.
Sebastian, King of Portugal, by Henry Chettle and (English dramatist and pamphleteer (1572-1632)) Thomas Dekker, April 1601.
www.absoluteastronomy.com /encyclopedia/H/He/Henry_Chettle.htm   (1022 words)

  
 [No title]
For instance, Chettle says the Groatsworth was written to "diuers play-makers," which suggests that he hasn't a copy of the letter at hand as he is writing, or is not consulting it very closely if he does, since three is less than most people would take "divers" to mean.
Whether Chettle wrote his apology carelessly quickly or not, though, there are good reasons for believing that the Crow was one of the two who took offense--reasons that, in my view, trump the two reasons against just given.
That Chettle also speaks of Playwright #2's civility, something Jonson, Heywood and others noted about Shakespeare, and of his "facetious grace in writting," which is close to the way Shakespeare's writing style is often thereafter described, is strong secondary evidence that Playwright #2 was the Crow aka William Shakespeare.
www.geocities.com /comprepoetica/chettle.html   (2220 words)

  
 ninemsn Encarta - Search Results - Chettle Henry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Henry (of Portugal) (1512-1580), King of Portugal (1578-1580), son of King Emanuel of Portugal.
Henry was educated for the priesthood and at about...
Henry (unit), derived SI unit of electric inductance, symbol H. It is named after the 19th-century American physicist Joseph Henry.
au.encarta.msn.com /Chettle_Henry.html   (86 words)

  
 Chettle, Henry
Chettle began his career as a printer and associated with such literary men as Robert Greene and Thomas Nashe.
Chettle's Piers Plainnes Seaven Yeres Prentiship (1595) is a picaresque romance.
Francis Meres, in Palladis Tamia (1598), commends him as "one of our best for comedy," and between 1598 and 1603 Chettle is known to have had a hand in 49 plays.
search.eb.com /shakespeare/micro/120/98.html   (117 words)

  
 List of plays - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
The Valiant Welshman, by Michael Drayton and Henry Chettle (apparently a different play from that of the same name by Robert Armin), 1597, printed in 1615.
The Death of Robert Earl of Huntington, by Anthony Munday and Henry Chettle.
The Funeral of Richard Cordelion, by Robert Wilson, Henry Chettle, Anthony Munday, and Michael Drayton.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_plays   (840 words)

  
 HENRY CHETTLE - LoveToKnow Article on HENRY CHETTLE
(1564?16o7?), English dramatist and miscellaneous writer, was the son of Robert Chettle, a London dyer.
He seems to have been generally in debt, judging from n.umerous entries in Henslowes diary of advances for various purposes, on one occasion (17th of January I 599) to pay his expenses in the Marshalsea prison, on another (7th of March 1603) to get his play out of pawn.
Among the plays in which Chettle had a share is catalogued The Danish Tragedy, which was probably either identical with Hoff mann or another version of the same story.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /C/CH/CHETTLE_HENRY.htm   (449 words)

  
 Henry Chettle - Encyclopedia.WorldSearch   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
#The London Florentine, Part I., by Thomas Heywoodand Henry Chettle, December 1602.
The Pleasant Comodie of Patient Grisill von Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker and William Haughton.
The Indian mutiny, its causes and results: A sermon preached in the Wesleyan Chapel, Bridge Street, Bolton, on Wednesday, October 7th, 1857 : being the...
encyclopedia.worldsearch.com /henry_chettle.htm   (994 words)

  
 HENRY PORTER - LoveToKnow Article on HENRY PORTER   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
(ft. 1596-1599), English dramatist, author of The Two Angry Women of A bingdon, may probably be identified with the Henry Porter who matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford, on the i9th of June 1589, and is described as aged sixteen and the son of a gentleman of London.
From 1596 to 1599 he was engaged in writing plays for Henslowe for the admirals men, and his closest associate seems to have been Henry Chettle.
It seems in the highest degree unlikely that he is the Henry Porter who took his degree as Mus.
www.1911encyclopedia.org /P/PO/PORTER_HENRY.htm   (411 words)

  
 Chettle, Henry - Hutchinson encyclopedia article about Chettle, Henry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Of his own plays, written for Philip Henslowe's Rose Theatre, London, The Tragedy of Hoffman was the only one to be printed (1631) and the only one to survive.
He also wrote the poem England's Mourning Garment (1603), an elegy on Queen Elizabeth I. Chettle was born in London and became apprenticed to a stationer.
This information should not be considered complete, up to date, and is not intended to be used in place of a visit, consultation, or advice of a legal, medical, or any other professional.
encyclopedia.farlex.com /Chettle%2c+Henry   (219 words)

  
 New Page 1   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Clearly Chettle knew of this important entail to Cambridge, at least indirectly.
He, Chettle, has taken heat for some of the things these writers have written, but only at his own discretion, i.e., on his own terms.
Beside his own opinion, Chettle reminds readers that he knows of the Privy Council’s opinion of Marlowe, which he alludes to in the phrase "divers of worship have reported his uprightness of dealing." This phrase can only allude to Marlowe and can only allude to the Privy Council’s entail.
www2.localaccess.com /marlowe/allusions.htm   (1479 words)

  
 Robert Wilson (dramatist) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
All of Wilson's works are lost except for the first part of the collaborative Sir John Oldcastle, commissioned as a counterblast to the negative depiction of title character in the original versions of William Shakespeare's plays Henry IV (Part 1) and Henry IV (Part 2).
Objections from descendants of the historical John Oldcastle, a Protestant martyr, appears to have been responsible both for the writing of the corrective Oldcastle play and the alteration of Oldcastle to Sir John Falstaff in later versions of the Henry IV plays.
Piers of Exton, by Michael Drayton, Henry Chettle, Thomas Dekker, and Robert Wilson, March 1598.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Robert_Wilson_(dramatist)   (381 words)

  
 Chettle, Henry --  Encyclopædia Britannica
One of the first great American scientists after Benjamin Franklin, Joseph Henry was responsible for numerous inventions and discovered several major principles of electromagnetism, including the oscillatory nature of electric discharge and self-inductance, an important phenomenon in electronic circuitry.
Fearless and eloquent, Patrick Henry became the spokesman of the Southern colonies during the stirring period that led to the American Revolution.
The Canadian writer Henry Makow gained fame at the age of 11 when he began to write the syndicated advice column “Ask Henry.” The column ran in newspapers in the early 1960s.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9023897   (625 words)

  
 Henry Chettle
Cardinal Wolsey, Part II., by Henry Chettle, May 1602.
This page was last modified 08:30, 17 Oct 2004.
The article about Henry Chettle contains information related to Henry Chettle, List of plays and Reference.
www.arikah.net /encyclopedia/Henry_Chettle   (931 words)

  
 William Shakespeare Biography
Artists of the stature of George Romney, William Blake, Henry Fuseli, Eugene Delacroix, John Constable, J. Turner, and Dante Gabriel Rossetti have drawn inspiration from Shakespeare's dramatis personae; and, thanks to such impresarios as the eighteenth-century dealer John Boydell, the rendering of scenes from Shakespeare has long been a significant subgenre of pictorial art.
Henry VI, part 2, covers a ten-year span from Margaret of Anjou's arrival in England (1445) to the Duke of York's victory over his Lancastrian enemies at St. Albans in the first major battle of the Wars of the Roses (1455).
As the feeble Henry VI withdraws into a private realm of pastoral longing, his brutal Queen and her allies exchange outrages with one Yorkist enemy after another, father killing son and son killing father in a nightmarish world that has degenerated into a spectacle of unmitigated cruelty.
people.brandeis.edu /~teuber/shakespearebio.html   (12273 words)

  
 [CHETTLE, Henry], The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Revenge for a Father, as it hath bin divers Times acted with great ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
[CHETTLE, Henry], The Tragedy of Hoffman or A Revenge for a Father, as it hath bin divers Times acted with great Applause, at the Phenix in Druery-Lane.
Henslowe’s Diary at Dulwich College records a payment of £1 in July 1602 to Henry Chettle ‘in earneste of A tragedye called A Danyshe tragedy’ on behalf of the Admiral’s Men, for whom Chettle had signed a bond to write exclusively in March.
The author, Henry Chettle, was a remarkably industrious playwright, poet, and pamphleteer, the ‘editor’ in 1592 of Greenes Groatsworth of Wit with its earliest of all slurs on Shakespeare, and the author as well of Kind-harts Dreame (1593), an apology for that affront.
www.polybiblio.com /quaritch/E985.html   (345 words)

  
 CHETTLE, HENRY (1564?—16o7?) - Online Information article about CHETTLE, HENRY (1564?—16o7?)
CHETTLE, HENRY (1564?—16o7?) - Online Information article about CHETTLE, HENRY (1564?—16o7?)
Among the plays in which Chettle had a share is catalogued The Danish Tragedy, which was probably either identical with See also:
November 1599 Chettle receives ten shillings for mending the first See also:
encyclopedia.jrank.org /CHA_CHR/CHETTLE_HENRY_156416o7_.html   (569 words)

  
 Queensway tube station bei eLexi - das Onlinelexikon   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Sir Henry Sidney (1529 - May 5, 1586), lord deputy of Ireland, was the eldest son of Sir William Sidney, a prominent politician and courtier in the reigns of Henry VIII and Edward VI, from both of
Henry Frenay (1905-1988) was a French military officer and French resistance member.
Sir Henry Herbert (1595-1673) was Master of the Revels to both King Charles I and King Charles II of England.
www.elexi.de /en/q/qu/queensway_tube_station.html   (326 words)

  
 Henry Chettle
Henry Christman - Tin Horns and Calico - 1112826513
Henry Clarence Pitz - Howard Pyle--Writer, Illustrator, Founder of the Brandywine School - 0516516655
This artikel Henry_Chettle is licensed under the GNU free Documentation License.
www.bookreportforfree.com /373664_henry-chettle_0866981675greenesgroatsworthofwitboughtwithamillionofrepentance1592whatisabookreport.html   (1093 words)

  
 Groatsworth of Wit -- the First Glimpse of Shakespeare   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Henry Chettle was a printer, and he was charged with the responsibility of getting Greene's final work out, this same Groatsworth.
Whether Chettle or Greene-- we have no way of being certain who was the author of the passage in question-- Chettle makes more sense to me, but let's just keep our minds open.
Perhaps for Chettle to name him directly, or even indirectly point at him (hence the apology ostensibly to the first three) might have added yet more injury to the insult.
users.erols.com /volker/Shakes/Groats.htm   (2584 words)

  
 Shakespeare Fellowship Discussion Boards: Shakespeare's language, but Nashe's too   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
He entered GGW in the SR with the proviso that it was “at the peril of Henry Chettle”.
Given Danter’s implication in 3 of the 5 above-mentioned publications, it seems logical to assume that Chettle was acting and risked the expected peril on behalf of his master John Danter.
Hence, the entry “at the peril of Henry Chettle.” The papers are also used for a second publication, * The Repentance *, the publication of which is entrusted to William Wright’s former apprentice Cuthbert Burby.
www.shakespearefellowship.org /ubbthreads/showthreaded.php/Cat/0/Number/20363/page/vc/1   (1206 words)

  
 The attack retracted   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
A Groats-worth of Witte was seen through the press by a friend of Greene's, Henry Chettle; evidently the pamphlet caused a stir, so much so that a few months later Chettle published a further work (Kind-Harts Dreame, 1592) in which he included a reference to the controversy Greene stirred.
He begins by describing the circumstances, and an apparent attack on him (since Greene was dead); he continues by defending his record, and ends with an apology.
If the last meaning is the one he intended, it is the first mention of a quality of Shakespeare as writer which has not always been seen as admirable, the apparent ease and rapidity with which he wrote.
ise.uvic.ca /Library/SLTnoframes/life/chettle.html   (264 words)

  
 Poet: Henry Constable - All poems of Henry Constable   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Poet: Henry Constable - All poems of Henry Constable
Henry Constable (1562-1613), British poet, and Henry Chettle c.1560-c.1607, British poet.
Diaphenia (attributed to Constable and to Chettle) (l.
www.poemhunter.com /henry-constable/poet-6952   (254 words)

  
 PORTER, HENRY (ft. 1596-1599) - Encyclopedia Britannica - PORTER, HENRY (ft. 1596-1599) - JCSM's Study Center
PORTER, HENRY (ft. 1596-1599), English dramatist, author of The Two Angry Women of Abingdon, may probably be identified with the Henry
The entries in Henslowe's Diary indicate that he wrote a play called Love Prevented (1598), Hot Anger soon Cold, with Chettle and Ben Jonson (1598), the second part of The Two Angry Women of Abingdon (1598), The Four Merry Women of Abingdon (1599), and The Spencers (1599), with Chettle.
None of these are extant, unless, as has been suggested, Love Prevented is another name for The Pleasant History of the two angry women of Abingdon.
www.jcsm.org /StudyCenter/Encyclopedia_Britannica/POL_PRE/PORTER_HENRY_ft_1596_1599_.html   (683 words)

  
 Munday's: The Downfall and The Death: Introduction   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Both the diary note and internal evidence indicate that this was to be a single work -- line 2229 predicts "Robins Tragedie" at the end of the current play.
But Munday was an artist as well as a political author, and he made the elegant decision to set the play itself at the court of Henry VIII.
By Anthony Munday in collaboration with Henry Chettle.
www.lib.rochester.edu /camelot/teams/dowdeint.htm   (1762 words)

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