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Mother Bombie
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30 September 2014

Mother Bombie is unique among Lyly’s comedies in its urban setting and focus upon middle and lower class concerns.
The play turns on the tissue of misconceptions surrounding the efforts of four fathers to secure socially advantageous marriages for their heirs, and the determination of their young servants to exploit their masters’ misguided aspirations for their own advantage. A theatrical success in its own day, the play is of particular interest to twenty-first century criticism for its focus upon those situated on the margins of the social group, notably Mother Bombie herself, thought by some to be a witch, and the two simpletons whose marital prospects lie at the heart of the action.
This fully annotated, modern-spelling edition of the play, now available in paperback, is re-edited from the earliest witnesses; the quartos of 1594 and 1598, and incorporates the songs first published by Blount in his collected edition of Lyly’s works in 1632
LITERARY CRITICISM / Drama, Plays, playscripts, LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 16th Century, Literary studies: plays and playwrights, Literary studies: c 1400 to c 1600
General editors’ preface
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
THE TEXT
Authorship and date
Sources and contexts
Style and structure
Cunning and folly
Marginalization
Dramaturgy, staging, and the stage history of the play
Critical reception
This edition
Notes
Mother Bombie
Appendix: historical collation.
Index