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The Humorous Magistrate (Osborne)
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One of two volumes of an early seventeenth century play, showing two distinct versions which both have much to commend them. The only editions of the play in print, it was very popular in the early...
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30 November 2011

The Humorous Magistrate is a seventeenth-century satiric comedy extant in two highly distinctive manuscripts. The earliest and clearly working draft of the play is bound with three other plays (including The Emperor’s Favourite, published by the Malone Society in 2010) in a volume in the library of the Newdigate family of Arbury Hall, Nuneaton, Warwickshire. This, the second version, showing yet another stage of revision not found in the Arbury manuscript and orientated towards performance, was purchased by the University of Calgary from the English antiquarian Edgar Osborne in 1972. The relationship between the manuscripts was discovered in 2005. The anonymous play has been attributed to John Newdigate III (1600-1642). Like The Emperor’s Favourite, it takes aim at the court; its particular object of satire is governmental strategies under the Personal Rule of Charles I. The play appears in print for the first time in these separate editions. The volumes are illustrated with several plates, some provided for comparative purposes.
Price: £50.00
Pages: 57
Publisher: The Malone Society
Imprint: The Malone Society
Publication Date:
30 November 2011
ISBN: 9780719087011
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
LITERARY COLLECTIONS / European / English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Literary studies: general, LITERARY CRITICISM / Drama, Anthologies: general, Literary studies: plays and playwrights
‘Offers a rare opportunity for comparative work...the chance to look at the play in two distinct forms adds many more questions to our understanding of play manuscripts, provincial literary and dramatic culture, and play transmission on the eve of the closing of the theatres.’
Emma Smith, The TLS, 19 April 2013
Jacqueline Jenkins is Professor of English at the University of Calgary|Mary Polito is Associate Professor of English and Associate Dean of Arts at the University of Calgary
Introduction
The play