The Witch of Edmonton: "I have observed strange variations in you."
By Thomas Dekker and John Ford
()
About this ebook
Thomas Dekker was a playwright, pamphleteer and poet who, perhaps, deserves greater recognition than he has so far gained. Despite the fact only perhaps twenty of his plays were published, and fewer still survive, he was far more prolific than that. Born around 1572 his peak years were the mid 1590’s to the 1620’s – seven of which he spent in a debtor’s prison. His works span the late Elizabethan and Caroline eras and his numerous collaborations with Ford, Middleton, Webster and Jonson say much about his work. His pamphlets detail much of the life in these times, times of great change, of plague and of course that great capital city London a swirling mass of people, power, intrigue.
Thomas Dekker
Thomas Dekker is a Dutch former professional cyclist whose talent on the bike quickly took him to the top of the sport. He raced for The Netherlands in the 2004 Summer Olympic Games in Athens, won two Dutch National Time Trial Championships, and captured victories in the 2006 Tirreno-Adriatico and the 2007 Tour of Romandie. He rode for the Dutch Rabobank superteam and then Silence-Lotto before a retroactively tested sample returned positive for EPO. In 2009, Dekker was suspended for two years for the drug violation, and it was later confirmed during Operaction Puerto that Dekker was among the clients of Spanish doctor Eufemiano Fuentes. After his suspension, Dekker joined the American Garmin Development Team and rode for Garmin-Barracuda from 2012-2014. Dekker claims to have ridden clean for Jonathan Vaughters and he became a popular rider in the American peloton. He retired after an attempt on the World Hour Record in 2015.
Read more from Thomas Dekker
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The Witch of Edmonton - Thomas Dekker
The Witch of Edmonton by Thomas Dekker
Written in collaboration with John Ford
Thomas Dekker was a playwright, pamphleteer and poet who, perhaps, deserves greater recognition than he has so far gained.
Despite the fact only perhaps twenty of his plays were published, and fewer still survive, he was far more prolific than that. Born around 1572 his peak years were the mid 1590’s to the 1620’s – seven of which he spent in a debtor’s prison. His works span the late Elizabethan and Caroline eras and his numerous collaborations with Ford, Middleton, Webster and Jonson say much about his work.
His pamphlets detail much of the life in these times, times of great change, of plague and of course that great capital city London a swirling mass of people, power, intrigue.
Index of Contents
INTRODUCTION
PROLOGUE
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
SCENE—The town and neighbourhood of Edmonton; in the end of the last act, London
ACT THE FIRST
SCENE I.—The neighbourhood of Edmonton.
SCENE II.—Edmonton. A Room in Carter’s House
ACT THE SECOND
SCENE I.—The Fields near Edmonton
SCENE II.—Carter’s House
ACT THE THIRD
SCENE I.—The Village Green
SCENE II.—The Neighbourhood of Edmonton
SCENE III.—A Field with a Clump of Trees
SCENE IV.—Before Sir Clarington’s House
ACT THE FOURTH
SCENE I. Edmonton. The Street
SCENE II. A Bedroom in Carter’s House
SCENE II.—London. The Neighbourhood of Tyburn
ACT THE FIFTH
SCENE I.—The Witch’s Cottage
SCENE II.—London. The Neighbourhood of Tyburn
EPILOGUE
THOMAS DEKKER – A SHORT BIOGRAPHY
THOMAS DEKKER – A CONCISE BIBLIOGRAPHY
INTRODUCTION
The Witch of Edmonton, which was probably first performed in 1623, was not published until thirty-five years later, in 1658. It was then issued in the usual quarto form, with the title: The Witch of Edmonton: A known True Story. Composed into a Tragi-Comedy by divers well-esteemed Poets, William Rowley, Thomas Dekker, John Ford, &c. Acted by the Prince’s Servants, often at the Cock-Pit in Drury-Lane, once at Court, with singular Applause.
The best modern reprint of the play is that in the Gifford-Dyce edition of Ford, upon which the present version is based.
It is impossible to assign the exact share of the various authors in the play. The business of the Witch, the rustic chorus, and certain other parts mark themselves out as mainly Dekker’s. The conception of Sir Arthur Clarington, and the subsidiary domestic plot is no doubt mainly Ford’s. Rowley’s share is more difficult to ascertain. The intimate collaboration of all three can alone be held accountable for some of the scenes, and indeed in even the passages most characteristic of any one of the authors, the touch of another often shows itself in a chance word or phrase.
The justification for the description of the play as A known true story
is a pamphlet written by Henry Goodcole, and published at London in 1621, giving an account of one Elizabeth Sawyer, late of Islington, who was executed in 1621 for witchcraft.
See Caulfield’s Portraits, Memoirs, and Characters of Remarkable Persons,
1794. No existing copy of the pamphlet is known, but the British Museum possesses copies of two of Goodcole’s other pamphlets on similar subjects.
PROLOGUE
The town of Edmonton hath lent the stage
A Devil[1] and a Witch, both in an age.
To make comparisons it were uncivil
Between so even a pair, a Witch and Devil;
But as the year doth with his plenty bring
As well a latter as a former spring,
So hath this Witch enjoyed the first, and reason
Presumes she may partake the other season:
In acts deserving name, the proverb says,
Once good, and ever;
why not so in plays?
Why not in this? since, gentlemen, we flatter
No expectation; here is mirth and matter.
[1] An allusion to the popular old play of The Merry Devil of Edmonton, written about twenty years previously.
MASTER BIRD.
The whole argument of the play is this distich.
Forced marriage, murder; murder blood requires:
Reproach, revenge; revenge hell’s help desires.
DRAMATIS PERSONÆ
SIR ARTHUR CLARINGTON.
Old Thorney, a Gentleman.
CARTER, a Rich Yeoman.
WARBECK, }
SOMERTON, } Suitors To Carter’s Daughters.
FRANK, Thorney’s Son.
OLD BANKS, a Countryman.
CUDDY BANKS, his Son.
RATCLIFFE, } Countrymen.
HAMLUC, }
Morris-dancers.
SAWGUT, an old Fiddler.
A Dog, a Familiar.
A Spirit.
Countrymen, Justice, Constable, Officers, Serving-men and Maids.
Mother SAWYER, the Witch.
ANN, Ratcliffe’s Wife.
SUSAN, }
KATHERINE, } Carter’s Daughters.
WINNIFRED, Sir Arthur’s Maid.
SCENE—The town and neighbourhood of EDMONTON; in the end of the last act, LONDON.
ACT THE FIRST
SCENE I.—The neighbourhood of Edmonton.
A Room in the House of Sir Arthur Clarington.
Enter FRANK THORNEY and WINNIFRED, who is with child.
FRANK THORNEY
Come, wench; why, here’s a business soon dispatched:
Thy heart I know is now at ease; thou need’st not
Fear what the tattling gossips in their cups
Can speak against thy fame; thy child shall know
Whom to call dad now.
WINNIFRED
You have here discharged
The true part of an honest man; I cannot
Request a fuller satisfaction
Than you have freely granted: yet methinks
’Tis an hard case, being lawful man and wife,
We should not live together.
FRANK THORNEY
Had I failed
In promise of my truth to thee, we must
Have then been ever sundered; now the longest
Of our forbearing either’s company
Is only but to gain a little time
For our continuing thrift; that so hereafter
The heir that shall be born may not have cause
To curse his hour of birth, which made him feel
The misery of beggary and want,—
Two devils that are occasions to enforce
A shameful end. My plots aim but to keep
My father’s love.
WINNIFRED
And that will be as difficult
To be preserved, when he shall understand
How you are married, as it will be now,
Should you confess it to him.
FRANK THORNEY
Fathers are
Won by degrees, not bluntly, as our masters
Or wrongèd friends are; and besides I’ll use
Such dutiful and ready means, that ere
He can have notice of what’s past, th’ inheritance
To which I am born heir shall be assured;
That done, why, let him know it: if he like it not,
Yet he shall have no power in him left
To cross the thriving of it.
WINNIFRED
You who had
The conquest of my maiden-love may easily
Conquer the fears of my distrust. And whither
Must I be hurried?
FRANK THORNEY
Prithee do not use
A word so much unsuitable to the constant
Affections of thy husband: thou shalt live
Near Waltham Abbey with thy uncle Selman;
I have acquainted him with all at large:
He’ll use thee kindly; thou shalt want no pleasures,
Nor any other fit supplies whatever
Thou canst in heart desire.
WINNIFRED
All these are nothing
Without your company.
FRANK THORNEY
Which thou shalt have
Once every month at least.
WINNIFRED
Once every month!
Is this to have an husband?
FRANK THORNEY
Perhaps oftener;
That’s as occasion serves.
WINNIFRED
Ay, ay; in case
No other beauty tempt your eye, whom you
Like better, I may chance to be remembered,
And see you now and then. Faith, I did hope
You’d not have used me so: ’tis but my fortune.
And yet, if not for my sake, have some pity
Upon the child I go with; that’s your own:
And ’less you’ll be a cruel-hearted father,
You cannot but remember that.
Heaven knows how—
FRANK THORNEY
To quit which fear at once,
As by the ceremony late performed
I plighted thee a faith