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Title: The Interlude of Wealth and Health 
Author: Anonymous 
Editor: Percy Simpson 
Release Date: December 9, 2005 [EBook #17270] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
0. START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE 
INTERLUDE OF WEALTH AND HEALTH *** 
Produced by Jason Isbell and the Online Distributed
Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net
 (This file was
produced from images 
generously made available by The
Internet Archive/Canadian 
Libraries) 
[Transcriber's Notes: 
This early English text was printed in a black-letter font. Some of the 
letters used are not found on a typewriter. In the e-text those letters that 
have no modern equivalent are transcribed with their meaning. For 
example, there is a letter that looks like a "w" with a "t" over it. This 
means with. You will find this in the text as [with]. Others you will find 
are [per], [the], [that], and [thou]. You will also find the suffix [us].
All typos were kept as close as possible to the original. This e-text is 
based on the 1907 edition which included a long list of these typos and 
some of their possible meanings along with the editor's note. This list 
had many letters typeset upside down. For this e-text they were righted. 
Long s has been changed to standard short s. 
In the plain text version, letters with a macron over them are denoted 
by placing them in brackets with an = beside them, such as [=e] for an e 
with a macron over it. For smoother reading, a and o are shown with 
tilde. 
Speaker names are surrounded by + like +Health+. 
For those that wish to consult the original, black and white pngs have 
been included in the archive.] 
PRINTED FOR THE MALONE SOCIETY BY 
CHARLES WHITTINGHAM & CO. 
AT THE CHISWICK PRESS 
THE INTERLUDE OF WEALTH AND HEALTH 
THE MALONE SOCIETY 
REPRINTS 
1907 
This reprint of Wealth and Health has been prepared by the General 
Editor and checked by Percy Simpson. 
March 1907. W.W. Greg. 
Early in the craft year which began on 19 July 1557, and was the first 
of the chartered existence of the Stationers' Company, John Waley, or 
Wally, entered what was no doubt the present play on the Register
along with several other works. The entry runs as follows: 
To master John wally these bokes Called Welth and helthe/the treatise 
of the ffrere and the boye / stans puer ad mensam another of youghte 
charyte and humylyte an a b c for cheldren in englesshe with syllabes 
also a boke called an hundreth mery tayles ij^s [Arber's Transcript, I. 
75.] 
That Waley printed an edition is therefore to be presumed, but it does 
not necessarily follow that the extant copy, which though perfect bears 
neither date nor printer's name, ever belonged to it. Indeed, a 
comparison with a number of works to which he did affix his name 
suggests grave doubts on the subject. Though not a high-class printer, 
there seems no reason to ascribe to him a piece of work which for 
badness alike of composition and press-work appears to be unique 
among the dramatic productions of the sixteenth century. 
'Wealth and health' appears among the titles in the list of plays 
appended to the edition of Goffe's Careless Shepherdess, printed for 
Rogers and Ley in 1656. The entry was repeated with the designation 
'C[omedy].' in Archer's list of the same year, and, without the addition, 
in those of Kirkman in 1661 and 1671. In 1691 Langbaine wrote 
'Wealth and Health, a Play of which I can give no Account.' Gildon has 
no further information to offer, nor have any of his immediate 
followers. Chetwood, in 1752, classes it among 'Plays Wrote by 
Anonymous Authors in the 16th [by which he means the seventeenth] 
Century,' calls it 'an Interlude' and dates it 1602. This invention was 
only copied in those lists which depended directly on Chetwood's, such 
as the Playhouse Pocket-Companion_ of 1779. Meanwhile, in his 
Companion to the Play-House_ of 1764, D.E. Baker, relying upon 
Coxeter's notes, gave an essentially accurate description of the piece, 
except that he asserted it to be 'full of Sport and mery Pastyme,' and 
described it as an octavo. This entry has been copied by subsequent 
bibliographers, none of whom have seen the original. 
The play was among those discovered in Ireland in the spring of 1906 
and sold at Sotheby's on 30 June, when it was purchased for the British 
Museum at the price of one    
    
		
	
	
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