Campaspe was initially acted in the autumn of 1583 at the first
Blackfriars Theatre, before being performed at Court at
Whitehall Palace before Queen
Elizabeth I, most likely on 1 January 1584 (
new style). The play was performed, as the first quarto states on its title page, by the
Children of the Chapel ("her Maiesties Children") and the
Children of Paul's, a combined company also known as Oxford's Boys after its patron the
Earl of Oxford, and the name used in Court records. Lyly was in Oxford's service at the time, and was paid £20 for this and for the subsequent Shrove Tuesday Court performance of his
Sapho and Phao by a warrant issued on 12 March, although he would have to wait until 25 November to actually receive his money.
Campaspe was first published in
quarto in 1584 in three separate editions, printed by Thomas Dawson for the bookseller Thomas Cadman, without any previous entry appearing in the
Stationers' Register. Their publication made Lyly the first English writer to see his plays reprinted in a single year. A fourth quarto edition appeared in 1591, printed by Thomas Orwin for William Brome. (Rather than using the terms Q1, Q2, Q3, & Q4 to describe these four quarto editions, some scholars have preferred Q1a, Q1b, Q1c, and Q2.) None of the four name Lyly on their title page. Q1 titles the play
A moste excellent Comedie of Alexander, Campaspe, and Diogenes. The three subsequent quartos shorten the title to
Campaspe, although in all four the running title (printed along the tops of the text's pages) is given as
A tragicall Comedie of Alexander and Campaspe. Editors and scholars of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries generally referred to the play as
Alexander and Campaspe while their modern counterparts tend to prefer the shorter title. Q1 erroneously states on its title page that it was performed on "twelfe day at night", which Q2 corrects to "newyeares day at night" (a fact confirmed by Court records) and Q3 follows. However Q4, using Q1 as its copy text, reverts to the mistaken day. So too does the next edition of the play, printed with its own individual title page in
Edward Blount's 1632 collection of Lyly's plays
Six Court Comedies, which uses Q4 as its copy text. Blount had entered it into the Stationers' Register on 9 January 1628, naming each play individually under a group entry. This edition not only modernised some of the spelling, but also printed the lyrics of three of the play's four songs for the first time (the last, in Act 5 scene 3, remains missing). Amongst them is the often reprinted
Cupid and my Campaspe, sung by the love-struck Apelles at the end of Act 3, in which he describes Cupid gambling away parts of himself: Some scholars have questioned whether these songs are authentically Lylian in authorship, although according to the play's most recent editor, G. K. Hunter, this "is a hypothesis impossible to disprove; but the evidence that has been adduced to support it is equally without force." ==Sources==