John Waterson also published a noteworthy and problematic entry in the Shakespeare canon:
The Two Noble Kinsmen (
1634), printed by
Thomas Cotes. The title page of the quarto attributes the play to Shakespeare and Fletcher, an attribution that inspired three centuries of controversy before its general acceptance in the modern era. Other first editions of plays published by Waterson include: • Sir
William Davenant's
The Cruel Brother (1630), printed by
Augustine Matthews; • Davenant's
The Just Italian (also 1630), printed by Thomas Harper; • Philip Massinger's
The Renegado (also 1630), printed by Matthews; • Massinger's
The Emperor of the East (1632), printed by Harper; • Fletcher and Massinger's
The Elder Brother (1637), in partnership with
John Benson, printed by Felix Kingston; • Fletcher's
Monsieur Thomas (1639), printed by Harper; • Massinger's
The Unnatural Combat (1639), printed by "E.G." (Waterson maintained a close professional relationship with printer Thomas Harper; they worked together on many projects, including the Camden editions noted above.) Waterson also had a connection with
Ben Jonson; he entered Jonson's play
The Staple of News into the
Stationers' Register on 14 April
1626. For unknown reasons, the play was not published at that time, and Waterson transferred his copyright to
Robert Allot on 7 September
1631. Waterson published works beyond the confines of drama; he issued poetry, with volumes that included: •
Michael Drayton's ''The Muses' Elysium'' (1630), printed by Harper; •
Samuel Daniel's
The Whole Works in Poetry (1635), printed by Thomas Cotes. And Waterson produced the normal range of miscellaneous books typical of stationers in his era, including religious works like
Anthony Stafford's
The Female Glory, or the Life and Death of the Holy Virgin Mary (1635), and popular fiction like
The Tragedy of Alceste and Eliza (1638) — both printed by Harper. ==End==