Wilmot published, in 1591,
The Tragedie of Tancred and Gismund, with a plot deriving from
Boccaccio's
Decameron. It is dedicated by to "Lady Marie Peter and the Lady Annie Graie", the latter being the wife of Henry Grey, esq., of Pirgo. After the dedication comes a letter to the author from
William Webbe; before the play there are complimentary
sonnets to the Queen's
maids of honour. The play was acted, as
Gismund of Salern, before
Elizabeth I in 1568. In Wilmot's version the initials of five co-authors are given at the end of the five acts as follows: Rod. Staf.; Hen. No. (
Henry Noel?); G. Al.; Ch. Hat. (
Christopher Hatton); and R. W. (Robert Wilmot). The story is in
William Painter's
Palace of Pleasure, tale 39, and originally the play was in decasyllabic rhyming
quatrains. Wilmot in 1591 made it into
blank verse. It has
dumb shows to begin and
choruses to terminate the acts. The 1591 edition was reprinted in
James Dodsley's
Collection, vol. ii., in 1780 (4th edit. by Hazlitt, 1874, vol. vii.). Another work by Wilmot was
Syrophenisia, or the Canaanitish Woman (1598), a sermon. ==Notes==