Publisher
Humphrey Moseley obtained the rights to the play and re-registered it on 9 September 1653 as a work by
William Shakespeare. Moseley's attribution to Shakespeare was repeated by Edward Archer in his 1656 play list [see:
The Old Law], and by
Francis Kirkman in his list of 1661. The play was bound with
Fair Em and
Mucedorus in a book titled "Shakespeare. Vol. I" in the library of
Charles II. As its publishing history indicates, the play was popular with audiences; it is mentioned by
Ben Jonson in the Prologue to his play
The Devil is an Ass. While
Merry Devil was a
King's Men play and Shakespeare may have had a minor role in its creation, it does not have the distinctive marks of Shakespeare's style. Individual 19th-century critics attempted to attribute the play to
Michael Drayton or to
Thomas Heywood; but their attributions have not been judged credible by other scholars. William Amos Abrams proposed
Thomas Dekker as the play's author in his 1942 edition; Dekker scholars Gerald J. Eberle and M. T. Jones-Davies agreed, though Fredson Bowers, the editor of Dekker's
Dramatic Works, was unpersuaded by the evidence offered and did not include it in his edition. ==Synopsis==