The triple authorship of
The Travels is not in doubt; in some versions of the work the three dramatists are credited by name on the title page, and all three signed the prefatory epistle to the Shirleys. In addition, it would likely have taken more than one or two writers to produce an actable play in a short period of time. Scholars have made attempts to differentiate the respective shares of the three authors. Since George Wilkins is thought by some to have worked with
Shakespeare on
Pericles, Prince of Tyre around 1607, the question of his participation in this collaboration has drawn the attention of some Shakespeare scholars. Wilkins probably wrote about three-fifths of
The Travels. (H. Dugdale Sykes, employing a 13-scene scheme for the play, assigned the Prologue to Day, the Epilogue to Day and Wilkins; he allotted scenes 2, 4, 5, 6, 8, 10, 12, and the start of 13 to Wilkins; he gave scene 3 to Day, and the remainder, scenes 1, 7, 9, 11, and the end of 13, to Day or Rowley. Sykes's breakdown resembles the conclusions of other researchers.) ==Genre==