Drama •
Old Fortunatus (1599) • ''
The Shoemaker's Holiday'' (1599) • ''
Lust's Dominion'' (1600) •
Satiromastix (1601) •
Blurt, Master Constable (1601–02) •
The London Prodigal (1603) •
Patient Grissel (1603) (co-written with
Henry Chettle and
William Haughton) •
The Merry Devil of Edmonton (1604) •
The Honest Whore (1604) (co-written with
Thomas Middleton) •
Westward Ho (1604) (co-written with
John Webster) •
Northward Ho (1607) (co-written with Webster) •
Sir Thomas Wyatt (1607) (co-written with Webster) •
The Bloody Banquet (1608–09) (co-written with Middleton) •
The Roaring Girl (1607–10) (co-written with Middleton) •
Match Me in London (1611) •
The Tragical History of Guy Earl of Warwick (1620) •
The Virgin Martyr (1620) (co-written with
Philip Massinger) •
The Witch of Edmonton (1621) (co-written with
William Rowley and
John Ford) •
The Noble Spanish Soldier (1622) •
The Spanish Gypsy (1623) (co-written with Rowley, Middleton and Ford) • ''
The Sun's Darling'' (1624) (co-written with Ford) When Dekker began writing plays,
Thomas Nashe and
Thomas Lodge were still alive; when he died,
John Dryden had already been born. Like most dramatists of the period, he adapted as well as he could to changing tastes; however, even his work in the fashionable Jacobean genres of satire and
tragicomedy bears the marks of his Elizabethan training: its humour is genial, its action
romantic. The majority of his surviving plays are comedies or tragicomedies. '' Most of Dekker's work is lost. His apparently disordered life, and his lack of a firm connection (such as
Shakespeare or
Fletcher had) with a single company, may have militated against the preservation or publication of manuscripts. Close to twenty of his plays were published during his lifetime; of these, more than half are comedies, with three significant tragedies: ''
Lust's Dominion (presumably identical to The Spanish Moor's Tragedy
, written with Day, Marston, and William Haughton, 1600), The Witch of Edmonton (with Ford and Rowley, 1621), and The Virgin Martyr'' (with Massinger, 1620). The first phase of Dekker's career is documented in Henslowe's diary. His name appears for the first time in connection with "fayeton" (presumably,
Phaeton) in 1598. There follow, before 1599, payments for work on
The Triplicity of Cuckolds, ''The Mad Man's Morris
, and Hannibal and Hermes
. He worked on these plays with Robert Wilson, Henry Chettle, and Michael Drayton. With Drayton, he also worked on history plays on the French civil wars, Earl Godwin, and others. In 1599, he wrote plays on Troilus and Cressida, Agamemnon (with Chettle), and Page of Plymouth
. In that year, also, he collaborated with Chettle, Jonson, and Marston on a play about Robert II. 1599 also saw the production of three plays that have survived. It was during this year that he produced his most famous work, The Shoemaker's Holiday, or the Gentle Craft
, categorised by modern critics as citizen comedy. This play reflects his concerns with the daily lives of ordinary Londoners, and contains the poem The Merry Month of May. This play exemplifies his intermingling of everyday subjects with the fantastical, embodied in this case by the rise of a craftsman to Mayor and the involvement of an unnamed but idealised king in the concluding banquet. Old Fortunatus and Patient Grissel'', the latter on the folkloric theme treated by
Chaucer in
The Clerk's Tale. In 1600, he worked on
The Seven Wise Masters, ''Fortune's Tennis
, Cupid and Psyche
, and Fair Constance of Rome
. The next year, in addition to Satiromastix, he worked on a play possibly about Sebastian of Portugal and Blurt, Master Constable, on which he may have worked with Thomas Middleton. In 1602 he revised two older plays, Pontius Pilate
(1597) and the second part of Sir John Oldcastle. He also collaborated on Caesar's Fall
, Jephthah
, A Medicine for a Curst Wife
, Sir Thomas Wyatt'' (on
Wyatt's rebellion), and
Christmas Comes But Once a Year. Except for
Blurt, which was performed by the
Blackfriars Children, the earlier of these works were performed at the Admiral's
Fortune Theatre. After 1602, Dekker split his attention between pamphlets and plays; thus, his dramatic output decreased considerably. He and Middleton wrote
The Honest Whore for the Fortune in 1604, and Dekker wrote a sequel himself the following year. The Middleton/Dekker collaboration
The Family of Love also dates from this general era. Dekker and Webster wrote
Westward Ho and
Northward Ho for Paul's Boys. The failures of the anti-Catholic
Whore of Babylon and tragicomic
If This Be Not... have already been noted.
The Roaring Girl, a city comedy that incorporates the real-life contemporary figure 'Moll Cutpurse', otherwise known as
Mary Frith, was a collaboration with Middleton in 1611. In the same year, he also wrote another
tragicomedy called
Match Me in London. During his imprisonment, Dekker did not write plays. After his release, he collaborated with Day on
Guy of Warwick (1620),
The Wonder of a Kingdom (1623), and
The Bellman of Paris (1623). With Ford, he wrote ''
The Sun's Darling (1624), The Fairy Knight (1624), and The Bristow Merchant
(1624). He also wrote the tragicomedy The Noble Spanish Soldier (1622) and later reworked material from this play into a comedic form to produce The Welsh Ambassador
(1623). Another play, The Late Murder of the Son upon the Mother, or
Keep the Widow Waking'', a dramatization of two recent murders in Whitechapel, occasioned a suit for slander heard in the
Star Chamber. That play is lost. Dekker's plays of the 1620s were staged at the large amphitheatres on the north side of London, most commonly at the Red Bull; only two of his later plays were seen at the more exclusive, indoor
Cockpit Theatre, and these two were presumably produced by
Christopher Beeston, who operated both the Red Bull and the Cockpit. By the 1620s, the
Shoreditch amphitheaters had become deeply identified with the louder and less reputable categories of play-goers, such as apprentices. Dekker's type of play appears to have suited them perfectly. Full of bold action, careless about generic differences, and always (in the end) complementary to the values and beliefs of such audiences, his drama carried some of the vigorous optimism of Elizabethan dramaturgy into the Caroline era.
Prose He exhibited a similar vigour in his pamphlets, which span almost his whole writing career, and which treat a great variety of subjects and styles. Dekker's first spate of pamphleteering began in 1603, perhaps during a period when
plague had closed the theaters. His first was
The Wonderfull Yeare, a journalistic account of the death of
Elizabeth, accession of James I, and the 1603 plague, that combined a wide variety of literary genres in an attempt to convey the extraordinary events of that year ('wonderful' meaning astonishing, not excellent). It succeeded well enough to prompt two more plague pamphlets,
News From Gravesend and
The Meeting of Gallants at an Ordinary.
The Double PP (1606) is an anti-Catholic tract written in response to the
Gunpowder Plot.
News From Hell (1606) is an homage to and continuation of Nash's
Pierce Penniless.
The Seven Deadly Sins of London (1606) is another plague pamphlet. After 1608, Dekker produced his most popular pamphlets: a series of "cony-catching" pamphlets that described the various tricks and deceits of confidence-men and thieves, including
thieves' cant. These pamphlets, which Dekker often updated and reissued, include
The Belman of London (1608, now
The Bellman of London),
Lanthorne and Candle-light,
Villainies Discovered by Candlelight, and
English Villainies. They owe their form and many of their incidents to similar pamphlets by
Robert Greene. Other pamphlets are journalistic in form and offer vivid pictures of Jacobean London.
The Dead Term (1608) describes
Westminster during summer vacation.
The Guls Horne-Booke (1609, now ''The Gull's Hornbook
) describes the life of city gallants, including a valuable account of behaviour in the London theatres. Work for Armourers
(1609) and The Artillery Garden'' (1616) (the latter in verse) describe aspects of England's military industries.
London Look Back (1630) treats 1625, the year of James's death, while
Wars, Wars, Wars (1628) describes European turmoil. As might be expected, Dekker turned his experience in prison to profitable account.
Dekker His Dreame (1620) is a long poem describing his despairing confinement; he contributed six prison-based sketches to the sixth edition (1616) of Sir
Thomas Overbury's
Characters; and he revised
Lanthorne and Candlelight to reflect what he had learned in prison. Dekker's pamphlets, even more than his plays, reveal signs of hasty and careless composition. Yet the best of them can still entertain, and almost all of them offer valuably precise depictions of everyday life in the Jacobean period. Dekker's poetry entered into modern popular song (although almost unnoticeably) when some of the lyrics of the poem "Golden Slumbers", from Dekker's play
Patient Grissel, were included by
Paul McCartney in
the Beatles' 1969 song "
Golden Slumbers". ==References==