Wit at Several Weapons was first printed in the two
Beaumont and Fletcher folios of
1647 and
1679, and was entered into the
Stationers' Register on 29 June
1660, where it is also attributed to Beaumont and Fletcher. In its present form, however, it is usually considered by modern scholars to be a collaboration between
Thomas Middleton and
William Rowley. The Epilogue to the play in the folios refers to Fletcher's limited role in its authorship ("if he but writ / An act, or two"), although the text itself suggests that Fletcher's contribution may have been even less than that, since his highly characteristic pattern of
linguistic preferences (
ye for
you, '
em for
them, etc.) is lacking in the play. David Lake confirms the presence of Middleton and Rowley that earlier scholars like
Cyrus Hoy had detected. Where other critics had dated the play anywhere from 1609 to 1620, Lake favors a date in the later part of
1613 based on topical allusions. Lake's analysis of the play's internal evidence yielded the following division of shares of authorship: ::Middleton – Act I, scene 1; Act II, 1; Act III; Act IV; ::Rowley – Act I, scene 2; Act II, 2–4; Act V. The overall division is one typical of Middleton/Rowley collaborations, in which Middleton took primary responsibility for the main plot, and Rowley for the comic subplot. References in the text indicate that the clown character Pompey Doodle is a fat clown, a kind of part that Rowley repeatedly wrote for himself to play. ==Influence==