User:Corinne engl305/sandbox

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Another speculated source that Dekker used when writing The Shoemaker’s Holiday (published 1600), is not only The Gentle Craft by playwright Thomas Deloney, but also the play The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth (published approximately 1580) (cite), which is by an anonymous English playwright. It is considered that Dekker was influenced by the play because of the similarities found between the two. For example, the most notable similarity between the two is the opening impressment scenes in both plays.In Famous Victories, the scene (scene 10) opens with the Caption entering the stage, followed by an upset John Cobbler and his sobbing wife. The caption entreats them to calm down with the line “Come, come, there’s no remedy” (site). Similarly in Dekker’s play, the scene opens (act 1 scene 1) and Simon Eyre is followed on stage by a sobbing woman (his wife Mistress Eyre), Hodge, Firk, and Ralph, who are upset as well, and whilst leading them in, he turns round and urges them to stop lamenting: “Leaving whining, leaving whining” (cite). The obvious likeness of characters, stage entrance, and speech has lead scholars to believe Dekker was influenced by this play.