Thomas Dekker
(1572–1632)

Elizabethan dramatist and pamphleteer.

Thomas Dekker

Works

Dramatic

  • The Pleasant Comedy of Old Fortunatus (1600)
  • The Shoemaker's Holiday or The Gentle Craft (1600), with Valentine Simmes
  • Satiro-mastix (1602)
  • Patient Grissill (1603), with Henry Chettle and William Haughton) (external scan)
  • The Honest Whore, Part One (1604)
  • Whore of Babylon (1607)
  • The Roaring Girl (1611), in conjunction with Middleton
  • If It Be Not Good, The Devil is in It (1612)
  • The Virgin Martyr (1622), in conjunction with Massinger
  • Honest Whore part 2 (1630)
  • Match me in London (1631)
  • The Wonder of a Kingdom (1636)
  • The Sun's Darling (1656)
  • The Witch of Edmonton (1658), in conjunction with Rowley and Ford

with John Webster

  • Northward Ho (1607)
  • Westward Ho (1607)
  • Famous History of Sir Thomas Wyatt (1607)

Non-Dramatic

  • Canaan's Calamity, Jerusalem's Misery, and England's Mirror (1598)
  • The Wonderful Year (1603)
  • The Bachelers Banquet (1603)
  • The Seven Deadly Sins of London (1606)
  • News from Hell (1606)
  • The Double PP. (1606)
  • Jests to Make You Merry (1607)
  • The Dead Term (1608)
  • The Bellman of London (1608)
  • Lanthorn and Candlelight (1609)
  • Work for Armorers (1609)
  • The Raven's Almanac (1609)
  • The Gull's Horn-book (1609), included in Elizabethan & Jacobean Pamphlets
  • Four Birds of Noah's Ark (1613)
  • A Strange Horse-Race (1613)
  • Dekker his Dream (1620)
  • A Rod for Runaways (1625)

Lyrics

With John Day

  • The Life and Death of Guy Earl of Warwick (1619)

Works about Dekker


Works by this author published before January 1, 1927 are in the public domain worldwide because the author died at least 100 years ago. Translations or editions published later may be copyrighted. Posthumous works may be copyrighted based on how long they have been published in certain countries and areas.

 
This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.