cannot be dated with certainty, but an allusion to Suckling's own “Sessions of the Poets” or “The Wits” suggest a date after the summer of 1637; in August 1641 it appears in a list of plays belonging to the King's Men of which the Lord Chamberlain forbade the printing without permission of the company. Dryden observed that in
The GoblinsSuckling “followed [Shakespeare's] footsteps . . . his
Regnella[sic] being an open imitation of
Shakespear's Miranda; and his Spirits, though counterfeit, yet are copied from
Ariel“. Suckling's character is actually called Reginella and the resemblances to
The Tempestare not as absolute as Dryden suggests; still Dryden's remarks are useful for their suggestion that we view Suckling's play in the light of Shakespeare's romances…
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Citation: Pursglove, Glyn. "The Goblins". The Literary Encyclopedia. First published 28 October 2000 [https://www.litencyc.com/php/sworks.php?rec=true&UID=749, accessed 26 November 2024.]