Love's Labour's Won

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Love's Labour's Won is the name of a play written by William Shakespeare before 1598. However, it is not known if this play has been lost, or if the title is an alternate name for a known play.

Excerpt from Palladis Tamia (1598) specifies Loue Labours Wonne
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Excerpt from Palladis Tamia (1598) specifies Loue Labours Wonne

Contents

[edit] Evidence

In Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia, Wits Treasury (1598), Meres lists several of Shakespeare's plays. His list of comedies reads as follows:

"Gẽtlemẽ of Verona, his Errors, his Love labours lost, his Love labours wonne, his Midsummers night dreame, & his Merchant of Venice

This tells us that Love's Labour's Won was a comedy and that it was not one of the other plays listed.

For many years, it was assumed that Love's Labour's Won was an alternative name for The Taming of the Shrew. However, in 1953, Pottesman discovered the August 1603 booklist of the stationer Christopher Hunt, which lists as printed in quarto:

"Marchant Of Vennis[sic], Taming Of A Shrew, Loves Labor Lost, Loves Labor Won."

[edit] Theories

Many scholars now believe that Love's Labour's Won may have been a lost sequel to Love's Labour's Lost, depicting the further adventures of The King of Navarre, Berowne, Longville, and Dumaine, whose marriages were delayed at the end of Love's Labour's Lost.

The alternative is that it is an alternative title for another Shakespearean comedy not listed by Meres or Hunt. Much Ado About Nothing, commonly believed to be written around 1598, is often suggested. All's Well That Ends Well has also been suggested; Henry Woodhuysen's Arden edition of Love's Labour's Lost points out a number of striking similarities between the two plays. However, All's Well is normally dated after 1600, and hence after Meres wrote his list.

[edit] Modern version

"At the end of Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Lost, news of the death of the Princess's father halts four couples on the road to matrimony. Everything stops, including the entertainment prepared for the festivities, as the Princess prepares to return home. The couples agree to meet again in a year and a day and disperse to a song of spring and winter. The play implies a sequel, and apparently there was one, of which only the title, Love's Labour's Wonne, has survived - at least, so far." [1]
  • There is also a play of the title Love Labours Won by Ryan J-W Smith. It premiered at the 2006 Edinburgh Fringe Festival and transferred to London's West End shortly after. However, it is not related in any way to Love's Labour's Lost.

[edit] References

  • Baldwin, T.W. Shakespeare's Love's Labour's Won: New Evidence from the Account Books of an Elizabethan Bookseller. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1957.
The complete works of William Shakespeare
Tragedies: Romeo and Juliet | Macbeth | King Lear | Hamlet | Othello | Titus Andronicus | Julius Caesar | Antony and Cleopatra | Coriolanus | Troilus and Cressida | Timon of Athens
Comedies: A Midsummer Night's Dream | All's Well That Ends Well | As You Like It | Cymbeline | Love's Labour's Lost | Measure for Measure | The Merchant of Venice | The Merry Wives of Windsor | Much Ado About Nothing | Pericles, Prince of Tyre | Taming of the Shrew | The Comedy of Errors | The Tempest | Twelfth Night, or What You Will | The Two Gentlemen of Verona | The Two Noble Kinsmen | The Winter's Tale
Histories: King John | Richard II | Henry IV, Part 1 | Henry IV, Part 2 | Henry V | Henry VI, part 1 | Henry VI, part 2 | Henry VI, part 3 | Richard III | Henry VIII
Poems and Sonnets: Sonnets | Venus and Adonis | The Rape of Lucrece | The Passionate Pilgrim | The Phoenix and the Turtle | A Lover's Complaint
Apocrypha and Lost Plays Edward III | Sir Thomas More | Cardenio (lost) | Love's Labour's Won (lost) | The Birth of Merlin | Locrine | The London Prodigal | The Puritan | The Second Maiden's Tragedy | Richard II, Part I: Thomas of Woodstock | Sir John Oldcastle | Thomas Lord Cromwell | A Yorkshire Tragedy | Fair Em | Mucedorus | The Merry Devil of Edmonton | Arden of Faversham | Edmund Ironside
See also: Shakespeare on screen | Titles based on Shakespeare | Characters | Problem Plays | Ghost characters | Reputation | New Words | Influence on English Language | Authorship Question
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