During court festivities in the winter of 1612–1613, the King's Men give twenty performances, which include eight Shakespeare plays, four by Beaumont and Fletcher, and the lost Cardenio.[1]
Cyril Tourneur is commissioned by Robert Daborne to write one act of the play The Arraignment of London in order to help meet a deadline.[6] Later in the year, Tourneur is paid £10 for delivering letters from the Stuart monarchy to Brussels.
The English poet Francis Quarles attends the newly married Queen on her progress to Continental Europe.