Event Comment: The 
United Company.  An order, 9 Feb. 1683@4, in 
L. C. 5@145, p. 14 (
Nicoll, Restoration Drama, p. 356), and another, L. C. I, specify requirements for a play to be acted at 
Whitehall on 11 Feb. 1683@4, and name 
Valentinian as the drama.  The first 
Prologue and the 
Epilogue Written by a Person of Quality were printed separately; 
Luttrell's copy (
Bindley Collection, 
William Andrews Clark@Jr@Library) is dated 20 Feb. 1683@4.  They are reprinted in 
Wiley, 
Rare Prologues and Epilogues, pp. 249-51.  It is not certain on what date the first performance occurred, for premieres 
at court are quite rare in the 
Restoration period.  In 
Nahum Tate's 
Poems by Several Hands (1685): 
Sir Francis Fane: A Masque Made at the Request of the 
Earl of Rochester, for the Tragedy of Vadentinian.  
Downes (p. 40): The well performance, and the vast Interest the Author made in Town, Crown'd the Play, with great Gain of Reputation; and Profit to the Actors.  For an intended cast of 
Rochester's alteration of the play by 
John Fletcher, see the introductory note to the season of 1675-76.  In 
A Pastoral in French by 
Lewis Grabu (published in 1684; advertised in the 
London Gazette, No. 1947, 17 July 1684) are two songs for this play for which 
Grabu apparently composed the music: 
Injurious charmer of my vanquished heart and 
Kindness hath resistless charms.  In 
Choice Ayres and Songs, The Fourth Book, 1684, is: A new Song in the late reviv'd Play, call'd 
Valentinian: 
Where would coy Aminta run [the composer of the music not being indicated]