Endymion: The Man in the Moon arrives as a spare, shining example of Elizabethan theatrical ingenuity - courtly poetry and stagecraft braided with satire and sentiment. Moonlight and misrule meet onstage. First staged as an Elizabethan stage play for the Tudor court, its title announces the occasion: played before the Queen's Majesty at Greenwich on Candlemas Day by the Children of Paul's, at night. This classic theatrical script is a compact specimen of English Renaissance drama: allegorical court entertainment that uses moon symbolism literature and artful rhetoric to probe desire, authority and identity without modern exposition. The play's concentrated scenes and vivid imagery make it ideal both to read and to stage; its lyrical cadence rewards close attention, while the social games at its heart offer a rich study in romantic intrigue themes and courtly performance. Accessible to curious readers, it also gives theatre companies and drama students material that sings from the page. Endymion's survival on the page offers direct access to Tudor court performance and the theatrical ambitions of John Lyly. As part of the canon of early modern playwrights, Lyly's works show how allegorical entertainment served politics and pleasure in 16th century England; his compact scenes and rhetorical polish are now studied for their influence on later dramatic forms. This edition balances readable modern presentation with scholarly care, making it both a fine choice for casual readers and classic-literature collectors and a ready literature students edition or drama curriculum resource for schools and university modules. Universities and drama departments will find it a practical primary text for teaching Elizabethan stage play, performance practice and the mechanics of courtly spectacle. Republished by Alpha Editions in a careful modern edition, this volume preserves the spirit of the original while making it effortless to enjoy today - a heritage title prepared for readers and collectors alike.