The son of Robert Chettle, a London dyer, he was apprenticed in 1577 to a stationer, and in 1591 became a partner with William Hoskins and John Danter. In 1592 he published Robert Greene's Groatsworth of Wit. In the preface to his Kind Herts Dreame (end of 1592) he found it necessary to deny any share in that pamphlet, and apologised to three people (one of them thought to be William Shakespeare) who had been abused in it. Piers Plainnes Seaven Yeres Prentiship, the story of a fictitious apprenticeship in Crete and Thrace, appeared in 1595. As early as 1598 Francis Meres includes Chettle in his Palladis Tamia as one of the "best for comedy," and between that year and 1603 he wrote or collaborated in some forty-nine pieces.
It is thought Chettle may have been co-author of the Q1 of Romeo and Juliet and there is strong evidence that he was a coauthor of Sir Thomas More.
He seems to have been generally in debt, judging from numerous entries in Philip Henslowe's diary of advances for various purposes, on one occasion (January 17, 1599) to pay his expenses in the Marshalsea prison, on another (March 7, 1603) to get his play out of pawn. Of the thirteen plays usually attributed to Chettle's sole authorship only one was printed. This was The Tragedy of Hoffmann: or a Revenge for a Father (played 1602; printed 1631), a share in which Mr Fleay assigns to Thomas Heywood. It has been suggested that this piece was put forward as a rival to Shakespeare's Hamlet.
One of the plays on which Chettle collaborated is listed as The Danish Tragedy, which was probably either identical with Hoffmann or another version of the same story. The Pleasant Comedie of Patient Grissill (1599), in which he collaborated with Thomas Dekker and William Haughton, was reprinted by the Shakespeare Society in 1841. It contains the lyric "Art thou poor, yet hast thou golden slumbers," which is probably Dekker's.
In November 1599 Chettle received ten shillings for "mending" the first part of "Robin Hood," - The Downfall of Robert, Earl of Huntingdon, by Anthony Munday; and in the second part, which followed soon after and was printed in 1601, The Death of Robert, Earle of Huntingdon, he collaborated with Munday. Both plays are printed in Robert Dodsley's Select Collection of Old English Plays (ed. William Hazlitt, vol. viii.). In 1603 Chettle published England's Mourning Garment , in which are included some verses alluding to the chief poets of the time. His death took place some time before the appearance of Dekker's Knight's Conjurer in 1607, for he is there mentioned as a recent arrival in limbo.
Hofmann was edited by H Barrett Lennard (1852) and by Richard Ackermann (Bamberg, 1894).
List of plays
The Valiant Welchman, by Michael Drayton and Henry Chettle, February 1597-8. Printed in 1615.
Earl Goodwin, Part II., by the same authors, and under the same date in Henslowe's papers. Not printed.
Piers of Exton, by the same authors, same date. Not printed.
Black Batman of the North, Part I., by Henry Chettle, April 1598. Not printed.
Black Batman of the North, Part II., by Henry Chettle and Robert Wilson. Same date. Not printed.
The Play of a Woman, by Henry Chettle, July 1598. Not printed.
The Conquest of Brute with the first finding of the Bath, by John Day, Henry Chettle, and John Singer. Same date. Not printed.
Hot Anger soon Cold, by Henry Porter , Henry Chettle, and Ben Jonson, August 1598. Not printed.
Catiline's Conspiracy, by Robert Wilson and Henry Chettle. Same Date. Not printed.
'Tis no Deceit to Deceive the Deceiver, by Henry Chettle, September 1598. Not printed.
Aeneas' Revenge, with the Tragedy of Polyphemus, by Henry Chettle, February 1598-9. Not printed.
Agamemnon, by Henry Chettle and Thomas Dekker, June 1599. Not printed. Malone thought that this was the same play as "Troilus and Cressida" before mentioned.
The Stepmother's Tragedy, by Henry Chettle, August 1599. Not printed.