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07/05/2008
Edward deVere: known comedy writer
Eddie deVere and I keep running into each other.
I was doing some research on the advent of blank verse as a new medium in English in the late 16th century, and came across two short accounts that at least take a good swipe at the ahistorical idea that a nobleman would have necessarily had to write plays anonymously:
In 1589, George Puttenham (or possibly a writer with the first name Richard), wrote a treatise on English poetry in which he praised the Earl of Oxford for his comedy writing. In another essay, Francis Meres describes Oxford as one of the better comedy writers of his time.
What's that again about the Earl of Oxford having to write plays in secret?
Yes, it would have likely been far more acceptable for a nobleman to write poetry than to write plays, but Puttenham's and Meres' references suggest that Oxford was a known comedy writer by 1589, the year before Shakespeare first appears on the scene, and at least five years before any of Shakespeare's plays is printed.
There is also the far more significant fact that the Earl of Oxford died in 1604 and Shakespeare wrote until at least 1611.
09:50 Permalink | Comments (2) | Email this | Tags: authorship, pseudohistory


