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         <graphic url="images/EMEE_GreeneAttackRetracted_Folger_McPherson.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" width="800px" height="551px">
         </graphic>
         <figDesc>Page 11 of Henry Chettle’s <title level="m">Kind-Harts Dreame</title> (1592). By permission of <title level="m">the Folger Shakespeare Library</title>. Public Domain.</figDesc>
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    <div xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_Opener">
       <p xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_p1">Henry Chettle (1560–1607) published the 1592 attack on Shakespeare by Robert Greene that called the young playwright <quote>an upstart crow</quote>. Shortly after Greene’s critique, Chettle published <title level="m">Kind-Harts Dreame</title> (1592), to address the controversy Greene began before his death and to apologize for offending. It may indicate that Shakespeare was becoming an accepted member of the fraternity of playwrights in early modern London.</p>
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       <head>Chettle’s Apology</head>
       <p xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_p2">Chettle was acknowledged by other Elizabethan writers as a skilled dramatist and was involved with as many as 49 different plays during the era, although his name does not appear on any title pages until long after his death. Francis Meres, the same commentator who praises Shakespeare so strongly and lists many of his plays of the 1590s, also praises Chettle as <quote>one of our best for comedy</quote>.</p>
       <p xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_p3">In the modern spelling transcription below, Chettle describes the controversy and notes the attacks directed at him since Greene had recently died. Chettle defends his record and ends with an apology:
          <cit><quote>About three months since died M. Robert Greene, leaving many papers in sundry Booksellers <supplied>various publishers’</supplied> hands, among other his <title level="m">Groatsworth of Wit</title>, in which a letter written to divers play-makers <supplied>various playwrights</supplied>, is offensively by one or two of them taken, and because on the dead they cannot be avenged, they willfully forge in their conceits <supplied>create in their imaginations</supplied> a living Author: and after tossing it two and fro, no remedy, but it must light on <supplied>fall upon</supplied> me. How I have all the time of my conversing in printing hindered the bitter inveighing <supplied>attacks</supplied> against scholars, it hath been very well known, and how in that I dealt I can sufficiently prove. With neither of them that take offence was I acquainted, and with one of them I care not if I never be. The other, whom at that time I did not so much spare as since I wish I had, for that as I have moderated the heat of living writers, and might have used my own discretion (especially in such a case) the Author being dead, that I did not, I am as sorry, as if the original fault had been my fault, because myself have seen his demeanor no less civil than he excellent in the quality he professes. Besides, divers of worship <supplied>various respected men</supplied> have reported, his uprightness of dealing, which argues his honesty, and his fatious <supplied>‘facetious’; witty?</supplied> grace in writing, which approves his Art.</quote></cit></p>
       <p xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_p4">Chettle apparently addresses the persons <quote>of worship</quote>, possibly Shakespeare’s patron or colleagues, who took offense at Greene’s mocking language.</p>
       <p xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_p5">Chettle’s description of Shakespeare’s <quote>fatious grace in writing</quote> presents a puzzle. No other writer uses the word <quote>fatious</quote>, although some scholars speculate it may be a version of the word <mentioned>facetious</mentioned>. The modern meaning of <term>facetious</term> (<gloss>flippant, humorous</gloss>) probably means more like <mentioned>polished</mentioned> in this case. It could also be a typesetting error that yields a word no one has deciphered.</p>
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    <div xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_biblioPrint">
       <head>Key Print Sources</head>
       <listBibl>
          <bibl><author>Greenblatt, Stephen</author>. <title level="m">Will in the World: How Shakespeare Became Shakespeare</title>. <publisher>W.W. Norton</publisher>, 2004.</bibl>
          
          <bibl><author>Potter, Lois</author>. <title level="m">The Life of William Shakespeare: a Critical Biography</title>. <publisher>Wiley-Blackwell</publisher>, 2012.</bibl>
       </listBibl>
    </div>
      
    <div xml:id="emee_GreenesAttackRetracted_biblioOnline">
       <head>Key Online Sources</head>
       <listBibl>
          <bibl><author>Best, Michael</author>. <title level="a">The Attack Retracted</title>. <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Life and Times</title>. <title level="s">Internet Shakespeare Editions</title>, <ref target="https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/life/youth/chettle.html">https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/life/youth/chettle.html</ref>. Accessed 24 Feb. 2023.</bibl>
          
          <bibl><author>Chettle, Henry</author>. <title level="a">Kind-harts Dreame</title>. <title level="m">Shakespeare Documented</title>, 8 Feb. 2020, <ref target="https://web.archive.org/web/20180330165631/http://www.shakespearedocumented.org/exhibition/document/kind-harts-dreame-chettles-apology-shakespeare-greenes-groatsworth-witte">https://web.archive.org/web/20180330165631/http://www.shakespearedocumented.org/exhibition/document/kind-harts-dreame-chettles-apology-shakespeare-greenes-groatsworth-witte</ref>.</bibl>
          
          <bibl><title level="a">Henry Chettle</title>. <title level="m">Encyclopedia Britannica</title>, 31 May 2017, <ref target="https://www.britannica.com/biography/Henry-Chettle">https://www.britannica.com/biography/Henry-Chettle</ref>.</bibl>
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         <head>Image Source</head>
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            <bibl><author>Chettle, Henry</author>. <title level="m">Kind-Harts Dreame</title>. Page 11. 1592. <title level="m">Folger Digital Collections</title>. STC <idno type="STC">5123</idno>. <ref target="https://digitalcollections.folger.edu/img114151">https://digitalcollections.folger.edu/img114151</ref></bibl> 
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