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                  <p>Anthology Leads: Kate McPherson and Kate Moncrief.</p>
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               <ref target="https://www.mitacs.ca/our-programs/globalink-research-internship-students/">Mitacs Globalink Research Internship</ref>
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               <p>Michael Best is Professor Emeritus at the University of Victoria, BC. He founded the <title level="s">Internet Shakespeare Editions</title> in 1996, and was Coordinating Editor until 2017, contributing two editions to the ISE: <title level="m">King John</title> and <title level="m">King Lear</title> (the latter also available in print from <ref target="https://broadviewpress.com/product/king-lear-ed-best-joubin/">Broadview Press</ref>). In print, he has published editions of works of Elizabethan magic and huswifery, a collection of letters from the Australian goldfields, and <title level="m">Shakespeare on the Art of Love</title> (2008). He contributed regular columns for the <title level="m">Shakespeare Newsletter</title> on <soCalled>Electronic Shakespeares</soCalled>, and has written many articles and chapters for both print and online books and journals, principally on questions raised by the new medium in the editing and publication of texts. He has delivered papers and plenary lectures on electronic media and the <title level="s">Internet Shakespeare Editions</title> at conferences in Canada, the USA, the UK, Spain, Australia, and Japan.</p>
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<figure>
   <graphic url="images/EMEE_ShakespeareFirstReview_PalladisTitle_SDoc_KRM.jpg" mimeType="image/jpeg" width="800px" height="614px">
   </graphic>
   <figDesc>Title page of the book <title level="m">Palladis Tamia, Wits Treasury</title> by Francis Meres (1598). This book contains some of the first mentions of Shakespeare as an author of plays and sonnets. Courtesy of Folger Shakespeare Library. <ref target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/">CC BY-SA 4.0</ref></figDesc>
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       <head>Comments on Shakespeare as a Writer</head>
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          Francis Meres (1565–1647), a university-educated literary commentator about the same age as Shakespeare, published a work in 1598 that explains Shakespeare’s reputation in his own time and helps date several Shakespeare plays. It confirms Shakespeare’s positive reputation as an author of both poetry and drama before 1600.
       </p>
       <p xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_p2">In a small book of critical reflections on English and classical authors called <title level="m">Palladis Tamia, Wits Treasury</title>, Meres mentions many of Shakespeare’s plays in flattering terms. Meres begins by praising Shakespeare’s poetry, the two narrative poems, <title level="m">Venus and Adonis</title> and <title level="m">Lucrece</title>, and also his <title level="m">Sonnets</title>. The <title level="m">Sonnets</title>were circulating in handwritten copies at this point:
          <cit>
             <quote>As the soul of Euphorbus was thought to live in Pythagoras, so the sweet witty soul of Ovid lives in mellifluous and honey-tongued Shakespeare, witness his <title level="m">Venus and Adonis</title>, his <title level="m">Lucrece</title>, his sugared Sonnets among his private friends, etc.</quote>
          </cit>
          <ref>(<title level="m">Palladis Tamia</title> Oo1v)</ref></p>
       <p xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_p3">This is the first mention of Shakespeare as the author of poetry, including the collection of poems later published in 1609 as <title level="m">Sonnets</title>. It demonstrates conclusively that the poems were written and circulated in handwritten copies in the 1590s. Meres then continues, comparing Shakespeare to the renowned Roman writer Plautus in comedy and to the respected Roman writer Seneca in tragedy:
          <cit>
             <quote>As Plautus and Seneca are accounted for the best for Comedy and Tragedy among the Latins  , so Shakespeare among the English is the most excellent in both kinds of the stage for Comedy, witness his <title level="m">Gentlemen of Verona</title>, his <title level="m">Errors</title>, his <title level="m">Love Labours Lost</title>, his <title level="m">Love Labours Won</title>, his <title level="m">Midsummer Night’s Dream</title>, and his <title level="m">Merchant of Venice</title>; for Tragedy his <title level="m">Richard II</title>, <title level="m">Richard III</title>, <title level="m">Henry IV</title>, <title level="m">King John</title>, <title level="m">Titus Andronicus</title>, and <title level="m">Romeo and Juliet</title>.</quote> <ref>(<title level="m">Palladis Tamia</title> Oo2)</ref>
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         <figDesc>Page 282 of <title level="m">Palladis Tamia</title>. Courtesy of Folger Shakespeare Library. <ref target="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/">CC BY-SA 4.0</ref></figDesc>
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     <div xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_LostPlay">
        <head>A Lost Play?</head>
        <p xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_p4">
           The <title level="m">Love Labours Won</title> that Meres mentions is an unknown play which has sparked much speculation. If Meres is not referring to a play now lost, some scholars believe that one likely candidate is <title level="m">The Taming of the Shrew</title>, an early comedy that Meres does not mention, in which Petruchio certainly seems to win love’s labor, even if Kate might be thought to lose it. The play does note that taming the shrewish Kate might resemble the labors of Hercules: <quote>Yea, leave that labour to great Hercules/ And let it be more than Alcides twelve</quote> <ref>(1.2.255-256)</ref>.</p>
        <p xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_p5"><title level="m">Much Ado About Nothing</title> and <title level="m">As You Like It</title> have also both been suggested as candidates for this lost or mistitled play. In 2014, The Royal Shakespeare Company staged both the <soCalled>Love’s Labours</soCalled> plays and billed their production of the play best known as <title level="m">Much Ado About Nothing </title>as the lost play. Artistic director Gregory Doran notes:
           <cit>
              <quote>So strong is my sense, that I am sticking my neck out to say that we have come to the conclusion that <title level="m">Much Ado About Nothing</title> may have also been known during Shakespeare’s lifetime as <title level="m">Love’s Labour’s Won</title>. We know Shakespeare wrote a play under this name, and scholars have debated whether this is indeed a <soCalled>lost</soCalled> work, or an alternative title to an existing play, just as <soCalled>What You Will</soCalled> is the alternative title to <title level="m">Twelfth Night</title>. This pairing, cross-cast and with a single director Christopher Luscombe, will test out this theory.</quote> <ref>(Doran)</ref>
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         <p xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_p6">Meres goes on to refer to Christopher Marlowe, George Chapman, Ben Jonson, and other writers of the late Elizabethan period. He seems to especially admire Shakespeare, which is a bit surprising. Many university-educated men of the time preferred classical works as literature and thought of English writers an inferior and as writers of entertainment rather than creators of literary art.</p>
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      <div xml:id="emee_ShakespeareFirstReview_biblioPrint">
         <head>Key Print Sources</head>
         <listBibl>
            <bibl><title level="a">Francis Meres</title>. <title level="m">The Oxford Companion to Shakespeare</title>, edited by <editor>Michael Dobson et al.</editor> 2nd ed., Oxford, Oxford University Press, 2015, pp. 287-291.</bibl>
            
            <bibl><author>Jackson, Macdonald Peter</author>. <title level="a">Francis Meres and the Cultural Contexts of Shakespeare’s Rival Poet Sonnets.</title>. <title level="j">The Review of English Studies</title>, vol. 56, no. 224, Apr. 2005, pp. 224-246.</bibl>
            
            <bibl><title level="a">Francis Meres</title>. <title level="m">Shakespeare’s Theatre: A Dictionary of His Stage Context</title>, edited by <editor>Hugh M. Richmond</editor>. London, Bloomsbury, 2004, pp. 295-296.</bibl>
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         <head>Key Online Sources</head>
         <listBibl>
            <bibl><author>Best, Michael</author>. <title level="a">First Rave Review</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/early%20maturity/meres.html">https://internetshakespeare.uvic.ca/Library/SLT/life/early%20maturity/meres.html. Accessed 3 Mar. 2023</ref>.</bibl>
            
             
            
            <bibl><author>Doran, Gregory</author>. <title level="a">Winter 2014-Spring 2015 Season Guide</title>, The Royal Shakespeare Company. <ref target="http://www.stratford-upon-avon.co.uk/images/rsc-winter-14-season-guide.pdf">http://www.stratford-upon-avon.co.uk/images/rsc-winter-14-season-guide.pdf</ref>. Accessed 4 Mar.. 2023</bibl>
            
            <bibl><author>Hooks, Adam G</author>. <title level="a">Palladis tamia: one of the earliest printed assessments of Shakespeare’s works, and the first mention of his sonnets</title>. Shakespeare Documented. <ref target="https://shakespearedocumented.folger.edu/resource/document/palladis-tamia-one-earliest-printed-assessments-shakespeares-works-and-first">https://shakespearedocumented.folger.edu/resource/document/palladis-tamia-one-earliest-printed-assessments-shakespeares-works-and-first</ref> Accessed 4 Mar. 2023</bibl>  
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         <head>Image Sources</head>
         <listBibl>
            <bibl><author>Meres, Francis</author>. <title level="m">Palladis Tamia. Wits Treasury</title>. <publisher>P. Short</publisher>, 1598. <title level="m">Shakespeare Documented</title>. <publisher>Folger Shakespeare Library</publisher>. <ref target="https://doi.org/10.37078/161">https://doi.org/10.37078/161</ref>.</bibl>
         </listBibl>
      </div>
   </body>
   </text>
</TEI>
