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The fact that Henry Peacham’s date of birth and
death are both unconfirmed is a testament to the mystery
that has shrouded his life. The author was allegedly born
around 1576 in Hertfordshire, England, and he graduated
from Cambridge University as a young
man. Despite a lifetime worth of writings that would
eventually make him a well-known author, Henry Peacham
may best be remembered for a sketch and excerpt from one
of William Shakespeare’s earliest works, Titus Andronicus.
The document is significant because it brings into question
the original publication date of the play. The first known
publication of Titus Andronicus is dated 1594, but the
play described by a young Peacham appears to be quite
different from this early printing. Most notably, the
sketched staging is not in concordance with any known
scene. In addition, several of the lines that appear in
Peacham’s excerpt either don’t exist in the
known version or appear later than the stated Act II Scene
2.
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Therefore, many of the people who question the accepted
history of Shakespeare have used the Peacham document
to suggest that the play was written several years before
any of the Bard’s other early plays, and thus can
not be his work. (http://www.dlroper.shakespearians.com/henry_peacham.html)
Recently, many of the historians who express interest
in his Titus Andronicus sketch have also pointed out alleged
Shakespeare hints in the title page of his emblem book,
Minerva Brittana. The page shows a hand protruding from
a curtain writing the phrase “Mente, Vide Bori,”
by the mind shall I be seen. This is an anagram for Tibi
Nom. De Vere, a reference to Edward De Vere, a man often
mentioned as “the
real Shakespeare”
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