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more is known except that he was of an early generation. As the list in the Folio appears to be limited to Chamberlain's and King's men, excluding for example Alleyn, who certainly acted in Shakespearian plays, e.g. 1 Henry VI, it may be that Crosse was for a short time a member of the company soon after 1594.

It is hardly possible to carry the analysis of origins any further with profit, or to assume that the groups which segregated themselves from the Strange-Admiral's combination in 1594 bore any close correspondence to the respective contributions of Strange's and the Admiral's to that combination in 1589 or 1590. The only name that can be connected with Strange's men before 1588 is John Symons and neither he nor George Attewell, their payee in 1591, became a Chamberlain's man. Hypotheses have been framed, mainly in the hope of affiliating Shakespeare to Lord Leicester's men, who are supposed to have carried him away from Stratford-on-Avon when they visited it in 1586-7, and ultimately to have become Lord Strange's men.[1] So far as Shakespeare is concerned, the first record of him on the boards is in 1592, and the interval since his hegira from Stratford may have been quite otherwise spent. The proof of continuity between Leicester's men and Strange's altogether fails, since the latter made their appearance a decade before the former came to an end. The only member of the Lord Chamberlain's company of 1594 who can be traced to Leicester's service was Kempe, and he had left Leicester's men by the summer of 1586 and was in Denmark. With him were Bryan and Pope, who afterwards spent a year in Germany, and may have joined either Strange's or the Admiral's on their return. The only other Chamberlain's man, who can be assigned to an earlier company than Strange's, is Heminges, who was probably at some time a Queen's man.

The Chamberlain's men evidently started business in 1594 with something of a repertory derived by inheritance or purchase from antecedent companies. Our knowledge of this is mainly confined to plays with which Shakespeare was concerned as author or reviser. They certainly did not get all the plays produced by Strange's men at the Rose during 1592 and 1593. Some of these were Henslowe's property; others passed with Alleyn to the Admiral's men. But they got The Jealous Comedy, if I am right in identifying this with The Comedy of Errors. They probably got 1 Henry VI, for although the appearance of a Shakespearian play in the 1623

  1. Malone, Variorum, ii. 166; Fleay, L. and W. 8.