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Folio is not perhaps, in view of the composition of the 1647 'Beaumont and Fletcher' Folio, absolute proof that the King's men possessed the copy, their stage had often shown both the loss of France and the bleeding of England before Henry V was produced in 1599.[1] And they got Titus and Vespasian, as revised, after passing through the hands of Pembroke's men, for production by Sussex's under the title of Titus Andronicus. Three other of Pembroke's men's plays came to them, The Taming of A Shrew and 2 and 3 Henry VI, and probably Hamlet belongs to the same group. It is of course only a guess of mine that these also went with Shakespeare to Sussex's men and came thence with him. Titus Andronicus and A Shrew, indeed, became available in print during 1594, but not Hamlet, and not Henry VI, except in the obsolete version called The Contention of York and Lancaster. I think Shakespeare must also have brought Richard III and possibly an early version of Henry VIII, and that one or other of these had already been played by Sussex's as Buckingham. Of the provenance of Hester and Ahasuerus nothing can be said. It is not necessary to suppose that the Chamberlain's acquired any plays from the stock of the Queen's men. It is true that Shakespeare subsequently made some use of The Troublesome Reign of King John, The Famous Victories of Henry V, and King Leire, but these were all in print before he needed them.[2] Alphonsus, Emperor of Germany, published in 1654 as a play the King's men at the Blackfriars is believed by some to be an early play, possibly by Peele, and if so, may belong to the repertory of 1594.

I now return to the chronicle of the Chamberlain's men from 1598 onwards. The restriction of the London companies by the action of the Privy Council to two had left them in direct rivalry with the Admiral's at the Rose. Disputes broke out. Henslowe made a loan to William Bird of the Admiral's on 30 August 1598 to follow a 'sewt agenste Thomas Poope', and another to Thomas Downton on 30 January 1599, 'to descarge Thomas Dickers [Dekker] from the areaste of my lord chamberlens men'.[3] The company played at Court on 26 December 1598 and 1 January and 20 February 1599. During this winter they undertook the enterprise of finding a new head-quarters on the Bankside. The disputes between

  1. Hen. V, epil. 12.
  2. That the Famous Victories was reprinted in 1617 as a King's men's play proves nothing. It was to pass as Henry V; obviously the King's men never acted it, Henry V being in existence.
  3. Henslowe, i. 72, 101.