If one takes the Revels account entry for “Newyeres daie at night” 1576 [O.S.], “a play The historie of Error,” as the first performance of the play that would become Shakespeare's Comedy of Errors1, one may have identified the second play by Shakespeare for which we have a record. As much of the text that has come down to us is embedded in the much later version of the play. The signs are clear that the version that has survived was expanded from at least one earlier version when plays were considerably shorter, written more in irregular couplets. As it is, the version we have is the shortest of Shakespeare's plays.
The text we have received may be the one acted at Gray's Inn, on an infamous occasion, in 15942, or there may have been another still later revision. This would then become yet another play, according to orthodoxy, written well before the Stratford man could have written a play — he would have been no more than 12 years old — and longer still before he could have had it performed before the Royal Court. From time to time, orthodox scholars have suggested that it had to have been written by another far less capable playwright and rewritten by Shakespeare.
That another listing on Twelfth Night of 1583 [O.S.] was entered by a busy Revels accountant as “a play A historie of fferrar,” suggests that the first performance must have been well enough received that it was revived. That the second performance was by “Seruauntes of the Lorde Chamberlayne,” then Thomas Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Sussex, means that it was chosen for performance by the acting company of a staunch ally of Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford.3 Nearly 26 years of age, at the time of the first performance, he was old enough to have written it. Surely, Vere was writing comedies, in particular, at least by this time, in order that George Puttenham would write, in 1589, that among the noblemen writing for Queen Elizabeth's Royal Court, the Earl of Oxford deserved the highest praise for interlude and comedy.4
The much earlier date of the Comedy of Errors forces a much different chronological ordering of Shakespeare's works from at least 1576 to the year of Edward de Vere's death, in 1604. The playwright's inexplicable preference, by orthodox reckoning, for taking earlier plays by inferior craftsman and rewriting portions to make them his own, adopted expressly to suit authorship by the Stratford man, then becomes Edward de Vere writing plays for the Royal Court during the 1570s and 80s and revising them to suit the early public stage and yet again as the craft of play-writing rapidly progressed from the mid-1580s to the end of the century.
The Comedy of Errors, then, shows the vestiges not of an earlier less talented playwright but of a less mature Shakespeare progressing through his own personal literary maturity together with a series of rapid historical improvements to the craft of play-writing. In its time it was admired as among the best comedies on the stage.
The incongruities in the play Much Ado About Nothing are left over not from an earlier less talented playwright but from the original 1580s Shakespeare version, the text of which seems to have disappeared, called Love's Labours Won. The popular 1579 play The Jew, mentioned by Stephen Gosson5, was Shakespeare's first version of The Merchant of Venice. Edward de Vere's 1584 play, Ulysses and Agamemnon was expanded, in the late 1590s into Shakespeare's Troilus and Cressida.6 The Hamlet mentioned by Thomas Nashe, in 15897, and off-hand by others, is the less mature earlier version obsessively rewritten for over a decade until it arrived at Shakespeare's masterpiece. When a Stratfordian troll demands to see an actual play by Edward de Vere, there are a handful of them right there. The earlier playwright is Edward de Vere: the earlier Shakespeare.
Not that Shakespeare never adapted another playwright's play. Traditional scholarship is quite right to assign the first version of King John to George Peele with some modifications by Shakespeare. Less confident about the first Taming of a/the Shrew, still it is periodically and correctly assigned to Peele as well. The first King Leir was likely written by William Stanley none of whose plays are thought to have survived — except in the minds of those who consider him that man behind the pen-name Shakespeare.
What is the first extant play by Shakespeare, you may ask. That must await a better time.
1The base pattern here was first noted by Eva Turner Clark in her Hidden Allusions in Shakespeare's Plays (1931).
2Gesta Grayorum; or, The History of The Prince of Purpoole. Anno Domini , 1594. (1688). 22. “after such Sports, a Comedy of Errors (like to Plautus his Menechmus) was played by the Players. So that Night was begun, and continued to the end, in nothing but Consusion and Errors; whereupon, it was ever afterwards called, The Night of Errors.”
3 An history of the creweltie of A Stepmother, suspected by some to be an early version of Shakespeare's Cymbelline, was also acted by the Lord Chamberlaynes players on December 28, 1578. The bond between Vere and Sussex was formed when Vere served under the older man in the Scottish campaign of 1570.
4Puttenham, George. The Arte of English Poesie 1589 (Arber ed., 1869). 77. “That for Tragedie, the Lord of Buckhurst, and Maister Edward Ferrys for such doings as I have sene of theirs do deserue the hyest price: Th'Earle of Oxford and Maister Edwardes of her Maiesties Chappell for Comedy and Enterlude.”
5Gosson, Stephan. The Schoole of Abuse (1579). The Shakespeare Society (1841). 30. “The Jew, and Ptolome, showne at the Bull; the one representing the greedinesse of worldly chusers, and bloody mindes of usurers;...”
6See my Ulysses and Agamemnon (1584) (The Early Plays of Edward de Vere (William Shakespeare).) https://www.amazon.com/Ulysses-Agamemnon-Edward-William-Shakespeare-ebook/dp/B07JD7KM1T/
7Greene, Robert. Menaphon: Camillas alarm to slumbering Euphues (1589) . “Thomas Nashe, To the Gentlemen Students of Both Universities”. 'yet English Seneca read by candle light yeeldes manie good sentences, as “Bloud is a begger,” and so foorth: and, if you intreate him faire in a frostie morning, he will affoord you whole Hamlets, I should say handfulls of tragical speaches.”'
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
- On the Possibility that Edward de Vere and Shakspere of Straford Shared a Beer in Southwark. February 9, 2026. "The Earl of Oxford would have taken this route in 1575, as would Michel Eyquem, Seigneur de Montaigne,"
- Du Bartas – Dinosaurs = Shakespeare's Gaunt Speech in Richard the Second. November 30, 2025. "After quite some time it was discovered that one John Eliot's French lesson book Ortho-epia Gallica included..."
- Sonnet 130: Shakespeare's Reply to a 1580 Poem by Thomas Watson. September 7, 2024. “Interesting to see our Derek Hunter debating with Dennis McCarthy, at the North group,...”.
- Rocco Bonetti's Blackfriars Fencing School and Lord Hunsdon's Water Pipe. August 12, 2023. “... the tenement late in the tenure of John Lyllie gentleman & nowe in the tenure of the said Rocho Bonetti...”
Check out the Shakespeare Authorship Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time and about the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
- Check out the V.G.S. Oxfordian Shakespeare Poetry Page for many poems by Shakespeare together with historical context.








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