Shakespeare reference The comment about an "upstart crow beautified with our feathers" is generally accepted as a reference to Shakespeare, who is criticised as an actor who has the temerity to write plays (
absolute Iohannes factotum), and is possibly taken to task for
plagiarism or excessive pride. The line in Groatsworth, "Tygers hart wrapt in a Players hyde", alludes to Shakespeare's
Henry VI, Part 3 (written c. in 1591), which contains the line "O tiger's heart wrapped in a woman's hide". (I, iv, 137). If the "upstart crow" comment is accepted as a reference to Shakespeare, it is the first documented reference to Shakespeare since 1585, except for a passing reference to him in a 1588 lawsuit involving his father. Scholars are not agreed as to what Greene meant by his cryptic comments or what motivated them. Greene complains of an actor who thinks he can write as well as university-educated playwrights, he alludes to a line in Shakespeare's
Henry VI, Part 3, and he uses the term "Shake-scene," a term never used prior to
Groatsworth. Most scholars agree that Greene had Shakespeare in mind, who in 1592 would have been an "upstart" actor writing and contributing to plays such as the three parts of
Henry VI and
Richard III, all of which were likely written and produced (although not published) prior to Greene's death. Hanspeter Born has argued that Greene's attack on the "upstart Crow" was provoked because, in his view, Shakespeare may have rewritten parts of Greene's play
A Knack to Know a Knave. Believing that Thomas Nashe is "by far the stronger suspect" for having written the passage regarding the "upstart Crow",
Katherine Duncan-Jones points to instances in which Nashe may have had reason to be provoked. Baldwin Maxwell and
Stephen Greenblatt have speculated that Greene was the model for Shakespeare's
Falstaff. Greenblatt has also suggested that a line in
Hamlet is a dig at Greene's phrase in
Groatsworth, "beautified with our feathers".
Polonius, reading a letter from Hamlet addressed to "the most beautified Ophelia", comments disparagingly that "beautified is a vile phrase". Jenny Sager calls the suggestion that Falstaff was based on Greene fanciful and "cringe-worthy". Some
anti-Stratfordians have argued that the reference to the 'Upstart Crow' who was also a 'Shake-scene' applies to the famous Elizabethan actor
Edward Alleyn.
The three other writers as a jailbird in chains, from
Richard Lichfield's
The Trimming of Thomas Nashe, Gentleman (1597). The three playwrights whom Greene admonishes were members of a coterie of university-educated writers associated with Greene known as the
University Wits. The "famous gracer of Tragedians" is generally taken to refer to
Christopher Marlowe, educated at
Corpus Christi College, Cambridge, who was accused of atheism. co-author with Greene of the comedy
A Looking Glass for London; however, Lodge was out of England at the time, and Greene's language implies that all three playwrights were aware of Greene's illness. Most modern commentators now agree that Greene had in mind
Thomas Nashe, educated at
St John's College, Cambridge, later called "gallant young Juvenal" by
Francis Meres in
Palladis Tamia, an apparent allusion to Greene's earlier use of the epithet. Greene's phrase "bombast out a
blank verse" appears to be an allusion to a remark by Nashe in the preface to Greene's
Menaphon (1589) in which Nashe defended Greene against his detractors, who "out-brave better pens with the swelling bumbast of a bragging blanke verse". Nashe was also much younger than Greene, unlike Lodge, which would explain why Greene calls him "sweet boy". However, there are no known comedies co-written by Greene and Nashe. The third writer is usually identified as
George Peele, educated at
Christ Church, Oxford, who, like Greene, was notorious for his chaotic lifestyle. Peele may already have collaborated with Shakespeare; the early play
Titus Andronicus is now generally taken to have been co-written by them. Both Peele and Nashe may also have worked with Shakespeare on
Henry VI, Part 1. According to
Gary Taylor there is considerable evidence for Nashe's dominant role in the authorship of the first act of the play. ==Authorship==