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 employment unconnected with the theatre during his residence in the metropolis; but “Pericles,” his first work, according to Dryden, though many of his other critics and admirers have rejected it as spurious, did not appear until 1590. How was it possible that, amid the novel scenes that surrounded him, his active and fertile mind, whose rapidity, according to his contemporaries, ‘‘equaled that of his pen,” could have remained for six years without producing any thing? In 1593, he published his poem of ‘‘Venus and Adonis,” which he dedicated to Lord Southampton as “the first heir of his invention;” and yet, during the two preceding years, two dramas which are now ascribed to him had achieved success upon the stage. The composition of the poem may have preceded them, although the dedication was written subsequently to their production; but if the ‘‘Venus and Adonis” is anterior to all his dramas, we must come to the conclusion that, in the midst of his theatrical life, Shakspeare’s eminently dramatic genius was able to engage in other labors, and that his first productions were not intended for the stage.

A more probable supposition is that Shakspeare spent his labor, at first, upon works which were not his own, and which his genius, still in its novitiate, has been unable to rescue from oblivion. Dramatic productions, at that time, were less the property of the author who had conceived them than of the actors who had received them. This is always the case when theatres begin to be established; the construction of a building and the expenses of a performance are far greater risks to run than the composition of a drama. To the founder of the theatre alone is dramatic art indebted, at its origin, for that popular concourse which establishes its existence, and which the talent of the poet could never have drawn together with-