Literature
Shakespeare's real face appears in botany book
London, May 19
A 400-year-old botany book
contains what could be the only known portrait of English poet and
playwright William Shakespeare made in his lifetime, an academic expert
said on Tuesday.
Leading British botanist and historian Mark
Griffiths made the discovery when he was researching the biography of
pioneering botanist John Gerard (1545-1612), author of "The Herball or
Generall Historie of Plantes", BBC reported.
"This is what Shakespeare looked like, drawn from life and in the prime of life," he said.
The
1,484-page book, published in 1598, is described as the largest
single-volume work on plants that has been published in English.
The
title page is illustrated with an engraving by William Rogers depicting
four figures, which were thought to have been imaginary.
However,
Griffiths decoded decorative devices around the figures -- such as
heraldic motifs and emblematic flowers -- to reveal their "true
identities".
They are, he says, the author Gerard, Rembert
Dodoens, a renowned Flemish botanist, and Queen Elizabeth's lord
treasurer, Lord Burghley.
The fourth man holds a fritillary and
an ear of sweetcorn -- plants which Griffiths says point to
Shakespeare's poem "Venus and Adonis" and his play "Titus Andronicus".
"Beneath
the bearded fourth man was an ingenious cipher of the kind loved by the
Elizabethan aristocracy which, decoded, confirmed his identity as
William Shakespeare," the botanist said.
It is not the first time such claims have been made about a Shakespeare portrait.
In
2009, a painting known as the "Cobbe" portrait was put on show by the
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust in Stratford-upon-Avon, the playwright's
birthplace. The trust said it was convinced the artwork -- thought to
date back to 1610 -- was an authentic portrait, but some critics said
the picture was not of Shakespeare