William  Shakespeare, Richard Barnfield, and the Sixth Earl of Derby
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William Shakespeare, Richard Barnfield, and the Sixth Earl of De ...

Chapter 1:  Barnfield's Ganymede
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constrained to shew my simplenes to the world…I (…with the formost in affection) am one that most desire [sic] to serve, and onely to serve your Honour…I myself am yours.

If these connections were not enough to identify Stanley with Ganymede, we have a commendatory front-matter poem in Cynthia by one T. T., who is just possibly Thomas Thorpe, who would publish Shake-speares Sonnets fifteen years later—an identification Harry Morris notes (Colin's Child 54), and which Katherine Duncan-Jones also finds intriguing (47)—which provides us with more connections. Duncan-Jones is certainly right in asserting that, “[I]ndeed, there seems to be some as yet unexplained connection between Shakespeare and Barnfield” (47). Glancing both backward at The Affectionate Shepheard and ahead to the text which will follow his prefatory poem, and after explicitly identifying Earl William Stanley with the eagle, T. T. implies that Stanley actually asked Barnfield to write the verses in Cynthia:

Whylom that in a shepheards gray coate masked,
(Where masked love the nonage of his skill)
Reares new Eagle-winged pen, new tasked,
To scale the by-clift Muse sole-pleasing hill:
Dropping sweete Nectar poesie from his quill…
(lines 1–5)

T. T.'s reference to Stanley as the eagle who lends his poetic “wings” to Barnfield, and who has “tasked” him to write this book, would seem to go a good way toward settling the question of Stanley's identification with Barnfield's Ganymede.