Автор работы: Пользователь скрыл имя, 21 Ноября 2013 в 18:34, реферат
Henry VII. No such grants, however, have been traced, and even in the 16th-century statements as to” antiquity and service “ in heraldic preambles were looked upon with suspicion.
The name Shakespeare is extremely widespread, and is spelt in an astonishing variety of ways. That of John Shakespeare occurs 166 times in the Council Book of the Stratford corporation, and appears to take 16 different forms. The verdict, not altogether unanimous, of competent palaeographers is to the effect that Shakespeare himself, in the extant examples of his signature, always wrote “Shakspere.” In the printed signatures to the dedications of his poems, on the title-pages of nearly all the contemporary editions of his plays that bear his name, and in many formal documents it appears as Shakespeare.
Henry VII. No such grants, however, have been traced, and even in
the 16th-century statements as to” antiquity and service “
in heraldic preambles were looked upon with suspicion.
The name Shakespeare is extremely widespread, and is spelt in an astonishing
variety of ways. That of John Shakespeare occurs 166 times in the Council
Book of the Stratford corporation, and appears to take 16 different
forms. The verdict, not altogether unanimous, of competent palaeographers
is to the effect that Shakespeare himself, in the extant examples of
his signature, always wrote “Shakspere.” In the printed signatures
to the dedications of his poems, on the title-pages of nearly all the
contemporary editions of his plays that bear his name, and in many formal
documents it appears as Shakespeare.
This may be in part due to the martial derivation which the poet’s
literary contemporaries were fond of assigning to his name, and which
is acknowledged in the arms that he bore. The forms in use at Stratford,
however, such as Shaxpeare, by far the commonest, suggest a short pronunciation
of the first syllable, and thus tend to support Dr Henry Bradley’s
derivation from the Anglo-Saxon personal name, Seaxberht. It is interesting,
and even amusing, to’ record that in 1487 Hugh Shakspere of Merton
College, Oxford, changed his name to Sawndare, because his former name
vile reputatum est. The earliest record of a Shakespeare that has yet
been traced is in 1248 at Clapton in G]oucester~ shire, about seven
miles from Stratford. The name also occurs during the ,3th century in
Kent, Essex and Surrey, and durin~ the I4th in Cumberland, Yorkshire,
Nottinghamshire, Essex, Warwickshire and as far away as Yougbal in Ireland.
Thereafter it is found in London and most of the English counties, particularly
those of the midlands; and nowhere more freely than in Warwickshire.
There were Shakespeares in Warwick and in Coventry, as well as around
Stratford; and the clan appears to have been very numerous in a group
of villages about twelve miles north of Stratford, which includes Baddesley
Clinton, Wroxall, Rowington, I{aseley, Hatton, Lapworth, Packwood, Balsall
and Knowle. William was in common use as a personal name, and Williams
from more than one other family have from time to time been confounded
with the dramatist. Many Shakespeares are upon the register of the gild
of St Anne at Knowle from about 1457 to about 1526. Amongst these were
Isabella Shakespeare, prioress of the Benedictine convent of Wroxall,
and Jane Shakespeare, a nun of the same convent. Shakespeares are also
found as tenants on the manors belonging to the convent, and at the
time of the Dissolution in 1534 one Richard Shakespeare was its bailiff
and collector of rents. Conjectural attempts have been made on the one
hand to connect the ancestors of this Richard Shakespeare with ‘a
family of the same name who held land by military tenure at Baddesley
Clinton in the 14th and 15th centuries, and on usc other to ideniify
him with the poet’s grandfather, Richard Shakespeare of’ Snitterfield.
But Shakespeares are to be traced at Wroxall nearly as far back as at
Baddesley Clinton, and there is no reason to suppose that Richard the
bailiff, who was certainly still a tenant of Wroxall in 1556, had also
since 1529 been farming land ten miles off at Snitterfield.
With the breaking of this link, the hope of giving Shakespeare anything
more than a grandfather on the father’s side must be laid aside for
the present. On the mother’s side he was connected with a family of
some distinction. Part at least of Richard Shakespeare’s land at Snitterfield
was held from Robert Arden of Wilmcote in the adjoining parish of Aston
Cantlow, a cadet of the Ardens of Parkhall, who counted amongst the
leading gentry of Warwickshire. Robert Arden married his second wife,
Agnes Hill, formerly Webbe, in 1548, and had then no less than. eight
daughters by his first wife. To the youngest of these, Mary Arden, he
left in 1556 a freehold in Aston Cantlow consisting of a farm of about
fifty or sixty acres in extent, known as Asbies. At some date later
than November 1556, and probably before the end of 1557, Mary Arden
became the wife of John Shakespeare. In October 1556 John Shakespeare
had bought two freehold houses, one in Greenhill Street, the other in
Henley Street. The latter, known as the wool shop, was the easternmost
of the two tenements now combined in the so-called Shakespeare’s birthplace.
The western tenement, the birthplace proper, was probably already in
John Shakespeare’s hands, as he seems to have been living in Henley
Street in 1552. It has sometimes been thought to have been one of two
houses which formed a later purchase in 1575, but there is no evidence
that these were in Henley Street at all.
William Shakespeare was not the first child. A Joan was baptized in
1558 and a Margaret in 1562. The latter was buried in 1563 and the former
must also have died young, although her burial is not recorded, as a
second Joan was baptized in 1569. A Gilbert was baptized in 1566, an
Anne in 1571, a Richard in ~ and a~ Edmunc~l 01 1580. e~nne died in
~7o; Edmund,who like his brother became an actor, in 1607; Richard in
1613. Tradition has it that one of Shakespeare’s brothers used to
visit London in the 17th century as quite an old man. If so, this can
only have been Gilbert.
During the years that followed his marriage, John Shakespeare became
prominent in Stratford life. In 1565 he was chosen as an alderman, and
in 1568 he held the chief municipal office, that of high bailiff. This
carried with it the dignity of justice of the peace. John Shakespeare
seems to have assumed arms, and thenceforward was always entered in
corporation documents as “Mr” Shakespeare, whereby he may be distinguished
from another John Shakespeare, a “corviser” or shoemaker, who dwelt
in Stratford about 1584—1592. In 1571 as an ex-bailiff be began another
year of office as chief alderman
One may think, therefore, of Shakespeare in his boyhood as the son
of one of the leading citizens of a not unimportant Youth provincial
market-town, with a vigorous life of its own, which in spite of the
dunghills was probably not much unlike the life of a similar town to-day,
and with constant reminders of its past in the shape of the stately
buildings formerly belonging to its college and its gild, both of which
had been suppressed at the Reformation. Stratford stands on the Avon,
in the midst of an agricultural country, throughout which in those days
enclosed orchards and meadows alternated with open fields for tillage,
and not far from the wilder and wooded district known as the Forest
of Arden. The middle ages had left it an heritage in the shape of a
free grammar-school, and here it is natural to suppose that William
Shakespeare obtained a sound enough education,i with a working knowledge
of “Mantuan”2 and Ovid in the original, even though to such a thorough
scholar as Ben Jonson it might seem no more than “small Latin and
less Greek.” In 1577, when Shakespeare was about thirteen, his father’s
fortunes began to take a turn for the worse. He became irregular in
his contributions to town levies, and had to give a mortgage on his
wife’s property of Asbies as security for a loan from her brother-in-law,
Edmund Lambert. Money was raised to pay this off, partly by the sale
of a small interest in land at Snitterfield which had come to Mary Shakespeare
from her sisters, partly perhaps by that of the Greenhill Street house
and other property in Stratford outside Henley Street, none of which
seems to have ever come into William Shakespeare’s hands. Lambert,
however, refused to surrender the mortgage on the plea of older debts,
and an attempt to recover Asbies by litigation proved ineffectual. John
Shakespeare’s difficulties increased. An action for debt was sustained
against him in the local court, but no personal property could be found
on which to distrain. He had long ceased to attend the meetings of the
corporation, and as a consequence he was removed in 2586 from the list
of aldermen. In this state of domestic affairs it is not likely that
Shakespeare’s school life was unduly prolonged. The chances are that
he was apprenticed to some local trade. Aubrey says that he killed calves
for his father, and “would do it in a high style, and make a speech.”
Whatever his circumstances, they did not deter him at the early age
of eighteen from the adventure of marriage. Rowe Marriage recorded the
name of Shakespeare’s wife as Hathaway, and Joseph Greene succeeded
in tracing her to a family of that name dwelling in Shottery, one of
the hamlets of Stratford. Her monument gives her first name as Anne,
and her age as sixty-seven in 1623. She must, therefore, have been about
eight years older than Shakespeare. Various small trains of evidence
point to her identification with the daughter Agnes mentioned in the
will of a Richard Hathaway of Shottery, who died in 1581, being then
in possession of the farm-house now known as “ Anne Hathaway’s Cottage.”
Agnes was legally a distinct name from Anne, but there can be no doubt
that ordinary custom treated them as identical. The principal record
of the i It is worth noting that Walter Roche, who in 1558 became fellow
of Corpus Christi College, Oxford, was master of the school in 1570—1572,
so that its standard must have been good.
2 Baptista Mantuanus (1448—1516), whose Latin Eclogues were translated
by Turberville in 1567.
marriage is a bond dated on November 28, 2582, and executed by Fulk
Sandells and John Richardson, two yeomen of Stratford who also figure
in Richard Hathaway’s will, as a security to the bishop for the issue
of a licence for the marriage of William Shakespeare and “Anne Hathwey
of Stratford,” upon the consent of her friends, with one asking of
the banns. There is no reason to suppose, as has been suggested, that
the procedure adopted was due to dislike of the marriage dn the part
of John Shakespeare, since, the bridegroom being a minor, it would not
have been in accordance with the practice of the bishop’s officials
to issue the licence without evidence of the father’s consent. The
explanation probably lies in the fact that Anne was already with child,
and in the near neighbourhood of Advent within which marriages were
prohibited, so that the ordinary procedure by banns would have entailed
a delay until after Christmas. A kindly sentiment has suggested that
some form of civil marriage, or at least contract of espousals, had
already taken place, so that a canonical marriage was really only required
in order to enable Anne to secure the legacy left her by her father
“at the day of her marriage.” But such a theory is not rigidly required
by the facts. It is singular that, upon the day before that on which
the bond was executed, an entry was made in the bishop’s register
of the issue of a licence for a marriage between William Shakespeare
and” Annam Whateley de Temple Grafton.” Of this it can only be said
that the bond, as an original document, is infinitely the better authority,
and that a scribal error of “ Whateley “ for “Hathaway “-is
quite a possible solution. Temple Grafton may have been the nominal
place of marriage indicated in the licence, which was not always the
actual place of residence of either bride or bridegroom. There are no
contemporary registers for Temple Grafton, and there is no entry of
the marriage in those for Stratford-uponAvon. There is a tradition that
such a record was seen during the I9th century in the registers for
Luddirigton, a chapelry within the parish, which are now destroyed.
Shakespeare’s first child, Susanna, was baptized on the 26th of May
1583, and was followed on the 2nd of February 1585 by twins, Hamnet
and Judith.
In or after 1584 Shakespeare’s career in Stratford seems to have come
to a tempestuous close. An 18th-century story of a drinking-bout in
a neighbouring village is of no Obsce,~~ importance, except as indicating
a local impression years, that a distinguished citizen had had a wildish
youth. 1584 But there is a tradition which comes from a double 1592,
source and which there is no reason to reject in substance, to the effect
that Shakespeare got into trouble through poaching on the estates of
a considerable Warwickshire magnate, Sir Thomas Lucy, and found it necessary
to leave Stratford in order to escape the results of his misdemeanour.
It is added that he afterwards took his revenge on Lucy by satirizing
him as the Justice Shallow, with the dozen white louses in his old coat,
of The Merry Wives of Windsor. From this event until he emerges as an
actor and rising playwright in 1592 his history is a blank, and it is
impossible to say what experience may not have helped to fill it. Much
might indeed be done in eight years of crowded Elizabethan life. Conjecture
has not been idle, and has assigned him in turns during this or some
other period to the occupations of a scrivener, an apothecary, a dyer,
a printer, a soldier, and the like. The suggestion that he saw military
service rests largely on a confusion with another William Shakespeare
of Rowington. Aubrey had heard that “he had been in his younger years
a sthoolmaster in the country.” The mention in Henry IV. of certain
obscure yeomen families, Visor of Woncote and Perkes of Stinchcombe
Hill, near Dursley in Gloucestershire, has been thought to suggest a
sojourn in that district, where indeed Shakespeares were to be found
from an early date. Ultimately, of course, he drifted to London and
the theatre, where, according to the stage tradition, he found employment
in a menial capacity, perhaps even as a holder of horses at the doors,
before he was admitted into a company as an actor and so found his way
to his true vocation as a writer of plays. Malone thought that he might
have left Stratford with one of the travelling companies of players
which from time to time visited the town. Later biographers have fixed
upon Leicester’s men, who were at Stratford in 1587, and have held
that Shakespeare remained to the end in the same company, passing with
it on Leicester’s death in 1588 under the patronage of Ferdinando,
Lord Strange and afterwards earl of Derby, and on Derby’s death in
1594 under that of the lord chamberlain, Henry Carey, Lord Hunsdon.
This theory perhaps hardly takes sufficient account of the shifting
combinations and recombinations of actors, especially during the disastrous
plague years of 1592 to 1594. The continuity of Strange’s company
with Leicester’s is very disputable, and while the names of many members
of Strange’s company in and about 1593 are on record, Shakespeare’s
is not amongst them. It is at least possible, as will be seen later,
that he had about this time relations with the earl of Pembroke’s
men, or with the earl of Sussex’s men, or with both of these organizations.
What is clear is that by the summer of 1592, when. he was twenty-eight,
he had begun to emerge as a playwright, and had evoked the jealousy
of one at least of the group of 1Y scholar poets who in recent years
had claimed a f1, monopoly of the stage. This was Robert Greene, who,
in an invective on behalf of the play-makers against the play-actors
which forms part of his Groats-worth of Wit, speaks of” an upstart
Crow, beautified with our feathers, that with his Tygers heart wrapt
in a Players hide, supposes he is as well able to bumbast out a blanke
verse as the best of you: and being an absolute Johannes fac jotum,
is in his owne conceit the onely Shake-scene in a countrie.” The play
upon Shakespeare’s name and the parody of a line from Henry VI. make
the reference unmistakable.i The London theatres were closed, first
through riots and then through plague, from June 1592 to April 1594,
with the exception of about a month at each Christmas during that period;
and the companies were dissolved or driven to the provinces. Even if
Shakespeare had been connected with Strange’s men during their London
seasons of 1592 and 1593, it does not seem that he travelled with them.
Other activities may have been sufficient to occupy the interval. The
most important of these was probably an attempt to win a reputation
in the world of non-dramatic poetry. Venus and Adonis was published
about April 1593, and Lucrece about May 1594. The poems were printed
by Richard Field, in whom Shakespeare would have found an old Stratford
acquaintance; and each has a dedication to Henry Wriothesley, earl of
Southampton, a brilliant and accomplished favourite of the court, still
in his nonage. A possibly super-subtle criticism discerns an increased
warmth in the tone of the later dedication, which is supposed to argue
a marked growth of intimacy. The fact of this intimacy is vouched for
by the story handed down from Sir William Davenant to Rowe (who published
in 1709 the first regular biography of Shakespeare) that Southampton
gave Shakespeare a thousand pounds “to enable him to go through with
a purchase which he’heard he had a mind to.” The date of this generosity
is not specified, and there is no known purchase by Shakespeare which
can have cost anything like the sum named. The mention of Southampton
leads naturally to the most difficult problem which a biographer has
to handle, that of the Sonnets. But this will be more conveniently taken
up at a later point, and it is only necessary here to put on record
the probability that the earliest of the sonnets belong to the period
now under discussion. There is a surmise, which is not in itself other
than plausible, and which has certainly been supported with a good deal
of ingenious argument, that Shakespeare’s enforced leisure enabled
him to make of 1593 a Wanderjahr, and in particular that the traces
of a visit to northern Italy may clearly be seen in the local colouring
of Lucrece as compared with Venus and Adonis, and in that of the group
of plays which may be dated in or about 1594 and 1595 as compared with
those that preceded. It must, however, be borne in mind that, while
Shakespeare may perfectly well, at this or at some earlier time, have
voyaged i It is most improbable, however, that the apologetic reference
in Chettle’s Kind-hart’s Dream (December 1592) refers to Shakespeare.
to Italy, and possibly Denmark and even Germany as well, there is no
direct evidence to rely upon, and that inference from internal evidence
is a dangerous guide when a writer of so assimilative a temperament
as that of Shakespeare is concerned.
From the reopening of the theatres in the summer of 1594 onwards Shakespeare’s
status is in many ways clearer. He had certainly become a leading member
of the Chamberlain’s company by the following winter, when his name
appears for the first and only time in the treasurer Chamberof the chamber’s
accounts as one of the recipients of lain’s payment for their performances
at court; and there is every reason to suppose that he continued to
act with and write for the same associates to the close of his career.
The history of the company may be briefly told. At the death of the
lord chamberlain on the 22nd of July 1596, it passed under the protection
of his successor, George, 2nd Lord Hunsdon, and once more became “the
Lord Chamberlain’s men” when he was appointed to that office on.
the 17th of March 1597. James I. on his accession took this company
under his patronage as grooms of the chamber, and during the remainder
of Shakespeare’s connexion with the stage they were “the King’s
men.” The records of performances at court show that they were by
far the most favoured of th’e companies, their nearest rivals being
the company known during the reign of Elizabeth as “the Admiral’s,”
and afterwards as “Prince Henry’s men.” From the summer of 1594
to March 1603 they appear to have played almost continuously in London,
as the only provincial performances by them which are upon record were
during the autumn of 1597, when the London theatres were for a short
time closed owing to the interference of some of the players in politics.
They travelled again during 1603 when the plague was in London, and
during at any rate portions of the summers or autumns of most years
thereafter. In 1594 they were playing at Newington Butts, and probably
also at the Rose on Bankside, and at the Cross Keys in the city. It
is natural to suppose that in. later years they used the Theatre in
Shoreditch, since this was the property of James Burbage, the father
of their principal actor, Richard Burbage. The Theatre was pulled down
in 1598, and, after a short interval during which the company may have
played at the Curtain, also in Shoreditch, Richard Burbage and his brother
Cuthbert rehoused them in the Globe on Bankside, built in part out of
the materials of the Theatre. Here the profits of the enterprise were
divided between the members of the company as such and the owners of
the building as “housekeepers,” and shares in the “house” were
held in joint tenancy by Shakespeare and some of his leading “fellows.”
About I6o8 another playhouse became available for the company in. the
“private” or winter house of the Black Friars. This was also the
property of the Burbages, but had previously been leased to a company
of boy players. A somewhat similar arrangement as to profits was made.
Shakespeare is reported by Aubrey to have been a good actor, but Adam
in As You Like It, and the Ghost in Hamlet indicate the type of part
which he played. As a dramatist, however, he was the mainstay of the
company for at least some fifteen years, during which Ben Jonson, Dekker,
Beaumont and Fletcher, and Tourneur also contributed to their repertory.
On an average he must have written for them about two plays a year,
although his rapidity of production seems to have been greatest during
the opening years of the period. There was also no doubt a good deal
of rewriting of his own earlier work, and also perhaps, at the beginning,
of that of others. Occasionally he may have entered into collaboration,
as, for example, at the end of his career, with Fletcher.
In a worldly sense he clearly flourished, and about 1596, if not earlier,
he was able to resume relations as a moneyed man with Stratford-on-Avon.
There is no evidence to show whether he had visited the town in the
interval, or whether he had brought his wife and family to London. His
son Hamnet died and was buried at Stratford in 1596. During the last
ten years John Shakespeare’s affairs had remained unprosperous. He
incurred fresh debt, partly through becoming surety for his brother
Henry; and in 1592 his name was included in a list of recusants dwelling
at or near Stratford-on-Avon,with a note by the commissioners that in
his case the cause was believed to be the fear of process for debt.
There is no reason to doubt this explanation, or to seek a religious
motive in John Shakespeare’s abstinence from church. William Shakespeare’s
purse must have made a considerable difference. The prosecutions for
debt ceased, and in 1597 a fresh action was brought in Chancery for
the recovery of Asbies from the Lamberts. Like the last, it seems to
have been without result. Another step was taken to secure the dignity
of the family by an application in the course of 1596 to the heralds
for the confirmation of a coat of arms said to have been granted to
John Shakespeare while he was bailiff of Stratford. The bearings were
or on a bend sable a spear or steeled argent, the crest a falcon his
wings displayed argent supporting a spear or steeled argent, and the
motto Non sanz droict. The grant was duly made, and in 1599 there was
a further application for leave to impale the arms of Arden, in right
of Shakespeare’s mother. No use, however, of the Arden arms by the
Shakespeares can be traced. In 1597 Shakespeare made an important purchase
for £60 of the house and gardens of New Place in Chapel Street. This
was one of the largest houses in Stratford, and its acquisition an obvious
triumph for the ex-poacher. Presumably John Shakespeare ended his days
in peace. A visitor to his shop remembered him as” a merry-cheekt
old man “ always ready to crack a jest with his son. He died in 1601,
and his wife in 1608, and the Henley Street houses passed to Shakespeare.
Aubrey records that he paid annual visits to Stratford, and there is
evidence that he kept in touch with the life of the place. The correspondence
of his neighbours, the Quineys, in 1598 contains an application to him
for a loan to Richard Quiney upon a visit to London, and a discussion
of possible investments for him in the neighbourhood of Stratford. In
1602 he took, at a rent of 2S. 6d. a year, a copyhold cottage in Chapel
Lane, perhaps for the use of his gardener. In the same year he invested
£320 In the purchase of an estate consisting of 107 acres in the open
fields of Old Stratford, together with a farm-house, garden and orchard,
20 acres of pasture and common rights; and in 1605 he spent another
£440 in the outstanding term of a lease of certain great tithes in
Stratford parish, which brought in an income of about £60 a year.
Meanwhile London remained his headquarters. Here Malone thought that
he had evidence, now lost, of his residence in Southwark as early as
1596, and as late as 1608. It is known that payments of subsidy were
due from him tions. for 1597 and 1598 in the parish of St Helen’s,
Bishopsgate, and that an arrear was ultimately collected in the liberty
of the Clink. He had no doubt migrated from Bishopsgate when the Globe
upon Bankside was opened by the Chamberlain’s men. There is evidence
that in 1604 he “lay,” temporarily or permanently, in the house
of Christopher Mountjoy, a tire-maker of French extraction, at the corner
of Silver Street and Monkwell Street in Cripplegate. A recently recovered
note by Aubrey, if it really refers to Shakespeare (which is not quite
certain), is of value as throwing light not only upon his abode, but
upon his personality. Aubrey seems to have derived it from William Beeston
the actor, and through him from John Lacy, an actor of the king’s
company. It is as follows: “The more to be admired q~uod} he was not
a company-keeper, lived in Shoreditch, would not be debauched, &
if invited to court, he was in paine.” Against this testimony to the
correctness of Shakespeare’s morals are to be placed an anecdote of
a green-room amour picked up by a Middle Temple student in 1602 and
a Restoration scandal which made him the father by the hostess of the
Crown Inn at Oxford, where he baited on his visits to Stratford, of
Sir William D~venant, who was born in February 1606. His credit at court
is implied by Ben Jonson’s references to his flights “ that so did
take Eliza and our James,” and by stories of the courtesies which
passed between him and Elizabeth while he was playing a kingly part
in her presence, of the origin of The Merry Wives of Windsor in her
desire to see Falstaff in love, and of an autograph letter written to
honour him by King James. It was noticed with some surprise by Henry
Chettle that his “honied muse “dropped no “sable tear” to celebrate
the death of the queen. Southampton’s patronage may have introduced
him to the brilliant circle that gathered round the earl of Essex, but
there is no reason to suppose that he or his company were held personally
responsible for the performance of Richard II. at the command of some
of the followers of Essex as a prelude to the disastrous rising 0±
February 1601. The editors of the First Folio speak also of favours
received by the author in his lifetime from William Herbert, earl of
Pembroke, ‘and his brother Philip Herbert, earl of Montgomery.
He appears to have been on cordial terms with his fellows of the stage.
One of them, Augustine Phillips, left him a small legacy in 1605, and
in his own will he paid a F~tends. similar compliment to Richard Burbage,
and to John Heminge and Henry Condeli, who afterwards edited his plays.
His relations with Ben Jonson, whom he is said by Rowe to have introduced
to the world as a playwright, have been much canvassed. Jests are preserved
which, even if apocryphal, indicate considerable intimacy between ‘the
two. This is not inconsistent with occasional passages of arms. The
anonymous author of The Return from Parnassus (2nd part; 1602), for
example, makes Kempe, the actor, allude to a “purge” which Shakespeare
gave Jonson, in return for his attack on some of his rivals in The Poetaster.i
It has been conjectured that this purge was the description of Ajax
and his humours in Troilus and Cressida. Jonson, on the other hand,
who was criticism incarnate, did not spare Shakespeare either in his
prologues or in his private conversation. He told Drummond of Hawthornden
that “ Shakspeer wanted arte.” But the verses which he contributed
to the First Folio are generous enough to make all amends, and in his
Discoveries (pub. 164,; written c. 1624 and later), while regretting
Shakespeare’s excessive facility and the fact that he often “fell
into those things, could not escape laughter,” he declares him to
have been “honest and of an open and free nature,” and says that,
for his own part, “I lov’d the man and do honour his memory (on
this side idolatry) as much as any.” According to the memoranda-book
(1661—1663) of the Rev. John Ward (who became vicar of Stratford in
1662), Jonson and Michael Drayton, himself a Warwickshire poet, had
been drinking with Shakespeare when he caught the~ fever of which he
died; and Thomas Fuller (1608—1661), whose Worthies was published
in 1662, gives an imaginative description of the wit combats, of which
many took place between the two mighty contemporaries.
Of Shakespeare’s literary reputation during his lifetime there is
ample evidence. He is probably neither the “ Willy “ of Spenser’s
Tears of the Muses, nor the “ Aetion “ of Coatemhis Cohn Clout’s
Come Home Again. But from the porarj’ time of the publication of Venus
and Adonis and i~~put~~ Lucrece honorific allusions to his work both
as poet lou anddramatist, and often to himself by name, come thick and
fast from writers of every kind and degree. Perhaps the most interesting
of these from the biographical point of view are those contained in
the Palladis Tamia, a kind of literary handbook published by Francis
Meres in 1598; for Meres not only extols him as “the most excellent
in both kinds comedy and tragedyl for the stage,” and one of” the
most passionate among us to bewaile and bemoane the perplexities of
Love,” but also takes the trouble to give a list of twelve plays already
written, which serves as a starting-point for all modern, attempts at
a chronological arrangement of his work. It is moreover from Meres that
we first hear of “his sugred Sonnets among his private friends.”
Two of these sonnets were printed in 1599. I Kempe (speaking to Burbage),
“Few of the university pen plays well. They smell too much of that
writer Ovid and that writer (sic) Metamorphosis, and talk too much of
Proserpina and Jupiter. Why here’s our fellow Shakespeare puts them
all down; aye, and Ben Jonson too. 0 that Ben Jonson is a pestilent
fellow. He brought up Horace giving the Poets a pill, but our ‘fellow
Shakespeare bath given him a purge that made him beray his credit.”
in a volume of miscellaneous verse called The Passionate Pilgrim. This
was ascribed upon the title-page to Shakespeare, but probably, so far
as most of its contents were concerned, without justification. The bulk
of Shakespeare’s sonnets remained unpublished until 1609.
About 1610 Shakespeare seems to have left London, and entered upon the
definite occupation of his house at New Place, Stratford. Here he lived
the life of a retire gentleman, on friendly if satiricaJ terms with
the richest of his neighbours, the Combes, and interested in local affairs,
such as a bill for the improvement of the highways in 1611, or a proposed
enclosure of the open fields at Welcombe in 1614, which might affect
his income or his comfort. He had his garden with its mulberry-tree,
and his farm in the immediate neighbourhood. His brothers Gilbert and
Richard were still alive; the latter died in 1613. His sister Joan had
married William Hart, a hatter, and in 1616 was dwelling in one of his
houses in Henley Street. Of his daughters, the eldest, Susanna, had
married in 1607 John Hall (d. 1635), a physician of some reputation.
They dwelt in Stratford, and had one child, Elizabeth, afterwards Lady
Barnard (1608—1670). The younger, Judith, married Thomas Quiney, a
vintner, also of Stratford, two months before her father’s death.
At Stratford the last few of the plays may have been written, but it
is reasonable to suppose that Shakespeare’s connexion with the King’s
company ended when the Globe was burnt down during a performance of
Henry VIII. on the 29th of June I6 13. Certainly his retirement did
not imply an absolute break with London life. in 1613 he devised an
impresa, or emblem, to be painted by Richard Burbage, and worn in the
tilt on Accession day by the earl of Rutland, who had been one of the
old circle of Southampton and Essex. In the same year he purchased for
£140 a freehold house in the Blackfriars, near the Wardrobe. This was
conveyed to trustees, apparently in order to bar the right which his
widow would otherwise have had to dower. In 1615 this purchase involved
Shakespeare in a lawsuit for the surrender of the title-deeds. Richard
Davies, a Gloucestershire clergyman of the end of the i7th century,
reports that the poet “ died a papist,” and the statement deserves
more attention than it has received from biographers. There is indeed
little to corroborate it; for an alleged” spiritual testament “of
John Shakespeare is of suspected origin, and Davies’s own words suggest
a late conversion rather than an hereditary faith. On the other hand,
there is little to refute it beyond an entry in the accounts of Stratford
corporation for drink given in 1614 to “a preacher at the Newe Place.”
Shakespeare made his will on the 25th of March 1616, apparently in some
haste, as the executed deed is a draft with many erasures and interlineations.
There were legacies to his daughter Judith Quiney and his sister Joan
Hart, and remembrances to friends both in Warwickshire and in London;
but the real estate was left to his sister Susanna Hall under a strict
entail which points to a desire on the part of the testator to found
a family. Shakespeare’s wife, for whom other provision must have been
made, is only mentioned in an interlineation, by which the “second
best bed with the furniture” was bequeathed to her. Much nonsense
has been written about this, but it seems quite natural. The best bed
was an important chattel, which would go with the house. The estate
was after all not a large one. Aubrey’s estimate of its annual value
as £200 or £300 a year sounds reasonable enough, and John Ward’s
statement that Shakespeare spent £1000 a year must surely be an exaggeration.
The sum-total of his known investments amounts to £960. Mr Sidney Lee
calculates that his theatrical income must have reached £600 a year;
but it may be doubted whether this also is not a considerable overestimate.
It must be remembered that the purchasing value of money in the 17th
century is generally regarded as having been about eight times its present
value. Shakespeare’s interest in the “ houses “of the Globe and
Blackfriars probably determined on his death.
A month after his will was signed, on the 23rd of April 1616, Shakespeare
died, and as a tithe-owner was buried in the chancel of the parish church.
Some doggerel upon the stone that covers the grave has been assigned
by local tradition to his own pen. A more elaborate monument, with a
bust by the sculptor Gerard Johnson, was in due course set up on the
chancel wall. D th Anne Shakespeare followed her husband on the 6th
of August 1623. The family was never founded. Shakespeare’s grand-daughter,
Elizabeth Hall, made two childless marriages, the first with Thomas
Nash of Stratford, the second with John, afterwards Sir John, Barnard
of Abington. Manor, Northants. His daughter Judith Quiney had three
sons, all of whom had died unmarried by 1639. There were, therefore,
no direct descendants of Shakespeare in existence after Lady Barnard’s
death in 1670. Those of his sister, Joan Hart, could however still be
traced in 1864. On Lady Barnard’s death the Henley Street houses passed
to the Harts, in’ whose family they remained until 1806. They were
then sold, and in 1846 were bought for the public. They are now held
with Anne Hathaway’s Cottage at Shottery as the Birthplace Trust.
Lady Barnard had disposed of the Blackfriars house. The rest of the
property was sold under the terms of her will, and New Place passed,
first to the Cloptons who rebuilt it, and then to the Rev. Francis Gastrell,
who pulled it down in 1759. The site now forms a public recreation-ground,
and hard by is a memorial building with a theatre in which performances
of Shakespeare’s plays are given annually in April. Both the Memorial
and the Birthplace contain museums, in which books, documents and portraits
of Shakespearian interest, together with relics of greater or less authenticity,
are stored.
No letter or other writing in Shakespeare’s hand can be proved to
exist, with the exception of three signatures upon his will, one upon
a deposition (May II, 1612) in a lawsuit with which he was remotely
concerned, and two upon deeds (March io and II, 1613) ~fl connexion
with the purchase of his Blackfriars house. A copy of Florio’s translation
of Montaigne (1603) in the British Museum, a copy of the Aldine edition
of Ovid’s Metamorphoses (1502) in the Bodleian, and a copy of the
1612 edition of Sir Thomas North’s translation of Plutarch’s Lives
of the Noble Grecians and Romaines in. the Greenock Library, have all
been put forward with some plausibility as bearing his autograph name
or initials, and, in the third case, a marginal note by him. A passage
in the manuscript of the play of Sir Thomas More has been ascribed to
him (vide infra), and, if the play is his, might be in his handwriting.
Aubrey records that he was “a handsome, well-shap’t man,” and
the lameness attributed to him by some writers has its origin only in
a too literal interpretation of certain references to spiritual disabilities
in the Sonnets.
A collection. of Mr William Shakespeare’s Comedies, Histories and
Tragedies was printed at the press of William and Isaac Jaggard, and
issued by a group of booksellers in I6a3. Dr s This volume is known
as the First Folio. It has “a” dedications to the earls of Pembroke
and Montgomery, and to “the great Variety of Readers,” both of which
are signed by two of Shakespeare’s “fellows” at the Globe, John
Heminge and Henry Condell, and commendatory verses by Ben Jonson, Hugh
Holland, Leonard Digges and an unidentified I. M. The Droeshout engraving
forms part of the title-page. The contents include, with the exception
of Pericles, all of the thirtyseven plays now ordinarily printed in
editions of Shakespeare’s works. Of these eighteen were here published
for the first time. The other eighteen bad already appeared in one or
more separate editions, known as the Quartos.
The following list gives the date of the First Quarto of each such play,
and also that of any later Quarto which differs materially from the
First.
The Quarto Editions.
Titus Andronicus (1594). A Midsummer Night’s Dream
2 Henry VI. (1594). (1600).
3 Henry VI. (1595). The Merchant of Venice (1600).
Richard II. (1597, ,6o8). Much Ado About Nothing (1600).
Richard III. (15~7). The Merry Wives of Windsor
Romeo and Juliet (,5~7, 1599). (1602).
Love’s Labour’s Lost (1598). Hamlet (4603, 1604).
I Henry IV. (1598). King Lear (1608).
2 Henry IV. ~16oo). Troilus and Cressida (1609).
Henry V. (1600). Othello (1622).
Entries in the Register of copyrights kept by the Company of Stationers
indicate that editions of As You Like II and Anthony awl Cleopatra were
contemplated but not published in 1600 and 1608 respectively.
The Quartos differ very much in character. Some of them contain texts
which are practically identical with those of the First Folio; others
show variations so material as to suggest that some revision, either
by rewriting or by shortening for stage purposes, took place. Amongst
the latter are 2, 3 Henry VI., Richard III., Romeo and Juliet, The Merry
Wives of Windsor, Hamlet and King Lear. Many scholars doubt whether
the Quarto versions of 2, 3 Henry VI., which appeared under the titles
of The First Part of the Contention betwixt the two famous Houses of
York and Lancaster and The True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York, are
Shakespeare’s work at all. It seems clear that the Quartos of The
Troublesome Reign of Jo/zn King of England (1591) and Tile Taming of
A Shrew (1594),although treated forcopyright purposes as identical with
the plays of King John and The Taming of the Shrew, which he founded
upon them, are not his. The First Quartos of Romeo and Juliet, Henry
V., The Merry Wives of Windsor, and Hamlet seem to be mainly based,
not upon written texts of the plays, but upon versions largely made
up out of shorthand notes taken at the theatre by the agents of a piratical
bookseller. A similar desire to exploit the commercial value of Shakespeare’s
reputation probably led to the appearance of his name or initials upon
the title-pages of Locr-ine (15~5), Sir John Oldcastle (1600), Thomas
Lord Cromwell (1602), The London Prodigal (1605), The Puritan (1607),
A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608), and Pericles (I 609). It is not likely that,
with the exception of the last three acts of Pericles, he wrote any
part of these plays, some of which were not even produced by his company.
They were not included in the First Folio of 1623, nor in a reprint
of it in 1632, known as the Second Folio; but all seven were appended
to the second issue (1664) of the Third Folio (1663), and to the Fourth
Folio of 1685. Shakespeare is named as joint author with John Fletcher
on the title-page of The Two Noble Kinsmen (1634), and with William
Rowley on that of The Birth of Merlin (1662); there is no reason for
rejecting the former ascription or for accepting the latter. Late entries
in the Stationers’ Register assign to him Cardenio (with Fletcher),
Henry I. and Henry II. (both with Robert Davenport), King Stephen, Duke
Humphrey, and Iphis and lanthe; but none of these plays is now extant.
Modern conjecture has attempted to trace his hand in other plays, of
which Arden of Feversham (1592), Edward III. (1596), Mucedorus (1598),
and The Merry Devil of Edmonton (1608) are the most important; it is
quite possible that he may have had a share in Edward III. A play on
Sir Thomas More, which has been handed down in manuscript, contains
a number of passages, interpolated in various handwritings, to meet
requirements of the censor; and there are those who assign one of these
(ii. 4~ 1-17 2) to Shakespeare. Unfortunately the First Folio does not
give the’ dates at which the plays contained i,n it were written or
produced; and the endeavour to supply this deficiency has been one of
the Dates, main preoccupations of more than a century of Shakespearian
scholarship, since the pioneer essay of Edmund Malone in his An Attempt
to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays of Shakespeare were Written
(1778). The investigation is not a mere piece of barren antiquarianism,
for on it depends the possibility of appreciating the work of the world’s
greatest poet, not as if it were an articulated whole like a philosophical
system, but in its true aspect as the reflex of a vital and constantly
developing personality. A starting-point is afforded by the dates of
the Quartos and the entries in the Stationers’ Register which refer
to them, and by the list of plays already in existence in 1598 which
is inserted by Francis Meres in his Palladis Tamia of that year, and
which, while not necessarily exhaustive of Shakespeare’s pre-1598
writing, includes The Two Gentlemen of Verona, The Comedy of Errors,
Love’s Labour’s Lost, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant
of Venice, Richard II., Richard III., Henry IV., King John, Titus Andronicus
and Romeo and Juliet, as well as a mysterious Love’s Labour’s Won,
which has been conjecturally identified with several plays, but most
plausibly with The Taming of the Shrew. There is a mass of supplementary
evidence, drawn partly from definite notices in other writings or in
diaries, letters, account-books, and similar records, partly from allusions
to contemporary persons and events in the plays themselves, partly from
parallels of thought and expression. between each play and those near
to it in point of time, and partly from considerations of style, including
the so-called metrical tests, which depend upon an. analysis of Shakespeare’s
varying feeling for rhythm at different stages of his career. The total
result is certainly not a demonstration, but in the logical sense an
hypothesis which serves to colligate the facts and is consistent with
itself and with the known events of Shakespeare’s external life.
The following table, which is an attempt to arrange the original dates
of production of the plays without regard to possible revisions, may
be taken as fairly representing the common results of recent scholarship.
It is framed on the ~assumption that, as indeed John Ward tells us was
the case, Shakespeare ordinarily wrote two plays a year; but it will
be understood that neither the order in which the plays are given nor
the distribution of them over the years lays claim to more than approximate
accuracy.
Chronology of the Plays.
1591. 1600.
(I, 2) The Contention of York and (21) The Merry Wives of Windsor. Lancaster
(2, 3 Henry VI). (22) As You Like It.
1592. 160!. (3) 1 Henry VI. (23) Hamlet. (The theatres were closed for
riot (24) Twelfth Night. and plague from June to the end
1602.
of December.) (25) Troilus and Cressida.
1593.
(26) All’s Well that Ends Well. (~) Richard III. (5) Edward III. (part
only). 1603. (6) The Comedy of Errors. (The theatres were closed on
(The theatres were closed for Elizabeth’s death in March, and plague
from the beginning of remained closed for plague February to the end
of December.) throughout the year.)
1594. 1604.
(7) Titus Andronicus. (27) Measure for Measure. (The theatres were closed
for (28) Othello. plague during February and 1605. March.) (29) Macbeth.
(8) Taming of the Shrew. (30) King Lear. (g) Love’s Labour’s Lost.
1606. (1 o) Romeo and Juliet. (31) Anthony and Cleopatra. ‘595. (32)
Coriolanus. (ii) A Midsummer Night’s 1607. Dream. (~~) Timon of Athens
(un (12) The Two Gentlemen of Verona. finished). (13) King John. 1608.
1596.
(14) Richard II. (~~) Pericles (part only). (15) The Merchant of Venice.
1609.
1597.
(35) Cymbeline. (The theatres were closed for 1610. misdemeanour froth
the end of (36) The Winter’s Tale. July to October.)
1611.
(16) I Henry IV. (37) The Tempest.
1598. 1612.
(17) 2 Henry IV. . - (18) Much Ado About Nothing.
1613. 1599.
(38) The Two Noble Kinsmen (io) Henry V. (part only)., (20) Julius Caesar.
(ag) Henry VIII. (part only). A more detailed account of the individual
plays may now be attempted. The figures here prefixed correspond to
those in the table above. 1, 2. The relation of The Contention of York
and 1~ancaster to 2, 3 Henry VI. and the extent of Shakespeare’s responsibility
for either or both works have long been subjects of Composicontroversy.
The extremes of critical opinion are to be found in a theory which regards
Shakespeare as the sole author of 2, 3 Henry VI. and The Contention
as a shortened and piratical version of the original plays, and in a
theory which regards The Contention as written in collaboration by Marlowe,
Greene and possibly Peele, and a, 3 Henry VI. as a revision of The Contention
written, also in collaboration, by Marlowe and Shakespeare. A comparison
of the two texts leaves it hardly possible to doubt that the differences
between them are to be explained by revision rather than by piracy;
but the question of authorship is more difficult. Greene’s parody,
in the” Shakescene “ passage of his Groats-worth of Wit (1592),
of a line which occurs both in The Contention and in 3 Henry VI., while
it clearly suggests Shakespeare’s connexion with the plays, is evidence
neither for nor against the participation of other men, and no sufficient
criterion exists for distinguishing between Shakespeare’s earliest
writing and that of possible collaborators on grounds of style. But
there is nothing inconsistent between the reviser’s work in 2, 3 Henry
VI. and on the one hand Richard III. or on the other the original matter
of The Contention, which the reviser follows and elaborates scene by
scene. It is difficult to assign to any one except Shakespeare the humour
of the Jack Cade scenes, the whole substance of which is in The Contention
as well as in Henry VI. Views which exclude Shakespeare altogether may
be left out of account. Hen-ry VI. is not in Meres’s list of his plays,
but its inclusion in the First Folio is an almost certain ground for
assigning to him some share, if only as reviser, in the completed work.
3. A very similar problem is afforded by 1 Henry VI., and here also
it is natural, in the absence of tangible evidence to the contrary,
to hold by Shakespeare’s substantial responsibility for the play as
it stands. It is quite possible that it also may be a revised version,
although in this case no earlier version exists; and if so the Talbot
scenes (iv. 2-7) and perhaps also the Temple Gardens scene (ii. 4),
which are distinguished by certain qualities of style from the rest
of the play, may date from the period of revision. Thomas Nash refers
to the representation of Talbot on the stage in his Pierce Penilesse,
his Supplication to the Divell (1592), and it is probable that I Henry
VI. is to be identified with the “Harey the vj” recorded in Henslowe’s
Diary to have been acted as a new play by Lord Strange’s men, probably
at the Rose, on the 3rd of March 1592. If so, it is a reasonable conjecture
that the two parts of The Contention were originally written at some
date before the beginning of Henslowe’s record in the previous February,
and were revised so as to fall into a series with I Henry VI. in the
latter end of 1592.
4. The series as revised can only be intended to lead directly up to
Richard III., and this relationship, together with its style as compared
with that of the plays belonging to the autumn of 1594, suggest the
short winter season of 159 2—1593 as the most likely time for the
production of Richard III. There is a difficulty in that it is not included
in Henslowe’s list of the plays acted by Lord Strange’s men during
that season. But it may quite well have been produced by the only other
company which appeared at court during the Christmas festivities, Lord
Pembroke’s. The mere fact that Shakespeare wrote a play, or more than
one play, for Lord Strange’s men during 1592—1594 does not prove
that he never wrote for any other company during the same period; and
indeed there is plenty of room for guess-work as to the relations between
Strange’s and Pembroke’s men. The latter are not known to have existed
before 1592, and many difficulties would be solved by the assumption
that they originated out of a division of Strange’s, whose numbers,
since their amalgamation with the Admiral’s, may have been too much
inflated to enable them to undertake as a whole the summer tour of that
year. If so, Pembroke’s probably took over the Henry VI. series of
plays, since The Contention, or at least the True Tragedy, -was published
as performed by them, and completed it with Richard III. on their return
to London at Christmas. It will be necessary to return to this theory
in connexion with the discussion of Titus A ndroni.cus and The Taming
of the Shrew. The principal historical source for Henry VI. was Edward
Hall’s The Union of the Noble and Illustre Families of Lancaster and
York (1542), and for Richard III., -as for all Shakespeare’s later
historical plays, the second edition (1587) of Raphael Holinshed’s
Chronicles of England, Scotland and Ireland (i5l’~i). An earlier play,
The True Tragedy of Richard the Third (i5~4), seems to have contributed
little if anything to Richard III.
5. Many scholars think that at any rate the greater part of the first
two acts of Edward III., containing the story of Edward’s wooing of
the countess of Salisbury, are by Shakespeare; and, if so, it is to
about the time of Richard III. that the style of his contribution seems
to belong. The play was entered in the Stationer~’ Registei on December
1, 1595. The Shakespearian scenes are based on the 46th Novel in William
Paynter’s Palace of Pleasure (1566). The line, “ Lilies that fester
smell far worse than weeds” (ii. 1.451), is repeated verbatim in the
94th sonnet.
6. To the winter season of 1592—1593 may also be assigned with fair
probability Shakespeare’s first experimental comedy, The Comedy of
Errors, and if his writing at one and the same time for Pembroke’s
and for another company is not regarded as beyond the bounds of conjecture,
it becomes tempting to identify this with “the gelyous comodey”
produced, probably by Strange’s men, for Henslowe as a new play on
January 5, 1593. The play contains a reference to the wars of succession
in France which would fit any date from 1589 to ‘594. The plot is
taken from the Menaethmi, and to a smaller extent from the Amphitruo
of Plautus. William Warner’s translation of the Menaech,ni was entered
in the Stationers’ Register on June 10, 1594. A performance of The
Comedy of Errors by “a company of base and common fellows” (including
Shakespeare?) is recorded in the Gesta Grayorum as taking place in Gray’s
Inn hail on December 28, 1594.
7. Titus Andronicus is another play in which many scholars have refused
to see the hand of Shakespeare, but the double testimony of its inclusion
in Meres’s list and in the First Folio makes it unreasonable to deny
him some part in it. This may, however, only have been the part of a
reviser, working, like the reviser of The Contention, upon the dialogue
rather than the structure of a crude tragedy of the school of Kyd. In
fact a stage tradition is reported by Edward Ravenscroft, a late 17th-century
adapter of the play, to the effect that Shakespeare did no more than
give a few “ master-touches” to the work of a “private author.”
The play was entered in the Stationers’ Register on February 6, 1594,
and was published in the same year with a title-page setting out that
it had been acted by the companies of Lords Derby (i.e. Strange, who
had succeeded to his father’s title on September 25, 1593), Pembroke
and Sussex. It is natural to take this list as indicating the order
in which the three companies named had to do with it, but it is probable
that only Sussex’s had played Shakespeare’s version. Henslowe records
the production by this company of Titus and A ndronicus as a new play
on January 23, 1594, only a few days before the theatres were closed
by plague. For the purposes of Henslowe’s financial arrangements with
the company a rewritten play may have been classed as new. Two years
earlier he had appended the same description to a play of Tittus and
Vespacia, produced by Strange’s men on April II, I592. At first sight
the title suggests a piece founded on the lives of the emperor Titus
and Vespasian, but the identification of the play with an early version
of Titus Andronicus is justified by the existence of a rough German
adaptation, which follows the general outlines of Shakespeare’s play,
but in which one of the sons of Titus is named Vespasian instead of
Lucius. The ultimate source of the plot is unknown. It cannot be traced
in any of the Byzantine chroniclers. Strange’s men seem to have been
still playing Titus in January 1593, and it was probably not transferred
to Pembroke’s until the companies were driven from London by the plague
of that year. Pembroke’s are known from a letter of Henslowe’s to
have been ruined by August, and it is to be suspected that Sussex’s,
who appeared in London for the first time at the Christmas of I5c13,
acquired their stock of plays and transferred these to the Chamberlain’s
men, when the companies were again reconstituted in the summer of 1594.
The revision of Titus and Vespasian into Titus Andronicus by Shakespeare
may have been accomplished in the interval between these two transactions.
The Chamberlain’s men were apparently playing Andronicus in June.
The stock of Pembroke’s men probably included, as well as Titus and
Vespas’ian, both Henry VI. and Richard III., which also thus passed
to the Chamberlain’s company.
8. In the same way was probably also acquired an old play of The Taming
of A Shrew. This, which can be traced back as far as 1589, was published
as acted by Pembroke’s men in 1594. In June of that year it was being
acted by the Chamberlain’s, but more probably in the revised version
by Shakespeare, which bears the slightly altered title of The Taming
of The Shrew. This is a much more free adaptation of its original than
had been attempted in the case of Henry VI., and the Warwicksbire allusions
in the Induction are noteworthy. Some critics have doubted whether Shakespeare
was the sole author of The Shrew, and others have assigned him a share
in A Shrew, but neither theory has any very substantial foundation.
The origins of the play, which is to be classed as a farce rather than
a comedy, are to be found ultimately in widely distributed folk-tales,
and more immediately in Ariosto’s I Suppositi (1509) as translated
in George Gascoigne’s The Supposes (1566). It may have been Shakespeare’s
first task for the newly established Chamberlain’s company of 1594
to furbish up the old farce. Thenceforward there is no reason to think
that he ever wrote for any other company.
9. Love’s Labour’s Lost has often been regarded as the first of
Shakespeare’s plays, and has sometimes been placed as early as 1589.
There is, however, no proof that Shakespeare was writing before 1592
or thereabouts. The characters of Love’s Labour’s Lost are evidently
suggested by Henry of Navarre, his followers Biron and Longaville, and
the Catholic League leader, the duc de Maine. These personages would
have been familiar at any time from 1585 onwards. The absence of the
play from the lists in Henslowe’s Diary does not leave it impossible
that it should have preceded the formation of the Chamberlain’s company,
but certainly renders this less likely; and its lyric character perhaps
justifies its being grouped with the series of plays that began in the
autumn of 1594. No entry of the play is found in the Stationers’Register,
and it is quite possible that the present First Quarto of 1598 was not
really the first edition. The title-page professes to give the play
as it was” corrected and augmented” for the Christmas either of
1597 or of 1598. It was again revived for that of 1604. No literary
source is known for its incidents.
10. Romeo and Juliet, which was published in 159l’ as played by Lord
Hunsdon’s men, was probably produced somewhat before A Midsummer Night’s
Dream, as its incidents seem to have suggested the parody of the Pyramus
and Thisbe interlude. An attempt to date it in 1591 is hardly justified
by the Nurse’s references to an earthquake eleven years before and
the fact that there was a real earthquake in London in i 580. The text
seems to have been partly revised before the issue of the Second Quarto
in 1599. There had been an earlier play on the subject, but the immediate
source ‘used by Shakespeare was Arthur Brooke’s narrative poem Romeus
and Juliet (1562).
11. A Midsummer Night’s Dream, with its masque-like scenes of fairydom
and the epithalamium at its close, has all the air of having been written
less for the public stage than for some courtly wedding; and the compliment
paid by Oberon to the “fair vestal throned by the west” makes it
probable that it was a wedding at which Elizabeth was present. Two fairly
plausible occasions have been suggested. The wedding of Mary countess
of Southampton with Sir Thomas Heneage on the 2nd of May 1594 would
fit the May-day setting of the plot; but a widowed countess hardly answers
to the “little western flower “ of the allegory, and there are allusions
to events later in 1594 and in particular to the raihy weather of June
and July, which indicate a somewhat later date. The wedding of William
Stanley, earl of Derby, brother of the lord Strange for whose players
Shakespeare had written, and Elizabeth Vere, daughter of the earl of
Oxford, which took place at Greenwich on the 26th of January 1595, perhaps
fits the conditions best. It has been fancied that Shakespeare was present
when “certain stars shot madly from their spheres” in the Kenilworth
fireworks of 1575, but if he had any such entertainment in mind it is
more likely to have been the more recent one given to Elizabeth by the
earl of Hertford at Elvetham in 1591. There appears to be no special
source for the play beyond Chaucer’s Knight’s Tale and the widespread
fairy lore of western Europe.
12. No very definite evidence exists for the date of The Two Gentlemen
of Verona, other than the mention of it in Palladis Tamia. It is evidently
a more rudimentary essay in the genre of romantic comedy than The Merchant
of Venice, with which it has other affinities in its Italian colouring
and its use of the inter-relations of love and friendship as a theme;
and it may therefore be roughly assigned to the neighbourhood of 1595.
The plot is drawn from various examples of contemporary fiction, especially
from the story of the shepherdess !ilismena in Jorge de Montemayor’s
Diana (1559). A play of Felix and Philiomena had already been given
at court in 1585.
13. King John is another play for which ‘595 seems a likely date,
partly on. account of its style, and partly from the improbability of
a play on an independent subject drawn from English history being interpolated
in the middle’ either of the Yorkist or of the Lancastrian series.
It would seem that Shakespeare had before him an old play of the Queen’s
men, called The Troublesome Reign of King John. This was published in
i~91, and again, with “W. Sh.” on the title-page, in 1611. For copyright
purposes King John appears to have been regarded as a revision of The
Troublesome Reign, and in fact the succession of incidents in. the two
plays is much the same. Shakespeare’s dialogue, however, owes little
or nothing to that of his predecessor.
14. Richard II. can be dated with some accuracy by a comparison of the
two editions of Samuel Daniel’s narrative poem on The Civil Wars Between
the Two Houses of Lancaster and York, both of which bear the date of
I595 and were therefore issued between March 25, 1595 and March 24,
1596 of the modern reckoning. The second of these editions, but not
the first, contains some close parallels to the play. From the first
two quartos of Richard II., published in. 1597 and 1598, the deposition
scene was omitted, although it was clearly part of the original structure
of the play, and its removal leaves an obvious mutilation in the text.
There is some reason to suppose that this was due to a popular tendency
to draw seditious parallels between Richard and Elizabeth; and it became
one of the charges against the earl of Essex and his fellow-conspirators
in the ,abortive êmeute of February I60I, that they had procured a
performance of a play on Richard’s fate in order to stimulate their
followers. As the actors were the Lord Chamberlain’s men, this play
can hardly have been any other than Shakespeare’s. The deposition
scene was not printed until after Elizabeth’s death, in the Third
Quarto of 1608.
15. The Merchant of Venice, certainly earlier than July 22, 1598, on
which date it was entered in the Stationers’ Register, and possibly
inspired by the machinations of the Jew poisoner Roderigo Lopez, (who
was executed in June 1594, shows a considerable advance in comic and
melodramatic power over any~ of the earlier plays, and is assigned by
a majority of scholars to about 1596. The various stories of which its
plot is compounded are based upon common themes of folk-tales and Italian
novelle. It is possible that Shakespeare may have had before him a play
called The Jew, of which there are traces as early as 1579, and in which
motives illustrating “the greedinesse of worldly chusers” and the
“bloody mindes of usurers” appear to have been already combined.
Something may also be owing to Marlowe’s play of The Jew of Malta.
16, 17. The existence of Richard II. is assumed throughout in Henry
IV., which probably therefore followed it after no long interval. The
first part was published in 1598, the second not until 1600, but both
parts must have been in existence before the entry of the first part
in the Stationers’ Register on February 25th 1598, since Falstaff
is named in this entry, and a slip in a speech-prefix of the second
part, which was not entered in the Register until August 23rd I600,
betrays that it was written when the character still bore the name of
Sir John Oldcastle. Richard James, in his dedication. to The Legend
of Sir John Oldcastle about 1625, and Rowe in 1709 both bear witness
to the substitution of the one personage for the other, which Rowe ascribes
to the intervention of Elizabeth, and James to that of some descendants
of Oldcastle, one of whom was probably Lord Cobham. There is an allusion
to the incident and an acknowledgment of the wrong done to the famous
Lollard martyr in the epilogue to 2 Henry IV. itself. Probably Shakespeare
found Oldcastle, with very little else that was of service to him, in
an old play called The Famous Victories of Henry the Fifth, which had
been acted by Tarlton and the Queen’s men at least as far back as
1588, and of which an edition. was printed in. 1598. Falstaff himself
is a somewhat libelous presentment of the 15th century leader, ~r John
Fastolf, who had already figured in Henry VI.; but presumably Fastolf
has no titled descendants alive in 1598.
18. An entry in the Stationers’ Register during 1600 shows that Much
Ado About Nothing was in existence, although its publication was then
directed to be” stayed.” It may plausibly be regarded as the earliest
play not included in Meres’s list. In. 1613 it was revived before
James I. under the alternative title of Benedick and Beatrice. Dogberry
is said by Aubrey to have been taken from a constable at Grendon in
Buckinghamshire. There is no very definite literary source for the play,
although some of its incidents are to be found in Ariosto’s Orlando
Furioso and Bandello’s novelle, and attempts have been made to establish
relationships between it and two early German plays, Jacob Ayrer’s
Die Schone Phaenicia and the Vincentius Ladiszlaus of Duke Henry Julius
of Brunswick.
19. The completion. of the Lancastrian series of histories by Henry
V. can be safely placed in or about 1599, since there is an allusion
in one of the choruses to the military operations in Ireland of the
earl of Essex,who crossed on March 27 and returned on September 28,
1599. The First Quarto, which was first “stayed” with Much Ado About
Nothing and then published in. 1600, is a piratical text, and does not
include the choruses. A geniune and perhaps slightly revised version
was first published in the First Folio.
20. That Julius Caesar also belongs to 1599 is shown, not only by its
links with Henry V. but also by an allusion to it in John Weever’s
Mirror of Martyrs, a work written two years before its publication in
1601, and by a notice of a performance on September 2Ist,1599 by Thomas
Platter of Basel in an account of a visit to London. This was the first
of Shakespeare’s Roman plays, and, like those that followed, was based
upon. Plutarch’s Lives as translated from the French of Jacques Amyot
and published by Sir Thomas North in 1580. Itwasalso Shakespeare’s
first tragedy since Romeo and Juliet.
21. It is reported by John Dennis, in the preface to The Comical Gallant
(1702), that The Merry Wives of Windsor was written at the express desire
of Elizabeth, who wished to see Falstaff in love, and was finished by
Shakespeare in the space of a fortnight. A date at the end of 1599 or
the beginning of 1600, shortly after the completion of the historical
Falstaff plays, would be the most natural one for this enterprise, and
with such a date the evidence of style agrees. The play was entered
in the Stationers’ Register on January 18th, 1602. The First Q uarto
of the same year appears to contain an earlier version of the text than
that of the First Folio. Among the passages omitted in the revision
was an allusion to the adventures of the duke of Wurttemberg and count
of Mompelgard, whose attempts to secure the Garter had brought him into
notice. The Windsor setting makes it possible that The Merry Wives was
pro’duced at a Garter feast, and perhaps with the assistance of the
children of Windsor Chapel in the fairy parts. The plot has its analogies
to various incidents in Italian novelle and in English adaptations of
these.
22. As You Like It was one of the plays “stayed” from publication
in 1600, and cannot therefore be later than that year. Some trifling
bits of evidence suggest that it is not earlier than 1599. The plot
is based upon Thomas Lodge’s romance of Rosalynde (1590), and this
in part upon the pseudo-Chaucerian Tale of Gamelyn.
23. A play of Hamlet was performed, probably by the Chamberlain’s
men, for Henslowe at Newington Butts on the oth of June 1594. There
are other references to it as a revenge-play, and it seems to have been
in existence in some shape as early as I 589. It was doubtless on the
basis of this that Shakespeare constructed his tragedy. Some features
of the so-called Ur-Hamlet may perhaps be traceable in. the German play
of Der bestrafte Brudermord. There is an allusion. in Hamlet to the
rivalry between the ordinary stages and the private plays given by boy
actors, which points to a date during the vogue of the children of the
Chapel, whose performance began late in 1600, and another to an inhibition
of plays on account of a “late innovation,” by which the Essex rising
of February 1601 may be meant. The play was entered in the Stationers’
Register on July 26, 1602. The First Quarto was printed in 1603 and
the Second Quarto in 1604. These editions contain texts whose differences
from each other and from that of the First Folio are so considerable
as to suggest, even. when allowance has been made for the fact that
the First Quarto is probably a piratical venture, that t’he play underwent
an exceptional amount of rewriting at Shakespeare’s hands. The title-page
of the First Quarto indicates that the earliest version was acted in
the universities of Oxford and Cambridge and elsewhere, as well as in
London. The ultimate source of the plot is to be found in Scandinavian
legends preserved in the H-istoria Danica of Saxo Grammaticus, and transmitted
to Shakespeare or his predecessor through the Histoires tragiques (1570)
of Francois de Belleforest (see HAMLET).
24. Twelfth Night may be fairly placed in. 1601-1602, since it quotes
part of a song included in Robert Jones’s First Book of Songs and
Airs (1600), and is recorded by John Manningham to have been seen by
him at a feast in the Middle Temple hall on February 2nd, 1602. The
principal source of the plot was Barnabe Riche’s “History of Apolonius
and Silla” in his Farewell to Military Profession (1581).
25. Few of the plays present so many difficulties as Troilus and Cressida,
and it cannot be said that its literary history has as yet been thoroughly
worked out. A play of the name,” as yt is acted by my Lord Chamberlens
men” was entered in the Stationers’ Register on February 7th, 1603,
with a note that “sufficient authority “ must be got by the publisher,
James Roberts, before he printed it. This can hardly be any other than
Shakespeare’s play; but it must have been. “ stayed, “ for the
First Quarto did not appear until 1609, and on the 28th of January of
that year a fresh entry had been made in the Register by another publisher.
The text of the Quarto differs in certain respects from that of the
Folio, but not to a greater extent than the use of different copies
of the original manuscript might explain. Two alternative title-pages
are found in copies of the Quarto. On one, probably the earliest, is
a statement that,the play was printed “as it was acted by the Kings
Majesties seruants at the Globe “; from the other th€se words are
omitted, and a preface is appended which hints that the “grand possessors”
of the play had made difficulties about its publication, and describes
it as “never staled with the stage.” Attempts have been made, mainly
on grounds of style, to find another hand than Shakespeare’s in the
closing scenes and in the prologue, and even to assign widely different
dates to various parts of what is ascribed to Shakespeare. But the evidence
does not really bear out these theories, and the style of the whole
must be regarded as quite consistent with a date in 1601 or 1602. The
more probable year is 1602, if, as seems not unlikely, the description
of Ajax and his humours in the second scene of the first act is Shakespeare’s
“purge” to Jonson in reply to the Poetaster (1601), alluded to,
as already mentioned, in the Return from Parnassus, a Cambridge play
acted probably at the Christmas of 1602—1603 (rather than, as is usually
asserted, 1601—1602). It is tempting to conjecture that Troilus and
Cressida may have been played, like Hamlet, by the Chamberlain’s men
at Cambridge, but may never have been taken to London, and in this sense
“never staled with the stage.” The only difficulty of a date in
1602 ~5 that a parody of a play on Troilus and Cressida is introduced
into Histriomcfstix (c. 1599), and that in this Troilus “ shakes his
furious speare.” But Henslowe had produced another play on the subject,
by Dekker and Chettle, ill 1599, and probably, therefore, no allusion
to Shakespeare is really intended. The material for Troilus and Cressida
was taken by Shakespeare from Chaucer’s Troilus and Criseyde, Caxton’s
Recuyell of the Historyes of Troyc, and Chapman’s Homer.
26. It is almost wholly on grounds of style that All’s Well that Ends
Well is placed by most critics in or about 1602, and, as in the case
of Troilus and Cressida, it ‘has been argued, though with little justification,
that parts of the play are of considerably earlier date, and perhaps
represent the Love’s Labour’s Won referred to by Meres. The story
is derived from Boccaccio’s Decameron through the medium of William
Paynter’s Palace of Pleasure (1566).
27. Measure for Measure is believed to have been played at court on
the 26th of December 1604. The evidence for this is to be found, partly
in. an extract made for Malone from official records now lost, and partly
in a forged document, which may, however, rest upon genuine information,
placed amongst the account-books of the Office of the Revels. If this
is correct the play was probably produced when the theatres were reopened
after the plague in 1604. The plot is taken from a story already used
by George Whetstone, both in his play of Promos and Cassandra (1578)
and in his prose Heptame’ron of Civil Discourses (1582), and borrowed
by him from Giraldi Cinthio’s Hecatommithi (1566).
28. A performance at court of Othello on November 1, 1604, is noted
in the same records as those quoted with regard to Measure for Measure,
and the play may be reasonably assigned to the same year. An alleged
performance at Harefield in 1602 certainly rests upon a forgery. The
play was revived in 1610 and seen by Prince Louis’of Wurttemberg at
the Globe on April 30 of that year. It was entered in the Stationers’
Register on October 6, 1621, and a First Quarto was published in. 1622.
The text of this is less satisfactory than that of the First Folio,
and omits a good many lines found therein and almost certainly belonging
to the play as first written. It also contains some profane expressions
which have been modified in the Folio, and thereby points to a date
for the original production earlier than the Act to Restrain Abuses
of Players passed in the spring of 1606. The plot, like that of Measure
for Measure, comes from the Hecatommithi (1566) of Giraldi Cinthio.
29. Macbeth cannot, in view of its obvious allusions to James I., be
of earlier date than 1603. The style and some trifling allusions point
to about 1605 or 1606, and a hint for the thememay have been given by
Matthew Gwynne’s entertainment of the Tres Sib yllae, with which James
was welcomed to Oxford on August 27, 1605. The play was revived in 1610
and Simon Forman saw it at the Globe on April 20. The only extant text,
that of the First Folio, bears traces of shortening, and has been interpolated
with additional rhymed dialogues for the witches by a second hand, probably
that of Thomas Middleton. But the extent of Middleton’s contribution
has been exaggerated; it is probably confined to act iii. sc. 5, and
a few lines in act. iv. sc. I. A ballad of Macdobetli was entered in
the Stationers’ Register on August 27, 1596, but is not known. It
is not likely that Shakespeare had consulted any Scottish history other
than that included in Raphael Holinshed’s Chronicle; he may have gathered
witchlore from Reginald Scot’s Discoverie of Witchcraft (1584) or
King James’s own Demonologie (1599).
30. The entry of King Lear in the Stationers’ Register on November
26, 16o7, records the performance of the play at court on December 26,
1606. This suggests 1605 or 1606 as the date of production, and this
is confirmed by the publication in 5605 of the older play, The True
Chronicle History of King Leir, which Shakespeare used as his source.
Two Quartos of King Lear were published in 1608, and contain a text
rather longer, but in other respects less accurate, than that of the
First Folio. The material of the play consists of fragments of Celtic
myth, which found their way into history through Geoffrey of Monmouth.
It was accessible to Shakespeare in Holinshed and in Spenser’s Faerie
Queene, as well as in the old play.
31. It is not quite clear whether Antony and Cleopatra was the play
of that name entered in the Stationers’ Register on May 20, 1608,
for no Quarto is extant, and a fresh entry was made in the Register
before the issue of the First Folio.’ Apart from this entry, there
is little external evidence to fix the date of the play, but it is in
Shakespeare’s later, although not his last manner, and may very well
belong to 1606.
32. In the case of Coriolanus the external evidence available is even
scantier, and all that can be said is that its closest affinities are
to Antony and Cleopatra, which in all probability it directly followed
or preceded in order of composition. Both plays, like Julius Caesar,
are based upon the Lives of Plutarch, as Englished by Sir Thomas North.
33. There is no external evidence as to the date of Timon of Athens,
but it may safely be grouped on the strength of its internal characteristics
with the plays just named, and there is a clear gulf between it and
those that follow. It may be placed provisionally in 1607. The critical
problems which it presents have never been thoroughly worked out. ‘
The extraordinary incoherencies of its action and inequalities of its
style have prevented modern scholars from accepting it as a finished
production of Shakespeare, but there agreement ceases. It is sometimes
regarded as an incomplete draft for an intended play; sometimes as a
Shakespearian. fragment worked over by a second hand either for the
stage or for printing in the First Folio; sometimes, but not very plausibly,
as an old play by an inferior writer which Shakespeare had partly remodelled.
It does not seem to have had any relations to an extant academic play
of Timon which remained in manuscript until1842. The sources are to
be found, partly in Plutarch’s Life of Marcus Antonius, partly in
Lucian’s dialogue of Timon or Misanthropos, and partly in William
Paynter’s Palace of Pleasure (1566).
34. Similar difficulties, equally unsolved, cling about Pericles. It
was entered in the Stationers’ Register on May 20, 1608, and published
in 1609 as “the late and much admired play” acted by the King’s
men at the Globe. The title-page bears Shakespeare’s name, but the
play was not included’in the First Folio, and was only added to Shakespeare’s
collected works in the Third Folio, iii company with others which, although
they also had been printed under his name or initials in quarto form,
are certainly not his. In 1608 was published a prose story, The Painful
Adventures of Pericles Prince of Tyre. This claims to be the history
of the play as it was presented by the King’s players, and is described
in a ‘dedication by George Wilkins as “a poore infant of my braine.”
The production of the play is therefore to be put in 1608 or a little
earlier. It can hardly be doubted on. internal evidence that Shakespeare
is the author of the verse-scenes in the last three acts, with the exception
of the doggerel choruses. It is probable, although it has been doubted,
that he was also the author of the prose-scenes in those acts. To the
first two acts he can. at most only have contributed a touch or two.
It seems reasonable to suppose that the nonShakespearian part of the
play is by Wilkins, by whom other dramatic work was produced about 1607.
The prose story quotes a line or two from Shakespeare’s contribution,
and it follows that this must have been made by 1608. The close resemblances
of the style to that of Shakespeare’s latest plays make it impossible
to place it much earlier. But whether Shakespeare and Wilkins collaborated
in the play, or Shakespeare partially rewrote Wilkins, or Wilkins completed
Shakespeare, must be regarded as yet undetermined. Unless there was
an earlier Shakespearian version now lost, Dryden’s statement that
“ Shakespeare’s own Muse her Pericles’ first bore “ must be
held to be an error. The story is an ancient one which exists in many
versions. In all of these except the play, the name of the hero is Apollonius
of Tyre. The play is directly based upon a version in Gower’s Confessio
Amantis, and theuse of Gower as a “presenter “is thereby explained.
But another version in Laurence Twine’s Patterne of Painefull Adventures
(c. 1576), of which a new edition appeared in 1607, may also have been
consulted.
35. Cymbeline shows a further development than Pericles in the direction
of Shakespeare’s final style, and can hardly have come earlier. A
description of it is in a note-book of Simon Forman, who died in September
1611, and describes in the same book other plays seen by him in 1610
and 1611. But these were not-necessarily new plays, and Cymbeline may
perhaps be assigned
conjecturally to 1609. The mask-like dream in act v. sc. 4 must be an
interpolation by another hand. This play also is based upon a wide-spread
story, probably known to Shakespeare in Boccaccio’s Decameron (day
2, novel 9), and possibly also in an English book of tales called Westward
for Smelts. The historical part is, as usual, from Holinshed.
38. The Winter’s Tale was seen by Forman on May 15, 1611, and as it
clearly belongs to the latest group of plays it may well enough have
been produced in the preceding year. A document amongst the Revels Accounts,
which is forged, but may rest on some authentic basis, gives November
5, 1611 as the date of a performance at court. The play is recorded
to have been licensed by Sir George Buck, who began to license plays
in 1607. The plot is from Robert Greene’s Pandosto, the Triumph of
Time, or Dorastus and Fawnia (1588).
37. The wedding-mask in act iv. of The Tempest has suggested the possibility
that it may have been composed to celebrate the marriage of the princess
Elizabeth and Frederick V., the elector palatine, on February 14, 1613.
But Malone appears to have had evidence, now lost, that the play was
performed at court as early as 1611, and the forged document amongst
the Revels Accounts gives the precise date of November I, 1611. Sylvester
Jourdan’s A Discovery of the Bermudas, containing an account of the
shipwreck of Sir George Somers in 1609, was published about October
r6io, and this or some other contemporary narrative of Virginian colonization
probably furnished the hint of the plot.
38. The tale of Shakespeare’s independent dramas is now complete,
but an analysis of the Two Noble Kinsmen leaves no reason to doubt the
accuracy of its ascription on the title-page of the First Quarto of
1634 to Shakespeare and John Fletcher. This appears to have been a case
of ordinary collaboration. There is sufficient resemblance between the
styles of the two writers to render the division of the play between
them a matter of some difficulty; but the parts that may probably be
assigned to Shakespeare are acts i. scc. 1-4; ii. I; iii. I, 2; V. I,
3, 4. Fletcher’s morris-dance in act iii. sc. 5 is borrowed from that
in Beaumont’s Mask of the Inner Temple and Gray’s Inn, given on
February 20, 1613, and the play may perhaps be dated in 1613. It is
based on Chaucer’s Knight’s Tale.
39. It may now be accepted as a settled result of scholarship that Henry
VIII. is also the result of collaboration, and that one of the collaborators
was Fletcher. There is no good reason to doubt that the other was Shakespeare,
although attempts have been made to substitute Philip Massinger. The
inclusion, however, of the play in the First Folio must be regarded
as conclusive against this theory. There is some ground for suspicion
that the collaborators may have had an earlier work of Shakespeare before
them, and this~wou1d explain the reversion to the” history” type
of play which Shakespeare had long abandoned. His share appears to consist
of act i. scc. 1, 2~ act ii. scc. 3, 4; act iii. Sc. 2, II. 1-203; act
V. sc. I. The play was probably produced in 1613, and originally bore
the alternative title of All is True. It was being performed in the
Globe on June 29, 1613, when the thatch caught fire and the theatre
was burnt. The principal source was Holinshed, but Hall’s Union of
Lancaster and York, Foxe’s Acts and Monuments of the Church, and perhaps
Samuel Rowley’s play of When You See Me, You Know Me (1605), appear
also to have contributed.
Shakespeare’s non-dramatic writings are not numerous. The narrative
poem of Venus and Adonis was entered in the Stationers’ Register on
April 18, 1593, and thirteen editions, dating from 1593 to 1636, are’
known. The Rape of Lucrece was, entered in the Register on May 9, 1594,
and the six extant editions range from 1594 to 1624. Each poem is prefaced
by a dedicatory epistle from the author to Henry Wriothesley, earl of
Southampton. The subjects, taken respectively from the Metamorp/ioses
and the Fasti of Ovid, were frequent in Renaissance literature. It was
once supposed that Shakespeare came from Stratford—on-Avon with Venus
and Adonis in his pocket; but it is more likely that both poems owe
their origin to the comparative leisure afforded to playwrights and
actors by the plague-period of 1592—1594. In 1599 the stationer William
Jaggard published a volume of miscellaneous verse which he called The
Passionate Pilgrim, and placed Shakespeare’s name on the title-page.
Only two of the pieces included herein are certainly Shakespeare’s,
and although others may quite possibly be his, the authority of the
volume is destroyed by the fact that some of its contents are without
doubt the work of Marlowe, Sir Walter Raleigh, Richard Barnfield and
Bartholomew Griffin. In 1601 Shakespeare contributed The Phoenix and
the Turtle, an elegy on an unknown pair of wedded lovers, to a volume
called Love’s Martyr, or Rosalin’s Complaint, which was collected
and mainly written by Robert Chester. The interest of all these poems
sinks into insignificance beside that of one remaining’ volume. The
Sonnets were entered in the Register on May 20, 1609, by the stationer
Thomas Thorpe, and published by him under the title S/sake- ~mS speares
Sonnets, never before Imprinted, in the same Sonne~. year. In addition
to a hundred and fifty-four sonnets, the volume contains the elegiac
poem, probably dating from the Venus and ‘ Adonis period, of A Lover’s
Complaint. In 1640 the Sonnets, together with other poems from The Passionate
Pilgrim and elsewhere, many of them not Shakespeare’s, were republished
by John Benson in Poems Written by Wil. Shakespeare, Gent. Here the
sonnets are arranged in an altogether different order from that of 1609
and are declared by the publisher to “appeare of the same purity,
the Authour himselfe then living avouched.” No Shakespearian controversy
has received so much attention, especially during recent years, as that
which concerns itself with the date, character, and literary history
of the Sonnets. This is intelligible enough, since upon the issues raised
depends the question whether these poems do or do not give a glimpse
into the intimate depths of a personality which otherwise is at the
most only imperfectly revealed through the plays. On the whole, the
balance of authority is now in favour of regarding them as in a very
considerable measure autobiographical. This view has undergone the fires
of much destructive argument. The authenticity of the order in which
the sonnets were printed in 1609 has been doubted; and their subject-matter
has been variously explained as being of the nature of a philosophical
allegory, of an effort of the dramatic imagination, or of a heartless
exercise in the forms of the Petrarchan convention. This last theory
has been recently and strenuouslymaintained, and may be regarded as
the only one which now holds the field in opposition to the autobiographical
interpretation. But it rests upon the false psychological assumption,
which is disproved by the whole history of poetry and in particular
of Petrarchan poetry, that the use of conventions is inconsistent with
the expression of unfeigned emotions; and it is hardly to be set against
the direct conviction which the sonnets carry to the most finely critical
minds of the strength and sincerity of the spiritual experience out
of which they were wrought. This conviction makes due allowance for
the inevitable heightening of emotion itself in the act of poetic composition;
and it certainly does not carry with it a belief that all the external
events which underlie the emotional development are capable at this
distance of time of inferential reconstruction. But it does accept the
sonnets as an actual record of a part of Shakespeare’s life during
the years in which they were written, and as revealing at least the
outlines of a drama which played itself out for once, not in his imagination
but in his actual conduct in the world of men and women.
There is no advantage to be gained by rearranging the order of the 1609
volume, even if there were any basis other than that of individual whim
on which to do so. Many of the sonnets are obviously linked to those
which follow or precede them; and altogether a few may conceivably be
misplaced, the order as a whole does not jar against the sense of emotional
continuity, which is the only possible test that can be applied. The
last two sonnets, however, are merely alternative versions of a Greek
epigram, and the rest fall into two series, which are more probably
parallel than successive. The shorter of these two series (cxxvii.clii.)
appears to be the record of the poet’s relations with a mistress,
a dark woman with raven brows and mourning eyes.
In the earlier sonnets he undertakes the half-playful defence of black
beauty against the blonde Elizabethan ideal; but the greater number
are in a more serious vein, and are filled with a deep consciousness
of the bitterness of lustful passion and of the slavery of the soul
to the body. The woman is a wanton. She has broken her bed-vow for Shakespeare,
who on. his side is forsworn in loving her; and she is doubly forsworn.
in proving faithless to him with other men. His reason condemns her,
but his heart has not the power to throw off her tyranny. Her particular
offence is that she, “a woman coloured ill, “ has cast her snares
not only upon him, but upon his friend, “a man right fair,” who
is his “better angel,” and that thus his loss is double, in love
and friendship. The longer series (i.-cxxvi.) is written to a man, appears
to extend over a considerable period of time, and covers a wide range
of sentiment. The person addressed is younger than Shakespeare, and
of higher rank. He is lovely, and the son of a lovely mother, and has
hair like the auburn buds of marjoram. The series falls into a number
of groups, which are rarely separated by any sharp lines of demarcation.
Perhaps the first group (i.-xvii.) is the most distinct of all. These
sonnets are a prolonged exhortation by Shakespeare to his friend to
marry and beget children. The friend is now on the top of happy hours,
and should make haste, before the rose of beauty dies, to secure himself
in his descendants against devouring time. In the next group (xviii.-xxv.)
a much more personal note is struck, and the writer assumes the attitudes,
at once of the poet whose genius is to be devoted to eternizing the
beauty and the honour of his patron, and of the friend whose absorbing
affection is always on the point of assuming an emotional colour indistinguishable
from that of love. The consciousness of advancing years and that of
a fortune which bars the triumph of public honour alike fin.d their
consolation in this affection. A period of absence (xxvi.-xxxii.) follows,
in which the thought of friendship comes to remedy the daily labour
of travel and the sorrows of a life that is “in disgrace with fortune
and men’s eyes” and filled with melancholy broodings over the past.
Then (xxxiii.-xlii.) comes an estrangement. The friend has committed
a sensual fault, which is at the same time a sin against friendship.
He has been wooed by a woman loved by the poet, who deeply resents the
treachery, but in the en.d forgives it, and bids the friend take all
his loves, since all are included in the love that has been freely given
him. It is difficult to escape the suggestion that this episode of the
conflict between love and friendship is the same as that which inspired
some of the “dark woman “sonnets. Another journey (xliii. -lii.)
is again filled with thoughts of the friend, and its record is followed
by a group of sonnets (liii.-lv.) in which the friend’s beauty and
the immortality which this will find in the poet’s verse are especially
dwelt upon. Once more there is a parting (lvi.-lxi.) and the poet waits
as patiently as may be his friend’s return to him. Again (lxii.-lxv.)
he looks to his verse to give the friend immortality. He is tired of
the world, but his friend redeems it (lxvi.-lxviii.). Then rumours of
some scandal against his friend (lxix.-lxx.) reach him, and he falls
(lxxi.-lxxiv.) into gloomy thoughts of coming death. The friend, however,
is still (lxxv.-lxxvii.) his argument; and he is perturbed (lxxviii.lxxxvi.)
by the appearance of a rival poet, who claims to be taught by spirits
to write “above a mortal pitch,” and with “the proud full sail
of his great verse” has already won the countenance of Shakespeare’s
patron. There is another estrangement (lxxxvii.xc.), and the poet, already
crossed with the spite of fortune, is ready not only to acquiesce in
the loss of friendship, but to find the fault in himself. The friend
returns to him, but the relation is still clouded by doubts of his fidelity
(xci.-xciii.) and by public rumours of his wantonness (xciv.-xcvi.).
For a third time the poet is absent (xcvii.-xcix.) in summer and spring.
Then comes an apparent interval, after which a love already three years
old is renewed (c.-civ.), with even richer praises (cv.-cviii.). It
is now the poet’s turn to offer apologies (cix.cxii.) for offences
against friendship and for some brand upon his name apparently due to
the conditions of his profession. He is again absent (cxiii.) and again
renews his protestations of the imperishability of love (cxiv.-cxvi.)
and of his own unworthiness (cxvii.-cxxi.), for which his only excuse
is in the fact that the friend was once unkind. If the friend has suffered
as Shakespeare suffered, he has “passed a hell of time.” The series
closes with a group (cxxii.-cxxv.) in which love is pitted against time;
and an envoi, not in sonnet form, warns the “lovely boy” that in
the end nature must render up her treasure. Such an analysis can give
no adequate idea of the qualities in these sonnets, whereby the appeal
of universal poetry is built up on a basis of intimate self-revelation.
The human document is so legible, and at the same time so incomplete,
that it is easy to understand the strenuous efforts which have been
made to throw further light upon it by tracing the identities of those
other personalities, the man and the woman, through his relations to
whom the poet was brought to so fiery an ordeal of soul, and even to
the borders of self-abasement. It must be added that the search has,
as a rule, been conducted with more ingenuity than judgment. It has
generally started from the terms of a somewhat mysterious dedication
prefixed by the publisher Thomas Thorpe to the volume of 1609. This
runs as follows:— “To the onlie begetter of these insuing sonnets
Mr W. H. all happinesse and that eternitie promised by our ever-living
poet wisheth the well-wishing adventurer in setting forth T. T.” The
natural interpretation of this is that the inspirer or “begetter”
of the sonnets bore the initials W. H.; ~ and contemporary history has
accordingly been ran.- w. ii.” sacked to find a W. H. whose age and
circumstances might conceivably fit the conditions of the problem which
the sonnets present. It is perhaps a want of historical perspective
which has led to the centring of controversy around two names belonging
to the highest ranks of the Elizabethan nobility, those of Henry Wriothesley,
earl of Southampton, and William Herbert, earl of Pembroke. There is
some evidence to connect Shakespeare with both of these. To Southampton
he dedicated Venus and Adonis in 1593 and The Rape of Lucrece in 1594,
and the story that he received a gift of no less than £1000 from the
earl is recorded by Rowe. His acquaintance with Pembroke can only be
inferred from the statement of Heminge and Condell in their preface
to the First Folio of the plays, that Pembroke and his brother Montgomery
had “prosequuted both them and their Authour living, with so much
favour.” The personal beauty of the rival claimants and of their mothers,
their amours and the attempts of their families to persuade them to
marry, their relations to poets and actors, and all other points in
their biographies which do or do not fit in with the indications of
the sonnets, have been canvassed with great spirit and some erudition,
but with no very conclusive result. It is in Pembroke’s favour that
his initials were in fact W. H., whereas Southampton’s can only be
turned into W. H. by a process of metathesis; and his champions have
certainly been. more successful than Southampton.’s in. producing
a dark woman, a certain Mary Fitton, who was a mistress of Pembroke’s,.
and was in consequence dismissed in disgrace from her post of maid of
honour to Elizabeth. Unfortunately, the balance of evidence is in favour
of her having been blonde, and not “black.” Moreover, a careful
investigation of the sonnets, as regards their style and their relation
to the plays, renders it almost impossible on chronological grounds
that Pembroke can have been their subject. He was born on the 9th of
April 1580, and was therefore much younger than Southampton, who was
born on the 6th of October 1573. The earliest sonnets postulate a marriageable
youth, certainly not younger than eighteen, an age which Southampton
reached in the autumn of 1591 arid Pembroke in the spring of 1598. The
writing of the sonnets may have extended over several years, but it
is impossible to doubt that as a whole it is to the years 1593—I 598
rather than to the years 1598—I 603 that they belong. There is not,
indeed, much external evidence available. Francis Meres in hisPalladis
Tamia of 1598 mentions Shakespeare’s “sugred sonnets among his private
friends,”1 but this allusion might come as well at
“The sweet witty soul of Ovid lives in mellifluous and honeytongued
Shakespeare, witness his Venus and Adonis, his Lucrece, his sugred sonnets
among his private friends.” the beginning as at the end of the series;
and the fact that two, not of the latest, sonnets are in The Passionate
Pilgrim of 1599 is equally inconclusive. The only reference to an external
event in the sonnets themselves, which might at first sight seem useful,
is in the following lines (cvii.) :— “The mortal moon bath her eclipse
endured, And the sad augurs mock their own presage; Incertainties now
crown themselves assured, And peace proclaims olives of endless age.”
This has been variously interpreted as referring to the death of Elizabeth
and accession of James in 1603, to the relief caused by the death of
Philip II. of Spain in 1598, and to the illness of Elizabeth and threatened
Spanish invasion in 1596. Obviously the “ mortal moon” is Elizabeth,
but although “eclipse” may well mean “ death,” it is not quite
so clear that “ endure an eclipse “ can mean “ die.”
Nor do the allusions to the rival poet help much. “The proud full
sail of his great verse “ would fit, on critical grounds, with Speriser,
Marlowe, Chapman, and possibly Peele, Daniel or Drayton; and the “affable
familiar ghost,” from whom the rival is said to obtain assistance
by night, might conceivably be an echo of a passage in one of Chapman’s
dedications. Daniel inscribed a poem to Southampton in 1603, but with
this exception none of the poets named are known to have written either
for Southampton or for Pembt’bke, or for any other W. H. or H. W.,
during any year which can possibly be covered by the sonnets. Two very
minor poets, Barnabe Barnes and Gervase Markham, addressed sonnets to
Southampton in 1593 and 1595 respectively, and Thomas Nash composed
improper verses for his delectation.
But even if external guidance fails, the internal evidence for 1593—1598
as approximately the sonnet period in Shakespeare’s life is very strong
indeed. It has been worked out in detail by two German scholars, Hermann
Isaac (now Conrad) in the Shakes peare-Jcthrbuch for 1884, and Gregor
Sarrazin in William Shakespeares Lehrjahre (1897) and Aus Shakespeares
Meisterwerkstatt (1906). Isaac’s work, in particular, has hardly received
enough attention even from recent English scholars, probably because
he makes the mistakes of taking the sonnets in Bodenstedt’s order
instead of Shakespeare’s, and of beginning his whole chronology several
years too early in order to gratify a fantastic identification of W.
H. with the earl of Essex. This, however, does not affect the main force
of an argument by which the affinities of the great bulk of the sonnets
are shown, on the ground of stylistic similarities, parallelisms of
expression, and parallelisms of theme, to be far more close with the
poems and with the range of plays from Love’s Labour’s Lost to Henry
I V. than with any earlier or later section of Shakespeare’s work.
This dating has the further advantage of putting Shakespeare’s sonnets
in the full tide of Elizabethan sonnet-production, which began with
the publication of Sidney’s Astrophel and Stella in 1591 and Daniel’s
Delia and Constable’s Diana in 1592, rather than during years f or
which this particular kind of poetry had already ceased to be modish.
It is to the three volumes named that the influence upon Shakespeare
of his predecessors can most clearly be traced; while he seems in his
turn to have served as a model for Drayton, whose sonnets to Idea were
published in a series of volumes in 1594, 1599, 1602, 1605 and 1619.
It does not of course follow that because the sonnets belong to 1593—1598
\V. H. is to be identified with Southampton. On general grounds he is
likely, even if above Shakespeare’s own rank, to have been somewhat
nearer that rank than a great earl, some young gentleman, for example,
of such a family as the Sidneys, or as the Walsinghams of Chislehurst.
It is possible that there is an allusion to Shakespeare’s romance
in a poem called “ Willobie his Avisa,” published in ‘594 as from
the pen of o~ne Henry Willoughby, apparently of West Knoyle in Wiltshire.
In this Willoughby is introduced as taking counsel when in love with
“ his familiar friend W. S. who not long before had tryed the curtesy
of the like passion, and was now newly recovered of the like infection.”
But there is nothing outside the poem to connect Shakespeare with a
family of Willoughbys or with the neighbourhood of West Knoyle. Various
other identifications of W. H. have been suggested, which rarely rest
upon anything except a similarity of initials. There is little plausibility
in a theory broached by Mr Sidney Lee, that W. H. was not the friend
of the sonnets at all, but a certain William Hall, who was himself a
printer, and might, it is conjectured, have obtained the “copy”
of the sonnets for Thorpe. It is, of course, just possible that the
“ begetter “ of the title-page might mean, not the “inspirer,”
but the “procurer for the press “ of the sonnets ; but the interpretation
is shipwrecked on the obvious identity of the person to whom Thorpe
“ wishes” eternity with the person to whom the poet “promised”
that eternity. The external history of the Sonnets must still be regarded
as an unsolved problem; the most that can be said is that their subject
may just possibly be Southampton, and cannot possibly be Pembroke.
In order to obtain a glimmering of the man that was Shakespeare, it
is necessary to consult all the records and to read the evidence of
his life-work in the plays, alike in the light of the simple facts of
his external career and in The man and the that of the sudden vision
of his passionate and dis- artist. satisfied soul preserved in the sonnets.
By exclusive attention to any one of these sources of information it
is easy to build up a consistent and wholly false conception of a Shakespeare;
of a Shakespeare struggling between his senses and his conscience in
the artistic Bohemianism of the London taverns; of a sleek, bourgeois
Shakespeare to whom his art was no more than a ready way to a position
of respected and influential competence in his native town; of a great
objective artist whose personal life was passed in detached contemplation
of the puppets of his imagination. Any one of these pictures has the
advantage of being more vivid, and the disadvantage of being less real,
than the somewhat elusive and enigmatic Shakespeare who glances at us
for a perplexing moment, now behind this, now behind that, of his diverse
masks. It is necessary also to lay aside Shakespeareolatry, the spirit
that could wish with Hallam that Shakespeare had never written the Sonnets,
or can refuse to accept Titus Andronicus on the ground that “the play
declares as plainly as play can speak, ‘I am not Shakespeare’s;
my repulsive subject, my blood and horrors, are not, and never were
his.’ “ The literary historian has no greater enemy than the sentimentalist.
In Shakespeare we have to do with one who is neither beyond criticism
as a man nor impeccable as an artist. He was for all time, no doubt;
but also very much of an age, the age of the later Renaissance, with
its instinct for impetuous life, and its vigorous rather than discriminating
appetite for literature. When Ben Jonson said that Shakespeare lacked
art,” and when Milton wrote of his “native wood-notes wild,” they
judged truly. The Shakespearian drama is magnificent and incoherent
; it belongs to the adolescence of literature, to a period before the
instrument had been sharpened and polished, and made unerring in its
touch upon the sources of laughter and of tears. Obviously nobody has
such power over our laughter and our tears as Shakespeare. But it is
the power of temperament rather than of art; or rather it is the power
of a capricious and unsystematic artist, with a perfect dramatic instinct
for the exposition of the ideas, the characters, the situations, which
for the moment command his interest, and a perfect disregard for the
laws of dramatic psychology which require the patient pruning and subordination
of all material that does not make for the main exposition. This want
of finish, this imperfect fusing of the literary ore, is essentially
characteristic of the Renaissance, as compared with ages in which the
creative impulse is weaker and leaves room for a finer concentration
of the means upon the end. There is nearly always unity of purpose in
a Shakespearian play, but it often requires an intellectual effort to
grasp it and does not result in a unity of effect. The issues are obscured
by a careless generosity which would extend to art the boundless freedom
of life itself. Hence the intrusive and jarring elements which stand
in such curious incongruity with the utmost reaches of which the dramatic
spirit is capable; the conventional and melodramatic endings, the inconsistencies
of action and even of character, the emotional confusions of tragicomedy,
the complications of plot and subplot, the marring of the give-and-take
of dialogue by superfluities of description and of argument, the jest
and bombast lightly thrown in to suit the taste of the groundlings,
all the flecks that to an instructed modern criticism are on.ly too
apparent upon the Shakespearian sun. It perhaps follows from this that
the most fruitful way of approaching Shakespeare is by an analysis of
his work rather as a process than as a completed whole. His outstanding
positive quality is a vast comprehensiveness, a capacity for growth
and assimilation, which leaves no aspect of life unexplored, and allows
of no finality in the nature of his judgments upon life. It is the real
and sufficient explanation and justification of the pains taken to determine
the chronological order of his plays, that the secret of his genius
lies in its power of development and that only by the study of its development
can he be known. He was nearly thirty when, so far as we can tell, his
career as a dramatist began; and already there lay behind him those
six or seven unaccounted-for years since his marriage, passed no one
knows where, and filled no one knows with what experience, but assuredly
in that strenuous Elizabethan life with some experience kindling to
his intellect and formative of his character. To the woodcraft and the
familiarity with country sights and sounds which he brought with him
from Stratford, and which mingle so oddly in his plays with a purely
imaginary and euphuistic natural history, and to the book-learning of
a provincial grammar-school boy, and perhaps, if Aubrey is right, also
of a provincial schoolmaster, he had somehow added, as he continued
to add throughout his life, that curious store of acquaintance with
the details of the most diverse occupations which has so often perplexed
and so often misled his commentators. It was the same faculty of acquisition
that gave him his enormous vocabulary, so far exceeding in range and
variety that of any other English writer.
His first group of plays is largely made up of adaptations and revisions
of existing work, or at the best of essays in the conventions of stage-writing
which bad already achieved popularity. In the Yorkist trilogy he takes
up the burden of the chronicle play, in The Comedy of Errors that of
the classical school drama and of the page-humour of Lyly, in Titus
Andronicus that of the crude revenge tragedy of Kyd, and in Richard
III. that of the Nemesis motive and the exaltation of the Machiavellian
superman which properly belong to Marlowe. But in Richard III. be begins
to come to his own with the subtle study of the actor’s temperament
which betrays the working of a profound interest in the technique of
his chosen profession. The style of the earliest plays is essentially
rhetorical; the blank verse is stiff and little varied in rhythm; and
the periods are built up of parallel and antithetic sentences, and punctuated
with devices of iterations, plays upon words, and other methods of securing
emphasis, that derive from the bad tradition of a popular stage, upon
which the players are bound to rant and force the note in order to hold
the attention of a dull-witted audience. During the plague-vacations
of 1592 to 1594, Shakespeare tried his hand at the ornate descriptive
poetry of Venus and Adonis and Lucrece; and the influence of this exercise,
and possibly also of Italian travel, is apparent in the next group of
plays, with their lyric notes, their tendency to warm southern colouring,
their wealth of decorative imagery, and their elaborate and not rarely
frigid conceits. Rhymed couplets make their appearance, side by side
with blank verse, as a medium of dramatic dialogue. It is a period of
experiment, in farce with The Taming of the Shrew, in satirical comedy
with Love’s Labour’s Lost, in lyrical comedy with A - Midsummer
Night’s Dream, in lyrical tragedy with Romeo and Juliet, in lyrical
history with Richard II., and finally in romantic tragicomedy with The
Two Gentlemen of Verona and with the masterpiece of this singular genre,
The l~ferchant of Venice. It is also the period of the sonnets, which
have their echoes both in the phrasing and in the themes of the plays;
in the black-browed Rosaline of Love’s Labour’s Lost, and in the
issue between friendship and love which is variously set in The Two
Gentlemen of Verona and in The Merchant of Venice. But in the latter
play the sentiment is already one of retrospection; the tempest of spirit
has given way to the tender melancholy of renunciation. The sonnets
seem to bear witness, not only to the personal upheaval of passion,
but also to some despondency at the spite of fate and the disgrace of
the actor’s calling. This mood too may have cleared away in the sunshine
of growing popularity, of financial success, and of the possibly long-delayed
return to Stratford. Certainly the series of plays written next after
the travels of 1597 are light-hearted plays, less occupied with profound
or vexatious searchings of spirit than with the delightful externalities
of things. The histories from King John to Henry V. form a continuous
study of the conditions of kingship, carrying on the political speculations
begun in Richard II. and culminating in the brilliant picture of triumphant
efficiency, the Henry of Agincourt. Meanwhile Shakespeare develops the
astonishing faculty of humorous delineation of which he had given foretastes
in Jack Cade, in Bottom the weaver, and in Juliet’s nurse; sets the
creation of Falstaff in front of his vivid pictures of contemporary
England; and passes through the half-comedy, half melodrama, of Much
Ado About Nothing to the joyous farce of The Merry Wives of Windsor,
and to his two perfectly sunny comedies the sylvan comedy of As You
Like It and the urban comedy of Twelfth Night.
Then there comes a change of mood, already heralded by Julius Caesar,
which stands beside Henry V. as a reminder that efficiency has its seamy
as well as its brilliant side. The tragedy of political idealism in
Brutus is followed by the tragedy of intellectual idealism in Hamlet;
and this in its turn by the three bitter and cynical pseudo-comedies,
All’s Well That Ends Well, in which the creator of Portia, Beatrice,
Rosalind and Viola drags the honourof womanhood in the dust—Troilus
and Cressida, in which the ideals of heroism and of romance are confounded
in the portraits of a wanton and a poltroon—and Measure for Measure,
in which the searchlight of irony is thrown upon the paths of Providence
itself. Upon the causes of this new perturbation in the soul of Shakespeare
it is perhaps idle to speculate. The evidence of his profound disillusion
and discouragement of spirit is plain enough; and for some years the
tide of his pessimistic thought advances, swelling through the pathetic
tragedy of Othello to the cosmic tragedies of Macbeth and King Lear,
with their Titan-like indictments not of man alone, but of the heavens
by whom man was made. Meanwhile Shakespeare’s style undergoes changes
no less notable than those of his subjectmatter. The ease and lucidity
characteristic of the histories and comedies of his middle period give
way to a more troubled beauty, and the phrasing and rhythln often tend
to become elliptic and obscure, as if the thoughts were hurrying faster
than speech can give them utterance. The period closes with Antony and
Cleopatra and Coriolanus, in which the ideals of the love of woman and
the honour of man are once more stripped bare to display the skeletons
of lust and egoism, and in the latter of which signs of exhaustion are
already perceptible; and with Timon of Athens, in which the dramatist
whips himself to an almost incoherent expression of a general loathing
and detestation of humanity. Then the stretched cord suddenly snaps.
Timon is apparently unfinished, and the next play, Pericles, is in an
entirely different vein, ~nd is apparently finished but not begun.
At this point only in the whole course of Shakespeare’s development
there is a complete breach of continuity. One can. only conjecture the
occurrence of some spiritual crisis, an illness perhaps, or some process
akin to what in the language of religion is called conversion, which
left him a new man, with the fever of pessimism behind him, and at peace
once more with Heaven and the world.
The final group of plays, the Shakespearian part of Pericles, Cymbeline,
The Winter’s Tale, The Tempest, all belong to the class of what may
be called idyllic romances. They are happy dreams, in which all troubles
and sorrows are ultimately resolved into fortunate endings, and which
stand therefore as so many symbols of an optimistic faith in the beneficent
dispositions of an ordering Providence. In harmony with this change
of temper the style has likewise undergone another change, and the tense
structure and marmoreal phrasing of Antony and Cleopatra have given
way to relaxed cadences and easy and unaccentuated rhythms. It is possible
that these plays, Shakespeare’s last plays, with the unimportant exceptions
of his contributions to Fletcher’s Henry VIII. and The Two Noble Kinsmen,
were written in retirement at Stratford. At any rate the call of the
country is sounding through them; and it is with no regret that in the
last pages of The Tempest the weary magician drowns his book, and buries
his staff certain fathoms deep in the earth.