Hunting for good Will
Will the real Shakespeare please stand up?
BY MICHAEL SATCHELL
LONDONAmong the crowds enjoying
the summer productions of Hamlet
and The Tempest at Shakespeare's
Globe Theatre, few are likely to question
who wrote the 38 plays, two long
poems, and 154 sonnets that make
up the West's greatest canon of literary genius. Conventional wisdom points to the Stratford merchant and supposed Globe actor,
born to an illiterate glove maker
in 1564 and baptized Gulielmus
Shakspere. But there is growing
circumstantial evidence that the
Bard may be an Elizabethan courtier
and author, the Earl of Oxford.
The authorship question has been pondered since the 1780s, when the Rev. James
Wilmot spent four fruitless years trying to
link the Stratford man to the works attributed to him. Today, those who believe that
Shakspere was the author have no definitive proof but instead point to Hamlet's declaration: "The play's the thing."
Disbelievers, borrowing from The
Rape of Lucrece, are eager "to unmask falsehood and bring truth to
light." Charles Francis Topham de
Vere Beauclerk, the Earl of Burford and direct descendant of Edward de Vere (1550-1604), the
17th Earl of Oxford, believes
his ancestor wrote the plays
under the hyphenated pseudonym "William Shake-speare." Declares his lordship, curator of the
de Vere library and a leading Oxford proponent: "Academics have
an enormous vested interest in
Shakespeare: For them, the issue
is not literary or historical, but political. Their man is a flimsy cardboard cutout."
The debate hums on both sides
of the Atlantic, and over the years
many have expressed doubt in
Shakespeare's authorship. Skeptics range from Walt Whitman,
Henry James, Ralph Waldo
Emerson, Mark Twain, Sigmund
Freud, Orson Welles, and John
Gielgud to current entertainment
luminaries such as Mark Rylance,
artistic director of the Globe, and
leading Shakespearean actors
Michael York, Kenneth Branagh,
and Derek Jacobi. Even Keanu Reeves has
gotten into the act. The Matrix star, who
appeared in Branagh's 1993 Much Ado
About Nothing, is described by the de Vere
camp as a dedicated Oxford supporter. Several Elizabethan writers, including
Francis Bacon, Ben Jonson, and
Christopher Marlowe, are proffered as possible authors, but the
weight of evidence anoints de
Vere as the leading candidate.
Despite more than two centuries of research beginning
with Wilmot, there isn't a scrap
of documentation that Shakspere,
the Warwickshire merchant, ever
wrote anything in his life. There are no
manuscripts, poems, letters, diaries, or
records in his own hand. His will, dictated to a lawyer, makes no mention of a literary legacy and who should inherit it.
Shakspere at best had only a grammar
school education, and he is not known to
have traveled beyond Stratford and London. He probably left the capital in his early
to middle 40s, when his writing career presumably would have been at its zenith, and
returned to the humdrum life of a provincial grain and property dealer. How, say
skeptics, could he have accumulated the
vast knowledge of royalty, court life, politics, and foreign landsparticularly of Italy,
where several plays are setwoven through
such a sophisticated body of work? Whoever wrote the plays and sonnets had a rare
breadth of knowledge in numerous disciplines, including physical sciences, medicine, the law, astronomy, and the Bible.
Grain man. Shakspere died in obscurity
and was buried anonymously. Six years
after his death in 1616, the first edition
of Henry Peacham's The Compleat Gentleman was published, listing the Elizabethan era's greatest poets. Heading the
list: Edward de Vere, the Earl of Oxford.
In this and three succeeding editions,
there is no mention of Shakespeare by any
spelling. Eighteen years after Shakspere's
death, an engraved monument in a Stratford church shows him holding what appears to be a sack of grain. A century later,
the sack became pen and paper.
Stratfordians cherish their orthodoxy but
have scant evidence to bolster their case. In
1623, the so-called First Folio of the complete works of "William Shake-speare" was
published, and the dedications include the
phrases "thy Stratford moniment"
and "sweet swan of Avon," apparent references to the author's
home. And presuming young Will
attended grammar school, he most
likely would have received a first-class education. Gail Kern Paster,
editor of The Shakespeare Quarterly, calls the attack on the Bard
a snobbish doctrine that rejects
the idea of brilliance flowering in
humble circumstances and that
underestimates Elizabethan classical schooling. "The only proof
necessary is that Shakespeare
could have written the plays and
sonnets, not that he did,'' she says.
But did de Vere? The 17th Earl
of Oxford died in 1604, before a
third of the plays were published,
but his supporters argue that they
could have been written and kept
under wraps or that the publication dates are inaccurate. He
earned two master's degrees,
studied law for three years, traveled extensively throughout Italy,
and had an intimate view of court
life and politics. A playwright and
author of sonnets, he ceased publishing under his own name in
1593the same year that the
name William Shake-speare appeared on a manuscript. It's probably a
pseudonym, because hyphenation was
rarely used then. And the name points to
de Vere. His family crest contains a lion
shaking a spear, and, at court, says Lord
Burford, he was known as "spear shaker."
(Although some believe that he knew the
real Will Shakespeare and simply borrowed his name.)
What's in a name? The pen name was
almost certainly for protection. Many of
the plays deal with court intrigue and political corruption and contain thinly
veiled satires and parodies of politicians
and courtiers. During the Elizabethan
era, writers were imprisoned and mutilated for committing literary excesses or
violating political correctness, and many
wrote anonymously. Playwrights were
also held in low esteem because public
theaters like the Globe were the rowdy
province of commoners, the audiences
laced with prostitutes, cutpurses, drunkards, and scoundrels of every stripe.
There may be an even more urgent reason. The 1623 First Folio of collected
works is dedicated to the young Earl of
Southampton, de Vere's son-in-law, with
whom he is reputed to have had a homosexual affair. Scholars also see strong homoerotic threads in many of the sonnetsa dangerous business at a time
when such affairs were a high crime.
Mounting evidence appears to strengthen de Vere's candidacy. None is more persuasive than an eight-year study, completed in 1999, of the heavily marked and
annotated Geneva Bible, owned by de
Vere. More than one fourth of the 1,066
highlighted passages appear in Shakespeare's writingsphrases like "weaver's
beam" and "I am that I am" and unusual
names like "Achitophel." In addition, 29
of the playwright's 66 most prominent biblical allusions are also marked.
Prof. Daniel Wright directs the annual Edward de Vere Studies Conference at
Oregon's Concordia University and harbors no doubts that Oxford is the anonymous author. Says Wright: "These works
are the mature achievements of a worldly and urbane littérateur who could not
tell the world his name." And there's the
rub, as Hamlet saysat least for the
Shakespearean traditionalists.