I find no mention of the Shakespeare Authorship controversy here at TFT.Org, except in a very brief review of the movie Anonymous. (If this oversight is deliberate, I ask TFT management to quickly expunge this thread.
)
I have been quite curious about the Shakespeare Authorship for three decades. The Pro-Stratfordian case (that Shaksper of Stratford wrote the plays and sonnets) is exceptionally meager, once evidence consistent with a hoax hypothesis is ignored.
Anti-Stratfordian arguments are many: Even without an alternate author to propose, Samuel Clemens wrote a book rejecting a Stratford authorship:
"Papers are destroyed by fire and flood. Biographical data on other playwrights are also missing."
Wrong. Read the pdf by Stanford's Professor Sturrock accessible from this link to see that among 25 playwrights of that era, and ten binary criteria of notability, only WS satisfies zero of the criteria. John Webster. (1578-1632) is next to bottom place with three criterial satisfactions.
"A typical rural gentleman of that era was likely to have illiterate daughters."
We're not speaking of a 'typical rural gentleman.' We're speaking of an alleged lover of words and learning, perhaps the greatest word-smith ever to have lived. Did this great lover of words allow his children to grow up illiterate?
"The 'Upstart crow' paragraph from Greene's posthumously-published Groatsworth shows that Shakespeare was considered a playwright before the publication of Venus and Adonis."
That quote ("beautified with our feathers") essentially accuses WS of doing what the Oxfordians accuse him of: putting his name on others' work.
WS's earliest fame came from the book-length poem Venus and Adonis and its sequel, signed by William Shake-speare and dedicated to Henry Wriothesley; and it is generally supposed that this Earl of Southampton and/or his mother the Dowager Countess was a patron of the fine poet. (Indeed a gift of £1000 — then a large sum — from Wriothesley to Shakespeare is widely mentioned.) Yet there is no evidence of any sponsership — let alone a princely £1000 — of WS by Southampton or his mother. (To give an idea of £1000 then, Edward de Vere received £1000 annually from Her Majesty; this was the largest annual salary or allowance paid to anyone by Queen Elizabeth.
While many people just focus on the improbability that WS of Stratford wrote the plays and poems, some propose an alternate real author. Edward de Vere Earl of Oxford and 19th hereditary Lord High Chamberlain of England is the most popular choice. He had big reasons (most especially strict instruction by Her Majesty) for keeping himself unnamed.
This gives us a total of four sub-debates:
Some argue that scores of people would have been "in the know" about the true authorship, and might have let the facts slip cryptically (they would hardly do so openly against the wishes of Oxford and Majesties). And we do see such cryptic mentions, e.g.
OR ... the peculiar preface to Troilus and Cressida
OR ... consider the riddles of Peacham's Compleat Gentleman
OR ... the inscription on the monument in Stratford,
OR ... even the Sonnets, e.g. CXXV, CXXVI or LXXVI: "Every word doth almost tell my name." (The anagram Yword Vere is only almost the name "Edward Vere", bu that's what the line states.)
Before continuing, I'd like to hear from people reading the thread. Please report which characterization fits best:
I have been quite curious about the Shakespeare Authorship for three decades. The Pro-Stratfordian case (that Shaksper of Stratford wrote the plays and sonnets) is exceptionally meager, once evidence consistent with a hoax hypothesis is ignored.
Anti-Stratfordian arguments are many: Even without an alternate author to propose, Samuel Clemens wrote a book rejecting a Stratford authorship:
Just for starters, here are some arguments against a Shaksper (WS) authorship:Mark Twain in "Is Shakespeare Dead?" said:Shall I set down the rest of the great Conjecture which constitute the Giant Biography of William Shakespeare? It would strain the Unabridged Dictionary to hold them. He is a brontosaur: nine bones and six hundred barrels of plaster.
... All the rest of his vast history, as furnished by the biographers, is built up, course upon course, of guesses, inferences, theories, conjectures--an Eiffel Tower of artificialities rising sky-high from a very flat and very thin foundation of inconsequential facts....
- No letters written by WS have turned up.
- The only letter to WS that's turned up is a never-sent request for a cash loan.
- No books owned by, or otherwise associated with WS have turned up.
- No manuscripts have turned up. None of Shakespeare's children, grandchildren, nieces or nephews every claimed their close relation penned a poem or story for them.
- No eulogies were written to WS until several years after his death.
- Documents that imply anyone in Stratford knew WS was employed in the London theater — never mind as a playwright/poet — are exceedingly rare. Dr. John Hall kept a journal, even mentioning a Stratford neighbor who was "an excellente poet", but doesn't mention WS. John Hall was married to WS's favorite daughter.
- Camden, a semi-official reporter on Stratford for WS's adult life and who does mention London theatrical doings, passes up multiple opportunities and leaves no reference to WS.
- There is no record of WS ever going to school. (Sure, school records were burned. Still, reconstructions are possible. A mate of the WS youth might have attested "Will was pretty good with words way back in 6th form." No one ever did.)
- As far as is known, WS never traveled abroad or on a ship, nor did he work as a soldier, teacher nor in a law office nor any of several professions consistent with the playwright's knowledge.
- As far as is known, WS was friends with no noblemen.
- Although widely considered a principal Player in the Lord Chamberlain's Men, no role is alleged to be WS's except ... the ghost of Hamlet's father!
- While there are many mentions of WS from that time, very very few of them mention Stratford, or attest clearly that the writer/speaker knew the poet personally. An exception are legal documents which show (a) WS was charged with poaching near Stratford, being a theater ruffian in London, then hoarding in Stratford; (b) WS was granted a coat-of-arms ca 1592; (c) WS served as witness in two minor proceedings; (d) WS filed suit in Straford (at the same time he was allegedly putting the final touches on King Lear) against a customer of his Stratford butcher shop, seeking payment of a 2-shilling debt and other redress; and (e) WS's much remarked-on last will and testament.
- Some references to WS-as-writer from the 1605-1609 period seem to imply that the writer was deceased, though WS died in 1616.
- WS had two children (daughters) who grew to adulthood. It appears neither of them could read or write.
"Papers are destroyed by fire and flood. Biographical data on other playwrights are also missing."
Wrong. Read the pdf by Stanford's Professor Sturrock accessible from this link to see that among 25 playwrights of that era, and ten binary criteria of notability, only WS satisfies zero of the criteria. John Webster. (1578-1632) is next to bottom place with three criterial satisfactions.
"A typical rural gentleman of that era was likely to have illiterate daughters."
We're not speaking of a 'typical rural gentleman.' We're speaking of an alleged lover of words and learning, perhaps the greatest word-smith ever to have lived. Did this great lover of words allow his children to grow up illiterate?
"The 'Upstart crow' paragraph from Greene's posthumously-published Groatsworth shows that Shakespeare was considered a playwright before the publication of Venus and Adonis."
That quote ("beautified with our feathers") essentially accuses WS of doing what the Oxfordians accuse him of: putting his name on others' work.
WS's earliest fame came from the book-length poem Venus and Adonis and its sequel, signed by William Shake-speare and dedicated to Henry Wriothesley; and it is generally supposed that this Earl of Southampton and/or his mother the Dowager Countess was a patron of the fine poet. (Indeed a gift of £1000 — then a large sum — from Wriothesley to Shakespeare is widely mentioned.) Yet there is no evidence of any sponsership — let alone a princely £1000 — of WS by Southampton or his mother. (To give an idea of £1000 then, Edward de Vere received £1000 annually from Her Majesty; this was the largest annual salary or allowance paid to anyone by Queen Elizabeth.
While many people just focus on the improbability that WS of Stratford wrote the plays and poems, some propose an alternate real author. Edward de Vere Earl of Oxford and 19th hereditary Lord High Chamberlain of England is the most popular choice. He had big reasons (most especially strict instruction by Her Majesty) for keeping himself unnamed.
This gives us a total of four sub-debates:
- The case For Stratford
- The case Against Stratford
- The case For Oxford (assisted by collaborators)
- The case Against Oxford
Some argue that scores of people would have been "in the know" about the true authorship, and might have let the facts slip cryptically (they would hardly do so openly against the wishes of Oxford and Majesties). And we do see such cryptic mentions, e.g.
OR ... read the cryptic dedication of Shakespeare's SonnetsRichard Brathwait said:Strappado for the Devil[/I] (1615)]Yea, this I know I may be bold to say,
Thames ne'er had swans that sung more sweet than they.
It's true I may avow it, that ne'er was sung.
Chanted in any age by swains so young,
With more delight than was perform'd by them,
Prettily shadow'd in a borrowed name.
And long may England's thespian springs be known.
OR ... the peculiar preface to Troilus and Cressida
OR ... consider the riddles of Peacham's Compleat Gentleman
OR ... the inscription on the monument in Stratford,
OR ... even the Sonnets, e.g. CXXV, CXXVI or LXXVI: "Every word doth almost tell my name." (The anagram Yword Vere is only almost the name "Edward Vere", bu that's what the line states.)
Before continuing, I'd like to hear from people reading the thread. Please report which characterization fits best:
- I know much more on this topic than Swammi. The "anti-Stratfordians," as they sillily call themselves, really are crackpots, their thinking warped by elitism.
- I've read a book on the topic. Hogwash! Let's talk about the time Oxford farted while bowing to the Queen.
- I'm read relatively little on the topic. But I'm pretty sure it's crackpottery.
- I'd like to learn more about this fascinating topic. Swammi? Can you recommend some reading?
- Why the hoax at all? Doesn't seem to make sense: wouldn't Oxford want to boast of his writing prowess?
- I've also thought the Oxfordian case to be strong, and am glad someone here finally admitted it.
- Other. _________________________________