Shakespeare: A Life (74 page)

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Authors: Park Honan

Tags: #General, #History, #Literary Criticism, #European, #Biography & Autobiography, #Great Britain, #Literary, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Europe, #Biography, #Historical, #Early modern; 1500-1700, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Performing Arts, #History & Criticism, #Shakespeare, #Theater, #Dramatists; English, #Stratford-upon-Avon (England)

BOOK: Shakespeare: A Life
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8
.
For versions of these anecdotes (in 17th-century notes by Sir Nicholas
L'Estrange, Nicholas Burgh, and Thomas Plume), see EKC,
Facts
, ii. 243, 246-7.
9
. See Satire VII, in
The Scourge of Villainy
( 1598).
10
.
Sonnets
80 and 85.
11
.
Ben Jonson
, ed. Herford and Simpson, iii. 303.
12
.
Ibid. vi. 16
.
13
. See James Shapiro,
Rival Playwrights. Marlowe, Jonson, Shakespeare
( Cambridge, 1991), 133-70, esp. 154.
14
. Thus in Q1600 and F1623.
15
. Norman Jones (on the aftermath of the Usury Act of 1571) in
God and the Moneylenders
( Oxford, 1989), esp. 199.
16
. Cf. SS, DL 137, 198-200.
17
. Despite his theories, Leslie Hotson in
Shakespeare versus Shallow
( 1931) illuminates Langley, Gardiner, and Wayte; see esp. pp. 9-83.
18
. John Gross,
Shylock: Four Hundred rears in the Life of a Legend
( 1994), 323. For aspects of Shylock, pertinent supplements to John
Gross survey include the chapter, ' "Ev'ry child hates Shylock" ', in
Frank Felsenstein
Anti-Semitic Stereotypes . . . 1660- 1830
( Baltimore, Md., 1995), as well as David Katz
The Jews in the History of England 1485- 1850
( Oxford, 1995), and James Shapiro
Shakespeare and the Jews
( New York, 1996).
19
. Peter Hall,
Making an Exhibition of Myself
( 1993), 382-3. Cf. the viewpoints in Leo Salingar ,
Dramatic Form in Shakespeare and the Jacobeans
( Cambridge, 1986), and in Avraham Oz,
The Yoke of Love
(Newark, Del., 1995).
20
. MS Folger, W. b. 180 has evidence relating to the scarcities; cf. James Bennett,
History of Tewkesbury
( Tewkesbury, 1830), 307-9.
21
. Richard Hillman,
Shakespearean Subversions
( 1992), 141; Philip Edwards,
Shakespeare and the Confines of Art
( 1968), 63.
22
.
The Diary of John Manningham of the Middle Temple 1602-1603
, ed. R. P. Sorlien ( Hanover, NH, 1976), fo. 29b, pp. 75, 328, Cf. SS, DL 205.
23
.
Manningham
, fo. 29b. EKC,
Facts
. ii. 212, is useful, but over-confident about the informant's name.
24
. Francis Meres,
Palladis Tamia. Wits Treasury. Being the Second part of Wits Common wealth
( 1598), sigs. O01
v
-O02.
25
.
Ibid., sig. O02
.
26
.
Hamlet
, 11. ii. 401-2.
27
. Andrew Gurr, "Money or Audiences",
Theatre Notebook
, 42 ( 1988), 3-14.
28
. Everard Guilpin,
Skialetheia
( 1598), Satire 5.
29
. R. L. Knutson, '
The Repertory
', in J. D. Cox and D. S. Kastan (eds.),
A New History of Early English Drama
( New York, 1997), 469-71.
30
. Stow,
The Annales of England
( 1601), 1303; Ann Jennalie Cook, "John Stow's Storm and the Demolition of the Theatre",
Shakespeare Quarterly
, 40 ( 1989), 327-8.
31
. C. W. Wallace and his wife Hulda originally found but did not publish these

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references, which David Kathman assesses in "Six Biographical Records
ReDiscovered: Some Neglected Contemporary References to Shakespeare",
Shakespeare Newsletter
, 45 (Winter 1995), 73-8.
32
. Barry Day
This Wooden "O": Shakespeare's Globe Reborn
( 1997) offers a lively, nontechnical history of the modern Globe site.
33
. See A. Gurr, R. Mulryne, and M. Shewring,
The Design of the Globe
( 1993).
34
.
Julius Caesar
, ed. Marvin Spevack ( Cambridge, 1988), 3-5.
Thomas Platter's Travels in England 1599
, trans. Clare Williams ( 1937); and Ernest Schanzer, ' Thomas Platter Observations on the Elizabethan Stage',
Notes and Queries
,
201 ( 1956), 465-7. (Some of Platter meanings are still obscure; I
follow Schanzer translation, and acknowledge Helmuth Joel's advice on
the dialect.)
35
. K. W.,
The Education of children in learning: Declared by the Dignitie, Utilitie, and Method thereof
( 1588), sig. D1.
36
.
Julius Caesar
, ed. A. Humphreys ( Oxford, 1984.),46.
14. Hamlet's Questions
1
. H. H. Lamb,
Climate, History and the Modern World
( 1982), 201-5, and E. LeRoy Ladurie ,
Times of Feast, Times of Famine
, trans. B. Bray ( New York, 1988), 312-13.
2
.
Jack Drum's Entertainment
( 1600), v.
3
. See
Hamlet
, ed. G. R. Hibbard ( Oxford, 1987), 67-130, citing W. W. Greg; and R. L. Knutson on the "little eyases", in
Shakespeare Quarterly
, 46 ( 1995), 1-31.
4
.
The Pigrimage to Parnassus
, and the First and Second Parts of
The Returne from Parnassus
,
are three anonymous plays written between 1598 and 1602, and acted at
St John's College, Cambridge. Edmund Rishton matriculated there and
took his BA in 1599, and MA in 1602. He probably owned the extant MS:
on its first leaf is the name ' Edmund Rishton, Lancastrensis' (MS
Bodleian, Rawlinson D. 398).The quoted lines, from the second
Returne
,
are spoken by Kempe to Burbage as they discuss whether to hire
Studioso and Philomusus, two recent graduates, as actors in WS's
troupe. In the first
Returne
, Gullio, a fool, leaves the reading of Spenser and Chaucer to dunces. He would sleep with
Venus and Adonis
under his pillow. 'O sweet M
r
Shakespeare', he rhapsodizes, 'I'll have his picture in my study at the
Court'. All three plays either quote or imitate WS; see
The Three Parnassus Plays
( 1598-1601) ed. J. B. Leishman ( 1949), esp. 337, 369-71.
5
. Sig. H4
v
.
6
.
Hamlet
, 111. i. 154.; cf.
Hamlet
, ed. Hibbard, 32.
7
.
Hamlet
, ed. Hibbard, 29; Barbara Everett,
Young Hamlet: Essays on Shakespeare's Tragedies
( Oxford, 1989), 3-8.
8
.
Hamlet
, ed. Philip Edwards ( Cambridge, 1985), 5.
9
.
Hamlet
, Arden edn., ed. Harold Jenkins ( Methuen, 1982), 123, 129;
Hamlet
, additional passages, F. 8-11.

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10
.
Hamlet
, 111. ii. 1-5, 17-25, 36-8.
11
. Keeling men acted
Hamlet
at sea in 1607. Sir Thomas Smith cited the play in relation to Godunov's Moscow court in a pamphlet,
Sir T. Smithes voiage and entertainment in Russia
( 1605), sig. K1. Poulett wrote from Paris on 10 Oct. 1605: Hilton Kelliher, "A Shakespeare Allusion",
British Library Journal
, 3 ( 1977), 7-12.
12
. EKC,
Facts
, ii. 197.
13
.
Troilus and Cressida
, ed. K. Muir ( Oxford, 1984.), 193.
14
. George Chapman,
Seaven Bookes of the Iliades of Homere
( 1598), sig. A4.
15
. G. Wilson Knight, "The Philosophy of Troilus and Cressida", in his
The Wheel of Fire: Interpretations of Shakespearian Tragedy
( 1961), 47-72, esp. 48.
16
. For some of the bearings of religious rite upon the poem, H. Neville Davies, "The Phoenix and Turtle: Requiem and Rite",
Review of English Studies
, 46 ( 1995), 525-30.
17
. ME 92; SS, DL 246;
Bearman
, 37-8.
18
. Màiri Macdonald, "A New Discovery about Shakespeare's Estate . . .",
Shakespeare Quarterly
, 45 ( 1994), 87-9;
Bearman
, 41.
19
. MS SBTRO BRU 2/1, 17 Dec. 1602 and 7 Feb. 1612. E. I. Fripp,
Shakespeare: Man and Artist
, 2 vols. ( Oxford, 1964.), ii. 845-6.
20
. EKC,
Facts
, ii. 119-27.
21
. Jeanne E. Jones, "Lewis Hiccox and Shakespeare's Birthplace",
Notes and Queries
, 239 ( 1994), 497-502.
22
. ME 101.
15. The King's Servants
1
. Douglas Bruster,
Drama and Market in the Age of Shakespeare
( Cambridge, 1992), 101-2.
2
.
Memoirs of Robert Carey
, ed. F. H. Mares ( Oxford, 1972), 58-60. Cf. H. Neville Davies , "Jacobean Antony and Cleopatra",
Shakespeare Studies
, 17 ( 1985), 146.
3
.
Englandes Mourning Garment
( 1603), sigs. D2
v
-D3.
4
. EKC,
Stage
, ii. 208. On the Stuart court itself, I have found especially useful Jenny Wormald , "James VI and I: Two Kings or One?",
History
, 68 ( 1983), 187-209; Derek Hirst ,
Authority and Conflict. England 1603-1658
( 1986); and Graham Parry,
The Golden Age Restor'd: The Culture of the Stuart Court, 1603-42
( Manchester, 1981).
5
. EKC,
Stage
, ii. 208-9.
6
.
Ibid. iv. 168
.
7
. MS Folger, W. b. 182.
Calendar of State Papers, Domestic, Jac
. I, vi. 21.
8
. E. Nungezer,
A Dictionary of Actors
( New York, 1929), 141-2.
9
. A. Gurr,
The Shakespearean Stage 1574-1642
( Cambridge, 1985), 46.
10
. MS Folger, W. b. 181 (translated from Latin).
11
. EKC,
Stage
, iv. 168.

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12.
M. G. Brennan, "We Have the Man Shakespeare With Us: Wilton House and As You Like It",
Wiltshire Archaeological and Natural History Magazine
, 80 ( 1986), 225-7.
13.
The First Quarto of King Richard III
, ed. Peter Davison ( Cambridge, 1996), 47. Wilton's burgesses show in their accounts for 1603, 'Paid to m
r
Sharppe for his layinges out vppon giftes and fees vnto the kinges
seruantes £6 = 5 = 0' (Trowbridge Record Office, G25/1/90.
14.
David M. Bergeron offers a good overall survey of this topic in
English Civic Pageantry 1558-1642
( Columbia, SC, 1971).
15.
Quoted in Parry,
The Golden Age Restor'd
, 6.
16.
EKC,
Stage
, iv. 172.
17.
Calendar of MSS of the Marquess of Salisbury
( 1883-1976), xvi. 415 (spelling modernized).
18.
EKC,
Stage
, iv. 171.
19.
E. A. J. Honigmann,
The Texts of 'Othello' and Shakespearian Revision
( 1996), 86-8.
20.
Patrick Collinson, "The Church: Religion and its Manifestations", in J. F. Andrews (ed.),
Shakespeare
,
3 vols. ( New York, 1985), i. 21-40, esp. 35. For Stratford: MS
SBTRO, council-books, 17 Dec. 1602 and 7 Feb. 1611/12; Ann Hughes,
"Religion and Society in Stratford upon Avon, 1619-1638",
Midland History
, 19 ( 1994-), 58-84,
21.
All's Well
, II. iii. 152, 265; IV. iii. 220, 302.
22.
Germaine Greer,
Shakespeare
( Oxford, 1986), 109, 113.
23.
Robert Smallwood, "The Design of All's Well that Ends Well",
Shakespeare Survey
, 25 ( 1972), 45-61.
24.
Bridewell archive MS
,
1597/8- 1604, courtesy of Guildhall Library, London; Laura Wright and
Jonathan Hope. On petty offenders in the Duke's 'Vienna', see
Measure
, IV. iii. 1-18.
25.
Richmond Noble, "The Date of Othello",
TLS
, 14. Dec. 1935, p. 859; cf.
Othello
, Arden edn., ed. Honigmarm ( Walton-on-Thames, 1997), 344-50.
26.
See G. Tillotson, in
TLS
, 20 July 1933, p. 494.
16 The Tragic Sublime
1.
2 Henry IV
, II. iv. 60-2.
Athenae Oxonienses
, ed. P. Bliss, vol. iii ( 1817), 802-9.
2.
Mary Edmond,
Rare Sir William Davenant
( Manchester, 1987), 18.
3.
Ibid. 13.
4.
Ibid. 22-3
. The errors of fact in Schoenbaum
Shakespeare's Lives
( Oxford, 1970), 99 ( 1991 edn.), 61, are repeated in SS,
DL
224-5.
5.
MS Bodleian, Arch. F. C. 37.
6.
Ibid.
7.
The best analyses of these five documents are still those in EKC,
Facts
, ii. 87-90

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