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Oxfordian Mark Anderson finds other clues in Shakespeare's settings, plots and characters. He discerns in Hamlet, for instance, elements drawn from Oxford’s life. "Polonius is a caricature of Oxford's father-in-law, Lord Burghley, who was known to be rather prolix and tedious," he says. "Burghley, like Polonius, once sent spies to check up on his own son." Ophelia is Burghley's daughter, whom Oxford/Hamlet woos, and so on.
As persuasive as their case may be, even the most ardent Oxfordians must admit there isn't a scrap of real evidence tying their man to Shakespeare's work. And how to explain Ben Jonson's eulogy of the "Sweet Swan of Avon," in the First Folio? "...Soule of the Age! The applause! delight! the wonder of our Stage!...Thou art a Monument, without a tombe, / And art alive still, while thy Booke doth live, / And we have wits to read, and praise to give."
By and large, orthodox Stratfordians—a group that includes the vast majority of historians and English professors with an interest in Shakespeare—dismiss Oxford's champions as wishful thinkers who ignore or misread historical evidence. It's natural, they say, that we yearn for traces of our most revered writer—a signed love sonnet on parchment, at least, if not a complete first draft of Macbeth. But finding their absence suspicious, they say, reveals basic misunderstandings about life during the English Renaissance.
"In his own time, Shakespeare wasn't thought of as a universal genius," says Marjorie Garber, professor of English and visual studies at Harvard University and the author of several books on Shakespeare, including Shakespeare After All (2004). "Nobody was about to save a laundry list he wrote so they could sell it on eBay. It wasn't that kind of culture." Paper, typically handmade in France, was scarce and expensive; when it was no longer needed, it was reused—to line a baking dish, perhaps, or stiffen a book cover. Letter-writing and diary-keeping were unusual, especially for commoners. As for play manuscripts, Garber says, "Once they were set in type, there was certainly no reason to save them." Even in print, plays were considered something less than literature. When Thomas Bodley set up the Bodleian library at Oxford University in Shakespeare's time, she points out, he refused to include play texts. "These were considered trash, like pulp fiction."
One by one, mainstream scholars knock down the Oxfordians' debating points. No, Stratford wasn't an uncultured backwater; a lord mayor of London and an archbishop of Canterbury had both come from there. No, a Stratford grammar-school graduate wasn't akin to a seventh-grade dropout of today. The Greek and Latin classics echoed in the plays were a standard part of the grammar-school curriculum. Shakespeare may never have visited Italy, but neither he nor anyone else during the Renaissance ever set foot in ancient Greece or Rome either, and that did not rule out the Classical world as a popular setting for poetry and drama. And no, you didn't have to be a nobleman to write about kings and queens. Writers of every stripe did so—it's what the Elizabethan public demanded.
"In the end, what sets Shakespeare apart from his contemporaries is the sheer range of his style and his subject matter," says the University of Warwick's Jonathan Bate. "He was great in comedy and tragedy and history. He could write about the court, and he could write about ordinary people." A play doesn’t have to be autobiographical, Bate suggests, any more than a sonnet has to be confessional. "Shakespeare always kept himself well disguised. He didn't insert his own opinions, and he steered away from the topical controversies of the day. That's why it's so easy for directors and filmmakers today to make his plays contemporary. It's the key to his endurance."
Nor, Bate adds, is it necessary to believe that Shakespeare began writing masterpieces as soon as he picked up a quill. "There is good evidence that he started by rewriting the works of other dramatists. Lots of his early plays are either collaborative works, where he's a kind of junior partner working with more established dramatists, or they're reworkings of older plays." Even the mature plays like Hamlet and King Lear, Bate says, drew on existing works for their plots. "In his time, originality wasn't especially valued."
As for England not mourning his death, that's not surprising either. By 1616, Shakespeare was, after all, a middle-class retiree living far from London, and his plays were no longer the latest fashion. "In his own lifetime and for some time after, Shakespeare is certainly admired and respected, but he's not thought of as unique," says Bate. Which is why later writers felt justified in "improving" on him. British poet laureate John Dryden shortened Troilus and Cressida in the late 1600s by excising what he called "that heap of Rubbish, under which so many excellent Thoughts lay wholly bury'd." An unnamed critic in the following century scolded Shakespeare "for ignoring the ancients, for violating decorum by resorting to tragicomedy and supernatural characters, and for using puns and blank verse."


Comments
I find your article very interesting and after reading it I agree with you, I never had the tought that Shakespeare could be made up. I was just wondering how much research you did on this before wrighting the article and where did you go to get back up on the subject.
Posted by Heloisa on April 8,2008 | 07:42AM
It is not quite even-handed to give the Stratfordians the last word, but since we have all been raised on the inherited diet of Stratford-man-as-Shakespeare, it is almost a customary courtesy to offer readers a plate of intellectual comfort food after unsettling them with the escargot and frog's legs of Oxfordian tales. It appeases the appetite for stable landmarks on the historical plain and the sweet and certain knowledge that our good professors have everything completely sorted out. On the other hand, as Orson Welles put it, "If you don’t agree, there are some awfully funny coincidences to explain away…" The more that is known about Oxford, the more coincidences there are. Read Mark Anderson's book, "Shakespeare by Another Name" (or go to his website by the same name) and you will get a sense of how autobiographical the plays are, or may be. Merely to entertain the possibility is exciting and enlightening.
Posted by Daniel Batchelar on August 18,2008 | 03:00AM
You question the authenticity of William Shakespeare but I question why. Why as to how many persons have read these great literary works and have not in some shape or form been influenced by them. Why go against history and everything we have learned from his pieces. Why are so many willing to believe that such an extrodinary man could never have existed. If that be true that such a man never have, then who wrote the plays if not William? If they were wrote by another person for say why would they not take recognition for such masterpieces? Or maby they didn't want to be found, maby they wanted to remain anounomous and allow the minds of millions to ponder what could have been. But I find it obsurd to not know all the facts and make such terrible accusations.
Posted by Chelsea Hoffman on December 16,2008 | 01:57PM
Were people jealous of Skespeare and that is why the claim he is a fraud? I believe he isn't a fraud.
Posted by Kayy on March 30,2009 | 11:43AM
I was born in Stratford myself and grew up in the Warwickshire countryside. I have recently used the internet to conduct my own new investigation into Shakespeares life. Many of us can use our inelligence to guess what might have happened but the facts are few and far between.
For me, Shakespeare was the writer and creator of the Plays but that doesnt mean he wrote them conclusively. These are my opinions only:
1. William left Stratford early 1585 and headed for Rome where he would meet this old school tutor and now jesuit priest Simon Hunt
2. Probably attended with Richard Burbage the Kenilworth pageant of July 1575, remember Richards Father James Burbage helped organize it
3. While in Rome/Italy, William would have been informed by Richard Field/Richard Burbage and Michael Drayton (among others) of execution of Mary Queen of Scots, failure of Spanish Armada and death of Lord Leicester
4. The Shakespeare family and Sir Thomas Lucy were certainly at odds with each other and we can suspect that William was caught 'poaching' at Charlcote park by Lucys henchmen
5. 1575 pageant would have inspired Midsummers Nights Dream
6. William possessed extraordinary powers of memory and great knowledge of history but was probably a lazy writer at heart
7. William returned to England in 1588 and settled in a room organied for him by Richard Field and became an actor working around the various Theatres (not just James Burbages Theatre)
8. Shakespeare collaborated with creative writers to turn the material into plays, with Francis Bacon for merchant of venice and with John Fletcher/Francis Beaumont for Hamlet and Cardenio/Henry VIII.
9. Some Plays such as Merry Wives of Windsor, Twelfth Night, Othello, macbeth and King Lear written for royalty
Posted by paul david on July 16,2009 | 09:51AM