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Shakespeare's Experience
William Shakespeare of Stratford's life is almost undocumented
before 1592 (see Timeline). Somewhere
in his early education and his "lost years," from roughly 1582
to 1592, must be the explanation for how the son of a glover from a smallish
Midlands town became the poet Shakespeare--if William Shakespeare of Stratford
is the poet Shakespeare.
What was Shakespeare doing in his early years?
Somewhere he should have been learning the following subjects,
which appear in his writing:
- Modern languages, since he quotes untranslated sources in French,
German, and Italian
- Modern history
- The workings of the court
- Rhetoric
- Humanistic learning
- Medicine and the treatment of madness (Hamlet, Macbeth, Lear)
- Geography and customs of France and Italy
- English and classical history
- Hunting and sports, especially hawking
- The law
- Military life
- Astronomy and astrology (Hamlet)
- Music
Various critics have suggested ways in which he could have learned some
of these:
- David Kathman explains his knowledge of modern languages by saying
that he read books provided him by Richard
Field. These books would have also provided him with his knowledge
of modern history and humanistic learning. (See "Shakespeare's
library.")
- John Aubrey (Brief Lives, 1681) says that Shakespeare "had
been in his younger yeares a Schoolmaster in the Countrey," citing
William Beeston, son of Christopher Beeston, an actor and theatrical
man who in his earlier life had belonged to the Lord Chamberlain's men
and had acted with Shakespeare in Every Man in His Humour (1598).
This is as likely a scenario as any, and has better provenance than
most. E.A.J. Honigmann (Shakespeare, The Lost Years) further
argues that Shakespeare might have been in Lancashire, in the household
of the Catholic Hoghton family, as a schoolmaster, player, and musician;
the Hoghtons had an extensive library.
- He might have learned the workings of the court by being there as
an actor, and studied rhetoric as an actor.
- He might have talked to French and Italian people who were living
in London. (See "Shakespeare's travels.")
- He might have got his knowledge of sports and hunting through poaching.
The Gloucestershire clergyman Richard Davies, around 1616, wrote that
"Shakespeare was much given to all unluckiness in stealing venison
and rabbits, particularly from Sir ----- [Thomas] Lucy who oft had him
whipped and sometimes imprisoned and at last made him fly his native
country to his great advancement."
- In 1790, Edmund Malone speculated Shakespeare might have been "employed
while he yet remained at Stratford, in the office of some country attorney..."
- Shakespeare might have served in the Low Countries.
- He might have learned much of what he knew in the household of some
nobleman. (I have suggested in Chasing Shakespeares that he
served in Oxford's household.) He might even have traveled abroad with
a nobleman, or, as Anthony Munday did, might have got the money to go
to Rome by pretending he wished to become a priest.
No single piece of this is impossible, and the "schoolmaster in
the country" story has the virtue of coming from the family of a
man who might have known. The difficulty is that, with the exception perhaps
of serving with a nobleman, no story explains all of Shakespeare's various
wide areas of knowledge. And that story itself has holes; even though
Shakespeare were a servant in a noble household, he would not necessarily
have access to the nobleman's library or those of his friends, or leisure
to read, or experience of hunting and hawking (as opposed to being a beater
or standing holding the game bag).
Unlike most other aspiring poets/playwrights, Shakespeare could not have
gone to university; University men were required to be unmarried, and
Shakespeare's marriage at 18 had closed higher education to him.
The most likely scenario for Shakespeare's missing years is that he was
doing the same things that he did later:
- Shakespeare might have been in Stratford, engaged in business with
his father, a glovemaker and a dealer in leather, grain, and wool. In
later years Shakespeare is known to have done much business in Stratford,
including moneylending, buying land, and dealing in grain.
- He might have been working for someone else locally. Most Stratfordians
dealt in wool, grain, or leather, all businesses on the downturn in
Shakespeare's time.
- He might also have been doing some acting, enough that he could have
been hired away by one of the theatrical troupes that visited Stratford.
Shakespeare of Stratford has no documented interest in astrological or
astronomical learning, medicine or the treatment of madness, rhetoric,
or hunting or hawking. He is not known to have hunted or to have kept
a hawk; New Place is not known to have included a mews. He does lend
money at interest, something which Shakespeare the poet condemns.
In other words, what we know about his experience does not map closely
to what we know about the experience of Shakespeare the poet.
Oxford's experience maps much better.
- He is known to have studied modern languages and spent extensive time
in Europe
- He studied modern history, which included the history of his own prominent
family. In some respects Shakespeare the poet treats history as Oxford
might have; for example, the homosexual affair between an earl of Oxford
and King Richard II does not appear in Shakespeare's play
- As a courtier, he knew the workings of the court intimately
- He studied rhetoric with XXXX [chck in Sobran], who influenced Shakespeare.
- He had access to some of the largest private libraries in England
(see "Shakespeare's Library")
and had his own large library, 600 books by the time he was 16
- He studied law at Gray's Inn
- For eight years he lived opposite Bedlam Hospital, London's insane
asylum. As a nobleman, he would have had access to it
- He favored Paracelsian medicine, as does Shakespeare (SBAN 73-74)
- He traveled in France and Italy, and he or his friends were present
at many of the events and places described in Shakespeare (see "Shakespeare's
Travels")
- His father was an avid sportsman; Edward de Vere was a champion tourney
jouster, rode to hawks, and had a bowling alley at Fisher's Folly (another
metaphor that shows up in Shakespeare)
- He was on active service in a number of military campaigns
- He was studying astronomy and astrology with Dr. John Dee at the time
of the Nova of 1572. This nova, which essentially blew apart Ptolemaic
astronomy and replaced it with Copernican, fits with the mixture of
pre-Copernican and Copernican astronomical metaphor in Hamlet.
- He is known to have written substantial poetic works
- He contributed material or introductions to a number of books, including
Hamlet's favorite Cardanus Comfort, and paid for the printing
of others
- He was known to be an amateur actor. A record survives of his acting
in front of Queen Elizabeth in 1579
- He maintained several troupes of actors
- He was a trained musician
Many of these things could be said of other nobles as well; but some
are specific to Oxford.
Biographical Stratford
Jonson's eulogy Oxford's
death Biographical Oxford
Shakespeare's library
Shakespeare's travels
Shakespeare's experience
Dating the plays
Authorship timeline "Theory
of casual references"
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