Sunday 30 November 2014

From the Mind of Merc - Shakespeare

Sometimes I find my mind wandering over various eclectic topics and occasionally I am inspired to write some of them down. Today I was thinking about the question of Shakespeare's authorship.

Ok – this issue is a real bugbear with me – the main crux of the matter seems to be that people don't believe that a tanner's son from Stratford could be capable of writing such beautiful works. Sorry but that's like saying a butcher's son can't become the second most powerful man in Tudor England (see Cardinal Wolsey) or that a greengrocer's daughter can't become the first female prime minister (see Thatcher).
Also, despite what many people think, Shakespeare was educated and could write (how else would we have the 6 surviving signatures of his) and ultimately all you need to write is a writing tool and a writing surface.
To get down to it, the main alternatives suggested by the conspiracy theorists include:
1) Christopher Marlowe – it is theorised that he passed off his works to the young man from Stratford after his espionage activities forced him to fake his own death. Excuse me? This is not James Bond. Marlowe was killed, tragic and unfortunate but all the same plain and simple. Shakespeare may have known and certainly would have heard of him but take credit for his work? Even if Marlowe had faked his death, what's to stop his associates producing later work as 'newly discovered'?
2) Earl of Oxford – who is vehemently proposed as the true author of Shakespeare's works to the point that his main advocate cannot even begin to comprehend how anyone could consider anything else. Well I could and here's why – Oxford died in 1604 – that is 7 years before The Tempest (Shakespeare's final play) was written – this is either an extremely clever trick that all modern magicians could learn from or it is in fact proof of the absurdity of this suggestion.
3) Bacon – a noted scientist and writer who travelled to many of the places mentioned in Shakespeare's works. Aside from the question of if he had plenty of works to his own name why exactly would he pass any to another, the fact that he travelled, rather than providing proof of his authorship, in fact counters it as there are several (geographical) mistakes made in Shakespeare's works which someone who had been to those countries would not have made.
(There is an additional theory that the longest word in Shakespeare's works – honorificabilitudinitatibus - when rearranged spells out a latin phrase which translates as “These plays, F. Bacon’s offspring, are preserved for the world” - what a lovely COINCIDENCE. Please – play word games if you wish but don't for one moment suggest that they provide conclusive proof to doubt the validity of Shakespeare's authorship).
Now I'm not claiming that Shakespeare was a genius (I'll leave that to the BBC) or that he was entirely original (see the tragedy of Romeus and Juliet), I just resent the doubt placed on Shakespeare's authorship of his own works.
Finally, for me, the deciding point in the debate – the one that completely dismisses all other possibilities is that during his lifetime EVERYONE SAID SHAKESPEARE WROTE THEM – particularly his friends like Ben Jonson - but also his rivals. The first doubter of Shakespeare's authorship didn't appear until over 100 years after Shakespeare's death(!) which to me kind of suggests that there wasn't ever a question to be asked in the first place.
So overall I think it makes for a nice conspiracy theory but on closer inspection doesn't hold water for one second and in fact is little more than a spurious and highly insulting attempt/blight on Shakespeare's name and achievements.
So let's stop casting aspersions on him and HIS works and start returning to him the credit and acclaim he has rightly earned.
Well done, Will. Well done.





This if course only a brief summary of the main aspects of the case but those interested in the points above would be well advised to look into the matter and form your own conclusions.

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