Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- SECTION 1 The Problem stated
- SECTION 2 The Marlowe fiction
- SECTION 3 The Greenwood theory
- SECTION 4 The Stratford legend
- SECTION 5 Does Shakespeare rail?
- SECTION 6 William Shakespeare, gentleman
- SECTION 7 Concerning Genius
- SECTION 8 Stratford fact and fable
- SECTION 9 The flight to London
- SECTION 10 Shakespeare's silence about Stratford
- SECTION 11 Concerning Arden
- SECTION 12 Of Poets, Patrons and Pages
- SECTION 13 What happened in 1572
- SECTION 14 Polesworth
- SECTION 15 Shakespeare in North Warwickshire
- SECTION 16 Shakespeare's road to London
- SECTION 17 Michael Drayton
- SECTION 18 The Polesworth circle
- SECTION 19 The Gooderes
- SECTION 20 The Sonnets
- SECTION 21 Southampton
- SECTION 22 Warwickshire scenes in Shakespeare's youth
- SECTION 23 The last days
- Plate section
SECTION 14 - Polesworth
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- ILLUSTRATIONS
- SECTION 1 The Problem stated
- SECTION 2 The Marlowe fiction
- SECTION 3 The Greenwood theory
- SECTION 4 The Stratford legend
- SECTION 5 Does Shakespeare rail?
- SECTION 6 William Shakespeare, gentleman
- SECTION 7 Concerning Genius
- SECTION 8 Stratford fact and fable
- SECTION 9 The flight to London
- SECTION 10 Shakespeare's silence about Stratford
- SECTION 11 Concerning Arden
- SECTION 12 Of Poets, Patrons and Pages
- SECTION 13 What happened in 1572
- SECTION 14 Polesworth
- SECTION 15 Shakespeare in North Warwickshire
- SECTION 16 Shakespeare's road to London
- SECTION 17 Michael Drayton
- SECTION 18 The Polesworth circle
- SECTION 19 The Gooderes
- SECTION 20 The Sonnets
- SECTION 21 Southampton
- SECTION 22 Warwickshire scenes in Shakespeare's youth
- SECTION 23 The last days
- Plate section
Summary
Polesworth (Powlesworth, Pollesworth) is a large village in the extreme north of Warwickshire, where an angle of the county is projected between Staffordshire and Leicestershire. The distance from Stratford—travelling by way of Warwick, Coventry and Nuneaton—is about thirty-eight miles. As other parishes in its neighbourhood, until its assignment to the modern diocese of Birmingham, it was included in that of Lichfield. Stratford was in Worcester diocese.
The parish, which now has some 5000 inhabitants, was formerly more extensive, and within its limits contained, as Dugdale writes, nine ‘villages and places of note,’ besides Polesworth. The village is charmingly situated and retains much of its rural and ancient character, though its neighbourhood is defaced by the chimneys and collieries of Wilnecote, which is now a separate parish, formed in the last century out of the civil parishes of Tamworth and Polesworth. Wilnecote has a population about equal to that of Polesworth.
In medieval times the place was called Polesworth in Arderna. It was in the heart of the ancient forest of Arden. To ‘cleere Ankor,’ the river which flows through the village, Drayton dedicates the 13th Amour of his Sonnets (1594):
‘Fayre Arden, thou my Tempe art alone,
And thou, sweet Ankor, art my Helicon.’
‘Polesworth,’ says Professor Oliver Elton in his Michael Drayton, ‘now consists chiefly of a street of ruddy-roofed, black-and-white cottages with the church and adjoining vicarage.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Chapter in the Early Life of ShakespearePolesworth in Arden, pp. 63 - 71Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1926