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 3 - The Greenwood theory
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
Before I proceed to the discussion of the sources of the Stratford Legend I am drawn into a bypath by the attractive and ablyargued theory of Sir G. G. Greenwood that the Plays and Poems of ‘Shakespeare’ were not the work of the man who wrote his name ‘Shakspere,’ who was born and died at Stratford, and was merely a popular actor. Inasmuch as the actor was a Warwickshire man and the Plays are full of Warwickshire, the divagation is not so irrelevant as at first view it may seem.
Sir George Greenwood is by no means out to substitute an impossible Bacon for an actual but unwriting Shakespeare. In one contention I hold that, for all that the Orthodox have alleged against it, he is signally right. I agree with him that William Shakespeare, as he figures in the Stratford Apocrypha, was not, and could not be, the William Shakespeare who wrote the Plays and Poems.
But, if not Bacon, then Who? Sir George offers us only an unknown and neuter Tertium Quid. What I want, and what in reason everybody demands, is a Tertius Quis. Can we realise no more of the author of Hamlet and Lear than we do of the something called Homer? In the dual Shakspere-Shakespeare of his begetting, Sir George, by not confounding the persons but dividing their substance, imperils my faith in human individuality.
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- Chapter
- Information
- A Chapter in the Early Life of ShakespearePolesworth in Arden, pp. 8 - 12Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1926