Shakespeare Fellowship | Preface


"Shakespeare" Identified

In Edward De Vere the Seventeenth
Earl of Oxford

by J. Thomas Looney
(Text from the first American edition by Frederick A. Stokes Company, New York: 1920.)

"Vero Nihil Verius."

NB: This text is over 80 years old. Consequently, current Oxfordian scholarship has corrected some errors in this text, paticularly Appendix I - The Tempest.


"What a wounded name,
Things standing thus unknown, shall live behind me."
(Hamlet, v. 2)

"Dear son of memory, great heir of fame,
What need'st thou such weak sitness for thy name?
Thou in our wonder and astonishment."
(Milton, on Shakespeare.)


Contents

PREFACE and PRELIMINARY NOTE

INTRODUCTION

CHAPTER I - THE STRATFORDIAN VIEW

I-Growing scepticism; Ignatius Donnelly; Anti-Stratfordian authorities; "Shakespeare" and law; "Shakespeare's" education; Halliwell-Phillips
II-William Shakspere's early life; Shakspeare and Burns
III-William Shakspere's three periods; Closing period
IV-The Will; Ben Jonson; Hemming and Condell; Penmanship; The "Shakespeare" manuscripts; The First Folio; Obituary silence
V-William Shakspere's middle period; No participation in publication; Uncertain duration; Uncertain habitation; The great alibi
VI-William Shakspere's silence
VII-Character of contemporary notices; The Stratfordian impossibility; Absence of incidents; No letters
VIII-William Shakspere as actor; Municipal records
IX-As London actor; Accounts of Treasurer of Chamber; Missing Lord Chamberlain's books; Notable omissions

X-Summary

CHAPTER II - CHARACTER OF THE PROBLEM AND METHOD OF SOLUTION

I-Authorship a mystery; A solution required; Literary authorities; "Shakespeare's" voluntary self-effacement; Genius; Maturity and masterpieces; A modem problem
II-The method of solution; Stages outlined.

CHAPTER III - THE AUTHOR: SOME GENERAL FEATURES

Recognized genius and mysterious; Appearance of eccentricity; A man apart; Apparent inferiority to requirements of the work; An Englishman of literary tastes; Dramatic interests; A lyric poet; Classical education; Summary.

CHAPTER IV - THE AUTHOR: SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS

His feudal partialities; Aristocratic outlook; Lancastrian leanings; Enthusiast for Italy; Sporting tastes; Music; Negligent in money matters; Mixed attitude towards woman; Catholicism and Scepticism; Summary.

CHAPTER V - THE SEARCH AND DISCOVERY

Choice of guide; Narrowing the operations; The point of contact; The actual quest; An important poem; Seeking expert support; First indications; Dictionary of National Biography; Selection justified; Competing solutions.

CHAPTER VI - CONDITIONS FULFILLED

Personal traits; Personal circumstances; Summary of points attested; Remaining points: Sport, Lancastrianism, Woman, Religion.

CHAPTER VII - EDWARD DE VERE AS LYRIC POET

Expert testimony; Dr. Grosart's collection; Oxford's early poetry; Hidden productions; The great literary transition embodied in De Vere; Oxford's style and Shakespeare's. His character in his writings.

CHAPTER VIII - THE LYRIC POETRY OF EDWARD DE VERE

I-Six-lined stanza; Central theme; Personality; Haggard hawk; Lily and damask rose; Love's difficulties; Love's penalties; Mental distraction
II-Interrogatives; Stanzas formed of similar lines; A peculiar literary form; Loss of good name; Fortune and Nature; Desire for pity; Echo poems; Romeo and Juliet; The Lark; Tragedy and Comedy.

CHAPTER IX - RECORDS AND EARLY LIFE OF DE VERE

I-Reputation of the Earl of Oxford; Reasons for concealment; The shadow lifting; Need for reinterpretation; False stories
II-Ancestry of Edward de Vere; Shakespeare and Richard II; Shakespeare and high birth
III-The Earls of Oxford in the Wars of the Roses; Shakespeare and the Earls of Oxford; The Great Chamberlain
IV-Father of Edward de Vere; Shakespeare and Father worship
V-A royal ward; "All's well", aremarkable parallel; Education; Arthur Golding's Ovid; De Vere and law; Life and book-learning; The universities; Relationship with the Cecils; General experiences; Dancing; Shooting; Horsemanship; Early poetry.

CHAPTER X - EARLY MANHOOD OF EDWARD DE VERE

I-Marriage; Sordid considerations; Oxford and Burleigh; Burleigh and literary men; Burleigh's espionage; Hostility; Raleigh; Desire for travel; Unauthorized travel; Visit to Italy; Shakespeare and travel; Oxford in Italy
II-Domestic rupture; An Othello argument; A sensational discovery; Kicking over the traces; Burleigh's methods of warfare.

CHAPTER XI - MANHOOD OF DE VERE. MIDDLE PERIOD. DRAMATIC FOREGROUND

I-Gabriel Harvey; Holofernes; Oxford and Berowne; Philip Sidney; Boyet; Eccentricity; Vulgar scandal
II-Dramatic activities; Anthony Munday
III-Agamemnon and Ulysses; Troilus and Cressida
IV-Lyly and the Oxford Boys
V-Shakespeare and Lyly
VI-Apparent inactivity; Spenser and De Vere; Spenser's "Willie Shakespeare and "Will."

CHAPTER XII - MANHOOD OF DE VERE. AN INTERLUDE

Execution of Mary Queen of Scots and funeral of Philip Sidney; Oxford and his times; Shakespeare and politicians; Mary Queen of Scots and Portia; Spanish Armada and Shakespeare; Death of Lady Oxford.

CHAPTER XIII - MANHOOD OF DE VERE. FINAL PERIOD

I-Material difficulties; Second marriage; An important blank; Shakespeare's method of production; Dating the plays; Rapid issue; Dramatic reserves; Habits of revision; De Vere a precisionist; State plays and literature
II-Plays as poems; Henry Wriothesley a personal link; Contemporary parties; Southampton, Bacon and De Vere; Death of Queen Elizabeth; The Boar's Head Tavern and Gadshill; Death of De Vere.

CHAPTER XIV - POSTHUMOUS CONSIDERATIONS

An unfinished task; Death's arrest; "Lear" and "Macbeth"; Three periods of Shakespeare publication; Posthumous publications; "Pericles" and the Sonnets; "King Lear" and "Troilus"; "Hamlet"; First Folio; William Shakspere's purchases; William Shakspere's supposed retirement and Oxford's death; Loyal helpers; Henry Wriothesley; The 1602 gap; Horatio de Vere; The second Lady Oxford; The series of sonnets closes; Summary; A conclusive combination; The substitution.

CHAPTER XV - POETIC SELF-REVELATION. THE SONNETS

Resume of points already treated; Southampton the better angel; W. H. and T. T.; The poet's age; Southampton and Oxford's daughter Elizabeth; a significant marriage proposal; Sentiment of the sonnets; The dark lady; Supplementary details; The inventor of the Shakespearean sonnet; An early sonnet by Edward de Vere; Romeo and Juliet.

CHAPTER XVI - DRAMATIC SELF-REVELATION: HAMLET

Shakespeare's contemporaries in his plays; The dramatist in his dramas; Hamlet and destiny; Hamlet is Shakespeare; De Vere as Hamlet; Hamlet's father and mother; Hamlet and Polonius; Ophelia; Horatio; Patron of Drama; Minor points; Hamlet and his times; Hamlet's dying appeal.

CHAPTER XVII - CHRONOLOGICAL SUMMARY OF EDWARD DE VERE AND SHAKESPEARE

CHAPTER XVIII - CONCLUSION

APPENDIX I - THE TEMPEST

A check; The Tempest and other comedies; Shakespeare's philosophy: Quality of the play; Dumb show and noise; Shakespearean details; Wit; A play apart; Medievalism; Woman; Horsemanship; Sport; Human nature; General Vocabulary; Not "Shakespeare's" work.

APPENDIX II - SUPPLEMENTARY MATTERS

The "Posthumous" argument; Oxford's Crest; Martin Droeshout's engraving; The Grafton portrait.

INDEX


Shakespeare Fellowship | Preface



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