(For information regarding my Shakespeare Lectures: georgewalllectures@gmail.com)

Thursday, March 17, 2011

James Shapiro's 2010 book, Contested Will, is a very good summary of all of the theories that together comprise what's known as the "authorship question", or the belief that someone other than Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. (You'll notice that I've written that the book summarizes the theories - summarizing the evidence in favour of the position is much easier. In fact, I'll do it here: There isn't any.) In April of last year, Shapiro also wrote an article for the Los Angeles Times about the forthcoming movie entitled, Anonymous, which according to its director, Roland Emmerich, will tell "how the plays written by the Earl of Oxford ended up labelled 'William Shakespeare'." In the article (http://articles.latimes.com/2010/apr/11/opinion/la-oe-shapiro11-2010apr11), Shapiro devastates this statement, along with a couple of others made by Mr. Emmerich, including this one about what is, for me, at any rate, the crux of the issue: Why on earth would someone not take credit for creating the most astonishing body of art (literary or otherwise) the world has ever seen? "And the explanation as to why Shakespeare would have gotten credit for plays and poems the Earl of Oxford wrote? The 'real facts' had to be hushed up because a Tudor prince could never be seen to stoop to the lowly business of playwriting."

If the earl in question (Edward de Vere) had the talent to write the plays, would he not have also had the talent to persuade others of the importance of his work? Would he not have made mincemeat of any argument against "lowly" playwrights? Would a playwright, of "noble" birth, allow his life's mission to be openly derided without rebuttal, and then write these lines for Henry V (who says them in reply to his future wife Katherine informing him that it is not customary for unmarried couples of France to kiss before the wedding): "O Kate, nice customs curtsy to great kings. Dear Kate, you and I cannot be confined within the weak list of a country's fashion: we are the makers of manners, Kate; and the liberty that follows our places stops the mouth of all find-faults..."

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