IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD? FROM MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY

correctly without learning it with pick and shovel and drill and

fuse.

I have been a surface-miner–gold–and I know all its mysteries,

and the dialect that belongs with them; and whenever Harte

introduces that industry into a story I know by the phrasing of his

characters that neither he nor they have ever served that trade.

I have been a “pocket” miner–a sort of gold mining not findable in

any but one little spot in the world, so far as I know. I know

how, with horn and water, to find the trail of a pocket and trace

it step by step and stage by stage up the mountain to its source,

and find the compact little nest of yellow metal reposing in its

secret home under the ground. I know the language of that trade,

that capricious trade, that fascinating buried-treasure trade, and

can catch any writer who tries to use it without having learned it

by the sweat of his brow and the labor of his hands.

I know several other trades and the argot that goes with them; and

whenever a person tries to talk the talk peculiar to any of them

without having learned it at its source I can trap him always

before he gets far on his road.

And so, as I have already remarked, if I were required to

superintend a Bacon-Shakespeare controversy, I would narrow the

matter down to a single question–the only one, so far as the

previous controversies have informed me, concerning which

illustrious experts of unimpeachable competency have testified:

WAS THE AUTHOR OF SHAKESPEARE’S WORKS A LAWYER?–a lawyer deeply

read and of limitless experience? I would put aside the guesses,

and surmises, and perhapses, and might-have-beens, and could-have

beens, and must-have-beens, and we-are justified-in-presumings, and

the rest of those vague spectres and shadows and indefinitenesses,

and stand or fall, win or lose, by the verdict rendered by the jury

upon that single question. If the verdict was Yes, I should feel

quite convinced that the Stratford Shakespeare, the actor, manager,

and trader who died so obscure, so forgotten, so destitute of even

village consequence that sixty years afterward no fellow-citizen

and friend of his later days remembered to tell anything about him,

did not write the Works.

Chapter XIII of The Shakespeare Problem Restated bears the heading

“Shakespeare as a Lawyer,” and comprises some fifty pages of expert

testimony, with comments thereon, and I will copy the first nine,

as being sufficient all by themselves, as it seems to me, to settle

the question which I have conceived to be the master-key to the

Shakespeare-Bacon puzzle.

CHAPTER VIII

Shakespeare as a Lawyer {2}

The Plays and Poems of Shakespeare supply ample evidence that their

author not only had a very extensive and accurate knowledge of law,

but that he was well acquainted with the manners and customs of

members of the Inns of Court and with legal life generally.

“While novelists and dramatists are constantly making mistakes as

to the laws of marriage, of wills, and inheritance, to

Shakespeare’s law, lavishly as he expounds it, there can neither be

demurrer, nor bill of exceptions, nor writ of error.” Such was the

testimony borne by one of the most distinguished lawyers of the

nineteenth century who was raised to the high office of Lord Chief

Justice in 1850, and subsequently became Lord Chancellor. Its

weight will, doubtless, be more appreciated by lawyers than by

laymen, for only lawyers know how impossible it is for those who

have not served an apprenticeship to the law to avoid displaying

their ignorance if they venture to employ legal terms and to

discuss legal doctrines. “There is nothing so dangerous,” wrote

Lord Campbell, “as for one not of the craft to tamper with our

freemasonry.” A layman is certain to betray himself by using some

expression which a lawyer would never employ. Mr. Sidney Lee

himself supplies us with an example of this. He writes (p. 164):

“On February 15, 1609, Shakespeare . . . obtained judgment from a

jury against Addenbroke for the payment of No. 6, and No. 1. 5s.

0d. costs.” Now a lawyer would never have spoken of obtaining

“judgment from a jury,” for it is the function of a jury not to

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