IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD? FROM MY AUTOBIOGRAPHY

wills witnessed by him still extant, and after a very diligent

search none such can be discovered.”

Upon this Lord Penzance comments: “It cannot be doubted that Lord

Campbell was right in this. No young man could have been at work

in an attorney’s office without being called upon continually to

act as a witness, and in many other ways leaving traces of his work

and name.” There is not a single fact or incident in all that is

known of Shakespeare, even by rumor or tradition, which supports

this notion of a clerkship. And after much argument and surmise

which has been indulged in on this subject, we may, I think, safely

put the notion on one side, for no less an authority than Mr. Grant

White says finally that the idea of his having been clerk to an

attorney has been “blown to pieces.”

It is altogether characteristic of Mr. Churton Collins that he,

nevertheless, adopts this exploded myth. “That Shakespeare was in

early life employed as a clerk in an attorney’s office, may be

correct. At Stratford there was by royal charter a Court of Record

sitting every fortnight, with six attorneys, beside the town clerk,

belonging to it, and it is certainly not straining probability to

suppose that the young Shakespeare may have had employment in one

of them. There is, it is true, no tradition to this effect, but

such traditions as we have about Shakespeare’s occupation between

the time of leaving school and going to London are so loose and

baseless that no confidence can be placed in them. It is, to say

the least, more probable that he was in an attorney’s office than

that he was a butcher killing calves ‘in a high style,’ and making

speeches over them.”

This is a charming specimen of Stratfordian argument. There is, as

we have seen, a very old tradition that Shakespeare was a butcher’s

apprentice. John Dowdall, who made a tour in Warwickshire in 1693,

testifies to it as coming from the old clerk who showed him over

the church, and it is unhesitatingly accepted as true by Mr.

Halliwell-Phillipps. (Vol I, p. 11, and see Vol. II, p. 71, 72.)

Mr. Sidney Lee sees nothing improbable in it, and it is supported

by Aubrey, who must have written his account some time before 1680,

when his manuscript was completed. Of the attorney’s clerk

hypothesis, on the other hand, there is not the faintest vestige of

a tradition. It has been evolved out of the fertile imaginations

of embarrassed Stratfordians, seeking for some explanation of the

Stratford rustic’s marvellous acquaintance with law and legal terms

and legal life. But Mr. Churton Collins has not the least

hesitation in throwing over the tradition which has the warrant of

antiquity and setting up in its stead this ridiculous invention,

for which not only is there no shred of positive evidence, but

which, as Lord Campbell and Lord Penzance point out, is really put

out of court by the negative evidence, since “no young man could

have been at work in an attorney’s office without being called upon

continually to act as a witness, and in many other ways leaving

traces of his work and name.” And as Mr. Edwards further points

out, since the day when Lord Campbell’s book was published (between

forty and fifty years ago), “every old deed or will, to say nothing

of other legal papers, dated during the period of William

Shakespeare’s youth, has been scrutinized over half a dozen shires,

and not one signature of the young man has been found.”

Moreover, if Shakespeare had served as clerk in an attorney’s

office it is clear that he must have so served for a considerable

period in order to have gained (if indeed it is credible that he

could have so gained) his remarkable knowledge of law. Can we then

for a moment believe that, if this had been so, tradition would

have been absolutely silent on the matter? That Dowdall’s old

clerk, over eighty years of age, should have never heard of it

(though he was sure enough about the butcher’s apprentice), and

that all the other ancient witnesses should be in similar

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