Shakespeare, Life of an Icon Exhibition Material

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This article offers a comprehensive list of each piece included in Shakespeare, Life of an Icon, one of the Exhibitions at the Folger.

Introduction

Four centuries after William Shakespeare’s death, Shakespeare, Life of an Icon brings together 50 of the most important manuscripts and printed works related to his life and career—some of them never before exhibited in the United States, and some of them on public display for the first time ever.

In his lifetime, Londoners and others took note of Shakespeare—they went to his plays, bought and read his works, and compared him to other great writers. At the same time, bureaucrats recorded details of his professional and family life—real estate transactions, baptisms and burials, taxes, legal proceedings—in mundane paperwork. We will never have a photograph of Shakespeare or a recording of his voice, but we can appreciate the rarity and significance of these documents and the brief, sometimes surprising, glimpses they provide of his life and rise to fame.

Thomas Speght, who lived in Shakespeare’s time, described the key components of an author’s biography as “so much as we can find” of “his Country, Parentage, Education, Marriage, Children, Revenues, Service, Rewards, Friends, Books, Death.” By that standard, we know much about Shakespeare, although never as much as we might wish. The materials in this exhibition remind us of the difficulty of interpreting the past, and the rewards of doing so, through careful reading and small details.

Shakespeare, The Playwright

Shakespeare was an ACTOR, a PLAYWRIGHT, and a SHAREHOLDER in an acting company known as the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, which became the King’s Men after the accession of James I in 1603. His plays were performed on indoor and outdoor commercial stages in London and in many other venues as well, including the royal court, the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, the Inns of Court, public buildings and outdoor courtyards in the provinces, and private households.

The total number of Shakespeare’s plays varies somewhat, depending on who is counting them, and how. The total shifts between 38 and 40 plays as scholars reassess references to his two lost plays—Love’s Labor’s Won and Cardenio—and analyze how large a hand he had in some collaboratively-written plays.

The Shakespeare Quartos (1.1)

Eighteen of Shakespeare’s plays were printed during his lifetime, in a small, inexpensive format called a “quarto.”

Quartos were sold in flimsy bindings or sometimes no bindings at all, making them vulnerable to damage and loss over the years. The early Shakespeare quartos are now extraordinarily rare; some survive in only a single copy. Some of the quarto plays diff er significantly from the same plays in the 1623 First Folio, the first collected edition of Shakespeare’s plays, which was published seven years after he died.

Shakespeare's Earliest Critics (1.2)

Shakespeare is fi rst mentioned as a playwright in 1592, when he had already written at least five plays: The Comedy of Errors, Titus Andronicus, and Henry VI, Parts 1 , 2 , and 3.

In 1598, a literary critic attributes a dozen plays to him, including one that is now considered lost, Love’s Labors Won, and compares them to the plays of Plautus and Seneca. A year later, a treatise on poetry describes Shakespeare’s play Richard II as a “well-conceipted tragedy.”

Quotable Shakespeare (1.3)

Like other plays from the period, Shakespeare’s plays were meant to be read both as stories and as sources for sententiae, passages that became stand-alone proverbs when removed from the play. Beginning in 1600, a group of editors and publishers elevated English plays to a more respectable status by excerpting them in printed literary anthologies and printing “commonplace markers” (modern-day quotation marks) alongside extractable sayings in the plays themselves. These markers would indicate passages that readers could then copy into their own commonplace books, personalized collections of proverbs.

(1.4)

Sir Thomas More. Manuscript, 1601?. BL, Harleian MS 7368. LOAN COURTESY OF THE BRITISH LIBRARY. See this item on Shakespeare Documented: Shakespeare's handwriting: Hand D in The Booke of Sir Thomas More

Scholars have assigned letters to the various styles of handwriting found in this play. The handwriting on the page on the left, referred to as Hand D, is the hand that might be Shakespeare’s. Hand C, an unidentified professional scribe, has made corrections to this page. The handwriting on the page on the right, known as Hand S, most likely belongs to Anthony Munday, with revisions by Hand B, probably Thomas Heywood. Despite the many changes made to satisfy the censors, the play was never printed. And despite the stage directions added by a theatrical employee known as a “bookkeeper,” it was never publicly acted.

(1.6)

Privy Seal Office. Warrant for the issue of letters patent. Manuscript, May 18, 1603. LOAN COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES, UK, C82/1690 F.78

This is the warrant for issuing the offi cial letters patent which would place the Lord Chamberlain’s Men under royal patronage, making them the King’s Men. The hole in the upper left-hand corner is for a fi ling string, which ties this document to other warrants received by the Lord Keeper in May 1603. The string has been removed from the file for this exhibition, but will be replaced when it returns to the National Archives in England.

WHAT DID THE WARRANT LOOK LIKE WHEN IT WAS ISSUED?

If you look closely you can see three pairs of slits cut through the fifth-to-last line of text. When the warrant is folded into a square, the slits are aligned into a single opening, and a parchment strip would have been threaded through to hold the warrant closed. The strip would have held the privy seal. The seal no longer survives, but wax residue is visible in two places on the back of the document. ����������

MODERNIZED TRANSCRIPTION�������������

… Know ye that we … do license and

authorize, these our Servants Lawrence

Fletcher, William Shakespeare, Richard

Burbage, Augustine Phillips, John

Heminge, Henry Condell, William Sly, Robert Armin, Richard Cowley, and

the rest of their associates freely to use and exercise the Art and Faculty of

playing Comedies, Tragedies, Histories,

Interludes, Morals, Pastorals, Stage

Plays, and such other like as they have already studied or herea� er shall use or study, as well for the recreation of our

loving Subjects as for our solace and

pleasure when we shall think good to see

them during our pleasure. … when the

infection of the plague shall decrease, as

well within their now usual house called the Globe within our County of Surrey, as also within any Town, Halls, or Moot Halls, or other convenient places within the liberties and freedom of any other City, University, Town, or Borough whatsoever within our said Realms

and dominions...

On the Stage at the Globe (1.7)

In 1599, Shakespeare’s company began performing at their newly constructed theater, the Globe.

They had previously performed at the Theatre, which they vacated and disassembled after a property dispute. They used the timbers to build a six-sided open-air playhouse, with multiple levels of seating, for up to 3,000 spectators. Several surviving accounts—by a famous astrologer, a baronet’s tutor, and a German prince’s secretary, among others—include descriptions of Shakespeare’s plays being performed there. In June 1613, the original Globe burned down during a performance of Shakespeare’s Henry VIII. A second Globe was built and reopened by June 1614.

The Buzz About Shakespeare (1.8)

As one of England’s most popular playwrights, Shakespeare was fodder for satire, rumors, and criticism.

His contemporaries discussed his plays and gossiped about his life, in both manuscript and print.

Shakespeare and the Master of the Revels (1.9)

Evidence for Shakespeare’s prominence in the playwriting community appears in manuscript and print, including title pages, literary anthologies, and literary criticism by his contemporaries.

Occasionally, however, we encounter more subtle glimpses of the theatrical network at work—for example, a conversation with Shakespeare about a play’s author, recorded by Sir George Buc, Master of the Revels, who was responsible for censoring plays for performance in the early 17th century. Buc’s hand also appears alongside many others in the only surviving play manuscript by Shakespeare’s acting company, revealing the highly-collaborative process of revising a play text for performance.

Who wrote the plays?

The “authorship question”—did William Shakespeare from Stratford-upon-Avon really write all those plays?—has fascinated people since the nineteenth century.

The documents in this exhibition—title pages with his name on them, administrative records, and numerous print and manuscript references to him by people who knew him, or knew of him, in his lifetime—leave no doubt that the man from Stratford was the author of the plays. However, the same books and manuscripts that clearly point to Shakespeare as a playwright have been interpreted by others as an elaborate cover-up to protect the true identity of the author. Over 80 diff erent individuals have been proposed as alternative authors of Shakespeare’s plays, but there is no archival evidence to support any of them.

Like most people who died 400 years ago, Shakespeare has gaps in his biographical record. This is not at all surprising. Only the personal papers of aristocratic families tend to survive, mainly because their houses have stayed in the same families for generations. Just a handful of play manuscripts remain from the period, mostly for plays that never appeared in print. As any archivist would tell us, the lack of surviving “Shakespeare manuscripts” is an archival issue rather than an authorship problem.

Shakespeare is a cultural icon, and thus the subject of close scrutiny and high expectations. Like other icons, he will intrigue and fascinate us for as long as his works are loved, read, studied, and performed. With new developments in literary and historical inquiry and the regular discovery of new references and allusions, the range of questions we can ask and answer about Shakespeare, his plays and poems, and about literature more broadly, is endless, and endlessly exciting.

Shakespeare, The Poet

Today we remember Shakespeare as the greatest PLAYWRIGHT of all time; however, in his own lifetime, he was equally revered as a POET. His first two books of poetry, Venus and Adonis and Lucrece, were reprinted many times. In fact, they were more popular in print than any of Shakespeare’s plays. Many of the earliest literary critics and anthologists of English-language verse cite these two narrative poems because of their exemplary lines. Like his plays, his poems were sold unbound or in flimsy, paper bindings, making their survival unlikely unless an early owner bound them up with other booklets in sturdy bindings.

A Range of Poems (2.1)

Shakespeare’s earliest publication, and by far the best-selling work in his lifetime, was the nearly 1200-line poem Venus and Adonis (1593). Because of its popularity, other printed poems soon followed. Lucrece was published in 1594 to great acclaim. His name appeared on the title page of The Passionate Pilgrim (1599) despite the fact that only a handful of the poems were by him. “The Phoenix and the Turtle” appeared in 1601, and Shakespeare’s Sonnets in 1609.

The Ultimate Annotator Reads Shakespeare (2.4)

Shakespeare was one of the many writers that the scholar Gabriel Harvey turned to for inspiration.

An inventor of words, and friend of the writer Edmund Spenser, Harvey constantly sought to improve himself through note-taking and repetitive reading. He was widely known and ridiculed for making copious notes in the margins of printed books.

Shakespeare, The Man

An abundance of administrative documents provide important details of Shakespeare’s economic and social status: he had a coat of arms, he was accorded “gentleman” status, he loaned money, he invested in real estate, his family lived in a big house in Stratford-upon-Avon, he moved around in London, and he bequeathed his assets to family, friends, and the poor.

Shakespeare’s personal papers do not survive, which is frustrating, but not surprising. Personal papers survived only if they became part of institutional or aristocratic archives. Shakespeare’s last direct descendant died in 1670—at which point his house, New Place, was sold. It wasn’t until the 18th century that people began to value and romanticize the personal relics of famous authors.

Shakespeare Buys A House (3.1)

Shakespeare purchased New Place, one of the largest houses in Stratford-upon-Avon, from William Underhill in 1597.

Shortly after the sale, Underhill was poisoned to death by his eldest son, Fulke, who was hanged in 1599 after being prosecuted for the crime. Fulke’s estates reverted to the crown until his brother, Hercules, came of legal age in 1602. In that year, Hercules confirmed the sale of New Place to Shakespeare; Shakespeare was probably motivated to create a new agreement to protect his investment. The three official copies of this 1602 agreement are reunited here for the first time in over 400 years.

At Home in Stratford-Upon-Avon (3.4)

Shakespeare divided his time between his theatrical career in London and business and personal matters in Stratford-upon-Avon, the town where he was born, grew up, and raised three children with his wife Anne: Hamnet (who died when he was 11), Susanna, and Judith.

These documents from the town’s corporate archives illustrate his Stratfordian connections and the constant balancing of debt and credit among its more prominent citizens.

Shakespeare's Will (3.5)

William Shakespeare’s last will and testament provides one of the richest surviving accounts for understanding his familial and professional networks. The will names many of the important people in his life, including family, friends, colleagues, and neighbors, as well as describing specific pieces of personal property. Drawn up by a clerk, it is written on three sheets of paper, with William Shakespeare’s signature appended to each sheet—half of his surviving signatures are found on this single document.

Shakespeare left the bulk of his estate to his two daughters, Susanna Hall and Judith Quiney: New Place, the house on Henley Street in which he was born, a cottage near New Place, the Blackfriars gatehouse, and other property. He left money, clothes, and the right to live in the Henley Street house to his sister, Joan Hart, and her three sons, and silver plate to his granddaughter Elizabeth Hall. To his wife he left his “second best bed with the furniture” (valance, hangings, linen).

He left a sword to family friend Thomas Combe, bequests to his lawyer, his overseer, and the poor of Stratford, and money to buy mourning rings for three of his theatrical colleagues: Richard Burbage, John Heminge, and Henry Condell. Of the three, Burbage died in 1619, but it was Heminge and Condell who put together the 1623 First Folio of Shakespeare’s plays.

Items Included

William Shakespeare (1564-1616). Last will and testament. Manuscript, March 25, 1616. IMAGE COURTESY OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVES, UK, PROB 1/4. See this item on Shakespeare Documented: William Shakespeare's last will and testament: original copy including Shakespeare's three signatures

Shakespeare's Baptism and Death (3.6)

The parish register for Holy Trinity Church in Stratford-upon-Avon contains five references to William Shakespeare. It records Shakespeare’s baptism on April 26, 1564; his daughter Susanna’s baptism on May 26, 1583; the baptisms of his twins Hamnet and Judith on February 2, 1585; Hamnet’s burial on August 11, 1596; and Shakespeare’s own burial on April 25, 1616. The register also contains 19 additional references to members of Shakespeare’s extended family.

Items Included

Parish Register for Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon. Manuscript, 1558-1776. On deposit at the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust. IMAGE COURTESY OF THE SHAKESPEARE BIRTHPLACE TRUST. See this item on Shakespeare Documented: Parish Register, Holy Trinity Church, Stratford-upon-Avon

A House in the City (3.7)

In addition to owning one of the largest houses in his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon, Shakespeare purchased other properties, including one in London near the Blackfriars Theatre—the indoor theater where his acting company performed. Shakespeare’s acquisition is typically called a gatehouse because part of the building is described in the deed as being “erected over a great gate.” The gatehouse may have been an investment by the business-savvy Shakespeare or a convenient London residence.

A type of deed known as a “bargain and sale” was used to convey the property from Henry Walker, “citizen and minstrel of London,” to William Shakespeare, “of Stratford upon Avon in the Countie of Warwick gentleman” on March 10, 1613, for 140 pounds. Two indentures, or indented copies, of the bargain and sale were made: one for Shakespeare and one for Walker. Each copy begins with the phrase “This indenture made…” because the top edge is cut in a wavy, or “indented,” line. A third copy was entered into a large roll in the Court of Chancery.

Items Included

  1. Bargain and sale for Shakespeare’s purchase of the Blackfriars Gatehouse from Henry Walker. William Shakespeare’s copy (buyer’s copy, signed by Henry Walker). March 10, 1613. Folger MS Z.c.22 (45). See this item on Shakespeare Documented: Bargain and sale from Henry Walker, citizen and minstrel of London,[...]

This is Shakespeare’s copy of the bargain and sale for the Blackfriars Gatehouse. It was signed at the bottom by the seller, Henry Walker, but the seal has since disappeared. As part of the sale, Henry Walker was to give Shakespeare all the earlier deeds to the property that had been passed down by prior owners. Image at right; original displayed at left

2. Bargain and sale for Shakespeare’s purchase of the Blackfriars Gatehouse from Henry Walker. Henry Walker’s copy (seller’s copy, signed by William Shakespeare and trustees). Manuscript, March 10, 1613. LMA, CLC/522/MS03738. IMAGE COURTESY OF THE LONDON METROPOLITAN ARCHIVES. See this item on Shakespeare Documented: Shakespeare purchases the Blackfriars Gatehouse: Vendor's copy of the bargain and sale

This is Walker’s copy of the bargain and sale for the Blackfriars Gatehouse, signed by William Shakespeare and two trustees: William Johnson and John Jackson. Shakespeare’s third trustee, colleague John Heminge, would have signed the blank fourth tag if he had been present. It is shown here as part of a pair: the top part is Shakespeare’s copy, the bottom half is Walker’s. Some pairs of indenture, like this one, were cut from the same large parchment, or calfskin.

3. Mortgage for the Blackfriars Gatehouse (Henry Walker’s copy). Manuscript, March 11, 1613. BL, Egerton MS 1787. IMAGE COURTESY OF THE BRITISH LIBRARY. See this item on Shakespeare Documented: Mortgage by William Shakespeare, of Stratford-on-Avon, gentleman, and others, to Henry Walker, of London, vintner, of a dwelling-house in Blackfriars

On March 11, 1613, the day after he purchased the gatehouse, Shakespeare secured a 60 pound mortgage on the property from the seller, Henry Walker. This copy of the mortgage, signed by Shakespeare and two of his trustees, William Johnson and John Jackson (with the fourth tag for John Heminge again left blank), belonged to Henry Walker.

As with Walker’s copy of the “bargain and sale,” Shakespeare and Johnson both use the seal of the scribe’s servant (“HL,” for Henry Lawrence), while Jackson used a seal with a coat of arms. Seals were constantly borrowed, in the same way that we would borrow a pen to sign our name on a legal document. Given the identical witnesses, scribe, and signatures on the mortgage and the bargain and sale, the two documents were probably signed on the same day despite being dated a day apart.

Shakespeare, The Icon

Shakespeare died 400 years ago, but today more people than ever KNOW HIS NAME, and his plays are among the best-selling works of all time. Shakespeare’s ENDURING FAME was predicted by one of his playwriting friends, Ben Jonson. After Shakespeare’s death, Jonson described him as “a monument without a tomb” and proclaimed that “he was not of an age but for all time!” The first edition of his collected plays in 1623, known as the First Folio, solidified this legacy, and original copies are considered to be some of the most valuable books in the world.

Shakespeare Remembered (4.1)

Shakespeare died on April 23, 1616, at the age of 52. He was buried two days later in Holy Trinity Church at Stratford-upon-Avon.

The epitaph on his monument, written soon after, refers to him as a writer whose wit exceeds that of all living writers: “all that he hath writ / leaves living art but page unto his wit.” Friends and colleagues acknowledged the loss of the great writer in their own epitaphs and elegies, contributing to his posthumous role as a literary icon.

Shakespeare's Plays After Shakespeare (4.3)

Shakespeare’s plays continued to be published and performed in the years immediately following his death in 1616.

In 1619, an enterprising publisher unsuccessfully attempted to issue ten of Shakespeare’s plays as a collection. In 1623, the same year that the plays were published together as a single publication—the First Folio—a young historian created a combined version of two of Shakespeare’s history plays, to be performed by his family and friends.

William Shakespeare, A Timeline

1564 William Shakespeare is born in Stratford-upon-Avon

1582 Shakespeare marries Anne Hathaway

1583 Shakespeare’s fi rst child, Susanna, is born

1585 Shakespeare’s twins, Judith and Hamnet, are born

1592 Shakespeare is fi rst alluded to as a playwright, in Greene’s Groates-worth of Wit

1593 Shakespeare’s fi rst printed poem, Venus and Adonis, appears

1594 Shakespeare’s fi rst printed play, Titus Andronicus, appears

1596 Shakespeare’s father is granted a coat of arms

Shakespeare’s son, Hamnet, dies

1597 Shakespeare purchases New Place in Stratford-upon-Avon

1598 Shakespeare is fi rst mentioned as a sonneteer and author of 12 plays in Palladis Tamia

1599 Shakespeare’s father is granted a confirmation of arms

Shakespeare’s acting company takes down its old theater and uses the timber to build the Globe

1600 Extracts from Shakespeare’s plays and poetry appear in Bel-vedere, the first printed literary commonplace book to include plays

1601 Shakespeare’s father, John Shakespeare, dies

1602 The heralds dispute the legitimacy of a group of coat of arms, including Shakespeare’s

Shakespeare ratifies his purchase of New Place

1603 Shakespeare’s acting company, the Lord Chamberlain’s Men, becomes the King’s Men at the accession of James

Hamlet appears in print

1607 Shakespeare’s daughter Susanna marries John Hall

1608 Blackfriars Theatre is established as the indoor theater of the King’s Men

Shakespeare’s mother dies; his granddaughter Elizabeth is born

1609 Shakespeare’s Sonnets appears in print

1613 Shakespeare purchases the Blackfriars gatehouse in London

The Globe burns down during a performance of Henry VIII and is rebuilt within a year

1616 Shakespeare writes his will

Shakespeare’s daughter Judith marries Thomas Quiney

Shakespeare dies

1623 The First Folio is published

Shakespeare’s widow Anne dies