<h2><SPAN name="page6"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CHAPTER II</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">The Shakespeares—John Shakespeare,
Glover, Wool-merchant—Birth of William
Shakespeare—Rise and Decline of John
Shakespeare—Early Marriage of William.</p>
<p>A <span class="GutSmall">MODERN</span> man who now chanced to
own the name of “Shakespeare” would feel proud, even
of that fortuitous and remote association with the greatest
figure in English literature. He might even try to live up
to it, although the probabilities are that he would quite early
forgo the attempt and become a backslider to commonplace.
But available records tell us no good of the earliest bearers of
the name. The first Shakespeare of whom we have any notice
was a John of that name. He was hanged in 1248, for
robbery. It is a very long time ago since this malefactor
suffered, and perhaps he was one of those very many unfortunate
persons who have been in all ages wrongfully convicted. But
the name was not in olden times a respectable one. It
signified originally one who wielded a spear; not a chivalric and
romantic knight warring with the infidel in Palestine, or
jousting to uphold the claims to beauty of his chosen lady, but a
common soldier, a rough man-at-arms; one who was in great request
in his country’s wars, but was accounted an undesirable
when the piping times of peace were come again and every man
desired nothing better than to sit beneath his own vine and
fig-tree. We have record of a certain Shakespeare who grew
so weary of the name that he changed it for
“Saunders.” But Time was presently to bring
revenge, when William <SPAN name="page7"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>Shakespeare, afterwards to become a
poet and dramatist of unapproachable excellence, was born, to
make the choice of that recreant bearer of the name look
ridiculous.</p>
<p>One Shakespeare before the dramatist’s time had reached
not only respectability but some kind of local eminence.
This was Isabel Shakespeare, who became Prioress of the Priory of
Baddesley Clinton, near Knowle. Baddesley Clinton is in the
ancient and far-spreading Forest of Arden, and near it is the
village of Rowington, where there still remains the very
picturesque fifteenth-century mansion called Shakespeare Hall,
which is said to have been in the dramatist’s time the
residence of a Thomas Shakespeare, an uncle. But William
Shakespeare’s genealogy has not been convincingly taken
back beyond his grandfather Richard (whose very Christian name is
only traditional), who is stated to have been a farmer at
Snitterfield, three miles from Stratford-on-Avon.</p>
<p>Warwickshire was, in fact, extremely rich in Shakespeares,
many of them no relatives of the dramatist’s family.
They grew in every hedgerow, and very many of them owned the
Christian name of William, but they spelled their patronymic in
an amazing number of ways. It is said to be capable of four
thousand variations. We will forbear the most of
these. “Shaxpeare” is the commonest form.
The marriage-bond for William Shakespeare and Anne Hathaway
spells his name “Shagspere,” and the dramatist
himself spells it in two different ways in the three signatures
on his will, which forms to the Baconians conclusive proof of the
two following contradictory propositions (1) that he did not know
how to spell his own name, and (2) that, the spelling being
different, the so-called signatures were written by a
law-clerk! As a matter of fact, the <SPAN name="page8"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>spelling of
one’s name was in those times a matter of taste and fancy,
which constantly varied. Sir Walter Raleigh, contemporary
with Shakespeare, was a scholar whom no one will declare an
illiterate, yet he wrote his own name, with a fine disregard of
consistency and of what future generations might say,
“Rawley,” “Ralegh,”
“Rawleighe” and “Rauleygh.”</p>
<p>In any case, the “law-clerk” theory will hardly
do. A law-clerk who wrote such a shocking bad hand as the
six signatures of Shakespeare display could not have earned his
living with lawyers and conveyancers. They are signatures,
nearly all of them, which might confidently be taken to a
chemist, to be “made up,” but exactly how he would
read the “prescription” must be left to the
imagination.</p>
<p>Sure and certain foothold upon genealogical fact is only
reached with William Shakespeare’s father, who established
himself at Stratford-on-Avon about 1551, when he seems to have
been twenty-one years of age. He was described at various
times as a fell-monger and glover, a woolstapler, a butcher and a
dealer in hay and corn. Probably, as a son of the farmer at
Snitterfield, he was interested in most of these trades.
His home and place of business in the town was in Henley Street,
then, as now, one of the meaner streets of the place. Its
name derives from this forming the way out of Stratford to the
town of Henley-in-Arden.</p>
<p>The very first thing we have recorded of John Shakespeare at
Stratford is his being fined twelve pence for having a muck-heap
in front of his door. Twelve pence in that day was equal to
about eight shillings and sixpence of our own times; and thus,
when we consider the then notoriously dirty and insanitary
condition of Stratford, endured with fortitude, if not with
cheerfulness by the burgesses, we are forced to the conclusion <SPAN name="page9"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>that Mr. John
Shakespeare’s muck-heap must have been a super muck-heap,
an extremely large and offensive specimen, that made the gorge of
even the least squeamish of his fellow-townsmen rise. Two
other tradesmen were fined at the same time, and in 1558 he was,
in company with four others (among whom was the chief alderman,
Francis Burbage) fined in the smaller sum of fourpence for not
keeping his gutter clean.</p>
<p>By 1556, however, he would seem to have been prospering, for
in that year he purchased two copyhold tenements, one in Henley
Street, next the house and shop now known as “the
birthplace” which he was already occupying; the other in
Greenhill Street. Next year he married Mary Arden, of
Wilmcote, three miles from Stratford, daughter of Robert Arden,
yeoman farmer of that place, said on insufficient evidence to
have been kin to the ancient knightly family of Arden. She
had become, on her father’s death in December 1556, owner
of landed property called Asbies, at Wilmcote, and some like
interests at Snitterfield, in common with her brothers and
sisters. She was thus, in a small way, an heiress.
Wilmcote being then merely a hamlet in the parish of Aston
Cantlow, they were married at the church of that place.</p>
<p>John Shakespeare was now a rising tradesman, and in this same
auspicious year became a member of the town council, a body then
newly established, upon the granting of a charter of
incorporation in 1553.</p>
<p>On September 15th, 1558 his daughter Joan was baptized.
She died an infant. In 1565, after serving various
municipal offices, he became an alderman. Meanwhile, at the
close of November 1562, a daughter, Margaret, was born, who died
the next year; and in 1564, on April 26th, his son William was
baptized. The date of the poet’s birth is
traditionally St. George’s Day, <SPAN name="page10"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>April 23rd; now, with the alteration
in the calendar, identical with May 5th.</p>
<p>In that year the town was scourged by a terrible visitation of
the plague, and John Shakespeare is recorded, among others, as a
contributor to funds for the poor who suffered by it. On
August 30th he paid twelve pence; on September 6th, sixpence; on
the 27th of the same month another sixpence; and on October 20th
eightpence; about twenty-two shillings of our money. It is
only by tradition—but that a very old one—that
William Shakespeare was born at “the birthplace” in
Henley Street; but there is no reasonable excuse for doubting it,
unless we like to think that he was born at the picturesque old
house in the village of Clifford Chambers, which afterwards
became the vicarage and is now a farmhouse. A John
Shakespeare was at that time living there, two miles only from
Stratford, and it has been suggested that he is identical with
the father of William, and that in this plague year he took the
precaution of removing his wife out of danger.</p>
<p>In 1566 we find a link between the Shakespeares and the
Hathaways in John. Shakespeare standing surety for Richard
Hathaway; and in the same year his son Gilbert was born; another
Joan being born in 1569. In 1568 and 1571 he attained the
highest municipal offices, being elected high-bailiff and senior
alderman, and thus, as chief magistrate, is found described in
local documents as “Mr.” Shakespeare. In 1571
also his daughter Anne, who died in 1579, was born; and in 1573 a
son, Richard. In 1575 he purchased the freehold of
“the birthplace” from one Edmund Hall, for
£40.</p>
<p>Early in 1578 the first note of ill-fortune is sounded in the
career of John Shakespeare. Some financial disaster had
befallen him. In January, when the town council had decided
to provide weapons for two billmen, a body <SPAN name="page11"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>of pikemen,
and one archer, and assessed the aldermen for six shillings and
eightpence each and the burgesses at half that amount, two of the
aldermen were excused the full pay. One, Mr. Plumley, was
charged five shillings, and Mr. Shakespeare was to pay only three
and fourpence. The following year he defaulted in an
assessment for the same amount. Meanwhile, he had been
obliged to mortgage Asbies, which had come to him with his wife,
and to sell the interests at Snitterfield. The
Shakespeares, although they in after years again grew prosperous,
never recovered Asbies.</p>
<p>No one knows what caused these straitened circumstances.
Possibly it was some disastrous speculation in corn. In the
midst of this trouble, his seven-year-old daughter, Anne, died,
and another son, Edmund, was horn, 1580. He ceased to
attend meetings of the town council, and his son William entered
into an improvident marriage.</p>
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