<h2><SPAN name="page12"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>CHAPTER III</h2>
<p class="gutsumm">Anne Hathaway, Shakespeare’s
bride—The hasty marriage—Shakespeare’s wild
young days—He leaves for London—Grendon
Underwood.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">William Shakespeare</span> was but
eighteen and a half years of age when he married. Legally,
he was an “infant.” His wife was by almost
eight years his senior, but if we agree with Bacon’s
saying, that a man finds himself ten years older the day after
his marriage, the disparity became at once more than
rectified. She was one Anne, or Agnes, Hathaway; her
father, Richard, being a farmer of Shottery. The Hathaways
were numerous in this district, there being at that time no fewer
than three families of the name in Shottery and others in
Stratford. Anne had no fewer than eight brothers and
sisters, all of whom, except two, are mentioned in their
father’s will. Richard, who describes himself in his
will as “husbandman,” executed that document on
September 1st, 1581, and died probably in the June following, for
his will was proved in London on July 9th, 1582. Storms of
rival theories have raged around the mystery surrounding this
marriage, of which the register does not exist. It is
claimed that Shakespeare was married at Temple Grafton,
Luddington, Billesley, and elsewhere, but no shadow of evidence
can be adduced for any of these places. All we know is that
on November 28th, 1582, Fulke Sandells and John Richardson,
farmers, <SPAN name="page13"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
13</span>of Stratford, who had been respectively one of the
“supervisors” and one of the witnesses of Richard
Hathaway’s will, went to Worcester and there entered into a
“Bond in £40 against Impediments, to defend and save
harmless the right reverend father in God, John, Lord Bushop of
Worcester” from any complaint or process that might by any
possibility arise out of his licensing the marriage with only
once asking the banns. These two bondsmen declared that
“William Shagspere, one thone partie and Anne Hathaway of
Stratford” (Shottery was and is a hamlet in the parish of
Stratford-on-Avon) “in the dioces of Worcester, maiden, may
lawfully solemnize marriage together.” This document,
discovered in the Worcester Registry in 1836, is sufficiently
clear and explicit; but a complication is introduced by a license
issued the day before by the Bishop for a marriage “inter
Wm. Shaxpere et Anna Whateley de Temple Grafton.” It
has been suggested that, as there were Whateleys living in the
neighbourhood, and that as there were numerous Shakespeares also,
with many Williams among them, this was quite another couple,
while others contend that “Whateley” was a mistake of
one of the clerks employed in the Bishop’s registry, and
that the name of Temple Grafton as “place of
residence” of the bride was a further mistake, that being
the place intended for the ceremony. In any case, the point
is of minor interest for the registers of Temple Grafton do not
go back to that date, and the fabric of the church itself is
quite new. We do not know, therefore, where Shakespeare was
married, nor when; and can but assume that the wedding took place
shortly after the bond was signed.</p>
<p>Six months later, Shakespeare’s eldest daughter was
born, for we see in the register of baptisms in Holy Trinity
church, Stratford, the entry:—</p>
<blockquote><p><SPAN name="page14"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
14</span>“1583, May 26th, Susanna, daughter to William
Shakespere.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The reason for the hurried visit of the two farmers to
Worcester, to hasten on the marriage with but one
“asking” in church now becomes evident. They
were friends of the late Richard Hathaway, and were determined
that young Shakespeare should not get out of marrying the girl he
had—wronged, shall we say? Well, no. There have
been many moralists excessively shocked at this pre-nuptial
intimacy, and they assert that Shakespeare seduced Anne
Hathaway.</p>
<p>But young men of just over eighteen years of age do not, I
think, beguile young women nearly eight years older. Anne
probably seduced him; for woman is more frequently the huntress
and the chooser, and man is a very helpless creature before her
wiles.</p>
<p>The extravagances of the Baconians may well be illustrated
here, for although the subject of Shakespeare’s marriage
has no bearing upon the famous cryptogram and the authorship of
the plays, Donnelly spreads himself generously all over
Shakespeare’s life, and lightheartedly settles for us the
mystery of the bond <i>re</i> the marriage of Anne Hathaway and
the license to marry Anne Whateley by suggesting that <i>both</i>
names are correct and refer to the same persons. He says
Anne Hathaway married a Whateley and that it was as a widow she
married William Shakespeare, her maiden name being given in the
bond by mistake! The sheer absurdity of this is obvious
when we consider that if Mr. Donnelly is right, then the bondsmen
made the yet grosser error of describing the widow as a
“maiden.” She was actually at that time neither
wife, maid nor widow.</p>
<p>Again, Richard Hathaway the father made his will in September
1581, leaving (<i>inter alia</i>) a bequest to Anne “to be
paide unto her at the daie of her marriage.” She <SPAN name="page15"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>was a single
young woman then, and yet according to the Donnellian view she
was already, fifteen months later, a widow, again about to be
married.</p>
<p>Apologists for this hasty marriage, jealous for the reputation
of Shakespeare, are keen to find an excuse in the supposition
that he was a Roman Catholic and that he was already married
secretly, probably in the room in the roof of Shottery Manor
House, which is supposed to have been used at this period as a
place of secret worship. But there is no basis for forming
any theory as to Shakespeare’s religious convictions.
A yet more favourite assumption is that Shakespeare and Anne
Hathaway went through the ceremony of “hand-fasting,”
a formal betrothal which, although not a complete marriage and
not carrying with it the privileges of marriage was a bar to
either of the parties marrying another. Jack was thus made
sure of his Jill; and, perhaps even more important, Jill was
certain of her Jack. But if this ceremony had taken place,
there would have been no necessity for that hasty journey of
those two friends of the Hathaways to Worcester.</p>
<p>Nothing is known of the attitude of Shakespeare’s
parents towards the marriage, nor has any one ever suggested how
he supported himself, his wife and family in the years before he
left Stratford for London. At the close of January 1585,
his twin son and daughter, Hamnet and Judith were born, and they
were baptized at Stratford church on February 2nd. Whether
he assisted his father in his business of glover, or helped on
his farm, or whether he became assistant master at the Grammar
School, as sometimes suggested, is mere matter for
speculation. John Aubrey, picking up gossip at Stratford,
writes—</p>
<blockquote><p>“Mr. William Shakespear was borne at
Stratford upon Avon in the county of Warwick. His father
was a <SPAN name="page16"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
16</span>butcher, and I have been told heretofore by some of the
neighbours, that when he was a boy he exercised his
father’s trade, but when he kill’d a calfe he would
doe it in a high style, and make a speech.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>That may or may not be true, but it looks as though William
had, about this impressionable age, become stage-struck. He
had had numerous opportunities of seeing the players, for his
father had in his more prosperous days been a patron of the
strolling companies, both as a private individual and as a member
of the town council. In 1569 two such troupes, who called
themselves the “Queen’s servants,” and
“servants of the Earl of Warwick,” gave performances
before the corporation and were paid out of the public monies; a
forecast of the municipal theatre! And no doubt John
Shakespeare, together with many other Stratford people, went over
to Kenilworth during the magnificent pageants given there by
Dudley, Earl of Leicester, in 1575, in honour of Queen Elizabeth;
taking with him his little boy, then eleven years of age.
Thus would the foundations of an ambition be laid.</p>
<p>At this time, 1585, John Shakespeare’s affairs, from
whatever cause, were under a cloud. They had been declining
since 1578, when he had been obliged to mortgage some of the
property that had been his wife’s, and now he was deprived
of his alderman’s gown. William about this time,
whether in 1585 or 1587 is uncertain, left Stratford for London,
whither some of his boyhood’s friends had already preceded
him, among them Richard Field.</p>
<p>Stratford at this time was certainly no place for William, if
he wished to emulate Dr. Samuel Smiles’ worthies and
conform to the gospel of getting on in the world, the most
popular gospel ever preached. In 1587, Nicholas Lane, one
of his father’s creditors, sought to <SPAN name="page17"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>distrain upon
John Shakespeare’s goods, but the sheriff’s officers
returned the doleful tale of “no effects,” and so he
had his trouble for nothing. It is, however, curious that
even when reduced to his last straits, John Shakespeare never
sold his property, the house in which he lived and carried on
business, in Henley Street.</p>
<p>In addition to the discredit attaching to being thus one of
the Shakespeares who had come down in the world, William,
according to the very old, strong and persistent tradition, was
at this time showing a very rackety disposition. He
consorted with the wilder young men of the town and went on
drinking bouts with them. Sometimes, with them, he raided
the neighbouring parks and killed the deer and poached other
game; and the old tradition hints that on these occasions the
others made good their escape and Shakespeare was generally
caught. Sir Thomas Lucy of Charlecote, who was the chief
sufferer from the exploits of these youths, is said to have had
Shakespeare whipped, imprisoned and fined for his part in
them.</p>
<p>To London, therefore, William Shakespeare made his way.
With what credentials, if any, did he go? He had friends in
London, among them Richard Field, a schoolfellow, who in 1579 had
gone thither, to become apprentice to a printer, and in 1587,
about this time when Shakespeare left home, had set up in
business for himself and become a member of the Stationers’
Company. Shakespeare may quite reasonably have sought his
help or advice; and certainly Field six years later published
Shakespeare’s <i>Venus and Adonis</i>, dedicated to Henry
Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, the foremost literary and
dramatic patron of the age, from whose friendship and powerful
aid all intellectual aspirants hoped much.</p>
<p>It is quite likely that Shakespeare left Stratford <SPAN name="page18"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>with a
company of travelling actors, and reaching town with them,
gradually drifted into regular employment at one of the only two
London theatres that then existed, “The Theatre” and
the “Curtain” both in Shoreditch.</p>
<p>It is of some interest to speculate upon the manner in which
Shakespeare journeyed to London, and the way he went. Was
he obliged to walk it, in the traditional manner of the poor
countryman seeking his fortune in the great metropolis? Or
did he make the journey by the carrier’s cart? There
are two principal roads by which he may have gone; by
Newbold-on-Stour, Long Compton, Chapel House, and Woodstock to
Oxford, Beaconsfield and through High Wycombe and Uxbridge, 95
miles; or he might have chosen to go by Ettington, Pillerton
Priors, Sunrising Hill, Wroxton and Banbury, through Aynho,
Bicester, Aylesbury, Tring and Watford to London, 92¾
miles. Such an one as he would probably first go to London
by way of Oxford, for, like Thomas Hardy’s “Jude the
Obscure,” he would doubtless think it “a city of
light.” There are traditions at Oxford of
Shakespeare’s staying at the “Crown” inn in the
Cornmarket in after years. Sometimes he would doubtless go
by the Banbury and Bicester route: and along it, at the village
of Grendon Underwood, to the left of the road between Bicester
and Aylesbury, as you journey towards London, there still linger
very precise traditions of Shakespeare having stayed at what was
formerly the “Old Ship” inn.</p>
<p>Grendon Underwood, or “under Bernwode” as it is
styled in old records, appears in an old rhyme as—</p>
<blockquote><p>“The dirtiest town that ever
stood,”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>but it was never a town, and, whatever may once have been its
condition, it is no longer dirty.</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><SPAN name="page19"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>
<SPAN href="images/p19.jpg">
<ANTIMG alt="“Shakespeare Farm,” formerly the “Ship” Inn, Grendon Underwood" title= "“Shakespeare Farm,” formerly the “Ship” Inn, Grendon Underwood" src="images/p19.jpg" /></SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN name="page20"></SPAN><span class="pagenum"></span>It is
not at first sight easily to be understood why Shakespeare, or
any other traveller of that age journeying the long straight
stretch of the old Roman road, the Akeman Street, between
Bicester and Aylesbury, should want to go a mile and a quarter
out of his way for the purpose of visiting this place, but that
they did so is sufficiently proved by the comparative importance
of the house that was until about a hundred and twelve years ago
the “Old Ship” and is now known as “Shakespeare
Farm.” It is clearly too large ever to have been
built for an ordinary village inn, and is said to have formerly
been even larger. If, however, we refer to old maps of the
district, it will he found that, for some unexplained reason, the
ancient forthright Roman road had gone out of use, and that
instead of proceeding direct, along the Akeman Street, the
wayfarers of old went a circuitous course, through Grendon
Underwood. When this deviation took place does not appear;
but it was obviously one of long standing. The first
available map showing the roads of the district is that by
Emanuel Bowen, 1756, in which the Akeman Street is not shown; the
only road given being that which winds through Grendon. The
next map to be issued—that by Thomas Jeffreys,
1788—gives the Akeman Street, running direct, between point
and point, and avoiding Grendon, as it does now. That was
the great era of turnpike-acts, providing for the repair and
restoration of old roads, and the making of new; and this was one
of the many highways then restored. The “Old
Ship” inn, at Grendon Underwood, at which Shakespeare and
many generations of travellers had halted, at once declined with
the making of the direct road, and soon retired into private
life.</p>
<p>The Shakespeare tradition comes down to us through John
Aubrey, who, writing in 1680, says—</p>
<blockquote><p>“The humour of the constable, in <SPAN name="page21"></SPAN><span class="pagenum">p.
21</span><i>Midsomer-night’s Dreame</i>, <SPAN name="citation21"></SPAN><SPAN href="#footnote21" class="citation">[21]</SPAN> he happened to take at Grendon, in
Bucks—I thinke it was Midsomer night that he happened to
lye there—which is the roade from London to Stratford, and
there was living that constable about 1642, when I first came to
Oxon.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>The village constable referred to was well known to one Josias
Howe, son of the rector, born at Grendon, March 29th, 1612, died
August 28th, 1701, who told Aubrey the story at Oxford, in
1642.</p>
<p>The lofty gabled red brick and timber end of Shakespeare Farm,
illustrated here, is the earlier part of the building, although
the whole of it is probably as old as Shakespeare’s
time. That earlier wing, the part to which tradition
points, is not now occupied, and is, in fact, in a very
dilapidated condition, occasional floorboards, and even some of
the stairs, being missing. Where the wearied guests of long
ago rested, broody hens are set by the careful farmer’s
wife on their clutches of eggs. There is little interesting
in the architectural way in these dark and deserted rooms, but
the flat, pierced, wooden banisters of the staircase are
genuinely old and quaint.</p>
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