Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 611 pages of information about Shakespeare.

Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 611 pages of information about Shakespeare.
monarch.  These were at that time places of considerable service and responsibility; and both the uncle and the nephew were liberally rewarded by their royal master.  By conveyances dated in December, 1519, it appears that Robert Arden then became the owner of houses and land in Snitterfield.  Other purchases by him of lands and houses are recorded from time to time.  The Poet’s maternal grandfather, also named Robert, died in 1556.  In his will, dated November 24th, and proved December 17th, of that year, he makes special bequests to his “youngest daughter Mary,” and also appoints her and another daughter, named Alice, “full executors of this my last will and testament.”  On the whole, it is evident enough that he was a man of good landed estate.  Both he and Richard Shakespeare appear to have been of that honest and substantial old English yeomanry, from whose better-than-royal stock and lineage the great Poet of Nature might most fitly fetch his life and being.  Of the Poet’s grandmother on either side we know nothing whatever.

Mary Arden was the youngest of seven children, all of them daughters.  The exact time of her marriage is uncertain, no registry of it having been found.  She was not married at the date of her father’s will, November, 1556.  Joan, the first-born of John and Mary Shakespeare, was baptized in the parish church of Stratford-on-Avon, September 15, 1558.  We have seen that at this time John Shakespeare was well established and thriving in business, and was making good headway in the confidence of the Stratfordians, being one of the constables of the borough.  On the 2d of December, 1562, while he was chamberlain, his second child was christened Margaret.  On the 26th of April, 1564, was baptized “William, son of John Shakespeare.”  The birth is commonly thought to have taken place on the 23d, it being then the usual custom to present infants at the Font the third day after their birth; but we have no certain information whether it was observed on this august occasion.  We have seen that throughout the following Summer the destroyer was busy in Stratford, making fearful spoil of her sons and daughters; but it spared the babe on whose life hung the fate of English literature.  Other children were added to the family, to the number of eight, several of them dying in the mean time.  On the 28th of September, 1571, soon after the father became head-alderman, a fourth daughter was baptized Anne.  Hitherto the parish register has known him only as John Shakespeare:  in this case it designates him “Master Shakespeare.”  Whether Master was a token of honour not extended to any thing under an ex-bailiff, does not appear; but in all cases after this the name is written with that significant prefix.

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Shakespeare: His Life, Art, And Characters, Volume I. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.