means of investigation and verification in which not
less than in the metrical test they were accustomed
to put their faith, and by which they doubted not to
attain in the future even more remarkable results
than their researches had as yet achieved, the debate
just concluded, in common with every other for which
they ever had met or ever were likely to meet, would
amply suffice to show. By such processes as
had been applied on this as on all occasions to the
text of Shakespeare’s works and the traditions
of his life, they trusted in a very few years to subvert
all theories which had hitherto been held and extirpate
all ideas which had hitherto been cherished on the
subject: and having thus cleared the ground for
his advent, to discover for the admiration of the
world, as the name of their Society implied, a New
Shakespeare. The first step towards this end
must of course be the demolition of the old one; and
he would venture to say they had already made a good
beginning in that direction. They had disproved
or they would disprove the claim of Shakespeare to
the sole authorship of Macbeth, Julius Caesar,
King Lear, Hamlet, and Othello; they had
established or they would establish the fact of his
partnership in Locrine, Mucedorus, The Birth of
Merlin, Dr. Dodipoll, and Sir Giles Goosecap.
They had with them the incomparable critics of Germany;
men whose knowledge and judgment on all questions
of English literature were as far beyond the reach
of their English followers as the freedom and enlightenment
enjoyed by the subjects of a military empire were beyond
the reach of the citizens of a democratic republic.
They had established and affiliated to their own
primitive body or church various branch societies
or sects, in England and elsewhere, devoted to the
pursuit of the same end by the same means and method
of study as had just been exemplified in the transactions
of the present meeting. Still there remained
much to be done; in witness of which he proposed to
lay before them at their next meeting, by way of inauguration
under a happy omen of their new year’s work,
the complete body of evidence by means of which he
was prepared to demonstrate that some considerable
portion, if not the greater part, of the remaining
plays hitherto assigned to Shakespeare was due to
the collaboration of a contemporary actor and playwright,
well known by name, but hitherto insufficiently appreciated;
Robert Armin, the author of A Nest of Ninnies.
ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS.
The humble but hard-working journeyman of letters who was charged with the honourable duty of reporting the transactions at the last meeting of the Newest Shakespeare Society on the auspicious occasion of its first anniversary, April 1st, has received sundry more or less voluminous communications from various gentlemen whose papers were then read or announced, pointing out with more or less acrimonious commentary