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Though less than yours in past, must o'ertop | which was in its place in Julius Cæsar;'

yours:

For time is like a fashionable host,

and gives us, altogether, a set of mongrel characters, compounded of the common-place

That slightly shakes his parting guest by the heroic and Shakspere's reduction of the false hand;

And with his arms outstretch'd, as he would fly,

Grasps-in the comer: Welcome ever smiles, And farewell goes out sighing. Oh, let not virtue seek

Remuneration for the thing it was;

For beauty, wit,

High birth, vigour of bone, desert in service,
Love, friendship, charity, are subjects all
To envious and calumniating time.

One touch of nature makes the whole world kin,

That all, with one consent, praise new-born gawds,

Though they are made and moulded of things past;

And give to dust, that is a little gilt,
More laud than gilt o'er-dusted.

The present eye praises the present object:
Then marvel not, thou great and complete

man,

That all the Greeks begin to worship Ajax;
Since things in motion sooner catch the eye,
Than what not stirs. The cry went once on
thee,

And still it might; and yet it may again,
If thou wouldst not entomb thyself alive,
And case thy reputation in thy tent;
Whose glorious deeds, but in these fields of

late,

Made emulous missions 'mongst the gods themselves,

And drave great Mars to faction.

Now, of this scene Dryden has not a word. This was a part of the "rubbish" which he discarded. But in the place of it he gives us an entirely new scene between Hector and Troilus-" almost half the act." He says, "the occasion of raising it was hinted to me by Mr. Betterton; the contrivance and working of it was my own." The scene, he admits, was an imitation of the famous scene in Julius Cæsar' between Brutus and Cassius. And so Dryden transposes the principle of one play into another; destroys the grave irony of Troilus and Cressida' by the introduction of the heroic seriousness

heroic to truth and reason. And yet, with all his labour, Dryden could not make the thing consistent. He is compelled to take Shakspere's representation of Ajax, for example. One parallel passage will be sufficient to show how Dryden and Shakspere managed these things:

DRYDEN.

"Thank Heav'n, my lord, you 're of a gentle nature,

Praise him that got you, her that brought you forth;

But he who taught you first the use of arms, Let Mars divide eternity in two,

And give him half. I will not praise your wisdom,

Nestor shall do 't; but pardon, father Nestor. Were you as green as Ajax, and your brain Temper'd like his, you never should excel him, But be as Ajax is."

SHAKSPERE.

"Ulyss. Thank the heavens, lord, thou art of sweet composure;

Praise him that got thee, she that gave thee suck:

Famed be thy tutor, and thy parts of nature
Thrice-famed, beyond all erudition:
But he that disciplined thy arms to fight,
Let Mars divide eternity in twain,
And give him half: and, for thy vigour,
Bull-bearing Milo his addition yield
To sinewy Ajax. I will not praise thy wisdom,
Which, like a bourn, a pale, a shore, confines
Thy spacious and dilated parts: Here's Nes
tor,-

Instructed by the antiquary times,

He must, he is, he cannot but be wise;-But pardon, father Nestor, were your days As green as Ajax, and your brain so temper'd. You should not have the eminence of him, But be as Ajax."

One of the most extraordinary subtleties of Shakspere's Troilus and Cressida' arises out of the circumstance that the real heroic tragedy is found side by side with the ironical heroic. Cassandra, short as the

character is, may be classed among the finest creations of art. Dryden omits Cassandra altogether. Was this a want of a real perception of "the grounds" of tragedy; or an instinct which avoided the higher heroic, when it would come into contrast with his

own feebler conceptions? The Cassandra of Shakspere is introduced to heighten the effect of the petty passions, the worldliness, which are everywhere around her. The solemn and the earnest are in alliance with madness.

CHAPTER V.

KING HENRY VIII.

"THE famous History of the Life of King, tain chambers in way of triumph, the fire Henry the Eighth' was first published in the folio collection of Shakspere's works in 1623. The date of the original production of this drama has been a subject of much discussion. The opinions in favour of its having been produced in the reign of Elizabeth are far more numerous than those which hold it to be a later production. As the question is one of more than usual interest, we shall examine it somewhat in detail.

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catch'd." But this does not establish that it was Shakspere's play. The accomplished Sir Henry Wotton, writing to his nephew on the 6th of July, 1613, gives a minute and graphic account of the accident at the Globe: "Now to let matters of state sleep, I will entertain you at the present with what happened this week at the Bankside. The king's players had a new play, called 'All is True,' representing some principal pieces of the reign of Henry the Eighth, which was set forth with And first, of the external evidence. The many extraordinary circumstances of pomp Globe, Shakspere's theatre, was burnt down and majesty, even to the matting of the stage; in June, 1613. The cause of this accident, the knights of the order, with their Georges and the circumstances attending it, are and Garter, the guards with their embroidered minutely related by several witnesses. In coats, and the like; sufficient, in truth, within Winwood's Memorials' there is a letter a while to make greatness very familiar, if from John Chamberlain to Sir Ralph not ridiculous. Now King Henry, making a Winwood, dated from London the 12th of mask at the Cardinal Wolsey's house, and July, 1613, which describes the burning, certain cannons being shot off at his entry, "which fell out by a peal of chambers." some of the paper, or other stuff, wherewith This conflagration took place on the previous one of them was stopped, did light on the 29th of June. The play acted on this occa- thatch, where, being thought at first but an sion was one on the story of Henry VIII.' idle smoke, and their eyes being more atWere the "chambers" (small cannon) which tentive to the show, it kindled inwardly, and produced the misfortune those fired according run round like a train, consuming, within to the original stage-direction in the fourth less than an hour, the whole house to the scene of the first act of Shakspere's 'King very ground. This was the fatal period of Henry VIII.,' "Drum and trumpet, chambers that virtuous fabric, wherein yet nothing did discharged?" In the Harleian Manuscripts perish but wood and straw, and a few forthere is a letter from Thomas Lorkin to Sir saken cloaks: only one man had his breeches Thomas Puckering, dated "this last of June, set on fire, that would perhaps have broiled 1613," in which the writer says, "No longer him, if he had not, by the benefit of a prosince than yesterday, while Bourbage his vident wit, put it out with bottle ale."* company were acting at the Globe the play Here, then, is a new play described "repreof 'Henry VIII.,' and there shooting of cer

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*Reliquiæ Wottonianæ.'

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senting some principal pieces of the reign of Henry VIII.;" and further, the passage of Shakspere's play in which the "chambers" are discharged, being the entry of the king to the "mask at the cardinal's house," is the same to the letter. But the title which Sir Henry Wotton gives the new play isAll is True.' Gifford thinks this sufficient to show that the play represented at the Globe in June, 1613, was not Shakspere's. But other persons call the play so represented Henry VIII.' Howes, in his continuation of Stow's 'Chronicle,' so calls it. He writes some time after the destruction of the Globe, for he adds to his account of the fire, "And the next spring it was new builded in far fairer manner than before." He speaks of the title of the play as a familiar thing:"the house being filled with people to behold the play, viz. of 'Henry the Eighth.'" When Howes wrote, was the title 'All is True' merged in the more obvious title derived from the subject of the play, and following the character of the titles of Shakspere's other historical plays? There can be no difficulty in showing that the Prologue to 'Henry VIII.' especially keeps in view such a title as Sir Henry Wotton has mentioned:

:

"Such as give

Their money out of hope they may believe,
May here find truth too."

"Gentle hearers, know,

To rank our chosen truth with such a show
As foot and fight is," &c.

"To make that only true we now intend."

Boswell has a very ingenious theory that this Prologue had especial reference to another play on the same historical subject, 'When You See Me You Know Me, or the Famous Chronicle History of King Henry the Eighth, &c., by Samuel Rowley,' in which "the incidents in Henry's reign are thrown together in the most confused manner." But, upon the whole, the probability is that the Henry VIII.' of Shakspere, and the 'All is True' described by Wotton, are one and the same play. The next question is, then, whether Wotton was correct in describing the 'Henry VIII.' as a new play. Chalmers, who almost stands alone in his

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opinion, maintains that the fact of a play on the subject of Henry VIII. being termed new in 1613 is decisive as to the date of its original production at that time. Malone, on the contrary, conjectures that the 'Henry VIII.' was written in 1601, and revived in 1613, with a new title and prologue, "having lain by some years unacted." This conjecture rests upon no external evidence. We proceed, therefore, to the other division of the subject the evidence of its date which is furnished by the play itself.

In the prophecy of Cranmer in the last scene, the glories of the reign of Elizabeth are carried on to that of her successor, in the following lines:

"Nor shall this peace sleep with her: But as when

The bird of wonder dies, the maiden phoenix, Her ashes new create another heir,

As great in admiration as herself; So shall she leave her blessedness to one, (When Heaven shall call her from this cloud

of darkness,)

Who, from the sacred ashes of her honour, Shall star-like rise, as great in fame as she was, And so stand fix'd: Peace, plenty, love, truth, terror,

That were the servants to this chosen infant, Shall then be his, and like a vine grow to him; Wherever the bright sun of heaven shall shine, His honour, and the greatness of his name, Shall be, and make new nations: He shall flourish,

And, like a mountain cedar, reach his branches To all the plains about him :-Our children's ¦ children

Shall see this, and bless Heaven."

This passage would appear to be decisive as to the date of the play, by the introduction of these lines:

"Wherever the bright sun of heaven shall shine, His honour, and the greatness of his name, Shall be, and make new nations."

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was also then granted for the encouragement of the colony, which was struggling L with great difficulties. That James took an especial interest in this important settlement, and naturally enough was recognised as the founder of " new nations," may be readily imagined. In the inscription upon a portrait of the king, which belonged to Lord Bacon, he is styled "Imperii Atlantici conditor." This part of Cranmer's prophecy, therefore, would fix the date of the play after the settlement of Virginia. But a new difficulty arises: All that part of the prophecy relating to James, which we have quoted, is held to be an addition, made upon a revival of the play in 1613.

"These lines," says Dr. Johnson, "to the interruption by the king, seem to have been inserted at some revisal of the play, after the accession of King James. If the passage be left out, the speech of Cranmer proceeds in a regular tenor of prediction and continuity of sentiments; but, by the interpolation of the new lines, he first celebrates Elizabeth's successor, and then wishes he did not know she was to die; first rejoices at the consequence, and then laments the cause." Is it so ?

The presumed interpolation immediately

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66

But it is held, further, that Shakspere did not write these lines; that Ben Jonson wrote them; that Shakspere might properly compliment Elizabeth in her lifetime, but that he would not descend to flatter James, who was a contemptible king." Shakspere, it is well known, had reason to be grateful to James for personal kindnesses; but there is not a word here of James's personal qualities. The lines apply to the character of his government-its "peace, plenty, love, truth, terror"-the extension of its growth to make new nations." Would Jonson, had he written this passage, have forgotten that James was somewhat prouder of his

66

"Nor shall this peace sleep with her: But as reputation as a scholar than as a king; and

when

The bird of wonder dies. **

So shall she leave her blessedness to one,
(When Heaven shall call her from this cloud
of darkness,)

Who, from the sacred ashes of her honour,
Shall star-like rise."

Is it true, then, that he "first celebrates Elizabeth's successor, and then wishes he did not know she was to die"? Of the seventeen lines which relate to James, the first eleven never lose sight of Elizabeth. Her "blessedness," her "honour," her "fame," were to descend to her "heir." The exten

that one who knew him well had not hesitated to say to him, and perhaps, indeed, in sincerity, "There has not been since Christ's time any king or temporal monarch which has been so learned in all literature and erudition, divine and human "?* We have no hesitation in accepting the passage as one that Shakspere might not have blushed to have written, and which derogates nothing from the manly independence of his cha

racter.

The later editors consider that the interpolation rested at the interruption of the

* Bacon 'Advancement of Learning.'

king. Theobald would carry it further, through the remainder of Cranmer's speech: "If this play was wrote, as in my opinion it was, in the reign of Elizabeth, we may easily determine where Cranmer's eulogium of that princess concluded. I make no question but the poet rested here :

"

by the poet—that is, in the sequence of the dramatic action-as the impelling motive for his divorce from Katharine? Would she have tolerated the masque-scene immediately succeeding that in which Katharine is told by her husband, "You have half our power"! Would she have endured that her father,

And by those claim their greatness, not by upon his next appearance after the meeting

blood."

Theobald omits to state the most obvious reason for his opinion. We hold that Shakspere, in the age of Elizabeth, would never have written

"She shall be, to the happiness of England,

An aged princess."

That passage is also, to our minds, clearly an interpolation, assuming that the play was produced during Elizabeth's reign. She, of all sovereigns, would least have endured to be called aged; she, of whom, in her seventieth year, the French Ambassador writes,

66 Her is still lively, she has good spirits,

eye

and is fond of life, for which reason she takes great care of herself; to which may be added an inclination for the Earl of Clancarty, a brave, handsome Irish nobleman. This makes her cheerful, full of hope and confidence respecting her age.” About a year before this time it is held that the Henry VIII.' was written, and that it originally included the close of Cranmer's prophecy. "An aged princess!" "But she must die!" Shakspere must indeed have been a bold man to have ventured upon such truths.

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But let us yield the whole question of interpolation to those who assert that the 'Henry VIII.' was written in the time of Elizabeth, and give up even the passage of the "aged princess." It is held that the play was written to please Elizabeth. The memory of Henry VIII., perhaps, was not cherished by her with any deep affection; but would she, who in her dying hour is reported to have said, "My seat has been the seat of kings," allow the frailties, and even the peculiarities, of her father to be made a public spectacle? Would she have borne that his passion for her mother should have been put forward in the strongest way

with Anne Bullen, when he exclaims,

"The fairest hand I ever touch'd! O beauty, Till now I never knew thee !"—

and

"By Heaven, she is a dainty one !-Sweetheart, I were unmannerly to take you out, And not to kiss you

that he should be represented in the depth of his hypocrisy gloating over his projected divorce, with

"But, conscience, conscience,— Oh, 't is a tender place, and I must leave her"? Would she have been pleased with the jests of the old lady to Anne upon her approaching elevation-her title-her "thousand pound a-year❞—and all to be instantly followed by the trial-scene, that magnificent exhibition of the purity, the constancy, the fortitude, the grandeur of soul, the selfpossession, of the "most poor woman and a stranger" that her mother had supplanted; contrasted with the heartless coldness, salved over with a more heartless commendation of

his injured wife, from the hypocritical tyrant, who ends the defence of his conduct expressed in

"the sharp thorny points Of my alleged reasons drive this forward," with the real truth, spoken aside,

"I may perceive,

These cardinals trifle with me

Cranmer, Pr'ythee, return! with thy approach, I know, My comfort comes"?

Finally, would she have licensed the stage exhibition of her father's traditionary peculiarities, in addition to the portraiture., which cannot be mistaken, of his sensual, arrogant, impatient, and crafty character! Would she have laughed at his perpetual

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