Within the text I introduce many of
the works of poetry I intend(ed) to include in the second volume. The detail
analyses I intend(ed) to present as the bulk of the critical text. For the
purposes of the biography, a goodly number of individual lyrics served as previews,
the following, from An Hundredth Sundrie
Flowers (1573)[2]
included.
73. If the following Shakespearean sonnet had
appeared in the 1609 Sonnets of
Shake-speare it is difficult to believe that a reader would see it as the
least out of place:
You
must not wonder though you thinke it straunge,
To
see me holde my lowring head so lowe:
And
that myne eyes take no delight to raunge,
About
the gleames which on your face doe growe.
The
mouse which once hath broken out of trappe,
Is
sildome tysed with the trustlesse bayte,
But
lyes aloofe for feare of more misshape,
And
feedeth styll in doubte of deepe deceipte.
The
scorched flye which once hath scapt the flame,
Wyll
hardlye come to playe againe with fyre.
Whereby
I learne that greevous is the game,
Which
followes fansie dazled by desire.
So
that I wynke or else holde downe my head,
Because
your blazing eyes my bale have bred.[3]
The entirely end-stopped lines
identify the style of the young Shake-speare, it’s true, but they likewise
identify the style of almost all young poets.
This being the introductory biography to The Collected Poems of Edward De Vere, this single example will
have to suffice.
Further commentary would have to
await the second volume.
Little did I know the journey that
preparing the second volume would take me. I realized, foremost, that I would
have to explain why I assigned the poems of Si Fortunatus Infoelix to the
Edward de Vere in spite of Robert Prechter’s extensive objections[4]. My
reply to the gentlemen’s essay on the subject occupies the bulk of my recently
released Authorship In-Progress Journal, Shakespeare in 1573: Apprenticeship and Scandal.[5]
It would also be necessary to return
to various Tudor publications which included, in one obscure corner or another,
a poem that promised to be by De Vere. My work in that direction resulted in
the book / monograph Discovered: A New Shakespeare Sonnet (or three,actually)[6]
in which I describe my findings regarding the sonnets and several other poems I
was able to assign to De Vere directly.
As for Shakespeare in 1573,
it has been brought to my attention that none of the poems I selected from An
Hundredth Sundrie Flowers were by Si Fortunatus Infoelix. Being an
“In-Progress” journal, the intention had been to show that Gascoigne’s
anthology was just that: a volume containing the work of a number of authors.
The evaluation of individual poems is another discrete step.
Nevertheless, the above quote from Edward
de Vere was Shakespeare and the following sonnet are now provided for those
readers who may have felt the lack.
WHen
stedfast friendship (bound by holy othe)
Did
parte perforce my presence from thy sight,
In
dreames I might behold how thou wert loth
With
troubled thoughts to parte from thy delight.
When
Popler walles enclos'd thy pensive mind,
My
painted shadow did thy woes revive:
Thine
evening walks by Thames in open wind,
Did
long to see my sayling boate arive.
But
when the dismold day did seeke to part
From
London walles thy longing mind for me,
The
sugred kisses (sent to thy deare hart)
With
secret smart in broken sleepes I see.
Wherfore
in teares I drenche a thousand fold,
Till these moist eyes thy beauty may
behold.
Si fortunatus infoelix.
This sonnet was left out of the 1575
second edition as part of the major revision Gascoigne felt necessary to make
to the original volume. In the 1573 first edition it was included among the
miscellaneous poems, not as part of the poetry and prose narrative “A discourse
of the adventures passed by Master F.I.” which had caused the scandal (such as
it was).
Among the many fascinating aspects of the latter sonnet is the poet’s reference to his “painted shadow”. He refers in 1573 to a painted image of himself in the possession of his beloved friend. Also, the remnants of a huge poplar forest remained in the environs of the royal palace at Greenwich, which also featured a jetty upon the Thames beside which Queen Elizabeth often walked when in residence. Of course, London is mentioned and the palace of Whitehall is also on the Thames. While Master F.I. included a number of risqué hints in the account of his adventures, these references would seem simply to rehearse small details from a deeply felt friendship.
[1]
Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. Edward de Vere was Shakespeare: at long last the
proof (2013, 2015). https://www.amazon.com/dp/1543136257/
[2]
Gascoigne, George. An Hundredth Sundry Flowres bound up in one small Posie
(1573).
[3] In the first edition this poem
went under the moniker Spreta tamen vivunt. In the second edition it was changed to Si
fortunatus infoelix.
[4]
Prechter, Robert R. “Hundreth Sundrie Flowres Revisited: Was Oxford Really
Involved?” Brief Chronicles, Vol. 10 (2010). 44-77.
[5]
Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. Shakespeare in 1573: Apprenticeship and Scandal (2021). https://www.amazon.com/dp/B096GSQV14
[6]
Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. Discovered: A New Shakespeare Sonnet (or three,
actually)(2015). https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00X4JUJAU/
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
- More on Thomas North as Shakespeare and author of Arden of Feversham. June 14, 2021. “This is also the reason why the title pages included the address of the shop that was selling the book.”
- A 1572 Oxford Letter and the Player’s Speech in Hamlet. August 11, 2020. “The player’s speech has been a source of consternation among Shakespeare scholars for above 200 years. Why was Aeneas’ tale chosen as the subject?”
- Gutenberg, proto-Hack Writers and Shakespeare. May 26, 2020. “A less well known effect of the Reformation was that many young Catholic men who had taken religious orders in order to receive an education began to lead lives at large from monastic discipline. Like Erasmus and Rabelais they took up the pen.”
- Shakespeare’s Funeral Meats. May 13, 2020. “Famous as this has been since its discovery, it has been willfully misread more often than not. No mainstream scholar had any use for a reference to Hamlet years before it was supposed to have been written.”
- Check out the English Renaissance Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time and about the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
- Check out the Letters Index: Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford for many letters from this fascinating time, some related to the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
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