Did Francis Bacon write Shakespeare’s Works?
Nobody knows.
We cannot say we know a thing
when that thing has not been proved. Know is
too strong a word to use when the evidence is not final
and absolutely conclusive. We can infer, if
we want to, like those slaves . . . No, I will
not write that word, it is not kind, it is not courteous.
The upholders of the Stratford-Shakespeare superstition
call us the hardest names they can think of,
and they keep doing it all the time; very well, if
they like to descend to that level, let them do it,
but I will not so undignify myself as to follow them.
I cannot call them harsh names; the most I can do
is to indicate them by terms reflecting my disapproval;
and this without malice, without venom.
To resume. What I was about
to say, was, those thugs have built their entire superstition
upon inferences, not upon known and established
facts. It is a weak method, and poor, and I am
glad to be able to say our side never resorts to it
while there is anything else to resort to.
But when we must, we must; and we
have now arrived at a place of that sort.
Since the Stratford Shakespeare couldn’t
have written the Works, we infer that somebody did.
Who was it, then? This requires some more inferring.
Ordinarily when an unsigned poem sweeps
across the continent like a tidal wave, whose roar
and boom and thunder are made up of admiration, delight
and applause, a dozen obscure people rise up and claim
the authorship. Why a dozen, instead of only
one or two? One reason is, because there’s
a dozen that are recognizably competent to do that
poem. Do you remember “Beautiful Snow”?
Do you remember “Rock Me to Sleep, Mother, Rock
Me to Sleep”? Do you remember “Backward,
turn backward, O Time, in thy flight! Make me
a child again just for to-night”? I remember
them very well. Their authorship was claimed
by most of the grown-up people who were alive at the
time, and every claimant had one plausible argument
in his favor, at least: to wit, he could have
done the authoring; he was competent.
Have the Works been claimed by a dozen?
They haven’t. There was good reason.
The world knows there was but one man on the planet
at the time who was competent not a dozen,
and not two. A long time ago the dwellers in
a far country used now and then to find a procession
of prodigious footprints stretching across the plain footprints
that were three miles apart, each footprint a third
of a mile long and a furlong deep, and with forests
and villages mashed to mush in it. Was there
any doubt as to who had made that mighty trail?
Were there a dozen claimants? Were there two?
No the people knew who it was that had
been along there: there was only one Hercules.
There has been only one Shakespeare.
There couldn’t be two; certainly there couldn’t
be two at the same time. It takes ages to bring
forth a Shakespeare, and some more ages to match him.
This one was not matched before his time; nor during
his time; and hasn’t been matched since.
The prospect of matching him in our time is not bright.
The Baconians claim that the Stratford
Shakespeare was not qualified to write the Works,
and that Francis Bacon was. They claim that Bacon
possessed the stupendous equipment both
natural and acquired for the miracle; and
that no other Englishman of his day possessed the like;
or, indeed, anything closely approaching it.
Macaulay, in his Essay, has much to
say about the splendor and horizonless magnitude of
that equipment. Also, he has synopsized Bacon’s
history: a thing which cannot be done for the
Stratford Shakespeare, for he hasn’t any history
to synopsize. Bacon’s history is open to
the world, from his boyhood to his death in old age a
history consisting of known facts, displayed in minute
and multitudinous detail; facts, not guesses
and conjectures and might-have-beens.
Whereby it appears that he was born
of a race of statesmen, and had a Lord Chancellor
for his father, and a mother who was “distinguished
both as a linguist and a theologian: she corresponded
in Greek with Bishop Jewell, and translated his Apologia
from the Latin so correctly that neither he nor Archbishop
Parker could suggest a single alteration.”
It is the atmosphere we are reared in that determines
how our inclinations and aspirations shall tend.
The atmosphere furnished by the parents to the son
in this present case was an atmosphere saturated with
learning; with thinkings and ponderings upon deep
subjects; and with polite culture. It had its
natural effect. Shakespeare of Stratford was
reared in a house which had no use for books, since
its owners, his parents, were without education.
This may have had an effect upon the son, but we
do not know, because we have no history of him of an
informing sort. There were but few books anywhere,
in that day, and only the well-to-do and highly educated
possessed them, they being almost confined to the
dead languages. “All the valuable books
then extant in all the vernacular dialects of Europe
would hardly have filled a single shelf” imagine
it! The few existing books were in the Latin
tongue mainly. “A person who was ignorant
of it was shut out from all acquaintance not
merely with Cicero and Virgil, but with the most interesting
memoirs, state papers, and pamphlets of his own time” a
literature necessary to the Stratford lad, for his
fictitious reputation’s sake, since the writer
of his Works would begin to use it wholesale and in
a most masterly way before the lad was hardly more
than out of his teens and into his twenties.
At fifteen Bacon was sent to the university,
and he spent three years there. Thence he went
to Paris in the train of the English Ambassador, and
there he mingled daily with the wise, the cultured,
the great, and the aristocracy of fashion, during
another three years. A total of six years spent
at the sources of knowledge; knowledge both of books
and of men. The three spent at the university
were coeval with the second and last three spent by
the little Stratford lad at Stratford school supposedly,
and perhapsedly, and maybe, and by inference with
nothing to infer from. The second three of the
Baconian six were “presumably” spent by
the Stratford lad as apprentice to a butcher.
That is, the thugs presume it on no evidence
of any kind. Which is their way, when they want
a historical fact. Fact and presumption are,
for business purposes, all the same to them.
They know the difference, but they also know how
to blink it. They know, too, that while in history-building
a fact is better than a presumption, it doesn’t
take a presumption long to bloom into a fact when
they have the handling of it. They know
by old experience that when they get hold of a presumption-tadpole
he is not going to stay tadpole in their history-tank;
no, they know how to develop him into the giant four-legged
bullfrog of fact, and make him sit up on his
hams, and puff out his chin, and look important and
insolent and come-to-stay; and assert his genuine simón-pure
authenticity with a thundering bellow that will convince
everybody because it is so loud. The thug is
aware that loudness convinces sixty persons where
reasoning convinces but one. I wouldn’t
be a thug, not even if but never mind about
that, it has nothing to do with the argument, and it
is not noble in spirit besides. If I am better
than a thug, is the merit mine? No, it is His.
Then to Him be the praise. That is the right
spirit.
They “presume” the lad
severed his “presumed” connection with
the Stratford school to become apprentice to a butcher.
They also “presume” that the butcher
was his father. They don’t know.
There is no written record of it, nor any other actual
evidence. If it would have helped their case
any, they would have apprenticed him to thirty butchers,
to fifty butchers, to a wilderness of butchers all
by their patented method “presumption.”
If it will help their case they will do it yet; and
if it will further help it, they will “presume”
that all those butchers were his father. And
the week after, they will say it. Why,
it is just like being the past tense of the compound
reflexive adverbial incandescent hypodermic irregular
accusative Noun of Multitude; which is father to the
expression which the grammarians call Verb. It
is like a whole ancestry, with only one posterity.
To resume. Next, the young Bacon
took up the study of law, and mastered that abstruse
science. From that day to the end of his life
he was daily in close contact with lawyers and judges;
not as a casual onlooker in intervals between holding
horses in front of a theatre, but as a practicing
lawyer a great and successful one, a renowned
one, a Launcelot of the bar, the most formidable lance
in the high brotherhood of the legal Table Round;
he lived in the law’s atmosphere thenceforth,
all his years, and by sheer ability forced his way
up its difficult steeps to its supremest summit, the
Lord Chancellorship, leaving behind him no fellow
craftsman qualified to challenge his divine right to
that majestic place.
When we read the praises bestowed
by Lord Penzance and the other illustrious experts
upon the legal condition and legal aptnesses, brilliances,
profundities and felicities so prodigally displayed
in the Plays, and try to fit them to the history-less
Stratford stage-manager, they sound wild, strange,
incredible, ludicrous; but when we put them in the
mouth of Bacon they do not sound strange, they seem
in their natural and rightful place, they seem at
home there. Please turn back and read them again.
Attributed to Shakespeare of Stratford they are meaningless,
they are inebriate extravagancies intemperate
admirations of the dark side of the moon, so to speak;
attributed to Bacon, they are admirations of the golden
glories of the moon’s front side, the moon at
the full and not intemperate, not overwrought,
but sane and right, and justified. “At
every turn and point at which the author required a
metaphor, simile or illustration, his mind ever turned
first to the law; he seems almost to have thought
in legal phrases; the commonest legal phrases, the
commonest of legal expressions were ever at the end
of his pen.” That could happen to no one
but a person whose trade was the law; it could
not happen to a dabbler in it. Veteran mariners
fill their conversation with sailor-phrases and draw
all their similes from the ship and the sea and the
storm, but no mere passenger ever does it, be
he of Stratford or elsewhere; or could do it with
anything resembling accuracy, if he were hardy enough
to try. Please read again what Lord Campbell
and the other great authorities have said about Bacon
when they thought they were saying it about Shakespeare
of Stratford.