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Nicholas Rowe: Some Account Of The Life &c. Of Mr. William Shakespear
by
—- Natura sublimis & Acer,
Nam spirat Tragicum satis & feliciter Audet,
Sed turpem putat in Chartis metuitque Lituram.
There is a Book of Poems, publish’d in 1640, under the name of Mr. William Shakespear, but as I have but very lately seen it, without an opportunity of making any judgment upon it, I won’t pretend to determine, whether it be his or no.
NOTES:
2. Some Latin without question, etc. This passage, down to the reference to the scene in Henry V., is omitted by Pope. Love’s Labour’s Lost, iv. 2, 95; Titus Andronicus, iv. 2, 20; Henry V., iii. 4.
3. Deer-stealing. This tradition–which was first recorded in print by Rowe–has often been doubted. See, however, Halliwell-Phillipps’s Outlines of the Life of Shakespeare, 1886, ii., p. 71, and Mr. Sidney Lee’s Life of Shakespeare, pp. 27, etc.
4. the first Play he wrote. Pope inserted here the following note: “The highest date of any I can yet find is Romeo and Juliet in 1597, when the author was 33 years old, and Richard the 2d and 3d in the next year, viz. the 34th of his age.” The two last had been printed in 1597.
Mr. Dryden seems to think that Pericles, etc. This sentence was omitted by Pope.
5. the best conversations, etc. Rowe here controverts the opinion expressed by Dryden in his Essay on the Dramatic Poetry of the Last Age : “I cannot find that any of them had been conversant in courts, except Ben Johnson; and his genius lay not so much that way as to make an improvement by it. Greatness was not then so easy of access, nor conversation so free, as now it is” ( Essays, ed. W. P. Ker, i., p. 175).
A fair Vestal. Midsummer Night’s Dream, ii. 1, 158. In the original Rowe adds to his quotations from Shakespeare the page references to his own edition.
The Merry Wives. The tradition that the Merry Wives was written at the command of Elizabeth had been recorded already by Dennis in the preface to his version of the play,– The Comical Gallant, or the Amours of Sir John Falstaffe (1702): “This Comedy was written at her command, and by her direction, and she was so eager to see it acted, that she commanded it to be finished in fourteen days; and was afterwards, as Tradition tells us, very well pleas’d at the Representation.” Cf. Dennis’s Defence of a Regulated Stage : “she not only commanded Shakespear to write the comedy of the Merry Wives, and to write it in ten day’s time,” etc. ( Original Letters, 1721, i., p. 232).
this part of Falstaff. Rowe is here indebted apparently to the account of John Fastolfe in Fuller’s Worthies of England (1662). But neither in it, nor in the similar passage on Oldcastle in the Church History of Britain (1655, Bk. IV., Cent, XV., p. 168), does Fuller say that the name was altered at the command of the queen, on objection being made by Oldcastle’s descendants. This may have been a tradition at Rowe’s time, as there was then apparently no printed authority for it, but, as Halliwell-Phillips showed in his Character of Sir John Falstaff, 1841, it is confirmed by a manuscript of about 1625, preserved in the Bodleian. Cf. also Halliwell-Phillips’s Outlines of the Life of Shakespeare, 1886, ii., pp. 351, etc.; Richard James’s Iter Lancastrense (Chetham Society, 1845, p. lxv.); and Ingleby’s Shakespeare’s Centurie of Prayse, 1879, pp. 164-5.