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  • June 1, 1879
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  • SHAKSPERE, HIS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES.
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Shakspere, His Friends And Acquaintances.

wife : " Doll , I charge thee , by the love of our 3 'outh , ancl by my soul ' s rest , that thou Avilt see this man paid : for if he and his wife had not succoured me , I had died in the streets ! " It Avas from him that Shakspere stole ( as he at least considered it ) the plot of that Winter ' s Tale , first acted apparently at Whitehall , in 1611 , and once more , after two hundred and sixty-seven years have passed over our great and growing metropolis , reproduced at old Drury , Avith the scenery of a Beverly .

Nor must I dilate on the contemporary dramatists , Thomas Nashe , bitterest of controversialists and keenest of satirists ; of little John Lyhy , whom Meres calls " eloquent and witty , " and who Nashe said had " one of the best Avits in England ; " of Thomas Lodge , AA'I IO , after graduating at Oxford , became player , dramatist , and aftei-Avards barrister and physician , from whom Shakspere derived the plot of his As You Like It ; of Thomas Kyd , whose Jeronimo Ben Jonson declared

to be " the only best ancl judiciously penned play in Europe ; " of Dekker , and Anthony Munday , and the rest ; for these alone AA'ould supply matter for a chapter themselves . JSTor must I pause to imagine Burleigh , and Raleigh , and Sidney , and Bacon , and the other great men of the period , talking familiarly with the popular dramatist , as seems to have been the custom , and how the father of inductive philosophy would have laughed to think there could be fools in a distant age , boasting ¦ of its enlightenment , who could really , without one particle of eAidence , ascribe to him the authorship of . Shakspere ' s plays ! But , though my space is nearly exhausted , " last ,

but not least , I must briefly express the great gratitude we all ought-to feel to the dear " fellows " of the immortal bard , John Heminge ( whom Malone supposes to haA'e been also a Stratford man , as the baptismal registers of Stratford church prove that there Avas a John Heminge at Shottery in 1567 , and a Richard Heminge in 1570 ) and Henry Condell , to both of whom also the sum of twenty-six shillings and eightpence each was left in the poet ' s will , " to buy them rings " to wear in memory of him whom they Avould see on earth no more ; for to those two sharers with Shakspere in the

theatre Ave owe the first collected edition of the plays in which they had so often acted leading parts ; many of them never before published , and the others only surreptitiously . " It had been a thing , " they modestly say , " we confess , worthy to have been wished , that the author himself had lived to have set forth and overseen his own writings . But since it hath been ordained otherwise , and he , by death , departed from that right , we pray you do not envy his friends the office of their Care and pain to have collected

and published them ; and so to have published them , as where , before , you were abused with divers stolen and surreptitious copies , maimed and deformed by the frauds and stealths of injurious impostors that exposed them , —even those are now offered to your view cured , and perfect of their limbs ; and all the rest , absolute in their numbers , as he conceived them ; who , as he Avas a happy imitator of Nature , was a most gentle expresser of it . His mind and hand went together ; and what he thought he uttered with that easiness that we have scarce received from him a blot in his papers . "

But for those " pious felloAvs " of the great bard , as Ben Jonson terms them , the plays of Shakspere , like those of the old Greek dramatists , might have been for the most part lost for ever , and the mental legacy he has left us—wisely estimated by Thomas Carlyle as worth much more than our whole Indian Empire—would many of them , and amongst them some of his best , have been totally unknown to us . In some future numbers of the Masonic Magazine I hope to be permitted to have

other glances with the readers at Shakspere , from various points of view , and the men who surrounded him ; for it is a subject worthy of the study of every Freemason . Rose Cottage , Stokesley .

“The Masonic Magazine: 1879-06-01, Page 137” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01061879/page/137/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
TRANSMISSION OF MASONIC ART AND SYMBOLISM IN THE FOURTH CENTURY. Article 1
A QUEER CAREER. Article 6
THE PAST. Article 18
A PERFECTLY AWFULLY LOVELY POEM. Article 19
TO ARTHUR . Article 20
ARE YOU A MASTER MASON ? Article 21
THE LITERARY EXPERIENCES OF A YOUNG MAN WITH A FUTURE. Article 26
HERMES TRISMEGISTUS. Article 27
A CATALOGUE OF MASONIC BOOKS IN THE BRITISH MUSEUM. Article 29
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 36
GOTHIC ARCHITECTURE.* Article 42
ST. ALBAN'S CATHEDRAL. Article 46
TO HOPE. Article 48
THE DEPUTY GRAND MASTER OF ENGLAND. Article 49
CATHERINE CARMICHAEL; on, THREE YEARS RUNNING. Article 50
CHRISTMAS, 1878. Article 64
SONNET. Article 65
LIST OF "ANCIENT LODGES," 1813, WITH THEIR NUMBERS IN 1814, 1832, AND 1863. Article 66
THREE CHRISTMAS EVES. Article 73
GRADUS AD OPUS CAEMENTITIUM. Article 80
HOW I WAS FIRST PREPARED TO BE MADE A MASON. Article 83
CHRISTMAS DAY ON BOARD HER MAJESTY'S SHIP "NONSUCH." Article 92
A PHILOLOGICAL FANCY Article 95
ALONE. Article 97
DESCRIPTION OF A CHURCH SITUATED IN FORT MANOEL, MALTA, IN WHICH ARE SEVERAL INTERESTING MASONIC ILLUSTRATIONS. Article 98
THE LOVING CUP: OR, HOW THE DUSTMEN WERE DIDDLED. Article 102
A CHRISTMAS DAY BEFORE THE ENEMY. Article 105
GERMAN MASONIC TEACHING ONE HUNDRED YEARS AGO. Article 108
A MEMORY. Article 111
ROB MOORSON. Article 112
PARTED. Article 120
THE MAP OF EUROPE IN 1879. Article 121
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE LODGE OF ANTIQUITY, NO. 146, BOLTON. Article 124
AN UNKNOWN WATERING-PLACE. Article 127
SHAKSPERE, HIS FRIENDS AND ACQUAINTANCES. Article 131
SKETCHES OF CHARACTER. Article 138
SONNET. Article 139
THE VOLITATIONIST. Article 139
A SIMILE. Article 144
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Shakspere, His Friends And Acquaintances.

wife : " Doll , I charge thee , by the love of our 3 'outh , ancl by my soul ' s rest , that thou Avilt see this man paid : for if he and his wife had not succoured me , I had died in the streets ! " It Avas from him that Shakspere stole ( as he at least considered it ) the plot of that Winter ' s Tale , first acted apparently at Whitehall , in 1611 , and once more , after two hundred and sixty-seven years have passed over our great and growing metropolis , reproduced at old Drury , Avith the scenery of a Beverly .

Nor must I dilate on the contemporary dramatists , Thomas Nashe , bitterest of controversialists and keenest of satirists ; of little John Lyhy , whom Meres calls " eloquent and witty , " and who Nashe said had " one of the best Avits in England ; " of Thomas Lodge , AA'I IO , after graduating at Oxford , became player , dramatist , and aftei-Avards barrister and physician , from whom Shakspere derived the plot of his As You Like It ; of Thomas Kyd , whose Jeronimo Ben Jonson declared

to be " the only best ancl judiciously penned play in Europe ; " of Dekker , and Anthony Munday , and the rest ; for these alone AA'ould supply matter for a chapter themselves . JSTor must I pause to imagine Burleigh , and Raleigh , and Sidney , and Bacon , and the other great men of the period , talking familiarly with the popular dramatist , as seems to have been the custom , and how the father of inductive philosophy would have laughed to think there could be fools in a distant age , boasting ¦ of its enlightenment , who could really , without one particle of eAidence , ascribe to him the authorship of . Shakspere ' s plays ! But , though my space is nearly exhausted , " last ,

but not least , I must briefly express the great gratitude we all ought-to feel to the dear " fellows " of the immortal bard , John Heminge ( whom Malone supposes to haA'e been also a Stratford man , as the baptismal registers of Stratford church prove that there Avas a John Heminge at Shottery in 1567 , and a Richard Heminge in 1570 ) and Henry Condell , to both of whom also the sum of twenty-six shillings and eightpence each was left in the poet ' s will , " to buy them rings " to wear in memory of him whom they Avould see on earth no more ; for to those two sharers with Shakspere in the

theatre Ave owe the first collected edition of the plays in which they had so often acted leading parts ; many of them never before published , and the others only surreptitiously . " It had been a thing , " they modestly say , " we confess , worthy to have been wished , that the author himself had lived to have set forth and overseen his own writings . But since it hath been ordained otherwise , and he , by death , departed from that right , we pray you do not envy his friends the office of their Care and pain to have collected

and published them ; and so to have published them , as where , before , you were abused with divers stolen and surreptitious copies , maimed and deformed by the frauds and stealths of injurious impostors that exposed them , —even those are now offered to your view cured , and perfect of their limbs ; and all the rest , absolute in their numbers , as he conceived them ; who , as he Avas a happy imitator of Nature , was a most gentle expresser of it . His mind and hand went together ; and what he thought he uttered with that easiness that we have scarce received from him a blot in his papers . "

But for those " pious felloAvs " of the great bard , as Ben Jonson terms them , the plays of Shakspere , like those of the old Greek dramatists , might have been for the most part lost for ever , and the mental legacy he has left us—wisely estimated by Thomas Carlyle as worth much more than our whole Indian Empire—would many of them , and amongst them some of his best , have been totally unknown to us . In some future numbers of the Masonic Magazine I hope to be permitted to have

other glances with the readers at Shakspere , from various points of view , and the men who surrounded him ; for it is a subject worthy of the study of every Freemason . Rose Cottage , Stokesley .

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