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"Shakespeare" Identified in Edward de Vere the Seventeenth Earl of
Oxford
The transference of the honour of writing the immortal Shakespeare
dramas from one man to another, if definitely effected, becomes not
merely a national or contemporary event, but a world event of
permanent importance, destined to leave a mark as enduring as human
literature and the human race itself. No one, therefore, who has a
due sense of these things is likely to embark upon an enterprise of
this kind in a spirit of levity or adventure; nor will he feel
entitled to urge convictions tending to bring about so momentous a
change as if he were merely proposing some interesting thesis.
However much the writer of a work like the present might wish to
keep himself In the background he is bound to implicate himself so
deeply as to stake publicly his reputation for sane and sober
judgment, and thus to imperil the credit of his opinion on every
other subject. It would therefore have been more discreet or
diplomatic to have put forward the present argument tentatively at
first, as a possible or probable, rather than an actual solution of
the Shakespeare problem. The temptation to do this was strong, but
the weight of the evidence collected has proved much too great and
conclusive to permit of this being done with even a fair measure of
justice either to the case or to my own honest convictions. Only
one course then was open to me. The greater responsibility had to
be incurred; and therefore some remark upon the circumstances under
which the investigations came to be undertaken is not only
justifiable but necessary.
Here, then, were the greatest literary treasures of England, ranked
by universal consent amongst the highest literary achievements of
mankind, to all intents and purposes of unknown origin. The
immediate effect of such a conviction was the sense of a painful
hiatus in the general out look upon the supreme accomplishments of
humanity; a want much more distressing than that which is felt
about the authorship of writings like the Homeric poems, because
the matter touches us more directly and intimately. It was
impossible, I felt, to leave things thus, if by any means the
problem could be solved and the gap filled up. I re solved,
therefore, notwithstanding the extreme boldness, or rather
presumption, of the undertaking to attempt a solution of the
problem.
At the beginning it was mainly the fascination of an interesting
enquiry that held me, and the matter was pursued in the spirit of
simple research. As the case has developed, however, it has tended
increasingly to assume the form of a serious purpose, aiming at a
long overdue act of justice and reparation to an unappreciated
genius who, we believe, ought now to be put in possession of his
rightful honours.
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