Shakespeare the man > Life > Private life
Shakespeare had little contact with officialdom, apart from walkingdressed in the royal livery as a member of the King's Menat the coronation of King James I in 1604. He continued to look after his financial interests. He bought properties in London and in Stratford. In 1605 he purchased a share (about one-fifth) of the Stratford tithesa fact that explains why he was eventually buried in the chancel of its parish church. For some time he lodged with a French Huguenot family called Mountjoy, who lived near St. Olave's Church in Cripplegate, London. The records of a lawsuit in May 1612, resulting from a Mountjoy family quarrel, show Shakespeare as giving evidence in a genial way (though unable to remember certain important facts that would have decided the case) and as interesting himself generally in the family's affairs.
No letters written by Shakespeare have survived, but a private letter to him happened to get caught up with some official transactions of the town of Stratford and so has been preserved in the borough archives. It was written by one Richard Quiney and addressed by him from the Bell Inn in Carter Lane, London, whither he had gone from Stratford on business. On one side of the paper is inscribed: To my loving good friend and countryman, Mr. Wm. Shakespeare, deliver these. Apparently Quiney thought his fellow Stratfordian a person to whom he could apply for the loan of £30a large sum in Elizabethan times. Nothing further is known about the transaction, but, because so few opportunities of seeing into Shakespeare's private life present themselves, this begging letter becomes a touching document. It is of some interest, moreover, that 18 years later Quiney's son Thomas became the husband of Judith, Shakespeare's second daughter.
Shakespeare's will (made on March 25, 1616) is a long and detailed document. It entailed his quite ample property on the male heirs of his elder daughter, Susanna. (Both his daughters were then married, one to the aforementioned Thomas Quiney and the other to John Hall, a respected physician of Stratford.) As an afterthought, he bequeathed his second-best bed to his wife; no one can be certain what this notorious legacy means. The testator's signatures to the will are apparently in a shaky hand. Perhaps Shakespeare was already ill. He died on April 23, 1616. No name was inscribed on his gravestone in the chancel of the parish church of Stratford-upon-Avon. Instead these lines, possibly his own, appeared:
Good friend, for Jesus' sake forbear
To dig the dust enclosed here.
Blest be the man that spares these stones,
And curst be he that moves my bones.
John Russell Brown
Terence John Bew Spencer
Ed.
-
·Introduction
-
·Shakespeare the man
-
·Shakespeare the poet and dramatist
-
·Shakespeare's plays and poems
-
·The early plays
-
·The poems
-
·Plays of the middle and late years
-
-
·Shakespeare's sources
-
·Understanding Shakespeare
-
·Questions of authorship
-
·Linguistic, historical, textual, and editorial problems
-
·Literary criticism
-
·Seventeenth century
-
·Eighteenth century
-
·Romantic critics
-
·Twentieth century and beyond
-
-
-
·Additional Reading
-
·Modern editions
-
·Shakespeare biography
-
·Shakespearean staging and acting companies
-
·Censorship and governmental regulation
-
·Critical studies
-
·History of Shakespeare criticism
-
·Criticism of Shakespearean characters
-
·Historical criticism
-
·New Criticism
-
·Shakespeare's language and imagery
-
·Psychological, archetypal, and mythological criticism
-
·New Historicism, cultural materialism, Marxist criticism, and political theatre
-
·Feminist criticism and gender studies
-
·Post-structuralism and deconstruction
-
·Broad-spectrum criticism: language, themes, thought
-
·Shakespearean comedy
-
·Shakespearean tragedy
-
·Shakespearean history
-
·Dramaturgy and Shakespeare in the theatre
-
-

