Imatges de pàgina
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and of which Mr. Rushton quotes several
instances in its fuller form, "fee simple,"
-we have but to turn back a few stan-
zas in this same canto of the "Faërie
Queene," to find one in which the term
is used with the completest apprehension
of its meaning:-
:-

"So is my lord now seiz'd of all the land,
As in his fee, with peaceable estate,
And quietly doth hold it in his hand,
Ne any dares with him for it debate."
Ib. st. 30.

And in the next canto :-
"Of which the greatest part is due to me,
And heaven itself, by heritage in fee."
Ib. C. vii. st. 15.

And in the first of these two passages from the "Faerie Queene," we have two words, "seized" and "estate," intelligently and correctly used in their purely legal sense, as Shakespeare himself uses them in the following passages, which our Chief Justice and our barrister have both passed by, as, indeed, they have passed many others equally worthy of notice :

"Did forfeit with his life all those his lands Which he stood seiz'd of to the conqueror." Hamlet, Act i. Sc. 1.

"The terms of our estate may not endure Hazard so near us," etc.-Ib. Act iii. Sc. 3.

Among the most important passages cited by both our authors is one that every reader of Shakespeare will recollect, when it is mentioned to him,- Hamlet's speech over the skull in the grave-digging scene. But although this speech is remarkable for the number of lawterms used in it, only one of them seems to evince any recondite knowledge of the law. This is the word "statutes," in the following sentence:

"This fellow might be in's time a buyer of land, with his statutes, his recognizances, his fines, his double vouchers, his recoveries."

Act v. Sc. 1.

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The general reader supposes, we believe, and very naturally, that here" statutes' means laws, Acts of Parliament concerning real estate. But, as Mr. Rushton remarks, (Malone having explained the term before him,) "The statutes referred to by

Hamlet are, doubtless, statutes merchant and statutes staple." And "a statute merchant (so called from the 13th Edward I., edged before one of the clerks of the De mercatoribus) was a bond acknowl statutes merchant, and the mayor, etc., etc. A statute staple, properly so called, was a bond of record, acknowledged before the mayor of the staple," etc., etc.

Here we again have a law-term apparently so out of the ken of an unprofessional writer, that it would seem to favor the Attorney and Solicitor theory. But let us see if the knowledge which its use implies was confined to Shakespeare among the dramatists of his time.

comedy, first performed in 1625, we find
In Fletcher's "Noble Gentleman," a
ing out,-
a lady, sorely pushed for ready cash, cry-

"Take up at any use: give bond, or land,
Or mighty statutes, able by their strength
To tie up Samson, were he now alive."
Act i. Sc. 1.

And in Middleton's "Family of Love," (where, by the way, the Free-Love folk of our own day may find their peculiar notions set forth and made the basis of the action, though the play was printed two hundred and fifty years ago,) we find a female free-loveyer thus teaching a mercantile brother of the family, that, although she has a sisterly disregard for some worldly restraints, she yet keeps an eye on the main chance :

"Tut, you are master Dryfab, the merchant: your skill is greater in cony-skins and woolpacks than in gentlemen. His lands be in statutes: you merchants were wont to be merchant staplers; but now gentlemen have gotten up the trade; for there is not one gentleman amongst twenty but his lands be engaged in twenty statutes staple."

Act i. Sc. 3.

And in the very first speech of the first scene of the same play, the husband of this virtuous and careful dame says of the same "Gerardine," (who, as he is poor and a gentleman, it need hardly be said, is about the only honest man in the that poor debauchee, Robert Greene, who piece,)—" "His lands be in statutes." And

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knew no more of law than he might have derived from such limited, though authentic information as to its powers over gentlemen who made debts without the intention of paying them, as he may have received at frequent unsolicited interviews with a sergeant or a bum-bailiff, has this passage in his "Quip for an Upstart Courtier," 1592:

"The mercer he followeth the young upstart gentleman that hath no government of himself and feedeth his humour to go brave: he shall not want silks, sattins, velvets to pranke abroad in his pompe; but with this proviso, that he must bind over his land' in a statute merchant or staple; and so at last forfeit all unto the merciless mercer, and leave himself never a foot of land in England."

Very profound legal studies, therefore, cannot be predicated of Shakespeare on the ground of the knowledge which he has shown of this peculiar kind of stat

ute.

It is not surprising that both our legal Shakespearean commentators cite the following passage from "As You Like It" in support of their theory; for in it the word "extent" is used in a sense so purely technical, that not one in a thousand of Shakespeare's lay readers nowa-days would understand it without a note :

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"Duke F. Well, push him out of doors, And let my officers of such a nature Make an extent upon his house and lands." Act iii. Sc. 1. "Extent," as Mr. Rushton remarks, is directed to the sheriff to seize and value lands and goods to the utmost extent; "an extendi facias," as Lord Campbell authoritatively says, applying to the house and lands as a fieri facias would apply to goods and chattels, or a capias ad satisfaciendum to the person." But that John Fletcher knew, as well as my Lord Chief Justice, or Mr. Barrister Rushton, or even, perhaps, William Shakespeare, all the woes that followed an extent, the elder Mr. Weller at least would not have doubted, had he in the course of his literary leisure fallen upon the following passage in "Wit Without Money" (1630):

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George Wilkins, too, the obscure author of" The Miseries of Enforced Marriage," uses the term with as full an understanding, though not with so feeling an expression or so scandalous an illustration of it, in the following passage from the fifth act of that play, which was produced about 1605 or 1606

"They are usurers; they come yawning for money; and the sheriff with them is come to serve an extent upon your land, and then seize your body by force of execution."

Another seemingly recondite law-phrase used by Shakespeare, which Lord Campbell passes entirely by, though Mr. Rushton quotes three instances of it, is "taken with the manner." This has nothing to do with good manners or ill manners; but, in the words of the old law-book before cited,

-"is when a theefe hath stollen and is followed with hue and crie and taken, having that found about him which he stole;-that is called ye maynour. And so we commonly use to saye, when wee finde one doing of an unlawful act, that we tooke him with the maynour or manner."

Termes de la Ley, 1595, fol. 126, b. Shakespeare, therefore, uses the phrase with perfect understanding, when he makes Prince Hal say to Bardolph,

"O villain, thou stolest a cup of sack eighteen years ago, and wert taken with the manner, and ever since thou hast blush'd extempore."

1 Henry IV. Act ii. Sc. 4.

But so Fletcher uses the same phrase, and as correctly, when he makes Perez say to Estefania, in "Rule a Wife and Have a Wife,"

"How like a sheep-biting rogue, taken i' the

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manner,

And ready for the halter, dost thou look now!"-Act v. Sc. 4.

But both Fletcher and Shakespeare, in

their use of this phrase, unusual as it now seems to us, have only exemplified the custom referred to by our contemporary legal authority," And so we commonly use to saye, when wee finde one doing of an unlawful act, that we tooke him with the maynour"; though this must doubt less be understood to refer to persons of a certain degree of education and knowledge of the world.

It seems, then, that the application of legal phraseology to the ordinary affairs of life was more common two hundred and fifty years ago than now; though even now-a-days it is much more generally used in the rural districts than persons who have not lived in them would suppose. There law shares with agriculture the function of providing those phrases of common conversation which, used figuratively at first, and often with poetic feeling, soon pass into mere thought-saving formulas of speech, and which in large cities are chiefly drawn from trade and politics. And if in the use of the law-terms upon which we have remarked, which are the more especially technical and remote from the language of unprofessional life among all those which occur in Shakespeare's works, he was not singular, but, as we have seen, availed himself only of a knowledge which other contemporary poets and playwrights possessed, how much more easily might we show that those commoner legal words and phrases, to remarks upon Shakespeare's use of which both the books before us (and especially Lord Campbell's) are mainly devoted, "judgment," "fine,” "these presents," "testament," "attorney," 66 arbitrator,” fees," 66 bond," "lease," "pleading," "arrest," "session," 66 mortgage," 99.66 vouchers," "indentures," assault," "battery," "dower," 66 enant," 66 distrain," "bail," "non-suit," etc., etc., etc.,-words which everybody understands,—are scattered through all the literature of Shakespeare's time, and, indeed, of all time since there were courts and suits at law!

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Many of the passages which Lord Campbell cites as evidence of Shake

ly a smile at the self-delusion of the critic speare's "legal acquirements" excite onthat light. For instance, these lines in who could regard them for a moment in Measure;"-"Take, oh, take those lips that most exquisite song in "Measure for away,”

"But my kisses bring again

Seals of love, but seal'd in vain";

and these from "Venus and Adonis,”—

"Pure lips, sweet seals in my soft lips imprinted,

What bargains may I make, still to be sealing!"

to which Mr. Rushton adds from "Hamlet,"

"A combination and a form, indeed,

Where every god did seem to set his seal."
Act iii. Sc. 4.

"Now must your conscience my acquittance seal."-Act iv. Sc. 7.

And because indentures and deeds and covenants are sealed, these passages must be accepted as part of the evidence that Shakespeare narrowly escaped being made Lord High Chancellor of England! It requires all the learning and the logic of a Lord Chief Justice and a London barrister to establish a connection besion. And if Shakespeare's lines smell of tween such premises and such a conclulaw, how strong is the odor of parchment and red tape in these, from Drayton's Fourth Eclogue (1605):—

"Kindnesse againe with kindnesse was repay'd,

And with sweet kisses couenants were sealed."

We ask pardon of the reader for the production of contemporary evidence, that, in Shakespeare's day, a knowledge of the significance and binding nature of a seal was not confined to him among poets; for surely a man must be both a lawyer and a Shakespearean commentator to forget that the use of seals is as old as the art of writing, and, perhaps, older, and that the practice has furnished a figure of speech to poets from the time when it was written, that out of the whirlwind

Job heard, "It is turned as clay to the seal," and probably from a period yet

more remote.

And is Lord Campbell really in earnest in the following grave and precisely expressed opinion?

"In the next scene, [of " Othello,"] Shakespeare gives us a very distinct proof that he was acquainted with Admiralty law, as well as with the procedure of Westminster Hall. Describing the feat of the Moor in carrying off Desdemona against her father's consent, which might either make or mar his fortune, according as the act might be sanctioned or nullified, Iago observes,—

"Faith, he to-night hath boarded a land carack:

If it prove a lawful prize, he's made forever'; the trope indicating that there would be a suit in the High Court of Admiralty to determine the validity of the capture" !—p. 91.

Why did not his Lordship go farther, and decide, that, in the figurative use of the term, “land carack,” Shakespeare gave us very distinct proof that he was acquainted with maritime life, and especially with the carrying-trade between Spain and the West Indies? spectfully submit to the court the following passage from Middleton and Rowley's "Changeling,"- first published in 1653, but written many years before. Jasperino, seeing a lady, calls out,—

We re

"Yonder's another vessell: Ile board her: if she be lawfull prize, down goes her topsail." Act i. Sig. B. 2. And with it we submit the following points, and ask a decision in our favor. First, That they, the said Middleton and Rowley, have furnished, in the use of the phrase “lawful prize,” in this passage, very distinct proof that they were acquainted with Admiralty law. Second, That, in the use of the other phrases, "board,” and especially "down goes her topsail," they have furnished yet stronger evidence that they had been sailors on board armed vessels, and that the trope indicates, that, had not the vessel or lady in question lowered her topsail or top-knot, she would then and there have been put mercilessly to the sword.

But what shall we think of the acumen and the judgment of a Chief Justice, a

man of letters, and a man of the world, who brings forward such passages as the following as part of the evidence bearing upon the question of Shakespeare's legal acquirements?

"Come; fear not you: good counsellors lack no clients."

Measure for Measure. Act i. Sc. 2.

"One that before the judgment carries poor souls to hell."

Comedy of Errors. Act iv. Sc. 2.

"Well, Time is the old Justice that examines all such offenders,-and let Time try."

As You Like It. Act iv. Sc. 1.

"And that old common arbitrator, Time." Troilus and Cressida. Act iv. Sc. 5. "No cock of mine; you crow too like a cra

ven."

Taming of the Shrew. Act ii. Sc. 1. "Bestial oblivion or some craven scruple." Hamlet. Act iv. Sc. 4.

By which last line, according to Lord Campbell, (p. 55,) "Shakespeare shows that he was acquainted with the law for regulating 'trials by battle'”!

But to proceed with the passages quoted in evidence:

"Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made parchment? that parchment, being scribbled o'er, should undo a man? Some say, the bee stings: but I say, 'tis the bee's wax; for I did but seal once to a thing, and I was never mine own man since."-2 Henry VI. Act vi. Sc. 2. Upon citing which, his Lordship exclaims,—

"Surely Shakespeare must have been employed to write deeds on parchment in courthand, and to apply the wax to them in the form of seals. One does not understand how he should, on any other theory of his bringingup, have been acquainted with these details"!

One does not; but we submit to the court, that, if two were to lay their heads together after the manner of Sydney Smith's vestrymen, they might bring it about.

In aid of his Lordship's further studies, we make the following suggestion. He doubtless knows that one of the earli

est among our small stock of traditions about Shakespeare is that recorded by Aubrey as being derived from Stratford authority, that his father was a butcher, and that "when he was a boy he exercised his father's trade, but when he kill'd a calfe, he wold do it in a high style, and make a speech." When his Lordship considers this old tradition in connection with the following passage in one of Shakespeare's earliest plays,

"Who finds the heifer dead and bleeding fresh,

And sees fast by a butcher with an axe, But will suspect 'twas he that made the slaughter,"

2 Henry VI. Act iii. Sc. 2. how can he resist the conclusion, that, although the divine Williams may not have run with "Forty," it is highly probable that he did kill for Keyser? Let his Lordship also remember that other old tradition, mentioned by Rowe, that John Shakespeare was "a considerable dealer in wool," and that William, upon leaving school, "seems to have given entirely into that way of living which his father proposed to him "; and remember, also, this passage from another of Shakespeare's earliest plays:

"He is too picked, too spruce, too affected, too odd, as it were, too peregrinate, as I may call it. . . . He draweth out the thread of his verbosity finer than the staple of his argu

....

ment."-Love's Labor's Lost. Act v. Sc. 1.

Is there not a goodly part of the woolstapler's craft, as well as of the art of rhetoric, compressed into that one sentence by the hydraulic power of Shakespeare's genius? Does it not show that he was initiated in the mysteries of long and short staple before he wrote this, perhaps, his earliest play? But look again at the following passage, also written when his memory of his boyish days was freshest, and see the evidence that both these traditions were well founded:

"So, first, the harmless sheep doth yield his

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able dealer in wool, and a butcher who killed a calf in high style and made a speech? Who can have a doubt about this matter, when he appreciates rightly the following passage in "Hamlet," (Act v. Sc. 2,) and is penetrated with the wisdom of two wise commentators upon it ?"Our indiscretion sometimes serves us well, When our deep plots do pall; and that

should teach us

There's a divinity that shapes our ends,
Rough-hew them how we will.'

Dr. Farmer informs me that these words are merely technical. A wool-man, butcher, and dealer in skewers lately observed to him that his nephew (an idle lad) could only assist him in making them; - he could rough hew them, but I was obliged to shape their ends! To shape the ends of wool-skewers, i. e., to point them, requires a degree of skill; any one can rough-hew them. Whoever recollects the profession of Shakespeare's father will admit that his son might be no stranger to such terms. I have frequently seen packages of wool pinn'd up with skewers."-STEEVENS.

Lucky wool-man, butcher, and dealer in skewers! to furnish at once a comment upon the great philosophical tragedy and a proof that its author and you were both of a trade! Fortunate Farmer, to have heard the story! and most sagacious Steevens, to have penetrated its hidden meaning, recollecting felicitously that you had seen packages of wool pinn'd up with skewers! But, O wisest, highest-and-deepest-minded Shakespeare, to have remembered, as you were propounding, Hamlet-wise, one of the great unsolvable mysteries of life, the skewers that you, being an idle lad, could but rough-hew, leaving to your careful father the skill-requiring task to shape their ends!-ends without which they could not have bound together the packages of wool with which you loaded the carts that backed up to the door in Henley Street, or have penetrated the veal of the calves that you killed in such a high style and with so much eloquence, and which loaded the tray that you daily bore on your shoulder to the kitchendoor of New Place, yet unsuspecting that you were to become its master!

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