Read Shakespeare: A Life Online
Authors: Park Honan
Tags: #General, #History, #Literary Criticism, #European, #Biography & Autobiography, #Great Britain, #Literary, #English; Irish; Scottish; Welsh, #Europe, #Biography, #Historical, #Early modern; 1500-1700, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Performing Arts, #History & Criticism, #Shakespeare, #Theater, #Dramatists; English, #Stratford-upon-Avon (England)
fused the town's welfare and funds with his own. Neither was on easy,
intimate terms with Shakespeare, who treated them with caution.
Should the poet invest in Shottery land? Old Adrian sees no gain to anyone in
that,
and wishes to get him to buy a share in the town's tithes, as Sturley
tells Quiney on 24 January. That will bring needed cash to the
Corporation and help the poet too, so it is up to Quiney to persuade
Shakespeare: 'By the instructions you can give him thereof and by the
friends he can make therefore', Sturley writes, 'we think it a fair
mark for him to shoot at and not impossible to hit. It obtained would
advance him indeed and would do us much good.
Hoc movere et quantum in te est permovere ne negligas
[don't neglect to move in this and, as much as in you lies, move deeply].'
25
But, probably without seeing Shakespeare, Quiney rushed back to
Stratford. Further news in his friend's letter was alarming. The town
was in an uproar with citizens 'assembled together in great number' to
attack those forcing up grain prices. One man, who had complained to
Sir Fulke Greville, said 'he hoped within a week to lead some of them
in a halter, meaning the malsters'. A local weaver trusted 'to see
them hanged on gibbets at their own doors'.
26
If a mob attacked Quiney's barn they could take torches to New Place,
too. Shakespeare's wife and daughters were in jeopardy, and this may be
the closest analogue to his showing later, in
Coriolanus
,
an intent Roman mob ready to riot over corn.
Stratford's grain survey, a few days after Sturley's letter, may have
pacified hot heads, and it shows that excess stocks have magically
vanished from barns. In an earlier survey, Sturley was alleged to hold
twenty-six quarters of malt and Quiney thirty-two of malt, and
fortyseven quarters of barley -- all of 632 bushels. But by 4 February,
Quiney's hoard on paper has shrunk to a mere fourteen quarters of
malt, and Sturley's barn is a place of moral purity and beatitude since
his holdings have dropped to only five quarters, half as much as his
friend Shakespeare holds!"
27
Still, the populace had come close to insurrection and the poet was
alarmed, or at any rate his investment plan changed. So far as we
know, he invested not a penny at Stratford for the next four years, or
until after his father's death and well into 1602. In a time of dearth
he
-241-