CONTENTS

CHAPTER I
[AN OUTLINE OF SHAKESPEARE'S LIFE]PAGE
1

CHAPTER II
[ENGLISH DRAMA BEFORE SHAKESPEARE ]20

CHAPTER III
[THE ELIZABETHAN THEATER] 35

CHAPTER IV
[ELIZABETHAN LONDON]51

CHAPTER V
[SHAKESPEARE'S NONDRAMATIC WORKS ] 60

CHAPTER VI
[THE SEQUENCE OF SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS]73

CHAPTER VII
[SHAKESPEARE'S DEVELOPMENT AS A DRAMATIST]85

CHAPTER VIII
[THE CHIEF SOURCES OF SHAKESPEARE'S PLAYS]105


CHAPTER IX
[HOW SHAKESPEARE GOT INTO PRINT]113

CHAPTER X
[THE PLAYS OF THE FIRST PERIOD--IMITATION AND EXPERIMENT]131

CHAPTER XI
[THE PLAYS OF THE SECOND PERIOD--COMEDY AND HISTORY]153

CHAPTER XII
[THE PLAYS OF THE THIRD PERIOD--TRAGEDY]172

CHAPTER XIII
[THE PLAYS OF THE FOURTH PERIOD--ROMANCE]196

CHAPTER XIV
[SOME FAMOUS MISTAKES AND DELUSIONS ABOUT SHAKESPEARE]210

AN INTRODUCTION TO SHAKESPEARE

CHAPTER I

AN OUTLINE OF SHAKESPEARE'S LIFE

Our Knowledge of Shakespeare.—No one in Shakespeare's day seems to have been interested in learning about the private lives of the dramatists. The profession of play writing had scarcely begun to be distinguished from that of play acting, and the times were not wholly gone by when all actors had been classed in public estimation as vagabonds. While the London citizens were constant theatergoers, and immensely proud of their fine plays, they were content to learn of the writers of plays merely from town gossip, which passed from lip to lip and found no resting place in memoirs. There were other lives which made far more exciting reading. English sea-men were penetrating every ocean, and bringing back wonderful tales. English soldiers were aiding the Dutch nation towards freedom, and coming back full of stories of heroic deeds. At home great political, religious, and scientific movements engaged the attention of the more serious readers and thinkers. It is not strange, therefore, that the writers of plays, whose most exciting incidents were tavern brawls or imprisonment for rash satire of the government, found no biographer. After Shakespeare's death, moreover, the theater rapidly fell into disrepute, and many a good story of the playhouse fell under the ban of polite conversation, and was lost.