Authorship Coalition (SAC) felt sufficiently confident of their
ground that they took out a full-page advertisement in The
Times Literary Supplement, offering to donate £40,000 to the
Shakespeare Birthplace Trust if it could establish, in open debate, beyond
reasonable doubt, that William Shakespeare of Stratford was the author of the
Complete Works. The money was put up by an assortment of supporters,
including the actors Sir Derek Jacobi and Michael York. The Birthplace
to defend the very basis on which they are founded!” exclaims the
irrepressible Waugh,
grandson of the novelist Evelyn Waugh and honorary president of SAC.
“We are now
considering a formal complaint to the Charities Commission and appealing to
anyone who would like to join in a class action suit against the Trust for all
the money they’ve taken under false pretences. I am publicly accusing them
of that and I am waiting for my writ. Where is it?”
would go away and boil its head. The Trust has stated its case for Shakespeare
repeatedly and at length, notably in an online Authorship Campaign
(featuring a battery of orthodox scholars) and in Shakespeare Bites Back,
published as a spoiler the day before the 2011 film Anonymous
came out. Starring Rhys Ifans, Anonymous
(the poster read “Was Shakespeare a fraud?”) dramatised the “Oxfordian”
claim that Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, was the
true author of the plays. Yet no matter how much the scholastic
Shakespeare establishment insists that the doubters are fruit loops,
flat-earthers or simply snobs, who can’t bear the idea that the world’s greatest
poet was a mere grammar school boy and not a glamorous aristo,
the case against Shakespeare is as vociferous today as at any time
since it first gained credence in the mid-19th century.
code-breakers and anagram-spotters looking for clues as to the
identity of the real author, the doubters’ camp can also boast some
world-class minds down the years, including Sigmund Freud,
Mark Twain, Henry James, Charles Dickens and historian Hugh Trevor-Roper,
who found the case for reasonable doubt about the author’s
identity “overwhelming” (though it should be pointed out that
Trevor-Roper also famously believed the forged Hitler diaries were genuine).
Every time a book asserts Shakespeare was the true author, another one of
apparently equal erudition comes out saying, “Where’s the evidence?”
Shakespeare WAS Shakespeare. It didn’t do the trick with one
customer – Prince Philip. When the author asked him if he was a heretic,
the Prince is reported to have replied, “all the more so after reading
your book.” Prince Philip apparently thinks a Tudor diplomat named
Sir Henry Neville wrote at least some of the plays. But even the House
of Windsor is divided on this national debate: Prince Charles is president
of the Royal Shakespeare Company, which is in no mood to re-brand itself as The Royal Possibly-Not-Shakespeare Company. Indeed the RSC summarises without mercy on their website the doubters’ collective mental state: “ignorance; poor sense of logic; refusal, wilful or otherwise, to accept evidence; folly; the desire for publicity; and even (as in the sad case of Delia Bacon, who hoped to open Shakespeare’s grave in 1856) certifiable madness.”

