The Shakespeare Mask: A Novel
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About this ebook
The award-winning novel THE SHAKESPEARE MASK fictionalizes a more likely authorship. It tells the fascinating story of a precocious young nobleman who draws the attention of the Elizabethan court and of the Virgin Queen herself. A writer and patron of the arts, Edward de Vere is volatile, controversial, and brilliant. He leaves a trail of women and scandal in his wake. But his plays, when he’s in the queen’s good graces, charm the court. His sonnets turn feelings into sound.
The rules of the court, however, say a nobleman may not publish. An earl’s name is too sacred for the theater. If de Vere must write, he must do so anonymously. He must employ an almost-illiterate glove-maker from Stratford as his “mask,” a man we know today as Shakespeare.
Newton Frohlich spent fifteen years researching the true identity of the poet and playwright who penned the most beloved works of the English language. The result is this ingenious and intimate portrayal of the complex man who a growing number of prominent scholars, writers, and actors believe wrote the works of Shakespeare.
Edward de Vere’s astonishing life, starting with his father’s murder when Edward is a young boy to his close but difficult relationship with Queen Elizabeth to his compulsion to write plays as he travels in Europe, is portrayed here with all the skill and drama Newton Frohlich brought to his highly praised first novel, 1492: The World of Christopher Columbus. From the intrigue of the English court to the romance of Venetian canals, the magic and mystery of THE SHAKESPEARE MASK will keep you turning pages well into the night.
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The Shakespeare Mask - Newton Frohlich
1589
Preface to the Second Edition
His father owned more land in England than any other nobleman, and his title was the oldest and most venerated. Yet his father sent him away to live with a tutor because he feared for his son’s life as well as his own.
The fears were well founded. When the boy was twelve, his father was murdered and he was forced to move again—this time to the mansion of Queen Elizabeth’s prime minister, where he became a brilliant student, learned to be a courtier, and was compelled to marry the prime minister’s daughter.
After graduating from Oxford and Cambridge, this promising young nobleman began writing plays about England’s kings. But to him, Italy was the center of playwriting, and he was determined to live there. En route to Italy, the happy earl drafted two comedies. When he arrived in Venice and met merchants and Jews, he started a play about them. In Verona he drafted two more plays, one about two gentlemen, the other about two ill-starred young lovers from warring families. In Mantua he studied playwriting and fell in love with a courtesan. Together they traveled to Sicily, where he had difficulty coming up with a title for the play he was writing there. He ended up calling it Much Ado about Nothing.
On the way back to Venice, his boat was caught in a tempest. He and his companions found refuge on a strange island that inspired another play. Then on to Rome, which gave rise to plays about Roman generals, and to Padua, where he wrote a comedy about a wife who was a shrew.
When he returned to England, the queen arranged for his plays to be presented in the palace. He acquired acting companies so that his plays could also be produced for the public. But always he wrote anonymously. As the premier nobleman of England, it would have been considered improper for him to do otherwise. To further preserve his anonymity, he hired a barely literate glove-maker from Stratford who agreed to be his mask.
The mask’s name was William Shakespeare. The playwright and poet behind the mask was Edward de Vere, seventeenth Earl of Oxford. Or so I have dramatized in The Shakespeare Mask, a work of fiction.
Is there any proof that the Earl of Oxford wrote the works that have long been attributed to Shakespeare? No, but neither is there any definitive proof that Shakespeare wrote them. There is certainly a strong case to be made in favor of the earl, however.
Fifteen years ago, I was reading about the authorship of the works of Shakespeare and I discovered that the man from Stratford left nothing in writing—not a script, not a draft of a script, not a diary, not even a personal letter. The only writing we have in his hand are six signatures on his Last Will and Testament and on a mortgage. As I delved into these puzzling facts, I learned that the authorship of the works of Shakespeare had been in doubt from the moment they were attributed to a man by that name—and for good reason.
More research uncovered that the Stratford man had no schooling except possibly a few years in a one-room schoolhouse in Stratford and that he left that school when he was twelve to work for his father, who made gloves and other leather goods. Yet the plays and poems of Shakespeare are some of the most complicated and sophisticated ever written. They draw on extensive knowledge of English, Greek, and Roman history, not to mention the topography, customs, and language of Italy.
On the other hand, Edward de Vere was tutored by the leading Renaissance scholar in England, graduated from both Oxford and Cambridge, read law at the Inns of Court, and traveled throughout Europe. Not only that, but when Edward lived for over a year in Italy he made Venice his base and traveled to Padua, Verona, Mantua, Rome, and Sicily. All of those places are settings for well-known plays of Shakespeare. In addition, Hamlet, Othello, and All’s Well That Ends Well, among other plays, are largely autobiographical of Edward’s life.
Now it all made sense. One-third of the plays of Shakespeare are set in Italy: the Earl of Oxford lived there; the Stratford man did not. The Earl of Oxford had an intense and sophisticated education through books and travel: the Stratford man did not.
I traveled the routes in England, France, and Italy that the Earl of Oxford took to write his plays. I studied the social climate that required him to write anonymously. I examined his financial wherewithal to see if he had the resources to spend a lifetime writing at least thirty-seven plays, two long narrative poems, and many of the world’s most beautiful sonnets. As one of the richest men in England, he did indeed.
In doubting the identity of the man who wrote some of the greatest plays and poems in the English language, I am in good company. Mark Twain, Charles Dickens, Herman Melville, Henry James, Royal Shakespeare Company actors (including Sir John Gielgud), a British prime minister, five United States Supreme Court justices, and thousands of others have had doubts about Will. In fact, most people who have studied the subject and who do not assume that the Stratford man was Shakespeare have concluded that the author of this astounding corpus of work was Edward de Vere, the seventeenth Earl of Oxford.
Although much has been written about who the real author of Shakespeare’s works might be from a scholarly perspective, I felt compelled to tell this story as a novel. I wanted to describe and bring alive the intriguing intersection of the life of the Earl of Oxford and the works attributed to Shakespeare
in the context of those enthralling Elizabethan times. The result is The Shakespeare Mask.
As I conducted my research, I came to know a brilliant, unpredictable, altogether astonishing man. Telling his story has been a great pleasure—never more so than in places where, as I have imagined it, the plays come into the historic story. I hope you will enjoy Edward de Vere as much as I have. Perhaps at last the Earl of Oxford will have justice. In the sixteenth century his authorship had to be anonymous, but in the twenty-first century it need not be.
Newton Frohlich
Time is like a fashionable host
That slightly shakes his parting guest
by th’ hand,
And with his arms outstretched
as he would fly,
Grasps in the comer.
Shakespeare
Troilus and Cressida
On a cold December night in 1554, John de Vere, the sixteenth Earl of Oxford, steered his wife through the crowded courtyard of Hedingham Castle. Grown men knelt to kiss his hand, women curtsied and held out small gifts as he made his way toward the keep.
Earl John!
a farmer called out. Please, save us!
All will be well,
Earl John said. All will be well.
He glanced back toward the gate. Hundreds more were camped out there, a count he based on the campfires scattered across the surrounding hills.
Someone jostled him. He whipped around as his hand flew to his sword. But it was just another farmer.
Earl John tightened his grip on Margery’s arm and kept walking.
A pig roasting in the courtyard bonfire reminded him of last week’s hunt. He’d spent the whole day teaching his four-year-old son to hold a bow and arrow. That night a wild boar had invaded his camp—John skewered the animal with a flimsy French rapier he found on the ground. Edward, of course, was awestruck.
Would that all his problems were so easily solved.
His biggest one had come about because of Mary, damn her. He’d supported her claim to the throne, but then she announced her intention to marry the king of Spain and force a return to Catholicism. He wouldn’t have it! Certainly not for the few parcels of land she said she’d return. He already owned more than a hundred tracts, a mansion in London, not to mention God knows how many castles, priories, and abbeys all over England.
Now the rebellion against Mary had exploded. Robin Dudley, a Protestant nobleman, had marked Earl John for assassination. He sighed and looked at the villagers standing about in their sheepskin coats, all of them looking to him for their salvation.
Mr. Christmas!
he shouted to his clerk. More food, firewood, and beer for these good folk.
Earl John waved and resumed his walk to the keep. It was up to him to preserve the Oxford name, property, and titles—a legacy that went back five hundred years. And tonight could be his last chance.
He peered up at the walls of the keep that towered eight stories high. A servant said little Edward liked to watch his father through the archers’ slits. He saw a flicker of light and smiled. Good—perhaps his son had learned another lesson about how an earl treats his people.
Once the keep’s massive wooden doors were bolted behind him, Earl John threw himself into a chair near the great hall’s trestle table and ordered three cups of warm wine. He and Margery were sipping their drinks when her stepbrother, a Cambridge don of about fifteen, joined them. Earl John waved him into the third chair.
Welcome, Arthur.
Arthur Golding kissed his stepsister, shook Earl John’s hand—the young scholar’s was clammy—and set his book on the table. Earl John picked it up: a collection of Calvin’s Protestant sermons. He tossed the book back to the table and signaled to a servant, who ladled soup into bowls for the three of them and left.
Earl John got right to the point. What did Cecil say?
Smith has agreed!
Arthur beamed. He’s said he’ll take Edward at your convenience.
Margery looked up from her soup. Take him where?
Earl John glanced at his brother-in-law. Where will they stay?
Smith lives in South Buckinghamshire,
Arthur said.
Good,
Earl John said. Not a Dudley for miles.
Margery’s eyes moved from her husband to her stepbrother and back. Milord, please,
she said. What’s going on?
Earl John inspected his soup as if he’d just discovered barley. After a long moment, he looked up to his wife. We must move Edward to a safer place, so I asked your stepbrother to make inquiries about his staying in the home of Sir Thomas Smith.
But he’s only four—
He’ll be five in a few weeks. Did we not decide to employ a tutor when he turned seven? What’s two years?
But—
Earl John slammed his fist on the table. When I want your opinion I’ll ask for it. Until then, be silent.
He turned to Arthur. What other news?
"The queen’s burning Protestants again. She’s even exhuming dead bodies and adding their bones to the fire. They also say she imprisoned Lady Elizabeth."
Arthur, are you sure Smith’s suitable for Edward?
Sir Thomas Smith has not only mastered law, history and Greek and Roman literature, he speaks Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Spanish, Italian, and French. At twenty-seven, he held the first chair in civil law at Cambridge. They made him vice chancellor when he was thirty, and he was so successful at it that they made him master of requests for King Edward’s protector.
King Edward’s protector was a thief.
But he bought Smith a mansion, which cost four hundred pounds. They say it overlooks the Thames and has a splendid view of Windsor Castle. On a clear day you can see St. Paul’s.
If Smith’s so smart, why’s he tutoring a five-year-old?
"He is smart. He’s not terribly … diplomatic."
Earl John snorted.
Queen Mary said she was forced to fire him,
Arthur said. Though still she gave him a pension.
How much?
Ten pounds a year.
That’s nothing,
Earl John said. You said Edward was too young for a Latin tutor, but he needs male company, so I’m sending Fowle as well.
Margery half-rose from her seat. My lord—
"Margery, sit."
She sat.
Didn’t I tell you to keep quiet?
She slumped in her chair. Arthur patted her hand.
I can’t wait to see Smith’s library,
he said. "He has four hundred books, forty or fifty in English and the rest in Greek and Latin. History, philosophy, drama, rhetoric. He invented a new way to pronounce Greek and he’s also a wordsmith. They say he’s determined that England shall have a language everyone can speak."
If he makes a scene, he’ll call attention to Edward.
Earl John, he’s just the man to direct the education of the future Earl of Oxford. And Sir Thomas is not only a brilliant scholar, he’s close to Cecil as well—the man who’ll govern England once Lady Elizabeth is queen.
Earl John smiled.
"My Edward is a remarkable boy. Last week, he memorized all the letters of the alphabet. This week he memorized the numbers. He put down his spoon.
I’ll summon Lewyn."
Arthur sat back. Who?
"Servant of mine. Flemish fellow. Edward took a liking to him, so I made him his companion. Christian name’s William—well, not exactly Christian, I suppose. Lewyn’s a Jew. Must be a hundred of them in London now, even if it is against the law."
Earl John called to a servant. Bring in Lewyn.
He turned back to Arthur. I want Edward to speak French, Italian, Spanish, German, and Dutch in addition to Greek and Latin. With all the talk about routes to the Orient, languages are England’s future. I also want him to speak proper English, not some bloody backwater dialect.
He turned to Margery. Lewyn will escort Edward under strict orders not to let the boy out of his sight. He’ll sleep at the foot of his bed, taste his food, watch him like a hawk.
She bit her lip and nodded.
Earl John,
Arthur said, may I accompany Edward as well? I’d like to meet Smith.
Fine, but no one else. I don’t want a crowd drawing attention to him. If someone kidnapped Edward …
Margery looked up. No guards?
Arthur will take a sword—that is, if he knows how to use one—and Lewyn will carry a pistol. Arthur, I want you to dress in the clothes of a peasant. Edward, Lewyn, and Fowle, too.
I love disguises,
Arthur said.
What’s the name of Smith’s estate?
Margery asked.
Ankerwycke.
Does he have a wife?
He does.
Again, Arthur patted his stepsister’s hand. Why don’t you write her a letter? I’ll take it with me.
He turned to Earl John. Cecil says his wife brought good property to the marriage, a place he’s renovating not far from here. Smith intends to move in as soon as Elizabeth’s queen.
Margery looked hopeful, but Earl John shook his head.
I don’t want Edward living in Essex till Bloody Mary’s off the throne. Safer that way.
A tall man of about eighteen with dark brown hair falling over his forehead stepped into the hall.
Here’s Lewyn.
Earl John watched William Lewyn stride toward the trestle table.
God’s blood, I like that boy. Nothing intimidates him, not even me.
He took a sip of wine and squeezed Arthur’s shoulder. You know, I haven’t thanked you enough for your efforts. I think Edward and Smith will get along just fine.
Earl John, you don’t have to thank me. Arranging the education of someone as brilliant as Edward is a privilege.
O wonderful, wonderful,
And most wonderful
Wonderful, and yet again
Wonderful, and after that,
Out of all hoping!
Shakespeare
As You Like It
On a cold January morning, five-year-old Edward rode toward Ankerwycke, the twenty-room brick manor house surrounded by acres of pastureland and woods owned by Sir Thomas Smith. Edward sat in the saddle in front of William Lewyn. His legs too short to reach the stirrups, he leaned against Lewyn’s wiry frame to keep his balance.
My boy,
Arthur said, riding to his left, Sir Thomas is a self-made man, something you’ve not experienced before.
What’s a self-made man?
His father was a farmer. Sir Thomas left home when he was twelve, went to Cambridge on a scholarship, took a first in everything, went to Italy, studied at the University of Padua, and when he returned he was placed in charge of Eton, the high school for young men like you. At court, people noticed him.
Thomas Fowle nudged his horse closer. Edward liked his redheaded Latin tutor, a good teacher who smiled a lot.
Understand all that, Edward?
Most of it.
Fowle laughed. You don’t miss much, do you?
"I like stories."
Arthur touched Edward’s shoulder. He can’t pronounce the words correctly until he’s heard them spoken, but he always knows the meaning.
Edward ran his fingers through his curly brown hair and straightened in the saddle. Ahead, Ankerwycke’s gate was open. Earl John always said every gate must be locked.
Arthur raised his hand and the three horsemen halted.
My boy, before you stands your home for the next few years. That river sparkling in the sun is the Thames. Across the water is Windsor, the only palace with a heating system worth the name. And downriver are the spires of St. Paul’s Cathedral. When Bloody Mary no longer tortures our land, we’ll visit London.
Promise?
Arthur smiled. Promise.
By the time they crossed the last field, it was midday. An elderly servant who’d been taking in the sun in front of the house led them inside to a long wooden stairway. Halfway up, he stopped and turned to face Edward, who saw he was missing some teeth.
My lord, your room’s next to the one occupied by Sir Thomas’s father. He’s dying, so keep your voice down. A man about to meet his maker needs quiet.
Yes, sir.
Edward quickened his pace as they passed that room. He’d seen animals die but never a person. He turned and looked for Arthur, but neither he nor Fowle were in sight. Lewyn squeezed his shoulder.
Your uncle and Fowle are sleeping at the other end of the hall.
Edward followed the servant to his room. Lewyn unpacked his bag—which didn’t take long—and handed him fresh clothes. He was washing his face when Fowle came in.
Sir Thomas is in his laboratory, distilling medicines.
Lewyn winked, bowed, and swept the door open. He took Edward’s hand, and together they followed Fowle to Sir Thomas’s library.
They found Arthur already there.
Look, my boy! Look!
Bookcases packed with leather-bound tomes lined the walls, floor to ceiling.
Edward smiled. Upstairs he’d felt homesick but kept it to himself—Earl John said boys don’t cry. This, though—this was a wonderful place. There must be a thousand stories here. And he was getting pretty good at learning to read on his own. Last night, Aesop’s Fables.
This collection is the largest I’ve seen outside of Oxbridge,
Arthur said.
Edward looked around the room. Bookshelves were everywhere, even over the doorways and beneath the windows, and framed maps hung in the few places where there weren’t any. An oak desk and a tall red leather armchair were by the window, a round table covered in books in the center of the room.
Beneath the table, on a red Turkish carpet, he spied a tabby cat and a flop-eared spaniel snuggled close as kittens. Eyes wide, the animals stared at him. He stared back. Maybe they could be his friends.
"Fasti. Arthur took a red leather book from a shelf and pointed to the gold letters on the binding.
It was written by Ovid—you’re going to love Ovid. He replaced the book and wandered along the shelves, Edward’s hand still in his.
Plautus, Juvenal, Horace, Lucretius, Cicero, Saint Augustine … you’ll love them all. Arthur’s voice rose with excitement as he pointed to book after book.
Caesar, Chaucer, Homer, Josephus, Heliodorus, Livy, Plutarch, Seneca, Virgil, Apuleius, Castiglione! He stopped.
I take it back. You’re not going to love them, you’re going to need them."
Fowle inspected the shelves on the other side of the room.
He’s got books on everything from philosophy and history to astronomy and astrology … angling, poetry, Welsh and Danish customs.
Arthur resumed his stroll along the shelves, Edward by his side.
My boy, our work’s cut out for us. Most of these books are in Greek and Latin, the rest in French and Italian. Few books are translated into English. It’ll take years to—
Arthur, the printing press is only a hundred years old,
Fowle said. Give us time.
I know, but in the meantime this young man will soak up languages like a sponge! Then he can read each work in its original language.
It’ll be fun,
Edward said. Lewyn smiled, and Edward smiled back.
Fowle reached for a book. Here’s Aesop’s Fables. You were reading that last night.
I liked it a lot,
Edward said.
Arthur laughed. When I was five it was my favorite, too.
Edward’s gaze moved from shelf to shelf. At Hedingham, Earl John had taught him to ride and hunt and then promised to teach him how to fence and use a spear so he could compete in the tournaments. But Edward had never seen his father read a book. By the time you’re twenty-one,
Earl John had said, you’ll know everything you need to take your place in Parliament, manage our properties, and read law at the Inns of Court.
He’d never mentioned this—all these stories, all these subjects, all these languages. Edward ran a hand over one of the volumes—it felt wonderful.
Arthur plucked a book from a stack on the table and opened it. Edward moved closer and saw a portrait of a man in a suit of armor.
My boy, that’s the Duke of Urbino. This is an engraving of his portrait painted by Titian, an artist who lives in Venice.
Who was the duke?
I don’t know much about him except he was murdered. Someone poured poison in his ear.
Who?
Luigi Gonzaga.
Why?
You know, I’m not sure—but we’ll find out, won’t we?
He turned to the maps on the walls. Other maps lay in frames on the floor and leaned against bookshelves. More were rolled up and jammed into a wooden umbrella stand.
Sir Thomas knows the explorers, sailors, and mathematicians who made these maps,
he said. In Windsor, there must be a hundred paintings of things explorers brought back from their voyages—animals, birds, people. When it’s safe, Sir Thomas will take you to see them.
Safe. Earl John said Queen Mary was Catholic—just like him and his father. But his mother’s family was Protestant. He wondered if Arthur and Fowle were Protestants, too. Were they afraid? He was about to ask when a brown-bearded man with a big nose entered the room.
Sir Thomas,
Arthur said, please forgive us for intruding. Your servant instructed us to come here. I’m Arthur Golding, and this young man is my nephew, milord Edward de Vere.
Edward extended his hand.
Milord,
Sir Thomas said, I regret I was unable to greet you when you arrived. I was in bed with my wife. It’s that time of month.
He turned to the others. I’m determined to beget a son like this fine fellow. My efforts seem hopeless, but still we halek.
What’s halek?
Edward whispered to Fowle as soon as Sir Thomas walked to his desk.
Later,
Fowle said, his face red.
Sir Thomas looked over. Milord, when I was provost of Eton I developed a pedagogical technique I’m eager to try out on young nobles such as yourself.
What’s a pedagogical technique?
A teaching technique. I want you to meet people who write and think about important matters, so they’ll inspire you to write and think, too. I’ll explain more about it when it’s time for you to meet them. For now, let’s take lunch. Tomorrow we’ll begin.
And begin he did. He’d learned his numbers and he could read, but Sir Thomas taught him so much more—about the world of nature, the medicines he made in his laboratory, and all the languages Edward could imagine: French, Italian, Hebrew, Greek, Latin, English.
Sir Thomas also encouraged him to write. Edward liked the stories he was learning in Italian, so he made up one about an Italian girl and a boy his age. They liked each other, but one family was Protestant and the other Catholic, so their families were sworn enemies.
It’s hard for someone your age to write about love,
Sir Thomas said. It might go easier if you model your characters after people you know.
Writing distracted Edward from thoughts of home and his father. On the ride from Hedingham, he hadn’t been able to imagine life without him—Earl John was everywhere, even in his dreams. But Sir Thomas gave him new dreams, and little by little he was getting used to life at Ankerwycke. Still, he couldn’t wait to visit Hedingham and tell Earl John everything he was learning.
"Edward, your first guest is about to arrive, Sir Thomas told him one morning when he was reading in the library.
Listen carefully and answer all his questions. Mr. Digges is a mathematician. If he likes you, he’ll bring his grandson the next time he comes here."
The meeting must have gone well, because Mr. Digges returned the next day with his grandson, whom he called Junior. He was five years older than Edward, who was now eight, but they became friends—a rare experience for Edward. On the few occasions when a boy from some neighboring village had visited Hedingham, he’d always called Edward milord.
Junior didn’t—he said Sir Thomas had told him not to.
"Edward, do you know how