It would have been impossible, completely and entirely, for any woman
to have written the plays of Shakespeare in the age of Shakespeare.
Let me imagine, since facts are so hard to come by, what would have
happened had Shakespeare had a wonderfully gifted sister, called Judith,
let us say. Shakespeare himself went, very probably—his mother was an
heiress—to the grammar school, where he may have learnt Latin—Ovid,
Virgil and Horace—and the elements of grammar and logic. He was, it
is well known, a wild boy who poached rabbits, perhaps shot a deer,
and had, rather sooner than he should have done, to marry a woman in
the neighbourhood, who bore him a child rather quicker than was right.
That escapade sent him to seek his fortune in London. He had, it seemed,
a taste for the theatre; he began by holding horses at the stage door.
Very soon he got work in the theatre, became a successful actor, and
lived at the hub of the universe, meeting everybody, knowing everybody,
practising his art on the boards, exercising his wits in the streets,
and even getting access to the palace of the queen. Meanwhile his extraordinarily
gifted sister, let us suppose, remained at home. She was as adventurous,
as imaginative, as agog to see the world as he was. But she was not
sent to school. She had no chance of learning grammar and logic, let
alone of reading Horace and Virgil. She picked up a book now and then,
one of her brother's perhaps, and read a few pages. But then her parents
came in and told her to mend the stockings or mind the stew and not
moon about with books and papers. They would have spoken sharply but
kindly, for they were substantial people who knew the conditions of
life for a woman and loved their daughter—indeed, more likely than not
she was the apple of her father's eye. Perhaps she scribbled some pages
up in an apple loft on the sly, but was careful to hide them or set
fire to them. Soon, however, before she was out of her teens, she was
to be betrothed to the son of a neighbouring woolstapler. She cried
out that marriage was hateful to her, and for that she was severely
beaten by her father. Then he ceased to scold her. He begged her instead
not to hurt him, not to shame him in this matter of her marriage. He
would give her a chain of beads or a fine petticoat, he said; and there
were tears in his eyes. How could she disobey him? How could she break
his heart? The force of her own gift alone drove her to it. She made
up a small parcel of her belongings, let herself down by a rope one
summer's night and took the road to London. She was not seventeen. The
birds that sang in the hedge were not more musical than she was. She
had the quickest fancy, a gift like her brother's, for the tune of words.
Like him, she had a taste for the theatre. She stood at the stage door;
she wanted to act, she said. Men laughed in her face. The manager —
a fat, loose-lipped man—guffawed. He bellowed something about poodles
dancing and women acting—no woman, he said, could possibly be an actress.
He hinted — you can imagine what. She could get no training in her craft.
Could she even seek her dinner in a tavern or roam the streets at midnight?
Yet her genius was for fiction and lusted to feed abundantly upon the
lives of men and women and the study of their ways. At last—for she
was very young, oddly like Shakespeare the poet in her face, with the
same grey eyes and rounded brows—at last Nick Greene the actor-manager
took pity on her; she found herself with child by that gentleman and
so—who shall measure the heat and violence of the poet's heart when
caught and tangled in a woman's body?—killed herself one winter's night
and lies buried at some cross-roads where the omnibuses now stop outside
the Elephant and Castle.
That, more or less, is how the story would run, I think, if a woman
in Shakespeare's day had had Shakespeare's genius.