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13 - Schoolfriend, publisher and printer Richard Field

from Part II - Friends and Neighbours

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 November 2015

Carol Chillington Rutter
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
Paul Edmondson
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
Stanley Wells
Affiliation:
The Shakespeare Birthplace Trust
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Summary

1

Near the beginning of The Two Gentlemen of Verona, a couple of elders consider a son's future. It's recently been observed that ‘Home-keeping youth have ever homely wits’ (1.1.2). Now, having heard ‘sad talk’ from Antonio's brother on the subject of his nephew, Proteus, the servant Panthino reports to this master what he's heard:

He wondered that your lordship

Would suffer [Proteus] to spend his youth at home

While other men, of slender reputation,

Put forth their sons to seek preferment out –

Some to the wars to try their fortune there;

Some to discover islands far away;

Some to the studious universities;

For any or for all these exercises

He said that Proteus your son was meet.

(1.3.4–12)

The uncle's complaint is that ‘living dully … at home’ doesn't just ‘sluggardize’ (1.1.7) a young man's ‘wits’; it stores up ‘great impeachment to his age / In having known no travel in his youth’ (1.3.15–16).

This conversation, or a version of it, must have been the constant chatter up and down England in Shakespeare's youth, as fathers, not only ‘elites’ (like Antonio) but tradesmen, like John Shakespeare, aimed to secure employment for their sons to set them up for life. Given his evident ambitions for his son, it was surely a conversation Henry Field, a man of very ‘slender reputation’, had, and perhaps with John Shakespeare. They were near enough neighbours in the market town of Stratford-upon-Avon, the Shakespeares living at the Rother Market end of Henley Street, the Fields, down towards the river along Bridge Street; their houses three minutes walk from each other. They worked in parallel trades, Field a tanner, employed in the heavy leather industry that dealt in cattle hides, an insalubrious process that required hides to be soaked in an infusion of bird droppings and dog dung or stale beer and urine then layered and steeped in a pit for a year in an oak bark solution, while Shakespeare was employed at the lighter end of the trade, a whittawer. Tawing sheep and goat hides with alum and oil, he was preparing skins for use in his main business, the highly skilled craft of glove making (Cherry 1991, p. 295).

Type
Chapter
Information
The Shakespeare Circle
An Alternative Biography
, pp. 161 - 173
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2015

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References

Arber, Edward (ed.) 1875, 1876, 1894. A Transcript of the Registers of the Company of Stationers of London 1554–1640. Vols. i, ii, iii, iv, v. Privately printed. BirminghamGoogle Scholar
Bloy, C. H. 1967. A History of Printing Ink Balls and Rollers 1440–1850. London. E. Adams and Mackay LtdGoogle Scholar
Cherry, John 1991. ‘Leather’ in Blair, John and Ramsay, Nigel (eds.), English Medieval Industries. London. A. & C. BlackGoogle Scholar
Donno, Elizabeth Story (ed.) 1962. Sir John Harington's A New Discourse of a Stale Subject called the Metamorphosis of Ajax. London. Routledge and Kegan PaulGoogle Scholar
Fripp, Edgar I. 1938. Shakespeare Man and Artist. 2 vols. Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Gaskell, Philip 1972. A New Introduction to Bibliography. Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Greer, Germaine 2008. Shakespeare's Wife. London. BloomsburyGoogle Scholar
Hunter, G. K. 1994. ‘Rhetoric in Use’ in Mack, Peter (ed.), Renaissance Rhetoric. Basingstoke. MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Kirwood, A. E. M. 1931. ‘Richard Field, Printer, 1589–1624’, The Library Fourth Series, 12.1: 1–39Google Scholar
Laoutaris, Chris 2014. Shakespeare and the Countess: The Battle That Gave Birth to the Globe. London. Fig TreeGoogle Scholar
Miola, Robert 2000. Shakespeare's Reading. Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Moxon, Joseph 1958. Mechanick Exercises on the whole Art of Printing. Davis, Herbert and Carter, Harry (eds.). London. Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar

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