AMONG THE ELIZABETHAN and Jacobean manuscripts gathered by Sir Robert
Cotton, the antiquary, were private papers of Sir George Buck who served
in the office of the Revels during the last decade of Elizabeth. In
1606 Buck succeeded Edmund Tylney, his uncle, as Master of the Revels,
keeping this place until a short time before his death in 1622.
Through the Stationers' Company, Buck or his deputy licensed five of
the Shakespeare plays for publication, but all of the records of the
Revels Office relating to play production during Buck's administration
have disappeared entirely.
In 1731, when the Cotton Library and manuscript collection was at Ashburnham
House, London, it was seriously damaged by fire. Among the manuscripts
salvaged were some in Buck's handwriting. One page consists of rough
notes in which the Master of the Revels endeavors to sum up his personal
impressions of the poetical Earl of Oxford. About one-fourth of the
writing on this sheet has been charred away. The sentences and words
still legible are most interesting, however, and serve to deepen the
regret of students of Lord Oxford's career that Buck was not able to
leave us a more complete commentary on the strange genius whose familiar
acquaintance he says had been vouchsafed me. As the official
authority on the drama of his time, every comment now identifiable as
from Buck's pen on playwrights of his day would be of unusual value
to historians. But it is now apparent that Oxford is the only Elizabethan
playwright of record whose personality this Master of the Revels sought
to explain and defend in surviving memoranda.
It will be observed, moreover, that Buck weighs every word he sets
down here with extreme care, adds and rejects words and phrases, leaves
unfinished a name dangerous to many, records another beginning with
a capital W which the fire erases, and in general struggles hard
to explain (without too much revealing) the one great poet-playwright
of the era whose loss of property and political prestige has always
been shrouded in mystery.
That Buck, who was himself a poet and historian of mark, feels an intense
admiration for the man Edward de Vere which outweighs his pity for the
ruined nobleman, is apparent. His partially destroyed commentary was
first reproduced sixteen years ago in Thomas Lodge and Other Elizabethans
by C. J. Sisson and Mark Eccles. In the chapter headed "Sir George
Buc and the Office of the King's Revels," Dr. Eccles reproduces
a good photoengraving of the manuscript, which is now owned by the British
Museum. His printed transcription of the Oxford commentary, however,
consists of little more than half of Buck's lines. These appear in such
typographical clutter as to confuse much of their sense.
In compiling the present transcription with the assistance of specialists
in Elizabethan chirography at the New York Public Library, we have adopted
a simplified system in rendering the Buck notes into type. Thus, each
group of triple dots signifies a charred portion of the script. Words
partially destroyed are contiguous to these dots. Where Buck has crossed
out a word or a phrase in favor of another, we designate the rejected
characters in a rounded bracket immediately following. Words or letters
obviously required to complete sense are also given in rounded brackets.
The elongated brackets represent Buck's own enclosures.
Near the top and center of this partially burned sheet, the numeral
3 appears, indicating that the Master of the Revels had written at least
two other pages of commentary on the great and unfortunate Elizabethan
poet nobleman. These were undoubtedly entirely consumed in the fire
of 1731. Our transcription runs as follows:
.
. . 3.
. . . fully begotten by himselfe in much . . .
. . . lases tyme that great & stately . . .
. . . the opulent & friendly patro(n) . . .
. . . and was very (struck out but restored) sodenly
. . .
. . . consumed [como sal en agua . . .
. . . say in the Refran] but not by the fault . . .
. . . lord Harys (Howard's) but rather by the sale of the
. . . dmaur. (word contracted) for certainly the erl was
a
. . . magnificent & a very (s.o.b.r.) learned &
religious . . .
& so worthy in every way, as I haue heard some graue &
. . .
(d)iscret & honorable persons [who knew the erl from his y(outh)
. . .
& could very well iudge of the hopefullness & . . .
tow(ard) lynes of young men] say & affirme he was much
more like(ly) . . .
to raise & acquire a new erldome then to dis (s.o.) . .
.
decay & loose an old erldome. yet this erldome was * * *
(Buck's own dots after erldome was, witness his disinclination to record
the grim facts of Oxford's financial insolvency.)
. . . in a word he was a . . .
in deed as in name - - - Vere nobilis for he was W . . .
(In the charred right-hand margin, interlined below the missing word
beginning with W, appears the rounded remnant of another capitalized
letter which may have stood for S. It therefore seems quite possible
that the now partially destroyed line above may originally have read:
in deed as In name. - - - Vere nobilis for he was William Shakespeare.
One thing at least is certain. No authority in England would then be
more likely to appreciate the "noble Truth" of Oxford's creative
deeds as "'William Shakespeare" than Master of the Revels
Buck. His script continues:)
& truly noble,& a most noble Vere (note pun.) I
spea(k) . . .
. . . what I know, for he vouchsafed me his familiar ac(quaintance)
. . .
(A variant interlineation after know reads: haueing had the
honour of, etc.)
It seems strange that Dr. Eccles does not include a transcription of
the last line of this manuscript in his printed version, for in the
light of Buck's foregoing efforts to explain how the earldom under Oxford
suffered notable loss of property and prestige, these nine words are
of surpassing significance:
And whereas I and all that overthrew a Stately.
Although the sentence begins with a capital A and is unfinishedproving
the continuance of Buck's apology for the poet Earl on succeeding pages,
now hopelessly lostthe personal element in the thought carries
on from Buck's statement that he was on terms of familiar acquaintance
with Oxford. Also, the word Stately, meaning noble or
grand, is obviously a reference to the same earldom of Oxford
which Buck likewise designates in the second line of his script. Yet
does this make sense? How could Buck himself be associated with persons
or circumstances responsible for Lord Oxford's overthrow as a
great aristocrat?
The answer is, Buck had been one of a group of Elizabethan writers
and dramatists to whose support Oxford had contributed with lavish generosity
until his financial break-up, about 1585. In the third and fourth lines
here, Buck refers to the disasters that very sodenly overcame
this opulent & friendly patron. As early as 1582 we find
Buck's name on the first sonnet of commendation printed in Thomas Watson's
Passionate Century of Love. This collection of poems, frequently
mentioned as a forerunner of Shakespeare's Sonnets, is dedicated
to Oxford, who unquestionably paid for its publication. Watson intimates
that the Earl helped edit the volume. Two famous dramatists, John Lyly
and George Peele, also contributed commendatory verses, together with
Matthew Royden, Thomas Acheley, and C. Downhalus. As it is now known
from excellent testimony that Watson was a prolific writer for the stage,
while Oxford's dramatic genius is featured by Meres, we thus find George
Buck's name early in life associated on the one hand with that of the
playwright Earl, and on the other with a representative group of Oxford's
proteges. A veritable regiment of these sought and obtained Oxford's
patronage during his years of prosperity, including many eminent scholars,
and dramatists and poets such as Churchyard, Lyly, Munday, Greene, Nash,
Watson, Marlowe, Kyd and Spenser; not to mention composers such as Byrd
and Farmer, theatrical managers such as Hunnis and Evans, together with
various troupes of the most talented actors of the period. In fact,
the Earl's generosity to creative workers is definitely known to have
outrun his means, though it hardly deserves the obtuse sneer which Lee
accords it in the Dict. Nat. Biog. when he says: "Oxford
had squandered some part of his fortune upon men of letters whose bohemian
mode of life attracted him."
Here we find Sir George Buck, Shakespearean Master of the Revels, sadly
recording the Earl's waste of money, but in a truly Noble cause,
and for reasons wherein Buck holds himself partly responsible. Their
mutual connection with the drama would account for this. Finally, it
should be noted that, beginning with the phrase in a word he was
a . . . ,Sir George has criss-crossed out every line of his script
to the bottom of the page. Despite this, all uncharred words are fairly
legible. Buck evidently decided that he had told too much about the
playwright nobleman whose strange career stirred him to conscience-smitten
admiration.
Gwynneth Bowen's continuation
of this research.