Bài tập IELTS Reading - Who Wrote Shakespeare

 

Who Wrote Shakespeare?

IELTS Reading - Who Wrote Shakespeare

 

William Shakespeare is the Western world’s most famous playwright – but did he really write the plays and poems that are attributed to him?

There has been controversy over the authorship of the works of Shakespeare since the nineteenth  century. The initial impetus for this debate came from the fact that nineteenth century critics, poets  and readers were puzzled and displeased when they were presented with the few remaining scraps  of evidence about the life of “Shakspere”, as his name was most commonly spelled. The author they  admired and loved must have been scholarly and intellectual, linguistically gifted, knowledgeable  about the lifestyle of those who lived in royal courts, and he appeared to have travelled in Europe.

These critics felt that the son of a Stratford glove-maker, whose only definite recorded dealings  concerned buying property, some minor legal action over a debt, tax records, and the usual entries for birth, marriage and death, could not possibly have written poetry based on Classical models. Nor  could he have been responsible for the wide-ranging intellectually and emotionally challenging plays  for which he is so famous, because, in the nineteenth century world-view, writers inevitably called  upon their own experiences for the content of their work.

By compiling the various bits and pieces of surviving evidence, most Shakespearian scholars have  satisfied themselves that the man from Stratford is indeed the legitimate author of all the works  published under his name. A man called William Shakespeare did become a member of the Lord  Chamberlain’s Men, the dramatic company that owned the Globe and Blackfriars Theatres, and he  enjoyed exclusive rights to the publication and performance of the dramatic works. There are 23  extant contemporary documents that indicate that he was a well-known poet or playwright.  Publication and even production of plays had to be approved by government officials, who are  recorded as having met with Shakespeare to discuss authorship and licensing of some of the plays,  for example, ‘King Lear’.

However, two Elizabethans who are still strongly defended as the true Shakespeare are Christopher Marlowe and Edward de Vere, both of whom would have benefited from writing under the secrecy  of an assumed name.

Marlowe’s writing is acknowledged by all as the precursor of Shakespeare’s dramatic verse style: declamatory blank verse that lifted and ennobled the content of the plays. The records indicate that he was accused of being an atheist: denying the existence of God would have been punishable by the death penalty. He is recorded as having ‘died’ in a street fight before Shakespeare’s  greatest works were written, and therefore it is suggested that he may have continued producing literary  works while in hiding from the authorities.

De Vere was Earl of Oxford and an outstanding Classical scholar as a child. He was a strong supporter of the arts, including literature, music and acting. He is also recorded as being a playwright, although no works bearing his name still exist. However, in 16th century England it was not acceptable for an aristocrat to publish verse for ordinary people, nor to have any personal dealings with the low-class denizens of popular theatre.

To strengthen the case for their respective alternatives, literary detectives have looked for relationships between the biographies of their chosen authors and the published works of Shakespeare. However, during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, there was no tradition of basing plays on the author’s own life experiences, and therefore, the focus of this part of the debate has shifted to the sonnets. These individual poems of sixteen lines are sincerely felt reactions to emotionally charged situations such as love and death, a goldmine for the biographically inclined researcher.

The largest group of these poems express love and admiration and, interestingly, they are written to a “Mr W.H.” This person is clearly a nobleman, yet he is sometimes given forthright advice by the poet, suggesting that the writing comes from a mature father figure. How can de Vere or Marlowe be established as the author of the sonnets?

As the son of a tradesman, Marlowe had no aristocratic status; unlike Shakespeare, however, he did attend and excel at Cambridge University where he mingled with the wealthy. Any low-born artist needed a rich patron, and such is the argument for his authorship of the sonnets. The possible  recipient of these sonnets is Will Hatfield, a minor noble who was wealthy and could afford to  contribute to the arts; this young man’s friendship would have assisted a budding poet and  playwright. Marlowe’s defenders contend that expressions of love between men were common at  this time and had none of the homosexual connotations that Westerners of the twenty-first century may ascribe to them.

The Earl of Oxford had no need of a wealthy patron. The object of De Vere’s sonnets, it is suggested,  is Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, whose name only fits the situation if one accepts that it is not uncommon to reverse the first and surnames on formal occasions. De Vere was a rash and careless man and, because of his foolish behaviour, he fell out of favour with Queen Elizabeth herself. He needed, not an artistic patron, but someone like Henry to put in a good word for him in the complex world of the royal court. This, coupled with a genuine affection for the young man, may have inspired the continuing creation of poems addressed to him. Some even postulate that the mix of love and stern advice may stem from the fact that Henry was de Vere’s illegitimate son, though there is no convincing evidence of this fact.

 

Questions 27-29

Choose THREE letters A – G

Write the correct letters A – G, in boxes 27–29 on your answer sheet.

Which THREE of the following are given as reasons for the arguments that someone else wrote Shakespeare’s works?

A    Shakespeare did not come from Stratford.

B    We have little information about Shakespeare’s life.

C    We know that Shakespeare did not go overseas.

D    Shakespeare went to prison for owing money.

E    Shakespeare spoke only the English language.

F    Shakespeare’s life appears to have been limited.

G   The plays suggest that the writer was familiar with a high-class lifestyle.

 

Questions 30–35

Complete the table below.

Choose NO MORE THAN TWO WORDS from the passage for each answer.

Write your answers in boxes 30–35 on your answer sheet

Evidence for Different Authors

Shakespeare

He was an actor.

He had 30……………….. for printing and putting on the plays.

31……………….. consulted Shakespeare before approving performance of the plays.

Marlowe

The plays use his writing style.

He was in trouble because some people said he was an 32………………

He may have faked his own death in a 33……………… He needed to write in secrecy.

De Vere

He was an excellent student.

He supported other writers, musicians and actors.

He may have been a 34………………

As a member of the upper class he could not write for 35………………

 

Question 36

Choose the correct letter, A, B, C or D.

Write the correct letter in box 36 on your answer sheet.

The sonnets are useful for researchers because they are

A    shorter and easier than the plays.

B    all written to the same person.

C    more personal than the plays.

D    addressed to a lower-class person.

 

Questions 37–40

Complete each sentence with the correct ending, A–G, below.

Write the correct letter, A–G, in boxes 37–40 on your answer sheet.

 

37    W.H. was probably a young man because

38    W.H. could have been Marlowe’s friend because

39    W.H.’s name could have been Henry Wriothesley because

40    W.H. could have been De Vere’s friend because

 

    W.H. had some influence with important people.

B     the poems are addressed to the writer’s child.

C     the content of the poems strongly suggests this.

D    W.H. was able to provide financial support.

E    W.H. had been to Cambridge University.

   W.H. had a lot of high-class enemies.

 the poet may have changed the order of his initials

 

 

Answer key 

 

27. B                                      28. F                                      29. G

30. exclusive rights                    31. government officials                         32. an atheist                     

33. street fight                            34. playwright                                         35. ordinary people

36. C                    37. C                        38. D                        39. G                         40. A

 

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