Imágenes de páginas
PDF
EPUB

Catharine, daughter of Shakspeare and Anne Hart, was baptized July 19, 1703.

Mary, daughter of George Hart, was baptized Oct. 7, 1705.

Mary, wife of George Hart, was buried Oct. 7, 1705.

George Hart was married to Sarah Mountford, Feb. 20, 1728. [1728-9.]

2

Thomas, fon of George Hart, Jun. was baptized May 9, 1729.

Sarah, daughter of George Hart, was baptized Sept. 29, 1733.

Anne, daughter of Shakspeare Hart, was buried March 29, 1738.

Anne, daughter of George Hart, was baptized Sept. 29, 1740.

William Shakspeare, fon of William Shakspeare

Hart, was baptized Jan. 8, 1743. [1743-4.] William Shakspeare, fon of William Shakspeare Hart, was buried March 8, 1744. [1744-5. William, fon of George Hart, was buried April 28, 1745.

George Hart 3 was buried Aug 29, 1745.

Thomas, fon of William Shakspeare Hart, was buried March 12, 1746. [1746-7.]

Shakspeare Hart 4 was buried July 7, 1747. Catharine, daughter of William Shakspeare Hart, was baptized May 10, 1748.

2 This Thomas Hart, who is the fifth in defcent from Joan Hart, our poet's fifter, is now (1788) living at Stratford, in the house in which Shakspeare was born. MALONE.

3 He was born in 1676, and was great grandson to Joan Hart. MALONE.

• He was born in 1666, and was also great grandson to Joan Hart. MALONE.

William Shakspeare Hart 5 was buried Feb. 28, 1749. [1749-50.]

6

The widow Hart was buried July 10, 1753.

John, fon of Thomas Hart, was baptized Aug. 18,

1755.

Anne, daughter of Shakspeare and Anne Hart, was buried Feb. 5, 1760.

Frances, daughter of Thomas Hart, was baptized Aug. 8, 1760.

Thomas, fon of Thomas Hart, was baptized Aug. 10, 1764.

Anne, daughter of Thomas Hart, was baptized Jan. 16, 1767.

Sarah, daughter of George Hart, was buried Sept. 10, 1768.

Frances, daughter of Thomas Hart, was buried Oct. 31, 1774.

George Hart was buried July 8, 1778.

He was born in 1695. MALONE.

• This abfurd mode of entry seems to have been adopted for the purpose of concealment rather than information; for by the omiffion of the chriftian name, it is impoffible to ascertain from the Register who was meant. The perfon here described was, I believe, Anne, the widow of Shakspeare Hart, who died in 1747. MALONĖ.

7 He was born in 1700. MALONE.

[blocks in formation]

SHAKSPEARE'S COAT OF ARMS.

The following Inftrument is copied from the Original in the College of Heralds: It is marked G. 13, p. 349.

To all and finguler noble and gentlemen of all eftats and degrees, bearing arms, to whom these presents fhall come, William Dethick, Garter, Principall King of Arms of England, and William Camden, alias Clarencieulx, King of Arms for the fouth, eaft, and weft parts of this realme, fendethe greeting. Know ye, that in all nations and kingdoms the record and remembraunce of the valeant facts and vertuous difpofitions of worthie men have been made knowne and divulged by certeyne fhields of arms and tokens of chevalrie; the grant and teftimonie whereof apperteyneth unto us, by vertu of our offices from the Quenes moft Exc Majestie, and her Highenes most noble and victorious progenitors: wherefore being folicited, and by credible report informed, that John Shak

* In the Herald's Office are the first draughts of John Shakfpeare's grant or confirmation of arms, by William Dethick, Garter, Principal King at Arms, 1596. Šee Vincent's Press, Vol. 157, No. 23, and 4. STEEVENS.

In a Manufcript in the College of Heralds, marked W. 2. p. 276, is the following note: As for the Speare in bend, it is a patible difference, and the perfon to whom it was granted hath borne magiftracy, and was juftice of peace at Stratford-uponAvon. He married the daughter and heire of Arderne, and was able to maintain that estate." MALONE.

fpeare, now of Stratford-upon-Avon, in the counte of Warwick, gent. whofe parent, great grandfather, and late anteceffor, for his faithefull and approved fervice to the late moft prudent prince, king Henry VII. of famous memorie, was advaunced and rewarded with lands and tenements, geven to him in those parts of Warwickfhere, where they have continewed by fome defcents in good reputacion and credit; and for that the faid John Shakfpeare having maryed the daughter and one of the heyrs of Robert Arden of Wellingcote, in the faid countie, and also produced this his auncient cote of arms, heretofore affigned to him whileft he was her Majefties officer and baylefe of that towne ;9 In confideration of the premiffes, and for the encouragement of his pofteritie, unto whom fuche blazon of arms and achievements of inheritance from theyre faid mother, by the auncyent custome and lawes of arms, maye lawfully defcend; We the faid Garter and Clarencieulx have affigned, graunted, and by these prefents exemplefied unto the faid John Shakspeare, and to his pofteritie, that shield and cote of arms, viz. In a field of gould upon a bend fables a speare of the first, the poynt upward, hedded argent; and for his creft or cognifance, A falcon with his wyngs displayed, standing on a wrethe of his coullers, fupporting a speare armed hedded, or fteeled fylver, fyxed uppon a helmet with mantell and taffels, as more playnely maye appeare depected on this margent; and we have likewife uppon on other efcutcheon impaled the fame with the aun

9 his auncient cote of arms, heretofore affigned to him whileft he was her Majefties officer and baylefe of that towne ;] This grant of arms was made by Cook, Clarencieux, in 1569, but is not now extant in the Herald's Office.

MALONE

cyent arms of the faid Arden of Wellingcote; fignifieng therby, that it maye and fhalbe lawfull for the faid John Shakspeare gent. to beare and use the fame fhield of arms, fingle or impaled, as aforfaid, during his natural lyffe; and that it fhalbe lawfull for his children, yffue, and posteryte, (lawfully begotten,) to beare, ufe, and quarter, and fhow forth the fame, with theyre dewe differences, in all lawfull warlyke facts and civile use or exercises, according to the laws of arms, and cuftome that to gentlemen belongethe, without let or interruption of any perfon or perfons, for use or bearing the fame. In wyttneffe and teftemonye whereof we have fubfcrebed our names, and fastened the feals of our offices, geven at the Office of Arms, London, the

day of

in the xlii yere of the reigne of our moft gratious Sovraigne lady Elizabeth, by the grace of God, quene of Ingland, France, and Ireland, defender of the faith, &c. 1599.

[ocr errors]

and we have likewife-impaled the fame with the auncyent arms of the faid Arden-] It is faid by Mr. Jacob, the modern editor of Arden of Feverfham (firft published in 1592 and republished in 1631 and 1770) that Shakspeare defcended by the female line from the gentleman whofe unfortunate end is the fubject of this tragedy. But the affertion appears to want fupport, the true name of the perfon who was murdered at Fever ham being Ardern and not Arden. Ardern might be called Arden in the play for the fake of better found, or might be corrupted in the Chronicle of Holinfhed: yet it is unlikely that the true fpelling fhould be overlooked among the Heralds, whose interest it is to recommend by oftentatious accuracy the trifles in which they deal. STEEVENS.

Ardern was the original name, but in Shakspeare's time it had been foftened to Arden. See p. 58, n. 5. MALONE.

« AnteriorContinuar »