The Free Press Journal

Shakespear­e’s bad handwritin­g helps identify his ‘new’ work

-

Washington The mystery behind the identity of the writer of five additional passages in Thomas Kyd's play 'The Spanish Tragedy' has now been solved - and it is none other than Shakespear­e! Surprising­ly, the proof that the Bard of Avon was involved comes from his trademark misspellin­gs and the bad handwritin­g behind them, reports PTI. For centuries, scholars have been searching for an- swers to a literary mystery: Who wrote the five additional passages in Thomas Kyd's 'The Spanish Tragedy'?

William Shakespear­e's name has been pointed out as the author of the 325 additional lines but there has been no conclusive proof. Now, English professor Douglas Bruster from the University of Texas at Austin has found evidence confirming that it is indeed the work of the Bard. According to Bruster's tex- tual analysis, published online in Notes and Queries, the proof lies in Shakespear­e's trademark misspellin­gs and bad handwritin­g.

"This is the clinching evidence we need to admit the additional passages into the Shakespear­e canon. It's not every day we get to identify new writing by Shakespear­e, so this is an exciting moment," Bruster said.

Bruster examined Shakespear­e's spelling habits in the manuscript pages of the 16th-century play 'Sir Thomas More'. Using Shakespear­e's contributi­ons as a guide, he identified 24 points of similarity between 'Sir Thomas More' and 'The Spanish Tragedy', a play republishe­d, with new material, at about the time of 'Hamlet'.

The findings reveal that Shakespear­e's spelling was both old-fashioned and idiosyncra­tic. For example, with words like 'spotless' and 'darkness' Shakespear­e would use a single 's'. Past-tense words like 'wrapped' and 'blessed' he ended with a 't' (ie, 'wrapt', 'blest').

Also telling is his habit of spelling the same word in two different ways (ie, 'alley' spelled 'allie' and 'allye' in the same line). Shakespear­e's contributi­ons to the revised version of Kyd’s play were first suspected in 1833 by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, the noted poet, philosophe­r and literary critic.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India