Most Gracious and Honoured Lord,
The honour done to me by the trust of your most recent package knows no bounds, as my admiration of the skill you bring to this most noble art knows no bounds. For this humble spinner of words to offer more than thanks is in itself an insult. It is therefore in a spirit of submission, regard and humility that I seek to question as I do, in the belief that even the noblest of buildings needs the humble mason to see to its design. It is in this spirit that I ask first of all if to call this work The Magic of Man is sufficient testimony to its true brilliance and worth, where a proper description of its power is that it unleashes a tempest of thought and a tempest of wonders into die mind of its audience…
The letter was five pages long. As he moved to continue the translation, his hand skewed the other sheets up, revealing the last page. The signature.
William Shakespeare.
For a moment, the world stopped. Then, slowly, colour, light and sound returned to it, though it was as if the pounding of his heart would never cease.
A librarian was standing by his side. 'I'm sorry, sir, but we're closing now. If I could ask you…'
He looked up at the man and pointed to the end sheet. He gathered up the five sheets as if they were the souls of his two children, held them up as an offering to the librarian.
'A letter,' he said simply. 'A five-page letter by William Shakespeare. Hitherto Unknown,' he added.
The librarian looked at him. Something in the moment had caught him, caught them both. Suddenly the librarian felt, knew even, that this was a moment that would be replayed time after time after time, replayed for as long as there were humans who cared about art.
'Not a will, or a legal document, or something about his second-best bed,' he said to the librarian. 'A five-page letter. A letter which seems to go into intimate detail about the authorship of Shakespeare's plays. A letter,' he added for good measure, 'which was found in the archive material of The Cambridge University Library.'
'A letter by… Shakespeare?' said the librarian in a reverential tone.
'Do you think,' he said, plucking up his courage, 'that just this once you could ask someone if the library could stay open a little longer?'
He saw little of what the future held for him as he proffered the five pages that had lain unseen for so long up to the lowly library employee. The fame, the notoriety, the divorce, the resentment of his children, the abuse and, finally, in his old age, the post as
Chaplain of Granville College, where he spent most of the day and night in his rooms, followed by the whispers of the tourists on the rare days when he faced the college quad.
Yet even then his heart told him something. Every book written about Shakespeare, or with even a passing reference to him, redundant now. Every film, every play and every parody — redundant now. The huge, vast and magnificent edifice of Shakespearian scholarship, its pontificating secular bishops, demolished, empty and meaningless. A hundred thousand voices who had sneered at their opponents over four hundred years that of course Shakespeare was, had to be, the only author of his plays, redundant now. A hundred thousand voices who had joined together in societies, campaigned, lobbied and sometimes sneered that of course Shakespeare could not have been the author of the plays credited to him, that they were written by Oxford, Marlowe, Rutland, Derby, all redundant now.
The huge, vast, multi-million dollar industry of Shakespeare, that world-wide industry, all redundant now.
My God, he thought, even then, before more than a tiny portion of the truth settled in his brain. The God in whom he believed every bit as much as Bishop Lancelot Andrewes. What have I done?