When law can do no right,
Let it be lawful that law bar no wrong:
Law cannot give my child his kingdom here,
For he that holds his kingdom holds the law.
(King John, 3.1.189), Constance to Cardinal Pandulph
Did Shakespeare study Law?
Researches till date proved that Shakespeare did not formally study law. But he acquired a significant general knowledge of legal terminology. We can see this in his different plays. The legal jargon in Hamlet’s speech in Act 5 is especially impressive. And Measure for Measure is an ideal play for lawyers. It raises fundamental questions of law and morality. Shakespeare's legal knowledge is acutely precise which indicates a mind well-trained and practiced in the idioms and conceptual habits, characteristic of lawyers and judges.
For the interested readers, here I’ve given the links of resources ‘Shakespeare and the Law’
Resources on Shakespeare and the Law
• Shakespeare's Knowledge of the Law: A Journey through the History of the Argument. Serious study of Shakespeare and the Law should begin with Mark Alexander's in-depth study, orginally published in the 2001 edition of The Oxfordian.
• Shakespeare's "Bad Law". A shorter survey focusing on Shakespeare's supposed misuse of legal terms.
• The Legally Annotated Hamlet. A complete annotation of the 1604 (Quarto 2) edition of Hamlet.
• "An Unrecognized Theme in Hamlet". Tony Burton's important article first appeared in the Fall 2000 edition of The Shakespeare Newsletter: “[In Hamlet ] there is a consistent and coherent pattern of legal allusions to defeated expectations of inheritance, which applies to every major character.†(71)
• "Laertes's Rebellion as a Defense of His Inheritance: Further Aspects of Inheritance Law in Hamlet" Tony Burton's follow up article provides further corroborating detail.
• "Could Shakespeare Think Like a Lawyer? How Inheritance Law Issues in Hamlet May Shed Light on the Authorship Question." Thomas Regnier's outstanding 2003 University of Miami Law Review article.
• The Shakespeare Law Library. Numerous original early source texts on Shakespeare's knowledge of law, by George Greenwood and others.
• Shakespeare's Legal Knowledge. The orthodox response, presented by David Kathman.
Some Other Source Texts
Shakespeare a Lawyer
William Rushton (1858 - Complete)
Shakespeare's Legal Acquirements
Lord Campbell (1859 - Complete)
"William Shakespeare,
Attorney at Law and Solicitor in Chancery"
Atlantic Monthly
Richard Grant White (1859)
excerpt from "Memoirs of the Life of Shakespeare"
from Richard Grant White's
Life and Genius of Shakespeare (1865)
"Introduction"
from Cushman K. Davis's
The Law in Shakespeare (1883)
Ecclesiastical Law in Hamlet:
The Burial of Ophelia
R. S. Guernsey (1885)
In Re Shakespeare's "Legal Acquirements"
William C. Devecmon (1899 - Complete)
"Shakespeare's Alleged Blunders in
Legal Terminology"
Yale Law Journal
Homer B. Sprague (1902)
"Shakespeare's Legal Knowledge"
from J.M. Robertson's
Did Shakespeare Write "Titus Andronicus"? (1905)
"Shakespeare as a Lawyer"
from George Greenwood's
The Shakespeare Problem Restated (1908)
Chapter III
"The Argument from Legal Allusions in Shakespeare:
Lord Campbell's Case"
Chapter IV
"The Argument from Legal Phraseology:
Mr Grant White's Case"
Chapter V
"The Argument from Legal Phraseology:
Mr Rushton, Senator Davis, Mr Castle"
Chapter VI
Litigation and Legalism in Elizabethan England
from J.M. Robertson's
The Baconian Heresy (1913)
"Shakespeare's Legal Knowledge"
from George Greenwood's
Is There A Shakespeare Problem? (1916)
"Law"
Arthur Underhill's essay in
Shakespeare's England (1916)
"Mr Robertson as Exponent of Law"
from George Greenwood's
Shakespeare's Law and Latin (1916)
Shakespeare's Law
George Greenwood (1920)
Farhana Helal Mehtab
Associate Professor & Head
Dept of Law