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    Chapter 8 - Page 2

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    of his law
    while writing it." Charles and Mary Cowden Clarke speak of "the
    marvelous intimacy which he displays with legal terms, his frequent
    adoption of them in illustration, and his curiously technical
    knowledge of their form and force." Malone, himself a lawyer,
    wrote: "His knowledge of legal terms is not merely such as might
    be acquired by the casual observation of even his all-comprehending
    mind; it has the appearance of technical skill." Another lawyer
    and well-known Shakespearean, Richard Grant White, says: "No
    dramatist of the time, not even Beaumont, who was the younger son
    of a judge of the Common Pleas, and who after studying in the Inns
    of Court abandoned law for the drama, used legal phrases with
    Shakespeare's readiness and exactness. And the significance of
    this fact is heightened by another, that it is only to the language
    of the law that he exhibits this inclination. The phrases peculiar
    to other occupations serve him on rare occasions by way of
    description, comparison or illustration, generally when something
    in the scene suggests them, but legal phrases flow from his pen as
    part of his vocabulary, and parcel of his thought. Take the word
    'purchase' for instance, which, in ordinary use, means to acquire
    by giving value, but applies in law to all legal modes of obtaining
    property except by inheritance or descent, and in this peculiar
    sense the word occurs five times in Shakespeare's thirty-four
    plays, and only in one single instance in the fifty-four plays of
    Beaumont and Fletcher. It has been suggested that it was in
    attendance upon the courts in London that he picked up his legal
    vocabulary. But this supposition not only fails to account for
    Shakespeare's peculiar freedom and exactness in the use of that
    phraseology, it does not even place him in the way of learning
    those terms his use of which is most remarkable, which are not such
    as he would have heard at ordinary proceedings at nisi prius, but
    such as refer to the tenure or transfer of real property, 'fine and
    recovery,' 'statutes merchant,' 'purchase,' 'indenture,' 'tenure,'
    'double voucher,' 'fee simple,' 'fee farm,' 'remainder,'
    'reversion,' 'forfeiture,' etc. This conveyancer's jargon could
    not have been picked up by hanging round the courts of law in
    London two hundred and fifty years ago, when suits as to the title

    of real property were comparatively rare. And beside, Shakespeare
    uses his law just as freely in his first plays, written in his
    first London years, as in those produced at a later period. Just
    as exactly, too; for the correctness and propriety with which these
    terms are introduced have compelled the admiration of a Chief
    Justice and a Lord Chancellor."

    Senator
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