[Is Shakespeare Dead? by Mark Twain]@TWC D-Link bookIs Shakespeare Dead? CHAPTER VIII--Shakespeare as a Lawyer {2}
The Plays and Poems of Shakespeare supply ample evidence that their
author not only had a very extensive and accurate knowledge of law, but
that he was well acquainted with the manners and customs of members of
the Inns of Court and with legal life generally 14/19
To these and all other subjects he recurs occasionally, and in season, but with reminiscences of the law his memory, as is abundantly clear, was simply saturated.
In season and out of season now in manifest, now in recondite application, he presses it into the service of expression and illustration.
At least a third of his myriad metaphors are derived from it.
It would indeed be difficult to find a single act in any of his dramas, nay, in some of them, a single scene, the diction and imagery of which is not colored by it.
Much of his law may have been acquired from three books easily accessible to him, namely Tottell's _Precedents_ (1572), Pulton's _Statutes_ (1578), and Fraunce's _Lawier's Logike_ (1588), works with which he certainly seems to have been familiar; but much of it could only have come from one who had an intimate acquaintance with legal proceedings.
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