Pubdate: Wed, 26 Aug 2015 Source: Daily Press, The (CN ON) Copyright: 2015 Sun Media Contact: http://www.timminspress.com/letters Website: http://www.timminspress.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1001 Author: Tom Mills Page: A4 SCIENTISTS SUSPECT SHAKESPEARE WAS A POTHEAD Many theatre-lovers think Shakespeare is dope. Now it's being suggested that he smoked the stuff. Last month some anthropologists announced that four 17th-century pipes unearthed from Shakespeare's garden contain traces of cannabis. Whoa! Maybe that explains that line from Macbeth: "Is this a dagger which I see before me, Dude?" Who knew that Sir Walter Raleigh brought something wackier than tobacco and rolling papers back from his expeditions to the New World? If the bard were alive, methinks he'd claim those pipes really belonged to his best bud Ben Jonson. And some scholars might speculate that the pot pipes actually originated with Christopher Marlow or Sir Francis Bacon, who many think ghost-wrote Shakespeare's plays. But the head anthropologist, oddly named Thackeray, cites references in the bard's sonnets to "noted weed" and "compounds strange" as supporting evidence we should be calling Will the Stratford Stoner. This "news" prompted me to conduct an archeological dig in my garage in search of a thesis that I wrote shortly before university officials suggested I probably should continue my studies elsewhere. As I recall, it was titled, "Bud of Avon: Shakespeare's Time Was Out of Joint." That was my second choice of topics, something I latched onto hastily after learning that Lady Macbeth was not referring to an incontinent household pet when she lamented, "Out, damn'd Spot." (By the way, I've since discovered "winter of our discontent" does not refer to February in Wawa and "this great state of fools" is not inscribed over the main doorway of Queen's Park.) My scholarship for the thesis consisted of plucking such stuff as pot-induced dreams are made on from the seeds and stems in Shakespeare's sonnets and plays. What I found convinced me his Globe Theatre must have burned down because someone sparked a joint. Surely there was reefer in the rafters, pot in the pit. Take "weed," for example. Shakespeare offers readers and audiences a whole slew of cannabis varietals in his works, waxing elegiac about "snowwhite weed" and "humble weed" and "fat weed" and even "weed wide enough to wrap a fairy in." Among his passages of horticultural advice is "gather honey from the weed." Occasional bad trips might have led him to curse "rank weed" and "the basest weed." Uneasy lies the head, and all that. As my essay title suggested, "joint" rolls out from time to time in pothead Shakespeare's plays, even "joint by joint." One character puffs, "I would not do such thing for a joint." And if a reference to "the charmed pot" still has you doubting if Will inhaled, consider his praise of "the sweetest bud" and "this bud of love." "Eat my bud," one character says, sounding a lot like Jimi Hendrix. "Bud and be blasted." "Fetch me this herb" and "light on such another herb," writes the wright, later going into withdrawal when there is "no grass, herb, leaf or weed." "I'll now take of thy drug ... the drug he gave me ... a drug of such damned nature," tokes the reefer-maddened dramatist. And later, "Love is a smoke made with the fume of sighs." Groovy. Hallucinogens might also have been involved. In one play Shakespeare talks of finding "tongues in trees, books in running brooks, sermons in stones and good in everything." And couldn't his most popular comedy, replete with fairies, magical herbs and potions, have been called A Midsummer Night's Acid Trip? Anyway, my professor, perhaps well possessed of a secret stash, declared my paper was more than a tale told by an idiot and awarded it a "doobie plus." So put that in your pipe and smoke it. Or as Shakespeare might have said, give Caesar his props. - --- MAP posted-by: Matt