Wow how great - to have all the quotes in one place - Thanks JoanP and Marcie - Dana sure started us on something - this discussion is so exciting -
I started to read using the links to the letter - found the print to be a bit larger therefore, easier on the Word PDF - lots to read and still reading. So far the beginning chapters of
The Brave Vessel sticks close to and pretty much copies the letter.
OK Kidsal - you found another who is saying as Woodard in
The Brave Vessel - You share Professor Harold Bloom saying
How much Strachey when he attended the performance recognized from his letters.For another viewpoint Project Gutenberg has a copy of
The Virgina Company 1606 - 1624 by Wesley Frank Craven - Copywrite©, 1957 Jamestown 350th Anniversary Historical Booklet Number 5
http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28555/28555-h/28555-h.htmPage 12 tells us about Admiral Newport's
five round trips between England and Virginia, with "planters" and equipment, bringing back to England reports and what commerce possibilities and waterways he finds -
In January of 1609 Admiral Newport plans the largest venture England has ever seen - he meets with several men among the group is
Richard Hakluyt, geographer noted for his political influence, his voluminous writings, and his persistent promotion of Elizabethan overseas expansion, especially the colonization of North America..
In Hakluyt's book
The Literature of the Sea The Cambridge edition includes this tidbit
It is to Richard Hakluyt that we are indebted for our knowledge of many matters that have been alluded to above. Shakespeare undoubtedly studied his pages. Scattered treatises and manuscript descriptions alone existed when Hakluyt set to work. He had long been amassing material, and his writings, as we have mentioned, began to appear in 1582, while the first edition of the Principall Navigations was published in 1589. The latter is the first great body of information we possess relating to the voyages of the sixteenth century.
On page 18 of
The Virgina Company 1606 - 1624 there is this... the 1609 charter incorporated by the name of "The Treasurer and Company of Adventurers and Planters of the City of London, for the first Colony in Virginia." Sir Thomas Smith was designated treasurer... The adventurers, "or the major part of them which shall be present and assembled..." were empowered to make grants of land according to "the proportion of the adventurer, as to the special service, hazard, exploit, or merit of any person so to be recompensed, advanced, or rewarded."
The connection to Shakespeare is, among the 50 members of the Council, which the book names 15 is
Henry, Earl of Southampton, Shakespeare's patron and Sir Dudley Digges, named by William Shakespeare as one of the two overseers of his will. It appears Shakespeare would have intimate knowledge of reports and the Excellent Lady's Letter that was known to be passed around to the investors.