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Samples indicate Shakespeare may have smoked, grown cannabis

Posted at 5:52 PM, Aug 10, 2015
and last updated 2015-08-10 17:52:03-04

LONDON  — Was playwright William Shakespeare stoned when he penned masterpieces like “Hamlet” and “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”?

A new report published in the South African Journal of Science which looks at analyzed residue in tobacco pipes dating to the early 17th century excavated in Stratford-upon-Avon, central England — including several from Shakespeare’s garden — found indications of cannabis and nicotine.

A kind of cocaine derived from coca leaves was also found in two samples — although neither of those were from the playwright’s garden.

The report does not claim to have proof that the Bard smoked cannabis or even that the pipes found in his garden belonged to him.

But author Professor Francis Thackeray, from the Evolutionary Studies Institute at University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, speculates that cannabis could have been a source of inspiration for the Bard.

He cites a reference in Shakespeare’s Sonnet 76 to “invention in a noted weed” saying via email: “I think that Shakespeare was playing with words and (it) is probably a cryptic reference to cannabis.”

Shakespeare could have enjoyed “the noted weed” for creative writing because it had mind-stimulating properties, he adds.

If true, Shakespeare would join a long and illustrious list of writers from Byron to Hunter S. Thompson who have been inspired by drugs.

However, some are sceptical about about his possible use of drugs.

“People love to come up with reasons for saying Shakespeare was not a genius. I don’t think there’s any proof that he was helped in any way by taking narcotic substances,” Ann Donnelly, curator of the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust museum has told CNN.

Sophisticated analysis

Thackeray originally carried out the original analysis in 2001 along with fellow scientists Nicholas van der Merwe of the University of Cape Town and Inspector Tommy van der Merwe.

They used a technique known as gas chromatography mass spectrometry (GCMS) on pipe bowls and stems they loaned from the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust in Stratford-upon-Avon.

The chemical analysis was carried out using technology at the South African Police narcotics laboratory.

The study included 24 pipe fragments and Cannabis was indicated in eight samples — four of which came from Shakespeare’s garden — nicotine in one sample, and “definite evidence” for Peruvian cocaine from coca leaves in two samples.

‘Compounds strange’

In Shakespeare’s time, various plants were smoked in clay pipes.

In 1597, the botanist John Gerard described a number of different kinds of tobacco in “Herbal,” a botanical encyclopedia.

References include the tobacco plant, nicotania, which the explorer Sir Walter Raleigh is credited with bringing to England from Virginia.

The encyclopedia also describe a special kind of tobacco from Peru — “the henbane of Peru” — which is likely to be cocaine derived from smoking coca leaves, according to Thackeray.

Another explorer, Sir Francis Drake could have brought coca leaves to England after visiting Peru in 1597, notes the botanical encyclopedia.

Shakespeare also wrote about “compounds strange,” in Sonnet 76 which may have been a reference to cocaine, says Thackeray.

Cannabis had been condemned by the church before Shakespeare’s time.

“Writers who were explicit about Cannabis could have their books burnt,” Thackeray added.