Edward III, play in five acts sometimes attributed to William Shakespeare, though without much evidence other than the resemblances of this play to Shakespeare’s early history plays and an occasional passage. It was not included in the First Folio of 1623. A quarto text was published in 1596; the play must have been written prior to that date, presumably in the early 1590s, when history plays of this sort were much in vogue. It was based largely on Raphael Holinshed’s Chronicles.
The play depicts Edward III’s great victories in France, especially at Crécy (1346) and Poitiers (1356), during the 14th century. Edward is portrayed as a heroic king, and his son Edward, the Black Prince, is even more stalwart than he. Much of the latter part of the play is devoted to military action in France, some of it near Calais. The play opens as Edward justifies his wars (historically, the Hundred Years’ War, beginning in 1337) on the basis of genealogical claims that sound like those of Henry V for claiming the French kingdom in Henry V. The play Edward III patriotically defends the English claim. The French and their allies—King John, his sons Charles and Philip, the duke of Lorraine, Lord Villiers, and others—are at times duplicitous and cowardly, though some Frenchmen do keep their word. The Scots are presented in an even more unattractive light: King David II and the Douglas cravenly take advantage of England’s preoccupation with France to attack England from the rear. They prove no match for the English, however; Edward is able, at Halidon Hill, to avenge England’s terrible loss to the Scots at the infamous Battle of Bannockburn in the time of Edward II (1314), which resulted in Scotland’s independence.
An attractive sidelight in the play, unhistorical and so engaging that it is a sentimental favourite among critics to have been written by Shakespeare, is the wooing by Edward III of the Countess of Salisbury, daughter of the earl of Warwick. Living in the north of England during her husband’s absence, the Countess is especially vulnerable to Scottish depredations across the border, though she shows herself bravely able to fend them off without much help. Edward, coming north to encounter the Scottish invasion, is smitten with the Countess’s charms and proposes a relationship that is plainly adulterous, since the Countess’s husband is alive and well even if necessarily absent from their home. Worse still, Edward falls so under the tyranny of his passion that he uses his great authority over the earl of Warwick to suggest that he prevail upon his daughter to give in to royal importunity. Eventually the Countess’s own fearless virtue, prompting her to threaten suicide if Edward persists, persuades the king that he has erred egregiously in his pursuit of a married woman, however attractive. He comes to his senses and goes on to become England’s great warrior king against the French. The episode illustrates both how mighty men have their failings and how the best of them are able to control their own improper instincts. The political ramifications are telling: a king of England is an absolute monarch whom no one may correct except himself. Edward absorbs this instructive lesson and is much the stronger for having done so.
For a discussion of this play within the context of Shakespeare’s entire corpus, see William Shakespeare: Shakespeare’s plays and poems.