- Unable to agree on the man responsible for the plays commonly attributed to William Shakespeare, Miss Gray, who favors Francis Bacon, and Lieutenant Stanton, who accepts Shakespeare as the author, break off their engagement. Stanton then arranges to be transferred to the Mexican border, and while fighting there is badly wounded. When she hears the news about Stanton's condition, Miss Gray faints, and then dreams that she has been transported to Elizabethan times. Then, after Bacon falls in love with her, she discovers his obsessive jealousy of Shakespeare, and learns that he has bribed a courtier to accuse him of stealing Bacon's plays. As a result, when Miss Gray wakes up, she realizes that she has championed the wrong poet, and so she immediately is reconciled with Stanton, who soon recovers from his wound.—Pamela Short
- Miss Gray, the daughter of Colonel Gray, according to the story, is very fond of literature. The plays of Shakespeare have afforded special interest to her, but she has come to believe, very sincerely, that they were the work of Bacon instead of the Bard of Avon. The girl's fiancé, Lieutenant Stanton, does not agree with her. At last, because she has been used to having her own way in every particular, she determines to make her affianced husband agree with her on this one subject. Their discussion leads to a serious misunderstanding, and their engagement is broken. Stanton is transferred, at his request, to the Mexican border. After his departure she feels more curious than ever about Shakespeare's life and reads his plays and studies his life with a new eagerness. At length she comes to learn that humanity and understanding means more than a coronet, and feels that her pride of race had previously made her unjust. At this time a dispatch from the west tells her that Stanton has been wounded in a fight with bandits. It leaves the girl stunned and ill. In her delirium she finds herself standing in front of an old English castle. A stately woman, in the costume of the Elizabethan period, addresses her as "daughter," and orders her to enter the coach. At first puzzled, the girl at length realizes that she is back again in the sixteenth century in England, and that she is the daughter of the Earl of Pembroke. At a tavern in the country the coach stops to change horses, and the girl and Lady Pembroke alight, wearing the masks with which ladies of the court always travel. A handsomely dressed noble, who had long wooed the young lady in vain, passes by. He determines to steal her away to his castle. Summoning his retainers, the noble enters the tavern, and is at the point of carrying the girl away when a young soldier, a trusted follower of Drake, espouses the girl's cause, and, single-handed, holds the enemies back. To her surprise, the girl recognizes her former fiancé, Lieut. Stanton. The combat is so unequal that it seems as if the young soldier will be overcome. At this juncture a stranger enters the room, draws his sword in behalf of the youth, and joins in the fray. The assailants of the young woman are put to route, and the gallant rescuer announces himself with a bow and flourish, as Master Shakespeare, Strolling Player. At the performance of Shakespeare's play before the Court, Lord Bacon sends one of the poet's scholars, whom he had bribed, to declare that Shakespeare had stolen the play from him. Bacon brings about a duel, and the young officer, less skilled than he, is killed. As the girl throws herself on the lifeless form of the soldier, she awakes, and finds herself back in the twentieth century, safe in her father's house. And from the other room appears the sturdy form of the young Lieutenant, who had only been injured in Mexico.—Moving Picture World synopsis
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