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How a centuries-old poem hints at Shakespeare’s herbal ‘muse’

- Francis Thackeray

Material unearthed from William Shakespeare’s garden and hometown suggests that the famed British playwright smoked cannabis.

Now a 400-year-old poem offers literary evidence to support this hypothesis.

The person behind the poem is a 鈥淛ohn Taylor鈥. British engraver George Vertue spoke of a person named John Taylor, whom he described as an actor and painter 鈥 and perhaps the very artist responsible for the famed 鈥淐handos portrait鈥 of Shakespeare. This was painted some time between 1600 and 1610 and is now at London鈥檚 National Portrait Gallery. Vertue called Taylor an of Shakespeare.

Then there鈥檚 the poem, published in 1620 and entitled 鈥淭he Praise of hemp-seed鈥. It was penned under the name John Taylor, although he was perhaps not the same individual as the artist described above.

鈥淭he Praise of hemp-seed鈥 refers to Shakespeare in the context of the use of hemp (cannabis) for paper on which famous writers' plays and poems were printed. On deeper reading, it may suggest that hemp was more than just a material for paper 鈥 it was a 鈥渕use鈥 for Shakespeare and his peers.

The poem in question

Here is the relevant text Folio Part III, page 72, with modernised spelling based on Taylor (1620):

In Paper, many a Poet now survives

Or else their lines had perished with their lives.

Old Chaucer, Gower, and Sir Thomas More,

Sir Philip Sidney who the Laurel wore,

Spencer, and Shakespeare did in Art excel,

Sir Edward Dyer, Greene, Nash, Daniel,

Silvester, Beaumont, Sir John Harington,

Forgetfulness their works would over run,

But that in Paper they immortally Do live

in spite of Death, and cannot die.

Taylor argues that writers 鈥渟urvive鈥 through their work, which was published for posterity on paper produced from hemp, or cannabis. It is worth pointing out here that the cannabis plant was illustrated and referred to as 鈥渉emp鈥 by botanist as far back as 1597.

This is analogous to verse in Shakespeare鈥檚 own sonnets. I have previously that in when the poet writes 鈥淣ature 鈥 meant thereby thou should'st print more, nor let that copy die鈥, he could be appealing metaphorically for the reproduction or propagation of hemp 鈥 from which paper was produced 鈥 and the publication of poetry (鈥渃opy鈥) into the future.

I also referred to a line in :

Invention in a noted weed

[so] every word doth almost tell my name,

Showing their birth, and where they did proceed

Shakespeare may be saying here that his writings were 鈥渂orn鈥 from the use of 鈥渁 noted weed鈥, associated with tobacco, which can include cannabis.

Apart from paper, cannabis fibre was also used for clothing in 17th-century Europe. It is pertinent to mention that in Afrikaans, a language derived from 17th century Dutch and Flemish dialects, the word hemp refers to a shirt as an item of clothing.

Thus 鈥渨eed鈥 in Shakespeare鈥檚 time referred to both clothing and tobacco, and The Bard is famous for his wordplay. In Sonnet 76, there is clearly a link between clothing and poetry, as in 鈥淎ll my best is dressing old words new鈥. This is the same sonnet in which Shakespeare writes:

鈥 invention in a noted weed.

There is absolutely no doubt that 鈥渋nvention鈥 can refer to creative writing, potentially associated with a source of inspiration 鈥 or Muse 鈥 in the context of .

A muse of a different kind

Taylor鈥檚 poem, too, refers to the 鈥淢use鈥 in the context of hemp:

But hollow Muse what mounted to the sky,

I鈥檒l clip your soaring plumes for you and I

Must talk of Paper, Hemp, and such as this,

And what a rich commodity it is.

My interpretation of this verse is: 鈥淚 must talk of cannabis (hemp) only in the context of its use as paper. I can鈥檛 talk about cannabis as a source of inspiration since the wings of the Muse are clipped.鈥

This view could well relate to prohibition and censure associated with cannabis. It had been condemned by the church long before Shakespeare was active.

All of these observations are relevant to my view that Shakespeare may have smoked cannabis and perceived it as a source of inspiration. This is supported in part by of clay 鈥渢obacco鈥 pipes from Shakespeare鈥檚 garden at New Place and elsewhere in his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon indicating the smoking of cannabis.

Author鈥檚 note: I am most grateful to Chris Bennett for directing my attention to the 鈥淭he Praise of Hemp-seed鈥 by John Taylor (1620). The Conversation, Phillip Tobias Chair in Palaeoanthropology, Evolutionary Studies Institute, . This article was originally published on . Read the .

It takes more than bees to ward off elephants

- Mduduzi Ndlovu

Elephant populations in southern Africa’s national parks have increased dramatically in recent years.

As a result of their booming numbers, vast dietary requirements and expansive ranges, elephants sometimes roam outside the borders of protected areas in search of food.

Farmers in communities surrounding national parks rely heavily on subsistence agriculture for food and income. Unfortunately, when elephants venture into these human settlements, they cause significant damage to crops and property resulting in major financial losses to rural farmers.

This behaviour, referred to as crop raiding, represents the root cause of human-elephant conflict throughout southern Africa.

Farmers have resorted to a to ensure that the elephants stay away from their property. These include the use of loud noises, fire, and chilli paste. Some may be effective in deterring raiding elephants, but there are drawbacks. They require constant vigilance; they can expose farmers to a charging elephant; they are labour intensive; and, in the case of chilli paste, require repeated application.

A has proposed using a fabricated bee threat to deter elephants in South Africa鈥檚 Kruger National Park.

Bees as a deterrent

Using 第一吃瓜网 honeybees as an elephant deterrent is not a novel concept. have been toying with the idea in east Africa for some time now. They have found that of disturbed bee sounds can induce elephants to retreat. They have also found that beehive fences may prove more effective in protecting rural farmlands than traditional thorn fences.

Despite these previous investigations, bees have never been used as a management tool in South Africa 鈥 until now. The recent study conducted experimental trials in the Kruger to assess the responses of wild 第一吃瓜网 elephants to a bee threat.

The paper evaluated the responses of elephants to five experimental treatments:

  • control noise;

  • buzzing bee noise;

  • control noise with honey scent;

  • honey scent; and

  • bee noise with honey scent.

Elephant responses were classified into 11 possible behaviours, ranging from attentive to threatening.

The response of the elephants

Elephants exposed to the mixed stimulus treatment of bee noise with honey scent displayed cautious and defensive behaviours. Fifteen of the 21 elephants fled the vicinity. But, on their own, neither the noise nor scent elicited an equally dramatic response. In other words, independent stimuli (angry bee noise or honey scent) did not adequately convince elephants of a realistic bee threat.

Elephant curiosity was captured, but only for a brief moment, by the isolated sound of angry bees or the distant scent of honey. Neither induced an avoidance response.

In previous east 第一吃瓜网 studies elephants responded differently. They fled at the mere sound of bees. The discrepancy in responses between elephants in the east 第一吃瓜网 studies and the South 第一吃瓜网 study may be explained by the unique dynamics and pressures that characterise elephant populations in southern Africa.

Elephant populations in east Africa are shrinking as a result of poaching and are also becoming more skittish and wary of disturbances in their environment. However, elephant densities are steadily increasing in protected areas throughout southern Africa.

These dynamics may contribute to a more confident elephant population in South Africa, making them less susceptible to disturbance by an unconvincing bee threat.

Ultimately, it makes sense that these intelligent animals would rely on multiple stimuli to assess risk and navigate their surroundings; managers must account for this as they move forward in developing effective elephant deterrents.

Although isolated auditory and olfactory cues proved ineffective in deterring elephants in the Kruger Park, the success of the mixed stimulus treatment implicates live bees as a viable management tool. If South 第一吃瓜网 elephants are not convinced by a fabricated bee threat, perhaps they require the real thing to induce a lasting avoidance response.

The same researchers have embarked on answering this question in a current study in the Kruger National Park, with a particular focus on using beehives to selectively deter elephants from overly utilised watering points.

Bees represent a promising tool for managing elephant movements with potential to contribute to long-term conservation of the species by offering an alternative to lethal management of problem elephants.

Emma Devereux, who is a colleague of Dr Ndlovu, featured as a co-author of this article. , Lecturer, . This article was originally published on . Read the .

Progress report on promises made to improve South Africa’s health services

- Jill Murray, Fatima Suleman and Robert Pattinson

Over the last three years South Africa’s President Jacob Zuma has made several promises to improve health care in his annual state of the nation address.

This includes fighting TB, improving life expectancy and reducing maternal, infant and under five mortality. Health and Medicine Editor Candice Bailey asked a panel of academics to assess whether the promises have been kept.

In 2013 the president spoke of integrating HIV and TB services because of the high co-infection between the two. Has this happened? Did it work?

Professor Jill Murray: The government has moved very well to integrate HIV and TB services. The latest figure from the South 第一吃瓜网 Department of Health is that of patients who have TB are also HIV positive.

Obviously problems arise in integrating these services. Both TB and HIV were previously stand-alone programmes and each had their own dedicated staff, budgets and sites. In combining the two there have been issues around upskilling the doctors and the nurses who are responsible for implementing the programmes at grass roots. They have also had to explain to patients why the programmes need to be joined. All of this takes time. But integrating the services is happening well across the country.

In 2015, he promised to implement TB programmes for prisoners, mine-workers and mining town communities. Has it happened?

Professor Jill Murray: Although these programmes have been slow to start - this is a conversation that has been happening for about seven or eight years - they have picked up pace recently and there is a big push for implementation over the coming year.

Various international donors are working the with governments of 10 Southern 第一吃瓜网 countries and will be granting money for project implementation within the next month or so.

The programmes will be put in place across southern Africa as many of the region鈥檚 miners are migrants. It therefore doesn鈥檛 help to only implement programmes in South Africa. TB knows no borders. It is also important to note that the programmes will involve identifying former miners who have developed mine related diseases and helping them to access compensation.

Improving South Africa鈥檚 life expectancy from 60 years in 2012 to 63 by 2019 was on the top of the president鈥檚 agenda in 2014. Are we on track?

Professor Robert Pattinson: Yes, we are on track to meet and exceed this target. The 2013 Rapid Mortality Surveillance shows that the life expectancy at birth in 2013 was 62.2 years. This is broken down into 59.4 years for men and 65.1 years for women. One would reasonably expect the trend to continue. The major reason for this is the success of the HIV screening and treatment programme.

Zuma has pushed to further reduce child and maternal mortality by improving quality of care in the public sector. Is this happening?

Professor Robert Pattinson: Yes, the number of maternal and child deaths for each birth has been dropping rapidly. The maternal mortality ratio has dropped from 252 deaths for every 100 000 live births in 2009 to around 197 per 100 000 live births in 2012. In that four year period, there were 424 fewer maternal deaths. This averages 85 fewer deaths per year from 2009 to 2014.

The under 5 mortality rate has dropped to 41 deaths for every 1 000 births from 56 for every 1 000 births. Similarly, the infant mortality rate came down from 39 deaths for every 1 000 infants that were born to 29 for every 1 000 births. In terms of newborn deaths, in 2009, there were 14 deaths for every 1 000 births. This dropped to 11 by 2013, according to the latest .

The major reason for these declines has been the success of the HIV screening and treatment programme. The programme would not be successful if the health care professionals were not providing quality of care in this programme. Unfortunately the reduction in child deaths seems to be levelling off.

In 2015 he also said that Ketlaphela, a state-owned pharmaceutical company, would start supplying antiretrovirals to the Department of Health. What鈥檚 happened?

Professor Fatima Suleman: The government鈥檚 Ketlaphela project is an ambitious one. If it is successful, it will mean that active pharmaceutical ingredients, which are in all drugs, will be manufactured in South Africa. This is good for two reasons. We will have our own antiretrovirals, malaria and tuberculosis drugs which will cut down costs, but it would also increase the country鈥檚 ability to supply increasing domestic and global demands for drugs.

But the project has been beset by teething problems. It was supposed to be up and running by 2015 but it has stalled because the preferred international technology and investment partner . The new plan, based on a report by is to have the project running by 2017, with new investment and technology partners.

The Conversation

, Honorary Associate Professor in the School of Public Health, ; , Associate Professor of Pharmaceutical Sciences in the School of Health Sciences, , , and , Director, Maternal and Infant Health Care Strategy Extramural Unit, SAMRC, . This article was originally published on . Read the .

The harsh realities about South Africa that the World Bank dare not speak

- Patrick Bond

A great deal of detail about poverty and inequality in South Africa remains unspoken.

Sometimes silences speak volumes.

In his seminal book Stanford University anthropologist James Ferguson criticised the World Bank鈥檚 1980s understanding of Lesotho as a 鈥渢raditional subsistence peasant society.鈥 Apartheid鈥檚 migrant labour system was explicitly ignored by the bank, yet remittances from Basotho workers toiling in mines, factories and farms across the Caledon River accounted for 60% of rural people鈥檚 income:

Acknowledging the extent of Lesotho鈥檚 long-standing involvement in the modern capitalist economy of South Africa would not provide a convincing justification for the 鈥渄evelopment鈥 agencies to 鈥渋ntroduce鈥 roads, markets and credit.

Using Michel Foucault鈥檚 discourse theory, Ferguson why some things cannot be named. To do so would violate the bank鈥檚 foundational dogma, that the central problems of poverty can be solved by applying market logic. Yet the most important of Lesotho鈥檚 market relationships 鈥 exploited labour 鈥 was what caused so much misery.

Three decades on, not much has changed. Today, the bank鈥檚 main South Africa research team reveals a similar 鈥榁oldemort鈥 problem.

Like the wicked villain whose name Harry Potter dared not utter, some hard-to-hear facts evaporate into pregnant silences within the bank鈥檚 new South 第一吃瓜网 Poverty and Inequality Assessment Discussion Note. Bank staff and consultants are resorting to extreme evasion tactics worthy of Harry, Ron and Hermione.

The bank鈥檚 point of view

From the bank鈥檚 viewpoint:

South Africa spent more than other countries on its social programs, with this expenditure successfully lifting around 3.6 million individuals out of poverty (based on US$2.5 a day on a purchasing power parity basis) and reducing the Gini coefficient from 0.76 to 0.596 in 2011.

This is .

1) 鈥淪pent more than other countries鈥? Of the world鈥檚 40 largest countries, only four - South Korea, China, Mexico and India - had lower social spending than South Africa, as a share of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

2) 鈥淢illions lifted out of poverty?鈥 In fact many millions have been pushed down into poverty since 1994. Unmentioned is poverty that can be traced to neoliberal policies such as the failed 1996-2001 plan co-authored by two bank economists. This made South Africa far more vulnerable to global capitalist crises.

The bank鈥檚 South Africa poverty line is $2.5/day, which was R15.75/day (R473/month) in 2011, the date of the last poverty census. In contrast, that food plus survival essentials cost R779/month that year, and the percentage of South 第一吃瓜网s below that line was 53%. University of Cape Town economists led by Josh Budlender that StatsSA was too conservative and the ratio of poor South 第一吃瓜网s is actually 63%.

For a net 3.6 million people, more than 7% of South 第一吃瓜网s, to have been 鈥渓ifted out of poverty鈥 is plausible only if the bank鈥檚 much lower R473/month line is used. But by local standards, the number of poor people has soared by around 10 million given the 15 million population rise since 1994.

3) The bank adjusts the Gini Coefficient (measuring income inequality on a 0-to-1 scale) 鈥渇rom 0.76 to 0.596鈥 by including state social spending that benefits poor households. But here another silence . The bank dare not calculate pro-corporate subsidies and other state spending that raise rich people鈥檚 effective income through capital gains.

Such wealth accruing through rising corporate share prices is enjoyed mainly by richer people when companies benefit from new, state-built infrastructure in their vicinity. Also ignored by the bank, mainly benefit the rich in the same way. South Africa鈥檚 after-tax profits have been among the world鈥檚 highest, according to the .

Indeed the Treasury鈥檚 single biggest fiscal policy choice has been to condone 鈥渋llicit financial flows.鈥 These escape through bogus invoicing and other tax avoidance strategies. The Washington NGO Global Financial Integrity they cost South Africa an annual $21 billion from 2004-13, peaking in 2009 at $29 billion. The bank dare not mention these flows or the resulting capital gains enjoyed by South 第一吃瓜网 shareholders.

4) The Bank was most impressed by government鈥檚

provision of free basic services (mainly water, sanitation, electricity, and refuse removal), and social protection mainly in the form of social grants, primary health care, education (specifically no-fee paying schools), enhancing access to productive assets by the poor (e.g. housing and land), as well as job creation through the Expanded Public Works Program.

But the bank evades vital details, such as how 鈥渇ree basic water鈥 was piloted in Durban in 1999 before becoming national policy in 2001. After a tokenistic 6 free kiloliters (kl) per month, the price of the second block of the water within the tariff increased dramatically. Overall by 2004 the price had doubled. , the lowest-income third of households lowered monthly consumption from 22kl to 15kl, while the highest-income third cut back by just 3kl/month, from 35kl to 32kl.

5) Another unmentionable concerns the bank鈥檚 largest-ever project loan: $3.75 billion in 2010 for the corruption-riddled, oft-delayed Medupi coal-fired power plant. Eskom鈥檚 repayment of that loan plus other financing has the price of electricity to poor people by more than 250% since 2007. But neither the loan, the borrower, the project nor the soaring price of electricity are mentioned. Nor are Eskom鈥檚 special pricing agreements with BHP Billiton and Anglo that to a tenth as much as poor households pay.

6) The bank applauds a grant that

now reaches 11.7 million children. Grant payments have risen from 2.9% of GDP and now amount to 3.1%.

But a meagre 0.2% of GDP suggests the amounts provided are tokenistic. The child grant of just R340/month is about a third of today鈥檚 StatsSA after-inflation poverty line.

The South 第一吃瓜网s who cannot be named

The bank endorses government鈥檚 鈥渁pparently sound policy鈥 on redistribution because its researchers cannot grapple with the core problem that best explains why South 第一吃瓜网 capitalism causes poverty and inequality: extreme exploitation systems amplified after apartheid by neoliberal policies. The most cited scholarly research about post-apartheid exploitation is by local political economists like , , and 鈥 but the bank dare not reference these books.

To truly tackle poverty and inequality, only one force in society has unequivocally succeeded since 1994. That force is the social activist. Their successes include raising life expectancy from 52 to 62 over the past decade, reversing municipal services privatisation, cutting pollution and raising apartheid wages. But the organisations responsible 鈥 such as the Treatment Action Campaign, Anti-Privatisation Forum, South Durban Community Environmental Alliance and trade unions 鈥 are also, from the bank鈥檚 viewpoint, South 第一吃瓜网s who cannot be named.

, Professor of Political Economy, .This article was originally published on . Read the .

What Zuma would say if he cast himself as a climate emergency president

- Vishwas Satgar

Post the Cold War and in the age of high finance, the performance of narrow representative democratic politics has spawned three types of presidential politics.

There are the populist presidents. These include Italy鈥檚 the US鈥檚 and South Africa鈥檚 . Policy is made on the hoof, is erratic, and there is no moral and intellectual leadership except to allow markets to rule.

Then there is the technocratic ruler guided by the numbers, markets and keen to ensure policy-making is about certainty and the right signals. This is about being a manager of deep globalisation. , Germany鈥檚 and South Africa鈥檚 epitomised this.

Finally there is the statesman who is a visionary trying to ensure a home grown master narrative and a strategic class project. They carry a cross section of social forces and invent innovative engagements to shape a globalised political economy. Bolivia鈥檚 and stand out.

The provides President Zuma with the opportunity to make a clean break with his populist leadership style and take the sort of actions that are likely to make him unpopular. But, that might be a very tall order for Zuma.

What it will take for Zuma the statesman to emerge

Zuma can be a statesman if he embraces and articulates the following three priorities.

Firstly he needs to call for a new mode of governance to tackle the ecological crises facing the world, South Africa and Africa. As the starkest expression of this crisis he actively champions climate emergency governance to ensure systemic adaptation and mitigation.

This means the drought narrative is shifted away from being a national disaster to being part of the 鈥渘ew normal鈥 of climate shocks that requires a new paradigm of state practice, governance and citizenship. He stakes this out as a response to the crises of capitalist civilisation and the need for a just transition to sustain life. Central to this is reaffirming a non-racial approach to these challenges to unify South Africa.

Secondly he affirms a policy shift to climate emergency governance. This means moving policy in the direction of a new metric of sustaining life and a low carbon society. He actively calls for transitional policies that deepen mass initiative. These could include:

  • climate jobs,

  • a universal basic income grant set at a high level to enable choice,

  • integrated public transport,

  • food sovereignty pathways,

  • solidarity economies,

  • participatory budgeting at municipal level,

  • zero waste,

  • socially owned renewables,

  • the lifting on the ceiling of renewables in the national energy mix and calls for the establishment for a socially owned renewables parastatal,

  • rights of nature legislation,

  • scaling up cooperative banking in every locale,

  • a new sustainable water management framework,

  • a suite of new progressive carbon taxes and the retrofitting of households, government buildings and private corporations with locally manufactured renewable energy technology.

At the same time, he announces an end to fracking and all nuclear deals and sets a deadline to stop producing coal. In addition, he calls on unions to work with government to ensure workers use the and to leave behind dirty industries.

He streamlines government by introducing a new democratic planning ministry to work with local governments. It absorbs trade and industry, minerals, energy, environment, water, public transport, local government, agriculture, local development, housing and the finance ministries. And he commits to dismantling provinces through a constitutional amendment to be replaced with three inter-provincial administrations.

He calls for a new policy on politicians' salaries and perks so they are not so excessive. To professionalise the public sector, he calls on the to improve working conditions for health professionals, teachers, municipal workers and government administrators.

Finally, he announces a revamp of foreign policy which entails re-priorisiting Africa, instead of the . Africa has and will be hit hardest by climate warming. Yet it does not have the necessary finance, technology and institutional capacity to deal with this. Commitments made by Western countries to Africa at are dismal. Africa is meant to be a zone of climate chaos.

Zuma needs to challenge this by calling for the development of a just transition and climate emergency plan for Africa through the . All foreign engagements would be realigned with this imperative.

Why none of this will happen

All of this will not happen because Jacob Zuma is not a statesmen. It also won鈥檛 happen because the is married to a fossil fuel and extractivist accumulation path and fixated on a growth-centred version of deep globalisation. This despite the fact that it has not worked and is the opposite of remaking society to fit into ecological constraints to survive.

Finally it will take more climate shocks to wake up the world鈥檚 ruling elites and citizenry to understand we have entered unchartered territory in human history.

We are now officially at a 1鈩 increase in planetary temperatures since the industrial revolution. And we are rapidly heading towards a 2鈩 increase this century. We need to think, act and govern differently if we are to survive and ensure future generations have hope.The Conversation

, Senior Lecturer, Department of International Relations, . This article was originally published on . Read the .

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