Shakespeare's plays were written by William Shakespeare.
Bacon's acknowledged poetry is pedestrian verse. The Earl of Oxford's poetry is also pedestrian verse.
Bacon was a very busy guy who also wrote voluminously in technical areas. If Shakespeare's plays were written in pedestrian verse on technical
matters, I could see the possibility that he wrote Shakespeare's plays.
Unfortunately the plays are world class literature, at the head of the class in fact, out of Bacon's literary league. Shakespeare wrote them. Ben
Johnson makes it completely, abundantly clear in a dedicatory poem in the first folio, that the plays were written by an actor from
Stratford-upon-Avon, and who that actor was.
The best argument against Baconian authorship of the plays is Bacon's life. He's too busy, too technical. He's not a serious artist. People seem to
believe that these supremely excellent dramatic works could be tossed off as garnishes to an already very full career. That's nonsense. A complete
impossibility.
The Earl of Oxford was a wealthy scrambled egg who was flattered by literary figures hoping to gain his financial patronage. He was also too busy and
too immature as a personality to write Shakespeare's plays. He travelled a lot, was deeply involved in court politics, litigation, quarrels, dissolute
behavior and died before the last of Shakespeare's plays had been produced.
If one looks into it
and thinks a little bit, it becomes obvious. Shakespeare wrote Shakespeare. It amazes me that people persist in thinking
otherwise.
When people criticise Shakespeare for a lack of education they don't seem to take the "prodigy" factor into consideration.
How could a boy of 10 years old master several dead languages? Well surely he spent the ages from 0 to 9 studying linguistics. But how could he even
do that without some educational grounding? Easy, and I do mean
easy, he was a prodigy. Prodigies are very quick learners.
en.wikipedia.org...:_Leadership.2C_Teaching.2C_Evangelism
Jean-François Champollion knew several dead languages by the time he was 10 years old and read an important paper at the Grenoble Academy at 16
years old.[124
But even if Shakespeare was a prodigy, how could he learn about statecraft when his job was putting on plays for the court of Queen Elizabeth I?
Maybe he was an observant prodigy.
Shakespeare's plays were written by someone steeped in the life of the theatre. They were written by a great artist, not a guy who was an outstanding
lawyer/scientist/philosopher/politician. The Baconians and Oxfordians are not being realistic about what it takes to write at the level of
Shakespeare.
Read Ben Johnson's poem. It is almost as if he knew that "the powers that be" would one day try to take those works from their true author. Ben
Johnson triple underlines who wrote those plays. It was William Shakespeare, an actor from Stratford-upon-Avon.
edit on 25-6-2013 by ipsedixit because: (no reason given)
edit on 25-6-2013 by ipsedixit because: (no reason given)