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Thread: Did Shakespheare Write Those Plays?

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    Question Did Shakespheare Write Those Plays?

    Did Shakespeare even write those plays? I don't think so. Before King Henry VIII was incapacitated with syphilis, he was a writer, poet, song writer (Greensleeves), and of course singer. Because he was King of England, he wasn't allowed to publish under his own name. It's believed by many that he wrote a silly folk song, "Where are You Going Henry My Son?" He was very religous and wrote a book defending the Sacredments and was named by the Pope, "Defender of the Faith." The use of language and the very syntax seems to point to him. Styles of writing are as different as one's finger print. He wrote reems of poetry, never published, but they are very simular to Shakespearean "writing." Shakespeare had his own playhouse and certainly produced and directed them.

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    What are you trying to say? Are you just having a laugh?

    What are you trying to say? Are you just having a laugh?: (

    If he never published his poetry, how do you know it was similar to Shakespeare's?

    It was NOT Henry, Elizabeth, Bacon, Oxford, or anyone else. Why do people insist on trying to say it WASN'T Shakespeare? There is absolutely no reason, or proof to say it wasn't him. The only "reason" people started to doubt him, (and not until centuries later, there was never any question of it being him at the time) is based on pure snobbery.

    I'm sure Henry, cultured and talented Renaissance man as he was, had loads of time, in between ruling the country and all that entails, to knock out 37 plays and loads of sonnets, of pure genius. And I'm sure that the publication of the First Folio in 1623, some 80 years after the death of the King, was very easy to get hold of, and publish, without any courtier or aide to him ever letting it slip. That would be one major conspiracy theory.

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    Quote Originally Posted by puppyshoes View Post
    Did Shakespeare even write those plays? I don't think so. ....
    You're not the only one who doubts his authorship

    "Coalition forms to discredit Shakespeare's authorship":
    http://www.cbc.ca/arts/theatre/story...uthorship.html


    Shakespeare Authorship Coalition:
    http://www.doubtaboutwill.org/

    "Declaration of Reasonable Doubt About the Identity of William Shakespeare":
    http://www.doubtaboutwill.org/declaration

    However, just to be on the safe side

    "Experts to avoid Shakespeare's 'curse' in restoring tombstone":
    http://www.cbc.ca/arts/artdesign/sto...eare-tomb.html

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    Of course Shakespeare wrote his plays and all the other great works that you and others are trying to discredit him of. Even if Henry never published his poetry, there would still be records of them, so why would Shakespeare's works not be among those in his personal keep?

    Shakespeare increased the size of the English language by about 30%. Take a look and see if Henry used similar phrases and diction as well.

    And I know this is off topic, but Henry is absolutely not as religious as he plays to be.
    "There are always flowers for those who want to see them."
    -Henri Matisse

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    Quote Originally Posted by puppyshoes View Post
    He was very religous and wrote a book defending the Sacredments and was named by the Pope, "Defender of the Faith." .
    Didnt know that, good to know My personal opinion is not that shakespeare himself wasnt the authour but that Marlowe and shakespeare were one and the same writer which ever it may have been.
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nightshade View Post
    Didnt know that, good to know My personal opinion is not that shakespeare himself wasnt the authour but that Marlowe and shakespeare were one and the same writer which ever it may have been.
    Yeah, right. Slight problem with that theory. Marlowe died in 1593. Shakespeare died in 1616. And was knocking out plays several years after Marlowe stopped a dagger with his face.

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    I can't believe people really believe this nonsense. Here's one Professor on the subject.

    Stephen Greenblatt, a professor at Harvard and author of the best-selling biography of the Bard, Will in the World, is one of America's most esteemed Shakespeare scholars.

    "Like most scholars, I think it's reasonably clear that the man from Stratford wrote the plays," he says. "But it's certainly a subject that doesn't go away. He does seem like he did drop in from another planet. The level of achievement is remarkable."

    Remarkable, says Greenblatt, but possible, even for a village lad if he were a genius. Greenblatt has little use for those who question the authorship of Shakespeare's works and compares doubters to Holocaust deniers and those who don't believe in evolution.

    Greenblatt has compared doubters to Holocaust deniers and those who don't believe in evolution.

    He says the most powerful evidence of authorship is the simplest: that the name William Shakespeare appeared on some of the plays published during his lifetime.

    "It's nothing that gives you the kind of certainty that can never be called into question," Greenblatt says. "Anything can be called into question. But you'd have to have a very strong reason to believe that there was skullduggery or an alternative account.

    http://www.npr.org/templates/story/s...oryId=92142217

    Also, Ben Jonson, who published the First Folio, was a friend and a colleague, and there's no doubting there who Shakespeare was.

    People just seem to want to deny the existence of genius, citing his education etc. Is Mozart ever questioned? "Oh a child could not have composed that?"

    As someone who is a great Shakespeare fan, I get very protective about people trying to deny him.

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    Lady of Smilies Nightshade's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Nightshade View Post
    Didnt know that, good to know My personal opinion is not that Shakespeare himself wasn't the author but that Marlowe and shakespeare were one and the same writer which ever it may have been.
    Quote Originally Posted by ballb View Post
    Yeah, right. Slight problem with that theory. Marlowe died in 1593. Shakespeare died in 1616. And was knocking out plays several years after Marlowe stopped a dagger with his face.
    Note the syntax of my original post, if you will, I didn't say Shakespeare was written by Marlowe, I said they were one and the same writer meaning that maybe Shakespeare ghost wrote for Marlowe, maybe there was a ghost writer for the pair of them , Maybe Shakespeare inherited a box of plays Marlowe had already written. There are lots of possibilities to the puzzle.
    And of course I could be completely wrong I never said it was a fact I said it was a personal opinion.

    And of course I cant be forgetting my favourite theory ( very dramatic and Hollywood-esque) Marlowe never died he just faked his death and 'became' Shakespeare.
    Last edited by Nightshade; 07-03-2008 at 09:24 AM.
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    wessexgirl, you are definitely in favor or the original man. Oxford's known verse sure has a similar quality to it as the plays. Also, I haven't heard about a follow-up to the initial examination of how many 2,3,4,5-length, etc. letter words per thousand words where the plays were similar to word lengths of the presumed dead Marlowe. You are probably right, but there are reasons to present alternatives. What I can't figure out is why they don't have original hand written scripts? or do they have them? If so, can't handwriting be compared?

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    Shakespeare Wrote Them!
    Beer is for daddy's and kids with fake ID's- Homer Simpson

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    Ahhhhhhh! Not again! Why does this myth keep persisting? I'd say the argument that someone named Shakespeare really didn't write the plays is quite ridiculous, and I'll give my opinion on why I think so:

    How can so many different authors write in such a consistent style: ever notice how all of Shakespeare's plays are filled with bawdy sexual jokes and references to disease, or how the plays vary expertly from great seriousness to sudden comedy? How can so many writers tackle the same themes in almost every play (sexual infidelity, bedroom tricks, sexual diseases, alcohol)? Ever notice how Shakespeare's characters are sometimes "types" (the witty lower class drunk or manual labourer, or the strong independent female in disguise who tries to find her lover, etc)? Did ALL of these authors have the skill to write like this? Also, why would all those writers even care to write on such topics? Highly unlikely!

    Also, Shakespeare revolutionized theatre by breaking the rules and inventing his own style of writing: his characters switch between prose and verse depending on their mood or circumstances. Also, he didn't always write things in iambic pentameter and sometimes used 9, 11, or 12 syllable lines when they suited him. And he used split lines: other writers didn't do this (which is why for a long time scholars had trouble figuring out why some lines were 3,4,5,etc syllables long and not the standard 10). How is it possible for a variety of writers to ALL share these traits and the same style of writing?

    Bacon did not write the plays. He was a deeply scientific, logical, and precise thinker: he wasn't given to flights of poetic fancy, because he was a scientist. If you've read his aphorisms and essays, you know Bacon simply didn't write the plays. He helped invent the essay format (no joke), and you're telling me he wrote something as funny as Midsummer Night's Dream? He was also pretty corrupt like many other officer holders of his time and helped to prosecute his own friend and benefactor Robert Devereux, the Earl of Essex (he seems too "inhuman" and unkind to be Shakespeare or write of such things as uncontrollable love, betrayal, or comedy so easily).

    And Marlowe died way before Shakespeare did and couldn't have written all those later plays.

    Further proof: the poet John Milton was born on Bread Steet, London, in 1608, and Shakespeare and Ben Jonson were often seen drinking at a bar on that very street. Milton, who was around 8 years old when Shakespeare died in 1616, wrote a sonnet dedicated to Shakespeare in 1630 called "On Shakespeare." Are you telling me that Milton was also "in on the joke/lie" that Shakespeare wasn't really real? That seems very unlikely. Milton, who might have actually seen Shakespeare and certainly admired his writing (enough to write a sonnet on him), presents solid proof that Shakespeare was a real person. Just ask yourself: why would Milton write a sonnet on a person named Shakespeare if that person never existed? What would he have to gain from such an elaborate lie?

    Neither did Elizabeth or Henry or any other monarch write the plays. Why? Because Shakespeare depicts the very lowest of the lower classes and knows how they speak and act and their living conditions: how could someone like Queen Elizabeth or Henry 8th know these things? Did Elizabeth or Henry hang out at bars or on the streets and learn poor people's slang (including the sexual stuff?). I'd don't think it'd be very proper for a monarch of England to be seen in such places or write of such things. Also, Shakespeare wrote on some contemporary issues, and Henry 8th died much before Shakespeare, so how could he write of that stuff?

    But then this begs the question: how did Shakespeare, a commoner, know of the life of royalty? Answer: he performed for royalty (like with his The King's Men acting company) and he perhaps conversed with them, like writing Macbeth for James the 1st. And he would easily be able to read of monarchs in other books, like Holinshed, or, living under a monarchy, hear stories or see the life of royalty firsthand.

    But how could Shakespeare, who comes from a middle class family (he's not lower class), be so brilliant? How the hell does anyone predict how genius works? How was Einstein the most brilliant scientist of the last century if his parents were no where near as brilliant as him? How did the brilliant Abraham Lincoln, born in poverty in a small log-cabin, rise to become president of a country? How? He was self-taught and devoured books and had a natural talent for learning (and he also loved Shakespeare). Funny how Mark Twain doubted Shakespeare's authorship even though he didn't go to school himself, but was so brilliant.

    Just because Shakespeare's brilliant beyond belief (which seems to be people's main problem) doesn't mean he didn't work very hard on his plays: so we may be mistaking pure brilliance for extreme hard work.

    And ask yourself this: why would the other writers who are alleged to have written Shakespeare's plays, like Marlowe or Bacon or whoever, not claim credit for the plays, since they're already professional writers? Seems dumb to me. So the simplest answer is that Shakespeare was real, and he wrote those works.
    Last edited by Abdiel; 09-27-2008 at 05:55 PM.

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    Abdiel, Answer me one question: when the Stratford Shakespeare came to London did he have a decent chunk of money to travel to Italy? Well, maybe. Because in one of these authorship books it mentions a certain painting or art work that is referred to in Othello, such that you had to be in Florence or Rome in the summer 1602, or some such date (getting fuzzy because can't quite recall the details). Also, I suppose by listening to stories about falconry, anybody could translate it into expertise writing, rather than experiencing it directly as, say, Oxford did. Ditto for navigation, sailing, warfare, astronomy, gardens. Also, when Richard II was presented and all hell broke loose in England because of treason threats, how come Stratford Shakespeare find himself in prison. Or, maybe he did, and wrote some tragedies in the dungeon.

    Does anybody know about what happened to handwritten manuscripts?

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    [QUOTE=byquist;634098]Abdiel, Answer me one question: when the Stratford Shakespeare came to London did he have a decent chunk of money to travel to Italy? Well, maybe. Because in one of these authorship books it mentions a certain painting or art work that is referred to in Othello, such that you had to be in Florence or Rome in the summer 1602, or some such date (getting fuzzy because can't quite recall the details). QUOTE]

    This is just clutching at straws. Do you mean "The Taming of the Shrew?"

    Check out this website, where you can find any of these barmy theories refuted.


    http://shakespeareauthorship.com/italy.html

    This may be what you're referring to in defence of Oxford.

    For example, a painting referred to in the introduction of The Taming of the Shrew was on display in Milan only between 1585 and 1600 -- too late for Oxford to have seen it, but just right for Derby and Rutland.

    It seems to point to yet more "candidates", showing how ludicrous these theories are...... and can be twisted to throw up any number of names.

    There were only questions about the authorship centuries after Shakespeare died, and I think one of the leaders of the questioning who championed Oxford, was aptly named....Looney!

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    Wessexgirl, That article is a bit erudite and dull for my tastes. But the truth is often very pedestrian indeed. One guy who makes the case is Joe Sobran in his book, Alias Shakespeare. In Appendix 2 and 3 he compares Oxford's know poems and letters with phrases and works in the 36 or more plays.

    Like Oxford: Drown me with trickling tears
    Shake: Drown the stage with tears; which burns worse than tears drown; tears shall drown the wind, etc.

    Oxford: I am not as I seem to be
    Shake: I am not what I am

    Oxford: secret thoughts
    Shake: Nor shall he smile at thee in secret thought

    Oxford: The secret signs that show my inward frief
    Shake: my grief lies all within, etc.

    Oxford: Nor will I frame myself to such as use
    Shake: And frame my face to all occasions; frame yourself to orderly soliciting;

    Oxford: raze the ground
    Shake: raze the santuary

    Page after page of comparisons, poems to plays.

    Then 6-7 pages about Oxford's letters:

    Ox: by these lewd fellows
    Sh: by this lewd fellow

    Ox: experience doth manifest
    Sh: manifest experience

    Ox: in an eternal remembrance to yourself
    Sh: together with rembrance of ourselves

    Oxford: I serve her Majesty, and I am that I am.
    Sh: "I serve his majesty"/I am that I am (Sonnet 121

    Ox: Thus I leave you to the protection of almighty God
    Sh: So I leave you to the protection of the prosperous gods.

    Ox: if by mine industry I could make something out of this nothing
    Sh: For nothing hath begot my something grief/Or something hath the nothing that I grieve

    Oxford: but the world is so cunning as of a shadow they can make a substance, and of a likelihood a truth
    Sh: Richard II all about "shadow" like "Each substance of a grief hath twenty shadows."

    Sum up: this Sobran comparison of phrases, vocab words, and rhythms of language are rather convincing.

    Give me an opinion about his book.

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    This is a topic that I find very interesting, but the comments in this thread are a good example of a perspective that detracts from the benefit of such an intellectual exercise: people inevitably react emotionally and this causes them to ignore reason.
    It is a fact that none of us can say without a doubt exactly who it was that penned all of Shakespeare's plays because we weren't there with a camera and a contract. The most likely scenario will always be that the man whose name was attributed to the plays is in fact, as he and other writers, scholars and entertainers of the time state outright, the true author.
    But contemplating whether or not there is some other possibility is not equivalent to slapping the man in the face... not in itself. So it makes no sense at all to get angry and makes even less sense to shut off our minds to any such argument purely because we are worried that it might offend the memory of a great genius or is in some way betraying that memory. Based on the cynicism and satire of his comedies (and indeed many of his tragedies), and the poetic license he himself took to the presentation of history, it seems clear to me that were the author of these plays sentient of the long-standing argument over authorship he would look a little more like: as opposed to - so there's no need for us to be any different.
    That is not to say that emotion hasn't clouded the argument "against" Shakespeare's authorship. Some of the strongest proponents for Marlowe, or Oxford or any of the Royals, etc also show the very emotional fault of searching for factoids of support rather than analysing articles for evidence.
    Personally, I am quite sure that whoever was the author had help, shared ideas, excerpts, storylines and characters both forward and backward and was, regardless of his actual name, education, experience or collar-size, a genius.
    At the very least, isn't it a surity that the man (or woman) was intelligent enough that speculation over whether "one man could possibly have written...", if "a public secondary school education could have nurtured such...", or that "this broad range of knowledge must needs be plagiarised..." could ultimately be viewed by him/her/them/it as an enduring flattery in the form of amazed incredulity?

    If you had the power to do something truly amazing, wouldn't you consider:
    "no freaking way could you have possibly done that!"
    just as flattering a testiment as "wow - you're really great"
    As long as you knew for a fact that it was you, of course.
    and whoever "Shakespeare" was...
    Shakespeare knew.

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