Entirely possible. Legal and autobiographical allusions and cryptographic ciphers and codes were later found in the plays and poems to buttress the theory that Bacon did not want the success of playwriting to hinder his political and educational agrnda. See Richard II and Richard III having some claims as allusions to Bacon authorship.
I read in a very convincing book that it was Christopher Marlowe who really WAS William Shakespeare. He had been accused of heresy by the royalty, so he feigned suicide and found the name William Shakespeare into some archives. The real William Shakespeare was a farmer in the north of England if I remember well, and he was illiterate.
Entirely possible. Legal and autobiographical allusions and cryptographic ciphers and codes were later found in the plays and poems to buttress the theory that Bacon did not want the success of playwriting to hinder his political and educational agrnda. See Richard II and Richard III having some claims as allusions to Bacon authorship.
If you like reading instead of listening, check this out. An A.I. essay was written up from a podcast about the dangers of A.I.…. hmmmm. Irony?:
https://open.substack.com/pub/soberchristiangentlemanpodcast/p/essay-the-ai-deception-2025-unraveling?utm_source=share&utm_medium=android&r=31s3eo
My comment is just down below.
I read in a very convincing book that it was Christopher Marlowe who really WAS William Shakespeare. He had been accused of heresy by the royalty, so he feigned suicide and found the name William Shakespeare into some archives. The real William Shakespeare was a farmer in the north of England if I remember well, and he was illiterate.
Dear Jerm, you did not reply to me here to back up your position you have not been doing nasty things to Jamie Andrews.
https://substack.com/@protonmagic/note/c-117316195
Very interesting indeed.
Thank you Jeremy.
*a small overlook: anomolies be written with an "a": anomAlies
Sounds like the Beatles