How "Shakespeare" told us the names of his aliases (WS71)

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therealshakespeare

therealshakespeare

Күн бұрын

This video demonstrates that the name of the Bard's alias "Sir Richard Wilbraham" ( / "Roger Wilbraham" - his supposed "son") of Dorfold Hall, Nantwich is embedded into some of his well known plays. The bard sometimes used homophones and syllables - in addition to complete words - to disguise the content.
There are also allusions to "Ipswich" and the pilgrim father's settlement in "far-off" lands (promontory) , namely Ipswich MA. Also an allusion to the Mermaid public house in London where the playwrights allegedly met. The bard imitates his character "Richard III" - by wearing many "coats" - like the Chameleon mentioned in the speech.
There are much longer word/syllable sequences of 20 or more segments hidden, for example, in the play "The Merry Wives of Windsor", potentially exposing his alias "Thomas Paget" (minister and Baron) plus "The Great Bed of Ware" (by "Hans Vredeman de Vries") and "Anne Hathaway".
LINK TO PURCHASE THE BOOK - "Debugging Shakespeare"
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LINK TO Wikipedia article for "Richard / Roger Wilbraham" of Dorfold Hall, Nantwich
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Пікірлер: 27
@rotagorretni
@rotagorretni 17 күн бұрын
This is so fricking mind-blowing awesome. Me and Jerry was just thinking the same thing. We were flicking thru the complete works like, and whenever we thought of a name, sure enough we'd soon enough find just that name hidden so carefully in plain sight in the first or second or third letters of every first or second or third line, say. I mean you think about the odds. Cos God you know, GOD, what are those letters actually spelling? Gift Of Divine!! Like what are the chances? And who is behind all this? We have to start asking. And I tell you, the day is nigh coming and the name shall be revealed and then all rocks will turn to sand and rains will fall in thunder, notwithstanding how the ice shall flow like the weeping willow into every borough from Ibeza to the Norfolk Broads
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 17 күн бұрын
Methinks thou art being over cynical, but I verily suggest to you and Jerry, that you just look at this very much longer (and much less likely to occur by accident) example of the same phenomenon:- "Wel green Wis tas ton Nan which Anne Page priest ba ron Caius doctor Will great bed gold Hath away", containing ALL of these words/syllables - in the play The Merry Wives of Windsor (Act IV, scene 6 - line 2430) - each of which has real relevance to the genuine origin of the bard in Nantwich, his sister ANNE, his college CAIUS and his occupation (PRIEST) as well as a reference to his supposed wife in the traditional narrative, "ANNE HATHAWAY". The bard was using an alias name of "Thomas PAGEt" and married to a "Margery GOLDsmith, while living at WELd's GREEN (now "Wells Green"). There were supposedly two Thomas PAGEt's, one was a BARON who attended CAIUS college and the other was a PRIEST. John CAIUS - who founded the college - was a DOCTOR. A garden designer, "Hans Vredeman de Vries" (who was another alias of the bard), allegedly built the "GREAT BED of WARE". Thomas the PRIEST 's sister was called ANNE PAGE. ANNE HATHAWAY the supposed wife of "Mr. W.S." was allegedly given his 2nd best BED in his WILL. Let me assure you, there are not just a few cases where this embedding of names is found - in quite similar fashion - but a great many.
@albertconstantine5432
@albertconstantine5432 11 күн бұрын
Shakespeare was Shakespeare of Stratford. Nothing here is defensible. Fantasy is fine but not when others - or you yourself - are aware of the game.
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 11 күн бұрын
@@albertconstantine5432 on the contrary, it’s what the true Shakespeare wanted you to believe in order to promote the grammar schools he had built to educate the masses. The narrative he wished to portray was that even a young lad from a tiny market town could advance his life through attending a grammar school. That was the fantasy in this case. Meanwhile, he built many more schools, libraries and almshouses all across the country and advanced the course of science and promoted the arts. It’s all in my book “Debugging Shakespeare” for you to see, unless you wish to keep your head buried in the sand or, like Professor Stanley Wells, who keeps his buried in his wallet.
@davidjames9626
@davidjames9626 6 күн бұрын
​@@therealshakespeare9243guff..no more..I doubt you have really read him..your use language gives it away..
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 6 күн бұрын
@@davidjames9626 So, without reading any of my book - which includes a lot of evidence regarding who the bard REALLY was - you pronounce my discoveries void. This shows a lack of openness on your part for any new material which might demolish the traditional narrative. There is enough evidence, in any case, to seriously question the status quo and demonstrate the bard's significant hidden encryptions to be found in his works. The incredible work of Alan Green and the late Alexander Waugh, shows these encryptions quite clearly impossible without serious intent. Your channel gives little of who you are away - but I am assuming you are "a Stratfordian" - despite evidence contradicting this belief.
@davidjames9626
@davidjames9626 6 күн бұрын
@@therealshakespeare9243 thank you for the reply, which I appreciate is without malice and civilised..I am not a scholar but perhaps just someone who is in love with Early Modern English literature..now how can I put it ? the word formation and literary content of W.S. is profound and perhaps without parallel AND this is what is the real importance of his works..now there are those that question the actuality of the name William Shakespheare as being a ruse..which completly misses the true value and point of Mister William Shakespeare..it is absurd..yes however there are many facts that are not verifiable, however this is a fact when the reality of the 'time' was that playwrights were not considered as important and deserving as poets or essayists or other writers in general and so were not documented so much..however Boswell knew and was an admirer of the works of W.S. and that is documented..If you read the Arden series of his plays you will see the considerable learned study of the man and his works that is and has been amassed that logic demands accepting.. As for Alexander Waugh, well he was it can be suggested rather jealous of his more famous brother and so possibly looked for some area in which he himself might shine hence the hocus pocus of looking for who was the real Shakespeare.. Check out the vast literature of Shakespearian studies of scholars of the Arden series, as opposed to the rather trite silly conspiracy theories that are around now, flat earth, creationism et al, well just see the beauty and the Algebra of the language of Shakespears plays..that is where to go.. David
@Shoomer1988
@Shoomer1988 22 күн бұрын
What nonsense. You can find just about anything you want in just a few pages of anything using that trick.
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 22 күн бұрын
@@Shoomer1988 you would be surprised just how many other names of his aliases I have found - usually built from a string of syllables. This was something the bard clearly enjoyed doing. If it was so easy, there would not be just a SINGLE occurrence in the entire works of the bard as there always is - even with the most obscure names you could imagine.
@Shoomer1988
@Shoomer1988 22 күн бұрын
@@therealshakespeare9243 My entire point was I wouldn't be surprised. You could find the exact same names in Harry Potter. It's not evidence.
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 22 күн бұрын
@@Shoomer1988 I answered your “entire point” by stating 1) it’s what the bard did 2) it’s only ever SINGLE occurrences in a vast amount of text. If it was “common” the names would crop up more than once in that quantity. If the names are uncommon (as many are), you wouldn’t expect ANY match unless genuinely DELIBERATELY embedded. The context can also be important - as with “random” accidental anagrams versus deliberate anagrams.
@Shoomer1988
@Shoomer1988 22 күн бұрын
@@therealshakespeare9243 You have zero evidence for those of those claims. "it’s only ever single occurrences in a vast amount of text" How do you know. You just finding one is not the same thing. "If it was “common” the names would crop up more than once in that quantity" How do you know? Have you done the maths? What formula did you use to come that conclusion? "If the names are uncommon (as many are), you wouldn’t expect ANY match unless genuinely DELIBERATELY embedded" How do you know? See above
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 22 күн бұрын
@@Shoomer1988 OK then - here's one for you "Wel green Wis tas ton Nan which Anne Page priest Caius doctor" - try putting that exact string into the search field in the website opensourceshakespeare.org (as shown in the video). Facts: 1. Wel (ds) Green is a crossroads between the towns of NantWICH and Crewe where Thomas Paget (the 3rd Baron of Beaudesert - also a priest of the same name), who attended Caius College and had a sister called Anne Page(t). Line 2430 in the "Merry Wives of Windsor" (Act IV, scene 6), refers to Doctor Caius (an obvious allusion to Caius College - because of the context) and is spoken by the character "Fenton". That's 12 syllables/words that match JUST ONCE in that single "line" - in the whole of the Shakespeare Canon. Please feel free to write a text search script that looks for those syllables in any quantity of random text you like - you will not find a match. Here is the results screenshot on Google Drive of that exact search. The opensourceshakespeare software only shows some of the words highlighted - but they are all present. drive.google.com/file/d/1W2Hp_eC3LLtXLJ_DJY3BbN4eG-8gmfzw/view?usp=sharing BTW, "Wells Green" (formerly "Weld's Green) - is where "Thomas Paget" (priest AND baron - bard alias) lived with his wife Margery GOLDsmith that he married in the salt town of NantWICH, and so too did "John Milton" the poet, and it is recorded in the "Visitation of Lancashire" of 1664 and also more recently documented in James Hall's "History of Nantwich" published 1883. "Caius College" is where a goodly percentage of the bard's aliases also "coincidentally" attended. The word Gold is used in the previous line by Fenton. I can also point out something I hadn't noticed until just now - The four words HATH, AWAY, WILL and BED also appear in the same line as the name "ANNE" (what a surprise) - that makes 16 matching words/syllables, not 12. - Thank you !, I think you have to agree - in light of "Shakespeare's" Will re: Anne Hathaway - the context is entirely relevant. I will allow you to try to calculate the odds of the set of words/syllables not only matching the particular "line" but also matching the context of what I believe to be the REAL Shakespeare from Nantwich - plus a little bit of the fake story too - for contrast (=Anne Hathaway of Stratford with her fake cottage and garden). There are other allusions I haven't mentioned, but I think that's good enough to convince you that this is not "random". EDIT: I have now discovered more relevant syllables/words bringing the total to 24 (previously 16). The new opensourceshakespeare.org search string becomes "Wel ds green Wis tas ton Nan which Great bear Tho mas Page gold ba ron doctor Caius Anne Hath Away Will hand bed "
@Brix96
@Brix96 26 күн бұрын
Very well spoken and acted
@xmaseveeve5259
@xmaseveeve5259 Ай бұрын
Wow, you are a very good actor!
@therealshakespeare9243
@therealshakespeare9243 Ай бұрын
Check out the video credits at the end of the video !
@xmaseveeve5259
@xmaseveeve5259 Ай бұрын
@@therealshakespeare9243 Thank you!
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