30 Aug 2015

(253)The "No-Letter-Argument" alone is sufficient to deny once and for all the authorship of Shakespeare (Stratford )

The "No-Letter-Argument"

No handwritten material from the worlds most literate man has ever be detected? 

The answer 

( "I have no idea why it happened but it happened") 

is unacceptable and unscientific.

______________________



In Shakespeare's time there was no telegraph, no telephone, no e-mail, no television, no internet etc. - The only way of communicating with remote people was by means of written (and) printed material, such as letters, notes, messages, stories, tales, poems, thoughts, reflections, texts  etc. etc.

Shakespeare was the most powerful literate and eloquent writer of his time. He has and must have written ....

...throughout his life on a daily basis.

 As soon as a consigner gives away his letters or any written texts he looses control of it, and he never can  be sure where his "words, poems, texts " will  remain later on.---


The fact that not a singular rudiment of a (hand)written document from Shakspeare has ever been found needs a rational, scientific explanation, it is virtually impossible and can never become plausible.

 There must be a logical and plausible explanation for this "impossibility": Under no circumstances a complete lack of handwritten information of Shakespeare, having lived for a quarter of a century in London, may have happened. An answer by an expert: 

"I have no idea why it happened but it happened" is totally unacceptable and unscientific.

Can you think of a great composer, who left  no handwritten notations?
- Shakespeare  must have left letters and writings in abundance. The most plausible possibility or explanation: The poet and dramatist did not write under the name we are looking for but used pseudonyms, pennames and initials.

The most often used Argument is, that we do not have handwritten material from so many other contemporous writers either, means that the cat bites into its own tail.

If we start to notice that our poet used dozens of pseudonyms and initials during his long  lifetime  (like  Willobee, -->Clarke, -->Griffin, -->Barnfield, -->Davison, -->Breton, -->Markham, -->Basse, -->Taylor, -->Chapman, -->Heywood, ->Drayton  ,>LODGE etc.  absurd though it might sound)

 it becomes evident that you will find more handwritten material from many of those ...