14 Dec 2015

(359) The fatal missing link: Shakespeare never ever has written any letter!

Shakspeare (from Stratford) never ever has written any letter! 

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This needs an explanation!!


                                                   The English secretary,
                                                           or Methode of writing
                                                            of epistles and letters
                                                               1599






The goal of language is communication. Shakespeare probably possessed the most powerful communicative competence of all time, becoming one of the most influential writer.

The craft of his writing and language is unprecedented. Since at his time there was no telegraph, no radio, no newspaper etc., letters were the outstanding means of communication and a method of gaining feedback, privately and for “official” communication. -


Consider that at Elisabethan times there were extremely popular writing manuals on how to compose letters: e.g. Angel Day’s “The English Secretary” with numerous editions (1586, 1592, 1595, 1599, 1607, 1614, 1621, 1625, and 1635) dedicated – by the way – to Edward de Vere.

For William Shakspere (Stratford) having lived for a quarter of a century in London not a single sign of written communication, (letters, notices, messages, accountings etc). has remained or ever been discovered?

Any written message, given away, is forever out of the control of the sender, the most logical and only plausible conclusion of the missing correspondence is:

Shakspere never ever has written any letter! 

As long as so-called Shakespeare experts (incl.Oxfrauds) and Academia do not provide us a rational explanation for this bizarre and impossible  situation, they cannot expect that the public will ever be willing to close the chapter of Shakspeare’s invisible communicative competence and to end the authorship debate!

Compare Shakspere with his contemporous Tobie Mathew and his impressive correspondence especially with Francis Bacon (written at Shakespeare's time between 1600 and 1630)

Why as early as 1660 an impressive "Collection of letters made by Tobie Mathew" could appear in print, but never ever a single letter of Shakspere?




! You should not use the Argument ("That’s not unusual: there were  of similar contemporary cases (such as Breton, Chapman, Drayton, Heywood, Markham, Mathew etc.)
as long as you are not familiar with  their IDENTITY & vast writings!!