Without the acceptance of a Shakespeare Authorship Conspiracy
most key questions and inconsistencies cannot be answered!
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It is not so well known that the translator of Du Bartas' "Divine weeks" Josuah Sylvester was a prolific poet born in 1563.
His own works include:
*Monodia (1594) ., ‘The Profit of Imprisonment, a Paradox (against libertie). ,
*‘The Miracle of the Peace in Fraunce , ‘*Automachia" or the Self-Conflict of a Christian, (s.preceeding blog), London. for Edward Blount’ ,
‘ *Lachrimæ Lachrimarum a.o
His first own poetic work at the age of 30 was entitled "M o n o d i a" in 1594 , an Elegie, in commemoration of an old Lady widdow, Dame Hellen Branch, Widdowe’ [married twice , late wife of Sir John Branch, lord-mayor] [1594], 4 leaves. The British Museum copy was supposed to be the only one extant, but one [formerly the Isham copy at Britwell.] is included in the Folio of 1641 (Brit. Mus.).
https://archive.org/stream/completeworks01sylvgoog#page/n8/mode/2up
John Sylvester, the author of Monodia (...within the first year of Marlowe's death, of the same age as Marlowe / Shakespeare ) compares his own private case to fading flowers fresh, green and gallant in the morning sun, which "witherd and dead before the day be done. Until now the world had not seen a poet ("a frame of flesh so glorious here beneath but had been ruined be the rage of Death" , dubiously! (question mark!")
His own works include:
*Monodia (1594) ., ‘The Profit of Imprisonment, a Paradox (against libertie). ,
*‘The Miracle of the Peace in Fraunce , ‘*Automachia" or the Self-Conflict of a Christian, (s.preceeding blog), London. for Edward Blount’ ,
‘ *Lachrimæ Lachrimarum a.o
His first own poetic work at the age of 30 was entitled "M o n o d i a" in 1594 , an Elegie, in commemoration of an old Lady widdow, Dame Hellen Branch, Widdowe’ [married twice , late wife of Sir John Branch, lord-mayor] [1594], 4 leaves. The British Museum copy was supposed to be the only one extant, but one [formerly the Isham copy at Britwell.] is included in the Folio of 1641 (Brit. Mus.).
https://archive.org/stream/completeworks01sylvgoog#page/n8/mode/2up
John Sylvester, the author of Monodia (...within the first year of Marlowe's death, of the same age as Marlowe / Shakespeare ) compares his own private case to fading flowers fresh, green and gallant in the morning sun, which "witherd and dead before the day be done. Until now the world had not seen a poet ("a frame of flesh so glorious here beneath but had been ruined be the rage of Death" , dubiously! (question mark!")
Isn't this portrayal of the private case of Sylvester within the year of Marlowe's disappearance equivalent (a Blueprint) to the fate of Marlowe, the most famous poet in London at the time of his alleged death 1593?