9 Oct 2020

(597) The true Shakespeare as the Author of "Titus Andronicus".

The 'True' Shake-speare  (and not the false! Shakspere) as  the Author of 
"Titus Andronicus".

C O N C L U S I O N S :

There are numerous plausible and logical reasons to agree that Shakespeare ("William from Stratford) was not the author of Titus Andronicus:

1.)   A no longer comprehensible number of  renowned literary Experts (although largely 
forgotten and negated today) early doubted Shakespeare's authorship of  "Titus Andronicus" such 
as:

Lewis Theobald, Samuel Johnson, George Steevens, Edmond Malone, William Guthrie, John Upton
Benjamin Heath, Richard Farmer, John Pinkerton,  John Monck Mason, William Hazlitt and 
Samuel Taylor Coleridge a.o. 

2.) Quarto1 (printed 1594) entered the Stationer's register late 1593 only month after Marlowe's fatal twist of  fate

3.) Specific text analogies between Shakespeare’s "Titus Andronicus", "History plays" and  the "Sonnets" suggest a common poet and author: 

Demetrius, Tamara's son, speaks in “Titus” about 
Lavinia (II/1)
        "She is a woman, therefore to be woo’d" 
        "She is a woman, therefore to be won"; 
        "She is Lavinia, therefore to be lov'd",

This sounds strikingly similar in Shakespeare's 
Sonnet 41: 
        "Gentle thou art, and therefore to be won", 
        "Beauteous thou art, therefore to be assailed" 

«The same applies to» Henry VI/ I « (V / 3): 
        "She's beautiful,  and therefore to be woo'd" 
         "She is a woman,  therefore to be won"


4.)  The late insertion and content of scene III/2 in Titus Andronicus of the First Folio reveal unnoticed allegoric (autobiographic) parallels to the true authors senseless death..

(Titus):
 "a deed of death done on the innocent";

 as well as allegoric legacies, to posterity, to his 
daughter (Lavinia):
"...go with me Lavinia, I'll to thy closet; and go 
read with you sad stories chanced in the times of old"

and to his nephew (boy)
" Go with me:  thy sight is young and thou shalt 
read, when mine begins to dazzle
                                                                         [--->  ! End of the newly inserted scene! ]

5. In Marlowe's play "The Jew of Malta"  the villain "Barabas" definitely  influenced the Villain 
("Aaron" )  in "Titus Andronicus".

6. There are logical and plausible arguments that not only the authors of the history plays  "Edward 
II" [Marlowe[ and anonymous "Edward I" [Peele ??]) were identical, but also the authors of the anony-mous plays "Edward III" [Shakespeare?] and "Edward IV" [Heywood?] belonged to pennames of 
Marlowe.                          


                       ...for more details click these videos!
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