January 02, 2025

(693) Dialog about Richard Niccols , " the editor (1610) of the Mirror of Magistrates

 Dialog about Richard N I C C O L S,  

last editor (1610) of "the Mirror of Magistrates".

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the largely unknown Richard Niccols, who edited the 1610 edition of A Mirror for Magistrates, must have been a Pseudonym for "true"Shakespeare (= Marlowe). The argument hinges on stylistic similarities between Nichols’s works and Shakespeare’s, as well as biographical details within Niccols’s poems that align with events in Shakespeare’s life, suggesting a concealed autobiographical connection.

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The video uses textual analysis of Nichols's poems, including "A Winter Night's Vision", "The Three Sisters' Tears", and Sir "Thomas Overbury's Vision", to support this claim.

The Video-author analyses the use of allegory, recurring motifs, and personal confessions to build their case. The overall thesis suggests that the 'obscure' Niccols was a carefully constructed literary persona used by 'true' Shakespeare (Concealed Marlowe) to publish works under a different identity.


ai Video Dialog on the original Video (below)

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Original Video (40 min.)



It makes no plausible or logical sense to attribute the authorship of pseudonymous Richard NICCOLS' works to anyone else than the
"TRUE" SHAKESPEARE (aka Marlowe)

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