Jan 2, 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 presenter 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



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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