learninfreedom.org
Books on School and State (Learn in Freedom)
http://www.learninfreedom.org/school_state.html
Books on School and State. Site Index (A to Z). Books on School and State. Here is a list of books. Suggestions you have for future revisions of this list. International standard book numbers or United States Superintendent of Documents numbers, where available, are listed to help you request these books from interlibrary loan or bookstores. Books on these subjects are generally classified 370, 371, or 379 in the Dewey system, LA or LC in the Library of Congress system of library classification. Books Li...
thefestivalrobe.com
practiceth more the Pennie than the Penne — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/practiceth-more-the-pennie-than-the-penne
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Practiceth more the Pennie than the Penne. The last post examined the first sixteen lines of The Italian Taylor and His Boy. Armin sets off the last sixteen lines of the work as a message to a specific person. Prior to that message, he tells us who he is addressing. The perfumed Politician” we quickly recognize as Shaksper. The muske-cod perfume of both Osric in Hamlet and Asinius in Satiromastix is discussed here. Shaksper as an agent of government. As You Like It.
thefestivalrobe.com
State Bird of Elsinore — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/state-bird-of-elsinore
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. State Bird of Elsinore. Our flight of the jackdaw brings us to a very different place now. The works of Shakespeare, and specifically Hamlet, where a character, Osric, is identified as a “chough,” an older word for a jackdaw dating back to Chaucer. The scene is quite relevent. First up is the First Folio version – Act V, sc 2 which we take up as (Osric) a courtier, enters. The court knows him, but he does not know the court. 8220;tis a vice to know him.”. Q1 has an ...
thefestivalrobe.com
2015 February — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/2015/02
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Posts from — February 2015. State Bird of Elsinore. Our flight of the jackdaw brings us to a very different place now. The works of Shakespeare, and specifically Hamlet, where a character, Osric, is identified as a “chough,” an older word for a jackdaw dating back to Chaucer. The scene is quite relevent. First up is the First Folio version – Act V, sc 2 which we take up as (Osric) a courtier, enters. The court knows him, but he does not know the court. Q1 has an exc...
thefestivalrobe.com
Full House: Jacks over Earls — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/full-house-jacks-over-earls
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Full House: Jacks over Earls. Full House: Jacks over Earls. I need to clear up some definitions before proceeding. The word Jack. Has many definitions. There are three that I believe are in play here – I’ve screen-capped them from the OED below. Click definitions to enlarge. Now, into Epicene and Jack Daw – some of these observations I or Rambler have made before. May have been owned by Vere. Jack Daw as bedfellow to a Vere character brings us to another play &#...
thefestivalrobe.com
The Gentleman Usher — The Festival Robe
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A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. George Chapman’s,. Which likely dates from 1602-1604, contains a seemingly quite specific allusion to William Shakspere. This allusion was discovered by, and discussed in, Rambler’s Quake-speare Shorterly blog post of June 14. I believe The Gentleman Usher contains not just an allusion to William Shakespere, but also an allusion to the circumstances of the authorship deception. A close reading of. Tells us, how the authorship ruse went down. Lord, who in his buckram.
thefestivalrobe.com
2015 March — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/2015/03
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Posts from — March 2015. Practiceth more the Pennie than the Penne. The last post examined the first sixteen lines of The Italian Taylor and His Boy. Armin sets off the last sixteen lines of the work as a message to a specific person. Prior to that message, he tells us who he is addressing. The perfumed Politician” we quickly recognize as Shaksper. The muske-cod perfume of both Osric in Hamlet and Asinius in Satiromastix is discussed here. The New Inn’s. Edit –...
thefestivalrobe.com
2014 May — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/2014/05
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Posts from — May 2014. To take more liberty of behavior. The Wisdom of Doctor Dodypoll. Anon 1600) Earl Lassinbergh, who is a ‘painter by day, and an earl by night’ is confronted with his deception. 8220;FLORES: Heere you young gentlemen; do you know this man? 8230; [II.1.80]. MOTTO Yes signior Flores, ’tis Earle Lassinbergh. My lord what meane you to come thus disguisd? LASSIN: The foolish boye is mad, I am Cornelius;. Earle Lassinbergh; I never heard of him. He ca...
thefestivalrobe.com
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/page/2
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. I suggested early in this series that Boswell’s referencing Dr. Johnson’s comments on the dual existence of physical truth and moral truth applied to the 18th century treatment of Shakespeare’s authorship. One of the primary movers of Shakespeare as myth was David Garrick. The other primary mover was the village of Stratford-upon-Avon. The moral component of our story is alluded to in the denouements for both. High Life Below Stairs. Bon Ton, High Life Above Stairs.
thefestivalrobe.com
2014 July — The Festival Robe
http://www.thefestivalrobe.com/2014/07
A Post Stratfordian Shake-speare Blog. Posts from — July 2014. 8220;Cover Your Head”. Discussed the various references to a gentleman usher ‘bare-headed before’ in various places in the literature. I argued there that the Droeshout portrait’s bare head is reference to these earlier mentions of a gentleman usher preceding bare-headed before their master. Well said, o’ mine honour! A good significant fellow,. He talks much; does he follow your ladyship? No, an’t please your honour, I go before her. This bl...