My last post may have been over-wrought. Let's take it slowly.
Did WAB ever give his interpretation of "Will. Monox with his great dagger"? Or "Thy will shakes spears"?
1. London's playwrights wrote about each other in letters and pamphlets.
2. Clearly "Monox with his great dagger" is a cryptic reference.
3. Almost surely it refers to Edward de Vere. Anyone who doubts this much is simply under-informed.
4. Cryptic references to a person were sometimes used in insults,
5. but here no insult appears;
6. instead it was common courtesy to keep the name of a playwright hidden if he was also a Peer of the Realm. Again, anyone who doubts that would be common courtesy is simply ignorant.
7.So far so good. But why is Edward de Vere apparently given the nickname "Will" ?
I've labeled the seven sentences of the syllogism. Do you agree with #1? #2? Tell us when you're ready to move on to #3.
What's with the large font in your prior post? You realize that is the same as dumb Americans speaking to people who don't speak English, and raising their voices in the idea that speaking loudly will help others who speak different languages to understand them? It is insulting, which was your intention; but that's okay, I notice you do it to other people in other threads. I notice that lots of all o' y'all put things in large font to insult your interlocutors. Some of you lament that you can't write your posts in crayon. You and the others ought to stop that. You should take it as given that anyone who participates at this site can bloody read. Not only that, it makes you look angry and overly challenged.
You're not going to teach me how to Google? Yet another insult. Gee, thanks!
"Let's take it slowly..." ??? Another insult!
You wrote: Just for starters,
Swammi: the M in "Will Monox" seems unnecessary — but may I assume you know a LITTLE bit of French? — and — behold — a separate occurrence of "Will Oxon" without the M improves the hypothesis. And who said it HAD to be an anagram?
I was responding to this, which I posted above, a quote from a page I linked to (
Post #405):
But Tom Nashe admitted he too was present at the banquet, and when he later wrote to Gabriel Harvey, he made a coded reference to the third man as “Will Monox” (an anagram of Will Oxon.—Oxon. being the conventional Latin abbreviation for Oxford, hence the need for not naming him in a letter).
- In the words of Steve Martin: Well Excuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuse Meeeeeeeeeeeeee!
Calm yourself down or don't expect any further conversation about Oxford coming from me; and once I'm gone, I am sure you've noticed that no-one else on this discussion board is even remotely interested in this overblown infatuation with De Vere (probably caused in great part by the film
Anonymous. Film is especially persuasive when done well, and even more so when you have an actor [who played De Vere] who is magnetically handsome, gracious, and charming). Not that you and Moogly have been persuaded by it (I don't even know if either of you saw it), but apparently many have, as evidenced in the Facebook group about Oxford,
Shakesvere.
You will notice that I have been patient with you and Moogly, and have entertained your belief in De Vere to the best of my ability. Some would say I have been "humoring" you both - which would not be that far from the truth.
It is possible that Oxford wrote Shakespeare. Possible, but far from certain.
ETA:
"Tell us when you're ready to move on to #3..." - So fucking condescending! Oh alright, alright! I have been condescending at times as well, so I forgive you, because I love you. Where's the hug smilie?
I am not interested in the
Monox w/ his great dagger conversation. So it is
cryptic? Everything is cryptic and secretive (and conspiratorial) for Oxfordians. Or so it seems.
I think I said this before but it bears repeating: My patience and good will with this silliness is getting all three of us absolutely nowhere. The best responses to the OP came from DBT and Bronzeage at the beginning of the thread. And Bomb#20 had some excellent commentary and questions that were not given a fair...
ahem...
shake.