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What James Mabbe Wrote in the First Folio

NOTE: If my cat Spooky is heard in the background, I apologize. She doesn’t like me being out of her sight. Thanks for your indulgence. Shakespeare’s First Folio published in 1623 contains many enigmas and anomalies which have perplexed scholars for centuries. The front matter of the book contains five poems, two letters, a weird engraving on an equally bizarre title page, a list of actors, and an incomplete table of contents that lists all but one of the plays. All these contribute to the mystery behind the work and who the man Shakespeare actually was. They operate much like gears in a finely made watch: each piece works in sync with the others to tell us more about the game they were playing amongst themselves. It is an intricate machine of verbal, numerical, and visual puzzles which accumulate to the point where each new solution provides more evidence of the game and that the name on the title page is not that of the real author. Ben Jonson (1572 - 1637) wasn’t the only writer from the front matter who concealed the playwright through numerical and verbal allusions; James Mabbe (1572 - 1642) (pronounced "maybe"), a notable translator of Spanish works, was probably another. What may be his poem – signed simply “I.M” - is the shortest at eight lines, but it’s length is deceptive for it surprisingly hides quite a few small puzzles leading to the real author’s identity. In this video I take viewers step by step in identifying the simple puzzles and hints he created to hide the playwright’s true identity. The only tools I use are the 23 Latin alphabet gematria values and its “big sister” the Latin Alphabet Repeated Count (LARC); no complicated letter-shifting codes or ciphers are needed to solve them. I also show how Mabbe indicates that the plays contain the playwright’s life story. By the end of the presentation I trust that viewers will come to understand two things: one, that the front matter of the First Folio is full of puzzles and clues in the Shakespeare Authorship Game, and two, those clues identify Edward de Vere the 17th earl of Oxford as the man who wrote using the name as a pseudonym - or pen name - to conceal his writing activities. I hope you enjoy this video and please leave any comments or corrections below so that I can improve things in the future. Have a great day and stay safe. *** Some useful links: Please visit the Declaration of Reasonable Doubt for more on the controversy behind the man who wrote the most produced plays in history: https://doubtaboutwill.org/declaration Alexander Waugh’s channel on the Authorship Question:    / @alexanderwaugh7036   I recommend starting with Alexander’s playlist Who Knew before diving into the other playlists as they follow from this starting point. Please visit John Anthony’s series of videos exploring more of the authorship game:    / @johnanthony8653   I recommend starting with his first video since the rest follow from it:    • Shakespeare's Sonnet Number Code 1 - ...  . NoBody Oxfordian has videos at:    / @nobodyoxfordian9500   The videos may be long in this series, but they contain a wealth of information. Some of it you may disagree with, but he presents a compelling argument nonetheless. Perhaps the best sites for information on de Vere and the Oxfordian theory are the following: The Shakespeare Oxford Fellowship is at https://shakespeareoxfordfellowship.org The De Vere Society is at: https://deveresociety.co.uk ** Image Sources Early 17th century Spanish anvil on the left. https://www.design-is-fine.org/post/1... Old French anvil dated 1616 from The Prillwitz Collection on the right. https://www.anvilfire.com/anvils/spri...

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