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Conspiracy

  We have found triple “we” at the ends of the words in (AB1d), triple “us” in (D2b), and triple “our tie” in (D1g), (AB1r), and (AB1u). This suggests us that the conspiracy of Shakespeare secret has been attained by three persons. Two of three are obvious. Francis Bacon as a principal, and a man of Stratford on Avon (husband of Ann Hathaway) as a substitute. Then who is the third? The difficulty of falsification of Romeus proves that the third is the man who has published Romeus, and has taken the position of Master of Stationers’ Company of London. His name is Richard Tottel.

  On 17/7/2016 the article “Richard Tottel” in WIKIPEDIA says “He died in early July 1593 after suffering little less than a decade of infirmity brought on by old age”. Recall that the T shaped “our tie” has appeared upside down in (AB1r). We let t^ denote it. t^ evokes us “ill W” in (SB21).

When we get right Italian “Bandella Da Port Britain”, t^ has vanished. So t^ may be Tottel. We will check this carefully.

  At (AB1r), we see “toga” covers t^ apart from its right arm. We will lay down this patient in a bed. In Italian, English bed is “letto”.

  In (CSa), (i) we carry “letto” by t^, (ii) we make “letto” fit for t^, and (iii) we lay down t^ in “letto”, then (iv) we find the patient t^ is Tottel.

  Now we list the titles of 1st~4th quartos ([6][7][8][9]) of Shakespeare’s Romeo and Juliet.

2nd~4th quartos are “excellent and lamentable”, whereas 1st quarto is “excellent conceited”. Only 1st is a “bad” quarto, and it has conceited (i.e. unconventional) title also. Of course the word “conceited” means also “vain”. Now we show that the title of the 1st quarto contains a vain cipher. The title is

We will notice two letters: “t” and “e”. (During the rule of Elizabeth Tudor, perhaps these two were initials of the most vain person for Bacon.) Firstly we make a column of “t” as follows.

In (CSd) we can find “Annie” which is another name of “Anne”. Secondly we make columns of “e” as follows.

In (CSe) we can find “idiot” and “loan”. Columns of “t” and “e” make us perceive the following arrangement:

This is nothing but a couple. Why is “idiot” upside down in (CSf)? With “idiot”, “loan” should be turn. And this turn of “loan” yields the right positioning of the spelling “loan”. This evokes us the turning of “we gat no M”. So this turning means that as long as these two live together, loan follows them like a shadow. It must be the reason of the husband’s coming to London to get work.

Here Francis Bacon is laughing at struggle of his important agent against poverty. Undoubtedly this is a bovaristic cipher.

 

Next we treat the title of Romeus.

Besides “our tie” we get another “tie” in (CSh). We can find also “ALL” and “YE”(Old English you as plural) at the ends of second and third lines. The column which lies in the left of these is as follows.

The top of the column is CR. It is a famous rumour that Francis Bacon was a Rosicrucian. For Rosicrucian we refer to “Rosicrucians” in “The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001” (red marks are  made  by me):

In “Fama fraternitatis (1614)”, we can find the six articles for rosicrucians as follows:

In (D3h), we get “Roses slur it as rules” with the appearance of a rose cross. The appearance means a leak of the secret. Rosicrucians must slur it following 6th in (CSk). So “Roses” of “Roses slur it as rules” also means Rosicrucians. By 5th of (CSk), the column in (CSi) means

Letting “ALL YE” follow this we get

The next column is

Here “oue” is a Middle English word, which means “to have as one’s duty”. Since “oue”=”owe”, we will try to alter “OUE” to “OWE” in (CSi). Then

The new column, starting with “OWE”, makes

This coincides with our “G” of “G”-figured course and Ireland “i”. Now we have old-fashioned verse as follows.

What does this mean? We have two chronological successions as follows.

Note that there are two views for the year of Bandello’s birth: 1484, and 1485. In both cases we get chain.

  At (CSr) (a) the years of death and birth overlapped whereas they do not so at (CSr) (b). Only at (a), 4th of (CSk) can be obeyed. So we may say that in the result of Brooke’s taking his place among them as fourth person, the tie has broken. At (AB1a) “o, us, us, us” became “us, us, us, us” by Romeus. The numbers of these “us” coincide with the numbers of the persons at (a) and (b).

  In (CSr), we see that Francis Bacon alters to Shakespeare if Brooke and Romeus are added. Perhaps this means that Francis Bacon’s career as a secret playwright comes from his encounter with Romeus. By these sidesplitting jokes, Francis Bacon builds the genealogy from Rosenkreuz to him. So (CSq) means that Francis Bacon steals all. In fact he has stolen not only Romeus’ surname but also the title of the book.

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