Bacon is Shake-speare . Plate X. The Back of the Left Arm, from Plate Plate XL The Front of the Left Arm, from Plate VIII. Plate XI. The Front of the Left Arm, from Plate VIII. Bacon is Shakespeare, 29 He hath hit his faceIt is thought that hit means hid as in ChaucersSquieres Tale, hne 511 etc. Right as a serpent hit him under flouresTil he may seen his tyme for to byte If indeed hit be intended to be read as hid then these ten lines are no longer the cryptic puzzlewhich they have hitherto been considered to be, but inconjunction with the portrait, they clearly reveal thetrue facts, th


Bacon is Shake-speare . Plate X. The Back of the Left Arm, from Plate Plate XL The Front of the Left Arm, from Plate VIII. Plate XI. The Front of the Left Arm, from Plate VIII. Bacon is Shakespeare, 29 He hath hit his faceIt is thought that hit means hid as in ChaucersSquieres Tale, hne 511 etc. Right as a serpent hit him under flouresTil he may seen his tyme for to byte If indeed hit be intended to be read as hid then these ten lines are no longer the cryptic puzzlewhich they have hitherto been considered to be, but inconjunction with the portrait, they clearly reveal thetrue facts, that the real author is writing left-handedly,that means secretly, in shadow, with his face hiddenbehind a mask or pseudonym. We should also notice out-doo is spelled witha hyphen. In the language of to-day and still more inthat of the time of Shakespeare all, or nearly all, wordsbeginning wdth out may be read reversed, out-bar isbar out, out-bud is bud out, out-crop is crop out, out-fit is fit out, and so on through the alphabet. If therefore we may read out-doo the life a


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectshakespearewilliam15