Shakespeare didn't even write Sir Thomas Moore. There's about one page that a minority of scholars think might have been drafted by him. That's it. Callow's point pretty much fails, then. It's amazing the amount of things Shakespeare gets praised for that really only comes from the drunken, idolizing minds of his beholders.
Isnt there enough Shaekspeare that could have been referred to without mentioning sit Thomas More for which there is anot a single reference to Shakespeare having a hand in whatsoever just bcuse it mentions immigration? Shakespeare lived with French exiles so i am sure he was not a bigot but using sir Thomas More as if it was Shakespeare to make a point on immigration is such twaddle.
john smith It's his. It was a King's Men play, and it got a brushing up at a time when Shakespeare was the house playwright. It contains several idiosyncratic spellings that Shakespeare favored, it can't be linked by handwriting or style to any other known poet, and stylometric studies all say it's his.
Simon Callow is superb. I love his reading of ye Sonnets.
Simon Callow is brilliant.
“ IN PEACE THERE’S NOTHING SO BECOMES A MAN AS MODEST STILLNESS AND HUMILITY. ” - SHAKESPEARE *
It's so interesting seeing the usual anti-Stratfordian trolls making unsupported comments. And the homophobia is revealing, too.
Oh dear. So many comments from bitter Shakespeare sceptics. Shakespeare will always have the last laugh.
Shakespeare didn't even write Sir Thomas Moore. There's about one page that a minority of scholars think might have been drafted by him. That's it. Callow's point pretty much fails, then.
It's amazing the amount of things Shakespeare gets praised for that really only comes from the drunken, idolizing minds of his beholders.
Isnt there enough Shaekspeare that could have been referred to without mentioning sit Thomas More for which there is anot a single reference to Shakespeare having a hand in whatsoever just bcuse it mentions immigration? Shakespeare lived with French exiles so i am sure he was not a bigot but using sir Thomas More as if it was Shakespeare to make a point on immigration is such twaddle.
john smith It's his. It was a King's Men play, and it got a brushing up at a time when Shakespeare was the house playwright. It contains several idiosyncratic spellings that Shakespeare favored, it can't be linked by handwriting or style to any other known poet, and stylometric studies all say it's his.