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Francis Bacon's Hamlet - A Tudor Family Tragedy


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1 hour ago, A Phoenix said:

We have often wondered why Francis did not return to England quickly enough to attend the funeral of his adoptive father Sir Nicholas Bacon. A few possibilities spring to mind.

The dream is something I wonder about, having dreams myself.

"...he dreamt that his father's house in the country was plastered all over with black mortar."

I am totally open to that he had a premonition dream about his public Father's approaching death. But I also know he was in a spy group, so word would have made it back to him. And if there was questions on what was happening, he'd be in the Know. If his biological Father had poisoned or was poisoning his public Father, and Bacon had a super spy-network head's up while Sir Nicholas was alive, it had to be a torment of a secret to hide.

Those two thoughts open up more than I can take on right now! 😉

I'll run with the dream version. I can relate to it much easier.

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   The Plot Thickens

  In Lives of the Lord Chancellors and Lord Keepers Of England Sir Nicholas Bacon’s

   nineteenth century biographer John Campbell, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain, also  

   referred to some of the anomalies in the account of his death, regarding which he was at a

   loss to explain:

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 47.png

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The Fictional Story of Sir Nicholas's Death

   While discussing the death of their illustrious subject in The Troubled Life of Francis  

   Bacon, and the various accounts of it provided by his earliest biographers Dr Rawley,

   Pierre Amboise and the antiquarian John Aubrey (which are also fictional), professors

   Jardine and Stewart urge us to treat them with caution:

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 51.png

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 The Abominable Life of Robert Dudley

  The favourite Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester was the most loathed man in the kingdom,

   loathed by most of the nobility, his fellow privy councillors, and virtually all the English

   people. Much of his private and some of his secret life were known to members of the

   nobility, members of the Privy Council and the Elizabethan government, but few if any

   dared to talk about them publicly, or out loud. This and more of the Black Legend of

   Leicester was consolidated and extended upon by an anonymous well-placed author who

   knew him very well in an explosive work neutrally entitled The Copy of a Letter Written by

   a Master of Art of Cambridge otherwise known as Leicesters Commonwealth that is

   believed to have been printed in Antwerp or Paris in 1584.

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 55.png

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The Anonymous Author of Leicester's Commonwealth Hints at the Poisoning of Sir Nicholas Bacon

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 56.png

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1 hour ago, A Phoenix said:

 

The Anonymous Author of Leicester's Commonwealth Hints at the Poisoning of Sir Nicholas Bacon

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 56.png

Thomas Radclyffe, Earl of Sussex (1525-1583)

On his return to England, Sussex, who before leaving Ireland had to endure the indignity of an inquiry into his administration instigated by his enemies and led by John Parker, threw himself into opposition to Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, especially in regard to the suggested marriage between Leicester and the queen. He does not appear to have incurred Elizabeth's displeasure, for in 1566 and the following year she employed him in negotiations for bringing about a different matrimonial alliance which he warmly supported, the proposal that she should bestow her hand on the Archduke Charles. When this project failed, Sussex returned from Vienna to London in March 1568, and in July he was appointed Lord President of the North, a position which threw on him the responsibility of dealing with the rebellion of the Northern Earls of Northumberland and Westmorland in the following year. The weakness of the force at his disposal rendered necessary at the outset a caution which engendered some suspicion of his loyalty, and this suspicion was increased by the counsel of moderation which he urged upon the queen; but in 1570 he laid waste the border, invaded Scotland, and raided the country round Dumfries, reducing the rebel leaders to complete submission. In July 1572 Sussex became Lord Chamberlain, and he was henceforth in frequent attendance on Queen Elizabeth, both in her progresses through the country and at court, until his death. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Radclyffe,_3rd_Earl_of_Sussex

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2 hours ago, A Phoenix said:

Bacon's Return from France and the First Version of His Immortal Play the Tragedy of Hamlet

#FrancisBacon #Shakespeare #Hamlet #Elizabeth #Rosicrucians #Freemasonry #RoyalBirth #RobertDudley #RobertDevereux #Robert Greene  #Thomas Nashe #Nicholas Bacon

HAMLET 59.png

Hi A.P. Just a small point: in Francis's case "banishment" meant acquiring diplomatic skills under the tutelage of Sir Amyas, building his language skills, absorbing the sophisticated culture of the French Court and possibly falling in love with Marguerite de Valois. 🙂

Edited by Eric Roberts
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