<p>This book describes in detail the ground-breaking discovery concerning William Shakespeare&rsquo;s real identity which has been the subject of a recent scientific investigation. Its conclusive result appears in this updated second edition of <em>How Science Proved Edward de Vere was William Shakespeare </em>by<em> </em>providing irrefutable proof that the 17th Earl of Oxford himself admitted to having been compelled by Queen Elizabeth I and her first minister Lord Burghley to use the name William Shakespeare as his penname. As a matter of national security his penname and literary work were both incorporated into the otherwise vacant life of William Shakspere a resident of Stratford-upon-Avon a hundred miles distant from London; thereby avoiding a threatened scandal in the Queen&rsquo;s court becoming public knowledge. Combined with the savage recriminations for disobeying censorship at that time the ruse was a success. And William Shakspere as Shakespeare became grafted onto the line of Tudor history that has survived for more than four centuries.&nbsp;Contemporaries of the Earl of Oxford secretly rebelled at this injustice to English literature by joining with him to bequeath the truth of his authorship to a future generation. The media they used were Oxford&rsquo;s <em>Sonnet 76</em> his poem as Ignoto in Spenser&rsquo;s <em>Faerie Queene </em>Thomas Nashe&rsquo;s <em>Strange Newes </em>and<em> </em>Ben Jonson&rsquo;s opening poem in<em> </em>the <em>First Folio </em>then in the inscription on the <em>Stratford Monument </em>and thirdly the verse he composed for Shakspere&rsquo;s <em>Gravestone; </em>&nbsp;to these were added<em> </em>Thomas Thorpe&rsquo;s <em>Dedication </em>prefacing <em>Shake-speares Sonnets</em> Leonard Digges&rsquo;s <em>Tribute to William Shake-speare </em>William Marshall&rsquo;s <em>Poem </em>accompanying his illustration of Shakespeare John Benson&rsquo;s <em>Letter to the Reader </em>&nbsp;in his poems by Wil. Shakespeare Gent and Sir Aston Cokaine&rsquo;s <em>Dedication </em>in his book of poems. All have one thing in common. They were written in cipher-text using steganography and employing the same code word defined as &lsquo;Whisper secret talk&rsquo;. Seen together with all having the same key of seventeen this in unison unlocks their secret acclamation: William Shakespeare was Edward de Vere.&nbsp;</p>
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