- Behind the Shakespeare Mask: The remarkably unremarked association . . .
Behind the Shakespeare Mask, is simply the first crude step in a quest by an Australian investigative reporter – albeit a conscientious biographer in his literary life – to probe beyond the dogma to the truth of the matter
- William Herbert | History | Research Starters - EBSCO
While William Herbert, who became the Third Earl of Pembroke upon the death of his father in 1601, is known as a poet, he is better known as the young man to whom William Shakespeare dedicated many of his sonnets
- Behind the Mask of William Shakespeare: Initially published in . . . - Amazon
Eminent French academic Abel Lefranc released his two-volume Sous le Masque de William Shakespeare (Behind the Mask of William Shakespeare)—an investigation into the true authorship of the Shakespeare canon—in 1918 and 1919
- Behind the Mask of William Shakespeare
In addition to referencing Lefranc’s later research in footnotes (e g , # 759), Lawler summarizes Lefranc’s research after the publication of Behind the Mask in the Appendices, thus making this edition the basic research tool for Lefranc’s oeuvre
- Connections with Shakespeare - humphrysfamilytree. com
Some people have suggested that the 3rd Earl of Pembroke is the model for the "Fair Youth" in Shakespeare's sonnets, and that his lover Mary Fitton is the "Dark Lady"
- William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke - Wikipedia
The First Folio of Shakespeare 's plays, published many years after Shakespeare's death, was dedicated to the "incomparable pair of brethren" William Herbert and his brother Philip Herbert
- Mr. W. H. | Mystery Man, Elizabethan Poet Literary Figure | Britannica
Among the names offered for consideration are those of Henry Wriothesley, 3rd Earl of Southampton, who was a noted patron of several writers, and William Herbert, 3rd Earl of Pembroke, with whom Shakespeare is believed to have had some connection, albeit slight
- William Herbert, 3rd earl of Pembroke: the ‘nearly man’ of early Stuart . . .
Pembroke’s personal relationship with James guaranteed him regular privileged access to the king, which in turn meant that he possessed status and influence at court Even so, the earl still needed other allies in order to secure one of the major offices of state and a real say in government policy
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