
Who was William Shakespeare?
If you’re sure you know, then let me shake your world.
We know who Mark Twain was. Sam Clemens never kept that a secret.
Shakesspere, Shakysper, Shaxpeer, Schakespeire, Shackper, Shexpere, Shaxkspere and Shakspeyre.
All of these refer to our boy WIlly in the records of the time.
Even those that he misspelled when he signed them himself.
If you believe he was the glovemaker’s son, the theater owner, and the character actor
Who lived in a house in Blackfriars, London, and grew up in Stratford on Avon,
I will not disrespect you for your beliefs.
But that man, if he was the greatest of all poets, owned no library of his own,
Nor had such a thing available,
Nor ever left the area of Southern England where his entire life was lived,
Nor evidenced any sort of formal schooling beyond the earliest schooling.
Reading English and Latin at the King’s School of Stratford,
Though nothing beyond the age of fourteen.
These things we are mostly sure of;
Ben Jonson knew the real William Shakespeare.
The real William Shakespeare knew Christopher Marlowe,
And the patron of his poem books, the Earl of Southhampton,
Probably knew the real Bill too.

What we know about the real William Shakespeare comes from his work.
This was perhaps the most literate man who ever lived.
Thirty-seven plays, 154 Sonnets, and two narrative poems
Demonstrate he knew the Italian countryside,
He knew the ways of European courts, especially the English court.
He understood points of English law.
He accurately portrayed emotions like depression, hatred, love, and madness.
He knew the stories of Hamlet, Prince of Denmark, Othello the Moor, and King Lear and his daughters,
Though he did not invent any of those stories collected from other lands.
So, who was William Shakespeare really?
Francis Bacon? Kit Marlowe raised from the dead? Edward DeVere, the Earl of Oxford?
Or a combination of men coordinated by Sir Francis Bacon’s secret plan?
We will never know for certain. But we can ask him through his work.
The iambic pentameter of William Shakespeare still lives and reveals the mind of Shakespeare.
Though the true name behind the pen name will never be revealed.




























Of course, there is the opposite problem too. Some writers are not hard to understand at all. They only use simple sentences. They only use ideas that lots of other people have used before. You don’t have to think about what they write. You only need to react. They are the reasons that words like “trite”, “hackneyed”, “boring”, and “cliche” exist in English. But simple, boring writing isn’t written by stupid people. Hemingway is like that. Pared down to the basics. No frills. Yet able to yield complex thoughts, insights, and relationships.

The Cowboy Code
When I was a boy playing cowboys and Indians with cap pistols and rubber tomahawks, we all knew that cowboys had a code. The guy in the white hat always shoots straight. He knows right from wrong. He only shoots the bad guy. He even shoots the gun out of the bad guy’s hand if he can. Westerns are about right and wrong, good and bad, and the unyieldingly good knights of plains.
And boys believe what they see on TV and in the movie theaters. People who make television shows never lie, do they? In fact, Wyatt Earp was based on a real guy who really lived and really shot the bad guys at the gosh-darn real OK Corral.
Daniel Boone was a real guy too. He faced the opening up of new lands full of deadly dangers. And when Fess Parker played him in 1964, wearing Davy Crockett’s coonskin hat, he walked the earth like a guardian angel, making everyone safe by the end of the episode. He even knew which Indians were good and which were bad. Mingo was always on Daniel’s side. And when they spoke to each other about the dangers they faced, it was never about killing the people they feared. It was about doing what is was right, about helping the community at Boonesboro to survive. Being encouraging… looking forward to a more settled future created by following the cowboy frontier code.
So, I am left wondering what ever happened to the cowboy code? I listen to Republican presidential candidates talking about dipping bullets in pig’s blood to kill Muslims, and building walls against Mexican immigrants, and why our right to carry assault rifles is sacred, and I wonder what happened. Didn’t they experience the same education from the television versions of the Great American Mythology? Didn’t they learn the code too?
I am old enough now to know that cap guns are not real guns and you cannot solve problems by shooting somebody. But that was never the point of the cowboy code. We need straight-shooters again in our lives, not to shoot people, but to tell the unvarnished truth. We need wise people who can tell who are the good Indians and who are the bad We need them to shoot the weapons out of the bad guys’ hands. And I know that’s asking for leaders to be larger than life and be more perfect than a man can actually be. But Daniel Boone was a real man. Myths and legends start with a fundamental truth.
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