• through that cranny (2/2)

    From Arthur Neuendorffer@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 23 17:50:34 2021
    [continued from previous message]

    ... And sue a friend, came debter for my sake,
    . So him I loose through my vnkinde abuse.
    . Him haue I lost, thou hast both him and me,
    . He paies the whole, and yet am I not free. ---------------------------------------------------
    ‘To my Loveinge good ffrend
    & contreymann Mr Wm. Shackespere, deliver thees,’ ............................................
    ‘Loveinge Contr[E]yman, I am bolde of yow, as of a ffrende, cra[V]einge yowr helpe with XXX uppon Mr Bush[E]lls & my securytee, or Mr Myttons with me. M[R] Rosswell is nott come to London as yeat[E], & I have especiall cawse. Yow shall ffrende me muche
    in helpeinge me out of all the debettes I owe in London, I thancke God & muche quiet my mynde, which wolde nott be indebeted. I am nowe towardes the Cow{R}te, in hope of answer for th{E} dispatche of my Buysenes. {Y}ow shall nether loase cre{D}dytt nor
    monney by me, the Lord(E) wyllinge; & nowe butt perswade yowr selfe soe, a(S) I hope, & yow shall nott need to feare, butt with a(L)l hartie thanck(E)fullene(S) I wyll ho(L)de my tym(E) & content (Y)owr ffrende, & yf we Bargaine farther, (Y)ow shalbe the
    paiemaster yowre selfe. My tyme biddes me hasten to an ende, & soe I committ t[H]ys yowr care & hope of yo[W]r helpe. I feare I s{H}all no[T] be backe thys night ff[R]om th{E} Cowrte. Haste, The L[O]rde be with yow, a{N}d with us all. Amen! ffom the Bell
    [I]n Ca{R}ter Lane the 25 October, 1598, Yowres in all k{Y}ndenes,

    RyC. QUYNEY.’
    ..............................................................
    ____________ <= 30 =>
    .
    .‘L o v e i n g e C o n t r [E] y m a n,I a m b o l d e o f y o w,a s
    . o f a f f r e n d e,c r a [V] e i n g e y o w r h e l p e w i t h X
    . X X u p p o n M r B u s h [E] l l s&m y s e c u r y t e e,o r M r M
    . y t t o n s w i t h m e.M [R] R o s s w e l l i s n o t t c o m e t
    . o L o n d o n a s y e a t [E]&I h a v e e s p e c i a l l c a w s e.

    [E.VERE] 33 : Prob. ~ 1 in 125 at start ..............................................................
    ____________ <= 30 =>

    I f e a r e I s {H} a l l n o[T]b e b a c k e t h y s n i g h
    t f f[R]o m t h {E} C o w r t e.H a s t e,T h e L[O]r d e b e
    w i t h y o w,a {N} d w i t h u s a l l.A m e n!f f o m t h e
    B e l l[I]n C a {R} t e r L a n e t h e O c t o b e r,Y o w r
    e s i n a l l k {Y} n d e n e s,R y C.Q U Y N E Y.

    {HENRY} 30 : Prob. ~ 1 in 201 at end ............................................
    (ESLEY) 8,38 : Prob. of both ~ 1 in 259
    [IOTH] -40
    [WR] 40
    (DYER) -22
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    ["Edward *DE VEER* , only son of John, born the Twelfth day
    of April A 1550, Earle of Oxenforde (Ogburn, 1998, 765). ........................................................
    In the name of God Amen. I *Iohn DE VEER* Erle of Oxinforde,
    Lorde greate Chamberlayne of Englonde Vicounte Bulbeck &c,
    __ *being of hole and parfecte mynde*

    - 1562 Will of the 16th Earl of Oxford (28 July 1562) http://ist-socrates.berkeley.edu/~ahnelson/DOCS/16will2.htm ------------------------------------------------------------
    {(de) VERE} *VOMERE* : *PLOUGHSHARE* (Italian, Latin) .......................................................
    _______________ <= 18 =>
    .
    . O T H E O {N}L i[E| B E G E T T E R O
    . F T H E S E {I}n[S| U I N G S O N N E
    . T S M R W h a {L|L|H] A P P I{N}E S S
    . E A N D t h a t {E|T|E} R N I T{I}E P
    . R O M I S E D [B|Y|O]u{R} E V E R{L}I
    . V I N G P O [E]t W|I]S H{E} T H(T)H{E}
    . |W]E L L W I S h i n g A{d V e} N(T)U
    . |R]E R I N S E t t i n g f o r .T H(T)T
    .
    {(de) VERE, H.} -19
    [WR-IOTH-ESLEY]
    --------------------------------------------------------------
    Pyramid {(de) VEER} *VOMERE* : *PLOUGHSHARE* (Italian, Latin) ...................................................
    ___ . . . . . . <= Sonnets 33/34 =>
    .
    ___. /T/ OT __ [H] EONLIEBEGE TTE . [R] .OFTHESEINSUINGS
    __- /O/ NN _. [E T] SMRWHALLH APPIN . [E] .SSEANDTHATETE
    __ /R/ NI___ [T(I)E] *PROMISED*BYOUREV. [E] .RLIVINGPOET
    _ /W/ IS___ [H E T H] THEWELL /WISHINGA [D V E] NTURERIN
    _______________ SETTIN GFORTH ______________TT --------------------------------------------------------------
    They burn in love, THY CHILDREN Shakespear [HET] THEm
    . Go, wo thy Muse, more NYMPhish brood BEGET THEm
    .
    [HET], v. t. & i. To *PROMISE*. [Obs.] --Chaucer. ..........................................................
    Probability of two {(de) VERE/VEER} *VOMEREs* ~ 1 in 435] ------------------------------------------------------------------
    ‘To my Loveinge good ffrend
    & contreymann Mr Wm. Shackespere, deliver thees,’ ............................................
    ‘Loveinge Contr[E]yman, I am bolde of yow, as of a ffrende, cra[V]einge yowr helpe with XXX uppon Mr Bush[E]lls & my securytee, or Mr Myttons with me. M[R] Rosswell is nott come to L+ondon as yeat[E], & I have especiall cawse. Yow shall ffrende me
    muche in helpeinge me out of all the debettes I owe in London, I thancke God & muche quiet my mynde, which wolde nott be indebeted. I am nowe towardes the Cow{R}te, in hope of answer for th{E} dispatche of my Buysenes. {Y}ow shall nether loase cre{D}dytt
    nor monney by me, the Lord(E) wyllinge; & nowe butt perswade yowr selfe soe, a(S) I hope, & yow shall nott need to feare, butt with a(L)l hartie thanck(E)fullene(S) I wyll ho(L)de my tym(E) & content (Y)owr ffrende, & yf we Bargaine farther, (Y)ow shalbe
    the paiemaster yowre selfe. My tyme biddes me hasten to an ende, & soe I committ t[H]ys yowr care & hope of yo[W]r helpe. I feare I s{H}all no[T] be backe thys night ff[R]om th{E} Cowrte. Haste, The L[O]rde be with yow, a{N}d with us all. Amen! ffom the
    Bell [I]n Ca{R}ter Lane the 25 October, 1598, Yowres in all k{Y}ndenes,

    RyC. QUYNEY.’
    ..............................................................
    ____________. . . . . . . <= 33 =>
    .
    .‘L o v e i n g e C o n t r [E] y m a n,I a m b o l d e o f y o w,a s
    . o f a f f r e n d e,c r a [V] e i n g e y o w r h e l p e w i t h X
    . X X u p p o n M r B u s h [E] l l s&m y s e c u r y t e e,o r M r M
    . y t t o n s w i t h m e.M [R] R o s s w e l l i s n o t t c o m e t
    . o L o n d o n a s y e a t [E]&I h a v e e s p e c i a l l c a w s e.

    [E.VERE] 33 : Prob. ~ 1 in 125 at start ..............................................................
    ____________. . <= 30 =>

    . I f e a r e I s {H} a l l n o[T]b e b a c k e t h y s n i g h
    . t f f[R]o m t h {E} C o w r t e.H a s t e,T h e L[O]r d e b e
    . w i t h y o w,a {N} d w i t h u s a l l.A m e n!f f o m t h e
    . B e l l[I]n C a {R} t e r L a n e t h e O c t o b e r,Y o w r
    . e s i n a l l k {Y} n d e n e s,R y C.Q U Y N E Y.

    {HENRY} 30 : Prob. ~ 1 in 201 at end ............................................
    (ESLEY) 8,38 : Prob. of both ~ 1 in 259
    [IOTH] -40
    [WR] 40
    (DYER) -22
    ---------------------------------------------------------------- http://www.angelfire.com/ca/unitedcats/henry.html http://www.fortunecity.com/greenfield/dreams/383/towercat.htm
    .
    <<The Tower of London has been a home for many prisoners during its
    long history. A grim and foreboding place like this seems to be an
    unlikely home for two cats to set up home. But during the Tudor and
    Elizabethan eras, a cat gave loyal comfort to one of those unfortunates incarcerated there. During the bitter struggle between the Yorkest and Lancastrians in the War of the Roses, Sir Henry Wyatt was taken
    prisoner by King Richard III, in 1483, and sent to the tower. This was
    quite a difference in life for him, as he had once been the Governor of
    the Tower, and now he had a rather different view on life in the tower.
    Being a well known cat lover living in Allington Castle it was said of
    him that he *EVER used to make much of a cat* . Stories say that while
    in the Tower he was visited by a stray cat which made its way to his
    cell through a chimney. The cat often used to leave the cell and come
    back with *PIGEONS* which it gave to Wyatt. It is said these were
    cooked for him by a friendly gaoler and made up for the meagre rations
    that were fed to the prisoners. It was surmised that when he was first incarcerated he would become succumb to illness & starvation, but the
    gifts of food that the cat brought kept him alive until he was later
    released. Later Sir Henry had a memorial built to his cat friend in
    a church at Boxley in Kent. He also remembered him in a painting of
    him in 1532. Several years later, in 1601, when the reign of Queen
    Elizabeth was nearing its end, Henry Wriothesley, the third Earl of Southampton, was incarcerated in the Tower of London for supporting
    The Earl of Essex's rebellion. During his stay there he was joined by
    his favourite cat, a black & white female called *TRIXIE* . The Earl
    being a nobleman, had two houses, a country mansion in Gloucestershire
    & Southampton House in London. One story says the cat made its own way
    across London from Southampton House, scaled the walls & clambered
    across the roofs until it found the chimney of his cell and climbed
    down to join the Earl. We know that the cat kept Wriothesley company
    because many years later after the event, the tale was put into
    writing by Thomas PENNANT an antiquarian. The cat was also included in
    a portrait commissioned by Wriothesley around 1603, & painted by John
    de Critz the Elder. Trixie is shown as a black cat with white markings
    to her face, a snowy white bib, and white forepaws, sitting by the
    right arm of the Earl with a quizzical look upon her face. Trixie
    kept her master company in the tower for about two years.>> .........................................................
    "In Vinculus Invictus" Motto in Tower Painting:

    https://tinyurl.com/zpa7rug
    https://tinyurl.com/gnj9385

    DROESHOUT/HERODOTUS = "In Vinculus Invictus" Painting:
    .
    1) Large forehead
    2) eyebrows
    3) eyes
    4) nose
    5) moustache
    6) lips
    7) 14 buttons.
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    . Antony and Cleopatra Act 5, Scene 2
    .
    CLEOPATRA: Shall they hoist me up
    . And show me to the shouting varletry
    . Of censuring Rome? Rather a ditch in Egypt
    . Be gentle grave unto me! rather on *NILUS' mud*
    . Lay me stark naked, and let the water-flies
    . Blow me into abhorring! rather make
    . My country's high PYRAMIDES my GIBBET,
    . And HANG me up *IN CHAINS* !
    .
    GIBBET, n. [OE. gibet, F. gibet, in OF. also club, fr. LL. gibetum;
    cf. OF. gibe sort of sickle or hook, It. giubbetto gibbet, and
    giubbetta, dim. of giubba mane, also, an under waistcoat, doublet,
    Prov. It. gibba); so that it perhaps originally signified
    a halter, a rope round the neck of malefactors; or it is,
    perhaps, derived fr. L. gibbus HUNCHED, HUMPED,
    E. gibbous; or cf. E. jib a sail.] 1. A kind of gallows;
    an upright post with an arm projecting from the top,
    on which, formerly, malefactors were hanged *IN CHAINS* ,
    and their bodies allowed to remain as a warning. ------------------------------------------------ http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/anagrams/
    .
    <<Even more curious is the one for Southampton,
    which explicitly states that he had been convicted
    of treason on false testimony inspired by envy.>> .............................................
    . HENRICUS URIOTHESLEUS
    _____ per anagramma
    . THESEUS NIL REUS HIC RUO
    .
    . [I] ure quidem poteras hanc fundere ab ore querelam,
    . [S] ors tibi dum ficto crimine dura fuit:
    . "[N] il reus en Theseus censura sortis iniquae
    . [H] ic ruo, livoris traditus arbitrio."
    . [A] t nunc mutanda ob mutata pericla querela est.
    . [I] nclite, an innocuo pectore teste rues?
    . [N] on sane. Hac haeres vacuo dat *VIVERE* cura,
    . [C] ollati imperii sub Iove sceptra gerens. .............................................
    . *ISNHAINC* {anagram} *IN CHAINS*
    .
    *Victorious though IN CHAINS* )
    .............................................
    . HENRY WRIOTHESLEY by an anagram
    . ('HERE I FALL, *THESEUS, GUILTY OF NOTHING* ')
    .
    Justly you were able to pour forth this complaint from
    your mouth, your lot was harsh while a false accusation
    prevailed. 'L.O. , Theseus is guilty of NOTHING , *HERE*
    I fall by an unfair lot's censure, betrayed by ENVY's whim.'
    But now the complaint is to be altered, because of
    altered perils. Great man, do you take a fall
    with an innocent heart bearing witness? Not at all.
    The HEIR, wielding the scepter of rule conferred
    under Jove's auspices, grants you to live free of this ............................................. http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/anagrams/text.html -----------------------------------------------------------------
    October 8 THESEIA: Festival honoring the hero Theseus. -----------------------------------------------------------------
    Plutarch's Lives Volume I : http://www.stoics.com/plutarch_1.html
    . Translated out of Greek into French by James Amyot,
    . Abbot of Bellozane, Bishop of Auxerre,
    . and out of French into Englishe by *THOMAS NORTH*
    .
    <<The greatest and most solemne sacrifice they doe unto [Theseus],
    is on the eight daye of October, in which he return-
    THESEVS ed from CRETA, with the other younge children of ATHENS: ..............................................................
    October 8 THESEIA: Festival honoring the hero Theseus.
    .
    October 8, 1600 A Midsummer Night's Dream entered
    . on Stationers' Register. ..............................................................
    *THOMA(s) SNOUT* , tinker
    . {anagram}
    *SOUTHAM(p)TON*
    ------------------------------­-------------------------
    T O T H E R I G H T H O N O R A B L E
    Henrie Wriothesley, Earle of Southampton,
    and Baron of Titchfield.

    RIght Honourable, I know not how I shall offend in
    dedicating my unpolisht lines to your Lordship, nor
    how the worlde Will censure mee for choosing so
    strong a proppe to support so Weake a burthen,
    onelye if your Honour seeme but pleased, I ac-
    count my selfe highly praised,

    and vowe to take advantage of all idle houres,

    TILL I [H]AV[E] HO[N]OU[R]ED [Y]OU [W.]IT[H.] SO[M]E G[r.]

    -AVER LABOUR.

    [HENRY W.] 3 : Prob. in V&A [HENRY W.] dedication ~ 1 in 36,000
    [W.H. Mr.] 3
    ..............................................................
    AVER, n. [OF. AVER domestic animal, whence LL. AVERia,
    pl. cattle. cf. {AVERage}.] A WORKING OX. [Obs. or Dial. Eng.] ..............................................................
    Moby Dick by Herman Melville
    Chapter 103: Measurement of The Whale's Skeleton

    The largest, a middle one, is in width somet[H]ing less than three
    fe[E]t, and in depth more tha[N] four. The smallest, whe[R]e the
    spine tapers awa[Y] into the tail, is only t[W.]o inches in width,
    and looks something like a white billiard-ball.

    [HENRY W.] 19 : shortest skip in MD & KJV. --------------------------------------------------------------------- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Lucy

    <<[LUCIA] of Syracuse (283–304), also known as Saint Lucy or Saint Lucia (Latin: Sancta Lucia), is patron saint of the blind, authors, cutlers, glaziers, laborers, and peasants. She is invoked against diseases of the eye. Saint Lucy's Day is celebrated
    on 13 December. Absent in the early narratives and traditions is the story of Lucia tortured by eye-gouging. According to later accounts, before she died she foretold the punishment of Paschasius and the speedy end of the persecution, adding that
    Diocletian would reign no more, and Maximian would meet his end. This so angered Paschasius that he ordered the guards to remove her eyes. Another version has Lucy taking her own eyes out in order to discourage a persistent suitor who admired them.
    .
    [LUCIA] appears in {DANTE A}lighieri's Inferno Canto II as the messenger sent to Beatrice from the Virgin Mary, to rouse Beatrice to send Virgil to Dante's aid. In the Purgatorio 9:52–63, Lucy carries the sleeping {DANTE} to the entrance to Purgatory.
    Then in Paradiso 32 {DANTE} places her opposite Adam within the Mystic Rose in Canto 32 of the Paradiso.>>
    ----------------------------------------------------
    . [ALL FOR ONE]
    ....................................................
    . Sonnet 19
    .
    Make glad and sorry seasons as thou fleet'st,
    And do what ere (t)hou wil[T (S)WIFT]-foo(t)ed time
    T(o) the wi{D}e (w)orld and [{A}LL] her fadi{N}g sweets:
    Bu{T} I [FOR]bid th{E}e [ONE] most h{A}inous crime,
    .
    O carue not wi{T|H] thy ho{W|e]rs my l{O|V]es fair[E] brow,
    No[R] draw no[E] lines there with thine antique pen,
    Him in thy course vntainted doe allow,
    For beauties patterne to succeding men.
    .
    . Yet doe thy worst ould Time dispight thy wrong,
    . My love shall in my verse *EVER (liv)E YOUNG*. ..................................................
    . . . . <= 10 =>
    .
    . .A n .d. d .o w h .a t e
    . .r e (t) h .o u w .i l[T
    . (S)W .I. F .T]f o .o(t)e
    . .d t .i. m .e T(o) t h e
    . .w i {D} e (w)o r. l d a
    . .n d[{A} L .L]h e. r f a
    . .d i {N} g .s w e. e t s:
    . .B u {T} I [F O R] b i d
    . .t h {E} e [O N E] m o s
    . .t h {A} i. n o u .s c r
    . .i m. e,
    .
    {DANTE A.} 10
    .............................................
    . <= 7 =>
    .
    . O c a r u e n
    . o t w i {T}[H] t
    . h y h o {W}[e] r
    . s m y l {O}[V] e
    . s f a i r [E] b
    . r o w, N o [R] d
    . r a w n o [E] l
    . i n e s t h e
    . r e
    .
    [He.VERE] 7
    ------------------------------------------------------------------- https://tinyurl.com/yczlkh29

    “The {TWO} Most Noble Henries” – [He]nry de [VERE] & Henry Wriothesley –
    No. 89 of 100 Reasons why the 17th Earl of Oxford was “Shakespeare” .................................................................... https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_de_Vere,_18th_Earl_of_Oxford

    [He.] de [VERE], 18th Earl of Oxford KB (24 February 1593 – June 1625) -------------------------------------------------------
    “Origins of the Pen Name ‘William Shakespeare’” by Katherine Chiljan https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ezk1B-airWI ............................................................
    The IMAGE OF *PALLAS* ATHENA on the Title-Page of Bacon's 1641
    Wisdom of the Ancients: http://www.sirbacon.org/sagessemysterie.htm

    On *PALLAS*'s shield is *OBSCURIS VERA INVOLVENS* meaning
    *TRUTH is enveloped in obscurity* from Virgil's Aeneid (VI, 100).

    I find it curious that:
    *OBSCURIS VERA INVOLVEN{s}*
    is an anagram for:
    *BACONVS/VERO NIL VERIUS {s}*

    much as: *VERO NIL VERIU{s}*
    is a near anagram for:
    *OUR EVER LIVIN{g}*
    (from John Michell's _Who Wrote Shakespeare?_) ---------------------------------------------------
    . Julius Caesar : Act I, scene II
    .
    Cassi. Why man, he doth bestride the narrow world
    . Like a Colossus, and we petty men
    . Walke vnder his huge legges, and peepe about
    . To finde our selues dishonourable Graues.
    . Men at sometime, are Masters of their *FATES*.
    . The fault (deere Brutus) is not in our Starres,
    . But in our Selues, that we are vnderlings.
    . Brutus and Caesar: What should be in that Caesar?
    . Why should that name be sounded more then yours .
    . Write them together: Yours, is as faire a Name:
    . Sound them, it doth become the mouth aswell:
    . Weigh them, it is as heauy: Coniure with 'em,
    . Brutus will start a Spirit as soone as Caesar.
    .
    . [Now in the na{M}es of all the Gods] at once,
    . Vpon what [M]eate doth this our Caesar feede,
    . Th[A]t he is growne so great? Age, thou art [S]ham'd.
    . Rome, thou hast lost the breed [O]f Noble Bloods.
    . When went there by a[N] Age, since the great Flood,
    . But it wa[S] fam'd with more then with one man?
    .
    . When could they say (till now) that talk'd of Rome,
    . That her wide Walkes incompast but one man?
    . Now is it Rome indeed, and Roome enough
    . When there is in it but one onely man.
    . O! you and I, haue heard our Fathers say,
    . There was a Brutus once, that would haue brook'd
    . Th'eternall Diuell to keepe his State in Rome,
    . As easily as a King.
    ................................................
    . . . . . . . <= 29 =>
    .
    . [Now in the na {M} es of all the Gods] aton
    . .ceV po nwh at [M] ea te dot hth isou .rCae
    . .sar fe ede Th [A] th ei sgr own esog .reat
    . .Age th oua rt [S] ha md Rom eth ouha .stlo
    . .stt he bre ed [O] fN ob leB loo dsWh .enwe
    . .ntt he reb ya [N] Ag es inc eth egre .atFl
    . .ood Bu tit wa [S] fa md wit hmo reth .enwi
    . .tho ne man?
    .
    (M)[MASONS] 29 : Prob. in soliloquy ~ 1 in 19,000 ..................................................
    Bru. That you do loue me, I am nothing iealous:
    . What you would worke me too, I haue some ayme:
    . How I haue thought of this, and of these times
    . I shall recount heereafter. For this present,
    . I would not so (with loue I might intreat you)
    . Be any further moou'd: What you haue said,
    . I will consider: what you haue to say
    . I will with patience heare, and finde a time
    . Both meete to heare, and answer such high things.
    . Till then, my Noble Friend, chew vpon this:
    . Brutus had rather be a Villager,
    . Then to repute himselfe a Sonne of Rome
    . Vnder these hard Conditions, as this time
    . Is like to lay vpon vs.
    .
    Cassi. I am glad that my weake words
    . Haue strucke but thus much shew of fire from Brutus.
    .
    . Enter Caesar and his Traine.
    .
    Bru. The Games are done, And Caesar is returning.
    .
    Cassi. As they passe by,
    . Plucke Caska by the Sleeue,
    . And he will (after his sowre fashion) tell you
    . What hath proceeded worthy note to day.
    .
    Bru. I will do so: but looke you Cassius,
    . The angry spot doth glow on Caesars brow,
    . And all the rest, looke like a chidden Traine;
    . Calphurnia's Cheeke is pale, and Cicero
    . Lookes with such Ferret, and such fiery eyes
    . As we haue seene him in the Capitoll
    . Being crost in Conference, by some Senators.
    .
    Cassi. Caska will tell vs what the matter is.
    .
    Caes. Antonio.
    .
    Ant. Caesar.
    .
    Caes. Let me haue men about me, that are fat,
    . Sleeke-headed men, and such as sleepe a-nights:
    . Yond Cassius has a leane and hungry looke,
    . He thinkes too much: such men are dangerous.
    .
    Ant. Feare him not Caesar, he's not dangerous,
    . He is a Noble Roman, and well giuen.
    .
    Caesar: Would he were fatter; But I feare him not:
    . Yet if my name were lyable to feare,
    . I do not know the man I should avoyd
    . So soone as that spare Cassius. He reades much,
    . He is a great Observer, and he lookes
    . Quite through the Deeds of men. He loves no Playes,
    . As thou dost Antony: he heares no Musicke;
    . Seldome h[E] smiles, and smiles in such a sort
    . As if he mock'[D] himselfe, and scorn'd his spirit
    . That could b[E] mov'd to smile at any thing.
    . Such men as he, be ne[V]er at hearts ease,
    . Whiles they behold a great[E]r then themselves,
    . And therefore are they ve[R]y dangerous.
    . I rather tell thee what is to be f[E]ar'd,
    . Then what I feare: for alwayes {I am *CAESAR*}.
    . Come on my right hand, for *this EARe is DEAFe*,
    . And tell me TRUEly, what thou think'st of him. ................................................
    . . . . . . <= 37 =>
    .
    . . S el domeh [E] smi lesandsmilesinsuchas ortA
    . s i fh emock [D] him selfeandscorndhisspi ritT
    . h a tc ouldb [E] mou dtosmileatanythingSu chme
    . n a sh ebene [V] era theartseaseWhilesthe ybeh
    . o l da great [E] rth enthemseluesAndthere fore
    . a r et heyve [R] yda ngerousIrathertellth eewh
    . a t is tobef [E] ard ThenwhatIfeareforalw ayes
    .{I a m *CAESAR*}[Come]onmyrighthandforthis*EARe
    . i s D .EAFe*
    .
    [E.DEVERE] 37 : Prob. in dialogue ~ 1 in 3,250 ----------------------------------------------------------
    << Many times he fell into those things [that] could not
    escape laughter, as when he said in the person of *CAESAR*,
    one speaking to him, "*CAESAR* thou dost me wrong".

    He replied,

    "[CAESAR NEVER DID WR]ong, but with just cause",

    and such like, which were ridiculous.>> -- Ben Jonson .........................................................
    [CAESAR NEVER DID WR]ong
    [EDWARD VERE CAIRNS]
    ---------------------------------------------------------
    (1603) Francis Davison’s
    Anagrammata in Nomina Illustrissimorum Heroum ............................................. http://www.philological.bham.ac.uk/anagrams/text.html
    .
    ____ *EDOUDARUS V(e)IERUS*
    _____ per anagramma
    ____ *AURE SURDUS VIDEO*
    ...................................
    _ *DEAFe IN MY EARe, I SEE*
    .
    Though by your zeal, FORTUNE, you keep perfidy's
    murmurs & schemings at a distance, nonetheless I learn
    (at which my mind & ear *QUAKE*) that our bodies have
    been deafened with respect to evil affairs. Indeed,
    I perceive men who come close to *CATILINE* in deception,
    freeing other men's *FATES* by their death.
    .
    ¶ *CATILINE* was the rabble-rouser suppressed by *CICERO*.
    His name became a watchword for incendiary troublemakers.>> -------------------------------------------------------------
    . Monstrous Adversary by Alan H. Nelson (p.206)
    .
    <<Oxford claimed...to have made 'certaiyne excellent oracions'
    at Venice, Padua, and Bologna, so that he was 'reputed for his
    eloquence another *CICERO* and for his conducke a *CEASER*.'>> -------------------------------------------------------------- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippicae

    <<The Philippics are a series of 14 speeches Cicero gave condemning
    Mark Antony in 44 & 43 BC. Cicero likened these speeches to those
    of Demosthenes' Philippic (Ad Atticus, 2.1.3), which Demosthenes
    had delivered against Philip of Macedon. Cicero's Second Philippic
    is styled after Demosthenes' De Corona ('On the Crown').>> ------------------------------------------------------
    Art Neuendorffer

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