Bardgate: Shake-speare and the Royalists Who Stole the Bard
| 6th Earl of Derby, William Stanley |
Are you an Oxfordian paranoid about the deleterious impact that the big budget Roland Emmerich/Sony movie entitled Anonymous will have on your movement because it peddles a salacious, sex-drenched narrative and a totally erroneous variant on the Oxfordian theory before the unsuspecting masses?
Lament or fear no more. You have another path to the truth before you finally 90 years after two remarkable scholars—Abel Lefranc and J. Thomas Looney—delivered a two-barrel shotgun blast at the Stratfordian Orthodoxy by advancing independently arguments in 1919-1920 in favor of the Earls of Derby and Oxford, the latter (Edward de Vere) being the father-in-law of the former (William Stanley).
Bardgate: Shake-speare and the Royalists Who Stole the Bard conclusively proves that an intuition of a more complex Oxford-Derby symbiosis—or Dual Bard—sensed by Looney and some other anti-Stratfordians in Britain and France in the 1920s is in fact the truth.
Those interested in obtaining a copy of the book should contact the author as soon as possible:
Peter W. Dickson
3515 North Pershing Drive
Arlington, Virginia 22201
Phone: 703-243-6641
Email: pwdbard@aol.com
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