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I am a retired federal employee who occasionally self-publishes books about hidden messages in Shakespeare.

Saturday, March 21, 2015

Part 3 of Messages About the Murder of the Poet Christopher Marlowe

This post shows messages about the poet Christopher Marlowe from page 2 of As You Like It. 

The first image shows page 2 of As You Like It.

The next set of images is the page overlaid on itself using the clues "secretly to understand" and "a secret and villainous construct."  The message shows Marlowe's name in association with Francis [Bacon] and [Edward] de Vere.  Marlowe is described as an "emulator" of de Vere.

The third set of images is an alignment of the words "fire" and "kindle."  The words "break that oath" and "break his neck" appear in association further up the page.  (Before I tried this, I tried to line up "break that oath" and "break his neck" on adjacent lines, but I did not see the letters in "Rose Cross" line up.  The the the letters in "Rose Cross" aligned when I aligned the words "fire" and "kindle.") The message is, essentially: "Break your oath to the Rose Cross, and we will break your neck."













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