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great arcs of vomit

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Art Neuendorffer

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Mar 25, 2003, 6:03:00 PM3/25/03
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Elizabeth, Countess of Oxford, wrote her last will & testiment
on the 50th birthday of the great Spanish playwright Lope de Vega

<<I the lady Elizabeth Vere Countesse Dowager of Oxenford late wife
of Edward de Vere late Earle of Oxenford doe make and ordayne
this my last will. . . Item I give vnto my worthie good friend
S{i}r Edward Mooreknight my longe SILVER BASON wth the eWER to it.>>

http://socrates.berkeley.edu/~ahnelson/DOCS/elizwill.html

Dr. John Hall dies 23 years later:
--------------------------------------------------------------------
BUTCHER son-in-law Lope de Vega born Wed. 25 November, 1562
WILL of Elizabeth, Countess of Oxford, Wed. 25 November, 1612
BUTCHER son-in-law Dr. John Hall dies Wed. 25 November, 1635
--------------------------------------------------------------------
BUTCHER son-in-law Lope de Vega dies 26 August, 1635
-------------------------------------------------------------------
[Patron Saint of BUTCHERS] St. Adrian : Feastday 26 August

http://users.erols.com/saintpat/ss/0908.htm#marg

<<Saint Adrian: as a Roman imperial officer watching
23 Christians being beaten before Emperor Maximian:

"Let me be counted as one of these."

His Christian wife of 13 months, Natalia, ministered
to Adrian and his fellow prisoners, who suffered excruciating
tortures. After Adrian had been sentenced to death, visitors
were forbidden, but Natalia DISGUISED HERSELF AS A BOY & bribed
her way into the prison to ask Adrian's prayers for her in heaven.

As the axe dismembered Adrian over an anvil,
Natalia managed to save one of his hands.

She had to be restrained from casting herself into the fire when
Adrian's body was burned with the other martyrs. A rain storm
extinguished the fire, allowing Christians to gather the remains.

Sometimes Saint Adrian is shown
being thrown from a cliff into the sea
or being brought to land by DOLPHINS(?).>>
------------------------------------------------------------------
nic(H)ola(S) br(EAKSPEAR)
[Dec. 4, 1154 - Sept. 1, 1159] ADRIAN IV only English pope
Dec. 4, 1639, Henry Wotton dies during first obser. VENUS TRANSIT
Dec. 4, 1791, Mozart emits 'great arcs of vomit' from his mouth
------------------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer

----------------------------------------------------------------
FLEDGE, a. furnished with feathers or wings; able to fly.
----------------------------------------------------------------
<<Thor was distraught when upon awakening one morning he discovered that
his
mighty hammer Mjölnir was missing. His shaggy head and his beard
quiVEREd as
he, the first-born of Mother-Earth reached around for it. His first
words
were: "Loki, listen to me! I have suffered a loss beyond perception.
My hammer has been stolen!" They hurried to Freyja's home, and he said:
"Freyja, will you lend me your feather-robe so that I can find and
retrieve
my hammer?" Freyja said: "I would give it to you, even if it were made
of gold or silver." Loki then flew, with whirring feathers,
from the home of the Æsir to the land of the giants.>>
-----------------------------------------------------------
Joyce: FW 378: <<He's door-knobs dead!
And Annie Delap is free! Ones more. One *FLEDGE*,
one brood till hulm culms evurdyburdy.>>
-----------------------------------------------------------
probability of *F L E D G E*: 1 / 25,500

TOTH [E] O [N] LIEB [E] GETTEROFTHESEIN
SVIN [G] S [O] NNET [ß] MRWHALLHAPPINES
SEAN [D] T [H] ATET [E] RNITIEPROMISEDB
[Y]OVR [E] V [E] RLIV [I] NGPOETWISHETHTH
[E]WEL [L] W [I] SHIN [G][ADVENTURER]INSET
[T]ING [F] O [R] TH
-----------------------------------------------------------------
P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses Book 8 (ed. Arthur Golding)

The finding of these things,
The spightfull heart of Daedalus with such a malice stings,
That headlong from the holy towre of Pallas downe he thrue
His Nephew, feyning him to fall by chaunce, which was NOT TRUE.
But Pallas (who doth favour wits) did stay him in his fall
And chaunging him into a Bird did clad him over all
With fethers soft amid the Aire. The QUICKnesse of his WIT
(Which erst was swift) did shed it selfe among his wings and feete.


Fledge, a. furnished with feathers or wings; able to fly.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Milton(1630): <<Dear son of MEMORY, great *HEIR of FAME*
What need'st thou such weak witness of thy name?>>

T O T H/E/ O /N/LIEB/E/G E TTER *oF* THES /E/ IN
\S\U I N/G/ S /O/NNET/ß/MRW\H\ ALLH *A* PPI /N/ ESS
\E\A N/D/ T /H/ATET/E/RNITI\E\ PRO *M* IS /E/ DBYO
\U\R/E/ V /E/RLIV/I/NGPOETW\I\ SH *E* T /H/ THEWE
\L L/ W /I/SHIN/G/ADVENTURE\R\ IN /S/ ETTING
\F/ O /R/TH
GIEßE: "to pour" {German}

Robert Dudley born: Surrey 24th June, 1532 at *S H E N E*
Oxford dies: [St.John's Day] 24th June, 1604
----------------------------------------------------------------

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From: Art Neuendorffer (aneuendor...@comcast.net)
Subject: HIS SON, FULK
Newsgroups: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Date: 2003-03-24 17:38:33 PST

------------------------------------------------------------------
THE MADNESS OF KINGS

<<So devilish an ancestry accounted for the demonic energy and
passionate ill-temper by which these princes seemed often afflicted.

'We who came from the devil', John's brother, Richard I, was
reported as saying caustically, 'must needs go back to the devil.
Do not deprive us of our heritage: we cannot help acting like devils.'
'De diabolo venit et ad diabolum ibid', commented Bernard of Clairvaux,
'From the devil he came, and to the devil he will go.'>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
<< http://www.dragoncourt.org/pubasset/vere_01.asp

Prince Milo de Vere - married to Charlemagne's sister -
and as Head of the Imperial House and Chief of the Imperial Army,
was himself an Imperial Prince.>>

('The Royal Genealogies' The Rev. Dr. James Anderson, D.D., M.A :

Milo I de Vere was Count of Anjou, (hence eldest son of Melusine.)

The House of Vere are descended in various lines from the dynasty of
Meroveus and consequently share this Germanic Royal Blood Tradition.>>
----------------------------------------------------------------
the last VERGES of a UNIVERSE EVER VASTER
----------------------------------------------------------------
Portrait of the Artist - James Joyce

He tore a sheet from his scribbler and passed it down, whispering:
-- In case of necessity any layman or woman can do it. The formula which
he wrote obediently on the sheet of paper, the coiling and uncoiling
calculations of the professor, the spectre-like symbols of force and
velocity fascinated and jaded Stephen's mind. He had heard some say that
the old professor was an atheist FREEMASON. O the GREY dull day! It
seemed a limbo of painless patient consciousness through which souls of
mathematicians might wander, projecting long slender fabrics from plane
to plane of EVER rarer and paler twilight, radiating swift eddies to
the last VERGES of a UNIVERSE EVER vaster, farther and more impalpable.
-- So we must distinguish between elliptical and ellipsoidal.
Perhaps some of you gentlemen may be familiar with the works
of Mr W. S. Gilbert. In one of his songs he speaks of
the BILLIARD sharp who is condemned to play: On a cloth UNTRUE
With a twisted cue And elliptical BILLIARD balls.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
p.[104] FW <<In the name of Annah the Allmaziful, the EVERLIVING,
the Bringer of Plurabilities, haloed be her *EVE*,
her singtime sung, her rill be run, unhemmed as it is UNEVEN!>>
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Cathy Howell <cho...@TOGETHER.NET>
Date: Wed, 8 May 1996 22:12:06 GEN-MEDIEVAL-L Archives

<<There's a story about a supposed ancestress of the Counts of Anjou,
sometimes also called Melusine. Various versions have her the wife
of Geoffrey I "Grisegonelle"/"GREY Tunic"/"GREYgown" (Count of Anjou,
962-987) or of HIS SON, FULK III "Nerra"/"The Contrary" (Count of Anjou,
987-1040). This countess, perhaps Melusine, was supposed to be a
daughter of Satan. The Count of Anjou married his demon countess for
her beauty, and all seemed normal except that she never stayed until the
end of mass, slipping out before the elevation of the Host. The Count
became curious, and arranged for four of his men to stand so close to
her as to stand on the HEM of her gown, thus preventing her from leaving
at the critical moment. The demon countess, foiled in her attempt
to avoid the sight of the body of Christ, shrieked in fear or pain,
wrenched herself free of her cloak, and flew out of the window
(taking two of her children with her), never to be seen again.>>
--------------------------------------------------------------------
September 7, 1151 Geoffrey (The Handsome) PlantaGENET dies at 38.
September 7, 1533 (Sunday) Elizabeth REGINA born, England(1558-1603)

St. Regina Day

September 7, 1471 Frederik I born, king of Denmark/NORWAY(1523-33)
September 7, 1596 Poet James Sherley baptized.
September 7, 1598 MERES' *Palladis Tamia*, registered (Elizabeth 65)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
"Greg Reynolds" <eve...@core.com> wrote:

> Gray cobalt (Min.), SMALtite.
----------------------------------------------------------------------
GREY Gandalf & a Small SM(i)ALtite
----------------------------------------------------------------------
<<In 3018, on Gandalf the GREY's advice, he left Bag End
under the name of MR. UNDERHILL to go to Rivendell. Going with
him were Samwise GamGEE, PEREGRIN Took, and Meriadoc Brandybuck.>>

http://www.glyphweb.com/arda/b/baggins.html

<<UNDERHILL: the part of HOBBITON that lay directly beneath HOBBITON
Hill. Its most famous SMIAL ('hobbit-hole') was in the Hill: Bag End.
Baggins: An old family of the Shire found mostly in the HOBBITON region
of the Westfarthing. The family seat was at the smial of Bag End in
UNDERHILL. They had always been an important family in the Shire,
and gave rise to the two most important Hobbits of the Third Age,
Bilbo the Ring-finder and Frodo the Ring-bearer.>>
--------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.thepalantir.com/characters/frodo.html

Frodo Baggins Birth: 2968 (SR 1368) Death: None*
r a Race: Hobbit Sex: Male
a c
n o *Frodo is not accounted to have died,
c n for he went away at the GREY Havens.
i
s Gris Havres
a a
b r
r v
i e
e y
l
---------------------------------------------------------------------
<<An existing copy of the Latin 'fine' of May 4, 1597 assigns to
Shakspere a MESSUAGE with two barns & *2 gardens* . William UNDERHILL,
who lived part of the year at Idlicote, was a Catholic recusant
who appeared to Stephen Burman to be 'CRAFTY'. Two months after
the sale, UNDERHILL was killed by HIS SON FULKe, then a legal minor,
to whom he had orally bequeathed his lands. UNDERHILL died at
Fillongley near Coventry on July 7, 1597. As a result, New Place was
forfeited to the state for felony, and Fulke was hanged for murder in
1599. The crime kept his right to the house insecure until the
victim's 2nd son Hercules UNDERHILL came of age in 1602.>> -P. Honan
------------------------------------------------------------------
<<. . . the house was sold; the mother dived down into the long
church-yard grass; her children twice followed her thither; and the
houseless, familyless old man staggered off a VAGABOND in crape;
his EVERy woe unreVEREncED; his GREY head a scorn to flaxen curls!>>

_Moby Dick_ Chap. 112 - THE BLACKSMITH

<<BELOW in his hammock, Ahab did not hear of this till GREY dawn,
when he came to the deck; it was then recounted to him by FLASK,
not unaccompanied with hinted dark MEANINGs.
He hollowly laughed, and thus explained the wonder.>>
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Don Quixote PART 2:CHAPTER XVIII

They led Don Quixote into a room, and Sancho removed his armour,
leaving him in loose Walloon breeches and chamois-leather doublet, all
stained with the rust of his armour; his collar was a falling one of
scholastic cut, without STARCH or lace, his buskins buff-coloured,
and his shoes polished. He wore his good sword, which hung in
a baldric of sea-wolf's skin, for he had suffered for many years,
they say, from an ailment of the kidneys; and over all
he threw a long cloak of good GREY cloth.
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Romeo and Juliet Act 1, Scene 4

MERCUTIO Her wagoner a small GREY-coated gnat,
Not so big as a round little WORM
Prick'd from the lazy finger of a maid;
--------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.bbc.co.uk/music/profiles/mozart.shtml

<<In July of 1791, however, Mozart was visited by a mysterious stranger
clad in GREY, who commissioned a requiem mass. Mozart worked feverishly
on the score of the work, and was evidently well-paid for it. However,
his health was deteriorating, and in his febrile state he imagined that
he was writing the music for his own funeral. Mozart even believed that
he was being poisoned. By December the Requiem remained unfinished;
Mozart's friends and students gathered at the sickening composer's
bedside to sight-read through those sections that were complete
in the vocal parts. Mozart's condition worsened; on 4 December 1791
he is reported to have emitted 'great arcs of vomit' from his mouth.
He died shortly after midnight on 5 December and was buried in a
commoners' grave, paid for by his patron Baron Gottfried van Swieten;
his burial was probably not attended by any of his friends.>>
------------------------------------------------------------------
<<Odin's prized possesions include the spear Gungnir, which never
misses it's mark, and the magnificent 8-legged stallion Sleipnir,
both of which were presents from Loki. He hung himself
on the World Tree Yggdrasil for nine straight days,
pierced by his spear Gungnir, in order to learn
nine powerful songs & the secrets of the 18 runes.>>
------------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer

All messages from thread

From: Art Neuendorffer (aneuendor...@comcast.net)
Subject: its wood could only be American!
Newsgroups: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Date: 2003-03-24 09:05:52 PST

---------------------------------------------------------
1640 *WIT's Recreation*:
To Master William Shakespeare

Shakespeare, we must be silent in thy praise,
'Cause our encomiums will but blast thy bays,
Which *ENVY* could not, that thou didst so well
*Let thine own HISTORIES prove thy chronicle*
----------------------------------------------------------
Dedication to Oxford in Fairie Queene (1590)
-----------------------------------------------------------
To the right Honourable the Earle of Oxenford,
Lord high Chamberlayne of England. &c.

REceiue most Noble Lord in gentle gree,
The vnripe fruit of an vnready WIT:
Which by thy countenaunce doth craue to bee

Defended from foule *ENUIES* poisnous bit.

(W)hich so to doe may thee right well befit,
(S)ith th'antique glory of thine auncestry

*Vnder a shady VELE is therein writ* ,
[VELLE = L., to WILL]
--------------------------------------------------------
MADAM, withouten many words,
Once I am sure you WILL, or no :
And if you WILL, then leave your bourds,
And use your *W I T*, and shew it so,

THE LADY TO ANSWER DIRECTLY WITH YEA OR NAY.
-- Sir Thomas Wyatt
--------------------------------------------------------------------
October 6, 1542 => Sir Thomas Wyatt dies (Tower cat named acaTaR)
October 6, 1573 => Henry Wriothesley born (Tower cat named TRixie)
October 6, 1576 => Roger Manners (5th Earl of Rutland) born
October 6, 1621 => Registration of Othello
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Claudius reads Hamlet's letter to Laertes:
Quarto 2 version (Act 4, Scene 7)

'High and mighty, you shall know I am set naked on your kingdom,
to morrow shall I begge leaue to see your kingly eyes,
when I shal first asking you pardon,
there-vnto recount the occasion of my suddaine returne.'
---------------------------------------------------------------
Ambassador to Denmark Roger Manners (E. Rutland)
asked for & received a "kingly pardon" of £30,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------
Claudius reads Hamlet's letter to Laertes:
Folio version (Act 4, Scene 7)

'High and mighty, You shall know I am set naked on
your kingdom. To-morrow shall I beg leave to see
your kingly eyes: when I shall, first asking your
pardon thereunto, recount the occasion of my
sudden *and more strange return.' 'HAMLET.'*
--------------------------------------------------------------
Unique Folio ending to Hamlet letter:
<< and more strange return. hamlet >>
h
a
m
r o g e r m a n n e r s, e. r u t l a n d
e
t
t

----------------------------------------------------------------
roger manners, e. rutland, motto: "Multum in Parvo"
"Much in Little"

"Much [info] condensed into few words or into a small compass."
-----------------------------------------------------------------
'And I have only to add, sir,' said Mr. Pickwick, now thoroughly
angry, 'that I consider you a rascal, and a--a--ruffian--and--
and worse than any man I EVER saw, or heard of, except
that PIOUS & sanctified VAGABOND in the MULBERRY LIVERY.'

Shake-speare. . . thy PIOUS FELLOWES give The world thy Workes
-----------------------------------------------------------
August 23, 1600, Shakespeare 1st appears in Stationer's Register
when "II Henry IV" & "Much Ado About Nothing"
were entered by *ANDREW WYSE*
-----------------------------------------------------------
*SUFIY* = PIOUS, WISE

s
r o g e r m a n n e r s, e. r u t l a n d
f
i
y
<<transferringly measured on>>
----------------------------------------------------------
<<"Ah! POOR FELLOW! he'll have to die now,"
ejaculated the Long Island sailor.

Going to his vice-bench, the CARPENTER for
convenience sake and general reference, now

TRANSFERRINGLY MEASURED ON

it the exact length the coffin was to be, and then made the
transfer permanent by cutting two notches at its extremities.>>
--------------------------------------------------------------
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Act 5, Scene 1

First Clown What is he that builds stronger than either
the MASON, the shipwright, or the CARPENTER?
-------------------------------------------------------------
"The ship! The HEARSE!- the second HEARSE!" cried Ahab
from the boat; "its wood could only be American!"

HEARSE, n. A grave, coffin, TOMB, or sepulchral monument.

"DE VERE IN TOMB"
"MENTE VIDEBOR"
------------------------------------------------------------
King Richard III Act 1, Scene 2
LADY ANNE If honour may be shrouded in a HEARSE,

King Henry IV, Part ii Act 4, Scene 5

KING HENRY IV Then get thee gone and dig my grave thyself,
And bid the merry bells ring to thine ear
That thou art crowned, not that I am dead.
Let all the tears that should bedew my HEARSE
Be drops of balm to sanctify thy head:
Only compound me with forgotten dust
Give that which gave thee life unto the WORMS.
--------------------------------------------------------------------
<<That is not Shake-speares; EV'RY Line, each VER(s)E
HERE shall REVIVE, redeeme thee from thy HER(s)E.>> -L. Digges

" Thy two Sonnes forth: are now *REUIU'D* " -- _Cymbeline_

<<. . .REVIUED the Earles of Oxford and SOUT-HAMPTON>>
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Thebes/4260/hvhw.html
--------------------------------------------------------------------
<<Or spunne out Riddles, or weav'd fifty Tomes
Of Logogriphes, or curious Palindromes;
Or pump'd for those hard trifles, Anagrams,
Or Ecrosticks, or your finer flames
Of Egges, and Halbards, Cradles, and a HER(s)E,
A paire of Sizers, and a COMBE in VER(s)E;
Acrosticks, and Tellesticks, or jumpe names,>> -- B. Jonson

(U)nderneath this sable HER(s)E
(LYES) the subiect of all VER(s)E:
(SYD)ne(YES) sister, Pembroke's Mother:
(O)n The Countesse Dowager of Pembroke: Mary (Sidney) Herbert,
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hamlet, Prince of Denmark Act 1, Scene 4

HAMLET Thou comest in such a questionable shape
That I will speak to thee: I'll call thee Hamlet,
King, father, royal Dane: O, answer me!
Let me not burst in ignorance; but tell
Why thy canonized bones, HEARSEd in death,
Have burst their cerements; why the sepulchre,
Wherein we saw thee quietly inurn'd,
Hath oped his PONDEROUS and marble JAWS,
To cast thee up again.

``Underneath this marble HEARSE.'' --B. Johnson.
------------------------------------------------------------------
Moby Dick - Melville

It was a sight to see Queequeg seated over against TASHTEGO,
opposing his *FILEd teeth* to the Indian's; crosswise to them,
Daggoo seated on the floor, for a bench would have brought
his *HEARSE* -plumed head to the low carlines; at every motion
of his colossal limbs, making the low cabin framework to SHAKE,
as when an African elephant goes PASSENGER in a ship.
------------------------------------------------------------------
FILEd teeth
---------------------------------------------------------------------
P. OVIDius Naso, Metamorphoses Book 8 (ed. Arthur Golding)

Did put him to thee to be taught full twelve yeares old and apt
To take instruction. He did marke the middle bone that goes
Through fishes, and according to the paterne tane of those
He *FILEd teeth* upon a piece of yron one by one
And so devised first the SAW where erst was never none.
--------------------------------------------------------------
"so the sweet wittie soule of *OVID* lives
in mellifluous & honytongued Shakespeare,
I say that the Muses would speak with Shakespeares
*fine FILEd phrase*, if they would speake English." - Meres
------------------------------------------------------------------
TRUE-FILEd lines
-------------------------------------------------------------------
Of Shakespeares minde, and MANNERS brightly shines
In his well toned, and *TRUE-FILEd lines*: -- Ben Jonson
--------------------------------------------------------------------
_Huckleberry Finn_ by Mark Twain Chap. 38

"I know how to fix it. We got to have a rock for
the coat of arms and mournful inscriptions, and we can
kill two birds with that same rock. There's a gaudy
big GRINDSTONE down at the mill, and we'll smouch it,
and carve the things on it,
and *FILE out the pens* and the *SAW* on it, too."
--------------------------------------------------------------------
<< *Clamn dever* , Lenehan said to Mr O'Madden Burke.>> -- _Ulysses_
--------------------------------------------------------------------
_David Copperfield_ by Charles Dickens CHAP. 20

'She is VERY CLEVER, is she not?' I asked.

'CLEVER! She brings EVERything to a GRINDSTONE,' said Steerforth,
and sharpens it, as she has sharpened her own face and figure
these years past. She has worn herself away by constant sharpening.
She is all edge. . . She is always dangerous.'
--------------------------------------------------------------------
The GRINDSTONE
Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Part III - Chapter II

The people in possession of the house had let them in at the GATE,
and they had rushed in to work at the GRINDSTONE;
it had evidently been set up there for their purpose,
as in a convenient and retired spot.

But, such awful workers, and such awful work!

The GRINDSTONE had a double handle, and, turning at it madly were two
men, whose faces, as their long hair Rapped back when the whirlings
of the GRINDSTONE brought their faces up, were more horrible and
cruel than the visages of the WILDEST SAVAGES in their most BARBAROUS
DISGUISE. False eyebrows and false moustaches were stuck upon them,
and their hideous countenances were all bloody and sweaty, and all
awry with howling, and all staring and glaring with beastly
excitement and want of sleep.

Twice more in the darkness the bell at the great gate sounded,
and the irruption was repeated, and the GRINDSTONE whirled and
spluttered. "What is it?" cried Lucie, affrighted. "Hush! The
soldiers' swords are sharpened there," said Mr. Lorry. "The place
is national property now, and used as a kind of armoury, my love."
--------------------------------------------------------------------
William Shakspere is thought to have lived in DURSLEY.
HARRY POTTER lived with MUGGLES named DURSLEY.
Shakspere lived in CrippleGATE on SILVER & MUGGLE (Monkswell) street
-----------------------------------------------------------------
Timon of Athens Act 2, Scene 1

Senator No PORTER at his GATE, but rather one that
smiles and still invites all that pass by.
--------------------------------------------------------------
Love's Labour's Lost Act 1, Scene 2

MOTH Samson, master: he was a man of good carriage, great
carriage, for he carried the town-GATEs on his back
like a PORTER: and he was in love.
---------------------------------------------------------------
King Lear Act 3, Scene 7

GLOUCESTER If wolves had at thy GATE howl'd that stern time,
Thou shouldst have said 'Good PORTER, turn the KEY,'
----------------------------------------------------------------
MACBETH Act 2, Scene 3

PORTER Here's a knocking indeed! If a man were PORTER
of hell-GATE, he should have old turning the KEY.
----------------------------------------------------------------
Coriolanus Act 4, Scene 5

Third Servingman He'll go, he says, and sowl the PORTER
of Rome GATEs by the ears: he will mow all down
before him, and leave his passage polled.

Second Servingman Has the PORTER his eyes in his head;
that he gives entrance to such companions?
------------------------------------------------------------------------
R&J First Servant: let the PORTER let in SUSAN GRINDSTONE and NELL.

HENRY PORTER disappears on St. AUGUSTINE's day May 26, 1599

the SUSAN CONSTANT:

SUSAN Vere born on St. AUGUSTINE's day May 26, 1587
Witty SUSANna Shak. was 'born' on St. AUGUSTINE's day May 26, 1583
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Henry PORTER's last loan: May 26, 1599

http://34.1911encyclopedia.org/P/PO/PORTER_HENRY.htm

<<PORTER, HENRY, English dramatist, author of The Two Angry Women
of Abingdon, may probably be identified with the Henry PORTER who
matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford, on the 19th of June 1589,
and is described as aged sixteen and the son of a gentleman of London.
From 1596 to 1599 he was engaged in writing plays for Henslowe for the
admiral's men, and his closest associate seems to have been HENRY
CHETTLE. Henslowe secured in February 1599 the sole rights of any play
in which PORTER bad a hand, the consideration being an advance of
FORTY SHILLINGS. As time goes on he is familiarly referred to as

" HARRY PORTER ";

his borrowings become more frequent, and the sums less, until on
the 16th of April 1599 he obtained a loan of twelve pence in exchange
for a bond to pay all he owed to Henslowe--twentyfive shillings--on pain
of forfeiting ten pounds. Whether he paid or not does not appear, but
his last loan is recorded on the 26th of May 1599, after which nothing
further is known of him. It seems unlikely that he is the Henry PORTER
who took his Music degree at Christ Church in 1600 after 12 years'
study, and whose skill in sacred music is celebrated by John Weever.>>
----------------------------------------------------------------------
William Shakspere is thought to have lived in DURSLEY.
HARRY POTTER lived with MUGGLES named DURSLEY.
Shakspere lived in CrippleGATE on SILVER & MUGGLE (Monkswell) street
---------------------------------------------------------------------
_An overview of James Joyce's Finnegans Wake_ by Jorn Barger
http://www.robotwisdom.com/jaj/fwake/index.html

<<Some years ago on rec.arts.books, 'SubGregious' summarized the
conventional view of FW's plot, presented especially in Joseph Campbell
and H.M. Robinson's "Skeleton Key to FW": "...the Wake is, simply
stated (which is to say, to some extent mistated) a record of the
dream-thoughts of a man whose dream name is Humphrey Chimpden Earwicker
and whose waking name is, I believe, PORTER. He has a wife named Ann who
becomes the source of all life, a daughter Isabel, and twin sons Kevin
and Jerry who go by many names and who are all forces in opposition.
Earwicker is the builder of cities, eternal and indestructable but
entirely mutable, his creative power endlessly required to reconstruct
what was built before, containing the seeds of its destruction in the
sexuality, which is sin, which allowed its erection. His sons are the
sundered halves of the creative power, synthesis degenerate into
antitheses, and the wife is the river, which eventually always
must be the Liffey as all the cities must eventually be Dublin."

The view that FW is the dream of a peculiar publican called PORTER
originated, I think, with Edmund Wilson. Books One and Three don't fit
this pattern very well, except that in III.4 a couple called PORTER
answer a cry in the night from the nursery overhead-- where the
twins and Issy reappear, re-named and much younger than in Book Two.

"Tell me something. The PORTERs, so to speak... are very nice people,
are they not? Very, all fourlike tellt. And on this wise, Mr. PORTER
(BARTHOLOMEW, heavy man, astern, mackerel shirt...) is an excellent
forefather and Mrs PORTER (leading lady, a poopahead, gaffneysaffron
nightdress...) is a most kindhearted messmother. A so united family
pateramater is not more existing on papel or off of it. As KEYmaster
fits the lock it weds so this bally builder to his streamline secret.
They care for nothing except everything that is allPORTERous...
Isn't that terribly nice of them? You can ken that they come of
a rarely old family by their costumance...">>
-------------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer


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From: Art Neuendorffer (aneuendor...@comcast.net)
Subject: BLADDER
Newsgroups: humanities.lit.authors.shakespeare
Date: 2003-03-24 16:17:45 PST

HERNE the hunter
----------------------------------------------------------------
The Merry Wives of Windsor Act 4, Scene 4

MISTRESS PAGE There is an old tale goes that HERNE the hunter,
Sometime a keeper here in Windsor forest,
Doth all the winter-time, at still midnight,
Walk round about an oak, with great ragg'd horns;
And there he blasts the tree and takes the cattle
And makes milch-kine yield blood and SHAKES a chain
In a most HIDEOUS & DREADFUL MANNER:
You have heard of such a spirit, and well you know
The superstitious idle-headed eld
RECEIVED and did DELIVER to our age
This tale of HERNE the hunter for a TRUTH.
------------------------------------------------------------------
The GRINDSTONE
Tale of Two Cities by Charles Dickens Part III - Chapter II

Their faces. . .were more horrible and cruel than the visages
of the WILDEST SAVAGES in their most BARBAROUS DISGUISE.
False eyebrows and FALSE MOUSTACHES were stuck upon them,
and their hideous countenances were all bloody and sweaty,
------------------------------------------------------------------
<<The bust, too--there in the Stratford Church.
The precious bust, the priceless bust, the calm bust,
the serene bust, the emotionless bust, with the DANDY MUSTACHE,
and the putty face, unseamed of care--that face which has looked
passionlessly down upon the awed pilgrim for a hundred and fifty years
and will still look down upon the awed pilgrim three hundred more, with
the deep, deep, deep, subtle, subtle, subtle expression of a BLADDER.>>
-- Mark Twain.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
King Henry IV, Part i Act 2, Scene 4

FALSE STAFF a plague of sighing and grief!
it blows a man up like a BLADDER.
There's villanous news abroad: here was
Sir John Bracy from your father; you must to the
court in the morning. That same mad fellow of the
north, PERCY, and he of Wales, that gave Amamon
the bastinado and MADE LUCIFER cuckold
-----------------------------------------------------------
MADE LUCIFER
EMARICDULFE (1595)
{anagram}
--------------------------------------------------------------------
"And sERVE EMARICDULFE forEVERmore."

http://www.sonnets.org/ec.htm
http://www.sobran.com/emar.shtml
http://www.sobran.com/emarintr.shtml
------------------------------------------------------------
The chance of any given Shakespearean word being:
MADE, MEAD or DAME ~ 1/1,000

And there are only 6 LUCIFER's in Shakespeare.

Chance of MADE, MEAD or DAME being adjacent to LUCIFER ~ 1/80
--------------------------------------------------------------
david joseph kathman wrote (hlas 1998):

> Joe Sobran is off his rocker if he thinks "EMARICDULFE"
> was written by the same person who wrote the works of Shakespeare.
> The "parallels" which Sobran has found between this sequence
> and the works of Shakespeare are primarily commonplaces
> of the type you could expect to find in any English
> poetry of the 1590s, with some possibly reflecting
> common sources (such as Daniel).
> The title page says the author was "E.C. Esquier",
> and the dedication is "To my very good friends,
> John ZOUCH and Edward FITTON, Esquiers".
----------------------------------------------------------------------
<<Cecil reported, 'we have no news but that there is a misfortune
befallen
Mistress FITTON. The Earl of Pembroke being examined confesseth a fact
[bastard child], but utterly renounceth all marriage. I fear they will
both dwell in the Tower for awile,'>> - _William Shake-speare_ by Rowse
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ZOUCHE. . .PERCY. . .DE VERE
---------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.montaguemillennium.com/research/crusaders.htm

<< "... the Knights (these would be the Hospitallers, ed.), having
lost their stronghold ... to Timur the Lame ("Tamurlane",) in 1402, were
establishing a new base at Bodrum, the site of the ancient Halicarnassus
& its famous Mausoleum, stone from which was used in the construction
of the Christian fortress dedicated to St. Peter. This fortress
was to act not simply as a military post, but also as a refuge
for fugitive Christians from the Ottoman Empire. ...

The castle of St. Peter itself provides striking witness to English
participation. Over the GATEWAY to one of its towers, known as the
English Tower, 26 coats of arms were set up in stone, including those
of Henry IV, the Prince of Wales, the dukes of Clarence, Bedford, &
Gloucester (the kings sons), the duke of York, and the families of
GREY, ZOUCHE, DE LA POLE, Neville, PERCY, Holland, Beauchamp, Burleigh,
STRANGE, Arundel, MONTAGUE, Stafford, DE VERE, Courtenay, FitzHugh,
Cresson, WOOLFE, and FAIRFAX, many of who could boast of both long
and recent crusading traditions." (Tyerman, pp. 313-314)>>
-------------------------------------------------------------------
<<[Thomas Tyler] tried his hand occasionally at deciphering ancient
inscriptions, reading them as people seem to read the stars, by
discovering bears & bulls and swords & goats where, as it seems to
me, no sane human being can see anything but stars higgledy-piggledy.
Next to the translation of Ecclesiastes, his _magnum opus_ was his work
on Shakespear's Sonnets, in which he accepted a previous identification
of Mr W. H., the "onlie begetter" of the sonnets, with the
Earl of Pembroke (William Herbert), and promulgated his own
identification of Mistress Mary FITTON with the Dark Lady. Whether he
was right or wrong about the Dark Lady did not matter urgently to me:
she might have been Maria Tompkins for all I cared. But Tyler would
have it that she was Mary FITTON;>> - George Bernard Shaw
--------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.nexusmagazine.com/ringlords2.html

<<In the 12th-century, Melusine's descendant, Robert de Vere,
3rd Earl of Oxford & pretender to the Earldom of Huntingdon, was
appointed as King Richard I's Steward of the forest lands of Fitzooth.
As Lord of the Greenwood & titular HERNE of the Wild Hunt, he was a
popular people's champion of the Sidhé heritage - as a result of which
he was outlawed for taking up arms against King John. It was he who,
subsequently styled Robin Fitzooth, became the prototype for Robin Hood.

Of all the monarchs who ever sat upon the throne of England, the Tudor
Queen, Elizabeth I, was by far the most in tune with ancient cultures
and wood lore. She was even called the Faerie Queene and, before being
formally crowned, she was installed by the people as their Queen
of the Greenwood. This was an ancient ritual of the Shining Ones
- the Elven Race of the Albi-gens. The ceremony was conducted
in the mist of early dawn in the depths of Windsor Forest and,
to facilitate the installation, the customary Robin Hood
legacy of the House of Vere was brought into play.

At that time, the Queen's Lord Chamberlain was Edward de Vere of Loxley,
17th Earl of Oxford, and it was his office to invest Elizabeth by first
deposing the Caille Daouine. This was the traditional King of the Forest
(whose name had given rise to Scotland's Pictish realm of Caledonia)
- the mighty Stag of the Seven Tines,

upon whose back Lord Vere rode into the ceremonial clearing.>>
-------------------------------------------------------------
HAMLET Alas, poor Yorick! I knew him, Horatio: a fellow
of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy: he hath
borne me on his back a thousand times;
-----------------------------------------------------------
Yorick <=> Falstaff portraying HERNE the hunter
with a young Edward de Vere (Cupid) on his back
-------------------------------------------------------------
Act 5, Scene 5

FALSTAFF Divide me like a bribe buck, each a haunch: I will
keep my sides to myself, my shoulders for the fellow
of this walk, and my horns I bequeath your husbands.
Am I a woodman, ha? Speak I like HERNE the hunter?

Why, now is Cupid a child of conscience; he makes
restitution. As I am a TRUE spirit, welcome!
-------------------------------------------------------------
Vere's falling star MADE LUCIFER
--------------------------------------------------------------
The Stag of Windsor
http://www.dragoncourt.org/ringasset/ch1_04.asp

<<Before Elizabeth was crowned by Bishops, she underwent coronation by
the people. Attending the ceremony were a host of "Wild Forest Dwellers"
who'd come to bless the new Queen. Later in her reign she attended a
curious ceremony in the Forest of Windsor Great Park. Seated before a
pavilion in a clearing one Spring morning Queen Elizabeth, with her
complicity & consent presided over one of the most ancient druidic &
shamanic ceremonies in Eurasian culture. A ceremony that harkened back
to the time when much of Britain and the continent was covered by
massive forests, namely the trial and accession of the King of the
Caille Daouine, the Lord of the Forest.

The King of the Forest is the Stag of 9 Tines. In the lays of Robin
Hood Robin himself is revealed as the Green Stag and the Totem is
repreatedly interwoven into the fabric of ancient northern Kingship.
In pre-christian & non-christian Europe, to claim the Kingship of
the vast greenwood, the pretender was obliged to ride and kill whilst
mounted, the great Stag of 9 Tines. This task was possibly one of the
most dangerous stunts anyone could pull. During the Spring Rut the Stag
is vicious, belligerent and half mad with lust and territorial rage.
Getting anywhere near him was a feat of courage in 'itself. However,
to be rightly invested with the true kingship of the Forest Peoples,
it was necessary first to depose the reigning monarch, the Great Stag.

On the spring Morning in question one of Elizabeth's favourites, the
Queen's Chamberlain Edward de Vere charged into the self same clearing
mounted upon the great Stag of Windsor Forest. Its throat had been cut
by the rider and he and the Stag came to an abrupt halt at the Queen's
feet. Edward de Vere was the premier Count of England and the senior
Peer of the Realm. His lineage was far superior to that of Elizabeth,
he descended from the the House of Anjou, from Melusine & the ancient
Pictish & Danann druid Kings of Gaul, Albany & Eire. A necromancer,
anti-christian & libertine, Edward had contempt for the Tudors. He was
student of Dr John Dee and it is still insisted that Edward was the true
William Shakespeare, whose work is teaming with stories of Elphame and
Magic. Shakespeares Oberon is Alberic whose name literally means Elf
King, whilst his Titania is Diana, whose Druidic, woad coloured Boar
wears her crescent Moon upon its flank in the crest of the ancient
family of Vere. Three of Edward's recent ancestors had borne the name
Alberic and the first of them in England had adopted also the falling
star of LUCIFER as a badge to denote, as Verily Anderson expresses it,
the Vere's "near divinity" as descendants of the line of priest
kingship that originated with the first Elf King - Samael or LUCIFER.>>
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Act 5, Scene 5

MISTRESS QUICKLY About, about;
Search Windsor Castle, elves, within and out:
Strew good luck, ouphes, on EVERy sacred room:
That it may stand till the perpetual DOOM,
In state as wholesome as in state 'tis fit,
Worthy the owner, and the owner it.
The several chairs of order look you scour
With juice of balm and EVERy precious flower:
Each fair instalment, coat, and SEVERal crest,
With loyal blazon, EVERmore be blest!
And nightly, meadow-fairies, look you sing,
Like to the Garter's compass, in a ring:
The expressure that it bears, green let it be,
More fertile-fresh than all the field to see;
And 'Honi soit qui mal y pense' write
In emerald tufts, flowers purple, blue and white;
Let sapphire, pearl and rich embroidery,
Buckled below fair knighthood's bending knee:
Fairies use flowers for their charactery.
Away; disperse: but till 'tis one o'clock,
Our dance of custom round about the oak
Of HERNE the hunter, let us not forget.
--------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer

Art Neuendorffer

unread,
Mar 25, 2003, 6:05:12 PM3/25/03
to

Art Neuendorffer

unread,
Mar 27, 2003, 12:20:57 PM3/27/03
to
"Art Neuendorffer" <aneuendor...@comcast.net> wrote :
> Dec. 4, 1791, Mozart emits 'great arcs of VOMIT' from his mouth
> ------------------------------------------------------------------
VOMIT PUN MURAL
roger manners, e. rutland, motto: "MULTUM IN PARVO"
"Much in Little"

----------------------------------------------------------
<<"Ah! POOR FELLOW! he'll have to die now,"
ejaculated the Long Island sailor.

Going to his vice-bench, the CARPENTER for
convenience sake and general reference, now

TRANSFERRINGLY MEASURED ON

it the exact length the coffin was to be, and then made the
transfer permanent by cutting two notches at its extremities.>>
--------------------------------------------------------------
*SUFIY* = PIOUS, WISE

s
r o g e r m a n n e r s, e. r u t l a n d
f
i
y

<<transferringly measured on>>
--------------------------------------------------------
Art Neuendorffer


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