Stranger still to read Baconian commentators. While the worshipers of Stratford enjoy the freedom of needing no demonstrable connection between the sonnets and the life of the Shakspere of that town, in order for it to be accepted that he wrote them, the Baconians revel in twisting themselves in the most excruciating mental knots in order to bind together connections where none exist to their candidate's well-documented life.
What both groups have in common, however, is that the biographies of their candidates for writing the works attributed to the name of Shakespeare bear no demonstrable connection to the sonnets that go under that name. Their claims of a relationship between their candidates' lives and the sonnets are contrived or drawn from generalizations upon human nature and/or traits shared by many who occupied the time and place.
Yet the Stratfordian myth has become so pervasive that even the advocates of other candidates, such as the Earl of Oxford, Christopher Marlowe, Thomas North, Henry Neville, etc., feel compelled to adopt the Stratfordian framework for commenting upon the sonnets. The first 126 are generally accepted as having been written to/about Henry Wriothesley, the 3rd Earl of Southampton, and the rest to “The Dark Lady”. The two groups of poems are considered to have been intentionally ordered by Shakespeare himself in order to tell the largely chronological tale of his adult emotional life, or, if a given candidate was dead at the time of publication, the matter avoided.
![]() |
Was Shakespeare Gay? What Do the Sonnets Really Say? |
Astonishingly, the Oxfordian commentators have even found it impossible to resist the Baconian trope of detecting ciphers. Whereas the Baconians adopted the strategy because the pieces of their authorship puzzle do not remotely fit the life to the works, Oxfordians have adopted it because they have chosen to accept the Stratfordian framework for the sonnets: that 1-126 have Southampton for their object.
But the Southampton connection became orthodoxy among Stratfordians because no other recipient was possible within the known social network of the Stratford man. The Shakespeare industry demanded a back-story that could not be provided without a name. That Shakespeare dedicated his Venus and Adonis and Rape of Lucrece to Southampton describes the entirety of his relationships to persons among the nobility — or, for that matter, to any identifiable person at all meriting the sophisticated imagery of the sonnets. The sole argument for Southampton is that, while there is no meaningful probability that he was the object of the sonnets, he is the only person with any probability at all. The only alternative to Southampton is no one.
All of this said, I submit that I have already shown a unique correspondence between the sonnets of Shakespeare and the events and the pattern of the life of Edward de Vere, the 17th Earl of Oxford in my various publications. There is Sonnet 74 in which Shakespeare receives, like Edward de Vere, in 1582 [1583 N.S.], so serious a wound in a duel that he fears he will die “The coward conquest of a wretch's knife...”. None of the other candidates is known to have suffered such a wound.1 There is Sonnet 125 in which Shakespeare says he “bore the canopy” such as Edward de Vere bore over Queen Elizabeth more than once but especially during the grand national celebration to thank God for victory over the Spanish Armada.2 No other candidate is known ever to have borne a canopy of any sort.
While these first two examples caught scholars attentions some time ago, I have added Sonnet 33 in which Shakespeare mourns the death of an infant son such as was the case with Edward de Vere.3 History does not record the Stratford man or any of the other candidates bearing such a loss.
At 36 years of age, however, a (by all appearances) healthy Stratford Shakspere did lose his only son at the age of 11 years. Which raises the question: “How did Shakespeare write Sonnet 108, as he felt death approaching,wondering how his young son would ever come to know him?”4 Edward de Vere's second legitimate son, Henry, did survive child-birth and was 11 years old when his father, who had been in declining health for some years, died.
These are just four of a great many examples. In each instance the sonnet in question describes a trait or event specific to the life of Edward de Vere. In none of the above cases does a sonnet describe the same from the life of any of the other candidates.
All of this said, it is true that individual short lyric poems, in isolation, can support a wide range of interpretation. Added to this is the fact that biographical records from Tudor lives were notoriously erratic. Few records from the life of a commoner like the Stratford man would be likely to have survived. The discovery of those that do would be largely serendipitous and the texts nondescript.
What is different about the results of my research into a Collected Poems of William Shakespeare — to which I wrote the introductory critical biography some 11 years ago5 — is that so many of the sonnets reveal a precise correspondence with events and traits from the documented biography of Edward de Vere few or none from any of the other candidates. Whereas isolated single sonnets may quite properly be dismissed as “insufficient evidence,” the correspondence between the known biography of Vere and the texts of a majority of the sonnets — a correspondence not found in the biography of any other candidate — constitutes so unique a pattern that it argues powerfully for Vere as their author. Such a pattern, and such a pattern alone, argues autobiography.
I have begun publicly composing drafts of the results of my years of research toward the promised Collected Poems of William Shakespeare — the earliest poems which pre-date the year 1566 — in my individually published studies and at my Virtual Grub Street blog, in a desperate attempt to finally complete the text I have promised for so many years. For me it is exciting and daunting that I still make major findings on the subject. The project has proven to be nearly overwhelming but I hope to complete it soon.
1 See my Edward de Vere was Shakespeare: at long last the proof (2013, 2017). https://www.amazon.com/dp/1543136257/
2 Ibid.
3 Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. "The Sonnets of Shakespeare: Sonnet 33. Edward de Vere's Memorial For His Son." Virtual Grub Street. https://gilbertwesleypurdy.blogspot.com/2024/07/the-sonnets-of-shakespeare-sonnet-33.html
4 Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. "The Sonnets of Shakespeare: Sonnet 108. Edward de Vere to his son, Henry." Virtual Grub Street. https://gilbertwesleypurdy.blogspot.com/2024/09/the-sonnets-of-shakespeare-sonnet-108.html
5 Purdy, Gilbert Wesley. Edward de Vere was Shakespeare: at long last the proof (2013, 2017). https://www.amazon.com/dp/1543136257/
Also at Virtual Grub Street:
Invention in a Noted Weed: the Poetry of William Shakespeare. September 21, 2024. “The coward conquest of a wretches knife,...”
The Sonnets of Shakespeare: Sonnet 108. Edward de Vere to his son, Henry. “That may expresse my love, or thy deare merit?”
- Sonnet 130: Shakespeare's Reply to a 1580 Poem by Thomas Watson. September 7, 2024. “Interesting to see our Derek Hunter debating with Dennis McCarthy, at the North group,...”.
- Rocco Bonetti's Blackfriars Fencing School and Lord Hunsdon's Water Pipe. August 12, 2023. “... the tenement late in the tenure of John Lyllie gentleman & nowe in the tenure of the said Rocho Bonetti...”
Check out the Shakespeare Authorship Article Index for many more articles and reviews about this fascinating time and about the Shakespeare Authorship Question.
- Check out the V.G.S. Oxfordian Shakespeare Poetry Page for many poems by Shakespeare together with historical context.