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WOW! Just In!
FOUR ADDITIONAL POEMS
OF IGNOTO
ON
QUEEN ELIZABETH'S OFFICIAL
FUNERAL PROCESSION

April 28, 1603

By E.L. Miller©2012


Queen Elizabeth's Funeral- April 28
Click to Read





Announcing New Evidence
Dating Shakespeare:
The Fiery Trigon and the"Mortall Moone"

Dating Shakespeare

SHAKESPEARE IDENTIFIED
The Fiery Trigon &
The Mortall Moone

NEW EVIDENCE
Correlates Sonnet 107 (people, persons and events) with the Greatest Cosmic Event In English history, April 28, 1583 12:00 noon

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Dating Shakespeare Home Page






Seith the Shakespeare Memorial Epitaph :: History of a Fraud by Eric Miller

Is There A Cipher in Shakespeare's Epitaph?

A Review/Commentary
by Eric Miller


Finalization of MRDD Report:
This finalization of Miller Reports Due Diligence examination concludes with amazing new evidence and issues which raise grave questions as to whether fraud and forgery may have been involved in the "repair” & "beautification" of Shakespeare’s "original" monument.
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Announcing New Evidnce :: Dating Shakespeare: THe Fiery Trigon and the "MOrtall Moone"

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NEW POEMS INCLUDING
IN PRISON PENT

from In Prison Pent (Posie 9)
byAnomos/Ignoto

The frozen snake oppress'd with heapéd snow,
By struggling hard gets out her tender head:
And spies far off from where she lies below,
The winter sun that from the north is fled:
But all in vain she looks upon the light,
Where heat is wanting to restore her might.

What does it help a wretch in prison pent,
Long time with biting hunger over-press'd
To see without or smell within the scent,
Of dainty fare for others tables dress'd?'
Yet snake and prisoner both behold the thing,
The which (but not with sight) might comfort bring.

Such is my state, or worse, if worse may be,
My heart oppress'd with heavy frost of care,
Debar'd of that which is most dear to me,
Kill'd up with cold, and pin'd with evil fare:
And yet I see the thing might yield relief,
And yet the sight doth breed my greater grief.

So Thisbe saw her lover through the wall,
And saw thereby, she wanted that she saw:
And so I flee, and fleeing want withal,
And wanting so, unto my death I draw:
And so my death were twenty times my friend,
If with this verse my hated life might end.


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A Poem from Gold Branch


An Old Man's Response To Inquires
Concerning His Health

The candle wick sputters out,
dying with a snake-like hiss.
Yet the added light isn't needed
this early morning
for an old man to pen a friend a poem.
Recently, I read a Chinese poet,
who, in speaking of the futile valor
of a famous general
distilled his anguished situation:
"A feather set next a flaming sky."
Now, I ask you, does one need be
a famous general for this to apply?

 


... Read More
Qin Shi Huangdi:
China's “First Emperor”


Qin Shi Hwang is an historical play in five acts which chronicles the overthrow of the First Emperor of China (221-207 B.C.) by a courageous peasant. It is the story of the three most important characters involved in that well documented revolution.


... Read More


Passion for Murder

Was Dr. Sigmund Freud, the father of psychoanalysis, a serial killer? This fascinating book by Eric Miller presents convincing evidence of that proposition. This facsimile publication is authorized by the author,...
Read more

 
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