A pamphlet entitled
The Story of the Learned Pig (circa 1786) and alleged research by
James Wilmot have been described by some as the earliest instances of the claim that Bacon wrote Shakespeare's works, but the Wilmot research has been exposed as a forgery, and the pamphlet makes no direct reference to Bacon. The idea was first proposed by
Delia Bacon (no relation) in lectures and conversations with intellectuals in America and Britain. William Henry Smith was the first to publish the theory in a letter to
Lord Ellesmere published in the form of a sixteen-page pamphlet entitled ''Was Lord Bacon the Author of Shakespeare's Plays?'' Smith suggested that several letters to and from Francis Bacon hinted at his authorship. A year later, both Smith and Delia Bacon published books expounding the Baconian theory. In Delia Bacon's work, "Shakespeare" was represented as a group of writers, including Francis Bacon,
Sir Walter Raleigh and
Edmund Spenser, whose agenda was to propagate an anti-monarchical system of philosophy by secreting it in the text. In 1867, in the library of
Northumberland House, John Bruce happened upon a bundle of bound documents, some of whose sheets had been ripped away. It had comprised a number of Bacon's oratories and disquisitions, and had also apparently held copies of the plays
Richard II and
Richard III,
The Isle of Dogs and ''
Leicester's Commonwealth'', but these had been removed. On the outer sheet was scrawled repeatedly the names of Bacon and Shakespeare along with the name of
Thomas Nashe. There were several quotations from Shakespeare and a reference to the word
Honorificabilitudinitatibus, which appears in Shakespeare's ''
Love's Labour's Lost'' and Nashe's
Lenten Stuff. The Earl of Northumberland sent the bundle to
James Spedding, who subsequently penned a thesis on the subject, with which was published a facsimile of the aforementioned cover. Spedding hazarded a 1592 date, making it possibly the earliest extant mention of Shakespeare. After a diligent deciphering of the Elizabethan handwriting in Francis Bacon's notebook, known as the
Promus of Formularies and Elegancies, Constance Mary Fearon Pott (1833–1915) argued that a number of the ideas and figures of speech in Bacon's book could also be found in the Shakespeare plays. Pott founded the Francis Bacon Society in 1885 and published her Bacon-centered theory in 1891. In this, Pott developed the view of W.F.C. Wigston, that Francis Bacon was the founding member of the
Rosicrucians, a
secret society of
occult philosophers, and claimed that they secretly created art, literature and drama, including the entire Shakespeare canon, before adding the symbols of the rose and cross rug to their work.
William Comyns Beaumont also popularised the notion of Bacon's authorship. Other Baconians ignored the esoteric following that the theory was attracting. Bacon's reason for publishing under a pseudonym was said to be his need to secure his high office, possibly in order to complete his "Great Instauration" project to reform the moral and intellectual culture of the nation. The argument is that Bacon intended to set up new institutes of experimentation to gather the data to which his inductive method could be applied. He needed high office to gain the requisite influence, and being known as a dramatist, an allegedly low-class profession, would have impeded his prospects (see
stigma of print). Realising that play-acting was used by the ancients "as a means of educating men's minds to virtue", and being "strongly addicted to the theatre" himself, he is claimed to have set out the otherwise-unpublished moral philosophical component of his Great Instauration project in the Shakespearean oeuvre. In this way, he could influence the nobility through dramatic performance with his observations on what constitutes "good" government. By the end of the 19th century, Baconian theory had received support from a number of high-profile individuals.
Mark Twain showed an inclination for it in his essay
Is Shakespeare Dead?.
Friedrich Nietzsche expressed interest in and gave credence to the Baconian theory in his writings. The German mathematician
Georg Cantor believed that Shakespeare was Bacon. He eventually published two pamphlets supporting the theory in 1896 and 1897. By 1900, leading Baconians were asserting that their cause would soon be won. In 1916 a judge in Chicago ruled in a civil trial that Bacon was the true author of the Shakespeare canon. However, this proved to be the heyday of the theory. A number of new candidates were proposed in the early 20th century, notably
Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland,
William Stanley, 6th Earl of Derby and
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, dethroning Bacon as the sole alternative to Shakespeare. Furthermore, these and other alternative authorship theories failed to make any headway among academics.
Baconian cryptology In 1880
Ignatius L. Donnelly, a U.S.
Congressman,
science fiction author and
Atlantis theorist, wrote
The Great Cryptogram, in which he argued that Bacon revealed his authorship of the works by concealing secret ciphers in the text. This produced a plethora of late 19th-century Baconian theorising, which developed the theme that Bacon had hidden encoded messages in the plays. Baconian theory developed a new twist in the writings of
Orville Ward Owen and
Elizabeth Wells Gallup. Owen's book ''Sir Francis Bacon's Cipher Story'' (1893–95) claimed to have discovered a secret history of the Elizabethan era hidden in cipher form in Bacon/Shakespeare's works. The most remarkable revelation was that Bacon was the son of
Queen Elizabeth. According to Owen, Bacon revealed that Elizabeth was secretly married to
Robert Dudley, Earl of Leicester, who fathered both Bacon himself and
Robert Devereux, 2nd Earl of Essex, the latter ruthlessly executed by his own mother in 1601. Bacon was the true heir to the throne of England, but had been excluded from his rightful place. This tragic life story was the secret hidden in the plays. '' on the 1916 trial of Shakespeare's authorship. From left: George Fabyan; Judge Tuthill; Shakespeare and Bacon;
William Selig.
Elizabeth Wells Gallup developed Owen's views, arguing that a
bi-literal cipher, which she had identified in the
First Folio of Shakespeare's works, revealed concealed messages confirming that Bacon was the queen's son. This argument was taken up by several other writers, notably Alfred Dodd in
Francis Bacon’s Personal Life Story (1910) and C.Y.C. Dawbarn in
Uncrowned (1913). In Dodd's account Bacon was a national redeemer, who, deprived of his ordained public role as monarch, instead performed a spiritual transformation of the nation in private though his work: "He was born for England, to set the land he loved on new lines, 'to be a Servant to Posterity'". In 1916 Gallup's financial backer
George Fabyan was sued by film producer
William Selig. He argued that Fabyan's advocacy of Bacon threatened the profits expected from a forthcoming film about Shakespeare. The judge determined that ciphers identified by Gallup proved that Francis Bacon was the author of the Shakespeare canon, awarding Fabyan $5,000 in damages. Orville Ward Owen had such conviction of his own cipher method that, in 1909, he began excavating the bed of the
River Wye, near
Chepstow Castle, in the search of Bacon's original Shakespearean manuscripts. The project ended with his death in 1924. Nothing was found. The American art collector
Walter Conrad Arensberg (1878–1954) believed that Bacon had concealed messages in a variety of ciphers, relating to a secret history of the time and the esoteric secrets of the Rosicrucians, in the Shakespearean works. He published a variety of decipherments between 1922 and 1930, concluding finally that, although he had failed to find them, there certainly were concealed messages. He established the Francis Bacon Foundation in California in 1937 and left it his collection of Baconiana. In 1957 the expert cryptographers
William and
Elizebeth Friedman published
The Shakespearean Ciphers Examined, a study of all the proposed ciphers identified by Baconians (and others) up to that point. The Friedmans had worked with Gallup. They showed that the method is unlikely to have been employed by the author of Shakespeare's works, concluding that none of the ciphers claimed to exist by Baconians were valid. ==Credentials for authorship==