Thanks for the bump, WAB
I've decided that people reject the evidence
because the idea of a hoax seems wildly unlikely.
Recite all the evidence that Shaksper was not a writer; recite all the evidence that Oxford was the author; but
the listener has tuned out. An authorship hoax is just too unlikely to consider. Why would the greatest writer ever suppress his identity? Wouldn't he and his family be proud of his writing?
That's why I think essays to convince a newcomer of the Authorship Hoax should focus first on WHY such a Hoax was not only plausible but LIKELY.
I'd start the discussion by mentioning that it was taboo for a nobleman to publish poetry, or to write plays for public performance. There is overwhelming evidence that noblemen DID write poems and plays but kept their identities secret. Then I'd mention that anonymity would be desired even without the taboo, for plays that insulted or revealed secrets of the elite.
The play
Comedy of Errors would be a good example of a play where Oxford would conceal his authorship: It contains a hilarious skit poking fun at Her Majesty Elizabeth. This play was performed ONLY ONCE during Elizabeth's life-time, and that was a private performance at Gray's Inn (Oxford's alma mater) during their drunken New Year's revels. (Traditionalists insist that Shaksper wrote for money, but there was no money collected for that private performance.)
But the most important reason Oxford needed anonymity is something else. I'll spend the rest of this post outlining that.
Her Majesty had been excommunicated by the Pope (with a "fatwa" issued encouraging Jesuit assassins to go kill her). There were also Protestants who plotted rebellions against her. Childless and with her father's Parliament-approved choice defying the customary rule, there was much controversy about who her successor would be, but Elizabeth forbade any discussion of that! She was afraid that partisans of her successor would plot her death.
The Tudors were perhaps the most powerful monarchs England ever knew (their personal treasury and the Government Treasury were the very same pile of gold and silver). But still she wanted the English people to respect the country, to respect the institution of the Monarchy, and to respect the Tudor dynasty specifically (and the Lancaster Dynasty on which it initially depended for legitimacy). There was no Internet or radio. Few people could afford or even read books;
London's vibrant theater was the one and only way to spread propaganda. Elizabeth was probably smart enough to understand the value of such propaganda, but she had two smart Machiavellian advisors (Cecil and Walsingham) who surely did.
Comedies were the genre of theater that produced the biggest box office receipts. Good tragedy plays were also well received.
Why then were the first 3 or 4 Shakespeare plays histories?? These early plays include
Richard III which has hurt the reputation of that Yorkist king for centuries, while making the Lancaster claimant Henry Tudor (the Queen's grandfather) out to be a hero. "Shakespeare" continued to write lots of history plays. (Traditionalists say he wrote for money; surely he saw that his comedies yielded better box office receipts than histories.)
The Queen needed someone to write propaganda plays for her and chose Oxford, well known to her and whose skill at writing plays is well attested. She paid him £1000 annually for this "office", a larger allowance than ANY other got from her except for James VI of Scots whose mother she had executed. That this £1000 was a salary for some service rather than a gift or other compensation is clear on several grounds.
Especially interesting is the Treasury Warrant she wrote instructing the tellers and auditors of her Treasury to pay him this huge sum annually. It contains a "non-accountability clause," instructing the auditors not to question the payments. Such clauses were common, e.g. the payments to Walsingham, the head of her secret police.
But the non-accountability clause in Oxford's warrant is unique, found nowhere else. It doesn't instruct the auditors not to question Oxford. Instead it instructs them not to question
Her Majesty's order itself! ("[nothing] whatsoever [shall] be charged towards Us, Our heirs or successors.") The money was to be delivered unconditionally and without explanation.
I'll reproduce the text of the Warrant in its entirety:
Elizabeth, etc., to the Treasurer and Chamberlains of our Exchequer,
Greeting. We will and command you of Our treasure being and remaining
from time to time within the receipt of Our Exchequer, to deliver and pay,
or cause to be delivered and paid, unto Our right trusty and well beloved
Cousin the earl of Oxford, or to his assigns sufficiently authorized by him,
the sum of One Thousand Pounds good and lawful money of England. The
same to be yearly delivered and paid unto Our said Cousin at four terms of
the year by even portions [beginning at the Feast of the Annunciation last
past]: and so to be continued unto him during Our pleasure, or until such
time as he shall be by Us otherwise provided for to be in some manner
relieved; at what time Our pleasure is that this payment of One Thousand
Pounds yearly to Our said Cousin in manner above specified shall cease.
And for the same or any part thereof, Our further will and commandment
is that neither the said Earl nor his assigns nor his or their executors
nor any of them shall by way of account, imprest, or any other way
whatsoever be charged towards Us, Our heirs or successors. And these
Our letters shall be your sufficient warrant and discharge in that behalf.
Given under Our Privy Seal at Our Manor of Greenwich, the six and twenti-
eth day of June in the eight and twentieth year of Our reign.