Is there an educational principle behind all or some of Shakespeare's plays? Yeah, absolutely. It follows the divine prin, what's called the Divine Principle, wisdom is hidden in the divine mind, and we're images of that, we're male/female, likeness of God. God is double, the Bible starts off with God. But the actual translation is elohim which is plural and God made heaven and earth. The duality, masked male/female and everything flows from that. And these are opposites. These are opposites. And so you got the truth. The original truth is hidden in the mind and the mind has to discover it and then eventually it knows it. So the people who designed all this, I think, there were several people and one person leading it. They were following these ancient wisdom principles, so hiding the truth in order that it could be found. Yes. I was reading that. You believe that the Shakespeare authorship enigma was set up to train us in what Francis Bacon calls the Art of Discovery. So eventually we might discover and know the author of all. Yeah, absolutely. God in other words. That's the whole purpose of it. Okay. So raising the level of consciousness you think is essentially what's behind the works. Do you see a single author behind the works or do you see a kind of organizing mind and perhaps multiple authors? I see something like one of these great renaissance master painters, they would have their studio of pupils and the pupils would be taught and they would help with some of the paintings. But the master would be the one who designed the painting in the first place and do the majority of the work. What signs of the involvement of Rosicrucians or Freemasons? Do you see in the Stratford monument, for example? It's a good question. There's a lot. And first, when you look at the inscription, most people cant read Latin, or if they can, they don't read that first, they read the English. And it starts off as sort of stay passenger why goest thou by so fast. Well, most people read it quickly and won't bother with that. But actually it's like what was said in the Merchant of Venice. Portia says Tarry a moment. There is something else. And that something else is rather important because. It changes the whole scenario. It's something that Shylock didn't know about and the other lawyers there had forgotten about. And that changes the whole thing and so they got the same statement really on this monument. I went to a lecture of yours a couple of years ago and I remember being quite intrigued. I couldn't believe I hadn't really noticed it before and I've looked at that poem on the Stratford monument, Stratford monument so many times. And yet I was oblivious to the fact that the T and the H, are kind of one symbol, where they've been combined. So all the words that begin th and there are quite a few of them have been combined into this sign. What's that sign called? Well again, unless one's got a certain knowledge of these things, you'd probably totally miss it. You'll just think it's a way of compressing letters because the engraver didn't have to do it that way. But he chose to do it that way. Well that way of putting the T and H together like that represents the main symbol or signature of the Royal Arch degree in Freemasonry which is the gateway into the Rosicrucian . TH it means several things. One of them in Templum Hira Solomonn which means the Temple of the Great Solomon or Solomon's Temple. But it can also be read as T and an H can be, are, two Ts together, so it can be written as three Ts, Triple Tau, it's called using the Hebrew Triple Tau, and when you write Triple Tau you get the capital letters that was used as capital letter code TT. So the Tripe Tau can also represent TT, two Ts and that's the signature again, you find on Freemasonic signed monuments and so on. And [the] sonnets assign TT title page and the dedication page on these Shakespeare monumental memorial in Westminster Abbey signed TT there. And he's pointing to temples, isn't he?? He's pointing to temples, yes.. And because it's a misquote. And yet Pope who made that quote, he told the engraver what to do. He is considered the expert on Shakespeare at that time. But Pope was challenged. He said, "You've got it wrong." Somebody said you got it wrong to him and he said, "No, leave it as it is. That's how I want it. Deliberate misquote."