Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Authorship of Shakespeare
Bacon found it to be just so with the history of Winds; for, says he, it is evident, that the dullness of men is such and so infelicitous, that when things are put before their feet, they do not see them, unless admonished, but pass right on. It would stand to reason, that the most precious things would not be strewn abroad thus by a mere swine-herd, if they had not come into his possession in an accidental or some other way, and without his having much knowledge of their real value nor by a coney-catch ing, beer-drinking idler, or a common play-actor, or even a prosperous stage-manager. It must be ad mitted that learning does not come by instinct; nor can sensible men be made to believe that high phi losophy can come by fantastic miracle. There never was any royal road to mathematics, though there have been very royal mathematicians.
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