Excerpt from The Baconian Heresy: A Confutation
This treatise was in large part compiled some years ago, under the shock of the revelation that Mark Twain had died a "Bacon-Shakespearean." Laid aside under a misgiving that the drudgery it involved had not been worth while, it has been finished, by way of a holiday task, at the instance of a friend somewhat disturbed by Baconian solicitings. It is finally published with a hope not merely of checking in some degree the spread of the Baconian fantasy, but of stimulating to some small extent the revival of scientific Shakespearean criticism. Any close reader of the Baconian literature will recognise that its doctrine flourishes mainly on the unsunned sides of the Shakespeare problem. If only the specialists had done their proper work of discriminating between the genuine and the alien in the Shakespeare plays, much of the Baconian polemic would have been impossible, if indeed it could have proceeded at all. What we latterly get from the professed historians of English literature is mostly "cathedral" declamation, somewhat analogous to much of the Baconian asseveration.
It has been a question for me how far the confutation of Baconian fallacies may usefully be carried.
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