The Little Cryptogram A Literal Application to the Play of Hamlet of the Cipher System of Mr. Ignatius Donnelly.

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The Little Cryptogram A Literal Application to the Play of Hamlet of the Cipher System of Mr. Ignatius Donnelly.

by Joseph Gilpin Pyle

EN·~29 minutes·1 chapter

Chapters

1 total

The Little Cryptogram:

29:01

Description

In this lively Victorian treatise, a newspaper editor turns his attention to the fevered debate over Shakespeare’s true author. He introduces Ignatius Donnelly’s ambitious cipher system, a numerical key that purportedly hides a secret narrative within the Bard’s text. The opening frames the work as both a scholarly challenge and a public curiosity, inviting readers to weigh evidence for and against the famed “Baconian” theory.

The heart of the book is a step‑by‑step demonstration of how Donnelly’s numbers—starting with 505, 506, 513, 516 and 523—can be applied to six pages of Hamlet. By following the prescribed “modifiers,” the editor shows how hidden messages might emerge, suggesting a concealed history and a claim to authorship. As the argument unfolds, the reader is drawn into the meticulous logic and the larger cultural intrigue of decoding a possible literary mystery, all while the author maintains a measured, almost playful tone.

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Full title

The Little Cryptogram A Literal Application to the Play of Hamlet of the Cipher System of Mr. Ignatius Donnelly. A Literal Application to the Play of Hamlet of the Cipher System of Mr. Ignatius Donnelly.

Language

en

Duration

~29 minutes (27K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Chris Curnow, Stephen Hutcheson, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-08-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

JG

Joseph Gilpin Pyle

b. 1853

A journalist, librarian, and biographer whose work moved between public affairs and literary curiosity, he is best remembered for the two-volume authorized life of railroad builder James J. Hill. His career also included newspaper editing in St. Paul and Seattle, plus contributions to the ninth edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica.

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