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William Shakespeare’s Mason Mark

by Freemason | Freemasonry |

William Shakespeare’s Mason Mark

A Masonic Mark

Shakespeare

The Dedication to the Sonnets

Christopher Marlowe and 2120

Numerological Significance

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A Masonic Mark

The taking of a ‘mason’s mark’ was a common aspect of initiation to the first degree of Entered
Apprentice in early Freemasonry. We know, for example, that in 1641 the Master Mason Sir Robert
Moray adopted the pentacle, in various forms, as his personal mark, whilst his friend, the mathematically
inclined Alexander Hamilton, chose a right-angled triangle (1). Sir Robert probably wished to recall the
‘five points of fellowship’ with his mark, because he appended the letters of the Greek word ΑΓΑΠΑ
(Love) to the points of the pentacle (and also used this as the basis of an acrostic). Mr Hamilton would
undoubtedly have been thinking of the 47th Proposition of Euclid – which has been described as, “The
foundation of all Masonry” (2).

Shakespeare

Shakespeare seems to have been fully conversant with the Masonic symbolism of the Square – and thus
the symbolism of Euclid’s 47th Proposition. We have seen in Anthony and Cleopatra (II, iii) reference to
the lines:

Read not my blemishes in the world’s report;

I have not kept my square, but that to come

Shall all be done by the rule.

The Bard also makes a number of pointed references to a ‘mark’ in his Sonnets. An analysis of these, in
my book reveals that their placement is not a casual matter but clearly predicated by Masonic
considerations of a very exact and specific nature. They all refer to his own Masonic mark.

Marke how one string sweet husband to an other, (s8)

For slanders marke was euer yet the faire, (s70)

Marke how with my neglect I doe dispence. (s112)

O no, it is an euer fixed marke (s116)

Shakespeare’s mark turns out to be no different from that of Alexander Hamilton – the right-angle
triangle. He uses it consistently throughout the Sonnets to encode his name.

The context of the first Marke actually has a clear association with a right-angled triangle. In this sonnet
the discussion concerns the three-way play between ‘sweet husband’, ‘happy mother’ and the ‘child’
they bring forth; there is also, in the following sonnet, the strongest indication that the mother is a
widow. This scenario brings to mind the legend of Osiris, Isis – the widow and child Horus. The most
common representation of this relationship in Masonic symbolism (following Plato) is the 3-4-5 right-
angled triangle: the upright (3) represents Osiris, the horizontal (4) Isis and the hypotenuse (5) Horus (3).
Therefore it’s interesting to note that the word Marke is the 828th word in the Sonnets – and 828 is the
gematria value of the Hebrew words BN ALMNH – The Widow’s Son.

The Dedication to the Sonnets

The dedication prefixed to Shakespeare’s Sonnets is one of the most enigmatic pieces of prose in the
English language. The reason for its convoluted syntax is explained by the fact that it is an intricate
cryptogram. Gematria considerations play a key role in distorting the phraseology.

When examining its numerology, one figure sticks out above all others – 2120. This number encapsulates
the dedication because it forms the sum of the first and last letters on each of the 12 lines (in green).
2120 is also found as the exact value of the 7th line – the line at the heart of the dedication explicitly
referring to the author (in blue):

The value of the ‘outside’ letters T F T S M E A E P D B Y O T W H T G A N S G F H is:

100 + 6 + 100 + 90 + 30 + 5 + 1 + 5 + 60 + 4 + 2 + 400 + 50 + 100 + 900 + 8 + 100 + 7 + 1 + 40 + 90 + 7 + 6 +


8 = 2120

The value of OUR EVER-LIVING POET is:

50 + 200 + 80 + 5 + 700 + 5 + 80 + 20 + 9 + 700 + 9 + 40 + 7 + 60 + 50 + 5 + 100 = 2120


Christopher Marlowe and 2120

The reason why Christopher Marlowe is ‘Our ever-living poet’ resides in the way that 2120 squares his
name by means of a right-angled triangle. Such a triangle whose perpendicular members measure 971
and 1885 has a hypotenuse of 2120.

The horizontal side has the value of Christopher and the vertical side that of Marlowe – when his name is
written in Greek. Therefore 2120 is a true and square Masonic cipher for his name.

Χ Ρ Ι Σ Τ Ο Φ Ε Ρ 600 + 100 + 10 + 200 + 300 + 70 + 500 + 5 + 100 = 1885

Μ Α Ρ Λ Ω 40 + 1 + 100 + 30 + 800 = 971

Numerological SignificanceNo Coincidence

The fact that the dedication number 2120 marks the hypotenuse of Marlowe’s ‘squaring triangle’ could
be a coincidence if it were a lone reference. However it is not: there are other clues hidden in the
numerological structure of the dedication which prove that the triangle has been correctly interpreted –
as is explained in chapter nine of Shakespeare’s Sonnets – Written by Kit Marlowe.

Notes

1) See David Stevenson, The Origins of Freemasonry – Scotland’s Century 1590 – 1710, C.U.P., 1988,
p.168-179.

2) Albert Mackey, The History of Freemasonry, Gramercy Books, New York, 1996, p.120.

3) See Manley P. Hall, The Secret Teaching of All Ages, The Philosophical Research Society, Los Angeles,
1988, facing p. LXIX. See also C.C. Zain, Ancient Masonry, The Church of Light, Los Angeles, 1994, p. 138.
4) John Michell’s: The Dimesions of Paradise, 2001, Adventures Unlimited Press, Kempton, Illinois; and
City of Revelation, 1972, The Garnstone Press, London.

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