JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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§9. Order of Printing the Quires
In the preceding sections, we have been exploring ToP
"vertically", as it were
—working out the histories of individual pages, studying
their chemistry as they
combine into formes and quires, and watching each quire
evolve in isolation
from the others. It is now time for a "horizontal" approach as
we begin to reconstruct
the progress of printing the whole text, phase by phase.
Table 30, a
modified version of appendix 3, shows how these phases align across
the quires
of the surviving copies. It shows a fairly orderly stratification: for
a given copy
of the book, the phase of any one of quires A-C serves as a good
predictor of
the phases of the others. The few exceptions to this among the
survivors result,
I believe, from the occasional necessity of making up copies
with sheets from
neighboring phases. (I will discuss this further in §11–14.) But
the phases do not
leapfrog one another: II and IV never mix in a copy, nor III and
I or IV and I.
If sheets from more than one phase were available simultaneously
for gathering
complete copies, there was nothing to stop Norton from mixing them
indiscriminately,
because the text-breaks across quires never change. Except for
the "third
impression" copies he would have no motivation for keeping the products
of
one phase segregated from another. Therefore, I think we can safely hold to
the
theory of four discrete printings of the book as a whole.
The recurrence of types can give us clues about the order of printing the
quires.
(Lacking evidence to the contrary, I will assume for the ensuing discussion
that
the order of printing in ToP is the same as the order of
composition.) We would
expect Norton to work through quires A-D in sequence. But
here, as so often, ToP
hands us a surprise. The recurring
types in the first phase of printing that I could
confidently identify are
distributed as follows:
A. PHASE I
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On first glance, the table appears to show nothing out the ordinary. Quire
B
inner forme could have been set with type distributed from the outer forme of
A;
Norton could even have begun at the title page and proceeded straight
through
the book. But we need to take into account what happened to the
individual
pages at the end of Phase I. In fact, the outer forme of quire A
remained in substantially
the same setting through the printing history of ToP, whereas quire B
was distributed after Phase I. So, types
from A(o) were not available to set B(i)—
rather the opposite. Therefore, A(o) was
set after B(i) went through the press and
got broken down. Similarly, quire "a"
continued to hang onto most of its type
(predominantly 96 mm italic) while D2r was
raided for its italic after Phase I. (I
have indicated the point of the raid with
a wavy border in table 31, distinguishing
the fate of that page from that of D4r,
which was entirely distributed.) The
preliminaries could not have been set until
printing was finished on quire D inner
forme. Furthermore, two letters on D2v show
that that page could not have
been set until after the distribution of at least
part of each forme of quire B; and
a distinctive bracket on C2r shows that C(i)
cannot have been set before B(i)
was off the press. So, quires C and D both
followed B. In §8A, I showed, on the
evidence of one broken parenthesis in the
headline, that quire D was probably
printed after quire C. No other types from C
show up elsewhere; it was probably
set while quire B was still being worked off,
after which it held onto most of its
have supplied some other printing job than ToP. If, then, we may consider entire
quires as production units, it appears that the printing of Phase I followed the
sequence B-C-D-A-a. Nothing in the data shows that the preliminary quire "a"
had to come last, as long as it followed D from which it drew some of its type. But
preliminaries were normally printed at the end of the job, and if "a" followed D
directly, there would have had to be a pause for D(i) to be at least partly distributed.
(Remember that in ToP the inner formes were printed after the outer ones,
and it is only D(i) that provided types for quire "a".)
Something caused Norton to place quire A late in the schedule. A probable
reason
emerges when we recall that quires B-D contain the text of the masque,
while quire
A sets the stage, as it were, with a description of the costumes, scenery,
and the
public procession that opened the performance. Most of this is written
in the past
tense, as if reporting the finished event, while the stage directions
for the
masque itself are mostly (though not exclusively) in the conventional
present
tense. This division between reportage and direction again raises the
question of
whether copies of the book were in fact available on the day of the
first
performance—a matter which I will explore further in §16. The important
point here
is that the details of the procession were more likely to be in flux until
the
last minute, whereas a relatively stable text of the masque would have been
needed
earlier so the performers could learn their parts. Though both sections
show light
revision through the printing history, it would have made sense to
start work on
the part least likely to change. Quite possibly, Norton began typesetting
the main
text before Shirley had even finished writing the
description of
the procession.
If typesetting and printing began with quire B, as the evidence above
indicates,
this may explain why this quire alone was mostly distributed after
Phase I—
seven of its eight pages broken up, as opposed to only one page each in
quires A
and D, and none in C. I have already mentioned the often arbitrary
pattern of
which pages got distributed and which survived into later impressions.
However,
this first quire printed could represent an initial intent to play by the
rules and
distribute type after running an impression—a routine that Norton could
discard
if he learned that he would have to achieve faster production than
planned.
Two other observations are worth mentioning here:
- Quires A, C, and D have a type-page width of 89–91 mm, but quires "a"
and
B measure 97 mm—three ens of english type wider. 35 These different widths
imply at least two differently adjusted composing sticks, suggesting more than
one compositor. - 2.The last page of quire B has some overly generous leading, indicating
some
distress in copy-fitting. This could reflect a compensation for the unexpected
use of the wider measure just mentioned.
B. PHASE II
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After Phase II, only four pages were distributed, plus italic portions of D2r
and
D3r; recurring types therefore provide less evidence for the order of printing
in
this phase than for Phase I. (The wavy border below D2r in this table shows
that
only the italic portion was reset; one of its types turns up on B4v.) Here
again,
it appears that quire A was printed after quire D: D1v was distributed at
the end
of this phase and two of its types show up on A2r. On the other hand,
quire A held
onto most of its type from this phase onward and could not have
supplied it to D
or any other quire. It also looks (on the evidence of only two
types, but both are
quite distinctive) as if quires D and C were finished print-
ing before quire B
could be set—again, because quire B carries its types largely
unaltered into the
next phase, while the donor pages in quires C and D give up
type after Phase II.
These observations show that quires C and D were printed
before quires A and B.
The fact that Phase II of quire A actually consisted of two
separate printings
complicates the picture. In §5, I suggested that, after an inter-
ruption in the
Phase-II printing of A(o), Norton chose to perfect the sheets he
had already
printed rather than resuming the planned run of the outer forme and
then
perfecting both sub-impressions in a single operation. The motive would be
to
prioritize the completion of at least part of the planned impression of sheet A
in
order to get some complete sets of sheets to the publisher for sale. This
strat-
egy would make more sense if quire A came later, even last, in the sequence
of
quires as printed. However, if quire A came last and if therefore B followed
D
directly, the composition of B's outer forme (the first one printed in B) would
have
had to wait for the italic from D2r (in the second forme printed in D) to
become
available. This would leave the press idle, at least for purposes of
machining ToP.
If, instead, A followed D directly, its
outer forme would still be standing from
Phase I and printing could have proceeded
on that while D was broken down
and the types incorporated into A(i). So, the
slightly more likely sequence for this
second phase of printing was C-D-A(Phase
IIa)-B. Probably Phase IIb of quire A
came last, but it cannot have been delayed
long because two of the three surviv-
ing books that contain it also have Phase II
of sheets B-D.
The textual changes in quire A are minor for Phase II and would have had
no
bearing on a decision to leave the production of that quire for later. Possibly it
B, on the other hand, came into this phase with only one type-page intact; all the
others had to be reset. So, it would have made sense to commence printing with
quires C, D, and A, leaving time for the resetting of B.
I have left quire "a" out of the discussion for this phase because it holds
onto
most of its original types throughout the production. We would normally
expect
it to come late in the series, probably after quires B and/or A(Phase
IIa).
C. PHASE III
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This phase began with the resetting of four pages, italic raids on two
others,
and some localized resettings. Only the inner forme of quire B was
distributed
before the next phase. Its donation of a distinctive bracket to C1v
shows that C(i)
was composed after B(i) had finished printing. This is the only
evidence for work
sequence that recurring type-matter affords in Phase III. (Of
course Norton's and
Okes' typesettings of quire D did not share any material.)
Italic raids before this phase point to a continuing need for english italic
for
another job; the distributed material does not reappear in reset portions of
ToP.
D. PHASE IV
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Both Norton's and Okes' quires D continue intact from the preceding phase,
and
most of sheets A-C also enter Phase IV unchanged except for localized reset-
tings
to accommodate revisions and resulting page-break changes. The exception
is quire
B inner forme, which was entirely reset. As usual, there is no obvious
reason why
Norton reset this forme and not others. But table 34 shows that some
of the types
from the first page of text (A1r) turn up again in the two last pages—
B3V and
4r—of the newly set B(i). So, A(o) was already printed and being dis-
tributed
before B(i) was ready for the press. A single letter "a" shows
that Norton
printed sheet D and distributed some of its type before resetting
three lines on
B3r. Therefore—if we again take sheets to be the units of
production—both A
and D preceded B through the press. Quire C contains no
distinctive types that
insufficient to establish links with any other. The sequence, then, was A-D-B,
with the positions of C and "a" unknown, though as usual we would expect the
preliminaries to come last.
Though the evidence of recurring types is very incomplete, it shows that Nor-
ton
distributed at least portions of quires A and D while other quires remained to
be
composed. It looks as if Norton knew that he had reached the end of the pro-
gram
and there was no point in leaving type standing against further reprints.
Some type-matter distributed from Phase III found its way into reset passages
in
Phase IV:
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It appears that the types freed up by the distribution of B(i) after Phase III
still
lay near the top of their boxes, available for picking up for Phase IV
alterations
in quire A. This implies a rather short delay, or none at all, between
Phases III
and IV.
A different case is the singleton leaf bearing "A speech to the King and
Queenes
Maiesties", surviving in four copies of the final phase. It is set mostly
in
Norton's italic i-1. I could identify none of its types with those used in the
rest
of the book in any phase. This lack of recurrence is not too surprising,
given the
small sample size, but it would also be consistent with a significant
passage of
time between the distribution of ToP's main text
and the setting of "A Speech".
During this period, the ToP
types might get deployed on other jobs or covered in
the boxes by other types more
recently distributed, making them less likely to be
picked for setting the new
epilogue.
JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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