JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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"a"
Preparation for printing: "of
Grayes Inne
," is removed from the title; motto
re-
spaced to two lines to compensate; spacing of imprint slightly disturbed. a2v
loses
the rule below the signature, which may therefore have been treated as part
of
the skeleton. The headline, however, is unchanged. On a2r, leading is adjusted
process, the loss of a spacer after "and" in l.3 causes a gradual rightward drift
of the first two words in the line.
The forme is printed off by work-and-turn.
Pauses for correction: none.
After printing: on a2v, "The humblest ... Shirley." stripped;
all pages otherwise
kept standing unaltered.
On the evidence of surviving copies, quire "a" has a print run sufficient
to
supply all copies from Phase III. The remainder of the third printing of ToP can
now be collated and shipped.
D. PHASE IV
Products of this last phase of work are the most uniform. All copies have
"The
third impression" on the title page. Although most of the formes underwent
ex-
tensive alteration, or even resetting, before printing began on each, there
were no
stop-press alterations thereafter. The only complication is the existence,
carried
over from Phase III, of the two settings of quire D printed by Norton and
Okes.
These occur in eight and six surviving copies
respectively.
In light of the evidence that there were four main work phases, and B(o) and
all
of quire A seem to have had five printings each, we need to take Norton's
final
claim of three "impressions" with a grain of salt. We cannot know whether
Nor-
ton actually believed this, whether the various starts and stops in the work
cycle
caused him to lose count, or even what he understood as an "impression". In
the
period 1600–40, the word was used on title pages essentially
synonymously with
"edition", but only one-fifth as often. One finds it most
commonly on title pages
of devotional works that went into many settings, like
Arthur Dent's Plaine Mans
Path-Way to Heaven; but the title
pages of Shakespeare's second and third folios
also
identify them as later "impressions". Norton himself used the term in
1624
(STC 25090a, in a collaboration with Augustine Mathewes), 1633 (23503),
1634
(twice, 3129a and 22459b [ToP]), and
1637 (20274); all of these except Triumph
of
Peace were completely new settings. It is likely that, in the case of ToP, Norton
was basing his count of impressions on the
changes of title-page wordings which
would have been noticeable to contemporary
readers: states 1a1 and 2, which
contained "of Grayes
Inne"; 1b, lacking those words; and ici and 2, the avowed
third
impression.
Phase IV seems to have followed Phase III rather closely, as some types
from
distributed portions of III turn up in IV. These types evidently remained
near
the top of their compartments in the type case without moving off to other
jobs.
The recurring types within this phase (see §9D) show that quire B inner
forme
(which had been distributed after Phase III) was reset after the last copies
of quire
A outer forme came off the press; and D(o) contributed one type to B(o).
For the
account below I have followed the order A-C-D-B-a.
In this phase, a new paragraph added to A2r causes a change of page
breaks
through the rest of the quire.
JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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