JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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CONCLUSIONS AND APPLICATIONS
I have presented evidence showing that John Norton printed
The Triumph
of Peace in four impressions, with hiatuses
within the second and third of these.
Varying amounts of text—but always much less
than half of the book—were
distributed and reset before each of the later
impressions, at least partly to sup-
ply other jobs running concurrently. The
preliminaries, including the title page,
also went through four impressions, but in
different quantities from the text
quires, so that the first two states of the title
may each occur with two possible
impressions of the text. Other, smaller disparities
in print runs among the text
quires produced occasional copies containing quires
from adjacent impressions,
further complicating the problems of identification.
However, in general the four
printings of the text come together in a few consistent
combinations with little
intermixing. The state of quire C is the clearest indicator
of which impression a
copy belongs to, but fully characterizing exemplars of the
first three printings still
requires the specification of many variables. About half
of the copies of the third
and fourth impressions contain type-material from Norton's partner Nicholas
Okes and
are presumed to have been printed by him.
The difficulties that earlier bibliographers had with ToP arose
largely from
their point of view. Like astronomers of the Ptolemaic paradigm, they
put the
most familiar element—the title page, in this case—at the center and saw
the
rest of the system behaving with a bewildering complexity. Moving the main
part
of the book—the text—to the center and relegating the title page to its own
odd
but explainable orbit eliminates much of the need to invoke mysterious
causes.
Even so, the book offers seemingly unlimited surprises—even unto the
fifty-fifth
copy—and mysteries whose unravelling I will now leave, as did Greg, to
those
to explain the unique variant in St. Catharine's (Cambridge) Z59; the garbling
of states in some phases of quires B and C; the weird quire interactions in the
Phase IIIb copies; the rationale of enlisting a second printer for help on quire D;
and the identity and dynamics of the competing jobs in Norton's shop. Mechani-
cal collation (a luxury that I did not allow myself) might uncover tiny differences
in the pairs of "identical" reprints that I have hypothesized above.
The complexities of ToP may tempt us to put it in a class by
itself,
65
but it
contains lessons
that might point the way to a fresh approach to certain diffi-
cult cases. For
example, both Greg and STC treat Philip
Massinger's
The Picture
(1630) as one edition with a
confusing array of variants.
66
A brief
comparison of
copies, with attention to the skeletons, reveals a similar situation
to that of ToP:
there were at least two impressions, though
in this case the copies contain sheets
drawn indiscriminately from both. Perhaps not
coincidentally, the printer was
again John Norton, and one
immediately recognizes the characteristic slovenli-
ness that he inflicted on his
lower-end work. Looking at The Picture in this light
may ease
the work of the next editor, but it also at least doubles our estimate of
the play's
sales during the author's lifetime. I cannot believe that The
Triumph
of Peace and The Picture form the tip of a
particularly large iceberg, but they
do underline the need to pay close attention to
skeletons, especially when the
headlines contain nothing more than page numbers. We
are still exploring the
range of ingenious—if not devious—shifts that early modern
printers could use
to make their lives easier.
JAMES SHIRLEY'S TRIUMPH OF PEACE:
ANALYZING GREG'S NIGHTMARE
by
STEPHEN TABOR
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