The Early Editions of Dryden's
State of
Innocence
Marion H. Hamilton
Nine quarto editions of Dryden's State of Innocence
were
printed before publication of the 1701 Folio of the Works,
shortly after Dryden's death, brought to a close the early history
of the text with a tenth edition. Although the chronological order
of five of these editions is established by the title-page dates,
which there is no reason to suspect, the same is not true for the
remaining five, three of which bear the date 1684 and two the date
of 1695.
In Hugh Macdonald's Bibliography of John Dryden the
order
of listing of these editions is presumably intended to be
chronological, although no statement is made concerning the
evidence on which the order is based. The Woodward and McManaway
Check List of English Plays 1641-1700 follows the
Macdonald
listing. However, textual collation of the nine quartos and of the
Folio makes evident that this commonly accepted sequence is not
correct, nor is the derivation of the various editions a simple
matter of successive reprints as has been generally, though
implicitly, believed. The following table summarizes what
investigation establishes as the true order of the printed quarto
texts.[1]
Edition
|
Date
|
Macdonald
|
W & McM
|
Q1 |
1677 |
81a |
465 |
Q2 |
1678 |
81b |
466 |
Q3 |
1684 |
81e |
469 |
Q4 |
1684 |
81d |
468 |
Q5 |
1690 |
81f |
470 |
Q6 |
1692 |
81g |
471 |
Q7 |
1695 |
81i |
473 |
Q8 |
1695 |
81h |
472 |
Q9 |
1684[*]
|
81c |
467 |
Obviously Dryden was concerned with the printing of the first
edition of the play: the prefatory essay "The Author's Apology for
Heroique Poetry and Poetique Licence" was written, he states,
partly to explain why he chose to publish an opera that was never
acted. Since textual collation shows no indication of fresh
authority having been added to any of the later editions, and
instead discloses only the usual steady deterioration of the text,
it is clear that Q1 is the only substantive printed text of the
play.
In brief, the derivation of the texts is as follows: Q2 was
printed from Q1, Q3 from Q2, and Q4 from Q3. Q4 is a terminal
edition from which no other derived. Although Q3 and Q4 were both
printed in 1684, the quartos are readily differentiated. Q3
collates A-G4, with advertisements on sig.
G4r-v. Q4 collates
A-E4 F2 G4 (G1
missigned F1). [See below for the
differentiating points between Q4 and its piracy, Q9.] Q5 derives
from Q3, Q6 from Q5, and Q7 from Q6. The 1701 Folio was printed
from Q7. Q8 was printed from Q7. Since both Q7 and Q8 are dated
1695 and have the collation A-F4 G2 they
could be confused
unless one notices that in Q7 there is a semi-colon after
Innocence in the running-title on
$2v4v(—G2v) and
a semi-colon after and in the running-title on
C3v;
whereas in Q8 the semi-colon after Innocence is found only
on C2v4v, and a comma appears after
and on C3v.
The piracy Q9 imitates the title-page and the collation
A-E4
F2 G4 of Q4, but its text derives
immediately from Q8.
However, there is no difficulty in distinguishing it from Q4 since
Q9 uses running-titles in the headlines but Q4, instead, has only
page numbers within parentheses.
The total evidence on which this statement of derivation is
based is too extensive for presentation here but may be briefly
summarized.
The lack of significant variation in the text of Q2, and the
fact that its preface and the text for Act I is a page-for-page
reprint of Q1, establishes that Q2 derives from Q1 and not from an
independent manuscript. There are 22 substantive variants in Q2,
eight of which are corrections of obvious errors in its copy. Of
the remaining 14, 2 are simple misprints corrected in Q3, 3 are
obvious errors but were retained until Q5, and the rest appear,
with occasional modification, in all subsequent editions. Of these
the most serious was the omission of the second half of the line in
Act V (Q1, sig. G2r)
Death you have seen: Now see your race revive, [.]
[2]
In substantives, Q3 has 18 variants from Q2 in addition to the
Q2 variants from Q1 which it follows. In turn, all but three
obvious errors in the Q3 total of variants appear in Q4,
which—being carelessly printed—adds 49 unique substantive
variants of its own. With only one exception, which may just
possibly be coincidental, none of these unique variants appears in
any later edition, this fact establishing Q4 as a terminal
text.
Q5, accepting all but the most flagrant of the Q3 variants, adds
19 to the list, all of which appear in Q6 together with 27 new
readings. In turn, Q7, repeating all but four of the most obvious
Q6 errors, adds 18 new substantive readings, of which 16 appear in
Q8 together with 19 new variants.
Q9, the last of the early quartos, presents a most peculiar
case. Dated 1684 and having in its register of signatures and
title-page typography a definite relationship with Q4, also dated
1684, it nevertheless shows (except for four pages) a page-for-page
correspondence with Q8 printed in 1695. Superficially, the simplest
view would be that this edition (Macdonald 81c) was a corrupt
version of Q4 and that, eleven years later, it served as copy for
Q8. Such an assumption is impossible, however. In the first place,
Q4 (M 81d) could not have served as copy for any other edition
because
of its extraordinary number of unique and non-reversible readings
which prove it to be a terminal text. Secondly, Q8 (M 81h) could
not have derived from Q9 (M 81c) since Q9 with 38 unique readings,
over half of which are non-reversible, is also shown to be a
terminal text. Moreover, there is definite evidence that Q9
textually derives from Q8, a fact which re-enforces the otherwise
ambiguous evidence of its general page-for-page correspondence with
Q8. Of the 20 substantive variants which first appeared in Q8, 11
are simple errors which Q9 corrects; but Q9 follows the other 9
cases of Q8's hitherto unique variants and adds no less than 39 of
its own. Thus Q8 could not have derived from Q9; and instead Q8
must have served as copy for Q9. This can be demonstrated, also,
for sheet C and half-sheet F.
We have, then, the peculiar situation that Q9, printed in
imitation of Q4, and falsely dated, nevertheless did not choose Q4
as copy but instead was set up from the text of Q8. Whatever the
reasons for this oddity,[3] the facts
rule out inadvertence, the more especially since Knight and
Saunders—listed in the Q9 imprint as sellers, in imitation of
Q4—were no longer in business together by 1695. Piracy is the
only answer, but the exact date cannot be determined except that it
was in 1695 or after.
There is one further peculiarity associated with Q9. Although
there can be no question that Q8 served as printer's copy, Q9
corrects six Q8 readings by reversion to the forms found in some
earlier edition. Since various of these in the Q8 forms were
plausible enough to have escaped suspicion, simple compositorial
ingenuity is insufficient to explain their revision, the more
especially since they appear in clusters.
Q8 reading
|
Q9 revision
|
possible source
|
Shut from his day and that contented skie |
contended (C1v) |
Q1-4 |
Thy . . . voice the sleeping Gods we'll
reach |
will (C1v) |
Q1-6 |
With wings expanded wide, ourselves will
reach |
we'll (C1v) |
Q1-6 |
What raised thy Beings, ours will take away |
Being (F1r) |
Q1-6 |
Such beauty may rise factions in his Heav'n |
raise (F1v) |
Q1-6 |
Imprudence was your fault, but Love was
mine |
is (G1r) |
Q1 |
If for the moment we disregard the variant on sig.
G1r, the
evidence points only to some edition between Q1 and Q4 being
collated to produce these revised readings. Since it is clear that
the printer had had access to Q4, it would seem a natural
assumption that Q8 for these pages had been collated against Q4.
This is probably the answer, although there are difficulties.
First, the return to a unique Q1 reading on line 5 of the adjacent
page would need to be fortuitous. It is true that in context the
change of was to is makes better sense;
nevertheless,
the was reading had passed muster with the compositors of
Q2-8. Hence it might be possible to conjecture that Q1 was the
collating copy and that this collation extended over to the top of
sig. G1r. Second, it may seem suspicious that in no case
does Q9
follow a unique Q4 variant,[4]
although two such unique readings would have been present for Q9
sig. F1,
one for F1v, one for F2, and three for
F2v. The text for Q9's
sig. C1v could have contained no unique Q4 reading,
however.
Yet we may be the more prepared to accept as chance the
collator's invariable rejection of Q4's unique variants (which have
nothing much to recommend them at best), since the alternative is
the hypothesis that a copy of Q1 was used as the collating edition.
In fact, the collation of Q1 (making three editions in the
possession of the Q9 printer) could be advanced only if we assumed
that Q4, although available for consultation, was not available to
be kept on the premises.[5] This
seems to invoke such special and peculiar circumstances that we are
better off with the simpler hypothesis that Q4, which served as the
specific model for the piracy, was also used for the small amount
of collation actually engaged in.
That any textual collation whatever with an earlier edition was
contemplated, and in fact performed even to a minor degree, is a
fact sufficiently astonishing in a late reprint and a piracy
without our conjecturing such extraordinary textual conscience in
the pirate as to secure a copy of Q1 for collation, when he was
also in the possession of Q4. In truth, the only plausible
explanation why this collation was ever engaged in was the
availability of Q4 in the shop as a model for the piracy.
Notes