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The Printing of John Webster's Plays (III):
The Duchess of
Malfi
by
John Russell Brown
The examples that have been presented in this paper have demonstrated the utility of this particular sort of investigation in shedding light on mechanical and on compositorial practices that offer problems to the bibliographer'—so wrote George Walton Williams in his 'Setting by Formes in Quarto Printing' in Studies in Bibliography, XI (1958). His thesis was forcefully presented, and other bibliographers who study quarto editions of dramatic texts of the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries have followed his lead in observing type-shortages in relation to compositors' habits. And now, in proper sequence, a responsible editor of such texts must discover how his task can be aided by this knowledge. He has a new duty: he must determine the order in which the pages of his copy-text were set and then enquire whether this order has influenced each individual compositor's presentation of his copy. In this way he may be able to discover means for presenting a text closer to his author's intentions or the printer's copy.
He may be able to do this. So far few have tried, and, until those few have shown their gains clearly, other editors with pressing commitments may be unable to decide whether they should spare the time for this further research. It is in this situation that some processes used for editing John Webster's Duchess of Malfi in the light of knowledge concerning its original printing by Nicholas Okes in 1623 are set out in considerable detail in the following note.
From papers which have been published already many relevant facts are known about the kind of copy used by Okes for this play, about the two compositors who set it, and about other quarto plays from Okes' shop within a few years of 1623.[1] We know that The
Compositor | A | A1-4v | B3-C2v | D3-E2v | F3-G2v | H3-I2v | K3-L2v | M3-N2v |
Compositor | B | B1-2v | C3-D2v | E3-F2v | G3-H2v | I3-K2v | L3-M2v | N3-4. |
Compositor | X | 1v | 2 | 1 | 2v |
Compositor | Y | 3v | 4 | 3 | 4v |
New evidence suggests that this guess is correct. In setting The Duchess there was a shortage of roman, capital T, which was made good by the use of italic; a shortage of italic, capital B, made good by roman; and a shortage of roman, capital W, made good by using two Vs; and these shortages occur in ways that suggest, though not with equal clarity, the same order of composition. The shortage of T is most useful. Compositor A first encountered the lack while setting his half of Sheet H. The following table shows the number of Ts and Ts on each page in the order in which they were used; X stands for a T used incorrectly for a T, and the superscript numeral for the number of times the particular letter occurs consecutively.
1v or 3v | 2 or 4 | 1 or 3 | 2v or 4v | |
H3-4v | T9 | T6,X2 | T7,X3 | T,X3 |
I1-2v | T3 | T10 | T5 | T4,X3 |
K3-4v | T11 | T8 | T2,X,T2,X, T,X,T | T3,X9 |
L1-2v | T9 | T5,X | X,T,X,T7 | X,T,X5 |
M3-4v | T6 | T5 | T2,X8 | T7 |
N1-2v | T11 | T,X5 | T3,X3 | T6,X,T |
Shortages of B (chiefly used in prefixes for Bosola's speeches) again suggest that the inner-forme pages were set first. The incorrect Bs first appear on A's pages of Sheet E, and again on his halves of G and K; on B's pages they occur in sheets H,K,L and M. The following table shows incorrect Bs as X; it is arranged as before.
1v or 3v | 2 or 4 | 1 or 3 | 2v or 4v | |
E1-2v | B 9,X | X5 | B 2 | -- |
G1-2v | B 4 | X,B | -- | B 2 |
H1-2v | B,X | B | B 2 | B |
K1-2v | B,X3,B,X3 | X4 | B,X,B 5 | B 3 |
K3-4v | B 5 | B 6 | B 8 | B,X |
L3-4v | B,X | X3,B 3 | B | X7 |
M1-2v | -- | B3 | X,B 5 | B 4,X,B 4 |
The use of VV for W gives only the slightest evidence. But for C3-4v and E3-4v it again suggests that setting started with a supply and that the inner-forme pages came first, and for F1-2v it suggests that 1 preceded 2v, and that some replenishment was made before completing F1. X stands for VV in the table.
1v or 3v | 2 or 4 | 1 or 3 | 2v or 4v | |
C3-4v | W6 | W4 | X3,W3,X | W,X,W |
E3-4v | W3 | W4 | W3,X,W | W5,X |
F1-2v | W | W4 | X3,W | W2 |
M1-2v | W5 | W,X | W5 | W3,X |
A recurring problem for an editor of Webster is how to arrange the text as verse. In Okes' quarto of The Duchess numerous lines are obviously bungled, but more are possibly so. For Webster's versification is not always the kind that can be verified by a simple count: it ranges from the easily formal, to the slack, strained, subtle, or hesitant. Moreover he used incomplete verse-lines to point dramatic pauses between speeches and within them, and introduced very short passages of prose in scenes otherwise in verse.[2] Editors often differ about the correct presentation, and their disagreement can be of moment. Literary critics are particularly apt to find importance or beauty in Webster's pauses or metrical subtleties. Una Ellis-Fermor may speak for many:
If an editor believes that The Duchess was originally set in the order in which it is read, he will probably judge that its obvious mislineation occurs fortuitously. But once he supposes that the copy was cast off before composition and the two inner-forme pages of each half-sheet set first, he will suspect that mislineation is often due to inaccurate casting off and the compositors' attempts to keep in step. In each sheet Signatures 1v-2 and 3v-4 would be set consecutively, so that the first page of each of these pairs would be unlikely to have this kind of mislineation; any error could be carried over to its fellow, with the chance that it might be cancelled out by the opposite kind of error in casting off.
1v | 2 | 1 | 2v | 3v | 4 | 3 | 4v | |
B | -- | -- | -- | 2 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
C | -- | -- | -- | 1 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
D | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- |
E | -- | 2 | -- | 1 | -- | -- | -- | 1 |
F | -- | -- | -- | -- | (1) | 1(1) | -- | -- |
G | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 1 | (1) |
H | -- | -- | (4,1) | -- | -- | 1(1) | 1 | -- |
I | -- | -- | -- | 1 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
K | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 1 |
L | -- | -- | -- | 1 | -- | -- | -- | 1(2) |
M | (2) | 1 | 1 | 1 | -- | -- | (1) | -- |
N | -- | 2 | -- | (1,1) | -- | -- | 1 |
The following facts confirm the order of composition.
21 times both editors modified the number of lines of type.
- 7 are on Signature 2v
- 7 . . . . Signatures 2 or 4
- 4 . . . . . . 1 or 3
- 3 . . . . Signature 4v
- 0 . . . . Signatures 1v or 3v
3 pages have 2 obvious mislineations; on each page both imply that the compositor added lines of type, or both that he saved.
Compositor B was responsible for fewer obvious mislineations than A (9 to 12), but he more frequently varied the number of lines on a page: E3v, I3v, K1 and K1v have 38 instead of 37; F2v, G3v and N3v have 36. It is noteworthy that none of these pages contains certain mislineation. Compositor A only varied from the standard on four occasions, setting 38 lines on D4v and G1v (where he made no mislineation), and on H3 (where he did save one line), and setting only 36 on N2v (where he made no certain mislineation). These variations demonstrate the results of inaccurate casting-off where the compositors were less careful about the precise balance of the printed pages.
The first way that the editor is helped by this new knowledge of the order of composition is in assessing the authority of the printer's copy: he may be virtually certain that this kind of mislineation is due to the printing of the play, not to its transcription by the scribe. Understanding where and how mislineation is likely to occur, he will be more reluctant to alter the line-arrangement of his copy-text elsewhere. Secondly the editor is helped in particular readings where it had previously been difficult to decide on the correct line-arrangement. Both the changes suggested, without support, for N2v can hardly be correct, for they cancel each other out in altering the number of lines of type; the editor should choose one or the other, or neither. And since A set a line short on that page against his usual custom, the suggested mislineation which would imply that he had added a line to those in his copy is the more likely to be correct. The change on H1 which implies that Compositor B added a line is unlikely to be right, if any of the other suggested changes are: and before accepting the large number of these, the editor would wish to find some special reason for the unprecedented inaccuracy. He will view the unconfirmed changes on F4, H4 and L4v particularly favourably, because they would alter the number of lines of type in accordance with the necessary re-arrangements.
Occasionally the editor will be able to propose a change where neither of his predecessors altered their copy-text. An example of this is on B4v, where the quarto has:
So:
What followes? (Neuer raind such showres as these
Without thunderbolts in the taile of them;)
Whose throat must I cut?
Ferd.
Your inclination to shed blood, rides post
Before my occasion to vse you: . . . . (Lucas, I.i.264ff.)
I could curse the stars.
Bos.
Oh, fearful!
Duch.
And those three smiling seasons of the year
Into a Russian winter: nay, the world
To its first chaos.
Bos.
Look you, the stars shine still.
Duch.
Oh, but you must remember, my curse hath a great way to go.—
Plagues, that make lanes through largest families,
Consume them! . . . . . (Lucas, IV.i.115ff.)
To its first Chaos.
Bos.
Looke you, the Starres shine still:
Duch.
Oh, but you must
Remember, my curse hath a great way to goe:
Another reason for an editor undertaking this research is the likelihood, attested in many kinds of investigation, that the solution of one bibliographical problem will set others in a new and clearer perspective. The editing of The Duchess of Malfi does benefit in this way.
One of its problems is the authority of its stage-directions. There are comparatively few of them, as in some other plays with massed entries at the head of each scene. But one, 'A Coffin, Cords, and a Bell' (K1v; Lucas, IV.ii.164-166) might derive from a prompt-book, while two others, 'Ferdinand giues her a ponyard' (F4; III.ii.79-80) and 'Enter Bosola with a Guard' (H4; III.v.110) were added during presscorrection, after some sheets had been printed, and might have been supplied by the author himself together with the corrections to dialogue and a marginal note which more surely indicate his responsibility.[4] Here the editor's new belief in the accuracy of the verse-lining of the printer's copy and his knowledge of the sequence of composition will encourage a reappraisal. He will notice that while both compositors were prepared to alter the verse-lining of their copy to accommodate the text cast off for a particular page, they set most of the book, like dramatic manuscripts in Ralph Crane's hand, with each new speech beginning a new line of type. Many times they could have countered inaccurate casting-off by starting a new speech in the same line as the conclusion of the previous one. But this they did not do until Sheet I. Clearly a firm printing-house decision was reversed at this point. The following table shows how both compositors availed themselves of this means of adjustment on pages after Ilv. The numerals stand for the number of times, on the page indicated, a new speech begins in the same line of type as the last line, or part-line, of the previous speech.
1v | 2 | 1 | 2v | 3v | 4 | 3 | 4v | |
I | 2 | -- | -- | -- | 6 | -- | 1 | -- |
K | -- | -- | 1 | 4 | 4 | 4 | 3 | -- |
L | 4 | 2 | 4 | 5 | -- | 2 | 1 | 3 |
M | 5 | 4 | 1 | 2 | -- | -- | -- | -- |
These facts are relevant to a re-consideration of the authority of the stage-directions because the first four formes with continuous printing contain three directions, each beginning (as no others in the play) with the word 'Here . . .'. The setting of these directions suggest that they were added, like those found among the variants due to presscorrection, after the type had been set up. On I1v the direction is printed:
Besides massed entries at the head of scenes, a dumb-show and simple marks for exits, there are only 16 stage-directions in the quarto and, as we have seen, two of these are among the press-variants for which Webster was probably responsible, and three appear to be late additions. The other eleven may now be scrutinized afresh for signs that they too were additions to the first type-setting. The directions are:
- i. he kneeles (C3v; I.i.477)
- ii. Enter Antonio with a Pistoll. (G1v; III.ii.166)
- iii. she shewes the poniard. (G1v; III.ii.177-178)
- iv. giues her a dead mans hand. (I1v; IV.i.50-54)
- v. A Coffin, Cords, and a Bell. (K1v; IV.ii.164-166)
- vi. They strangle her. (K2v; IV.ii.243-244)
- vii. Shewes the children strangled. (K3; IV.ii.272-273)
- viii. she dies, (K4v; IV.ii.381)
- ix. He kills the Seruant. (N2v; V.v.46)
- x. He wounds the Cardinall, and (in the scuffle) giues Bosola his death wound. (N3; V.v.70-72)
- xi. He kills Ferdinand. (N3; V.v.83)
Before investigations into type-shortages and the order of composition were undertaken, it was known that two stage-directions had been added after composition: now evidence has been found for believing that six more were similarly added, but before any surviving sheets had been printed off. These eight occur in the work of both compositors, so some source other than their copy must surely be posited. They might have been added because some printing-house corrector reversed a decision to omit some of the stage-directions found in the copy; but it is hard to believe that such crossed purposes would remain so long without being disentangled. Because we already believe that Webster visited the press to correct the printing of some formes, it is tempting to think that he was personally responsible for adding these stage-directions.
There is nothing in the position or type-setting of the remaining eight directions which argues against the same origin and procedures for them, save only that 'he kneeles' on C3v would be a very isolated
One further aid to the editor that can come from a close study of the type-setting of The Duchess of Malfi concerns punctuation. We know that, like Crane manuscripts and unlike other plays from Okes' printing-house at the same time, the quarto has more than usual numbers of colons and semi-colons, brackets and hyphens. A table showing the page-by-page fluctuations in the number of colons set,[6] especially if the pages of each half-sheet are arranged by formes, suggests that on certain pages the punctuation was influenced by type-shortages, and in some cases these apparent shortages coincide with those already noticed from less equivocal evidence. On L1-2v, for example, the appearance of italic T on L2 and L1 suggests that a distribution of type was made on L1 after L1v and L2 had been set, and the number of colons on individual pages varies in accordance with such a procedure. Compositor A usually set more than a dozen on each page, but here the figures are:
L1v | L2 | L1 | L2v |
16 | 9 | 5 | 21 |
Such matters must be judged after long familiarity with the text, for the frequency of any mark of punctuation will vary according to the syntactical, rhetorical, metrical and dramatic qualities of the dialogue and to unknown variations in the scribe's, compositors' and, perhaps, author's techniques. But the editor of The Duchess of Malfi, bearing in
notes
Cf. P. Williams, 'The Compositor of the 'Pied Bull' Lear', SB, I (1948-49), 61-68; J. R. Brown, 'The Printing of John Webster's Plays (I) and (II)', SB, VI (1954), 117-140 and VIII (1956), 113-127; and R. K. Turner Jr., 'The Composition of The Insatiate Countess, Q2', SB,XIII (1959), 198-203; 'The Printing of The Maid's Tragedy Q1' SB, XIII (1960), 199-220; 'Notes on the Text of Thierry and Theodoret Q1', SB, XIV (1961), 218-231; and 'The Printing of Philaster Q1 and Q2', The Library, 5th series, XV (1960), 21-32.
Possibly lines of dialogue were also added at the same time: or, if Compositor A (who set I1v) was ahead of B, the latter might already have followed the lead of the corrector of I1v and set two or three speeches continuously on I3v without special provocation. It is just possible that the whole madman's song as it is printed in the quarto was an addition to the printer's copy, replacing four or five lines of dialogue or stage-direction on both pages. This hypothesis gains some support by: 1.) 7 lines are saved on I3v and only four used on I4; 2.) on H2 a 'ditty' is printed where the printer's copy had announced 'The Hymne' and the author added an apologetic note after some sheets had been printed; the printer's copy may have been deficient in its songs as some dramatic texts of the period are; and 3.) the disconnected talk of the madmen might easily be cut without leaving traces.
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