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The Printing of the Plays in the Jonson Folio of
1616
by
James A. Riddell
In the Folio edition of Ben Jonson's Workes of 1616, the order of the plays as they appear in the volume does not fully coincide with the order of their being printed. That is, the first play, Every Man In His Humour, was printed in part after the sixth play in the volume, Volpone, was completed, and in larger part after the two remaining plays and a portion of Epigrammes were through the press. The general order of the printing of the plays has been known for some time: as long ago as 1957, Johan Gerritsen accounted for Every Man Out of His Humour being "quite the most heavily corrected [play] in the volume" because it was the first one Stansby printed.[1] In this paper, I intend to bring together some details about the printing of all of the plays, but with particular attention to that one.
Every Man Out and the next two plays to have been printed, Cynthia's Revels, and Poëtaster, all appear with two kinds of title-pages, "in compartment" and "plain."[2] The compartment is title-page border number 224 in McKerrow and Ferguson, first used by Stansby for these three Jonson plays.[3] The title-pages for Every Man Out are the most various of those for the three plays, and, when considered in conjunction with their conjugate pages, reflect what must have been a fair degree of uncertainty in Stansby's shop as he undertook the printing of the Jonson Folio. The title-pages themselves (sig. G1), as identified by Greg, appear in four variants, two in compartment
Unfortunately, the work of Herford and Simpson has impeded rather than advanced our understanding of the matter. Because they were convinced that the large-paper sheets of all of the gatherings of the Folio were printed after the small-paper sheets,[6] they made assumptions about the printing of sig. G6v that have proven to be misleading. This is compounded by their failure to understand fully the distinction between the corrected version and the reset one (H&S, textual notes to lines 103 — 146 of Every Man Out; IX, 55 — 56).[7] That large-paper sheets of the volume were not invariably the last to be printed has been demonstrated by Kevin Donovan in his study of the printing of the masques.[8] As to the distinction between the corrected and reset versions, there are variations that did not come to the attention of Herford and Simpson. For instance, in the first line of G6v the word "metaphor" appears in three different forms: original, "Metaphore"; corrected, "Metaphore"; reset, "Metaphore" with a swash "M",[9] the last two
They fail, therefore, to come to the conclusion that the penultimate line on the page should read (corrected, but not reset): "Squeeze out the humour of such spongie soules." And the reading that appears in their text is that of the inferior (H&S, "large-paper") reset version: "Squeeze out the humour of such spongie natures" (Induction, line 145). For a reason that they do not explain (it most likely is mere oversight), they reproduce the original and corrected form of "O, 'tis more than most ridiculous" (Induction, line 114)[10] rather than the reset form that, judging from their reliance on the authority of the large-paper version, they would have thought superior: "O,it is more then most ridiculous" (with no space between the comma and "it" in the reset). They declare that "For this play [Every Man Out] we have also collated Mr. H. L. Ford's 'A' copy on large paper" (IX, 53). However, the Ford copy is cited only in their accounting of quire G, none other; for G3.4 it is the sole source for variant readings. There are three, related, difficulties that inhere in this assessment. Why was the Ford copy not cited for any signature but G? Why do the Ford readings not agree with the other two "large-paper" readings cited by Herford and Simpson? Why are the Ford variants in G3.4 present in five small-paper copies, of twenty-three that I have recently examined, but not in the Grenville[11] or two additional large-paper (Clark and Huntington)? The three questions are answered in one explanation: the Ford copy was not, in fact, printed on large paper, which can be inferred from the physical evidence that Ford himself supplies and which can now be confirmed by an examination of the volume (see below, note 14). Ford seems to have judged that it was large-paper by size alone.[12] He describes his "premier copy," the one consulted by Herford and Simpson, in his Collation of the Ben Jonson Folios, 1616 — 31 — 1640, as measuring 11 ⅛ x 7 ⁷⁄₁₆˜.[13] But this is not "larger" than other small-paper copies; it is no taller
The question of why quire G (here particularly G1.6v) was reset provokes several possible answers, a couple of which will be entertained merely to dismiss them. It is possible that after the printing had begun it was decided that large-paper copies should be added to the small-paper; but this issue must have been long since decided, as large-paper stock would need to be acquired for the purpose, and, much more to the point, some large-paper sheets, for instance, G3.4, are printed with the original settings. A second reason for G1 being reset might be that originally there had been no provision for a title-page of Every Man Out with Stansby's name only in the imprint; but as will be seen below, this cannot be the case. The most obvious, and the most reasonable, answer is that Stansby, or Stansby and others, decided to enlarge the press-run. Evidence gathered through examining the variant title-pages and their conjugates can pretty well establish the printing order of the title-pages, and once that is established, conjecture about Stansby's practice can be narrowed. Until now there have been understood to be, in Greg's words, "four variant titles — — with and without a border and with and without Smethwick's name as publisher." Greg further observes:
In fact, there are two more variants than are set out by Greg or noticed by Herford and Simpson; that is, there are two distinctive states of plain, Stansby alone and two distinctive states of plain, Stansby for Smithwicke. The order is as follows:
- (1) in compartment, Stansby alone;
- (2) plain, Stansby alone;
- (3) plain, Stansby for Smithwicke;
- (4) plain, Stansby for Smithwicke ("Hor." in margin);
- (5) in compartment, Stansby for Smithwicke;
- (6) plain, Stansby alone.[17]
My evidence is derived from sixty-seven copies of the Folio which have title pages for Every Man Out (not all copies do[18]). Title-pages (1) (one copy[19]), (2) (three copies[20]), and (3) (nineteen copies) appear with the original (a) form of G6v. Title-page (4) appears only with the corrected (b) variant of G6v (six copies), as does title-page (5) (twenty-three copies). Title-page (6) appears only with the reset (c) variant of G6v (nine small-paper and all six of the large-paper copies that I have seen). If this sampling can be considered a representative one (I am aware that it may not be), and if the reset sheets do indeed reflect Stansby's increasing the size of the press-run (I shall present supplementary evidence in the next few paragraphs), we can estimate that it was enlarged by as much as twenty-five to thirty percent. First, the differences between title-pages (2) and (6) need to be explained, as do the differences between (3) and (4). Title-pages (3) and (4) are derived from (2). Title-page (6) is a resetting. The imprint of title-page (2) reads: "London, | Printed by William Stansby. | [rule] | M. DC. XVI." This imprint was altered to produce (3), in the following manner: most probably without being removed from the press, the chase was unlocked, the period after Stansby's name was removed (it would be strikingly inappropriate), the rule was lowered, and "for Iohn Swithwicke."[21] was inserted between Stansby's name and the rule; the original G6v was left unaltered.
There are three immediately recognizable differences between the two
Apparently at some time during the machining of quire I, it was decided that the press run should be made larger than originally intended, for no full quires of Every Man Out after I were printed short and only one third of quire I was. It may appear that two separate issues are involved here: first, the condition of there being original (and corrected original) and reset sheets in gatherings G, H, and I; second, the question that arises from that fact, "Why?" But the two issues are really one. The reset sheets exist. Where they exist offers a pretty good explanation of why. The most likely reason for their appearing in a significant number in the first three gatherings of the first play printed (but only sporadically in the rest of the volume) is that the press-run was augmented.
An examination of the running-titles, and thereby the skeletons, employed in the printing of Every Man Out provides evidence about the printing of quires G, H, and I. In quire G only G5v, G6, and G6v have running-titles. The other pages of the quire are devoted to an integral title leaf, preliminary matter (including the "Characters" of figures in the play), and the first page of the dramatic text. One running-title is used for the original
Because P3, in the final quire of Every Man Out, was machined before G5v, G6, and G6v, it appears that only after all of the play was printed did Stansby's men turn to resetting matter needed for the first quire, G. It is less clear when H and I3.4 were reset and machined, but some inferences can be drawn about them. The eight formes are set with the same two skeletons (one of them at one time altered), which have entirely new running-titles. It is the alteration of the one forme that provides some clues about the order of printing of reset H and I3.4. I shall call the once-altered skeleton "VI" and its running-titles "x" and "w." It appears in reset H three times, in the following configuration: 1(x).6v(w), 3(x).4v(w), 3v(w).4(x).[24] It must appear this way, if the skeleton remains intact, because the right side of the forme on the press must always be headed by w. In I3.4 it appears in both formes — — as 3(x).4v(w), but then, with the running-titles reversed, as 3v(x).4(w). The most reasonable assumption is that the shift of running-titles happened only once, either at the beginning or at the end of this group of formes. There is evidence to suggest that it happened at the end. A striking difference between the original I3 and the resetting is that in the latter the last line of the original is moved to the top of I3v. Because it is much more likely that a line would be dropped from the end of a page than that a line from the bottom of one page would be accidentally set at the top of the page
The evidence of the watermarks supports some of this conjecture, and provides grounds for a bit of further speculation. (In the discussion that follows, I employ numbers for watermarks that I have previously assigned; as any such numbers must be somewhat arbitrary, I have thought it not worthwhile to create "new" numbers for this essay). Paper with watermark 3 (two-handled pot with elongated letters O P, topped by grapes and flower) seems to have come into Stansby's shop (or, perhaps, merely began to be used) just as the last sheets of quire O were being machined, as 3 appears in one sheet (O1.6) of one copy of twenty-three. It then appears in P1.6 in all copies but one, and in subsequent quires until 2Z; it is in all five copies of reset G1.6. All reset sheets of G2.5 have either watermark 1 or 2, both being common throughout Every Man Out, but rarely present later in the volume. Also in all copies of the original G3.4 which I have noted, the watermark is either 1 or 2. In the reset G3.4, however, the watermark is 11. Except in seven copies of 2H3.4 (which I do not yet know how to account for), watermark 11 (two-handled pot with the letters TI[?], topped by grapes) does not appear until quire 3G, the fourth quire of The Alchemist. But G3.4 are the pages of "Characters," and nothing else — it would have been easy to print such a discrete portion of the quire (the pages do not even have running-titles) at any time. Thus, taking into consideration the evidence of the running-titles, it seems that G1.6 and 2.5 were set right after quire P, and that G3.4 was set at about the same time that the last two plays, The Alchemist and Catiline, were going through the press. Of the five copies I have referred to that have reset quire G, only four have reset quire H and I3.4. All of these four copies of quire H have yet another watermark (I have designated it as 37 [two-handled pot with the letters RUM, topped by grapes]), which I have not found elsewhere in the Folio. It is, therefore, of no particular use in determining when the reset quire was printed. However, all of the sheets of reset I3.4 have watermark 11, and because the skeleton that was newly composed for quire H was also employed in the machining of I3.4, it is reasonable to suppose that those four sheets were run off more or less together, probably at about the same time as G3.4.
When pages are present in the three states of original, corrected, and reset, as they are in the cases of G6v, H3v.4, and I3v.4, it will be found that the reset is based upon the corrected state. This can be seen particularly in punctuation marks that were introduced in the corrected state, such as the question mark after "this" on G6v, and the exclamation points after "above" and "edifice" on I4. It will also be found that the printer was often careless in his composition of the reset, whether it was set from the original or, if there was such, the corrected state. Here, for instance, are some obvious errors: on G4 (original and reset), from "Fungoso" to "Fungosa"; on H2 (original and reset), "Insula Fortunata" to "Insula, Fortunata"; on H3v (corrected and reset), "foode." to "food" (when the word unmistakably comes at the end of a sentence).
After Stansby's men had completed Every Man Out, they printed the following plays of the Folio, from Cynthia's Revels to Catiline, in the order in which they appear there. It is the coherence of that order, in conjunction with a brief disruption of it, that I wish to establish in this section of the essay. The plain title-pages for Cynthia's Revels are the same for both large-paper and small-paper and retain the imprint from title-page (6) of Every Man Out, which was left standing: "London, | Printed by William Stansby. | [rule] | M. DC. XVI." The imprint was retained intact for the large-paper title-pages of Poëtaster, the next play in the volume. For the small-paper plain copies it was modified to read: "London, | Printed by William Stansby, | for Matthew Lownes. | [rule] | M. DC. XVI.", with a comma substituted for the period following Stansby's name. In other words, the Stansby alone (which appears only in large-paper copies) imprint was first machined, then modified for the imprint with Lownes. Then, with the comma following Stansby's name still in place from the small-paper Poëtaster title-page, titles for Sejanus (both large- and small-paper) were machined, reading "London, | Printed by William Stansby, | [rule] | M. DC. XVI." For Volpone a new imprint was composed, with the following identifiable characteristics:[26] 1) "London" with a distinctive "dot" (no doubt caused by an air bubble when the letter was cast) near the bottom of the vertical of the letter "L"; 2) in Stansby a new "t", the horizontal no longer tilting up to the right; 3) a longer rule (fifty-two millimeters rather than forty), between Stansby's name and the date; 4) in the date, a new "X," with a bulge at the bottom of the left foot. This imprint was left standing for plays six and seven,[27] Volpone and Epicoene. It appears also on the title-page of Every Man In His Humour. As this imprint became altered during the printing of play eight, The Alchemist, we can infer that at least the first part (in fact, the first gathering) of Every Man In was printed about the same time as Volpone (which runs from 2O4 to 2X4v) and Epicoene (from 2X5 through 3D5v).
For well over thirty years Dr. Gerritsen has been aware that "the first quire [of Every Man In] was printed off roughly concurrently with the first quires of Epicoene."[28] Gerritsen bases his conclusions on evidence he derived chiefly from the headlines in the volume, although how, precisely, he does not explain. Other evidence, that of the watermarks, can be brought to bear, although it is only somewhat helpful in determining when quire A of Every Man In may have been printed. I have made a chart of all the watermarks (there are more than three dozen of them) in twenty-two small-paper copies of the Folio. A watermark I have designated 12 (two-handled pot with the letters PLS, topped with grapes) appears the most frequently of any in the Folio, but, except in Every Man In, not before the third play, Cynthia's Revels. Watermark 5 (one-handled pot with the letters OLC[?] and the date 1613) appears several places in the Folio, but most frequently in the fifth play, Poëtaster, then in Epicoene and the first two quires of The Alchemist; it also appears very often in A3.4 of Every Man In. Both the imprints and the watermarks, then, are consistent with Gerritsen's opinion about the printing of quire A. The evidence of the watermarks is much more compelling (which is just as well because, so far as I know, there isn't much other evidence) as it concerns the printing of the last five quires of Every Man In. My watermarks 6 and 7 (difficult to describe — each in its own way a misshapen pot) do not appear at all in the Folio until Epigrammes,[29] which follows the last play, Catiline. Those two watermarks appear often in the last five quires of Every Man In, though never in the first.
The imprint of Volpone, Epicoene, and Every Man In appears in the title-page of The Alchemist in some copies of the Folio. However, part way through the printing of that play the period following Stansby's name went missing,[30] perhaps pulled out by an inking ball, and is not to be found in most copies. For Catiline, the imprint was somewhat changed. A new period (somewhat flattened on the bottom) was installed after Stansby's name, the "y" at the end of Stansby's name slipped down (at the same time that the period was replaced?), and the space between the lines (the one above "London" and the one between Stansby's name and the date) was reduced to thirty-four millimeters from thirty-nine. However, the "L" with the distinctive "dot" was retained, as was the "X" with the bulge at the bottom of the left foot. There are four printed title-pages in the remainder of the volume, for Epigrammes (with which The Forrest appears), for Part of the King's Entertainment, for the Entertainment . . . at Althorpe, and for Masques at Court. Stansby's name appears on none of these title-pages. All bear the imprint: "London, | [rule] | M. DC. XVI.", which small fragment seems to have been left standing for the printing of all four.
Stansby's men, it would seem, left standing as much matter as they could for the printing of the volume, even if that matter amounted to very little, perhaps no more than a few words. Their practice has proven useful for this study, as the evidence uncovered through a close look at the standing type confirms the order of the printing of the plays. A good example is the fragment "The Author B. I.," which remains unchanged on all of the plain title-pages from Every Man Out to Epicoene and Every Man In. Depending upon the heaviness of the inking, the serifs at the bottom of the letter "A" in this bit of standing type are flat at the base and are scarcely separated at the middle of the letter; even when the inking is relatively light, there is usually a "shadow" between them. Different type is used for "The Author B. I." on the title-pages of The Alchemist and Catiline, which can be determined also by the letter "A." The "A" of "Author" in the title-pages for the last two plays has serifs which are clearly separated and which have slight, but quite discernible, curves in the base. The practice of leaving small portions of type standing began early on in the printing of the Folio, but not, apparently, from the outset. The dramatis personae page for Every Man Out is headed by "The Names of the Actors" (sig. G2v); this is altered for all of the following plays (including Every Man In) to "The Persons of the Play," obviously altogether different. Not so obvious are the differences between various versions of the latter. For Cynthia's Revels, "The Persons" is distinguished by a "dot" about one-third down the vertical of the letter "T," very much similar to the "dot" in the letter "L," discussed above. One can say with a fair degree of certainty that the type was distributed, for the same distinctive letter appears in "THE END" at the conclusion of the play. A different "T" is found in "The Persons" of Poëtaster. This one is not particularly distinctive, but it is clearly different from the "T" of "The Persons" of Sejanus, in which the left part of the horizontal slants slightly downward and the right part wants the downturning serif which, more often than not, is a part of an upper-case "T." Such a serif is to be found in "the Persons" for Volpone and for the plays printed afterward, including Every Man In. Indeed the type seems to have been left standing for the printing of the last four plays.[31]
There are several examples of the same standing type being used for the final pages of some plays.[32] Details of type face, of punctuation, and of upper- and lower-case type vary enough that patterns can be detected in the printing of these final pages; one such pattern provides further evidence that the last part of Catiline was printed within some proximity of the last part of Every Man In. The heading that was fashioned for the final page of Every Man Out became the model for all of the rest of the plays in the volume: "This Comicall Satyre [or 'Comoedy' or 'Tragoedy'] was first |
Except for the heading, after Volpone was printed, most of the type for the final page was distributed. The second element of Epicoene, which had been performed by the Children of the Revels was, of course, different from that of Volpone. Although for The Alchemist its wording was the same as that for Sejanus and Volpone, one can easily see that the type is different because the "M" of "Majesties" is not a swash. The final page of Catiline was set entirely new. The heading reads: "This Tragoedy was first | Acted, in the Yeere | 1611." The lower-case "a" for "acted" in all earlier plays is now upper-case. The second element is: "By the Kings Maiesties | Servants." "Kings" is in roman type and a swash "M" has again been employed. There is yet another piece of evidence that the entire page has been newly set. The last element on each of the final pages is a single line of type,
Appendix I: Skeletons in the original and corrected sheets of Every Man Out of His Humour.
Quire | Sig. | Running-Title | Sig. | Running-Title | Skeleton |
G | 1 | — | 6v | g | — |
1v | — | 6 | e | — | |
2 | — | 5v | e | — | |
2v | — | 5 | — | — | |
3 | — | 4v | — | — | |
3v | — | 4 | — | — | |
H | 1 | b | 6v | a | I |
1v | c | 6 | d | II | |
2 | h | 5v | g | IV | |
2v | e | 5 | f1 | III | |
3 | d | 4v | c | II | |
3v | a | 4 | b | I | |
I | 1 | f1 | 6v | e | III |
1v | g | 6 | h | IV | |
2 | b | 5v | a | I | |
2v | c | 5 | d | II | |
3 | f1 | 4v | e | III | |
3v | g | 4 | h | IV | |
K | 1 | d | 6v | c | II |
1v | g | 6 | h | IV | |
2 | j | 5v | i | V |
2v | e | 5 | f2 | III | |
3 | b | 4v | a | I | |
3v | c | 4 | d | II | |
L | 1 | f2 | 6v | e | III |
1v | c | 6 | d | II | |
2 | h | 5v | g | IV | |
2v | i | 5 | j | V | |
3 | f2 | 4v | e | III | |
3v | g | 4 | h | IV | |
M | 1 | b | 6v | a | I |
1v | i | 6 | j | V | |
2 | h | 5v | g | IV | |
2v | i | 5 | j | V | |
3 | f2 | 4v | e | III | |
3v | a | 4 | b | I | |
N | 1 | h | 6v | g | IV |
1v | c | 6 | d | II | |
2 | b | 5v | a | I | |
2v | c | 5 | d | II | |
3 | h | 4v | g | IV | |
3v | e | 4 | f2 | III | |
O | 1 | d | 6v | c | II |
1v | g | 6 | h | IV | |
2 | b | 5v | a | I | |
2v | g | 5 | h | IV | |
3 | j | 4v | i | V | |
3v | e | 4 | f2 | III | |
P | 1 | f2 | 6v | — | — |
1v | c | 6 | — | — | |
2 | j | 5v | — | — | |
2v | a | 5 | — | — | |
3 | †[35] | 4v | — | — | |
3v | e | 4 | f2 | III | |
Reset G | 1 | — | 6v | † | — |
1v | — | 6 | † | — | |
2 | — | 5v | † | — | |
2v | — | 5 | — | — | |
3 | — | 4v | — | — | |
3v | — | 4 | — | — | |
Reset H | 1 | x | 6v | w | VI |
1v | y | 6 | z | VII | |
2 | z | 5v | y | VII | |
2v | y | 5 | z | VII | |
3 | x | 4v | w | VI | |
3v | w | 4 | x | VI | |
Reset I3.4 | 3 | x | 4v | w | VI |
3v | x | 4 | w | VI (alt.) |
The difference between f1 and f2 is that in the former the is of His is two separate letters; in the latter, is is a ligature. Otherwise, the two running-titles appear to be identical.
Quire P comprises the last eight pages of Every Man Out and the preliminary matter (i. e., title-page [verso blank], Dedication, and Persons of the Play) for Cynthia's Revels.
Appendix II: Variant readings in quires G, H, and I3.4 not noticed in Herford and Simpson (H&S format).
G2, p. 75
Original | Altered Original | Reset | Corrected Reset | |
Ded. 18 | use-full | use full | use-full | use-full |
19 | For so | For so | For, so | For so, |
it: | it: | it. | it. | |
20 | gowne | gowne | gowne, | gowne, |
The Altered Original always appears with the fourth (last Original) variant of G5v (see below). The single change in it is the result of the disappearance of the hyphen from "use-full" in line 18, which must have occured during the machining of the forme, for in one copy (of nine) of this variant, the hyphen is present.
The headline from the reset G5, with the page number "81" mistakenly left in place, was used for the headline of the reset and corrected reset of G2.
Gerritsen points out (p. 53) that the largest block of italic type (the body of the Dedication) was not reset, which is almost correct. The first two lines were, in fact, reset; there were several alterations in punctuation later in the text.
G2v, p. 76
In their "Survey of the Text," for line 13 H&S fail to italicize "their servant" (IX, 53) but do get it right in the play (III, 422). For line 23 they note in the "corrected" state: "Rustici" (above "Fungoso"), which also appears in their edition of the play. I have not been able to find this variant anywhere, including in the Grenville copy at the British Library, which is cited in their notes (IX, 53). This ghostly fragment may be similar to a couple noted by Parker in his edition of Volpone (p. 358).
G3, p.77 | Original | Reset | |
Char. 10 | falls | fals | |
16 | singularity | singualaritie | |
27 | de- | formity | de- | formitie | |
G3v, p.78 | 41 | Hee | He |
43 | neede | need | |
44 | marchant | merchant |
63 | Lady | Ladie | |
CW | Sor- | Sor. | |
G4, p. 79 | 67 | Al- | manacks . . . | Al- | manackes . . . |
felicity | felicitie | ||
70 | Fungoso | Fungosa | |
75 | aimes | aymes | |
79 | Gentleman | gentleman | |
84 | Souldier | souldier | |
94 | he. . . . He | hee. . . . Hee | |
G4v, p. 80 | 112 | discreet, | discreet |
G5, p. 81 | [H&S seem to have noticed all variants.] | ||
G5v, p. 82 | Ind. 56 | friends. | friends, |
There are at least five states of G5v, four in the original and one in the reset. The stage-direction, between lines 51 and 52, "Here hee makes address to the People," appears at "the left extending into the outer margin, . . . [and at] the right, extending to the inner margin" (H&S, IX, 54). In at least one copy the stage direction at the right is broken off after the first letter of the. The page also appears without the stage-direction, both in the original and in the reset. The most likely order is this: The stage-direction at the left was thought unsightly and it was moved to the inner margin; when the stage-direction broke, it was removed and several lines of the page were re-spaced, "giving the page an irregular look" (H&S, IX, 53). When the page was reset the lines were spaced evenly.
G6, p. 83
Herford and Simpson seem to have noticed all the variants between the original and the reset page. In their assessment of the reasons for the changes, however, they are wrong, misled by their belief in the authority of "large-paper" (including "Ford") copies. They contend that "one change on pages 82 and 83 of the Folio . . . corrected a printer's error in the setting of the verse. Jonson liked his lines to be marshalled in even column, and he kept strictly to the verse-arrangement when a speech did not begin the line" (III, 416). It is much more likely that the printer was rearranging lines so that the page of the reset would end at the same place as the original.
G6v, p. 84 | Original | Corrected | Reset | |
Ind.103 | Metaphore | Metaphore | Metaphore (swash M) | |
138 | Worthy | Worthy | Worthie | |
139 | this, | this? | this? | |
145 | crush . . . soules | squeeze . . . soules | squeeze . . . natures |
Herford and Simpson note: "This quire [G] shows a corrected state in lines 103, 139, 140, 142, and 145. The readings found in M1, Ford, and S3 [the copies that they consider to be large-paper] alone are a resetting." Broadly speaking, they are right, but they do not deal with the most significant implication of what they say. The corrected readings, as noted above, are always to be preferred to the reset — when the distinction can be made.
H1, p. 85 | Original | Reset | ||
151 | ready | readie | ||
153 | censors, | censors | ||
154 | liberally | liberally. | ||
163 | several | severall | ||
172 | 'Tis | Tis | ||
H1v, p. 86 | [219 | Arte (swash A) | Arte] | |
[237 | Acts (swash A) | Acts] | ||
H2, p. 87 | 240 | fall | fal | |
259 | kinde | kind | ||
265 | elegancie | elegancy | ||
268 | bee | be | ||
273 | Insula | Insula, | ||
278 | seas | Seas | ||
282 | countries | countreys | ||
286 | auditorie | auditory | ||
291 | staid a little | | stayed a lit- | tle | ||
H2v, p. 88 | 298 | necessity | necessitie | |
305 | How? | How, | ||
307 | did or | | did | or | ||
308 | but 'twill not | | but | 'twill not | ||
310 | pro- | logue | Pro- | logue | ||
311 | poyson'd | poison'd | ||
312 | two-penny | two-pennie | ||
326 | him, | him | ||
327 | well-timberd | well timbred | ||
330 | said. . . . cup | saide. . . . cuppe | ||
331 | diamond | Diamond | ||
H3, p. 89 | 337 | mary | marie | |
342 | do' | do's | ||
344 | withall | with all | ||
345 | He | Hee | ||
346 | Man . . . humour: Sbloud | man . . . Humour: Sblood | ||
347 | humour hee . . . mee | Humour he . . . me | ||
348 | Gentles | Gentiles | ||
[350 | No | No (swash N)] | ||
351 | be thirsty | bee thirstie | ||
353 | play | Play | ||
354 | Cordatus? | Cordatus. | ||
356 | He | Hee | ||
363 | varietie | variety | ||
367 | he | hee | ||
368 | Atheistical | Atheisticall | ||
369 | hee'le ap- | peare | hee'le | | ||
I.i | 1 | Viri est | Viriest | |
[ferre (swash e) | ferre] | |||
2 | Stoique | Stoicke | ||
6 | every | everie | ||
7 | cor'sive | corr'sive |
There is one alteration in the original: "GREX." (following line 353) and "Act I. Scene I. | Macilente" are in some copies off center, to the left, but in other copies are centered.
H3v, p. 90 | Original | Corrected | Reset | |
14 | [My (swash M) | My (swash M) | My] | |
minde | minde | minde | ||
15 | hungrie . . . foode. | hungrie . . . foode. | hungry . . . food | |
21 | third, | third, | third | |
27 | eye-balls | eye-balls | eye-bals | |
34 | incutitq | incutitq | incutique | |
I.ii | 1 | Nay . . . Carlo | Nay . . . Carlo | Nay, . . . Carlo |
4 | (dropped) | Car. A . . . | Car. A . . . | |
resolution. | resolution. | |||
CW | Car | Sog | Sog. | |
H4, p. 91 | 6 | tay- | lors | tay- | lors | Tay- | ors |
20 | Sogliardo | Sogliardo | Sogliardo | |
21 | you | affect to be | you | affect to be | you affect | to bee | |
22 | qualities, | | qualities, | | qualities, hu- | mours | |
24 | signior | Signior | Signior | |
27 | me- | dicine | me- | dicine | medi- | cine | |
29 | you, and | you, and | you, & | |
32 | Macil. | Macil. | Maci. | |
39 | city | city | Citie | |
42 | trunks | trunks | trunkes | |
43 | conju- | rer . . . be | conju- | rer . . . be | con- | jurer . . . bee | |
44 | the spring | | the spring | | the | spring | |
45 | behaviour | in all: | behaviour | in all; | beha- | viour in all; | |
[49 | As | As | As (swash A)] | |
49 | are a | | are a | | are | a | |
52 | he . . . choose | he . . . choose | hee . . . chuse | |
53 | gentleman | gentleman | Gentleman | |
H4v, p. 92 | 59 | boot; | boot, | |
60 | else | as | else as | | ||
68 | city | citie | ||
69 | marchants | Merchants | ||
72 | suppe | sup | ||
73 | hire | a | hire a | | ||
74 | be | bee | ||
77 | kins- | man | kinsman | | ||
78 | there | (while | there (while | | ||
79 | enquiry . . . health, or | so) | enquirie . . . health, or so) one | | ||
80 | carry . . . breakes | it | carrie . . . breakes it up | | ||
81 | publikely | publikly | ||
82 | you | must | you must | | ||
83 | Mi- | stris | Mistresses | | ||
84 | hot | grace | hot grace | | ||
88 | this. | this: | ||
106 | policy | policie | ||
111 | credi- | tor | cre- | ditor | ||
115 | pliant | plyant | ||
118 | new-yeares | new-yeeres | ||
H5, p. 93 | 124 | tragedies | Tragedies | |
125 | Mary | Marie | ||
128 | feare, | feare | ||
130 | penny | pennie | ||
136 | lye | lie | ||
137 | [Mercuries] . . . me | [Mercuries (swash M)] . . . mee | ||
138 | they had | not | they | had |
146 | citie | Citie | ||
152 | Signior | signior | ||
153 | i'faith | if'aith | ||
160 | wild | wilde | ||
166 | al . . . straies | all . . . strayes | ||
169 | pitty | pittie | ||
H5v, p. 94 | 177 | Sir | sir | |
185 | tell | tel | ||
193 | ordinarie | ordinary | ||
194 | beene . . . readie | been . . . ready | ||
198 | well. . . . we | wel. . . . we | ||
205 | that. | that: | ||
212 | he | hee | ||
213 | chap- | falne | chop- | falne | ||
219 | he be | hee bee | ||
220 | him, | him. | ||
223 | and I, | | and | I, | ||
224, | citie, wee | . . . meet | citie, | we . . . meete | ||
H6, p. 95 | 225 | shun | shunne | |
229 | devill | divell | ||
I.iii. | 14 | yeere. . . . see, | year. . . . see | |
17 | xxi | xxj | ||
19 | xxvi | xxvj | ||
23 | xxxi. . . . S'lid | xxxj. . . . Slid | ||
24 | saies | he | sayes he | | ||
26 | here's . . . rogue, | her's . . . rogue. | ||
H6v, p. 96 | 35 | fortie | forty | |
38 | bee | be | ||
44 | daies | dayes | ||
61 | booke, | booke. | ||
63 | me | mee | ||
75 | skin | skinne |
In the original and corrected quire H, very often the lower case "w" is set with two "v"s, but almost always with the single "w" in the reset.
I3, p. 101 | II.i | Original | Reset | |
70 | be | bee | ||
80 | 'Fore | Fore | ||
85 | of an- | other | of | another | ||
86 | to your | | to | your | ||
91 | a ha- | bit | a | habit | ||
96 | lie | lye | ||
97 | muske-cat | musk-cat | ||
100 | sweetnesse | sweetnes | ||
106 | envy | this | en- | vy this | ||
107 | yfaith. How | | yfaith. | How | ||
115 | bounty | bountie | ||
CW | I | exceeding |
The last line of original I3, "I have heard this knight Pvntarvolo, reported to bee a gentleman of" is shifted in the reset to the top of I3v, where "gentleman" is altered to "Gentleman."
I3v, p. 102 | Original | Corrected | Reset | |
124 | hobby | hobby | hobbie | |
129 | he | he | hee | |
133 | he | he | hee | |
137 | hee | hee | he | |
139 | lady | lady | Lady | |
141 | gentleman | gentleman | Gentleman | |
145 | lady | lady | Ladie | |
150 | as | first, | as | first, | as first, | | |
151 | he has | his | he has | his | hee has his | | |
152 | shee . . . out, | and | shee . . . out, | and | she . . . out, and | | |
153 | hee . . . shee | hee . . . shee | he . . . she | |
154 | gentle- | men. | gentle- | men. | gentlemen. | | |
163 | saies | saies | sayes | |
166 | 1Saies | 1saies | 1saies | |
I4, p. 103 | 180 | pleasing | | pleasing | | pleasing ob- | |
object | object | ject | ||
II.ii | 2 | enclosed | enclosed | inclosed |
7 | above. | above! | above! | |
8 | eye | eye | eie | |
11 | retire | retire | retyre | |
36 | studied | studied | studyed | |
38 | play | play | Play | |
39 | e'en | e'en | e'ene | |
40 | edifice; | edifice! | edifice! | |
I4v, p. 104 | 46 | melancholy: | melancholy. | |
55 | 'Slud | Slud | ||
53 | twise | twice | ||
62 | beyond-sea | beyond-seas | ||
65 | back | backe | ||
68 | hee goes | to church | he goes to | Church | ||
71 | he | hee | ||
72 | capacity | capacitie | ||
74 | Shee | She | ||
77 | qua- | lified | quali- | fied | ||
89 | he does? | Looke, | hee does? Looke, | | ||
90 | on: | and | on: and the dogge | |
Notes
Gerritsen, rev. of Ben Jonson, ed. C. H. Herford and Percy and Evelyn Simpson, vols. IX — XI (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1950 — 52), English Studies 38 (1957), 121. All citations of Jonson are from this edition, 11 vols. (1925 — 52), referred to hereafter as H&S; i/j and u/v have been regularized to conform with modern practice. I am grateful to John Bidwell for his useful advice.
These succinct terms are those of W. W. Greg, in A Bibliography of the English Printed Drama to the Restoration (London: The Bibliographical Society, 1939 — 1959; rprt. 1970), III, 1071. For convenience, I shall use Greg's terminology where I can.
R. B. McKerrow and F. S. Ferguson, Title-page Borders used in England & Scotland, 1485 — 1640 (London: The Bibliographical Society, 1932). McKerrow and Ferguson, who do not note the Jonson title-pages, mistakenly cite for the first appearance of the compartment several of the subtitles in Stansby's "1617" printing of Hooker's Lawes of Ecclesiasticall Politie. Even though the Hooker subtitle for Book 5 bears the date "1616," it can be seen that the Jonson plays must have been printed earlier. The woodcut border sustained damage during its use; the crack "through the jewel at the foot on left" noticed by McKerrow and Ferguson (p. 177) began to appear as the in compartment title-page for Poëtaster was being machined.
I follow the spelling of Smithwicke as it appears on the title-pages instead of the more usual spelling of Smethwick or Smethwicke, as found in Herford and Simpson, Greg, and the New STC.
At one place in Epicoene ("sheet Yy [Act I and Act II up to scene ii, line 64]"), to account for sloppy printing in all three of the large-paper copies that they consulted, they offer the following conjecture: "The dislocation in sheet Yy must have occurred when the edition was being printed off and after Jonson had passed the proofs. It was probably due to an accident in the printing-house — for instance, to a workman dropping the formes. It was reset without consulting Jonson. What would he have said if he had discovered a copy in this state can be but faintly imagined" (V, 148 — 149). See, also, IX, 40.
Herford and Simpson also mistakenly assume that the reset page 84 (sig. G6v) appears only in large-paper copies (IX, 56).
"The Final Quires of the Jonson 1616 Workes: Headline Evidence," Studies in Bibliography, 40 (1987), 119. See, also, J. A. Riddell, "The Concluding Pages of the Jonson Folio of 1616," SB 47 (1994), 147 — 154. Gerritsen has noticed several large-paper sheets in Every Man Out with the original settings (p. 54 in "Stansby and Jonson Produce a Folio," English Studies, 40 [1959], 52 — 55).
As Stansby's men, like others, used swash and "normal" italic letters indifferently, it seems most likely that those letters were distributed into the same compartments. McKerrow notes that "these swash letters, whatever may have been their original purpose, seem to have been used at all times absolutely interchangeably with the plain letters in all positions." He also notes that such use itself may be of interest in bibliographical investigation (R. B. McKerrow, Introduction to Bibliography for Literary Students [Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1927; 2nd impr., corrected 1928], p. 296). For a few more examples (on one page) in the Jonson Folio see: the penultimate line in the Prologue for Epicoene (sig. 2Yv, original and reset), the plain and swash "M" in "Muse"; two lines further on the same page, the plain and swash "A" in "Another"; fifteen lines further on the same page, the plain and swash "A" in "Act" (that the plain and swash letters were used indifferently can also be inferred from the fact that on both the original and the reset page there is one plain "A" and one swash, that is, they were merely exchanged between "Another" and "Act" in the reset). Throughout the volume swash and plain varieties of "A" are used willy-nilly in the word "Act." See, also, the discussion of swash and plain "M" in the final pages of the plays, below.
The textual apparatus for Every Man Out is silent on the matter; the "it is" for "'tis" which appears in the reset variant is ascribed in the apparatus only to the 1640 and 1692 Folios. The "it is" of the reset variant is recorded in the "Textual Survey" (IX, 56), where the implication is that only large-paper copies had the reset G6v sheet. In fact, it appears also in a number of small-paper copies.
A greater bibliographer could make the same mistake. Jackson incorrectly identified the Elizabethan Club (Dent-Gott) copy as being large-paper (William A. Jackson, The Carl H. Pforzheimer Library, English Literature, 1475 — 1700, 3 vols. [New York: (The Merrill Press), 1940], II, 573, n.). Large-paper copies can most easily be identified by watermark. So far as I am aware, there is only one kind of watermark in the large-paper copies; it is characterized by a shield with three lions. I have briefly discussed this topic on pages 152 — 153 in "The Concluding Pages of the Jonson Folio of 1616."
Oxford: Oxford Univ. Press, 1932, pp. 6 — 7. That it is the copy that Herford and Simpson consulted, see H&S, IX, 40.
Ford does not say how he measured the width of the page. He gives the width of the Grenville large-paper copy as 8 ⅖” and the Douce as 7 ¼”; I make them to be no more than 8 ¼” and 7”. After this article was completed, the Huntington Library was given by Mr. Kendrick Schlatter a collection of books that included 1616 — 1640 Jonson Folios, with the following in pencil on the free endpaper of the first volume: "Note these two volumes are | those chiefly mentioned in | Collation of the Ben Jonson Folios | 1616 — 31 — 40 — — Oxford 1932 — — | By H L Ford." The first of these is the volume that Ford calls his "premier copy," and an inspection of it reveals his method of measuring. He measured the vertical dimension off of a page (11 ⅛”); he measured the horizontal along the inside cover from the back of the spine to the front edge of the cover (7 ⁷⁄₁₆”). The volume is printed, as I had supposed, on small paper stock. There is confirmation that the volumes are those owned by Ford from the text of Vol. II. The "trial title-page" for Bartholmew Fayre, as described and illustrated by Herford and Simpson (VI, 4 and 9) is that present in the Schlatter set. Herford and Simpson identify the photo illustration on page 9 as coming from Ford's copy. The Schlatter copy is identical, including a distinctive small ink mark below the left-hand side of the epigraph and a smudge below the right-hand side.
Huntington, 12 ⅝”; Clark, 12 ⅜”; Grenville (British Library), 12 ¾” (as noted by Ford [I measure it as 12 ⅝”]); Crocker, 13 ¼” (as noted by Jackson).
Greg's four title-pages and my six are reconciled thus: Greg makes no distinction between (3) and (4), but he does note a "variant: without Hor. in the margin," without attempting to account for it. He makes no distinction between (2) and (6).
On the other hand, a copy at the Folger (shelfmark 14751, copy 3) can boast two, one in compartment and an (added) plain.
At the William A. Clark Library (shelf-mark PR 2600 / 1616), Harvard (Widener 60 — 1116), and Beinecke (1978 / +50).
Why Smithwicke's (or Smethwick's) name should appear at all is not clear, for as Greg notes, he "had no traceable interest" in the play (III, 1072).
The accounting of Herford and Simpson is, of course, only partial: "A minor variant is the omission of 'Hor.' in both forms of the title-page, its insertion in the right margin in some copies [i. e., number (4)], and the centering of it above the quotation in the large-paper copies [i. e., number (6)]" (IX, 20, n. 2).
For a chart of the distribution of the skeletons and a description of the alteration, see Appendix I.
Some "mysterious resettings [on T2.5, 2X1.6, 3A1.6, and 3T1.6] made after the Folio had been published," perhaps about 1640, as suggested by Herford and Simpson (IX, 40), apparently do not bear on the present argument. It should be mentioned that all of these "mysterious resettings" derive from only one source, the "mysterious" Ford "A" copy. Gerritsen adds to the "reset" sheets of the Oxford editors Q3.4, 2M1.6, and 3L3.4, but thinks that all were printed much earlier than 1640 ("Stansby and Jonson Produce a Folio," p. 55). Whatever reset sheets there may be other than those for quires G and H and I3.4, they would have been reset for some reason other than enlarging the press-run.
Most likely the entire imprint was newly composed. These are the distinctive qualities that I could identify.
Except in two sheets (of a possible sixty-six) the misshapen watermarks do not appear in Epigrammes until about half way through the printing of that section, but after that they appear with great frequency.
It seems to have lasted through about ten or twelve percent of the press-run. Of twenty-seven copies that I have recently examined, including three large-paper, three (all small-paper) have the comma present.
It may well be that other small bits of type were left standing, for instance, "A Comœdie," as it appears on the title-pages of Epicoene and Every Man In, but in most cases the type is so regular that one cannot be sure.
I have not detected any variants in these final pages, and none is noticed by Herford and Simpson.
The page number is set within parentheses, between rules, in the center of the page. Such page numbers appear on all final pages of plays after Every Man Out.
R. B. Parker finds the ligature in three of the forty copies of the Folio that he collated for his Revels edition of Volpone (1983, p. 357). He also notes that Dr. Gerritsen had seen eight copies with it; I have seen it in two copies of twenty seven that I have recently examined. Parker calls it "State 3," although it should be considered to be the first of two states. Parker's "State 2" (with "Como die," missing the medial "e") is simply an error, one which I think I must have introduced when I corresponded with Professor Parker as he was working on his edition, some twenty years ago.
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