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IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY ONE ECONOMY practised in the publishing of cheap play quartos was the use of job lots of paper. These papers usually originated in France and varied somewhat in thickness, texture, and watermarks. As a result of their use, many quartos contain several different watermarks, and some almost as many different watermarks as sheets.[1] Often individual sheets vary in watermarks from copy to copy. It is obvious that such varying watermarks may prove a source of information as to the manner in which a book went through the press. Despite inherent ambiguities, they promise support to the evidence supplied by press corrections, headlines, and the early treatise by Joseph Moxon toward the solution of bibliographical problems.
This article is intended as a preliminary enquiry into the significance of job-lot or variant watermarks. The evidence and illustrations are drawn mainly from a group of play-quartos printed by Thomas Cotes in the spring of 1639/40. Though studies of the papers of other printers are needed for correlation, the present investigation appears already to yield useful inferences and methods.
The examination of watermarks is no easy task. The microfilm facilitates the collation of typographical variants from all over the world, but seldom suggests the presence of even a blatant watermark. If the bibliographer wishes to compare the paper in a number of copies, he must examine them at Bodley, Folger, and Huntington, or wherever they may be; and exact comparison suggests the advantage of carrying his own copy about as a basis of reference. Often it may not be possible to draw clear inferences from fewer than five or ten copies. In quartos the watermarks occur within the fold at the spine, and may be further obscured by sewing and close binding. When small they may be difficult to make out at all; and even when they are large and sprawling they may be difficult to describe well enough for sure recognition when one meets them again.[2] The initials on pots, the quarterings on shields, or the number of grapes on a stem may be hard to decipher. However, many watermarks are sufficiently distinguishable without such details. Gradually as one works from copy to copy the patterns of watermarks in an edition emerge and take on an appearance of significance.
The most interesting set of job-lot watermarks that I have encountered occurs in a group of seven play quartos printed by Thomas Cotes (successor to the Jaggards) in or about February-March-April 1639/40. They consist of two plays of Fletcher, Wit without Money (1639) and The Night-Walker (1640), printed for Andrew Crooke and William Cooke, and five of Shirley, two, The Maides Revenge (1639) and The Humorous Courtier (1640), printed for Cooke alone, two, The Coronation and The Opportunitie (both 1640), printed for Crooke and Cooke, and one, Loves Crueltie (1640), printed for Crooke alone.[3] I began the study of
I noted that Cotes printed two other plays in 1640: Chamberlain's The Swaggering Damsell, for Andrew Crooke, and Habington's The Queene of Arragon, for William Cooke. The first is a quarto containing seven of the watermarks found in the Fletcher-Shirley group, and The Queene of Arragon is a small folio which luckily exhibits three (at least) of the same watermarks —in the center of the page. As these two plays were entered on 2 April 1640,[5] while Cotes was seeing the Fletcher-Shirley quartos through the press, it is likely that he went on with the new work for Crooke and Cooke and completed the Chamberlain and Habington plays by May or June.[6]
I have attempted no complete study of these nine Cotes plays in terms of compositors, headlines, press corrections, and watermarks. There might never be time for that. But I have gathered data on all and have made a detailed study of one important quarto, The Opportunitie. I have examined twenty copies of this play for press corrections and twelve copies for watermarks. A full collation of eight copies and a partial collation of others has revealed corrections in just five formes: inner and outer C, outer F, inner G, and inner K. Several of those in outer C and outer F bespeak a corrector of intelligence and resource, but those in the other formes are mechanical and
Forme | Literal | Punctuational | Literary | Uncorrected copies | % |
C(i) | 5 | 3 | 1 | 10 ex 20 | 50 |
C(o) | 3 | 7 | 4 | 3 " " | 15 |
F(o) | 0 | 5 | 2 | 7 " " | 35 |
G(i) | 5 | 9 | 0 | 1 " " | 5 |
K(i) | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 " " | 5 |
The table shows the number and frequency of corrections for each forme. If the sample is a fair one, we have indications that half the edition sheet of inner C was run before corrections were made, amounting to nine small changes. Corrections were also made in the outer forme, somewhat sooner in its run, apparently when the reader discovered blunders in the sense. One suspects there had been earlier corrections when the compositor looked over his type or preliminary proofs were taken. In outer F a good third of the sheets remained uncorrected. But of inner G and of inner K only single uncorrected copies have come to light. Their rarity suggests the possible existence of other uncorrected (inner) formes.
Study of the headlines in The Opportunitie reveals two distinct skeletons. These show regular and normal transference from forme to forme, except for interchanges of formes at four points and turns of skeleton X at inner E and inner K. This is the pattern of the two skeletons:
Skeleton X: | B(i) | C(o) | D(o) | E(i)t | F(o) | G(o) | H(i) | I(i) | K(i)t |
Skeleton Y: | B(o) | C(i) | D(i) | E(o) | F(i) | G(i) | H(o) | I(o) | K(o) |
Judging from the treatment of speech prefixes and spellings, the early sheets were set by two compositors, but from about
With these bibliographical features of the quarto in mind, we turn to the watermarks in The Opportunitie. There seem to be seven. The accompanying table shows their distribution in the twelve copies examined, together with the incidence of corrections in these copies. The pot watermark common to sheets B and C is a one-handled pot surmounted by fleuron and crescent; its bowl, measuring 19 mm. across, bears the letters Gro -- probably indicating manufacture by the Rousel family in France.[9] One copy in sheet B has a slightly larger pot with two slender handles and a round bowl of 22 mm., bearing a fleurde-lis.[10] The characteristic mark of sheets B to F is the very Christian symbol IHS with cross mounted on the bar of the H;[11] it measures 36 x 36 mm.[12] Associated with this paper (in the same edition sheets) is one showing a small bird (45 x 27 mm.) with pointed head, wings outstretched, and tail fanned out: I find nothing like it in Briquet, Bofarull,[13] or Nicolaï.[14]
ICU | DFo1 | DFo2 | DFo3 | MH1 | MH2 | |
A | ......d | ......d | Grapesn | Grapesn | ......d | Grapesd |
B | Pot-fl | Pot | Pot | IHS | IHS | IHS |
C | Birdc c | Potu u | Potc u | Potc u | Potu u | IHSc c |
D | IHS | Bird | Spray | IHS | IHS | Bird |
E | IHS | IHS | IHS | Bird | Bird | IHS |
F | IHSc | IHSc | IHSc | IHSu | IHSu | Birdc |
G | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc |
H | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
I | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
K | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc |
DLC1 | DLC2 | NNP | ICN | IEN | S | |
A | Grapesd | Grapesn | Grapesd | Grapesn | Grapesd | [Missing] |
B | IHS | Pot | IHS | IHS | Pot | Pot |
C | IHSc c | Birdc c | Potc u | IHSc c | Birdc c | Potu u |
D | Spray | IHS | IHS | Bird | IHS | IHS |
E | IHS | Bird | IHS | IHS | IHS | Bird |
F | IHSu | IHSc | IHSu | IHSc | Birdc | IHSc |
G | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc |
H | Grapes | Grown/GP | Crown/GP | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
I | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
K | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc | Grapesc |
Collation: A2 B-K4. Copies: Chicago, Folger (3), Harvard (2), Library of Congress (2), Morgan, Newberry, Northwestern, Stevenson. Abbreviations: d dated, n not dated, u uncorrected and c corrected (superscript if outer forme, subscript if inner forme), fl fleur-de-lis.
The watermarks in The Opportunitie fall into three main groups: pots, IHS-birds, and grapes. There is a certain orderliness in their distribution. Though the marks in various Caroline plays give the impression of chaos,[20] here in a dozen copies we are aware of balance and continuity—a record of presswork in palimpsest form. The striking feature of sheet B is the equal
The distribution we have observed bears substantial implications for the size of the edition and for the order of the formes through the press. The first is the easier to see. The edition was probably one of 1500 copies. This quantity best satisfies both the distribution ratios and the external evidence.[23] If we adopt the working assumption that each watermark in the
An edition of 1500 fits with other evidence and considerations. (1) The Opportunitie was made up in three lots, with variant imprints: the main lot for Crooke and Cooke, a smaller one for Crooke alone, and a few copies for sale in Dublin. (2) I have located thirty-six copies in libraries and a dozen others in sale or auction catalogs. Thus the edition was clearly one of some size. (3) Shirley was a popular dramatist in his time and also liked on the Restoration stage; yet Andrew Crooke found it unnecessary to reprint any of Shirley's plays in which he had rights.[24] (4) The Stationers' Company had long permitted editions of 1250 and 1500, and the number had been increased to 1500 and 2000 in 1635.[25] In July 1639 the Company specifically gave John Benson "leaue to print an
Before taking up the problem of the order of the formes through the press, we should know the number of presses available. The Cotes establishment was an important one and must have operated at least two presses. The Jaggards had had two in their day. Mr. Willoughby has shown that their output for 1619-1623 averaged more than four hundred edition sheets a year, far more than one press would be able to handle.[29] Thomas and Richard Cotes, their successors, carried on a business of similar size.[30] And in 1637 a Star Chamber decree allowed the master printers, Thomas Cotes among them, two presses, or, rather, no more than two presses.[31] As this act seems not to have been closely enforced,[32] we need to allow for the possibility that Cotes had a third press, possibly some worn relic of Jaggard days, useful mainly for proofing[33] and for printing
Thus the resources of the Cotes shop in the Barbican allowed a choice between one press and two presses for the printing of a quarto. The nature of the work, as well as the habits of the shop, would ordinarily decide the question. In general, two presses (printing simultaneously or in relay) might be employed when a single job was in hand or when a certain book was given priority over others; and one press for each might be used when two books were in process and full use needed to be made of workmen, type, and presses. By allocating each quarto to separate compositors and pressmen and a single press, a master printer might reasonably expect that work on two plays would go forward simultaneously without confusion of formes or printed sheets. Circumstances would modify practice, of course, but a system of alternating the work on two presses between two books would have been no system at all. These considerations imply that The Opportunitie, as one of a series of play-quartos, would normally be printed on a single press.
For clues as to Cotes's method of handling such quartos, let us turn to the watermarks in The Night-Walker and The Coronation, their marks being much like those in The Opportunitie. The accompanying table shows the distribution in a few copies of these plays. The Night-Walker has six watermarks in common with The Opportunitie: pot-G/RO, pot-fleur-de-lis, IHS, bird, spray, grapes, plus two others, a lion on a shield and a belt encircling a quartered shield. The distribution looks a little
ICU | DFo1 | DFo2 | ICN | PU | |
A | Pot-fl | ...... | IHS | Pot-fl | ...... |
B | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
C | Belt | Bird | Bird | Spray | Bird |
D | Lion | Bird | Belt | Lion | Bird |
E | Pot-fl | IHS | IHS | IHS | ? |
F | Belt | Pot-fl | Pot-fl | IHS | Pot-fl |
G | IHS | Pot-fl | Pot-fl | IHS | Pot-fl |
H | Pot-fl | IHS | IHS | Pot-fl | IHS |
I | IHS | Belt | IHS | Bird | IHS |
K | Belt | IHS | Pot-?/RO | Belt | Spray |
Collation: A2 B-K4. Copies: Chicago, Folger (DFo2 Inderwick), Newberry, Pennsylvania. Abbreviation: fl fleur-de-lis.
ICU | DFo | DLC | ICN | S | |
A | Grapes | ...... | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
B | Bird | Grapes | Grapes | Belt | Belt |
C | IHS | Bird | Belt | IHS | IHS |
D | IHS | Bird | Grapes | IHS | IHS |
E | Grapes | Bird | IHS | Grapes | Bird |
F | Belt | Grapes? | Grapes | Crown/GP | Grapes? |
G | Grapes? | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
H | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes |
I | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes | Grapes? | Grown/GP |
K | Grapes | Grapes? | Grapes? | ...... | ...... |
division among three, as lion twice with bird and belt in sheet D,
and IHS thrice with the same pair in sheet I. Without further
evidence we cannot say whether such distributions are
characteristic of the use of two presses. The case of The
Coronation is clearer. With just two to five watermarks to a
copy, it has four in common with The Opportunitie: IHS,
bird, grapes, and crown/GP, plus the belt mark found in The
Night-Walker. Their relatively simple pattern is surprisingly
like that of The Opportunitie. There is the same general
progression from IHS-bird to grape papers, except that The
Coronation reached the run of grape paper at F, one sheet
behind The Opportunitie.[36] In
sheets B and C of The Coronation the belt paper occupies
more or less the place of the pot-G/RO paper. The IHS paper
continues commoner than the associated bird paper. And again the
crown paper occurs sporadically
among the reams of grapes.
The inference is inescapable: The Coronation was going through the press at very nearly the same time as The Opportunitie.[37] Placed side by side, the tables tell a similar story of moving from IHS and associated papers into a long run of grape paper. The simplest explanation is that the two plays were being printed on separate presses fed by the same job-lot supply of paper. There is again the contrary suggestion of more than one press in the use of three papers in sheets B to F of The Coronation, but just such a mixture of papers may have come from the stockroom. The very differences in the two sets of watermarks support the hypothesis of separate presses. During the printing of sheets B and C of these plays press 1 was supplied with several reams of pot paper, and press 2 with a similar amount of belt paper. At sheet F, press 2 (printing The Coronation) came upon a little more belt paper, possibly a remainder from its earlier use. The spray paper occurs only in The Opportunitie. And only in The Coronation does the grape paper turn up
That this is probably the right view, at least for the latter two-thirds of The Opportunitie, is attested by the apparent fact of a single compositor there. When composition must keep up with two presses, we may expect to find alternate setting by two compositors. But when a single press undertakes an edition of 1250 or 1500, one compositor should be able to keep up with its demands.[39] Though there are signs of two compositors in the first third of the play, particularly in sheet C, for the present it is safer to assume a single press there, too.
Now we can attempt to plot the order of the formes through the press, using what we know of compositors, headlines, corrections, the edition size, the presses available—and the papers laid out. As some of the evidence is itself inferential and limited by the number of copies examined, and as the patterns of the watermarks are under consideration as new evidence, we need rather to explore the more likely methods of presswork than grasp at conclusions. However, the new material considerably extends the range of enquiry and perhaps leads us close to right answers.
For the present we assume that 1500 copies of The Opportunitie were printed on a single press.
Sheet B has been composed. Skeleton X has been made up and placed about its inner forme, and skeleton Y made up (with an ornament at the head of the first page of text) and placed about its outer forme. Whichever forme went first on the press might be a matter of chance if B4v was composed before the press was made ready or if preliminary proofs were taken before presswork began. Though there is some reason to think the
There is, however, a better explanation of this shift. It lies in the pattern of the headlines through the quarto. As we have noted, there is a shift of skeletons not only after B, but likewise after D (with a turn of skeleton X), after E, and after G; and between I and K—though there is no shift—skeleton X is turned to starting position. Thus we find a rhythm of alternate sheets, except for a change of accent or quickening of tempo at sheet E.[41] I have an idea that the correct explanation is that which Mr. Bowers has recently found for a similar phenomenon in the Pide Bull Lear: a shift means the end of a day's labor, or
Then what precisely caused the shifts? Probably the habits of certain compositors in the shop of Thomas Cotes. If the compositor preferred to wait till the end of the day to distribute type,[44] at the end of any third day he would have on his workbench both formes of the sheet finished that day. If he placed the second forme on the bench below the first, pushing the first up and out of the way, the second forme (last off the press) would of course be the nearer one to him when he began distributing. And in this situation he would naturally attend to the nearer forme first. If in stripping this forme he placed its skeleton around the next forme designed for the press, and was consistent in the forme he sent first to press, he would bring about the sort of shift of skeleton that occurred four times during the printing of the play. The twice-turning of skeleton X might come from setting the forme down elsewhere before finding room for it on the bench. And the omission of a shift between sheets I and K may have been due to the nature of K,
We now return to the presswork on the early sheets, better able to imagine how they were handled. We see that the inner forme of sheet B may after all have been first on the press if the completion of work on the sheet coincided with the end of a day. If so, presswork must have commenced sometime during the previous day. Actually the shift may have come about either through beginning printing with the outer forme or beginning distribution with the second forme at the end of the day, though the sequence of shifts favors the latter view. In either case, we assume that the pressman began printing on IHS paper and after about 750 sheets went on to the first tokens of pot paper. If work commenced around noon, about mid-morning of the second day he would turn the pile and, the work moving smoothly, perfect the whole of it before going home to supper. And in the meantime sheet C would have been composed.
Sheet C is unusually interesting because of the close correspondence between its variations in text and paper. The chances are that the printing of this sheet began on a morning with the inner forme (and skeleton Y) on the press. The priority of the inner forme is particularly suggested by the fact that fifty per cent of the exemplars are uncorrected—that half the white paper was printed before the corrector arrived—whereas outer C received corrections after about 15 per cent of its pulls. The pressman, continuing with the pot paper used in B, began in the middle of a ream of it and finished three tokens before pausing for corrections and then going on to a fresh supply of IHS (and bird) paper, on which he impressed the whole of the corrected state. After thus taking 750 pulls of each state, by mid-afternoon he would be ready to turn the pile of printed sheets
However, there is a modification of this method which would make more efficient use of the pressman's time and such evidence as the relative quantities of uncorrected pulls for the two formes. It is odd that half the pulls of inner C should be uncorrected and a third of these backed with uncorrected pulls of the outer forme—when only three later formes exhibit corrections, and these with normal percentages in different sheets. But, as will be seen presently, sheet C must have been printed around Easter; and on the morning of Easter Even or Easter Monday Tom Cotes or the corrector might come to the printing-house late. Now then. The pressman, while printing the three tokens of uncorrected inner C, may have become aware of the need of corrections and decided not to go beyond the mid-point of the run without them. He had a heap of 750 sheets and had exhausted the supply of pot paper. Having proceeded so far, he might turn the heap, substitute the outer forme on the bed of the press, and begin printing with little fear of smudging. By noon he would have perfected about a token (one third) of
I am led to this inference not merely by the three to one ratio of uncorrected pulls and the neatness of the hypothesis but by the presence of "literary" corrections in these formes, perhaps one in inner C and four in outer C.[49] After study of the variant and invariant formes in several quartos, I am of the opinion that Cotes's formes commonly received cursory correction before printing commenced,[50] and I consider such corrections as those in outer C and outer F, and possibly those in inner C, true stop-press corrections, the second sets of corrections made in those formes. Obviously, second corrections would be made only where first corrections proved insufficient from the point of view of printer's style or reader's sense. There is no way of knowing whether both uncorrected states of sheet C were printed ahead of the corrected states, but this method accords precisely with the evidence. In the afternoon the pressman would go ahead with the corrected formes, presumably first printing the second half of the run of inner C, on IHS and bird papers, and then, towards the end of the day, perfecting about one token with corrected outer C. As before, he would finish perfecting the edition sheet the next morning.
There is less evidence as to the manner of printing the sheets that followed C, but what there is fits the hypothesis of 1500 copies printed on a single press at the rate of one edition sheet in a day and a half.
If the perfecting of sheet C was completed on a morning, the press could begin printing the white paper of sheet D in the afternoon. No late corrections were made,[51] and the sequence of the three watermarks is doubtful.[52] Assuming normal procedure, with the inner forme on the press first and printing the whole run of paper before the exchange of formes, we may suppose that 1000 sheets were printed in the afternoon, that perfecting began about the middle of the next morning, that the sheet was completed by evening. At this point comes the second shift of skeletons—and the turning of skeleton X.
Sheet E is an anomaly, for a third shift of skeletons occurs between it and the following sheet. There are indications of a change of compositors, perhaps in the midst of E1r.[53] There are no variants, and the watermarks imply an orderly run of two reams of IHS paper and one ream of bird paper. We may imagine some sort of delay, due to holidays, the change in compositors, or the need of the press for other work.[54] The delay may have been half a day or as much as a day and a half. At any rate, it is convenient to suppose that the printing of this sheet began about noon of one day and ended at the close of the next. For at this point comes the third shift in skeletons.
Continuing our hypothetical schedule, we find particular support for it in the corrections of outer F. If the printing of inner F (invariant) took the usual three-fourths of a day, the press would have time to perfect 500 sheets in the late afternoon.
At this point the change to grape paper took place. There is nothing to suggest a delay, for the new paper was probably laid out and dampened the night before. Our alternating schedule starts the printing of sheet G in an afternoon. If inner G went on the press first, either several proofs were taken or else printing proceeded while the proofs were being read. For this time the fourteen corrections include five literal changes, nine punctuation additions or substitutions, and no alterations of verbal sense. It was a quick job, or one done at lunchtime: only a few uncorrected quires can have been printed, for just one uncorrected copy has come to light. As this copy has a grape watermark,[56] apparently the whole edition sheet is so marked. On the second day of grape paper the heap would be ready to turn by mid-morning, and perfecting could be completed by night. The fourth shift of skeletons took place here.
Sheets H and I involve no problems and may be assigned to the third, fourth, and fifth days of grape paper. The two crown/ GP watermarks among the twelve exemplars in H may be a good clue to the source of the grape paper, but they seem to tell us nothing about presswork.
The imposition of sheet K was accompanied by no shift of
With the nine edition sheets of text out of the way, the press would proceed to the preliminaries, half-sheet A. At about this time Shirley, on arriving from Ireland, visited the printing-house, and penned his dedication to Captain Richard Owen.[58] In it he tells us he found The Opportunitie "emergent from the Presse, and prepar'd to seeke entertainment abroad." If there was no delay, this dedication as well as the title-page should have been in type by the morning on which the last sheets of K were perfected, and the greater part of the required half-sheets might be wrought off the same day. The most likely treatment would be imposition in a single forme[59] and printing by the print-and-turn method.[60] That is, the forme would be made up of the title (A1r), a blank (A1v), the dedication (A2r), and "The Actors Names" (A2v), arranged clockwise in the chase, with the title at lower left (or upper right); and as usual the sheets would be turned endwise for perfecting by the same forme.[61]
Now, the matter is complicated by variant imprints and a curious distribution of watermarks. Three lots were made up for the publishers: (1) the main one for Crooke and Cooke, dated 1640; (2) a smaller one for Crooke alone, not dated; and (3) a few copies for Crooke to sell in Dublin, dated 1640. These states exist in percentages of approximately 58, 40, and 2.[62] The watermark table shows state 1 fairly equally divided between watermarked and unwatermarked ends, but state 2 printed only on watermarked ends. Of five copies of this state examined,[63] five are watermarked with grapes, none unwatermarked. (State 3 is the unique Kemble-Devonshire-Huntington copy and is mounted so as to obscure watermarks.) The explanation of this distribution does not seem easy, particularly as we do not know how consistently watermarked ends were arranged in a ream. It probably would be easier for a paper maker to gather sheets consistently, and the run of watermarks in certain folio and quarto sheets seems uniform, but little is known about the point. In the present half-sheet we must assume either a freakish distribution or a fairly consistent arrangement of the sheets on which the undated state was printed.
A possible explanation, offered tentatively, is this. The pressman printed the complete run of the main state,[64] say 875 copies (three and a half tokens), before turning the heap and perfecting with states 2 and 3. If the title fell on unwatermarked ends during the first ream and on watermarked ends during the rest of the run, the ratio of blanks to marks for state 1 would be
Thus far we have assumed that The Opportunitie was printed wholly on a single press. We need now to explore briefly the possibility that a few of the early sheets were printed instead on two presses. Reasons for making allowance for this possibility include: (1) the neat division between pot and other watermarks in sheets B and C; (2) the evidence of two compositors in C, suggesting rapid composition; (3) the three to one ratio of uncorrected pulls in the two formes of C, suggesting a lag
The equal balance between pot and IHS watermarks in sheet B urges the idea of simultaneous printing on two presses. Simultaneous printing would seem a natural method for machining the first sheet of a play, if two presses were available.[69] Press 1 (say) might begin with the inner forme (skeleton X) and print a ream and a half of pot paper, while press 2 would take the outer forme (skeleton Y) and print a similar amount of IHS paper. At this point the pressmen would exchange heaps and begin to perfect each other's work. The first man through would provide the first forme on of the next sheet; and this in itself might cause such a shift in skeletons as that between B and C.
At this stage single-press printing might begin, or both presses might continue. However, sheet C cannot have been printed simultaneously, for the uncorrected states are found back to back. The relay system might be used—that in which one press prints and the other perfects.[70] Following this method, we may suppose that press 1 would continue with pot paper, using up the second ream and a half of it before pausing for corrections. When they arrived, it probably would go on to impress the corrected inner state on IHS and bird paper. In that case press 2 might follow after a ream or so with the uncorrected state of outer C.[71] An advantage of this procedure is that press
The apparently balanced distribution of papers in sheet C suggests an interesting variation. After press 1 had printed the three tokens of pot paper, it could receive the outer forme and begin perfecting. In the meantime inner C, now corrected, might find press 2 idle and use it for printing the second half of the edition sheet, on IHS and bird paper laid out for that press. Press 1 after perfecting a token would need to stop for corrections, about midday. It might end in perfecting the sheets printed by both presses.
Whatever the system used to print sheet D, it looks as if perfecting was completed at the end of a day, when a shift of skeletons took place. The time needed for relay printing is not easy to reckon, but two presses could handle an edition-sheet of 1500 in one day if the second press followed the first by two or three tokens. In the meantime, however, the first press would be able to go on to new work.
The uncertainties are too many in view of our little acquaintance with two-press work and the meanings of watermarks. At present the best evidence in favor of the use of two presses in any sheet of The Opportunitie seems to be that of two compositors at work on sheet C—where there might be the need of keeping up with two presses turning out sheet B. Actually, the intrusive compositor seems to have set just two pages of C, and there might be various reasons for his appearance. If we could assign a single two-press method to sheets B, C, D, the idea of two presses would be more attractive. Or if the pot paper of B and C extended into D, we might accept two-press printing for B and C. However, so neatly does the one-press hypothesis fit with the meaning suggested for the skeleton
There remains the question of the approximate period during which The Opportunitie was put through the press. We have a fairly definite terminus ad quem. After some three years in Ireland, Shirley returned to England in mid-April 1640.[72] He must have reached London about Monday, April 20.[73] As he found his play "emergent from the Preffe, and prepar'd to feeke entertainment abroad," we may take it that sheets B to K were then printed and ready, or sheet K was coming from the press. Reckoning back in terms of 1500 copies, a single press, and the skeleton shifts, we can make a schedule with tentative dates. It starts on April Fool's day and need not be taken as revelation.
April 1, 2, 4 (Wed.-Sat. of Holy Week). Sheet B composed and printed. A compositor would set about six pages on the first day,[74] and printing might begin late on the morning of the 2nd. If the pressman did not labor on Good Friday, but worked all day Saturday, he would finish perfecting the sheet by that evening; and the first skeleton shift would come at the end of a week. Meanwhile, sheet C would be composed, one compositor setting two pages on Thursday afternoon (say) and another the remaining six on Saturday.
April 6-11 (Easter week). Sheets C, D, E printed; C and D on the first three days, E after a delay (of uncertain length) on Friday-Saturday. The late corrections in inner C may be due to
April 13-18 (Mon.-Sat.). Sheets F, G, H, I printed. If inner F was printed first and outer F was the perfecting forme, corrections must have been made between days after a ream of uncorrected pulls. The press handled a normal week's run of four edition-sheets. At the end of the week skeleton X got turned again.
April 20-22 (Mon.-Wed.). Sheet K and half-sheet A printed. Shirley came to the printing-house on Monday or Tuesday and wrote the dedication to Captain Owen. If there were no delay, the half-sheet might be printed on Tuesday afternoon and perfected on Wednesday morning. Gathering into copies might take place later the same day.
Though there is no way to check the details of this schedule, the general idea in it seems right enough, and the imagined sequence is instructive. We realize that one press would take nearly three weeks to produce an edition of 1500 copies. We note that Easter may have contributed to the irregularities of sheet C. The shifts and turns of skeleton suggest reasonable allocations of work to particular days and weeks. And through analogy we can measure the amount of time Cotes took to print The Coronation, and perhaps the whole series of 1639/40 Fletcher-Shirley quartos.
We can now cast up accounts. Study of the variant watermarks[75] in The Opportunitie has enabled us to draw several useful inferences: (1) It was printed in an edition of 1500 copies. (2) It was produced mainly or wholly on a single press parallel with The Coronation. (3) Late corrections, when made, occurred between
Similar study of other play quartos, and indeed books of various formats, dates, and printers, should improve the quality of such inferences, and should throw light on two-press work and other procedures of the printing-house. One weakness of watermarks as evidence is their inherent ambiguity. And they lend themselves to subtleties and complications. Clearly, he who looks for meaning in their permutations needs to temper ingenuity with calm common sense. Bibliographers who fear madness may prefer to let them alone.
There are, however, some simple uses of variant watermarks that may help to preserve sanity. I mention three.
First, an obvious point. Everyone knows that in first editions the preliminaries were commonly printed last, but everyone cannot readily demonstrate the fact. A glance at the tables of watermarks found in The Opportunitie and The Coronation is enough to assure oneself that half-sheet A of both these plays was printed at least among the last. However, the continuity of watermarks is sometimes lacking, as in Loves Crueltie and The Night-Walker; and in such cases there may have been a delay in printing the preliminary half-sheet.
The second point presents a useful corollary. As press corrections are ever a highly important source of evidence as to what an author wrote, we need aids in searching them out. Variant watermarks are such an aid. After the investigator has listed the watermarks in several copies of a book, he will sometimes find such a contrast between papers as we have noted in sheets C and F of The Opportunitie. In these cases he may well suspect variants and begin collation in sheets with two contrasting marks. Naturally, he will not always find variants: collation of sheet B of The Opportunitie in terms of pot and IHS papers yields none; yet collation of the same papers
The principle is simply this: Since textual variants sometimes occur on contrasting papers, one should collate formes printed on such papers first. To this may be added: Since composition of pages in normal order favored a custom of sending the inner forme to press first and the first forme might wait some time for corrections,[76] one should collate inner formes first, at least in two-skeleton printing.
My first attempts to apply the principle were instructive. Noting that my copy of The Coronation differed from the University of Chicago copy in watermarks in several sheets, I collated these sheets—and found no variants. Then I realized that only in sheet E were the contrasting marks (bird and grapes) representative, so far as I could tell from five copies. Next I compared the Inderwick-Folger copy of The Night-Walker (using a microfilm) with the Newberry copy. The first two sheets I tried yielded variants. Sheet C, with bird and spray marks, proved variant in its inner forme. Sheet G, with pot and IHS marks, proved variant in its outer forme. Testing farther, I listed the watermarks in three copies of A Pastorall Called the Arcadia, "Written by Iames Shirly Gent." (an unlikely attribution) and printed by John Dawson, 1640. It is evident that Dawson was buying some of the same job-lot papers that Cotes bought. I noted that in sheet C my copy agreed with the Newberry copy in its watermark (lion on a shield) but not with the Chicago copy (15 grapes). Turning at once to the inner forme, I found no corrections on C1v, but at C2r 4 "wisper"
The third (and last) point illustrates the surprises that may lurk in watermarks. Examining the University of Chicago copy of The Queene of Arragon, by William Habington, I rejoiced to find three watermarks I knew well—in the midst of folio pages where I could measure them: several IHS marks, many grape marks, and once the bird with wings outstretched. A few days later I looked at the Newberry copy, and discovered a startling thing. The watermarks were different. No IHS marks, no bird mark, just one thin page with grapes. The prevailing mark in the Newberry copy is a long heraldic panel surmounted by a thin cross, the whole not too plain.[77] The paper is thicker than the intrusive grape paper and apparently of a better sort. What is the solution to this little mystery? Although I have not had the copies side by each, I can hardly doubt they are the same setting. The play (collation A2 B-H4I3) is probably too long to leave in standing type. My guess is that Habington, a butterfly sort of courtier-poet, had a number of copies printed on better-grade paper for himself and his friends, and that Tom Cotes simply included a token or so of this paper in the paper laid out for each sheet. It might be printed last in each edition-sheet so as to benefit from corrections. There would have to be care in gathering the fancy copies, and it is not surprising that one bunch of grapes got in by accident or lack of a fine-paper sheet.[78] I have no idea whether such special printings were rare or not. "The matter deserves further study."[78a]
The purpose of this paper has been to call attention to the significance of variant or dissimilar watermarks for bibliographical study. Certain findings of the paper are naturally tentative, subject to the discoveries and corrections of further investigation. But enough has been done to show that the new tool, when its subtleties have yielded to patient analysis, will take its place beside press corrections, headlines, and our knowledge of hand presses as a useful means of enquiry into the manner in which books were made. Actually the tool is an old one put to new employment. A generation of scholars has used inconsistency in watermarks to spot cancels,[79] inserted sheets,[80] mixed issues, standing type,[81] made-up copies, facsimiles,[82] , and other irregularities. Indeed, les filigranes have come a long way since Briquet compiled his distinguished work, and since A. W. Pollard remarked in the 11th Britannica that watermarks are helpful in distinguishing between gatherings. I believe that their aid can be extended to the study of various normal, though relatively complex, situations, and that this aid will prove substantial when it is properly correlated with other bibliographical evidence.
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