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ADDITIONS AND CORRECTIONS

Addendum by Allan H. Stevenson to "Watermarks Are Twins" in the present volume:

The Quaritch-Folger copy of the Pide Bull Lear apparently has no letter P in its Pot watermarks, merely two close bars across the bowl of the twin variants. However, at least sheet H of the Huntington copy does show a P on the lower part of the bowl of variant a. It may be that this letter dropped out in late reams made from mould a. Further copies may clear up the point.

The Wheel or Flower mark of John Tate appears in a third volume printed by Wynkyn de Worde—Chaucer's Canterbury Tales of 1498. See The Victoria History of the County of Hertford, ed. William Page, IV (1914), 256. The Folger copy (one of three extant) has, like the Bartholomæus, just the one pair of marks throughout the volume.

Correction to Lawrence C. Starkey, "The Printing by the Cambridge Press of A Platform of Church Discipline, 1649," vol. II, pp. 91-92.

Editor's note: As explained in a note to Dr. Starkey's article, the receipt of information about the uniquely variant copy owned by Mr. Thomas W. Streeter when proof was far advanced necessitated some slight alterations in the text of the article and a series of explanatory footnotes. In this process the editor believed that he had rechecked the hypothesis for cut-sheet printing in the light of the new characteristics of the Streetcr copy, but, if so, he was seriously at fault, since the hypothesis does not in fact work out although consistent with the information of the copies at Dr. Starkey's disposal when he wrote his account. It appears, therefore, that thc outer half-sheet of the preliminary gathering was not printed by cut-sheet imposition but, instead, by ordinary half-sheet imposition, the correction of the outer forme taking place when less than half of the white paper had been run, and the correction of the inner forme very shortly after perfecting had begun.

Errata for vol. II: on pp. 192-194 for Gist read Cist. For vol. III: on p. 255, line 3, for 1693 read 1695.


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Notes On Contributors

GEORGE IAN DUTHIE, D. Litt. Edinburgh University and Molson Professor of English at McGill University, is a pupil and protégé of J. Dover Wilson. A specialist in Shakespearian text, he is the author of The 'Bad' Quarto of "Hamlet" and of a recent major edition of King Lear. He is currently assisting with the New Cambridge Edition of Shakespeare.

JAMES G. MCMANAWAY, Consultant in Literature and Bibliography at the Folger Shakespeare Library, and Editor of Shakespeare Quarterly, is particularly interested in textual and bibliographical studies in Shakespeare, Spenser, and other authors of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

WILLIAM B. TODD, Chairman of the Department of English at Salem College, is in process of revolutionizing the methods of eighteenth-century bibliography by his application of analytical techniques, chiefly his original studies of the interpretation of the evidence of press figures.

ALLAN H. STEVENSON, Assistant Professor of English at the Illinois Institute of Technology, has acquired an international reputation for his searching investigation into the nature and processes of watermarked paper.

GILES E. DAWSON, Curator of Books and Manuscripts at the Folger Shakespeare Library, is completing a bibliography of Shakespeare in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries.

GEORGE B. PACE, Assistant Professor of English at the University of Missouri, received his doctorate and has taught at the University of Virginia. He is at present preparing an edition of Chaucer's Minor Poems.

MAURICE KELLEY, Professor of English and Acting Librarian at Princeton University, is engaged in a study of Milton manuscript materials.

ARTHUR F. STOCKER, Assistant Professor of Classics at the University of Virginia, is making a special study of the Servian manuscripts.

RALPH GREEN is a contracting engineer with the Chicago Bridge & Iron Co. His hobby, for almost thirty years, has been the study of printing-press history.

CURT F. BÜHLER, Curator of Books at the Pierpont Morgan Library, is an authority on the bibliographical analysis and history of incunabula.

MARGARET L. WILEY, received her doctorate from the University of Virginia. She is Professor of English at East Texas State College.

BERTA STURMAN (Nash) is Lecturer in English at Washington University of St. Louis. She is making a special investigation of Renaissance prompt books.

HENRY H. ADAMS is Assistant Professor in the Department of English, History, and Government at the United States Naval Academy.


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FREDSON BOWERS is Professor of English at the University of Virginia and Professorial Lecturer at the University of Chicago.

DR. H. TEERINK, residing at Bothaplein 4, Arnhem, Netherlands, is the author of a bibliography of Swift (1937), now in process of revision.

FRANCESCO CORDASCO, Associate Professor of English, Long Island University, is the author of numerous bibliographical compilations and is in process of issuing a series of 18th-century bibliographical pamphlets.

FRANKLIN P. BATDORF, who has taken the bibliography of previously unlisted editions of Crabbe as his special province, was formerly Instructor in English at the University of Texas.

BERTRAM COOPER and RICHARD HASKER are graduate students in the School of English, University of Virginia.

ROLLO SILVER, an expert on Whitman and on nineteenth-century American publishing history, is now teaching at the School of Library Science, Simmons College.

F. DEWOLFE MILLER, who received his doctorate from the University of Virginia with a dissertation on Cranch and his Caricatures, recently published, is now compiling a check list and critical history of American anthologies.

JAMES L. WOODRESS, JR. is Assistant Professor of English at Butler University after receiving his doctorate from Duke University.

WILLIAM L. PHILLIPS, who recently received his doctorate from the University of Chicago, is Instructor in English at the University of Washington. He is preparing a study of the writers of the Chicago "Renaissance."

WILLIAM H. MARSHALL recently received his M. A. from the University of Virginia.

RUDOLF HIRSCH is the expert on incunabula for the University of Pennsylvania Library.

HOWELL J. HEANEY is librarian for Thomas W. Streeter, collector of Americana and bibliographer, of Morristown, New Jersey.

COLOPHON

Volume Four of the Society's Papers, Studies in Bibliography, was produced at the University of Virginia Press under the supervisionof Robert L. Morris.

All machine and hand composition was done by Mark Rinker, foreman of the composing room. Presswork by William Travis. The halftones are the work of the Pontiac Engraving and Electrotype Company of Chicago and of the Lynchburg Engraving Co, L. H. Jenkins, Inc. of Richmond did the binding.

One thousand copies were manufactured.


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