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Compositors' spelling
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Compositors' spelling

The F text seems to have been distributed as follows between compositors A and B:-[7]

             
A H1r—h2r col. a  (pp. 69-71a)  I Prol.—I.ii.135 
B h2r col. b—h4r col. a  (pp. 71b—75a)  I.ii.136—II.ii.179 
A h4r col. b—i4r   (pp. 75b—87)  II.ii.180—IV.iv.43 
B i4v—i5r   (pp. 88-89)  IV.iv.44—IV.vii.142 
A i5v—i6r   (pp. 90-91)  IV.vii.143—V.i.34 
B i6v col. a  (p. 92a)  V.i.34—V.ii.11 
A i6v col. b—k2r   (pp. 92b—95)  V.ii.12—end 
Both compositors normally alter certain spellings of their copy-text to suit their own preferences. But, especially in the case of a printed text, they occasionally adopt the spelling of that copy. Thus, for example, we find compositor A, in his first stint, departing from his known habits to follow the Q spellings in such words as:-          
Normal A spelling   F Henry V   Q Henry V  
I.ii.96 clayme  claim  claim 
155 bene, beene  bin  bin Q1,3 (bene Q2) 
30 belieue  beleeue  beleeue 
177 thieues  theeues  theeues 
Even allowing for the occasional use of shorter spellings (e. g. bin) which might have been introduced to "justify" a line, there is a marked series of such variations in the work of both compositors —variations characterized by the consistent adoption of the Q spelling.


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The whole point may be neatly illustrated from their use of speech-prefixes, and in particular that for Gower. I have not seen it noticed that A consistently uses a longer form of prefix than B. Thus B can be identified immediately on the evidence of such forms as War., Suf., Mes., Con.; while A prefers Warw., Suff., Mess., Const. For Gower, A uses the full name, while B prefers Gow. Each, however, departs from his normal practice once (apart from an exceptional Gour. at V.i.36). All the quartos are inconsistent, and use several forms of the prefix. But in both the F variants, A and B adopt precisely that form which their quarto copy happened to favour at that point, A taking his Gow. from Q2 at IV.1.81, and B his Gower. from Q3 at IV.vii.19, quite contrary to their habitual forms.