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Notes

 
[*]

Research on the material in this note was completed while the writer held a grant-in-aid from the American Council of Learned Societies.

[1]

"Setting by Formes in Quarto Printing," Studies in Bibliography, XI (1958), 39-53. See especially Williams' discussion of the composition of the bad quarto of Romeo and Juliet (pp. 52-53).

[2]

Robert E. Brettle, "Bibliographical Notes on Some Marston Quartos and Early Collected Editions," The Library, 4th Series, VIII (1928), 340.

[3]

See Philip Williams, "The Compositor of the 'Pied Bull' Lear," SB, I (1948-49), 64-66, and John Russell Brown, "The Printing of John Webster's Plays (II)," SB, VIII (1956), 123.

[4]

My test was based on changes and retentions of the copy spellings of the following words: honor/honour, here/heere, doore/dore, goe/go, and doe/do. Compositor X preferred the first-listed form of each pair.

[5]

For example, on C1v we find two A's used in the first six lines of letterpress and eight substituted A's in the remaining thirty-two lines. Similarly, on E3v three italics are followed by three substituted romans and on E4v two italics by three substituted romans.

[6]

A swash A is used on A1, the title page, but because it never reappears it is not included in the tabulation.