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Notes

 
[1]

The Atheist's Tragedy, or, The Honest Man's Revenge (1964), ed. Irving Ribner.

[2]

See George R. Price, "The Authorship and Bibliography of The Revenger's Tragedy," The Library, 5th series, 15 (1960), 262-277; Peter B. Murray, "The Authorship of The Revenger's Tragedy," PBSA, 56 (1962), 195-218, incorporated in A Study of Cyril Tourneur (1964), pp. 144-189; David J. Lake, The Canon of Thomas Middleton's Plays (1975), pp. 136-152.

[3]

W. W. Greg, A Bibliography of the English Printed Drama to the Restoration (1939-57), I, 293.

[4]

I have ignored such forms as (in modern spelling) he's, he'll, methinks, etc.; only the unattached pronouns are considered.

[5]

Evidence from spacing of punctuation was used to good effect in compositor analysis by T. H. Howard-Hill, "The Compositors of Shakespeare's First Folio Comedies," Studies in Bibliography, 26 (1973), 61-106; he discusses problems in determining whether a space has been used or not: the main requirement, which I have tried to fulfill, is that the investigator be consistent in the application of whatever criteria he adopts.

[6]

Revels ed., p. xxvi.

[7]

The Works of Cyril Tourneur (1930), ed. Allardyce Nicoll, p. 322.

[8]

The two plays appear to have been set from the same roman fount, of which 20 lines of type measure 82-84 mm. The fount is most distinctively characterized by a double long ſſ ligature with a break in the left shoulder. In both plays virtually every instance of this much-used sort shows the same defect, which presumably originated in a faulty matrix.

[9]

A Study of Cyril Tourneur, p. 159.