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Early texts of Shakespeare's works
Early texts of Shakespeare's works
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Comparison of the 'To be, or not to be' soliloquy in the first three editions of Hamlet, showing the varying quality of the text in the Bad Quarto (Q1), the Good Quarto (Q2) and the First Folio

The earliest texts of William Shakespeare's works were published during the 16th and 17th centuries in quarto or folio format. Folios are large, tall volumes; quartos are smaller, roughly half the size. The publications of the latter are usually abbreviated to Q1, Q2, etc., where the letter stands for "quarto" and the number for the first, second, or third edition published.

Plays

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Eighteen of the 36 plays in the First Folio were printed in separate and individual editions prior to 1623. Pericles (1609) and The Two Noble Kinsmen (1634) also appeared separately before their inclusions in folio collections (the Shakespeare Third Folio and the second Beaumont and Fletcher folio, respectively). All of these were quarto editions, with two exceptions: The True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York, the first edition of Henry VI, Part 3, was printed in octavo form in 1595, as was the 1611 edition of The most lamentable tragedy of Titus Andronicus.[1] In chronological order, these publications were:

Six of the preceding were classified as "bad quartos" by Alfred W. Pollard and other scholars associated with the New Bibliography. Popular plays like 1 Henry IV and Pericles were reprinted in their quarto editions even after the First Folio appeared, sometimes more than once.

Poetry

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Shakespeare's poems were also printed in quarto or octavo form:

Differing from the quartos of the plays, the first editions of Shakespeare's narrative poems are extremely well printed. "Richard Field, Shakespeare's first publisher and printer, was a Stratford man, probably a friend of Shakespeare, and the two produced an excellent text."[2] Shakespeare may have had direct involvement in the publication of the two poems, a check such as Ben Jonson exercised in reference to the publication of his works, but as Shakespeare clearly did not do in connection with his plays.[citation needed]

John Benson published a collected edition of Shakespeare's Poems in 1640; the poems were not added to collections of the plays until the 18th century. (The disputed miscellany The Passionate Pilgrim was only printed in octavo: twice in 1599, with another in 1612, all by William Jaggard.)[3]

Folios

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The additional plays section in the 1664 second impression of the Third Folio.

The folio format was reserved for expensive, prestigious volumes. During Shakespeare's lifetime, stage plays were not generally taken seriously as literature and not considered worthy of being collected into folios, so the plays printed while he was alive were printed as quartos. His poems were never included in his collected works until the eighteenth century.

It was not until 1616, the year of Shakespeare's death, that Ben Jonson defied convention by issuing a folio collection of his own plays and poems. Seven years later the folio volume Mr. William Shakespeare's Comedies, Histories & Tragedies appeared; this edition is now called the First Folio. It contains 36 plays, 18 of which were printed for the first time. Because Shakespeare was dead, the folio was compiled by John Heminges and Henry Condell (fellow actors in Shakespeare's company), and arranged into comedies, histories and tragedies. The First Folio is generally looked to by actors and directors as the purest form of Shakespeare's text. While punctuation and grammar are not always accurate by today's rules, these things served as direction to the actors on how to say the lines.

The First Folio was compiled by Heminges and Condell but published by a trio of stationers (booksellers and publishers): William Jaggard, his son Isaac Jaggard, and Edward Blount. William Aspley and John Smethwick participated in the endeavor as subsidiary partners. It contained, in addition to blandishments provided by various admirers of Shakespeare, such as the dedication signed by "John Heminge and Henry Condell", 36 plays. They included Troilus and Cressida, which was not, however, listed in the table of contents, but omitted Pericles and The Two Noble Kinsmen, which are now usually considered canonical.[4] The Jaggards were printers, and did the actual printing of the book. The elder Jaggard has seemed an odd choice to many commentators, given his problematical relationship with the Shakespeare canon: Jaggard issued the suspect collection The Passionate Pilgrim in 1599 and 1612, and in 1619 printed the so-called False Folio, ten pirated or spurious Shakespearean plays, some with false dates and title pages. It is thought that the printing of the First Folio was such an enormous task that the Jaggards' shop was simply needed to get the job done. William Jaggard was old, infirm, and blind by 1623, and in fact died a month before the First Folio was complete.[5]

The First Folio was reprinted three times in the 17th century:

The Second Folio appeared in 1632. Isaac Jaggard had died in 1627, and Edward Blount had transferred his rights to stationer Robert Allot in 1630. The Second Folio was published by Allot, William Aspley, Richard Hawkins, Richard Meighen, and John Smethwick, and printed by Thomas Cotes. It contained the same plays as the First Folio and much of the same additional material, with the addition of an unsigned poem by John Milton.[6]

The Third Folio was issued in 1663, published by Philip Chetwinde; Chetwinde had married Robert Allot's widow and so obtained the rights to the book. To the second impression of the Third Folio (1664) he added seven plays, namely Pericles, Prince of Tyre; Locrine; The London Prodigal; The Puritan; Sir John Oldcastle; Thomas Lord Cromwell; and A Yorkshire Tragedy. (See: Shakespeare Apocrypha.) All seven of these additional plays had been published as quartos while Shakespeare was alive, but only Pericles was eventually widely accepted into the Shakespearean canon.[7]

The quartos of Pericles (1609 and 1611), The London Prodigal (1605) and A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608) were all attributed to William Shakespeare on their front pages. The quartos of Locrine (1595), The Puritan (1607) and Thomas Lord Cromwell (1602 and 1613) were attributed to W. S. on their title pages, but Shakespeare was not the only playwright with those initials; Wentworth Smith has been put forward as another possible author of these works. Sir John Oldcastle was printed in 1619, three years after Shakespeare's death, as part of the False Folio. It was attributed to Shakespeare on its title page which also bore a false date of 1600.

The Third Folio is relatively rare, compared to the Second and Fourth, probably because unsold copies were destroyed in the Great Fire of London in 1666. One surviving copy was purchased by the Irish High Court judge and antiquarian William O'Brien in the 1880s. It was put up for auction by Sotheby's in 2017.[8]

The Fourth Folio appeared in 1685, published by R. Bentley, E. Brewster, R. Chiswell, and H. Herringman. It contains the same 43 plays as the Third Folio. Brewster, Chiswell, and Herringman were members of the six-man syndicate that published the third Ben Jonson folio in 1692; Herringman was one of three stationers who issued the second Beaumont and Fletcher folio in 1679.

The Fourth Folio in turn served as the base for the series of eighteenth-century editions of Shakespeare's plays. Nicholas Rowe used the Fourth Folio text as the foundation of his 1709 edition, and subsequent editors — Pope, Theobald, etc. — both adapted and reacted to Rowe's text in their own editions. (See: Shakespeare's editors.)

The Two Noble Kinsmen did not appear in any Folio edition. It was not printed until 1634, although there is evidence of its being performed much earlier. The title page said "written by the memorable worthies of their time: Mr. John Fletcher and Mr. William Shakspeare [sic], Gent."[9] It was not included in most editions of Shakespeare (e.g., the Cambridge/Globe editions of Wright and Clark, ca. 1863) until the latter half of the 19th century (it appears, e.g., in Dyce's collected Works of Shakespeare in 1876) but it was not generally accepted into the Shakespeare canon until well into the 20th century, when, for example, it was included in the Riverside edition of 1974.

See also

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Notes

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
The early texts of William Shakespeare's works encompass the printed editions of his plays, poems, and sonnets produced from the 1590s through the early 1620s, including approximately eighteen individual publications during his lifetime (1564–1616) and the landmark of 1623, which collected thirty-six plays for the first time. These texts, ranging from small, affordable to the larger, more authoritative folio format, form the basis for all subsequent editions of Shakespeare's oeuvre but exhibit significant variations in quality, completeness, and fidelity to the author's intentions due to contemporaneous practices such as memorial reconstruction and unauthorized printing. Shakespeare's narrative poems appeared first in print, with Venus and Adonis published in 1593 by Richard Field and achieving nine editions by 1616, followed by in 1594, which saw five editions in the same period; these works were among the most commercially successful of his lifetime and often credited Shakespeare explicitly on the . His sonnets, meanwhile, were issued in a single in 1609 by Thomas Thorpe, compiling 154 poems that had circulated in form earlier. The plays' early printed history began with quartos—inexpensive books created by folding a sheet of twice to yield eight pages—starting in 1594 with editions of (attributed to "W.S.") and (published by the acting company without naming the author). By 1616, eighteen plays had been printed this way, including multiple editions of popular titles like Richard III (five quartos between 1597 and 1622) and (three between 1598 and 1613); however, some quartos derived from "bad" sources, such as actors' recollections rather than authoritative manuscripts, leading to textual corruptions, while others, like the 1604–05 quarto, closely matched later reliable versions. Notably, about half of Shakespeare's roughly thirty-eight plays remained unpublished during his life, with no collected edition appearing until after his death. The , titled Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies, was published in 1623 by a syndicate including Shakespeare's fellow actors John Heminge and , who presented it as a corrective to the "stol'n and surreptitious copies" of earlier quartos; it included eighteen previously unprinted plays and organized the canon into genres—comedies, histories, and tragedies—for the first time. Printed in large format (folded once for four pages per sheet) by Isaac Jaggard and Edward Blount, only around 750–1,000 copies were produced, with fewer than 235 surviving today, making it one of the most valuable printed books in existence. Subsequent folios followed in 1632 (), 1663–64 (Third), and 1685 (Fourth), with minor textual changes but preserving the 1623 arrangement. These early texts highlight the fluid nature of Shakespeare's transmission in the Elizabethan and Jacobean eras, where publishing rights were controlled by stationers under the Stationers' Company, often without authorial oversight, influencing modern scholarship through to reconstruct intended readings.

Publication Context

Printing and Publishing in Early Modern England

In early modern England, the printing and publishing industry was tightly regulated by the Stationers' Company, a guild established by royal charter in 1557 under Queen Mary I to control the book trade and prevent the spread of seditious or heretical materials. The company enforced a system of entry in the Stationers' Register, where publishers recorded their claims to works, effectively creating a form of copyright protection limited to members and granting monopolies on printing specific titles to maintain order and profitability within the trade. This regulatory framework, supported by the Crown and the Court of Star Chamber, limited the number of master printers or printing houses—typically to about 22 in London by the late sixteenth century, with additional limited presses allowed at the universities of Oxford and Cambridge—and required licenses for all publications, ensuring that only approved texts entered circulation. Books were produced in various formats determined by how large sheets of were folded, with and being the most common for dramatic and literary works. A was formed by folding a single sheet twice to yield four leaves (eight pages), resulting in a compact, affordable volume typically measuring around 6 by 8 inches, suitable for individual plays and priced at about sixpence, which made it accessible to a wide including apprentices and middling sorts. In contrast, a involved folding a sheet once to produce two leaves (four pages), creating a larger, more prestigious often used for collected editions, standing about 12 by 9 inches and costing around 15 shillings due to higher and binding expenses, thus appealing primarily to wealthier readers or institutions. Typical print runs for ranged from 500 to 1,500 copies, reflecting the modest scale of the market and the risks of unsold stock in an industry where accounted for much of the production cost. Theater companies played a significant role in the publication process, particularly during periods of disruption such as plague closures of playhouses or civil unrest, when actors would sell manuscript copies of plays to stationers to generate income. For instance, members of the Lord Chamberlain's Men, later the King's Men, occasionally authorized or supplied texts for printing to protect their repertory or capitalize on popularity after performances. This collaboration between performing troupes and the Stationers' Company bridged the oral culture of the stage with the burgeoning print trade, though companies generally preferred to keep scripts proprietary to avoid piracy and maintain control over their intellectual property.

Shakespeare's Involvement and Rights

Shakespeare demonstrated direct involvement in the publication of his narrative poems, providing clear evidence of authorization through dedicatory epistles. In the 1593 first edition of Venus and Adonis, printed by Richard Field and registered in the Stationers' Register on April 18, 1593, Shakespeare dedicated the work to Henry Wriothesley, Earl of , describing it as the "first heire of my inuention," which indicates his personal oversight and endorsement of the edition. Similarly, the 1594 first edition of , printed by Field for and registered on May 9, 1594, includes a to Southampton expressing confidence in his "Honourable disposition," further signifying Shakespeare's active role in authorizing and promoting these works. These epistles not only affirm his consent but also highlight his strategic use of to elevate the poems' status. In contrast, Shakespeare's control over his play texts was limited by the legal and economic structures of early modern , where authors lacked consistent protections and plays were typically regarded as the property of acting companies rather than individuals. The Stationers' Company granted perpetual rights to publishers upon registration, but playwrights like Shakespeare had no statutory ownership, allowing performances to be exploited for unauthorized printings without authorial consent. For instance, many of his plays were entered in the Stationers' Register—totaling 34 entries for his works up to 1623—by stationers such as James Roberts, often requiring company approval but not necessarily the playwright's direct input. Specific cases illustrate this ambiguity in Shakespeare's oversight. The 1603 first quarto of Hamlet (Q1) is widely considered a pirated edition, reconstructed from actors' memories without authorization, resulting in a shortened and altered text printed by Valentine Simmes for Nicholas Ling and John Trundell. In response, the 1604-1605 second quarto (Q2), printed by James Roberts for Ling, was presented as "Newly imprinted and enlarged... according to the true and perfect Coppie," suggesting Shakespeare's manuscript served as the basis and indicating possible authorial involvement or company efforts to produce a corrected version. This dichotomy underscores the challenges Shakespeare faced in protecting his dramatic works. The 1616 folio edition of Ben Jonson's Workes, the first such collection of plays in folio format, served as a influential model, inspiring the actors John Heminge and to compile Shakespeare's plays in a similar authoritative volume seven years later to assert control over his legacy.

Play Texts

Quarto Editions

The quarto editions represent the earliest printed publications of William Shakespeare's individual plays, appearing as small, affordable books in quarto format—typically measuring about 7 by 10 inches and consisting of sheets folded twice to produce four leaves or eight pages each. These single-play volumes, unbound and sold for a few pence, began with Titus Andronicus in 1594 and continued through the posthumous Othello in 1622, encompassing approximately 18 distinct plays before the 1623 First Folio. Unlike larger folios, quartos were the standard for dramatic texts in early modern England, allowing for quick production and wide distribution among readers and theatergoers. Publication patterns for these quartos often involved stationers affiliated with Shakespeare's company, the (later King's Men), who held rights to the plays. Printers such as Thomas Creede, Andrew Wise, and Valentine Simmes produced many editions, with title pages increasingly crediting "" as author starting with Love's Labour's Lost in 1598. For instance, the second quarto of (Q2, 1599) was printed by Creede for Cuthbert Burby, while (1600) came from Simmes for Wise and William Aspley; (1622) was issued by William Walkley from a print run by John Okes. These authorized or semi-authorized editions were derived from reliable sources, such as promptbooks used in performance or fair copies of the author's manuscripts, reflecting the collaborative nature of theater production. Scholars regard these "good" quartos as the most reliable early texts of Shakespeare's dramas, often providing the closest approximations to the versions performed on stage, complete with practical stage directions (e.g., entrance and exit cues) and textual variants that reveal revisions or actor adaptations. Analyses by bibliographers like Alfred W. Pollard have established their authority, distinguishing them from pirated editions by their fidelity to official manuscripts and relative freedom from corruption. For example, the 1599 Romeo and Juliet Q2 offers a more complete and coherent text than its 1597 predecessor, while Much Ado About Nothing (1600) preserves witty dialogue and comic timing indicative of live performance. These quartos thus serve as vital witnesses to Shakespeare's evolving craft, preserving dramatic elements lost or altered in later compilations.

Unauthorized and 'Bad' Quartos

The term "bad quarto" was coined by bibliographer Alfred W. Pollard in 1909 to describe certain early printed editions of Shakespeare's plays that deviate significantly from more authoritative texts, lacking fidelity to the author's original manuscripts. These unauthorized publications, estimated at six to seven in total for Shakespeare's works, include the first quartos of The First Part of the Contention betwixt the Two Famous Houses of York and Lancaster (1594, corresponding to 2 Henry VI), The True Tragedy of Richard Duke of York (1595, corresponding to 3 Henry VI), Romeo and Juliet (1597), Henry V (1600), The Merry Wives of Windsor (1602), and Hamlet (1603). Unlike authorized quartos derived from scribal copies or promptbooks, bad quartos were printed without permission from the play's owners, often by opportunistic stationers exploiting gaps in copyright enforcement under the Stationers' Company regulations. The origins of these texts are attributed to , where printers obtained imperfect copies through methods such as stealing manuscripts or relying on reconstructions by actors during provincial tours. Early scholarship, building on Pollard's framework, proposed the "memorial reconstruction" theory, positing that performers memorized and paraphrased the plays from memory, leading to corrupted versions suitable for shorter touring performances but riddled with inaccuracies. For instance, the 1600 Henry V quarto omits major scenes like the recruitment of Falstaff's troops and the French king's council, while the 1602 Merry Wives quarto reduces the full play to roughly half its length in later editions, featuring garbled and transposed scenes. Textual issues in bad quartos are evident in their brevity, omissions, paraphrases, and errors, often resulting in incoherent narratives and unmetrical verse that obscure Shakespeare's intended artistry. A stark example is the 1603 Hamlet quarto, which spans approximately 2,150 lines—half the 3,600 lines of the 1604 second quarto—featuring distorted soliloquies, such as a "To be or not to be" speech reduced to about 15 lines of altered phrasing, and relocated scenes that disrupt the play's structure. These flaws stem from unreliable sources, including shorthand notes or collective actor recall, rather than direct authorial oversight. Modern scholarship has reevaluated the bad quartos, with critics like Laurie E. Maguire challenging the uniformity of the memorial reconstruction model and the "bad" label itself, suggesting instead that some may represent early drafts, deliberate abbreviations for performance, or reported texts adapted by the company. This debate emphasizes their value as witnesses to Elizabethan practices, prompting editions like the New Shakespeare Early Quartos series to treat them as distinct textual variants rather than mere corruptions.

Poetry Texts

Narrative Poems

Shakespeare's two principal narrative poems, Venus and Adonis and , represent his earliest published works and the texts over which he maintained the greatest authorial control, distinguishing them from the often pirated play quartos. Composed amid the London plague outbreaks of 1592–1594, which shuttered theaters and curtailed dramatic performances, these poems allowed Shakespeare to capitalize on the demand for literary verse among affluent readers. Unlike plays, which circulated primarily through , the narrative poems were marketed as elegant, portable volumes—often in format—appealing to a genteel seeking sophisticated entertainment during the closures. Their commercial success is evident in the rapid reprints and sustained popularity, with Venus and Adonis outselling many contemporary works and establishing Shakespeare's reputation as a before his plays gained widespread . Venus and Adonis, entered in the Stationers' Register on April 18, 1593, by printer Richard Field—a fellow Stratford native—and published later that year, marks Shakespeare's debut in print. Field, who held the initial printing rights, produced the first edition in , featuring a dedicatory to Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, in which Shakespeare describes the poem as "the first heir of my invention," signaling his personal investment in its presentation. The work enjoyed immediate acclaim, undergoing nine editions during Shakespeare's lifetime (up to 1616) and reaching seventeen by 1641, far exceeding the print runs of his plays. Textually, early editions show remarkable consistency, with only minor variants attributable to compositorial errors rather than substantive corruptions; scholars widely regard the 1593 as derived from Shakespeare's fair copy or a closely supervised , ensuring to the author's intentions. Modern critical editions, such as those in series, rely primarily on these early printings as copy-texts due to their reliability. Similarly, (also known as Lucrece) followed swiftly, entered in the Stationers' Register on May 9, 1594, and printed that year by Richard Field for bookseller . Like its predecessor, it bears a dedication to the Earl of Southampton, further underscoring Shakespeare's direct oversight in the publication process. The poem appeared in five editions during Shakespeare's lifetime and six by 1624, reflecting robust demand; Textual analysis reveals few significant alterations across impressions, with variants limited to , , and occasional lineation differences, suggesting derivation from an author-approved and minimal intervention by printers or scribes. This stability contrasts sharply with the textual instability of many play editions, affirming the narrative poems' status as the most authoritative early Shakespeare texts; contemporary editions continue to prioritize the 1594 as the foundational source.

Sonnets

The sonnets of were first published in 1609 as Shake-speares Sonnets, a edition printed by George Eld for publisher Thomas Thorpe and sold by John Wright. This volume contains 154 sonnets in the English form, followed by the 329-line poem "A Lover's Complaint," which has been attributed to Shakespeare but is now debated among scholars. The edition's entry in the Stationers' Register on May 20, 1609, marks the formal authorization for printing, though the circumstances of its release remain obscure. Evidence suggests the sonnets circulated in manuscript form well before 1609, with references appearing as early as 1598 in Francis Meres's Palladis Tamia, which mentions Shakespeare's "sugred Sonnets" among his private friends. Two sonnets (nos. 138 and 144) were printed earlier in the 1599 anthology The Passionate Pilgrim, indicating selective public exposure, while others may have remained in private hands. The quarto's prefatory dedication, signed by Thorpe, reads: "TO.THE.ONLIE.BEGETTER.OF.THESE.INSUING.SONNETS.MR.W.H. ALL.HAPPINESSE.AND.THAT.ETERNITIE.PROMISED.BY.OVR.EVER-LIVING.POET.WISHETH.THE.WELL-WISHING.ADVENTURER.IN.SETTING.FORTH.T.T." The identity of "Mr. W.H."—interpreted as the "only begetter" who inspired or procured the poems—has sparked ongoing debate, with candidates including patrons like Henry Wriothesley, Earl of Southampton, or William Herbert, Earl of Pembroke, though some scholars argue it refers to a friend of the printer rather than a literary figure. No further editions appeared during Shakespeare's lifetime, making the 1609 quarto the sole contemporary printing. The next significant publication was John Benson's 1640 octavo Poems: VVritten by Wil. Shake-speare. Gent., printed by Thomas Cotes and sold by Benson, which reprinted most of the sonnets alongside other Shakespearean works and poems by different authors, but introduced rearrangements, title changes, and minor alterations that departed from the original sequence. This edition saw no major textual variants from the 1609 source until the development of scholarly editions in the , such as those by Edward Malone, which began to restore and analyze the quarto's readings. Scholars continue to debate the 1609 quarto's order and completeness, questioning whether it reflects Shakespeare's intended arrangement or resulted from editorial intervention, given the sonnets' likely private origins. The edition is generally viewed as authoritative, with minimal corruptions attributed to careful from a reliable , possibly authorial, which preserved the poems' integrity despite the delayed publication after the Elizabethan sonnet vogue had waned.

Collected Folios

First Folio

The First Folio, formally titled Mr. William Shakespeares Comedies, Histories, & Tragedies, is the first collected edition of William Shakespeare's plays, published in 1623, seven years after his death. It contains 36 plays, divided into comedies, histories, and tragedies, including 18 that had not appeared in print before, such as Macbeth, The Tempest, and As You Like It. These previously unpublished works were derived from manuscript copies held by Shakespeare's acting company, the King's Men, while the remaining plays were largely reprints from earlier quarto editions, some of which were considered authoritative ("good" quartos) and others memorial reconstructions or unauthorized ("bad" quartos). The volume's editors, John Heminge and Henry Condell—fellow actors and shareholders in the King's Men—claimed in their prefatory address "To the Readers" that they had gathered the texts from "true originall Copies" to correct the corruptions found in prior printings and restore Shakespeare's intended versions. The was printed by Isaac Jaggard (son of William Jaggard) and Edward Blount in , with additional involvement from publishers William Jaggard, Lawrence Smithweeke, and William Aspley, who held the rights to various plays. It was entered into the Stationers' Register on November 8, 1623 (), granting the publishers exclusive rights, and released for sale later that year, likely in December. Approximately 750 to 1,000 copies were produced, sold unbound for around 15 shillings or bound for £1—equivalent to about a laborer's monthly wage at the time. The prefatory materials enhanced its prestige, featuring an engraved portrait of Shakespeare by Martin Droeshout on the title page (in its second state in most copies), Ben Jonson's complimentary poems including "To " (facing the portrait) and "To the memory of my beloved, The Author Mr. William ," as well as a dedicatory from Heminge and Condell to the Earls of Pembroke and Montgomery, patrons of the King's Men. These elements positioned the Folio not merely as a practical collection but as a tribute to Shakespeare as a literary figure comparable to classical authors. The First Folio's significance lies in its role in preserving nearly half of Shakespeare's dramatic canon that might otherwise have been lost, ensuring the survival and dissemination of plays central to his reputation. Of the 235 known surviving copies today, most are held in institutions like the , which owns 82. Scholarly analysis has revealed that the texts derive from a heterogeneous mix of sources, with some plays (like ) based on good quartos corrected against manuscripts, while others reprint flawed quartos directly, leading to debates over the Folio's textual authority relative to individual quartos. Bibliographical studies have also identified errors introduced by the three or four compositors involved in setting the type, such as inconsistent spelling, punctuation variants, and mislineation, which vary across sections and influence modern editorial choices; for instance, compositor "B" is noted for frequent inaccuracies in the tragedies. Despite these imperfections, the Folio remains the foundational source for half of and a cornerstone for understanding early modern dramatic publishing.

Later Folios

The later folios of Shakespeare's collected plays, published between 1632 and 1685, functioned primarily as commercial reprints of the 1623 First Folio, disseminating his works amid rising demand while introducing textual alterations and expansions. These editions marked a shift toward broader market-driven publication, as publishers capitalized on Shakespeare's enduring popularity, though successive printings often compounded errors rather than refining the texts. By the late 17th century, they had solidified the core canon of 36 plays, influencing editorial practices into the 18th century when scholars like Nicholas Rowe drew upon them for modernized versions. The Second Folio, issued in 1632, was undertaken by printer Thomas Cotes, who assembled a syndicate of investors after the deaths of the First Folio's original publishers, William Jaggard and Edward Blount, and the exhaustion of the initial print run. This edition replicated the First Folio's content with minor corrections to spelling, punctuation, and some phrasing, alongside additions like new commendatory verses, most notably John Milton's anonymous praising Shakespeare as a "chief" among dramatists. Approximately 1,000 copies were printed, ensuring wider availability and contributing to the plays' cultural entrenchment without significant innovation. The Third Folio appeared in 1663 under publisher Philip Chetwinde, who had inherited rights through his marriage to the widow of Robert Allot, a prior stakeholder in Shakespeare's publications; a second issue followed in 1664 with substantial additions. It incorporated seven apocryphal plays absent from earlier folios—such as Pericles, Prince of Tyre, Locrine, and The London Prodigal—expanding the volume to 43 works, though these attributions were later disputed and excluded from the canon. This edition marked the first inclusion of an engraved frontispiece portrait of Shakespeare, adapted from the Droeshout image, and saw accumulated textual inaccuracies from proofreading lapses in the reprint process, including typographical errors and inconsistencies in stage directions. The Fourth Folio of 1685, handled by a including Henry Herringman and as Chetwinde's successors, reproduced the Third Folio's augmented text with efforts at modernization, such as updated spelling, punctuation, and larger typefaces for readability. However, these changes coexisted with new corruptions, including omitted lines and altered readings, stemming from hasty composition and variant consultations. As the final 17th-century edition, it underscored the era's commercial priorities—prioritizing volume over fidelity—and directly shaped 18th-century compilations by providing a readily available, if flawed, baseline for editors seeking to restore or adapt .

References

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