Chapter 20
HISTORY OF THE TEXT
1. COMPLETE EDITIONS
_In one volume._
The Globe Edition, ed. W. G. Clark and W. Aldis Wright 1864.
The 'Oxford' Edition, ed. W. J. Craig. Oxford, 1904.
The 'Cambridge Poets' Edition, ed. with introductions to each play, ed. W. A. Neilson. Boston, 1906 (the text used in the Tudor Shakespeare).
_Annotated Library Editions._
The Cambridge Shakespeare, ed. W. Aldis Wright. 9 vols. 1863-1866. 2d ed., 1891-1893. The text known as the Cambridge text is very near to that of the Globe ed., and these have been generally used in recent editions.
A new Variorum Edition, ed. H. Howard Furness and H. H. Furness, Jr. (in progress). Philadelphia, 1871. This ed. prints (latterly) the First Folio text with exhaustive variants and annotations. The appendices supply much illustrative matter. The following plays have appeared: Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth (2d ed.), Hamlet (2 vols.), Lear, Othello, Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, The Tempest, A Midsummer-Night's Dream, A Winter's Tale, Much Ado About Nothing, Twelfth Night, Love's Labour's Lost, Antony and Cleopatra, Richard III, Julius Cæsar.
The Arden Shakespeare, general ed. W. J. Craig, in progress, 1899. Publ. in the U. S. without special title by Bobbs-Merrill Co., Indianapolis.
The Eversley Edition, ed. by C. H. Herford. 10 vols., 1901-1907.
Among other recent editions are the Rolfe ed., 40 vols., 1871, revised 1896; Temple, ed. I. Gollancz, 40 vols., 1894, 1895; First Folio, ed. C. Porter and H. Clarke (following and defending the text of the First Folio). New York, 1903; Caxton, general ed. S. Lee, 1910.
_Historical Editions._
The most valuable is the Third Variorum, Boswell and Malone, 21 vols., 1821. The other principal editions are discussed in this volume, and include: Rowe, 1709, 1714; Pope, 1723-1725; Theobald, 1733; Hanmer, 1744; Warburton, 1747; Johnson, 1765; Steevens (20 plays), 1766; Capell, 1768; Steevens (and Johnson), 1773; Malone, 1790; Reed (Steevens and Johnson), 1st Variorum, 1803; 2d Variorum, 1813; Knight, 1838-1842, second ed., 1842-1844; Hudson, 1851-1856; Delius, 1854-1861; Dyce, 1857, second ed., 1864-1867; White, 1857-1860, second ed., 1859-1865.
2. FACSIMILE REPRINTS
For a discussion of conditions of publication of early editions, see A. W. Pollard's Shakespeare's Folios and Quartos. 1909.
The First Folio, With introd. by Sidney Lee. Oxford, 1902.
The First, Second, Third, and Fourth Folios. Methuen, 1904-1910.
The First Folio, reprint, L. Booth, 1869.
The First Folio, in reduced facsimile, J. O. Halliwell-Phillipps, 1876. Very small type.
Quarto Facsimiles. E. W. Ashbee. 48 vols. 1862-1871.
Quarto Facsimiles reproduced by photographic process, J. W. Griggs, under the superintendence of F. J. Furnivall. 43 vols. 1883-1889.
Shakespeare's Poems and Pericles, with introduction by Sidney Lee. 5 vols. Oxford, 1905.
3. GLOSSARIES, GRAMMARS, ETC.
The standard concordance is Bartlett's _New and Complete Concordance_, 1894. The standard dictionary and one of the great monuments of Shakespeare scholarship is Alexander Schmidt's _Shakespeare-Lexikon_. 2 vols. Berlin, 1894, 1895. 3d ed., 1902. This contains valuable appendices on syntax. The most recent brief glossary is C. T. Onion's _Shakespeare Glossary_. Oxford, 1911. It makes partial use of the valuable material in the New English Dictionary. The best grammar in English, though now somewhat out of date, is F. A. Abbott's _Shakespearian Grammar_, 1869, often reprinted.
The following are also of value:
Cunliffe, R. J. A New Shakespearean Dictionary. 1910.
Dyce, A. A Glossary to the Works of Shakespeare. 1867. Revised by H. Littledale, 1902.
Ellis, A. J. On Early English Pronunciation, with especial reference to Shakspere and Chaucer. 5 parts. E. E. T. S., 1869-1889.
Franz, W. Shakespeare-Grammatik. 2 parts. Halle, 1898-1900. 2d ed., Heidelberg, 1905. No English translation.
Vietor, W. A Shakespeare Phonology, Marburg and London, 1906.