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細節
HEYWOOD, Thomas (ca 1573-1641). The Royall King, and the Loyall Subject. As it hath beene Acted with great Applause by the Queenes Majesties Servants. London: Printed by Nich. and John Okes for James Becket, 1637.
4o (185 x 136 mm). (Lacking A1 blank.) Modern red morocco, gilt-lettered on spine.
FIRST EDITION, with F4 cancellans. Evidentally a passage of some 100 lines was omitted and the error not discovered until after signature F had been printed, but while G was still in process of composition. G was therefore correctly set and a cancel for F4 was subsequently printed on K4 and signed "F4." The catchword on the cancellans reads "that," where it had read "His" on the cancellandum.
Pforzheimer notes that the publication date is interesting in Heywood's biography. Until this time, Heywood had maintained that he did not wish to publish his own works, but in 1637 five works were issued. Financial strain is presumed to be the cause of Heywood's change it attitude. The tragicomedy The Royall King and the Loyall Subject (written ca 1602) is derived from the same tales in Matteo Bandello used later by John Fletcher in The Loyal Subject (1618). Greg 516; Pforzheimer 484; STC 13364.
4
FIRST EDITION, with F4 cancellans. Evidentally a passage of some 100 lines was omitted and the error not discovered until after signature F had been printed, but while G was still in process of composition. G was therefore correctly set and a cancel for F4 was subsequently printed on K4 and signed "F4." The catchword on the cancellans reads "that," where it had read "His" on the cancellandum.
Pforzheimer notes that the publication date is interesting in Heywood's biography. Until this time, Heywood had maintained that he did not wish to publish his own works, but in 1637 five works were issued. Financial strain is presumed to be the cause of Heywood's change it attitude. The tragicomedy The Royall King and the Loyall Subject (written ca 1602) is derived from the same tales in Matteo Bandello used later by John Fletcher in The Loyal Subject (1618). Greg 516; Pforzheimer 484; STC 13364.