The Shakespeare Apocrypha:
Being a Collection of Fourteen Plays Which Have Been Ascribed to Shakespeare
(Classic Reprint) - reprint June 16, 2012; original 1904.
by William
Shakespeare? (Author); 406 pages
"This volume is designed to
satisfy a need which during the past two generations has been variously and
often expressed. The ambition of the editor has been to provide an accurate and
complete text, with adequate critical and supplementary matter, of all those
plays which can, without entire absurdity, be included in the doubtfully
Shakespearian class. A similar work to comprise the first thirteen dramas in
this book, in addition to The Arraignment of Paris, The Death of Studey,
and The Siege of Antwerp appears, indeed, on the list of suggested
publications of the New Shakspere Society {Transactions, 1874, p. 4), but it
did not get beyond the stage of projection. Since the days of Malone, only
three of the works before us Arden of Feversham, The Two Noble
Kinsmen, and Sir Thomas More have appeared in English speaking
countries in what can at [most] justly be termed independently edited texts.
Tolerable versions of four others have been published by Germans in editions
now practically unprocurable. As regards the other seven plays, no real attempt
at purification of the text or collation of the early editions has been made,
if made at all, for more than two centuries, and in the case of Sir John
Oldcastle, it has remained for this book to give the very first reprint of
what is most unmistakably the only reliable and uncorrupted version. Thus
considerable and important passages appear here for the first time since 1600.
In the preparation of the body of the text, the main object has been to give a
faithful reproduction of the most authoritative edition of each play; that is,
of the earliest, except in the rare instances where a later edition is
demonstrably truer to the author's manuscript. Supplementary passages are
printed, within brackets, from the earliest edition which contains them. Where
a variant or an emendation has appeared inevitable, it has been adopted." -Amazon, from the Preface. $17.42
The Life of Sir John
Falstaff: With a Biography of the Knight from Authentic Sources (Cambridge
Library Collection - Shakespeare and Renaissance Drama)
by Robert
Barnabas Brough (Author), George
Cruikshank (Illustrator); 197 pages
Remembered for both his
satirical and serious work, Robert Barnabas Brough (1828–60) was a playwright,
journalist, poet and founder member of the Savage Club. Built around a series
of inspired etchings by the celebrated artist George Cruikshank (1792–1878),
this is a delightful fictional biography, 'from authentic sources', of that
most colourful of Shakespeare's characters. We hear how our hero was descended
from the great Saxon leader Hundwulf Falstaff, how the name is a corruption of
'False-thief', of his adventures with his beloved Prince Hal, and of Christmas
1412 with the Whittington family. Henry V's terrible rejection of him – 'I know
thee not, old man' – is touchingly depicted, as are the episode of the laundry
basket and other misadventures at Windsor, along with his sad death at the
Boar's Head in 1415. First published in 1858, this book is a must-read for
every lover of this larger-than-life figure. – Amazon; $12.47
Early Christian Writings: The Apostolic Fathers – September 1, 1987
by Andrew
Louth (Editor), Maxwell
Staniforth (Translator); 199 pages
The writings in this volume
cast a glimmer of light upon the emerging traditions and organization of the
infant church, during an otherwise little-known period of its development. A
selection of letters and small-scale theological treatises from a group known
as the Apostolic Fathers, several of whom were probably disciples of the
Apostles, they provide a first-hand account of the early Church and outline a
form of early Christianity still drawing on the theology and traditions of its
parent religion, Judaism. Included here are the first Epistle of Bishop
Clement of Rome, an impassioned plea for harmony; The Epistle of
Polycarp; The Epistle of Barnabas; The Didache; and the Seven
Epistles written by Ignatius of Antioch—among them his moving appeal to the
Romans that they grant him a martyr's death. – Amazon; $10.29
After getting no books last
month, I went rather overboard when May rolled around. Well, maybe in number,
but not too bad financially. Since these three came directly from Amazon and
exceeded $35, the shipping was free. I have three more coming, mostly from
different Goodwills, so not too expensive on any of them. I think all six together
did not exceed, say, the cost of one of those fancy-shmancy deluxe Tolkien
books. Thus do I try to justify my purchases and thus do I break one of my New Year's resolutions..
I’ve been wanting something
like that The Shakespeare Apocrypha for ages; I remember seeing a
similar volume a long time ago at one of the Half-Prices in San Antonio. Of
particular interest to me is The Birth of Merlin. Since it is basically
a scanned copy of a book in the Cornel University Library it includes all the
artifacts from that volume, including library marks.
Though I only just learned
about the existence of The Life of Sir John Falstaff, I have been aware
of George Cruikshank’s illustrations since at least high school. I am wary
about a book that was considered ‘humorous’ in 1858, although I somehow feel I
owe it to Sir John to take a squint at it. Maybe try to adjust my attitude to
the times and give it a whirl. Whatever, I’ll always have the Cruikshank
pictures.
I must confess that Jimmy
Akin whetted my appetite for Early Christian Writings on his show
recently, although I have been thinking of getting just such a volume for a while. I
find it includes the entire Didache; I could have spared myself buying
that slim little text (almost a pamphlet, really) by itself, had I but known. A Penguin book.
They arrived yesterday, Sunday, at about 4 PM. One thing all three books
have in common is that they are all in teeny, tiny, eye-strain-o-vision print.
A proper read would involve a bright light and my cheater glasses; my floor
lamp having recently passed away (so is the fashion of the world) renders a
comfortable place to read moot. I can do it at the desk, but the chair there
has its limitations.



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