Abbildungen der Seite
PDF
EPUB

THE TRAGEDY OF CORIOLANUS

All the unsigned footnotes in this volume are by the writer of the article to which they are appended. The interpretation of the initials signed to the others is: I. G. = Israel Gollancz, M.A.; H. N. H. Henry Norman Hudson, A.M.; C. H. H. C. H. Herford, Litt.D.

=

=

PREFACE

By ISRAEL GOLLANCZ, M.A.

THE FIRST EDITION

Coriolanus was first published in the Folio of 1623, where it was originally placed at the head of the division of "Tragedies," occupying pages 1-30; subsequently, however, Troilus and Cressida was placed before it. The text of the play is extremely unsatisfactory, due to the careless transcript put into the printers' hands.

The play is mentioned in the Stationers' Registers, under date of November 8, 1623, as one of sixteen plays not previously entered to other men.

1

THE DATE OF COMPOSITION

There is no definite external evidence for the date of Coriolanus; 1 general considerations of style, diction, and metrical tests 2 point to 1608-1610 as the most probable years.

1 The reference to the "ripest mulberry" (Act III. scene ii. line 79) was thought by Malone and Chalmers to bear on the date; for in 1609 the king made an attempt to encourage the breeding of silkworms. Similarly, Chalmers found in the references to famine and death allusions to the year 1609. Political allusions have also been found. All these doubtful pieces of evidence seem utterly valueless. 2 The light-endings and weak-endings, scanty in all the previous plays (the largest number being 21 of the former, and 2 of the latter, in Macbeth), reach the number of 71 and 28, respectively, in Antony; 60 and 44 in Coriolanus; 78 and 52 in Cymbeline; 42 and 25 in The Tempest; 57 and 43 in The Winter's Tale. All these are plays of Shakespeare's Fourth, or last, Period.

THE SOURCE OF THE PLOT

[ocr errors]

Coriolanus was directly derived from Sir Thomas North's famous version of Plutarch's Lives of the Noble Grecians and Romans, the book to which Shakespeare was indebted also for his Julius Cæsar, Antony and Cleopatra, and, to some extent, for Timon of Athens, and which has been fittingly described as "most sovereign in its dominion over the minds of great men in all ages.' North's monumental version is one of the masterpieces of English prose, and no better proof exists than a comparison of the play with its original. Shakespeare has borrowed North's very vocabulary, and many of his most striking effects; so closely does he follow the whole history that North's prose may actually assist in restoring a defective passage; e.g. in Act II, sc. iii, ll. 257–258, the folio reads:

"And Nobly nam'd, so twice being Censor

Was his great Ancestor";

:--

the lines are obviously corrupt, owing to the loss of some words, or of a whole line; the passage is adequately restored simply by "following Shakespeare's practice of taking so many of North's words in their order, as would fall into blank verse," and there is little doubt that it should be printed thus:—

"[And Censorinus that was so surnamed,]

And nobly named so, twice being Censor”;

the words given in italics are those taken from North. As an instance of the closeness of the play to its original the following lines afford an excellent illustration:

"Should we be silent and not speak, our raiment
And state of bodies would bewray what life
We have led since thy exile. Think with thyself
How more unfortunate than all living women
Are we come hither";

Shakespeare has here merely touched with the magic of his genius these words of North:-"If we held our peace

« ZurückWeiter »