Mr. William Shakespeares comedies, histories & tragedies. Published according to the True Originall Copies.
Mr.
William Shakespeares comedies, histories & tragedies. Published according
to the True Originall Copies.
Printed by Isaac Iaggard and Ed. Blount, London, 1623
SAFE/RB/Y1/1
Presented
by Sir Richard Tangye of Birmingham , 1885
First Folio
…
This Figure, that thou here seest put,
It
was for gentle Shakespeare cut …
The
title page of the first edition of Shakespeare’s collected plays published in
1623 including the engraved portrait by Martin Droueshout. Presumably, the
engraving was produced from an earlier portrait as Droueshout was 15 years old
when Shakespeare died.
William Shakespeare was baptized on 26 April 1564
and died on 23 April 1616.
Of the 36 plays in the
First Folio, 17 were printed in Shakespeare's lifetime in
various good and bad quarto editions, one was printed after his death and 18
had not yet been printed at all. It is this fact that makes the First Folio so
important; without it, 18 of Shakespeare’s plays, including Twelfth Night,
Measure for Measure, Macbeth, Julius Caesar and The Tempest, might never have
survived.
Shakespeare is often called
England’s national poet and the ‘Bard of Avon’.
The text was
collated by two of Shakespeare's fellow actors and friends, John Heminge
and Henry Condell, who edited it and supervised the
printing. They divided the plays into comedies, tragedies and
histories, an editorial decision that has come to shape our idea of the
Shakespearean canon.
Folio editions were
large and expensive books that were seen as prestige items.
The writer Ben
Jonson's admiring introduction to the First Folio, seen in the title page
image, declared in verse that the engraver had achieved a good likeness.
The first record of
Shakespeare's career as an actor and playwright in London is dated 1592, by
which time he was reasonably well established. It is believed his London career
began sometime between 1585 and 1592.
It is estimated around
750 First Folios were printed, of which 233 are currently known to survive
worldwide.
Shakespeare wrote
around 37 plays, 36 of which are contained in the First Folio. Most
of these plays were performed in the Globe, an open-air playhouse in
London built on the south bank of the Thames in 1599.
As none of
Shakespeare's original manuscripts survive (except, possibly, Sir Thomas More,
which Shakespeare is believed to have revised a part of) we only know his
work from printed editions.