A study of Shakespeare's versification : with an inquiry into the trustworthiness of the early texts an examination of the 1616 folio of Ben Jonson's works and appendices including a revised text of 'Antony and Cleopatra'

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A study of Shakespeare's versification : with an inquiry into the trustworthiness of the early texts an examination of the 1616 folio of Ben Jonson's works and appendices including a revised text of 'Antony and Cleopatra'

Matthew Albert Bayfield

(Cambridge library collection, . Literary studies)

Cambridge University Press, 2009

  • : [pbk.]

Other Title

A study of Shakespeare's versification : with an inquiry into the trustworthiness of the early texts an examination of the 1616 folio of Ben Jonson's works and appendices including a revised text of "Antony and Cleopatra"

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Note

"This digitally printed version 2009"--T.p. verso

Reprint. Originally published: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1920

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

The Reverend Matthew Albert Bayfield (1852-1922) published this study at the end of his life after a long career as classical scholar, editor of Greek tragedies and headmaster of several public schools. He gives an account of the structure and characteristic features of Shakespeare's dramatic verse and argues that it has been fundamentally misunderstood by other scholars. In particular, he analyses the use of contractions or abbreviations found in the Folio and Quartos and continued in the editions of his own time. He weighs up which of the contractions familiar from many editions were actually Shakespeare's, and what that reveals about how Shakespeare might have intended his prose and verse to be spoken. Bayfield's many appendices evaluating the metre of specific lines and his detailed linguistic analysis remain thought-provoking for modern editors and scholars of Shakespeare.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Part I. Shakespeare's Versification: 1. The predominant characteristic of Shakespeare's verse
  • 2. Metre and rhythm
  • Part II. The Early Texts: 3. Abolition of resolutions and other abbreviations in the verse
  • 4. Abbreviations in the verse (continued)
  • 5. Abbreviations in the verse (continued)
  • 6. Elision in the final foot
  • 7. On certain spellings
  • 8. Abbreviations in the prose
  • 9. Conclusions
  • Appendices
  • Index.

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