Prince Henry’s Barriers: Textual Essay

David Lindley

This was the first of Jonson’s court entertainments not to be issued in quarto shortly after the performance, and was first printed in F1 , occupying signatures 4M3-4N1v, pages 965-74. It falls, therefore, into that portion of the folio, from 4M-4Q, which was extensively reset. In the initial printing, as Gerritsen (1959) and Donovan (1987) have shown, the printers failed to run off sufficient copies of these pages. The error was discovered ‘about the time that quire 4P was being printed’ (Donovan, 108), at which point the printer collected all the pages where the type had not been distributed and reimposed them within new skeletons. Those pages for which the type had already been distributed were completely reset. In summary: all the pages of quire 4M (except 4M2 and the bottom half of 4M2v), together with the formes 4N3.4v, 4N1v.6, 4O3v.4 and 4O3.4v were reset; and all the others were reimposed, save 4P3v.4 and 4P1v.6. Donovan’s exhaustive technical analysis should be consulted for details of the evidence. What is particularly significant in terms of the narrative of the printing of F1 is the fact that the ‘resetting in quires 4M-4O took place after the original imposition and printing of all the quires in the volume’ (Donovan, 113). The Textual Essay for Gold. Age suggests some important revisions to his account of the printing of the final pages of the Folio, but for Barriers the evidence clearly demonstrates that the whole text was reset, with the exception of the forme 4N1:6 outer, which was reimposed, with no variants on the page belonging to this masque.

The reset pages (State 2) were derived from the existing printed copies. The variants do not suggest any reference back to a manuscript, nor that Jonson was involved in any corrections. In general, indeed, the compositors normalized more extensively than they had originally done. The Jonsonian spelling of ‘aequall’ in State 1, for example, is routinely transformed to ‘equal’. Most of the variants are of capitalization, font, and punctuation, and are entirely indifferent. In the case of substantive variants, the majority clearly introduce, rather than correct error. In line 74 ‘my’ becomes ‘thy’; in 203 ‘nigh’ is replaced by ‘high’; in 416 ‘And this’ becomes ‘And if this’. Whilst the replacement of ‘of’ by ‘for’ in line 69 makes sense, as does ‘inticement’ for ‘incitement’ in 160, neither is an improvement, and both are explicable as compositorial in origin. Even the metrical correction of ‘ordinance’ in 309 to ‘ord’nance’ (if it is indeed anything more than a normal spelling variant) could have lain within a compositor’s power to spot. In the absence of any evidence of authoritative revision, I have followed State 1 throughout, with the single exception of this last metrical correction. I have, however, in modernising the text, accepted State 2’s expansion of the abbreviated form of ‘Saint’. A complete list of variants is provided below.

Prince Henry’s Barriers is not merely distinctive in being the first masque to be printed only in the Folio; it is also the first in which there is virtually no indication of dramatic action, nor any description of the set. In the earlier barriers which followed Hymenaei, by contrast, there is extensive evocation of the occasion. Equally noteworthy is the fact that the text offers no scholarly marginalia. Whilst the Hymenaei barriers also carry no marginalia, every other masque that had preceded this (and Oberon which followed it) is characterised by Jonson’s display of learning in his marginalia. One might argue that the absence of marginalia is a consequence of the genre of the entertainment, for the later Challenge at Tilt is similarly scanty in description, and devoid of explanatory notes. (Though in this case it might also be a consequence of Jonson’s embarrassed purging from the Folio of any mention of the marriage of Frances Howard which was its occasion.) Given that Jonson claimed he had researched his marginalia for Queens specifically at Prince Henry’s request it might still seem odd that no such effort was made in this case. But the strong probability must be that the absence of apparatus and description is an indication of the nature of the copy underlying F1.

The absence of stage directions, and of other details – such as the list of combatants which Jonson supplied for Hymenaei – suggests that this was a final draft of the text, completed before all such details were known – apparently the number and identity of the defenders changed until the very last minute ( CSPV 1607-10 , 406, Masque Archive, Barriers, 22). Though clearly Jonson knew the basic outline of the setting – Merlin’s tomb, the indication of the lake, Saint George’s Portico and the Cave of Chivalry – it is probable that this text was composed before the set was built, and, for whatever reason, Jonson felt no need, or had no opportunity, to return to his script to fill in the details after the event.

In its first state there are a number of indications that the printer’s manuscript was probably a Jonson holograph. It is an extremely clean text, with only one obvious substantive error (‘fee’ for ‘feet’ at line 3), and bears many marks of Jonson’s practice. In particular, the spellings of ‘aequall’ (20, 22, 23) ‘AEdifice’ (46), ‘Trophaes’ (62, 320), ‘AEternally’ (115), ‘AEgyptians’ (235), are characteristically Jonsonian, and a number of elisions exhibit his normal habits – ‘I’am’ (114) ‘to’assure’ (208), ‘’hem’ (244), ‘giue’him’ (285). So too, there are many examples of Jonson’s preferred ‘y’ spellings scattered throughout (though not of his characteristic ‘theyr’, which compositors seem to have removed). These are not infallible indications, but all things concur together to suggest that the title The Speeches at Prince Henry’s Barriers is an exact description of what the text represents – solely Jonson’s own contribution to the event.

List of variants

4M 1:6 (o)

4M6v 972

State 1 State 2
1 Spaine ~,
8 windes Winds
11 ſhee ſhe
16 ordinance ord’nance
22 bloud Blood
24 thunderer Thunderer
25 Countries ... Spayne Countreys ... Spaine
27 conqueſts conqueſt
30 valure Valour
37 glorie Glory
42 Of SATVRNES OfSATVRNES
45 roſes Roſes

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

4M 2:5 (o)

4M5v 970

2 ayde ... nigh aide ... high
3 worthyeſt worthieſt
5 honors ... gayne honours ... gaine
6 maintayne maintaine
9 ſhee ſhe
10 Britayne Britaine
12 king King
13 Lyons hart Lyons heart
17 lion Lyon
19 Deedes Deeds
20 armies Armies
22 begin beginne
24 cullors cullours
27 Fortunes Fortunes
33 S. Saint
35 red ſea Red Sea
41 remaynes remaines
42 traynes traines

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

4M3:4 (o)

4M3 965

7 rayſ∧d rays’d
12 ſtil∧d ſtil’d
18 bene bin
24 aequall equall
26 aequall equall
27 thirſty ... vnaequall thirſtie ... vnequall
28 liu' d∧ ~ ,
,
29 reuiu'd! ~ !
31 loue! ... feare! ~ ! ... ~ !
34 maieſty Maieſtie

4M4v 968

8 ſixe ſix
12 vndemoliſh∧d ... built! vndemoliſh’d ... ~!
... 2
13 St. George’s Saint George∧s
15 Honor∧d honor'd
20 Armor armour
22 old Graecian Heroes ... died olde Graecian Heroes ... dyed
23 Rais∧d rays’d
26 all ... Lady al ... Ladie
31 GLory of knights GLorie of Knights
33 hower houre

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

4M3:4 (i)

4M3v 996

4 ſtrooke ſtroke
12 maieſty maieſtie
18 ſo, ~∧
-
21 ſeats ... knightes∧
... knightes
ſeates ... ~.
22 watch∧d ... nights∧
... nights
watch’d ... ~,
23 fill∧d fill’d
24 Old olde
28 Cloudes clouds
30m Diſcouerd Diſcouercd
31m ab oue∧ aboue.
34 call∧d of call'd for
39 My thy

4M4 967

1 take∧ ~,
8 Liſt liſt
13 duely ... ſtate, ... throne∧
... =tate, ... throne
duly ... ~∧ ... ~,
-
... ..
17 not be despiſ∧d not to be despis'd
18 Deuis∧d deuis'd
19 Maiden mayden
21 Indowe ... Lady ... lake Indow ... Lady ... Lake
25 Honor honour
30 error errour
36 AEternally Eternally
39m Tombe Tombe
39 Neither Neyther
41 She Shee
43 Meliadus, -... Knight∧ ~∧ ... ~,

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 15, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

4M2:5 (i)

4M5 969

4 copy ... incitement ... deedes copie ... enticement ... deeds
5 knights ... ſteedes Knights ... ſteeds
6 ladies Ladies
7 vn-horſe vn∧horſe
9 ſtage Stage
10 ſcene Scene
12 lawes Lawes
14 empire Empire
16 ſhee ſhe
19 Britayne ... flie Britaine ... flye
22 iuſtice Iuſtice
23 planet Planet
29 land Land
31 arte Art
34 fleece ... forrayne Fleece ... forrayne
,
39 thunder, ~;
41 trayn'd train'd

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

4M1:6 (i)

4M6 971

2 black blacke
4 Here Heere
6 farre∧ ~ .
9 french French
13 here heere
25 french French
29 here heere
46 here ... eight, heere ... ~.

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

(Missing from copy 41)

4N 1:6 (o)

4N1 973    IMPOSITION A             IMPOSITION B

      State 1          State 2          State 3

38       wake, her       wake her,          ~. ~,

42       MELIADVS. …shield,    ~. … ~,       ~, … ~.

State 1: 40

State 2: the rest

State 3: 4, 10, 14, 15, 18, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, 30, 31, 33, 36, 38, 42, 44, 45, 46, 48

4N1:6 (i)

4N1v 974

2 mee me
12/13 [Font 5] [Font 6]
13 After [swash 'A’]fter
16 blood∧ ~,
23 heauen heauen
26 propheſy propheſie
30 ſhal ... euery ſhall ... euerie
33 And this And if this
43 nations Nations
45 fly flie
47 ſky ſkie

State 1: 1, 2, 3, 6, 7, 8, 9, 11, 12, 13, 16, 17, 19, 20, 25, 26, 27, 29, 32, 34, 35, 37, 39, 40, 41, 43, 47

State 2: the rest

COPIES COLLATED (BY DAVID L. GANTS)

1. Huntington Library, 62100

2. Huntington Library, 62101

3. Huntington Library, 62104

4. Huntington Library, 62105

5. Huntington Library, 495467 (Ford Copy ‘A’)

6. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 1

7. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 2

8. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 3

9. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 4

10. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 5

11. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751, Copy 6

12. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751.2, copy 1

13. Folger Shakespeare Library, STC 14751.2, copy 2

14. Library of Congress, Yorke W.4.4

15. Gants Personal Copy, Fenton bookplate

16. Gants Personal Copy, Everard Home bookplate

17. British Library, G. 11630 (Grenville copy)

18. Boston Public Library, XfG .3811 .5

19. Boston University, YPR 2600 .C16

20. Wellesley College, qx - English Poetry

21. Bodleian Library, Douce I. 302

22. Huntington Library, 499968

23. Huntington Library, 499967

24. Huntington Library, 499971

25. Huntington Library, 606199

26. Huntington Library, 606202

27. Huntington Library, 606200

28. Huntington Library, 606574

29. Huntington Library, 606576

30. Huntington Library, 606599

31. Huntington Library, 606579

32. Huntington Library, 606582

33. Huntington Library, 606583

34. Brown University, Providence, PR 2600 - 1616

35. Texas Christian University, Fort Worth, Lewis PR2600 1616

36. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616a

37. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616ab

38. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616ad

39. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616af

40. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616ah

41. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616ak

42. University of Texas, Austin, Ah/ J738/ +B616am

43. University of Texas, Austin, AH/ J738/ +B616an

44. University of Texas, Austin, Wh/ J738/ +B616a

45. University of Texas, Austin, Pforz. 559

46. University of Texas, Austin, Woodward-Ruth 181

47. University of Texas, Austin, Stark 6431

48. University of Virginia, E 1616 .J64