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Where did Edmond Malone place the Tempest in the chronology of Shakespeare's plays?



March 2019 Topic Challenge: “Release the Sun”, by William SearsOrigin of symbolic interpretation of Prospero's breaking of his staff?How many of Shakespeare's words in his plays were new?Were all of Shakespeare's plays fully in iambic pentameter?How did people know the meaning to Shakespeare's new words?Shakespeare making fun of Shakespeare: listing all of the self-deprecating meta-references in Shakespeare's playsFirst English Renaissance play where women disguise as men?Comparing frequency of word use across Shakespeare's playsOrigin of symbolic interpretation of Prospero's breaking of his staff?How many Elizabethan or Jacobean manuscripts of Shakespeare sonnets have come down to us?Is Caliban of Shakespeare's “The Tempest” based on a real life character?When did Aristotle's Poetics first become available in England?










1















In an excellent answer to one of my previous questions, verbose writes:




Since The Tempest is the first play printed in the First Folio, it was often assumed to be an early play. Scholars such as Edmond Malone and Edward Capell began tackling the chronology of Shakespeare's plays in the late 1700s. I have been unable to track down exactly where Malone and Capell placed The Tempest chronologically, as I don't have easy access to a university library and could not find the information online.




Some scholars now assume that The Tempest was printed as the first play in the First Folio because of the quality of the text that the printer could work from. Edmond Malone was the first scholar who tried to establish a chronology of Shakespeare's plays, namely in "An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in Which the Plays Attributed to Shakspeare Were Written", which was included in the first volume of his Shakespeare edition, The Plays of William Shakspeare (1778).



The question is now where Malone put The Tempest in this first chronology. (He seems to have revised his chronology later; this question is specifically about the version published in 1778.)










share|improve this question
























  • There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

    – Gareth Rees
    4 hours ago











  • @GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

    – Christophe Strobbe
    3 hours ago











  • Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

    – verbose
    22 mins ago















1















In an excellent answer to one of my previous questions, verbose writes:




Since The Tempest is the first play printed in the First Folio, it was often assumed to be an early play. Scholars such as Edmond Malone and Edward Capell began tackling the chronology of Shakespeare's plays in the late 1700s. I have been unable to track down exactly where Malone and Capell placed The Tempest chronologically, as I don't have easy access to a university library and could not find the information online.




Some scholars now assume that The Tempest was printed as the first play in the First Folio because of the quality of the text that the printer could work from. Edmond Malone was the first scholar who tried to establish a chronology of Shakespeare's plays, namely in "An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in Which the Plays Attributed to Shakspeare Were Written", which was included in the first volume of his Shakespeare edition, The Plays of William Shakspeare (1778).



The question is now where Malone put The Tempest in this first chronology. (He seems to have revised his chronology later; this question is specifically about the version published in 1778.)










share|improve this question
























  • There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

    – Gareth Rees
    4 hours ago











  • @GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

    – Christophe Strobbe
    3 hours ago











  • Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

    – verbose
    22 mins ago













1












1








1








In an excellent answer to one of my previous questions, verbose writes:




Since The Tempest is the first play printed in the First Folio, it was often assumed to be an early play. Scholars such as Edmond Malone and Edward Capell began tackling the chronology of Shakespeare's plays in the late 1700s. I have been unable to track down exactly where Malone and Capell placed The Tempest chronologically, as I don't have easy access to a university library and could not find the information online.




Some scholars now assume that The Tempest was printed as the first play in the First Folio because of the quality of the text that the printer could work from. Edmond Malone was the first scholar who tried to establish a chronology of Shakespeare's plays, namely in "An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in Which the Plays Attributed to Shakspeare Were Written", which was included in the first volume of his Shakespeare edition, The Plays of William Shakspeare (1778).



The question is now where Malone put The Tempest in this first chronology. (He seems to have revised his chronology later; this question is specifically about the version published in 1778.)










share|improve this question
















In an excellent answer to one of my previous questions, verbose writes:




Since The Tempest is the first play printed in the First Folio, it was often assumed to be an early play. Scholars such as Edmond Malone and Edward Capell began tackling the chronology of Shakespeare's plays in the late 1700s. I have been unable to track down exactly where Malone and Capell placed The Tempest chronologically, as I don't have easy access to a university library and could not find the information online.




Some scholars now assume that The Tempest was printed as the first play in the First Folio because of the quality of the text that the printer could work from. Edmond Malone was the first scholar who tried to establish a chronology of Shakespeare's plays, namely in "An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in Which the Plays Attributed to Shakspeare Were Written", which was included in the first volume of his Shakespeare edition, The Plays of William Shakspeare (1778).



The question is now where Malone put The Tempest in this first chronology. (He seems to have revised his chronology later; this question is specifically about the version published in 1778.)







william-shakespeare english-renaissance-theater the-tempest






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 3 hours ago







Christophe Strobbe

















asked 4 hours ago









Christophe StrobbeChristophe Strobbe

7,30621452




7,30621452












  • There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

    – Gareth Rees
    4 hours ago











  • @GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

    – Christophe Strobbe
    3 hours ago











  • Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

    – verbose
    22 mins ago

















  • There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

    – Gareth Rees
    4 hours ago











  • @GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

    – Christophe Strobbe
    3 hours ago











  • Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

    – verbose
    22 mins ago
















There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

– Gareth Rees
4 hours ago





There's a copy on the Internet Archive.

– Gareth Rees
4 hours ago













@GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

– Christophe Strobbe
3 hours ago





@GarethRees Heh, thanks. Some other link had take me to an edition from 1821. I can now answer my own question, I guess.

– Christophe Strobbe
3 hours ago













Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

– verbose
22 mins ago





Correction, it’s not Malone’s edition. It’s Samuel Johnson and George Steevens’s. Malone contributed this essay and a lot of notes, but he’s merely one of the “various contributors” mentioned on page 6 at the link.

– verbose
22 mins ago










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














"An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays Attributed to Shakespeare Were Written" can be found on pages 269 - 346 of the first volume of The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes. The chronology itself can be found on pages 274-275. It start with Titus Andronicus (1589) and ends with the following plays and years:




  • A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608; title in italics since doubtful)


  • Antony and Cleopatra (1608)


  • Coriolanus (1609)


  • Timon of Athens (1610)


  • Othello (1611)


  • The Tempest (1612)


  • Twelfth Night (1614)

Malone's arguments for dating The Tempest to 1612 can be found on pages 341-342. These arguments include a "dreadful tempest" in England in late 1612 and the account of the sailor Edmond Pet, who narrowly survived a tempest at sea, but he eventually describes the dating of this play as "[not] a very improbable conjecture".






share|improve this answer























  • Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

    – verbose
    27 mins ago










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









2














"An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays Attributed to Shakespeare Were Written" can be found on pages 269 - 346 of the first volume of The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes. The chronology itself can be found on pages 274-275. It start with Titus Andronicus (1589) and ends with the following plays and years:




  • A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608; title in italics since doubtful)


  • Antony and Cleopatra (1608)


  • Coriolanus (1609)


  • Timon of Athens (1610)


  • Othello (1611)


  • The Tempest (1612)


  • Twelfth Night (1614)

Malone's arguments for dating The Tempest to 1612 can be found on pages 341-342. These arguments include a "dreadful tempest" in England in late 1612 and the account of the sailor Edmond Pet, who narrowly survived a tempest at sea, but he eventually describes the dating of this play as "[not] a very improbable conjecture".






share|improve this answer























  • Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

    – verbose
    27 mins ago















2














"An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays Attributed to Shakespeare Were Written" can be found on pages 269 - 346 of the first volume of The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes. The chronology itself can be found on pages 274-275. It start with Titus Andronicus (1589) and ends with the following plays and years:




  • A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608; title in italics since doubtful)


  • Antony and Cleopatra (1608)


  • Coriolanus (1609)


  • Timon of Athens (1610)


  • Othello (1611)


  • The Tempest (1612)


  • Twelfth Night (1614)

Malone's arguments for dating The Tempest to 1612 can be found on pages 341-342. These arguments include a "dreadful tempest" in England in late 1612 and the account of the sailor Edmond Pet, who narrowly survived a tempest at sea, but he eventually describes the dating of this play as "[not] a very improbable conjecture".






share|improve this answer























  • Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

    – verbose
    27 mins ago













2












2








2







"An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays Attributed to Shakespeare Were Written" can be found on pages 269 - 346 of the first volume of The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes. The chronology itself can be found on pages 274-275. It start with Titus Andronicus (1589) and ends with the following plays and years:




  • A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608; title in italics since doubtful)


  • Antony and Cleopatra (1608)


  • Coriolanus (1609)


  • Timon of Athens (1610)


  • Othello (1611)


  • The Tempest (1612)


  • Twelfth Night (1614)

Malone's arguments for dating The Tempest to 1612 can be found on pages 341-342. These arguments include a "dreadful tempest" in England in late 1612 and the account of the sailor Edmond Pet, who narrowly survived a tempest at sea, but he eventually describes the dating of this play as "[not] a very improbable conjecture".






share|improve this answer













"An Attempt to Ascertain the Order in which the Plays Attributed to Shakespeare Were Written" can be found on pages 269 - 346 of the first volume of The Plays of William Shakespeare in Ten Volumes. The chronology itself can be found on pages 274-275. It start with Titus Andronicus (1589) and ends with the following plays and years:




  • A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608; title in italics since doubtful)


  • Antony and Cleopatra (1608)


  • Coriolanus (1609)


  • Timon of Athens (1610)


  • Othello (1611)


  • The Tempest (1612)


  • Twelfth Night (1614)

Malone's arguments for dating The Tempest to 1612 can be found on pages 341-342. These arguments include a "dreadful tempest" in England in late 1612 and the account of the sailor Edmond Pet, who narrowly survived a tempest at sea, but he eventually describes the dating of this play as "[not] a very improbable conjecture".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered 3 hours ago









Christophe StrobbeChristophe Strobbe

7,30621452




7,30621452












  • Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

    – verbose
    27 mins ago

















  • Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

    – verbose
    27 mins ago
















Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

– verbose
27 mins ago





Oh cool! I’ll revise my answer to the other question based on this. Not sure how I missed finding this copy.

– verbose
27 mins ago

















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