The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 08, No. 47, September, 1861 by Various
page 13 of 295 (04%)
page 13 of 295 (04%)
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[Footnote J: In _Coriolanus_, Act v. sc. 2, (p. 55, col. 2, of the C. folio,) "struggles or instead noise,"--plainly a memorandum for a stage-direction in regard to the impending fracas between Menenius and the Guard.] These pencil-memorandums in some instances underlie the words in ink which correspond to them. Similar modern pencil-writing, underlying in like manner antique-seeming words in ink, has been discovered in the Bridgewater folio, (Lord Ellesmere's,) the manuscript readings in which Mr. Collier was the first to bring into notice. Some of the pencilled memorandums in the folio of 1632 seem to be unmistakably in the handwriting of Mr. Collier.[K] [Footnote K: Having at hand some of Mr. Collier's own writing in pencil, we are dependent as to this point, in regard to the pencillings in the folio, only upon the accuracy of the fac-similes published by Mr. Hamilton and Dr. Ingleby, which correspond in character, though made by different fac-similists.] Several manuscripts, professing to be contemporary with Shakespeare, and containing passages of interest in regard to him, or to the dramatic affairs of his time, have been pronounced spurious by the highest palaeographic authorities in England, and in one of them (a letter addressed to Henslow, and bearing Marston's signature) a pencilled guide for the ink, like those above mentioned, has been discovered. These manuscripts were made public by Mr. Collier, who professed to have |
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