Monday, 2 May 2016

1609 May 20 Shakespeare'sSonnets first published

Thomas Thorpe Issues the First Edition of Shakespeare's Sonnets(May 20, 1609)

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On May 20, 1609 English publisher and "procurer of manuscripts" Thomas ThorpeOffsite Link issued from London, without the author's permission, Shake-Speare's SonnetsOffsite Link. The volume contained 152 previously unpublished sonnets, and two (numbers 138 and 144) that had previously been published in a 1599 miscellany entitled The Passionate PilgrimOffsite Link. This earlier collection, falsely attributed in its entirety to Shakespeare, had been published by William JaggardOffsite Link, who would later, in 1623, publish the so-called "First FolioOffsite Link" of Shakespeare's plays.

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Thorpe's "apparent disregard for Shakespeare's permission earned him a poor reputation, although modern author Katherine Duncan-Jones has argued that he was not such a 'scoundrel' as he was portrayed, and the amiable and admirable [Edward] BlountOffsite Link would certainly not associate with him if he were a scoundrel. It has even been suggested that Shakespeare did sell his manuscript to Thorpe, because of his acquaintance with [Ben] JonsonOffsite Link as an actor in SejanusOffsite Link, who may have recommended Thorpe to him as a good publisher. The dedicationOffsite Link, which is addressed to a mysterious Mr. W.H., may have been written either by Shakespeare himself or by Thorpe. Popular belief, however, is that Shakespeare is the author of the dedication, but the identity of Mr. W.H. is not known. Thorpe was probably responsible for the arrangement of the sonnets, with 1-17 being the "procreation sonnetsOffsite Link", 18-126 being love sonnets to the Fair YouthOffsite Link (for the most part), and 127-154 being written on a variety of subjects, including politics, sex, and the Dark Lady.

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