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A Midsummer
Night's Dream Is Published, by Richard Cavendish
October 8th, 1600
Thomas Fisher kept a bookshop at the sign of the White Hart on
Fleet Street, London, in 1600. On October 8th he entered 'a booke called A mydsommer
nightes Dreame' in the register of the Stationers' Company. This was the method
of establishing publisher's copyright, for the Company controlled the publication
of all books, plays and pamphlets. The author at this time had no copyright to
his work. A dramatist sold his play to the actors' company staging it, which usually
would not want it in print because then other actors could buy a copy and put
it on. Sometimes, however, the company needed the money or wanted a play printed
to forestall a pirate edition. This may have happened with A Midsummer Night's
Dream, which came out soon after the appearance of a pirated version of Henry
V. Thomas Fisher's edition of the Dream in the usual small, cheapish quarto format
is thought to have been printed from Shakespeare's own handwritten copy of the
final acting text. Publication would have been at the instance of the Lord Chamberlain's
Men, the cream of the profession and the company in which Shakespeare
was partner, actor and house dramatist. It is thought that Shakespeare himself
normally took the part of the noble Duke Theseus of Athens. |
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