Book contents
- Frontmatter
- The Open Stage: Elizabethan or Existentialist?
- The Lantern of Taste
- Was there a Typical Elizabethan Stage?
- On Reconstructing a Practicable Elizabethan Public Playhouse
- The Discovery-space in Shakespeare’s Globe
- ‘Passing over the Stage’
- The Actor at the Foot of Shakespeare’s Platform
- Elizabethan Stage-Practice and the Transmutation of Source Material by the Dramatists
- The Maddermarket Theatre and the Playing of Shakespeare
- Actors and Scholars: A View of Shakespeare in the Modern Theatre
- Cleopatra as Isis
- Shakespeare’s Friends: Hathaways and Burmans at Shottery
- Illustrations of Social Life II: A Butcher and some Social Pests
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1957
- The Whirligig of Time, A Review of Recent Productions
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plate Section
Illustrations of Social Life II: A Butcher and some Social Pests
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2007
- Frontmatter
- The Open Stage: Elizabethan or Existentialist?
- The Lantern of Taste
- Was there a Typical Elizabethan Stage?
- On Reconstructing a Practicable Elizabethan Public Playhouse
- The Discovery-space in Shakespeare’s Globe
- ‘Passing over the Stage’
- The Actor at the Foot of Shakespeare’s Platform
- Elizabethan Stage-Practice and the Transmutation of Source Material by the Dramatists
- The Maddermarket Theatre and the Playing of Shakespeare
- Actors and Scholars: A View of Shakespeare in the Modern Theatre
- Cleopatra as Isis
- Shakespeare’s Friends: Hathaways and Burmans at Shottery
- Illustrations of Social Life II: A Butcher and some Social Pests
- International Notes
- Shakespeare Productions in the United Kingdom: 1957
- The Whirligig of Time, A Review of Recent Productions
- The Year's Contributions to Shakespearian Study 1 Critical Studies
- 2 Shakespeare’s Life, Times and Stage
- 3 Textual Studies
- Books Received
- Index
- Plate Section
Summary
The Huntington Library possesses a remarkable collection of seven small books of engravings of the mid-seventeenth century, some of which illustrate various aspects of social life. When in the Bridgewater Library, the seven were bound together in one volume, the items having been numbered and sometimes annotated by the man who played the elder brother in Comus, probably while still Viscount Brackley and before he became the second Earl in 1649. The volume is now broken up, and the accession numbers are 60708–14.
The illustrations reproduced here (Pi. VI) with the kind permission of the Huntington Library are taken from two of these items, the second and the seventh. The butcher's shop comes from a book of nine moral emblems, the title of which is given in a cartouche above the first engraving: The Ages of Sin, or Sinnes Birth & groweth. With the Stepps, and Degrees of Sin, from thought to finall Impenitencie. The Corser Sale-Catalogue (Sotheby's, March 1869, lot 460) assigns the book to c. 1656, and Wing (Short-Title Catalogue, A761) to 1655, and both indicate that the name of the printseller, Thomas Jenner, is present in the title. This is not so in the British Museum (Bright), Harvard (Huth) and Huntington copies.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Shakespeare Survey , pp. 107 - 108Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1959