Seven years after William Shakespeare鈥檚 death in 1616, two actors from his King鈥檚 Men troupe compiled his greatest hits into a collection known as the First Folio鈥36 plays, from The Tempest to Cymbeline, that form the core of what we traditionally think of when we think of Shakespeare.
Of the 750 copies printed of the First Folio, less than a third survive. The Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, DC, has about 80 copies, many of which are currently on tour throughout the United States as part of celebrations of the 400th anniversary of Shakespeare鈥檚 death.
And one, given to the College as part of a bequest from Allerton Hickmott, Class of 1917, and his wife, Madelyn, is the second-most requested book at (after a first edition of The Book of Mormon).
鈥淚t鈥檚 very rare to have any, so the fact that we have one is sort of amazing,鈥 says Shakespearean scholar , an assistant professor of English.
Even more rare, Gamboa says, is that, at 天美麻豆, students, faculty, and the community can view the First Folio not under glass, but up close.
鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of breathtaking, not only because it exists and exists here, but that students every day can interact with it,鈥 he says. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 mean just look at it, but thumb through the pages and see the liner notes and find their favorite plays and passages in a copy of the First Folio.鈥
鈥淚t鈥檚 sort of breathtaking, not only because it exists and exists here, but that students every day can interact with it,鈥 says Assistant Professor of English Brett Gamboa. (Photo by Robert Gill)
On a recent afternoon, students in Gamboa鈥檚 鈥淓nglish 15: Shakespeare鈥 course get to do just that. Librarians Morgan Swan and Laura Braunstein have brought the Folio鈥攁long with a sampling of other contemporaneous volumes鈥攐n a special visit to Gamboa鈥檚 classroom.
Uncasing the books on a table in the front of the room, Swan tells the group of 14 students, 鈥淭his is pretty informal鈥攜ou should leave your drinks and pens and food, but otherwise come on down. This is sort of a rare outing. Usually you have to come to us.鈥
Swan tells the class about the publication history of Shakespeare鈥檚 plays鈥攈ow during his lifetime he and his players were more interested in retaining the exclusive ability to perform his works than to publish the scripts widely.
鈥淚f you were a printer back then in London and you were the first person to print a play or a book, then you owned the copyright,鈥 Swan says. 鈥淧rinters would send guys to stand among the groundlings in front of the stage to remember everything they could and take it back and then, OK, we鈥檝e got Hamlet, boom! That鈥檚 why the earliest quarto of Hamlet is called the bad quarto. It鈥檚 just laughable鈥攚hole sections missing.鈥
The First Folio, printed later, was something different altogether. The actors John Heminges and Henry Condell were concerned about Shakespeare鈥檚 reputation鈥攁nd their own, Swan says. So they decided to create a definitive edition of the plays.
鈥淭hey went around and created this consortium of all the printers out there who had held copyright to all the plays that had been published. And then they brought in their own working copies that they had used when they were acting鈥攚hen they actually played the role of Hamlet.鈥
鈥淭he First Folio is really important because if this hadn鈥檛 been published, half of Shakespeare鈥檚 plays would be lost,鈥 Swan says. 鈥淥nly 18 plays had been printed up to that point.鈥
After Swan鈥檚 presentation, the students have a chance to examine the book itself and ask questions ranging from the order of the plays in the volume to why the paper in the First Folio has held up so well over 393 years. (Answer: The linen and cotton fiber of 17th-century paper is less acidic than modern wood pulp paper.)
鈥淭o have the Folio brought directly to our classroom and to have it be really tangible is just a weirdly transcendent experience,鈥 says Hannah Mazonson 鈥18. 鈥淚t鈥檚 incredibly cool getting to flip through it and compare what the text looks like to what we鈥檙e reading in class.鈥
That鈥檚 exactly the kind of experience Gamboa, Braunstein, and Swan want students to have. Asked why Rauner Library lets people handle documents like the First Folio, Swan says, 鈥淲e are very conscious of the fact that every time someone handles it, it minutely deteriorates the item. But we鈥檙e so committed to the educational, experiential act that we feel like being able to engage physically with the object has a value that you can鈥檛 reproduce if it鈥檚 behind glass or you have someone just talking at you about it.鈥