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Who Edited the 1571 Mirror for Magistrates?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  17 December 2022

Jim Pearce
Affiliation:
University of North Carolina, Charlotte
Ward J. Risvold
Affiliation:
Georgia College and State University, Milledgeville
William Given
Affiliation:
University of California, San Diego
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Summary

A Mirror for Magistrates was one of the most widely read works of poetry in early modern England, appearing in a remarkable seven editions and six reissues over its more than sixty years in print (1559–1621). Despite its popularity in its own time, this collection of historical verse tragedies presented chiefly in the voices of ghosts from Britain’s late-medieval past still remains understudied, and the bulk of scholarship devoted to it overwhelmingly focuses solely on the first two editions of the text, those of 1559 and 1563. Particularly overlooked are the two editions in the middle of the life of the Mirror, those of 1571 and 1574. This is not surprising, since these two texts add no new poems to augment those of the earlier editions of the collection, but the works are well worth close scholarly attention, particularly the edition of 1571, since they are the first Mirror editions prepared for publication by someone other than the original compiler William Baldwin (1526/7–63).

While the title page of the 1571 edition prominently announces that the collection has been “newly corrected and augmented,” nowhere in the text is there any indication of just who did that correcting and augmenting. As its title page suggests, the editor of the 1571 Mirror introduces numerous important changes to the text of the previous edition, that of 1563. First, he revises and often adds material to many of the prose passages that link the poems of the Mirror. Second, he rewrites lines in every poem of the collection, and he offers particularly extensive revisions to three tragedies, namely “Sir Robert Tresilian,” “King Richard II,” and “Edmund, Duke of Somerset.” He also adds dates of death for the ghostly narrators (and for Roger Mortimer, first earl of March, whose story is told by another ghost in the poem “The Two Rogers”) in the titles of the tragedies. Third, he rearranges several of the Mirror poems for the sake of chronology. His edition, unlike the first two editions of the Mirror, provides no closing prose commentary to end the work: it simply concludes with the final lines of the poem “Shore’s Wife” (moved in this edition to its proper chronological place in the last position in the collection) and the words “quod Thomas Churchyard” before the printer’s colophon.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2022

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