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September 20, 2019 05:04 pm PDT

Scholar finds John Milton's copy of Shakespeare, marked up with corrections and improvements

University of Cambridge lecturer Jason Scott-Warren was looking at an original 1623 folio copy of Shakespeare's plays, when thought he recognized the handwriting in the margins: John Milton.

Was it possible that he'd identified Milton's personal copy of Shakespeare? It was jammed full of marginalia, and scholars for years had wondered who had written those scribblings. If it was Milton, then they had a record "of arguably the second-greatest 17th-century writer reading the first."

So Scott-Warren went to his blog and wrote a post arguing his hypothesis, hit "publish" -- and the world of 17th-century English literary studies went faintly nuts. Turns out they agreed with him and now they're all flipping out with excitement.

One of the best parts about Milton's notes is that he keeps on suggesting corrections and improvements to Shakespeare. As the Washington Post writes (my apologies if this is paywalled):

Miltons marginalia range from line-editing crossing out an adjective and offering an alternative to flagging preferred passages to fixing Shakespeares meter, ensuring it conforms perfectly to the rules of iambic pentameter. At one point, Milton rewrites the title of what may be Shakespeares most famous work: The play becomes Juliet and Romeo, not vice versa. [snip]

Bourne came to cherish particular edits. For example, the time the commenter suggested wicked tongue instead of idle tongue in Hamlet. Or the time he proposed that Juliet was past hope, past cure, past help instead of past hope, past care, past help in Romeo and Juliet. [snip]

Its unclear why Milton may have made the marginalia and revisions.

Read the rest

Original Link: http://feeds.boingboing.net/~r/boingboing/iBag/~3/-DKgZBzTSV8/scholar-finds-john-miltons-c.html

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