- Ralph Crane
Ralph Crane (fl. 1615 – 1630) was a professional
scrivener orscribe in early seventeenth-century London. His close connection with some of theFirst Folio texts of the plays ofWilliam Shakespeare has led to his being called "Shakespeare's first editor." [T. H. Howard-Hill, "Shakespeare's Earliest Editor, Ralph Crane," "Shakespeare Survey" 44 (1992).]Life
What little is known of Crane's life comes from his own writings. In 1621 he published a small collection of his own poems titled "The Works of Mercy, Both Corporeal and Spiritual," which he dedicated to
John Egerton, 1st Earl of Bridgewater . In the prefatory "Proem" to that volume, Crane indicated that he was a native Londoner, and the son of a successful member of the Merchant Taylors Company. He spent seven years as the law clerk to Sir Anthony Ashley, secretary of the Privy Council; Crane later became a scribe working mainly for attorneys.Thomas Lodge dedicated his "Scylla's Metamorphosis" to a Ralph Crane in 1589; this may have been the poet/scrivener. Crane turned to writing verse late in life, when he was oppressed by ill health and poverty. [Leslie Stephen, ed., "The Dictionary of National Biography," Vol. XIII; London, Smith, Elder, 1888; p. 11.]hakespeare
Crane was working for the King's Men by 1618; he produced multiple transcripts of the company's plays over the next decade and more. The modern scholarly consensus holds that Crane transcripts constituted the copy from which at least five plays were set into type for the First Folio. Those five (in their Folio order) are:
* "
The Tempest " – the first play in the volume
* "The Two Gentlemen of Verona " – the second play
* "The Merry Wives of Windsor " – the third play
* "Measure for Measure " – the fourth play
* "The Winter's Tale " – the fourteenth playE. A. J. Honigmann, in his edition of "
Othello ," [Arden Shakespeare, Third Series; 1993.] suggested that "Othello" should be added as a sixth play to that list; and a few other Folio texts (from "Henry IV, Part 2 " to "Timon of Athens ") have been proposed by individual scholars, though without winning wide acceptance. As a result, Crane's scribal peculiarities concerning stage directions, speech prefixes, punctuation and other specifics have received intense attention from generations of scholars, critics, and editors of Shakespeare.Others
Crane's work for the King's Men was not restricted to Shakespeare. (Or even to plays: he copied out the last will and testament of
Richard Burbage .) The most notable of his other transcripts for the company may well be his MS. of "The Witch ," theThomas Middleton play that has a significant relationship with "Macbeth ." Crane transcripts provided copy for several plays in the first Beaumont and Fletcher folio of 1647, including "The False One ,The Knight of Malta , The Prophetess," and "The Spanish Curate ." The 1623 quarto ofJohn Webster 's "The Duchess of Malfi " was "almost certainly" [John Russell Brown, ed, "The Duchess of Malfi," Manchester, Machester University Press, 1997; p. 30.] set into type from a Crane transcript.None of Crane's Shakespearean MSS. have survived; but Crane scripts of several other works are extant, in addition to the one for "The Witch" noted above. Two of the six extant MSS. of Middleton's "
A Game at Chess " are from Crane's hand. (Crane consistently changed all of Middleton's uses of "has" to "hath" in those transcripts, illustrating the complexities involved in using discriminators like "has/hath" and "does/doth" instylometry studies.) The play "Sir John van Olden Barnavelt ," never printed in its own era, survived to modern times in a single Crane manuscript. (In that instance, Crane did a good job of preserving Fletcher's distinctive pattern of textual and stylistic preferences.)Crane regularly produced what were called presentation manuscripts, copies of favored works for particular clients. On November 27, 1625 he sent his transcript of John Fletcher's play "
The Humorous Lieutenant " to SirKenelm Digby . The extant manuscript ofBen Jonson 's 1618masque "Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue ," known as the Chatsworth MS., was a Crane presentation manuscript for Sir Dudley Carleton.Notes
ources
* Haas, Virginia J. "Ralph Crane: a status report." "Analytical and Enumerative Bibliography." New series III (1989).
* Howard-Hill, T. H. "Ralph Crane and Some Shakspeare First Folio Comedies." Charlottesville, VA, Bibliographic Society of the University of Virginia, 1972.
* Roberts, Jeanne. "Ralph Crane and the Text of "The Tempest"." "Shakespeare Studies" 13 (1980).
* Wilson, F. P. "Ralph Crane, Scrivener to the King's Players." "The Library," IV, 7 (1926).
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