The Independent on Saturday

What if we never had the Bard?

- EMMA SMITH Macbeth, Antony and Cleopatra, Coriolanus, Julius Caesar and Timon of Athens First Folio. | The Conversati­on Smith is Professor of Shakespear­e Studies at the University of Oxford

WITHOUT the First Folio, 18 of Shakespear­e’s plays that had not previously been printed would have been lost, among them Macbeth, Julius Caesar, Twelfth Night and The Tempest.

No “friends, Romans and countrymen”, no “brave new world”, no “double, double toil and trouble”. But what would really be different if this book had never been printed at all?

Most significan­tly, there wouldn’t be the cultural icon we know as “Shakespear­e”. Those works that do survive would be scattered across numerous flimsy early editions, rather than gathered in this imposing and serious volume.

Without the weight – cultural as well as literal – of the collected edition, it’s possible few would care about these surviving plays. Something similar happened to other playwright­s of the period, whose work was not given the authority of a collection.

We’d also have an idea of Shakespear­e as more interested in histories and comedies than tragedies. would

be lost without the

Since some of these early editions did not name Shakespear­e on their title pages, the authorship of plays such as Romeo and Juliet, Titus Andronicus and Henry V would be uncertain. Conversely, title pages identify Shakespear­e as the author of The London Prodigal (1605) and A Yorkshire Tragedy (1608), which most modern scholars do not attribute to Shakespear­e.

In part this is due to the fact that they are not included in the First Folio. Without it, the canon of Shakespear­e’s plays would have decisively shifted.

This different canon would have prompted a different historical response.

The convenienc­e and ready availabili­ty of the First Folio as a repository for Shakespear­e’s plays was a significan­t practical factor in getting him back into the theatres when they reopened at the Restoratio­n of Charles II in 1660.

This large collection of Shakespear­e’s works took up visible space on the shelf. Had he not come back into prominence at that important moment – and had the newly revived theatre looked elsewhere for their dramatic scripts – Shakespear­e’s reputation might well have been lost permanentl­y.

If Shakespear­e had not been revived in the later 17th century, it is hard to see how he would have become the national poet during the 18th. No statue in Poets’ Corner, no arguments between the literary figures of the day about the best way to edit his plays.

David Garrick – the leading Shakespear­ean actor of the 18th century – would have had an entirely different career (as, in later periods, would other actors such as Laurence Olivier and Judi Dench).

This much-depleted Shakespear­e would hardly have galvanised outrage about the sale of his Stratford birthplace in the 19th century.

Perhaps modern Stratford-upon-Avon would now simply mark its playwright son with a blue plaque (rather as Shakespear­e’s writing partner John Fletcher is remembered in his home town of Rye). There would be no birthday parade, no Othello taxi firm, no tourist industry. No one would care if his wife, Anne Hathaway, had a cottage.

Without the First Folio there would be no dedicated Shakespear­e theatre in Stratford, or at Shakespear­e’s Globe on Bankside. There would be no Shakespear­e festivals around the world, such as that in Stratford, Ontario.

In fact, Stratford, Ontario, named in the 19th century for Shakespear­e’s home town, would now have a different name entirely, as would Stratfords in Ohio, Connecticu­t, Wisconsin, New Jersey and in New Zealand and Australia.

Halloween would be quite different without Macbeth, which popularise­d a trio of witches around a cauldron performing a spell. Valentine clichés of romantic love are unthinkabl­e without the popularity of Romeo and Juliet.

A Shakespear­e reduced in national prestige would not have been sufficient­ly prominent to be translated. Without German Shakespear­e, we might never have had Freud’s version of the Oedipus complex, which he understood through his reading of Hamlet.

Karl Marx would not have conceptual­ised his theory of capital via Timon of Athens. And translatio­ns around the world – into more than 100 languages – would not have establishe­d Shakespear­e as a global author.

There are other, more serious consequenc­es of this fancy. Colonial rule in India would not have relied on Shakespear­ean study as the central text of empire. Othello’s murder of Desdemona might not have left its long shadow of prejudice about interracia­l marriage.

Perhaps the Confederat­e actor John Wilkes Booth would not have shot Abraham Lincoln at DC’s Ford’s Theatre in April 1865 since he wouldn’t have been steeped in the role of the assassin Brutus in Julius Caesar.

The after-effects of the First Folio are far-reaching indeed, touching fields of human psychology and geopolitic­s as well as literature, culture and theatre. No First Folio means no Shakespear­e. And, whether you enjoy his works or not, that’s a hard reality to imagine.

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 ?? | Wikimedia Commons ?? THE title page of the First Folio of Shakespear­e’s plays.
| Wikimedia Commons THE title page of the First Folio of Shakespear­e’s plays.

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