Between some Kenny Loving (or at least some Kenny Lunching)* and the viewing of a naked Clanger at the exhibition, I popped into various charity shops (all safe) and the library - where I had an accident. Not, fortunately, a catastrophe, merely an accident. The library was selling its 1960s editions of Henry VI I-III and Henry VIII, which, as I rightly judged, I did not have in Arden editions. I suspect we are up to Arden 3 or 4 by now - and from memory the later Ardens were stripping out some of the aparatus for a cleaner reading text and more on performance history. These will do me.
In the unlikely event of needing textual scholarship that is thirty years younger, I can turn to my Norton/Oxford edition and its toilet paper pages. To my surprise, I only have 17, including The Poems (I lent a dear friend The Tempest in 1988. I will not see that again). I don't, it appears, have Richard III, so I don't have all the histories, and I have consistently failed to buy Hamlet. The gaps are mostly comedies and problem plays, some of which I have in Penguin editions. That puts me halfway, and it might be a good set to collect under the £2 rule.
* A vain attempt to appear interesting by means of a private joke.
In the unlikely event of needing textual scholarship that is thirty years younger, I can turn to my Norton/Oxford edition and its toilet paper pages. To my surprise, I only have 17, including The Poems (I lent a dear friend The Tempest in 1988. I will not see that again). I don't, it appears, have Richard III, so I don't have all the histories, and I have consistently failed to buy Hamlet. The gaps are mostly comedies and problem plays, some of which I have in Penguin editions. That puts me halfway, and it might be a good set to collect under the £2 rule.
* A vain attempt to appear interesting by means of a private joke.
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We have a couple of pale blue, mostly dark blue CUPs. And the 2 I have picked at random off the shelf were edited by Russell Fraser (All's Well That Ends Well - pale blue) and MM Mahood (The Merchant of Venice - dark blue).