Prefatory Note
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
Summary
My task in writing this short prefatory note to the last volume of this edition of Shakespeare is an easy one, for I have only to commend to the notice of the public the work of my friends. The writer of the Introduction and the Life–my old and valued friend, Dr. Dowden– made, many years ago, a remark which, when it came to my ears, impressed me much– “An Actor's commentary is his acting.” Dr. Dowden criticises keenly, and from a very high stand-point; and in the face of such a truly critical apothegm what can I say but commend its truth, and humbly trust that the form of commentary to which I have devoted my life may have arrested the attention of some that might otherwise not have paused to grasp the lessons which the great English master of thought has spread with such free and beneficent fulness. In the years which have elapsed since we, each in his own way, took this work in hand, I have learned much, and I have to be grateful for many happy hours spent in congenial toil and in friendly communion with both the living and the dead. I am proud that my name should be associated with such a work, and with so many names illustrious in the scholarship of my time.
To those who remain of the staff who undertook and carried on the work, there is one deep, sad note in all their pleasure.
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- Information
- The Henry Irving Shakespeare , pp. v - viiiPublisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1890