Pericles was one of the most popular plays of its time, and it has
regained much of that popularity today. In a wide-ranging introduction,
Roger Warren draws on his experience of the play in rehearsal and
performance to explore the reasons for this enduring popularity.
Unfortunately Pericles survives only in a corrupt text, the Quarto
of 1609, in which many passages are nonsensical and others appear to be
missing altogether. Earlier editions have merely cleaned-up the
Quarto, but this edition offers a conjectural reconstruction of what
the original play might have been like. It draws upon George Wilkin's
The Painful Adventures of Pericles (1608) to emend some of the errors
and missing material. It does so in the belief that the play is a
collaboration between Shakespeare and Wilkins. The entire Quarto text
is reprinted in an appendix, together with the passages from Wilkin's
narrative that have particularly contributed to the reconstruction, so
that readers can see for themselves
how the reconstruction has been made.
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