Based on Chaucer's Knight's Tale, The Two Noble Kinsmen was written
at the end of Shakespeare's career, as a collaboration with the rising
young dramatist John Fletcher. Neglected until recently by directors and
teachers, the play deserves to be better known for its moving
dramatization of the conflict of love and friendship. This new edition,
compiled by distinguished scholar Eugene M. Waith, offers helpful new
material on the play's authenticity as a work of Shakespeare, his
collaboration with Fletcher, the relevance to the play of the
contemporary ideals of chivalry and friendship, and its limited but
increasing stage history. Based on the Quarto of 1634, Waith's edition
also sets out to clarify the stage directions, address problems of
mislineation, and provide useful guides to unfamiliar words, stage
business, allusions, and textual problems.