“This
is huge,” said Eric Rasmussen, an American Shakespeare expert who
traveled to France over the weekend to authenticate the volume. “First
folios don’t turn up very often, and when they do, it’s usually a really
chewed up, uninteresting copy. But this one is magnificent.”
The book was discovered this fall by librarians at a
public library in St.-Omer,
near Calais, who were sifting through its collections for an exhibition
on English-language literature. The title page and other introductory
material were torn off, but Rémy Cordonnier, the director of the
library’s medieval and early modern collection, suspected that the book —
cataloged as an unexceptional old edition — might in fact be a first
folio.
He called in Mr. Rasmussen, a professor at the University of Nevada in Reno and the author of
“The Shakespeare First Folios: A Descriptive Catalogue,” who identified it within minutes.
“It
was very emotional to realize we had a copy of one of the most famous
books in the world,” Mr. Cordonnier said. “I was already imagining the
reaction it would cause.”
Few
scholars have yet seen the book. But its discovery among holdings
inherited from a long-defunct Jesuit college is already being hailed as a
potential source of fresh insight into everything from tiny textual
variants to the question of Shakespeare’s connection to Catholic
culture.
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