Francis Constable

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Contents

Francis Constable (1592August 21, 1647) was a London bookseller and publisher of the Jacobean and Caroline eras, noted for publishing a number of stage plays of English Renaissance drama.

[edit] Life and work

Francis Constable, son of Robert Constable and Margery Barker, was baptized on May 12, 1592, in Datchet, Buckinghamshire. He became a "freedman" (a full member) of the Stationers Company on July 2, 1614. He established his independent business at a series of locations in London and Westminster: first at the sign of the White Lion in St. Paul's Churchyard, from 1616 through 1624; then under the sign of the Crane, also in St. Paul's Churchyard, to 1631; then "under St. Martin's Church" in Ludgate, to 1637; and finally on King Street in Westminster, at the sign of the Goat. He also kept a stall in Westminster Hall during the later part of his business career.[1]

In his career, Constable sometimes partnered with Humphrey Moseley, one of the most prominent publishers of drama and literature in Constable's generation; he also partnered with other stationers on specific projects.

A relation of Francis Constable, a brother or nephew named Richard Constable, was active as a bookseller in the late 1640s.[2] Francis was married to Alice Constable, who survived her husband; they had fifteen children. One of their daughters, Anne Constable, baptized on February 21, 1621( old style; 1622 new style), [1] married Richard Lee I, an important figure in the colony of Virginia. [2]

(Francis Constable the publisher is distinct from his contemporary, Francis Constable, esquire, of Burstwick in Yorkshire. Many members of the northern family, earlier and later, shared the name Francis Constable.)

[edit] Drama

Constable's earliest book was the first edition of Samuel Daniel's "pastoral tragicomedy" Hymen's Triumph (1615). Among Constable's other publications in drama were:

Constable worked with many London printers on these and other projects, including Richard and Thomas Cotes, Nicholas Okes and his son John Okes, and Elizabeth Allde, among others.

[edit] Other works

Inevitably, Constable also published a wide variety of other literature beyond the drama. He published the second edition of William Vaughan's The Spirit of Detraction in 1630. He issued multiple editions of Thomas Scott's satire Philomythie, or Philomythologie, Wherein Outlandish Birds Beasts and Fishes are Taught to Speak True English Plainly, in 1616 and after; and multiple editions of Henry Peacham the younger's The Complete Gentleman, from 1622 on. He published items of the religious literature that was so common in the era, like Alexander Ross's Three Decades of Divine Meditations (1630). And religious poetry: Richard Braithwaite's The Psalms of David (1638). He published Peacham's Thalia's Banquet in 1620, and his elegy Thestylis Astrata in 1634; and Glapthorne's poem Whitehall in 1643. Constable also was responsible for texts in medicine and anatomy.[3]

And Constable also issued works of social criticism and contemporary controversies, like Machiavel's Ghost, as He Lately Appeared to His Dear Sons, the Modern Projectors (1641; attributed to John Taylor the Water Poet). He issued one notable volume in the utopian literature, Samuel Hartlib's A Description of the Famous Kingdom of Macaria (1641) — plus a supply of political and legal materials involving the start of the English Civil War and the Commonwealth era.[4]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Henry Robert Plomer, A Dictionary of the Booksellers and Printers Who Were at Work in England, Scotland and Ireland from 1641 to 1667, London, The Bibliographical Society/Blades, East & Blades, 1097; p. 51.
  2. ^ Plomer, p. 52.
  3. ^ Elizabeth Lane Furdell, Publishing and Medicine in Early Modern England, Rochester, NY, University of Rochester Press, 2002; p. 53.
  4. ^ George Knottesford Fortescue/British Library Department of Printed Books, Catalogue of the Pamphlets, Books, Newspapers, and Manuscripts Relating to the Civil War, the Commonwealth, and Restoration, Collected by George Thomason, 1640–1661, London, British Museum/Longman & Co., 1908; Vol. 1, pp. 3, 8, 11, 15, and ff.