Walk into any decent bookshop today in search of Shakespeareโs plays and youโre sure to find at least one. And even if you canโt find what youโre looking for on the bookshelves, there is always the internet, where a great variety of different complete works and editions are also available โ almost all of them free of charge.
This, however, has not always been the case. In fact, in Shakespeareโs time, the texts were rather hard to find. The incredible access we have now to Shakespeareโs work is thanks to a handful of enterprising publishers who saw the earning potential of making the bardโs texts readily available to read.
The first publisher to take a chance on the plays was Thomas Millington in the late 1500s. Millngton was a small-scale operator who specialised in throwaway popular texts about murders and monsters and whose business was tucked away in an obscure corner of London. Millington issued editions of Shakespeareโs Titus Andronicus and of the second and third parts of the trilogy of plays that he wrote about King Henry VI. Despite the out-of-the way location of his shop, Millingtonโs editions sold well and his success encouraged others to take a punt on some of the other plays.
Shakespeare becomes expensive โ then cheap
By 1623 โ seven years after Shakespeareโs death โ sales had been good enough for almost all of the plays to be published together in a collected edition โ a volume conventionally known as the โFirst Folioโ (folios were the largest-sized books). But this edition was very expensive, costing about ยฃ1 โ the equivalent of almost nine daysโ wages for a skilled craftsman. It was thus a luxury item that only the wealthy could afford. And it set the pattern that was followed for many decades, with Shakespeareโs plays remaining largely confined to an elite readership who had the funds to buy expensive editions.
The first person to try to break this pattern and open up access to Shakespeare was Robert Walker (circa 1709-61).
Walker had a lot in common with Millington in that he mostly published cheap, disposable, sensationalist texts. He also had a sideline in quack medicines, as he manufactured and sold โDaffyโs Elixirโ, a concoction advertised as an effective cure for almost all known diseases.
In the mid-1730s, Walker waged a price war with the London publishing establishment, driving the cost of individual play editions down to just one penny each. This led to a significant expansion of Shakespeareโs readership and, consequently, to a much greater demand for performances of Shakespeareโs plays in the 18th-century theatre.
Shakespeare for all
In the following century, another out-of-the-way publisher, John Dicks, followed Walkerโs example and lowered the price of access to Shakespeare even further.
Dicks came, himself, from a very humble background and was determined to make great literature available to the poorest sectors of British society. In the 1860s, he issued Shakespeareโs plays individually at the rate of two plays for a penny โ half of Walkerโs price more than a century previously.
Dicks then collected all of the plays into a single, paperback volume which he offered for sale for just 12 pennies, the equivalent of less than a third of a penny per play โ far and away the cheapest price ever for a complete Shakespeare. Dicks estimated that he sold almost a million copies of this book, making it the most successful Shakespeare edition that had ever been published.
Dicks can be said to have done more to popularise Shakespeare than any other publisher. But even his achievement has been surpassed in our own time. The key figure today is, again, a rather obscure figure: a computer programmer called Grady Ward, who created a digital edition of the plays in 1993. Ward made his files freely available to others and they became the basis for a wide range of free-to-access Shakespeare websites and apps. The chances are that if youโve ever looked at a Shakespeare play online, you will have been looking at some version of Wardโs original files.
We have seen that John Dicks sold nearly a million copies of his shilling edition of Shakespeare. Figuring out how many people have made use of Wardโs text is a little harder. A possible guide may be the number of users of just one version of it: Eric Johnsonโs Open Source Shakespeare. Between 2006 and 2020 this site attracted just short of 19 million distinct users. Given this level of traffic on just one site, it does not seem unreasonable to speculate that the combined number of users for all the various sites and apps may well be approaching 100 million.
In our own time, Shakespeare is a global phenomenon, freely available to tens of millions of people around the world, either in print form or online. But we should never forget the debt we owe to those obscure figures who have helped to popularise his work over the centuries โ the Millingtons, Walkers, Dickses and Wards โ those unsung heroes who have helped so much to make Shakespeare what he is today.