The Book of Common Prayer,
1559:
The Elizabethan Book of Prayer
|
Edited by John Booty
Foreword by Judith Maltby |
| 448 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2517-7 $29.95 |
 |
John E. Booty’s edition of The Book of Common Prayer,
1559, first published by the University Press of Virginia for
the Folger Shakespeare Library in 1976 and long out of print,
is now being reissued in the same handsome format as the original
edition. In her foreword to the 2005 reissue, Judith Maltby writes,
“It is difficult to overemphasize the importance of the
1559 Prayer Book. . . . Shakespeare was clearly shaped by a culture
in which the vernacular was remarkably vigorous.”
Booty’s text derives from a rare copy of the Elizabethan
Prayer Book printed by Richard Jugge and John Cawode in 1559,
now part of the Josiah Benton Collection of the Boston Public
Library. Booty modernized spelling and punctuation, but took care
not to distort the style and cadence of the Elizabethan text.
To place the Prayer Book in its original cultural setting, he
wrote a lengthy critical essay that traces the book’s history
and use during the sixteenth century. Helpful bibliographical
notes enable readers to appreciate all the nuances of particular
services and their contents. Particularly useful are the general
index and the index of biblical passages, features unavailable
in other editions of the Prayer Book.
Through this magnificent document one begins to understand not
only the Anglican church but also the Elizabethan culture in which
Shakespeare lived, for this was one of the books that helped shape
Renaissance England in all of its vitality and greatness. As Booty
reminds the reader in his preface, each Sunday “in the parish
churches and in the cathedrals the nation was at prayer, the commonwealth
was being realized, and God, in whose hands the destinies of all
were lodged, was worshiped in spirit and in truth.”
Published in association with the Folger Shakespeare Library
John E. Booty is Professor Emeritus of Church
History at the Episcopal Divinity School in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Judith Maltby is Chaplain and Fellow at Corpus
Christi College, Oxford.