Mistress Quickly: Difference between revisions

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== As descriptive metadata ==
== As descriptive metadata ==
Before the Folger could create a nationally-recognized subject heading for Mistress Quickly, cataloging rules said we had to decide if she was one character (in which case her name could stand on its own), or two characters (in which case the names of the associated plays needed to be part of her subject entry). The consensus was that Mistress Quickly is one ''character'' (a lower-class woman named Mistress Quickly who comically mixes up words when speaking) but two ''people'' (hostess of a tavern in Henry IV and Henry V; housekeeper to Dr. Caius in Merry Wives) and "neither [Shakespeare] nor his audience was distressed by the inconsistencies this involves."<ref>Charles Boyce, ''Shakespeare: the essential reference'', p. 528</ref> This fits with the way that Shakespeare saw her: as a stock character. The fact that "Mistress Quickly" keeps a tavern in some plays and is a housekeeper in another is like Pierrot being the same character in different plays. A researcher looking for a specific instance of Pierrot would include the name of the play in their search; someone looking for Pierrot as a generic character wouldn't. Accordingly, Folger catalogers established the heading "[http://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010011181 Quickly, Mistress (Fictitious character)]."
Before the Folger could create a nationally-recognized subject heading for Mistress Quickly, cataloging rules said we had to decide if she was one character (in which case her name could stand on its own), or two characters (in which case the names of the associated plays needed to be part of her subject entry). The consensus was that Mistress Quickly is one ''character'' (a lower-class woman named Mistress Quickly who comically mixes up words when speaking) but two ''people'' (hostess of a tavern in Henry IV and Henry V; housekeeper to Dr. Caius in Merry Wives) and "neither [Shakespeare] nor his audience was distressed by the inconsistencies this involves." <ref> Charles Boyce, ''Shakespeare: the essential reference'', p. 528 </ref> This fits with the way that Shakespeare saw her: as a stock character. The fact that "Mistress Quickly" keeps a tavern in some plays and is a housekeeper in another is like Pierrot being the same character in different plays. A researcher looking for a specific instance of Pierrot would include the name of the play in their search; someone looking for Pierrot as a generic character wouldn't. Accordingly, Folger catalogers established the heading "[http://lccn.loc.gov/sh2010011181 Quickly, Mistress (Fictitious character)]."

Revision as of 08:08, 9 April 2014

"Mistress Quickly" in a lithograph from the 1830s

A character named "Mistress Quickly" appears as the hostess of a tavern in Henry IV and Henry V (both set in the historic past), and as the housekeeper to Dr. Caius in Merry Wives of Windsor (set in the historic present).

As descriptive metadata

Before the Folger could create a nationally-recognized subject heading for Mistress Quickly, cataloging rules said we had to decide if she was one character (in which case her name could stand on its own), or two characters (in which case the names of the associated plays needed to be part of her subject entry). The consensus was that Mistress Quickly is one character (a lower-class woman named Mistress Quickly who comically mixes up words when speaking) but two people (hostess of a tavern in Henry IV and Henry V; housekeeper to Dr. Caius in Merry Wives) and "neither [Shakespeare] nor his audience was distressed by the inconsistencies this involves." [1] This fits with the way that Shakespeare saw her: as a stock character. The fact that "Mistress Quickly" keeps a tavern in some plays and is a housekeeper in another is like Pierrot being the same character in different plays. A researcher looking for a specific instance of Pierrot would include the name of the play in their search; someone looking for Pierrot as a generic character wouldn't. Accordingly, Folger catalogers established the heading "Quickly, Mistress (Fictitious character)."

  1. Charles Boyce, Shakespeare: the essential reference, p. 528