The work should be reprinted in a similar format: quarto editions are out of place.
Less popular than Henry IV, Part 1, this was the only quarto edition.
Norton issued a second quarto edition, also undated, sometime later.
A folio edition was an expensive item, but even cheaper quarto editions of most writers were not available readily.
A little over 600 plays were published in the period as a whole, most commonly in individual quarto editions.
Andrew Crooke issued a second quarto edition in 1661.
The following table uses symbols from a 1531 quarto edition of Agrippa, but other forms exist.
The first quarto edition of 1653 was published by the actor-turned-bookseller Alexander Gough.
It was, however, reprinted in a single-play quarto edition in 1718.
Titus Andronicus, probably written between 1588 and 1593, appeared in three quarto editions from 1594 to 1601 with no named author.