John Waterson
John Waterson was a London publisher and bookseller of the Jacobean and Caroline eras; he published significant works in English Renaissance drama, including plays by William Shakespeare, John Fletcher, John Webster, and Philip Massinger.
Beginning
Waterson was the scion of a family of publishers: his grandfather Richard and his father Simon were both in the book trade. Simon Waterson was also the brother-in-law of William Ponsonby, the prominent publisher of Edmund Spenser and Sir Philip Sidney; when Ponsonby died in 1604, Simon acquired many of Ponsonby's copyrights.John Waterson became a "freeman" of the Worshipful [Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers|Stationers Company] on 27 June 1620, and soon after was an active independent publisher. He took over the management of his father's shop, at the sign of the Crown at Cheap Gate in St. Paul's Churchyard. The younger Waterson continued to publish some of his father's works; Simon Waterson issued the first four editions of William Camden's Remains of a Greater Work Concerning Britain, and John printed the fifth and sixth editions. Simon published the first edition of an anonymous English translation of Guarini's Il Pastor Fido, and John published the second edition.
One of John Waterson's earliest publications was also one of his most notable: the first quarto of Webster's The Duchess of Malfi, printed by Nicholas Okes.
Maturity
John Waterson also published a noteworthy and problematic entry in the Shakespeare canon: The Two Noble Kinsmen, printed by Thomas Cotes. The title page of the quarto attributes the play to Shakespeare and Fletcher, an attribution that inspired three centuries of controversy before its general acceptance in the modern era.Other first editions of plays published by Waterson include:
- Sir William Davenant's The Cruel Brother, printed by Augustine Matthews;
- Davenant's The Just Italian, printed by Thomas Harper;
- Philip Massinger's The Renegado, printed by Matthews;
- Massinger's The Emperor of the East, printed by Harper;
- Fletcher and Massinger's The Elder Brother, in partnership with John Benson, printed by Felix Kingston;
- Fletcher's Monsieur Thomas, printed by Harper;
- Massinger's The Unnatural Combat, printed by "E.G."
Waterson published works beyond the confines of drama; he issued poetry, with volumes that included:
- Michael Drayton's The Muses' Elysium, printed by Harper;
- Samuel Daniel's The Whole Works in Poetry, printed by Thomas Cotes.