Article XSZY Imogen beats Innogen when it comes to Shakespeare’s Cymbeline | Letters

Imogen beats Innogen when it comes to Shakespeare’s Cymbeline | Letters

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Letters
from on (#XSZY)

In her review of Cymbeline (12 December), Lyn Gardner refers to the heroine as Innogen, and states that the more common use of Imogen is a misspelling. This theory is based on a 1611 diary entry after a performance attended by Simon Forman, who died four days later in his 59th year. The only source we have for the text is the 1623 First Folio, where "Imogen" is printed 38 times and the editors, Heminge and Condell, would have been around at the time of that performance. So either we accept their inside knowledge, or one old man's hearing and possibly shaky handwriting. I know which I prefer.
Christine Ozanne
London

" In trying to make a wider point about the nation state and globalisation and the COP 21 climate talks, you bracket the nationalism of Marine Le Pen, Donald Trump and Nicola Sturgeon as "peddling one form of nationalism or another" (Editorial, 14 December). You really don't get it. Nationalism as promulgated by the SNP is the actual antithesis of Le Pen and the daft and incoherent utterings of Donald Trump. It is open, liberal and welcoming of refugees. Will your next editorial castigate Irish nationalism and urge the Irish Republic to return to the UK?
Emeritus professor Bob Osborne
Belfast

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