Book-collecting is undeniably one
of the most engaging pursuits in which a refined and
artistic taste may be indulged. From the earliest
times, and even before the days of printing, this pleasant
diversion has been pursued by persons of moderate
means as well as by those of wealth and distinction,
and every succeeding generation of book-collectors
has exceeded its predecessors in numbers and in enthusiasm.
The alluring influences of bibliophilism, or book-loving,
have silently crept into thousands of homes, whether
beautiful or humble; for the library is properly regarded
as one of the most important features of home as well
as mental equipment.
In The House Beautiful William
C. Gannett emphasizes the importance of considering
the library as foremost in furnishing a home.
He says: “It means admission to the new
marvels of science, if one chooses admission.
It means an introduction to the noblest company that
all the generations have produced, if we claim the
introduction. Remembering this, how can one help
wishing to furnish his house with some such furniture?
A poet for a table piece! A philosopher upon the
shelf! Browning or Emerson for a fireside friend!
“A family’s rank in thought
and taste can well be gauged by the books and papers
that lie upon the shelf or table of the library.”
Not many years ago, Mr. Howard Pyle
said: “I sometimes think that we are upon
the edge of some new era in which the art of beautifying
books with pictures shall suddenly be uplifted into
a higher and a different plane of excellence; when
ornate printed colour and perfect reproduction shall
truly depict the labour of the patient draughtsman
who strives so earnestly to beautify the world in which
he lives, and to lend a grace to the living therein.”
The prophecy is already fulfilled, and a modern book,
in order to win favor among present-day bibliophiles,
must embody an harmonious assimilation of many arts.
The ardor of possessing books, commonly
called bibliomania, also styled bibliophilism and
“biblio” whatever else that
has suggested itself to the fruitful imaginations
of dozens of felicitous writers upon the subject, is
described by Dibdin as a “disease which grows
with our growth, and strengthens with our strength.”
Kings and queens have not been immune from this prevalent
though harmless malady. The vast resources of
Henry VII were employed in collecting a library of
which a modern millionaire collector might be justly
proud. Many specimens of his magnificent collection,
bearing the royal stamp, are now to be found in the
British Museum. Queen Elizabeth and Lady Jane
Grey were submissive victims of the bibliomania.
It is worthy of note that while there were but few
women book-collectors in the Elizabethan period, there
are at the present time in our own country almost as
many women as there are men engaged in this fascinating
pursuit. As late as 1843, Dibdin remarks that
“it is a remarkable circumstance, that the bibliomania
has almost uniformly confined its attacks to the male
sex, and among people in the higher and middling classes
of society. It has raged chiefly in palaces,
castles, halls, and gay mansions, and those things
which in general are supposed not to be inimical to
health, such as cleanliness, spaciousness,
and splendour, are only so many inducements to the
introduction and propagation of the bibliomania!”
It should be remembered, however,
that one possessing a fondness for books is not necessarily
a bibliomaniac. There is as much difference between
the inclinations and taste of a bibliophile and a bibliomaniac
as between a slight cold and the advanced stages of
consumption. Some one has said that “to
call a bibliophile a bibliomaniac is to conduct a
lover, languishing for his maiden’s smile, to
an asylum for the demented, and to shut him up in
the ward for the incurables.” Biblio
relates to books, and mania is synonymous with
madness, insanity, violent derangement, mental aberration,
etc. A bibliomaniac, therefore, might properly
be called an insane or crazy bibliophile. It
is, however, a harmless insanity, and even in its worst
stages it injures no one. Rational treatment
may cure a bibliomaniac and bring him (or her) back
into the congenial folds of bibliophilism, unless,
perchance, the victim has passed beyond the curative
stages into the vast and dreamy realms of extra-illustrating,
or “grangerizing.” People usually
have a horror of insane persons, and one might well
beware of indulging a taste for books, if there were
any reasonable probability that this would lead to
mental derangement. There could be furniture-maniacs,
rug-maniacs, and china-maniacs just as well as book-maniacs,
but people do not generally hesitate to purchase furniture,
rugs, and china for fear of going crazy on the subject,
and no more reason is there why rational persons should
hesitate to make a collection of good books for a
library, for fear of being called bibliomaniacs.
In Sesame and Lilies Ruskin says: “If
a man spends lavishly on his library, you call him
mad a bibliomaniac. But you never
call one a horse-maniac, though men ruin themselves
every day by their horses, and you do not hear of
people ruining themselves by their books.”
This is preeminently the age of collectors,
and scarcely a week passes without the discovery of
some new dementia in this direction. Only a few
days ago I read of a new delirium which threatens disaster
to the feline progeny; it may be called the cat-tail
mania, seeing that its victims possess an insatiable
desire for amputating and preserving the caudal appendages
of all the neighborhood cats. A self-confessed
member of this cult was recently arrested in one of
the eastern States.
There are several species of bibliophiles;
there are many species of bibliomaniacs.
Some admire books for what they contain; others for
their beautiful type, hand-made paper, artistic illustrations,
ample margins, untrimmed edges, etc.; and there
are others who attach more importance to the limited
number of copies issued than to either the contents
or workmanship.
If a book is to attain any considerable
commercial value and increase in worth year after
year, it is of first importance that the number of
copies issued be actually limited; and the greater
the restriction the more likelihood that the monetary
value will be steadily enhanced. But it must
not be forgotten that the mere “limitation”
will not of itself create a furore among judicious
book-buyers; the book, or set of books, should rest
upon some more secure basis of valuation than that
of scarcity.
Dibdin says in his Bibliomania,
issued in 1811: “About twelve years ago
I was rash enough to publish a small volume of poems,
with my name affixed. They were the productions
of my juvenile years; and I need hardly say at this
period how ashamed I am of their authorship. The
monthly and analytical reviews did me the kindness
of just tolerating them, and of warning me not to
commit any future trespass upon the premises of Parnassus.
I struck off five hundred copies, and was glad to
get rid of half of them as wastepaper; the remaining
half has been partly destroyed by my own hands, and
has partly mouldered away in oblivion amidst the dust
of booksellers’ shelves. My only consolation
is that the volume is exceedingly rare!”
The contents, first to be considered,
should be worthy of preservation; next in importance
is the selection of appropriate type, and the size
and style of page, which should be determined by the
nature of the work and the period in which it was
written. The size of the book and the margins
of the page must be carefully considered in order to
harmonize with the text-page. In choosing illustrations
it is important to determine whether they should be
ornate and illustrative, or classic and emblematical
in design. The paper should be handmade, to order,
and of such correct size as not to lose the deckle
edges in cutting; and the printing should be done
in “forms” of not more than eight.
The paper should be scientifically moistened before
printing, and the ink allowed several weeks in which
to dry before handling the printed sheets. The
bindings should harmonize with interiors, and due care
taken against over-decoration of the covers.
These few technical hints will serve to acquaint the
book-lover with some at least of the many important
features which must be regarded in the preparation
of a fine book, a book fitted to demand
and merit a place upon the library shelves of discriminating
bibliophiles, and as well increase in demand and price
whenever thereafter its copies may “turn up”
for sale.
Next in importance, after considering
literary and mechanical fitness, and the limitation
of the work, is the question of distribution; its
scope, and the class of subscribers. The stock
of a corporation, if limited to a reasonable number
of shares and issued only to a few expert investors
of high standing, and for tangible considerations,
will obviously be considered a safer and more attractive
investment than if it be scattered indiscriminately
among a class of professional manipulators for stock-jobbing
purposes. With such a stock where thus closely
held for investment purposes, an order for a few shares
may largely elevate its market value. But if
the stock were issued in unlimited quantities, the
monetary value would be entirely lost. Again,
if the stock had no corporeal assets as a basis for
its issue, the “limited and registered”
clause could not sustain it in the market.
So it is with books: if the number
of copies issued be held within a reasonable constraint,
consistent with the price charged per copy, and if
they are subscribed for by book-lovers who prize them
for their literary or historic value and luxurious
appearance no less than for pecuniary values, they
are not likely to find their way into the bookstalls,
or to be “picked up” in auction rooms at
less than their original price. This condition
applies particularly to legitimate club editions and
privately printed editions. If an edition of five
hundred copies is widely distributed throughout the
country, it is reasonable to assume that the speculative
market therefor would be less apt to suffer from congestion
than if the sale of the whole number of sets were
confined to one locality.
Passing now to those who, in one way
or another, are to meet with and handle the completed
book, we may begin with a class of literary barnacles
who stick about the libraries of their friends and
of the public institutions, and feed their bibliophilistic
appetites on what others have spent much time and
money in collecting. These may perhaps more appropriately
be called biblio-spongers, and are of all ranks in
the community, many even owning beautiful homes, and
having ample resources at command; but while enjoying
the congenial atmosphere of a well-furnished library,
and the delights of caressing the precious and wisely
selected tomes of others, they are still of such temperaments
that they would no more think of buying books
than would another of buying an opera-house in order
to satisfy theatre-going propensities. These
people should be taught that fine books, like friends,
are not loanable or exchangeable chattels. They
will argue that there is no use spending money for
books, because they reside within easy reach of a
public library where such books as they desire are
readily obtainable, or perhaps suggest that “I
have free access to my friend Smith’s library;
he scarcely ever uses it;” without reflecting
that Smith would probably use it more, if his friends
used it less. And yet such folk will still incur
the needless expense of providing their own homes
with chairs, unless, haply, such homes may chance to
be within convenient reach of some park or public
institution where free seats are provided.
Most of us are disposed to idealize
a besotted bibliomaniac as a harmless being whose
companionship and favor are neither to be courted
nor particularly avoided, a sort of shellfish
basking on the bank of life’s flow in whatever
sunshine it may absorb, and paying little heed to
the thoughts or actions of others.
The following curious inscription
which is found on an old copperplate print of the
famous bibliomaniac, John Murray, will illustrate
one of the varieties:
Hoh Maister John Murray of
Sacomb,
The Works of old Time to collect
was his pride,
Till Oblivion
dreaded his Care:
Regardless of Friends, intestate
he dy’d,
So the Rooks and
the Crows were his Heir.
Mr. Nathan Haskell Dole, President
of The Bibliophile Society, aptly describes a miserly
bibliomaniac as a
Victim of a frenzied passion,
He is lean and
lank and crusty;
Naught he cares for dress
or fashion
And his rusty
coat smells musty;
while in characterizing the natural
impulses of true bibliophilism, he says that
Bibliophiles take pride in
showing
All the gems of
their collections;
They are generous in bestowing,
They have genuine
affections.
Peignot says a bibliomaniac is one
who has “a passion for possessing books; not
so much to be instructed by them as to gratify the
eye by looking on them.” This presumption
is about as reasonable as it would be to say that
a man is a monomaniac because he gets married when
he is in no special need of a house-servant, or body-guard.
In his Bibliomania Dibdin enumerates
eight symptoms of this “darling passion or insanity,”
in the following order: “A passion for
large-paper copies, uncut copies, extra-illustrated
copies, unique copies, copies printed on vellum, first
editions, true editions, and black-letter copies.”
The first of these should be omitted
from the symptomatic category: it would be fallacy
to assume that one is a maniac because one admires
the ample margins and paramount qualities of these
large-paper copies, which Dibdin himself says are
“printed upon paper of a larger dimension and
superior quality than the ordinary copies. The
presswork and ink are always proportionately better
in these copies, and the price of them is enhanced
according to their beauty and rarity. . . . That
a volume so published has a more pleasing aspect cannot
be denied.” He adds that “this symptom
of the bibliomania is at the present day both general
and violent.” No wonder! And yet the
charming Dr. Ferriar dips his pen in gall and writes
the following satirical lines upon this highly commendable
“weakness:”
But devious oft, from every
classic Muse,
The keen collector, meaner
paths will choose.
And first the margin’s
breadth his soul employs,
Pure, snowy, broad, the type
of nobler joys.
In vain might Homer roll the
tide of song,
Or Horace smile, or Tully
charm the throng,
If, crost by Pallas’
ire, the trenchant blade
Or too oblique or near the
edge invade,
The Bibliomane exclaims with
haggard eye,
“No margin!” turns
in haste, and scorns to buy.
Dibdin ventures to further assert
that “the day is not far distant when females
will begin to have as high a relish for large-paper
copies of every work as their male rivals.”
If he could return to this sphere and behold the enormously
increased number of women bibliophiles in our country
at the present time, the subject would doubtless furnish
him with a congenial theme for another of his rambling
discourses, this time perhaps under the caption of
Bibliowomania. He was far in advance of
the age in which he lived; for although he had very
little upon which to base the prediction, he yet prophesied
that not many years would lapse before women would
invade the fields of book-collecting and prove themselves
valiant competitors in the market. This, in fact,
is now common enough, and I myself have known of many
instances in auction-rooms where a small army of rampant
bibliomaniacs have been obliged to retreat and to
abandon their pursuit of some coveted treasure, on
finding it boldly covered by a carte-blanche
order from a feminine competitor. Women rarely
appear in the book auction-room, but leave their orders
to be executed through a trusted broker, and many
a collector has found himself suddenly obliged to
soar aloft to dizzy heights in quest of some prize,
on being thus lifted and pursued by one of the representatives
of an unseen and unknown member of the gentler sex.
Many people suppose the term “uncut,”
characteristic of Dibdin’s second “symptom,”
to signify that the leaves of such volume as may be
concerned have never been severed, whether for convenience
of reading or otherwise. “Uncut,”
however, in its technical sense does not imply that
the sheets are folded and bound just as they came from
the press. The leaves may all be cut, and the
tops trimmed, and even gilded, without striking terror
to the heart of the bibliomaniac. Dibdin, indeed,
treats this last mentioned symptom in merely a superficial
way and dismisses it with a few cursory remarks, viz:
“It may be defined a passion to possess books
of which the edges have never been sheared by the
binder’s tools.” This definition is
vague and unsatisfactory. Mr. Adrian H. Joline
(Diversions of a Booklover, Harper & Bros.,
New York, 1903, a charming book that should
be read by every book-fancier) discourses upon the
subject more intelligently; he observes that the word
uncut appears to be a stumbling-block to the
unwary, and says: “The casual purchaser
is sometimes deceived by it, for he thinks that it
means that the leaves have not been severed by the
paper-knife. I have read with much glee divers
indignant letters in the very interesting ‘Saturday
Review’ of one of our best New York journals,
in which the barbarian writers have denounced the uncut,
and have assailed in vigorous but misguided phrases
those who prefer to have their books in that condition.
Henry Stevens tells us that even such a famous collector
as James Lenox, founder of the splendid library into
whose magnificent mysteries so few of us dare to penetrate,
was misled by the word uncut, and chided Stevens
for buying an uncut book whose pages were all
open. He says: ’Again when his tastes
had grown into the mysteries of uncut leaves,
he returned a very rare, early New England tract,
expensively bound, because it did not answer the description
of uncut in the invoice, for the leaves had
manifestly been cut open and read.’ When
it was explained to him that in England the term uncut
signified only that the edges were not trimmed,
he shelved the rarity with the remark that he ‘learned
something every day.’ . . . Perhaps the
Caxton Club of Chicago is wise in describing its productions
as ’with edges untrimmed.’ Even a
Philistine ought to be able to comprehend that description,
although I once knew a man who supposed that a book
‘bound in boards’ had sides composed of
planking.”
Dr. Ferriar’s satirical lines
in his Second Maxim will find sympathizers
among admirers of uncuts:
Who, with fantastic pruning-hook,
Dresses the borders of his
book,
Merely to ornament its look
Amongst
philosophers a fop is:
What if, perchance, he thence
discover
Facilities in turning over,
The virtuoso is a lover
Of
coyer charms in “uncut copies.”
I have been requested to “explain
the reason, if there be any, for leaving leaf-edges
fastened [unopened] even in evanescent
magazines and why people keep books in this
condition, without looking at the contents.”
The reason why the binder does not open all the leaves
is that it involves additional labor and expense which
the publisher usually does not care to incur, as it
does not essentially add to the selling value.
Indeed, some collectors hesitate to open the leaves
of their books with the paper-knife, for fear that
the selling price would be thereby depreciated.
This is an entirely mistaken idea, though it prevails
very generally among those who do not understand the
real meaning of the term “uncut.”
Most booksellers prefer having the leaves of the volumes
all opened, as many buyers and readers object to the
nuisance of cutting them open. Some of the magazine
publishers have modern folding machines equipped with
blades for severing all the leaves. In fine book-making,
however, most of the folding and cutting is done by
hand.
The third “symptom” defined
by Dibdin, viz: “extra-illustrating,”
commonly called grangerizing, is really so far
removed from the indicative stages of bibliomania
as to render it entirely inappropriate as a proper
single characteristic; it is the whole disease in
its worst form. Fortunately, it is not a frequent
infirmity among our present day bibliomaniacs.
I cannot refrain from quoting Mr. William P. Cutter’s
vehement denunciation of the class of literary foragers
who are thus affected. He observes that “this
craze for ‘extra-illustrating’ seizes
remorselessly the previously harmless bibliophile,
and leads him to become a wicked despoiler and mutilator
of books. The extra-illustrator is nearly always
the person responsible for the decrepit condition
of many of the books which ‘unfortunately lack
the rare portrait,’ or have, ‘as usual,’
some valuable plate or map lacking. Were this
professional despoiler, or his minions, the ruthless
booksellers, to destroy the sad wrecks which result
from their piratical depredations, all would be well.
But they set these poor maimed hulks adrift again,
to seek salvage from some deluded collector, or some
impoverished or ignorant librarian.
“It is curious that the very
volume in which our reverend friend Dibdin so heartily
condemns these inexcusable bandits, should be seized
on as a receptacle for their ill-gotten prizes.
May the spectre of Thomas Frognall Dibdin haunt the
souls of these impious rascals, and torture them with
never-ceasing visions of unobtainable and rare portraits,
non-existent autographs, and elusive engravings in
general! They even dare to profane your sacred
work, the Biblia of book-lovers, by the ‘insertion’
of crudities invented by their fiendish imagination.
They have committed the ‘unpardonable sin’
of bibliophilism. Not only do they carry on this
wicked work, but actually flaunt their base crimes
in the face of their innocent brethren. Hearken
to this:
“DIBDIN, T.F. Bibliomania.
London, 1811. Extended to five volumes, with
extra printed titles, and having eight hundred engravings
inserted, comprising views, old titles(!), vignettes,
and six hundred and seventy-five portraits of authors,
actors, poets, sovereigns, artists, prelates, &c.,
&c., 250 guineas.”
Limited space prevents me from making
any remarks upon the other five “symptoms,”
none of which are of any special interest, except to
collectors to whose eccentricities they particularly
relate.
As to “Autograph Editions,”
the craze for these continues without abatement.
To me, this has always been one of the unsolved mysteries
of the book-mania. I can readily appreciate how
a collector would prize an author’s inscribed
copy of some choice edition, but why intelligent people
should be allured into the belief that an author’s
stereotyped autograph displayed upon a front page gives
any added value to a set of subscription books, will
to me, I fear, forever remain a disentangled enigma.
I was once applied to by an agent representing a $6000
“Autograph Edition” of Jean Jacques Rousseau.
Having never seen Rousseau’s autograph, I asked
that it be shown me. “Oh,” said the
agent, “Rousseau himself don’t sign the
copies, but the set will be signed by the publishers.”
Would not a much less expensive and more expeditious
way of obtaining publishers’ autographs be found
in writing a postal card of inquiry for the “prices
and terms” on their publications?
Gilpin has left the following quaint
account of the eccentric old bibliomaniac, Henry Hastings,
the uncompanionable neighbor of Anthony Cooper, Earl
of Shaftesbury. The accompanying pen-and-ink sketch
represents Louis Maynelle’s idealization of this
interesting character; it was made especially for
this volume:
“Mr. Hastings was low of stature,
but strong and active, of a ruddy complexion, with
flaxen hair. His clothes were always of green
cloth. His house was of the old fashion; in the
midst of a large park, well stocked with deer, rabbits,
and fish-ponds. He had a long narrow bowling
green in it, and used to play with round sand bowls.
Here too he had a banqueting room built, like a stand
in a large tree.
“He kept all sorts of hounds
that ran buck, fox, hare, otter, and badger; and had
hawks of all kinds, both long and short winged.
His great hall was commonly strewed with marrow-bones,
and full of hawk-perches, hounds, spaniels, and terriers.
The upper end of it was hung with fox-skins of this
and the last year’s killing. Here and there
a polecat was intermixed and hunter’s poles in
great abundance. The parlour was a large room,
completely furnished in the same style. On a
broad hearth, paved with brick, lay some of the choicest
terriers, hounds and spaniels. One or two of the
great chairs had litters of cats in them, which were
not to be disturbed. Of these, three or four
always attended him at dinner, and a little white wand
lay by his trencher, to defend it if they were too
troublesome. In the windows, which were very
large, lay his arrows, cross-bows, and other accoutrements.
The corners of the room were filled with his best
hunting and hawking poles. His oyster table stood
at the lower end of the room, which was in constant
use twice a day, all the year round; for he never
failed to eat oysters both at dinner and supper, with
which the neighbouring town of Pool supplied him.
“At the upper end of the room
stood a small table with a double desk, one side of
which held a church Bible; the other the Book of
Martyrs. On different tables in the room lay
hawks’ hoods, bells, old hats with their crowns
thrust in, full of pheasant eggs, tables, dice, cards,
and store of tobacco pipes. At one end of this
room was a door, which opened into a closet, where
stood bottles of strong beer and wine, which never
came out but in single glasses, which was the rule
of the house, for he never exceeded himself nor permitted
others to exceed.
“Answering to this closet was
a door into an old chapel, which had been long disused
for devotion; but in the pulpit, as the safest place,
was always to be found a cold chine of beef, a venison
pasty, a gammon of bacon, or a great apple-pye, with
thick crust, well baked. His table cost him not
much, though it was good to eat at. His sports
supplied all but beef and mutton, except on Fridays,
when he had the best of fish. He never wanted
a London pudding, and he always sang it in with ‘My
part lies therein-a.’ He drank a glass or
two of wine at meals; put syrup of gilly-flowers into
his sack, and had always a tun glass of small beer
standing by him, which he often stirred about with
rosemary. He lived to be an hundred, and never
lost his eyesight, nor used spectacles. He got
on horseback without help, and rode to the death of
the stag till he was past four-score.”
It is said of George Steevens, the
famous Shakespearian collector, that he “lived
in a retired and eligibly situated house, just on the
rise of Hampstead Heath. It was paled in, and
had immediately before it a verdant lawn skirted with
a variety of picturesque trees. Here Steevens
lived, embosomed in books, shrubs and trees, being
either too coy or too unsociable to mingle with his
neighbours. His habits were indeed peculiar:
not much to be envied or imitated, as they sometimes
betrayed the flights of a madman and sometimes the
asperities of a cynic. His attachments were warm
but fickle both in choice and duration. He would
frequently part from one with whom he had lived on
terms of close intimacy, without any assignable cause,
and his enmities once fixed were immovable. There
was indeed a kind of venom in his antipathies,
nor would he suffer his ears to be assailed or his
heart to relent in favour of those against whom he
entertained animosities, however capricious and unfounded.
In one pursuit only was he consistent: one object
only did he woo with an inflexible attachment; and
that object was Dame Drama.”
In Dibdin’s Bibliomaniacal romance,
“Philemon” is credited with the following
narrative concerning one who was probably a bibliomaniac
in all that the compound sense of the term implies:
“You all know my worthy friend
Ferdinand, a very helluo librorum. It
was on a warm evening in summer, about an hour after
sunset, that Ferdinand made his way towards a small
inn or rather village alehouse that stood on a gentle
eminence skirted by a luxuriant wood. He entered,
oppressed with heat and fatigued, but observed, on
walking up to the porch ‘smothered with honeysuckles,’
as I think Cowper expresses it, that everything around
bore the character of neatness and simplicity.
The hollyhocks were tall and finely variegated in
blossom, the pinks were carefully tied up, and roses
of all colours and fragrance stood around in a compacted
form like a body-guard forbidding the rude foot of
trespasser to intrude. Within, Ferdinand found
corresponding simplicity and comfort.
“The ‘gude man’
of the house was spending the evening with a neighbour,
but poached eggs and a rasher of bacon, accompanied
with a flagon of sparkling ale, gave our guest no
occasion to doubt the hospitality of the house on
account of the absence of its master. A little
past ten, after reading some dozen pages in a volume
of Sir Edgerton Brydges’s Censura Literaria,
which he happened to carry about him, and partaking
pretty largely of the aforesaid eggs and ale, Ferdinand
called for his candle and retired to repose. His
bedroom was small but neat and airy; at one end and
almost facing the window there was a pretty large
closet with the door open; but Ferdinand was too fatigued
to indulge any curiosity about what it might contain.
“He extinguished his candle
and sank upon his bed to rest. The heat of the
evening seemed to increase. He became restless,
and throwing off his quilt and drawing his curtain
aside, turned towards the window to inhale the last
breeze which yet might be wafted from the neighbouring
heath. But no zephyr was stirring. On a sudden
a broad white flash of lightning nothing
more than summer heat made our bibliomaniac
lay his head upon his pillow and turn his eyes in an
opposite direction. The lightning increased; and
one flash more vivid than the rest illuminated the
interior of the closet and made manifest an old mahogany
book-case stored with books. Up started Ferdinand
and put his phosphoric treasures into action.
He lit his match and trimmed his candle and rushed
into the closet, no longer mindful of the heavens,
which now were in a blaze with the summer heat.
“The book-case was guarded both
with glass and brass wires; and the key nowhere
to be found! Hapless man! for to his astonishment
he saw Morte d’Arthur, printed by Caxton Richard
Coeur de Lion, by W. de Worde The
Widow Edyth, by Pynson and, towering
above the rest, a large-paper copy of the original
edition of Prince’s Worthies of Devon,
while lying transversely at the top reposed John Weever’s
Epigrams!
“‘The spirit of Captain
Cox is here revived,’ exclaimed Ferdinand; while
on looking above he saw a curious set of old plays
with Dido, Queen of Carthage, at the head of
them! What should he do? No key! No
chance of handling such precious tomes till the morning
light with the landlord returned!
“He moved backwards and forwards
with a hurried step, prepared his pocketknife to cut
out the panes of glass and untwist the brazen wires;
but a ‘prick of conscience’ made him desist
from carrying his wicked design into execution.
Ferdinand then advanced towards the window, and, throwing
it open and listening to the rich notes of a concert
of nightingales, forgot the cause of his torments his
situation reminded him of The Churl and the Bird he
rushed with renewed madness into the cupboard, then
searched for the bell, but finding none, he made all
sorts of strange noises. The landlady rose, and,
conceiving robbers to have broken into the stranger’s
room, came and demanded the cause of the disturbance.
“‘Madam,’ said Ferdinand,
’is there no possibility of inspecting the books
in the cupboard? Where is the key?’
“‘Alack, sir,’ rejoined
the landlady, ’what is there that thus disturbs
you in the sight of those books? Let me shut the
closet-door and take away the key of it, and you will
then sleep in peace.’
“‘Sleep in peace!’
resumed Ferdinand; ’Sleep in wretchedness, you
mean! I can have no peace unless you indulge me
with the key of the book-case. To whom do such
gems belong?’
“‘Sir, they are not stolen goods!’
“’Madam, I ask pardon.
I did not mean to question their being honest property,
but’
“‘Sir, they are not mine or my husband’s.’
“‘Who, madam, who is the lucky owner?’
“’An elderly gentleman
of the name of sir, I am not at liberty
to mention his name, but they belong to an elderly
gentleman.’
“’Will he part with them?
Where does he live? Can you introduce me to him?’
“The good woman soon answered
all Ferdinand’s rapid queries, but the result
was by no means satisfactory to him.
“He learnt that these uncommonly
scarce and precious volumes belonged to an ancient
gentleman whose name was studiously concealed, but
who was in the habit of coming once or twice a week,
during the autumn, to smoke his pipe and lounge over
his books, sometimes making extracts from them and
sometimes making observations in the margin with a
pencil. Whenever a very curious passage occurred,
he would take out a small memorandum book and put
on a pair of large tortoise-shell spectacles with
powerful magnifying glasses in order to insert this
passage with particular care and neatness. He
usually concluded his evening amusements by sleeping
in the very bed in which Ferdinand had been lying.
“Such intelligence only sharpened
the curiosity and increased the restlessness of poor
Ferdinand. He retired to his bibliomaniacal bed,
but not to repose. The morning sunbeams, which
irradiated the bookcase with complete effect, shone
upon his pallid countenance and thoughtful brow.
He rose at five, walked in the meadows till seven,
returned and breakfasted, stole upstairs to take a
farewell peep at his beloved Morte d’Arthur,
sighed ‘three times and more,’ paid his
reckoning, apologized for the night’s adventure,
told the landlady he would shortly come and visit
her again and try to pay his respects to the anonymous
old gentleman.
“‘Meanwhile,’ said
he, ’I will leave no bookseller’s shop
in the neighbourhood unvisited till I gain intelligence
of his name and character.’
“The landlady eyed him steadily,
took a pinch of snuff with a significant air, and
returning with a smile of triumph to her kitchen,
thanked her stars that she had got rid of such a madman!”
To return, however, to the subject
more immediately in hand, it will be observed that
the present age is more prolific of bibliophiles than
any preceding one, and that the growing interest in
collecting fine books is attended by a relatively
increasing demand for a higher standard of excellency
of manufacture. A few years ago, there were only
two or three publishers in this country who “specialized”
in fine editions, while at present there are no less
than thirty publishing houses, large and small, and
as many more “private presses” engaged
in the production of beautiful books to appease the
demands of book-buyers. Many of these are well
established and conducted upon thoroughly honest business
principles; some, unfortunately, are not. The
publication and sale of books especially
the so-called “de luxe” editions is,
like some other branches of industry, beset with numerous
evils; so many sharp practices, indeed, having been
resorted to by a few conscienceless publishers, and
by a certain class of unscrupulous agents, that buyers
have become wary, not to say weary, of being made
the victims of their deceptive inventions. It
is indeed lamentable that a few such pestiferous schemers
should thus bring a certain degree of reproach upon
the entire publishing business. It is a common
practice among these soi-disant publishers many
of whom possess neither capital, credit, nor sense
of honor to buy some lot of etchings or
old prints from a junk-shop, or second-hand dealer,
at a trifling price, and thereupon work the same off
on credulous admirers of rare prints for possibly
a thousand times their real value. And it is
a common practice for these insidious sharks further
to prey upon unsuspecting book-buyers by obtaining
publications of reputable houses and falsifying them
by the insertion of spurious titles calculated to
delude the buyer into the belief that there are “only
fifty copies issued.” Many of them are ostracized
book-salesmen who have at some previous time enjoyed
the confidence of their employers, but have been ex-communicated
by all honest publishers and booksellers on account
of dishonest proclivities. They are therefore
set adrift to prey upon the public, and are a constant
menace to both publishers and buyers. I shall
pay my further respects to these counterfeiters later
on when I come to the subject of Book Clubs; in the
mean while, it need hardly be pointed out that reprehensible
methods of this kind are uniformly condemned among
all respectable publishers and book-dealers, and that
buyers should cautiously discriminate against those
who practice them. It is not surprising that
even the honest publishers and dealers themselves are
occasionally made the scapegoats of these obnoxious
parasites; but the astute collector is rarely “caught”
by their schemes; and after a book-buyer has passed
the primary or “experience” stages of
book-collecting, he (or she) is designated as a “dead
one,” in the common parlance of the underground
trade here referred to. Fortunate, indeed, are
the bibliophiles who have passed unscathed into the
category of “dead ones.”
That my present condemnatory observations
are not directed against that great majority of publishers,
booksellers, and agents whose methods in business
are founded upon sincerity and integrity, will, I
take it, be clearly understood; and I am, indeed, forced
partially to disagree with Mr. Joline in his vigorous
and general proscription of “subscription book-agents,”
for experience shows that there are many worthy people
of this class, however much they may suffer by the
sins of some of their kind. An acquaintance once
said to me that he would “never buy another
book,” because he had been “buncoed”
by a book-agent, to whom he otherwise referred with
an uncomplimentary adjective. But this did not
convince me that his position was more logical than
that of the man who declared he would never take another
bath because a watch had been stolen from his pocket
while he was in bathing at some beach resort.
It is incomprehensible that any one could imagine
that our paper currency system is fraudulent because
there are a few “green-goods” men in the
country, or because counterfeit bills appear every
now and then.
We read so much in the papers nowadays
of the extravagant sums paid for rare books by our
modern millionaire bibliomaniacs that one is apt to
become somewhat panic-stricken upon experiencing the
first symptoms of the bibliomania. While these
more opulent victims of book-madness vie with one
another in the auction-room, the rational bibliophile
sits in the gallery and views with silent awe and amazement
the scrimmage over some apparently trifling volume
that wouldn’t fetch ten cents, but for the fact
that it is “unique,” and that so and so
paid a stupendous sum for it at some previous sale.
Despair not, dear bibliophile, of never being able
to join in the mad scramble for these “uniques;”
nor need you feel that they are essential to the formation
of a library. They possess no virtues perceptible
to the ordinary bibliophile, and it requires all the
eloquence of a Cicero to elucidate their charms when
displaying them to friends. For after all, the
chief point of interest in such books is their cost
price, and this you may be obliged to refrain from
mentioning for fear you will be accused of being mentally
unbalanced.
It is not necessary to squander a
fortune in collecting a library, nor to be hasty in
buying every book you come across. Better go slowly
and select wisely; you will derive more enjoyment from
it, and in later years have less to charge to “experience
account.”
There are a few “busy”
book-collectors who intrust the selection of their
books to secretaries or librarians, and thus sacrifice
the keenest enjoyment of this captivating pursuit.
Of all absurdities, this seems the most insupportable.
It would be far more sensible to have your secretary
select your friends, because if you should happen
not to like these, you could abandon them without ceremony
or expense. Why not also attend the opera and
your various social functions by proxy, through your
secretary? If he were as good a courtier as he
is “literary adviser,” he might succeed
in getting as much enjoyment out of the receptions
and dinners as you would, if you were to attend in
person. Then, think of the time you would
save! We frequently hear the remark: “I
have no time to devote to my library. I am very
fond of books, but haven’t time to collect or
read them.” And yet seeing what may be
done in this regard by care and system, and that the
greatest readers have been the busiest men, it seems
strange that persons of intelligence should thus express
themselves; should admit such obvious fatuity of view
and procedure.
In referring to this class of book-buyers,
Roswell Field says, “The book-lover, so-called,
who lacks any of the thrills that go with the establishment
as well as the enjoyment of a library in all of its
appointments has deprived himself of many of the most
pleasurable literary and semi-literary emotions.
That bibliophile never pats his horse or his dog.
To him his books are merely tools of trade, accessories
to knowledge, to be pawed over, thrown away and replaced
by new copies when worn out. He glories in the
fact that his books are his servants rather than his
companions, and he affects to despise and laugh at
the sentimental relation which others have established
with their books. Look out for that man!
He is not of us; he is not of the elect; there is
as little of warmth and the genial glow of fellowship
in his library as in the middle gallery of the catacombs
in the Appian Way. His very books cry out against
him; but he hears them not, for he is deaf as well
as blind.”
One of the busiest men in New York
City, whose name is familiar in financial circles
throughout the civilized world, is one of the most
voracious collectors of the age. He probably transacts
more business in a day than half a dozen ordinarily
busy men, and yet finds time to give his personal
attention to every minute detail of his vast collections,
to which are added hundreds, and probably thousands,
of items every year. This is only one of many
such examples among our busiest men.
I have often heard persons lament
in a pensive and apologetic sort of way, “Yes,
I have a great weakness for fine books.”
The very presence of this mis-called weakness,
however, is unmistakable proof of great mental strength,
and those who suffer from it may find solace in the
fact that the giants of commerce, leading statesmen,
and great men of affairs in general are frequently
thus afflicted all through the periods of their greatest
activity and success. What can possibly afford
a more agreeable relaxation from the toils and perplexities
of the day than to recline in an easy chair before
an open grate fire in the library, surrounded by the
silently reposing tomes which record and preserve
the noblest thoughts of past and present generations?
Surely no enjoyment in the home or office can be more
delectable and unfailing in assuaging the worry and
solicitude of a strenuous life than the silent companionship
of books. It is a noteworthy fact that a large
percentage of the leading stock brokers, bankers, active
statesmen, and sedulous lawyers are bibliophiles.
I attribute this to the fact that all of these vocations
are extremely taxing upon the nervous system, and
those men who are busily engaged in them are, during
the intermittent hours of rest and recreation, naturally
inclined to seek the most enjoyable and refreshing
diversions; for, as Horace says,
. . . nunc veterum
libris, nunc somno et inertibus horis
Ducere sollicitae jocunda
oblivia vitae.
Along with old books, or a
nap, and divine hours of leisure
To taste thus forgetfulness sweet,
in the midst of life’s troubles.
In an article written for The Bibliophile
Society’s (1903) Year Book, Caroline Ticknor
says, “The true book-lover loves his books for
their helpfulness, for their companionship; but he
regards them as well for their elegant settings.”
She also observes that “strange as the anomaly
may seem, there are still many persons of ample means,
and some education, who, although they would be horrified
at the very thought of admitting to the home a cheap
rug or vase, to destroy the harmony and bring discord
and confusion into the luxuriance of the furnishings,
yet will nonchalantly tolerate the incongruity of a
miserable fragment of a library made up of the cheapest
and meanest editions to be found in the market, such
as would be scorned by those of the most limited means
and plebeian tastes. These will be found inappropriately
housed amid the most sumptuous surroundings. A
single rug to adorn the floor, or a single vase resting
on a mantle, will often be found to have cost ten
times as much as the whole home library. And
yet the intellects of these people have been nurtured
and trained in their youth by the brilliant thoughts
of ancient and modern writers! Even the favorite
author, be it Shakespeare, Dickens, Longfellow, Tennyson,
or some other, is frequently represented by a half
dozen or so disconsolate-looking volumes, the remainder
of the set either never having been bought, or else,
if bought, thrown aside, or strewn around the attic,
or abandoned as a child would discard a toy which
afforded it no further amusement.
“It is worthy of remark, however,
that the enormously increased demand of late for beautiful
books evinces the fact that cultured and wealthy people
are growing to appreciate the importance not only of
having a good library, but that its quality should
embody a degree of estheticism to correspond with
the surroundings.”
Many of the most delightful persons,
well read and competent to discourse intelligently
upon the merits of books and authors, have never experienced
a single pulsation of true bibliophilism; they have
never known the joy of possessing and admiring a beautiful
book, and that the attachment one bears for such a
treasure is wholly reciprocal. They have not
learned that fine books, like human beings, are capable
of mutual affection, and that it is not necessary to
devour them in order to value their charms. “We
do not gather books to read them, my Boeotian friend,”
says Mr. Joline; “the idea is a childish delusion.
‘In early life,’ says Walter Bagehot, ’there
is an opinion that the obvious thing to do with a
horse is to ride it; with a cake, to eat it; with
a sixpence to spend it.’ A few boyish persons
carry this further, and think that the natural thing
to do with a book is to read it. The mere reading
of a rare book is a puerility, an idiosyncrasy of
adolescence; it is the ownership of the book
which is the matter of distinction. The collector
of coins does not accumulate his treasures for the
purpose of ultimately spending them in the marketplace.
The lover of postage-stamps, small as his horizon
may be, does not hoard his colored bits of paper with
the intent to employ them in the mailing of letters.
When some one complained to Bedford that a book which
he had bound did not shut properly, he exclaimed,
‘Why, bless me, sir, you’ve been reading
it!’”
Herrick says that “the truest
owner of a library is he who has bought each book
for the love he bears to it; who is happy and content
to say, ‘Here are my jewels, my choicest possessions!’”
Seneca, the great Roman philologer, wrote: “If
you are fond of books, you will escape the ennui
of life; you will neither sigh for evening, disgusted
with the occupations of the day, nor will you live
dissatisfied with yourself or unprofitable with others.”
“I am quite transported and comforted in the
midst of my books,” says the younger Pliny, who
was an ardent book-fancier; “they give a zest
to the happiest and assuage the anguish of the bitterest
moments of existence. Therefore, whether distracted
by the cares or losses of my family or my friends,
I fly to my library as the only refuge in distress:
here I learn to bear adversity with fortitude.”
Southey thus immortalizes his speechless,
yet beloved, library companions:
My never failing friends are
they,
With whom I converse day by
day.
Balfour is no less eloquent in paying
worthy tribute to his library: “The world
may be kind or hostile; it may seem to us to be hastening
on the wings of enlightenment and progress to an imminent
millennium, or it may weigh us down with the sense
of insoluble difficulty and irremediable wrong; but
whatever else it may be, so long as we have good health
and a library, it can never be dull.”
“Bookes,” said the immortal
Milton, “demeane themselves as well as men.
Books are not absolutely dead things, but doe contain
a potencie of life in them to be as active as that
soule was whose progeny they are: nay they do
preserve as in a violl the purest efficacie and extraction
of that living intellect that bred them. Unlesse
warinesse be us’d, as good almost kill a Man
as kill a good Book; who kills a man kills a reasonable
creature, God’s Image; but Hee who destroys a
good Booke, kills reason itselfe, kills the image of
God, as it were in the eye.”
In the garnering of book-treasures,
some collectors are prompted wholly by mercenary motives most
of them, fortunately, are not. There are biblio-mercenaries
of such sordid inclinations that they would readily
part with almost any book in their possession, even
inscribed presentation copies! if lightly
tempted with money considerations. Verily, these
parsimonious traders would barter their own souls,
if they possessed any value.
I am indebted to the Secretary of
a well-known book club for the following facts, to
confirm which I saw all the correspondence. A
certain book-buyer joined the club some time ago, and
subscribed for the first publication issued after
he became a member. Upon receiving the work he
wrote: “I consider them among the most beautiful
examples of book-making that I have ever seen, and
prize them above all other books in my library.”
Six months later he sold the copy to a book-agent
for twice its original cost. He “passed”
the next publication issued by the club, as it did
not interest him, but appended a postscript to his
letter, saying: “If any member wants an
extra copy, I have no objection to one being issued
upon my membership and turned over to him, provided
I receive the increase in price.”
The following humorous incident is
recorded in the (1903) Year Book of another prominent
book club. It may be explained that the club
issued a very elaborate and beautiful publication,
printed upon deckle edge handmade paper, illustrated
with remarque proof copperplate etchings on Japanese
vellum, and in duplicate without remarque on Whatman
paper: “One of the members upon receiving
the first two volumes of the
publication, writes: ’The Society starts
out by making the worst kind of a blunder. The
man’s picture in the front of the volume is
put in twice and on two kinds of paper.
I could excuse this error, but imagine my horror when
upon turning to the back of the volume I found the
same mistake repeated. This is too much.’
He closed by expressing a desire to resign, saying
that he did not know he ‘was joining a faddists
club,’ and takes occasion to remark further
that ’the books are cheaply finished, not even
being trimmed and gilded;’ also that he ’can
buy better books in the stores, with full gilt
edges, for less money.’”
So much has been written about the
vagaries of book-collectors and bibliomaniacs that
the subject has long since become threadbare, and
about the only unexplored field of labor left to the
choice of him who would gain a hearing with the reader if
one can be found who is not already weary of reading
what the wags think of his (or her) own peculiar whims is
to fall in with the spirit of the age and compile
an “International Library of the World’s
Greatest Gibberish about Bibliomaniacs.”
We have the “World’s Greatest” everything
else in book-lore, and I shall not be surprised if
some enterprising publisher gets out a “definitive”
de luxe edition of the “World’s
Greatest Dictionaries.” Indeed, the Holy
Bible itself has not escaped, for they are now making
a “de luxe” edition, in fourteen volumes!
to be sold by subscription. It will not be an
“Autograph Edition,” however.
The freaks and fancies of capricious
book-gatherers and bibliomaniacs have undergone so
few changes in the last hundred years that modern
writers on Bibliomania, after vainly searching the
horizon for some new development in the way of symptoms
of the disease, or characteristics of those afflicted,
have wandered off into the verdure of adjacent fields
to avoid repetition. Some of them, from sheer
lack of anything new to say, have set upon each other
in the most unflattering terms. Many of the writers
on the delectable “Joys of a Book-buyer,”
or “Habits of a Bibliomaniac,” etc.,
evidently appreciate the fact that these much persecuted
human beings have other pastimes and habits than collecting
books, and that they really inhabit the earth in all
its civilized parts and partake unstintedly of its
many pleasurable diversions. But again, there
is another extreme, for I once read a book issued under
the misleading title of “Pleasures of a Book-collector,”
or something of the sort, which might have been more
appropriately called the “Pleasures of a Single
Man,” seeing that the work had more to do with
the hero’s hopeless love for a fair damsel,
and his hours at clubs, cafes, and other places of
amusement in which I had no special interest, than
it did with the acquirement of literature. Thus,
with the delusive idea that I was to be ushered into
some of the secret enjoyments of the pleasing diversion
of book-buying, I presently found myself more familiar
with the habits, vices, and various unimportant matters
of the author’s conception points,
in short, having no bearing whatever upon the subject
under consideration than with the pleasures
of a book-collector. The book was not badly written,
nor wholly uninteresting; but if a man buys a ticket
to the opera, he doesn’t go prepared to see
a cock-fight.
For literary scoffers and malcontents
who find fault with everything and everybody, who
even scold publishers because their own books bring
but meagre royalties, who fuss and fume over the harmless
foibles of the very ones upon whom they depend for
their audience, and like an ungrateful dog fasten
their teeth in the charitable hand that offers them
food, there can be but small sympathy. One is
tempted to enlarge upon this familiar type, but here
I am digressing from my subject, and am committing
much the same offence as that of which I have elsewhere
accused others.
I have been asked to include within
the scope of my article a few remarks about Book Clubs
and Book Societies. In presuming to trespass
upon sacred yet inviting ground of this character,
I must be understood as approaching the subject with
due reverence and apology. It is an indisputable
fact that among the agencies that have contributed
to the advancement and ennobling of the bookmaker’s
art in the past twenty years, the legitimate Book
Club has been one of the most potential. We have
only to refer to Growell’s American Book
Clubs in order to learn of the many clubs and societies
of this kind which have arisen in the past few years,
with varying degrees of success and failure, success,
when intelligently conducted upon honest cooeperative
principles, and failure, if irrationally directed,
without regard to the maxims upon which successful
clubs are managed. The province of these worthy
accessories in the world of fine bookmaking has not
been free from invasion by sharks and charlatans,
some of whom have succeeded for a time under the guise
of honest and reciprocal motives.
In this country there are private
book clubs and societies that have won places of enviable
distinction both here and abroad, and naturally among
the foremost of these are the ones which have been
pestered by “imitators.” The following
significant remarks are taken from the president’s
annual address to the members of an old and honored
book club:
“Fame brings its penalties,
and during the last year many of us have suffered
considerable annoyance, both individually and as members
of the Club, through the exploitation of books advertised
sometimes as publications of The
Club, and more often as publications of the
Society. These have usually been offered in connection
with works of distinguished authors in numerous volumes,
stated, as a rule, to be limited to a thousand copies,
and described as the contents of the private library
of a lady, which the agent declares to have been placed
in his hands to dispose of as quickly as possible,
regardless of cost. No widow’s cruse, apparently,
could be more unfailing in its supply than this ‘private
library.’ While annoying, the device of
a ‘ Society,’ though
manifestly designed to confuse the public mind and
trade on the reputation of this Club, can scarcely
deceive our members or even the book-loving public.
It, nevertheless, is an annoyance, and the more vexatious
because scarcely calling for other remedy than exposure.
“It is possible, however, that
harm to the good name of the Club may be wrought through
the advertisement, in an English newspaper, to which
my attention has been drawn, of a so-called ’
Society of Great Britain,’ which is declared
to have been recently formed in conjunction with the
‘ Society of the United States,’
which is described as having been established in 1884,
and to have occupied its own Club House since 1888,
and to have published handsomely printed books for
sale exclusively to the members. It is announced,
however, that the ‘ Society
of Great Britain,’ although intending to act
in conjunction with the American society, ’will
work upon somewhat different lines, at any rate at
first.’ It may well be that this cleverly
deceptive advertisement will require some attention
from us, either directly or through members resident
abroad.
“This, however, seems to be
the only fly in our ointment, and we may congratulate
ourselves that there is nothing more serious to disturb
our enjoyment of the anniversary which we now celebrate.”
Another and more palpable fraud has
been perpetrated in copying the name of The Bibliophile
Society, but with a slight prefix, just enough to
afford a loop-hole through which to escape legal prosecution.
Not enough, however, to enable the public to distinguish
between the spurious and the genuine, and even the
members themselves have sometimes been deceived by
unscrupulous agents representing their wares as the
regular productions of the valid society. The
audacious promoters of this so-called Society had
the boldness not only to pilfer the name of the legitimate
society, but also the name of its president, which
was ostentatiously printed upon their letter heads,
together with the name of Dr. Richard Garnett.
Both of these gentlemen have recently published their
denunciations through the columns of the press, and
protested vigorously against this unauthorized use
of their names.
The modus operandi of this
pestiferous concern is to send numbered “complimentary
certificates” throughout the country to persons
whose names are obtainable from directories, and when
acknowledgment cards are received from those who deign
to accept the exalted compliment, they are forthwith
called upon, usually by some “officer”
of the Society, sometimes the “President,”
but usually the “Treasurer,” “Secretary,”
or “Registrar.”
Some time ago I was honored by a call
from one of these circumventive “Treasurers,”
but happened to be conveniently busy at the time, and
so made an appointment with him to meet me at my office
the next day. Meanwhile, I prepared to have his
statements reduced to writing by a stenographer, anticipating
that it might be necessary to refresh my memory upon
certain passages that I might fail to remember verbatim.
The following is the substance of the “canvass”
as taken by the stenographer in an adjoining room,
the door of which was wide open:
“I am the Treasurer of the
Society, with headquarters in London. By a special
grant from the English Government, we have recently
been permitted to extend our membership into this country,
and three hundred life members are to be admitted under
this enlargement of our constitutional privileges.
It may interest you, first, to know something of the
origin of this Society. It was organized in London
about three hundred years ago by the Duke of Roxburghe
[who was not born until more than a hundred years later],
and was originally composed of about thirty members
of the royal family. The original charter limited
the membership to fifty members, and in less than
a month the limit was reached. Through the powerful
influence of the royal family the Society had easy
access to all the great repositories of unpublished
manuscripts, and the most valuable and interesting
of them were selected for publication. These
publications became so enormously valuable that it
stimulated a desire on the part of others to join
the Society, and particularly, some of the nobility
of France and Germany. It was decided to increase
the membership to three hundred, and to take in a
few members from France, Germany, Italy, and Russia.
The Society thrived for about a thousand years [this
is either a stenographic error, or else he meant to
say a hundred]; then there was a period of inactivity,
and later on it was revived again, and the membership
limit increased to five hundred. Last year we
obtained permission to again increase the membership
by taking in three hundred prominent people in America.
I am over here to arrange for three vice-presidents, two
for the East and one for the West. I have a special
commission to ask you to become one of the honorary
vice-presidents and to offer you a life membership
for less than half the regular fee, viz., $225.00;
the usual fee for life membership is $500.00, but
you get it for $225.00 on account of acting as our
honorary vice-president for this territory. Of
course you would have no regular duties to perform.
You would sign all the membership certificates in
your district, and in case of the death of any member,
you would have the privilege of naming his successor.
“The Society issues every year
a volume giving all the price currents for the year,
and keeps the members posted on the advance or decline
in the value of all important publications. We
also give you in confidence the ratings of various
publishers, and print reports to members exposing
all the frauds in the book business. Upon payment
of the fee of $225.00, you receive all of this material
free, for the balance of your life, and in addition
all of the Society’s regular publications, including
the present one, consisting of
volumes [here he produced the customary specimen sheets].
You see this one work alone is worth the full amount
you pay for life membership [here occurred a “special
offer” of some sort, given in a low monotone
which the stenographer was unable to hear; and I must
confess that I was so stupefied by this astounding
fabrication that I myself have not the faintest recollection
of what this “special offer” consisted].
We are very anxious to have your name as our honorary
vice-president here, because you will not only be
an honor to the Society, but the Society will be an
honor to you.”
Here my Treasurer friend produced
a regular form of subscription contract for a set
of books; but it contained no clause about life membership,
or any other membership, and included no promise of
anything further than the delivery of the books.
The honor of such a vice-presidency
being thrust upon me was indeed a thrilling sensation,
and the story was told in a fluent, cohesive, and
logical manner; so well, in fact, that had I not known
in advance that it was purely imaginary from beginning
to end, I could scarcely have avoided giving it full
acceptance. But I had heard of the story before,
and although partially prepared, it staggered me surprisingly.
I afterwards learned that every one else canvassed
by my interviewer was equally offered one of the “three
vice-presidencies.”
There appears to be no defense for
book clubs against these bogus impersonations.
The injured club, or society, can sustain no claim
for any special damage, because, as not offering its
publications in the open market, it actually suffers
no ascertainable loss of patronage. The principal
damage results to those who are thus victimized in
permitting themselves to be deluded into the belief
that they are acquiring the valid editions of reputable
clubs. When club publications come into the open
market they are usually picked up with avidity by
collectors, and they have thus grown into very general
favor among book-lovers. Indeed, the high esteem
in which they have come to be regarded offers a productive
field for a few crafty publishers to ply their wily
designs in. The audacity of these schemers carries
them to such incredible measures that they sometimes
buy sheet-stock from reputable publishing houses, change
the name of the edition, and deliberately manufacture
new titles on which they print the name of some book
club or society. These counterfeits are sold
to the unsuspecting book-buyer, who often imagines
he has landed a prize. Later, he is likely to
become disillusioned. There can be no doubt that
the contemptible practice of thus mutilating and garbling
books should be defined as a felony and made punishable
by fine or imprisonment. Book-buyers, however,
can in a measure help the situation and protect themselves
by not dealing with such people; they should particularly
remember that creditable book clubs never employ
soliciting agents, and rarely, if ever, offer their
publications for sale outside of the membership.
Any one, therefore, representing himself as an authorized
agent of a book club may usually be branded as an
impostor. Most book clubs print only such number
of copies of each publication as are subscribed and
paid for by members in advance, and the funds thus
advanced are used to pay the cost of the edition.
Notwithstanding the evils referred
to, the book club is with us to stay, and the very
fact that it is continually pestered by these hangers-on
is conclusive proof of its potency and usefulness;
features which insure its secure foundation in the
community.
Very few people are able to appreciate
the amount of gratuitous labor performed by the officers
and committees of private book clubs. It is erroneous
to suppose that beautiful books are a purely natural
offspring of the book club. The preparation of
the material for publication and successfully following
it through all the various stages of manufacture requires
an enormous amount of detail work, as well as an accurate
knowledge of bookmaking. The president of a prominent
book club recently said, in his annual address to the
members:
“I wish that our members could
be witnesses at the many conferences held by the Committee
on Publications and by the Council; of the various
experiments needed to settle upon the size and shape
of the book, the size of its page and its margins,
the style of type, the initial letters, head-bands,
tail-pieces, engravings, etc. etc.; of the
printer’s endless proofs, the making of a special
paper (which sometimes proves to be unsuited), and,
finally, the style of binding. What material,
color, and general make-up shall it have? If our
members could thus follow the progress of the work
from beginning to finish they would be reconciled
to disappointment. At any rate it is through
their subscriptions that these experiments can be undertaken,
and it is by knowledge thus gained that the Club has
won credit for the Arts and Crafts of our country,
and made an honorable record even in other lands;
so that to be a member of the Club has become an enviable
distinction.”
Owing to the tricks and stratagem
practiced in manufacturing “de luxe”
editions, some of our bibliophiles have taken matters
of bookmaking into their own hands, with the result
that they have organized clubs and societies, the
members of which take much pleasure in introducing
to their library companions each year one or two charming
new acquaintances which come bearing the club’s
seal of endorsement. A true bibliophile always
feels a just pride in shelving one of these book-treasures
of his own club’s production, and thereafter
displaying it before his friends, with the interesting
bit of information that “This is the latest
production of our Club; it is issued only
for members.” For obviously an owner’s
interest in any work is increased many fold by the
fact that he is a constituent part of the organization
which produced the same: the relationship to
the book in such a case is akin to the love of a parent
for a child; and the owner of a fine library will
not unusually regard his Club publications and privately
printed books as the objects therein which are entitled
to his fondest consideration.
I have recently taken occasion to
examine with considerable care the latest publications
of the leading book clubs of this country, and to
compare them with some of the first issues of these
same clubs. The improvement in the later productions
over the earlier ones astonished me. There were
as good artists, editors, binders, type, paper, ink,
and other accessories twenty years ago as we have now,
and indeed it is doubtful if our modern printing presses
show much improvement in the quality of work during
that time; but it would seem that persistent effort
along the lines of experimental work has been generously
rewarded by a steady improvement in the general results
now attained. Nor is the situation injured by
a slight tinge of friendly rivalry among clubs, to
lend an additional zest to their labors, and to whet
the praiseworthy ambition of each to make every succeeding
issue a little better than the last. There are
many zealous bibliophiles who belong to two or three
book clubs at once, finding it interesting to collect
and compare the works produced by the several clubs.
Many of our great scholars as well
as leading publishers are members of these book clubs,
and serve on the councils and various committees;
so it must not be supposed by skeptics that their publications
are in the slightest degree amateurish. They
employ the best talent and materials; the councils
and publication committees, as well, being composed
of persons of unquestioned integrity, who possess an
intelligent understanding of bookmaking.
Some of these clubs (particularly
those whose membership is largely local) have commodious
quarters where the members may meet at all times,
whether to discuss matters of common business interest,
to exchange their latest jokes, or to generally discuss
book-lore and other congenial topics. The social
features of some of the book clubs are, however, reduced
to the occasions of the annual meetings and dinners.
The “Club-Room Question,” in one of these
organizations having a membership of five hundred,
distributed in one hundred and sixty-seven cities
and towns in this country and abroad, was recently
reported upon by the Council as follows:
The question of providing and maintaining
club rooms and establishing a suitable library
for the Society has been more or less discussed
since its incorporation. The Council has not
found that spacious and luxuriously furnished rooms
are an important requisite in accomplishing the
expressed purpose and limitations of the Society.
These, according to Article I. of the Constitution
and By-laws, are to be “the study and promotion
of the arts pertaining to fine bookmaking and illustrating,
and the occasional publication of specially designed
and illustrated books, for distribution among its
members at a minimum cost of production.”
Then, too, while our membership is entirely
homogeneous in bibliomaniacal spirit, it is so
scattered over such a vast expanse of territory
that only a small percentage of the members would
be able to enjoy club-room privileges; even those
within easy reach of such rooms would probably not
frequent them enough to justify any considerable
expense in maintenance. It would be necessary,
also, to change the present constitution (and
to assess the members for annual dues in order
to meet current expenses), should the club-room idea
be carried out. This would be objectionable on
various grounds, and amongst these, because a
non-resident member might thus be paying an annual
fee without receiving any corresponding benefit
in return; a condition in such case which would
be tantamount to his meeting an increased charge each
year for the privilege of subscribing and paying for
the Society’s publications. Hence,
the Council do not see their way to entertaining
or recommending the club-room feature. But it
is not supposed that the spirit of fellowship among
our bibliophiles naturally related
as they are by a kindred interest will
in any degree suffer because of the lack of such
facilities. A personal contact, however agreeable,
does not seem essential. Certainly the many
charming letters received from members whom we
have never seen, go far to relieve the present
lack in this regard, so far as the officers are
concerned.
As matters now stand, the Society has
sufficiently comfortable quarters in one of the
offices of the Treasurer, where the Council holds
its meetings. These are found by experience to
be quite ample for all practical purposes and present
needs.
Collectors of manuscripts and of unique
copies often furnish the book clubs with valuable
and otherwise unprocurable material to be printed
for the members. Last year one collector alone
furnished gratuitously to a society of which he is
a member, many thousands of dollars’ worth of
unpublished manuscripts of interesting historical matter
to be printed exclusively for its members. In
this way much valuable material is preserved in print,
when it would otherwise remain forever unpublished
and unobtainable.
During the past few years it has been
my pleasant privilege to spend many hours of each
week in concurrent labor with the Council in the preparation
of the publications of The Bibliophile Society, in
which Council I have had the honor to serve continuously
since its organization.
There is no pleasure more delectable,
no joy more inspiring than that of devising books
which prove a delight to the eye and a satisfaction
to the artistic tastes of those who are competent to
appreciate the qualities that should characterize
a perfectly made book.
I now realize as never before why
it is that our busiest men of affairs, and scholars
of renown, are actuated to serve so assiduously in
this labor of love; for surely no amount of effort,
however laborious, can be regarded as having been
in any sense misguided or wasted when it elicits such
approbation as expressed in the following letter from
Charles A. Decker, Esq., a fellow member, of New York
City:
March
15th, 1904.
MR. H. H. HARPER, Treasurer,
The Bibliophile
Society,
Colonial
Building, Boston, Mass.
DEAR MR. HARPER:
My stock of superlatives is insufficient
to adequately express my appreciation of “Andre’s
Journal.” Keats must have had a psychic
sense which enabled him to see the latest issue by
our Society, and he had this in view when he wrote
the opening line of Endymion. (Is n’t
“A thing of beauty,” &c., the opening
line?) Such books as the Council has planned are an
education to bibliophiles; the work is progressive,
for each issue is finer than the one which preceded
it. Can any book be finer than “Andre’s
Journal”? If so, I can’t conceive
it. Such noble types, the pages so perfectly
balanced; the margins so broad; the paper of such
beautiful texture; the ink so brilliantly black;
the maps so marvelously reproduced; the etchings
so artistically conceived and executed and the title
page so beautifully engraved; then the binding real
vellum so rich, simple, and in such
perfect taste; even the box-cover is fitting in
every sense. A perfect book, it seems to
me. If there are any shortcomings, and you know
them, don’t tell me of them, that in my
ignorance I may be content.
Please thank all the members of the
Council for me. Somebody must have spent
many, many hours in arriving at a final judgment
upon all the parts which make up such a beautiful
whole.
I have yet to enjoy the pleasure
of reading the “Journal,”
then I will be thankful to Mr. Bixby and to Senator
Lodge.
Yours sincerely,
(Signed) CHARLES
A. DECKER.
Mr. Decker is one of the many pleasant
and appreciative members of The Bibliophile Society
whose personal acquaintance it has not been my good
fortune to make, but from whom the Society has received
many delightful and inspiring letters. The numerous
communications thus received from all quarters have
been placed before the Council, with the result that
the individual interest of every worker has been greatly
augmented in the Society’s welfare. Indeed,
I attribute no small measure of the success and the
good name of the Society to the indirect influence
of such words of encouragement and expressions of
appreciation as have come from the members.
I sincerely wish for health and continued
success to our worthy Book Clubs, and regret that
there are not more of them.
Sit bona librorum . . . copia.
HENRY H. HARPER.