Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-fbnjt Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-09T15:46:29.071Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

18 - Second-hand and old books

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2010

David McKitterick
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

The world of old books ranged from the waste paper of the dung heap to the wariness and snobberies of private collectors; and many more old books reached the former than reached the shelves of the latter. Here was one self-confessed bibliomaniac’s view:

When the Hatton Library was sold, Mr. Sheaf, of Ipswich in Suffolk, paid for as many books as loaded two waggons and a cart only 30l., and many of the MSS. were literally thrown to the dunghill ….

Nothing is much more to be regretted than such a gothic disregard to the interests of literature, unless it be the selfish and narrowminded principle of exclusion, which renders many valuable and interesting collections either inaccessible, or what is tantamount to it, only to be obtained through such cringing servility and teasing importunity as few men of real genius or talents can descend to practise.

Ideally, the history of books is concerned as much with what has been thrown away as what has been kept, though since the former is difficult to evaluate emphasis naturally falls on the latter. Just how far one was from the other – and not only in 1831, when these words were written – is reflected in the choice here of the word ‘gothic’ to denote unregenerate ignorance. The appreciation of old books was a self-consciously modern occupation. It depended on knowledge of editions, of literary history and of rarity.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bagehot, Walter Physics and politics (1872: 1887 edn)
Barker, Nicolas Bibliotheca Lindesiana (Roxburghe Club, 1977)
Biervliet, Lori Leven en werk van W. H. James Weale, een Engelskunsthistoricus in Vlaanderen in de 19de eeuw (Brussels, 1991)
Bonham-Carter, Victor Authors by profession. 1. From the introduction of printing until the Copyright Act 1911 (1978)
Bowman, John H. Greek printing types in Britain from the eighteenth to the early twentieth century (Thessaloniki, 1998)
Bradbury, Henry Printing: its dawn, day and destiny (1858)
Breslauer, B. H. The uses of bookbinding literature (New York, 1986)
Broomhead, Frank The Zaehnsdorfs (1842–1947): craft bookbinders (1986)
Brown, Richard and Brett, Stanley The London bookshop, 2 vols. (1971–7)
,Burlington Fine Arts Club Exhibition of bookbindings (1891)
Burton, Anthony Vision & accident: the story of the Victoria and Albert Museum (1999)
Bury, J. P. T.A. W. Tuer and the Leadenhall Press’, Book Collector 36 (1987)Google Scholar
Cockerell, Douglas Bookbinding, and the care of books (1901)
Collins, Steve“An eminent bibliophile and man of letters”: James Crossley of Manchester’, in Cass, E. and Garratt, M. (eds.) Printing and the book in Manchester, 1700–1850 (Manchester, 2001)Google Scholar
Cordasco, Francesco The Bohn libraries: a history and a checklist (New York, 1951)
de Ricci, S. Catalogue raisonné des premiéres impressions de Mayence (Mainz, 1911)
de Ricci, S. A census of Caxtons (Bibliographical Society, 1909)
de Ricci, S. English collectors of books & manuscripts (1530–1930) and their marks of ownership (Cambridge, 1930)
[Dibdin, T. F.] Bibliophobia: remarks on the present languid and depressed state of literature and the book trade (1832)
Dickens, Charles Speeches, ed. Fielding, K. J. (Oxford, 1960)
Dreyfus, JohnNew light on the design of types for the Kelmscott and Doves Presses’, The Library 5th ser. 29 (1974)Google Scholar
Duff, E. Gordon Early printed books (1893)
Folio, Felix’, The hawkers and street dealers of the north of England manufacturing districts (Manchester [1858?])
Folter, R.The Gutenberg Bible in the antiquarian book trade’, in Davies, Martin (ed.), Incunabula: studies in fifteenth-century printed books presented to Lotte Hellinga (1999)Google Scholar
Foot, Mirjam M., ‘Double agent: M. Caulin and M. Hagué’, The Book Collector special number for the 150th anniversary of Bernard Quaritch (1997)Google Scholar
Foot, Mirjam M., Blacker, Carmen and Poole-Wilson, Nicholas, ‘Collector, dealer and forger: a fragment of nineteenth-century binding history’, in Foot, M. M. (ed.), Eloquent witnesses: bookbindings and their history (2004)Google Scholar
Freeman, Arthur, ‘Bernard Quaritch and “my Omar”: the struggle for Fitzgerald’s Rubàiyàt’, The Book Collector special number for the 150th anniversary of Bernard Quaritch (1997)Google Scholar
Freeman, Arthur and Freeman, Janet Ing Anatomy of an auction: rare books at Ruxley Lodge, 1919 (1990)
Gaines, BarryA forgotten artist: John Harris and the Rylands copy of Caxton’s edition of Malory’, Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 52 (1969)Google Scholar
Gibbon, Edward English essays, ed. Craddock, Patricia B. (Oxford, 1972)
Gibson, Strickland Early Oxford bindings (1903)
Harris, NeilThe Ripoli Decameron, Guglielmo Libri and the “incomparable” Harris’, in Reidy, Denis V. (ed.), The Italian book, 1465–1800: studies presented to Dennis E. Rhodes on his 70th birthday (1993)Google Scholar
Harris, P. R. A history of the British Museum Library, 1753–1973 (1998)
Hellinga-Querido, Lotte and Wolf, Clemens, Laurens Janszoon Costerwas zijn naam (Haarlem, 1988)
Herrmann, Frank Sotheby’s: portrait of an auction house (1980)
Horne, Herbert The binding of books: an essay in the history of gold-tooled bindings (1894)
Hunt, Arnold, ‘The sale of Richard Heber’s library’, in Myers, Robin, Harris, Michael and Mandelbrote, Giles (eds.), Under the hammer: book auctions since the seventeenth century (2001)Google Scholar
James, Henry Sir Photo-zincography (Southampton, 1860)
Jewett, C. C. Notices of public libraries in the United States of America (Appendix to the 4th report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian Institution) (Washington, DC, 1851)
Johnson, C. P. Hints to collectors of original editions of the works of Charles Dickens (1885)
Knight, Charles William Caxton, the first English printer (1844)
Lee, Sidney Shakespeare’s comedies, histories, & tragedies … A census of extant copies (Oxford, 1902)
Lely, J. M. Copyright law reform: an exposition of Lord Monkswell’s copyright bill now before Parliament (1891)
Lewis, John The life of mayster Wyllyam Caxton (1737)
Lister, AnthonyGeorge John, 2nd Earl Spencer and his “librarian,” Thomas Frognall Dibdin’, in Myers, Robin and Harris, Michael (eds.), Bibliophily (Cambridge, 1986)Google Scholar
Liveing, Edward Lives of eminent persons (1833)
Loftie, W. J. A plea for art in the house (1876)
Maccioni Ruju, P. Alessandra and Mostert, Marco The life and times of Guglielmo Libri (1802–1869) (Hilversum, 1995)
Mandelbrote, Giles (ed.) Out of print and into profit: a history of the rare and secondhand book trade in Britain in the twentieth century (2006)
McCalman, Iain Radical underworld: prophets, revolutionaries and pornographers in London, 1795–1840 (Oxford, 1993)
McKerrow, Ronald B.Notes on bibliographical evidence for literary students and editors’, Transactions of the Bibliographical Society 12 (1911–13)Google Scholar
McKitterick, David CambridgeUniversity Library. a history: the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries (Cambridge, 1986)
McKitterick, DavidDawson Turner and book collecting’, in Goodman, Nigel (ed.), Dawson Turner: a Norfolk antiquary and his remarkable family (Chichester, 2007)Google Scholar
[Mohnike, G. C. F.] Review article, ‘The Gutenberg jubilee in Germany’, Foreign Quarterly Review 25 (1840)Google Scholar
Morison, Stanley Talbot Baines Reed: author, bibliographer, typefounder (Cambridge, 1960)
Morison, Stanley A tally of types, ed. Crutchley, Brooke (Cambridge, 1973)
Mayhew, Henry London labour and the London poor (1861); 4 vols., ed. Rosenberg, J. D. (New York, 1968); selected by Victor Neuberg (1985)
Morris, LeslieBernard Alfred Quaritch in America’, The Book Collector special number for the 150th anniversary of Bernard Quaritch (1977)Google Scholar
Munby, A. N. L. Connoisseurs and medieval miniatures (Oxford, 1972)
Munby, A. N. L. Phillipps studies, 5 vols. (Cambridge, 1951–60)
Nead, Lynda Victorian Babylon: people, streets and images in nineteenth-century London (New Haven, CT, 2000)
Needham, Paul The Bradshaw method (Chapel Hill, NC, 1988)
Needham, Paul, Dunlap, Joseph and Dreyfus, John William Morris and the art of the book (New York, 1976)
Nixon, H. M. Five centuries of English bookbinding (1978)
Parker, Wyman W. Henry Stevens of Vermont (Amsterdam, 1963)
Peterson, William S. A bibliography of the Kelmscott Press (Oxford, 1984)
Pollard, A.W. Records of the English Bible: the documents relating to the translation and publication of the Bible in English, 1525–1611 (1911)
(Porter, John) Catalogue of a William Pickering collection (privately printed, 2004)
Pratt, A. T. Camden Unknown London: its romance and tragedy [1897]
Quaritch, Bernard A catalogue of fifteen hundred books remarkable for the beauty or age of their bindings (1889)
Reed, Talbot Baines A history of the old English letter foundries (1887)
Roberts, William The book-hunter in London (1895)
Robinson, J. (ed.) Catalogue of the special exhibition of works of art of the mediaeval, renaissance and more recent periods, on loan at the South Kensington Museum, June 1862 (1863)
Rosenthal, Bernard (ed.) Die Rosenthal: der Aufstieg einer jüdischen Antiquarsfamilie zu Weltruhm (Vienna, 2002)
,Saint Bride Foundation, Catalogue of the technical reference library of works on printing and the allied arts (1919)
Scholderer, Victor Greek printing types, 1465–1927 (1927)
Scrivener, F. H. A. The authorized edition of the English Bible (1611), its subsequent reprints and modern representatives (Cambridge, 1884)
Slugg, J. T. Reminiscences of Manchester fifty years ago (Manchester, 1881)
Smith, George and Benger, Frank The oldest London bookshop: a history of two hundred years (1928)
Stevens, Henry The Bibles in the Caxton exhibition, MDCCCLXXVII (1878)
[Stirling-Maxwell, William Sir (ed.)] The Scott exhibition MDCCCLXXI. Catalogue of the exhibition held at Edinburgh (Edinburgh, 1872)
Straus, Ralph and Dent, Robert K., John Baskerville: a memoir (1907)
Tidcombe, Marianne and Middleton, Bernard, Tregaskis centenary exhibition: a catalogue of the Tregaskis centenary exhibition, 1994, together with a facsimile of the Tregaskis exhibition catalogue of 1894 (1994)
Timbs, John Stories of inventors and discoverers in science and the useful arts (1860)
Warren, Arthur The Charles Whittinghams: printers (New York, 1896)
Weale, W. H. J. Bookbindings and rubbings of bindings in the National Art Library, South Kensington Museum, 2 vols. (1894–8)
West, Anthony James The Shakespeare first folio: the history of the book, 2 vols. (Oxford, 2001–3)
Wheatley, H. Remarkable bindings in the British Museum selected for their beauty or historic interest (1889)
Windle, John and Pippin, Karma, Thomas Frognall Dibdin, 1776–1847: a bibliography (New Castle, DE, 1999)
Wynter, AndrewA chapter on shop windows’, Ainsworth’s Magazine 12 (1847), repr. in his Pictures of town & country life (1855)Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×