'2
The work has been justly described as “a remarkable perform-
ance, despite of all its imperfections, and one in which Watt's
name will live for centuries to come.
The work has been justly described as “a remarkable perform-
ance, despite of all its imperfections, and one in which Watt's
name will live for centuries to come.
Cambridge History of English Literature - 1908 - v12
S.
, in The Journal of the Ivernian Society, vol.
v (1912—13),
pp. 31, 83 f.
3 Ibid. p. 84.
## p. 361 (#385) ############################################
Xv]
Ireland
361
manuscripts and compiled a catalogue, founded the Archaeological
society in 1840, acted as its secretary and contributed to its
publications and, finally, published his masterpiece, St Patrick,
Apostle of Ireland (1864). William Reeves, who ultimately became
bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore, published Ecclesiastical
Antiquities of Down and Connor in 1847, and, ten years later,
elaborately edited for the Irish Archaeological and Celtic society,
and for the Bannatyne club, The Life of St Columba by Adamnan.
The Irish Archaeological society, founded in 1840, has had for its
occasional collaborators several clubs of kindred objects, the
Ossianic, the Iona and the Celtic. Of these, the Iona was founded
in 1833, while the Celtic, founded in 1845, was merged in the Irish
Archaeological society in 1853.
Patrick Weston Joyce, principal of the training college,
Dublin, was also a commissioner for the publication of Ancient
Laws of Ireland. His love of Irish songs and of folk-music
bore fruit in his Ancient Irish Music (1882), Irish Music and
Song and Irish Peasant Songs in the English Language
(1909). It also led him to many lonely places, where he collected
half-forgotten local names, and thus prepared himself for the
production of what may, probably, prove to be the most perma-
nent of his works, The Origin and History of Irish Names of
Places (1869, etc. ). Of his various histories of Ireland, which were
familiar as household words in his own land and among his
countrymen in the colonies, the most important was The Social
History of Ancient Ireland (1893).
The historical antiquary, Sir John Thomas Gilbert, secretary
to the public record office of Ireland from 1867 to 1875, wrote
Celtic Records and Historic Literature of Ireland (1861), and
edited Historic and Municipal Documents of Ireland from the
Archives of the City of Dublin (1870), as well as Facsimiles of
the National Manuscripts of Ireland (1874–1880). These last
have been recognised as equally interesting in their historic,
palaeographic and artistic aspects? .
Whitley Stokes, who had studied Irish philology from an early
age, returned to England in 1882 after a legal career of twenty
years in India He took part in editing a series of Irish and
Celtic texts, and was associated with John Strachan in Thesaurus
Palaeo-Hibernicus (1901—3). Robert Atkinson, successively
1 An early copy of his Old Celtic Romances (1879), sent to Tennyson by Alfred
Perceval Graves, inspired the poet laureate in The Voyage of Maeldune.
2 Cf, a later volume.
'volux
,ون به ته وه
## p. 362 (#386) ############################################
362
[ch.
Bibliographers
professor of Romance languages and of Sanskrit in Trinity college,
Dublin, was also familiar with Tamil, Telegu, Hebrew, Persian,
Arabic, Chinese, Celtic and Coptic. He edited the Norman-
French poem, La Vie de Seint Auban, The Book of Leinster, The
Book of Ballymote, a collection of pieces, prose and verse, in the
Irish language, and a middle Irish work, The Passions and
Homilies from the Leabhar Breac (1897). In the following year,
he was joint editor of two volumes of the Irish Liber Hymnorum.
6
BIBLIOGRAPHERS
Bibliography has been defined as the systematic description
and history of books, their authorship, publication, editions, etc.
It is only the handmaid of literature; it cannot be identified with
literature any more than the bibliographer (as such) can be
regarded as an author. But, although bibliography has only an
ancillary position, it has, nevertheless, a lofty aim. The biblio-
grapher aims at completeness ; he dares not make any invidious
selection; of his domain, it may be said, as of the grave, that 'the
small and great are there'; and works of comparatively slight
importance have an undoubted right to his recognition.
In fact,
the only way in which he can conscientiously escape from this
obligation is by labelling his list a 'select bibliography. The
author, on the other hand, must always be making a selection out
of all the possible words which he may use ; and, against breaking
this law of selection, he is sufficiently warned by the proverb: tout
dire est rien dire. Sometimes, however, a bibliographer may
produce a work which may rank as literature. A Dibdin may
write a romance on bibliomania, and an Andrew Lang, who
himself describes bibliography as 'the quaint duenna of literature,'
may discourse on it with all his wonted charm ; but bibliographers,
as such, are not authors, and it is only because of their loyal services
to letters that they can claim a place in these pages.
The importance of a first-hand knowledge of books has been
recognised by all bibliographers worthy of the name. It was the
leading principle which guided Joseph Ames, a native of Yarmouth
and a prosperous inhabitant of Wapping, in preparing the materials
for his account of printing in England from 1471 to 1600. Dis-
carding printed lists, and resorting to the title-pages of the books
themselves, he also secured the direct cooperation of others in
gathering information respecting the 215 English printers with
whom he proposed to deal. He thus succeeded in producing his
Typographical Antiquities (1749).
## p. 363 (#387) ############################################
Xv]
England
363
One of the first of English bibliographers, both in order
of time and in talent, was Samuel Paterson, bookseller and
auctioneer. We are told that ‘his talent at cataloguizing was
unrivalled’; and that “perhaps we never had a bookseller who
knew so much of the contents of books generally. We also learn
that his catalogues were masterly, and, some of them, perfect
models of their kind. He was on terms of intimacy with his
older contemporary, Dr Johnson, who has himself a fair claim to
be regarded as a bibliographer. He took part in cataloguing the
Harleian library in 1742. In the preface to this work he observes
that 'by means of Catalogues only can it be known, what has
been written on every part of Learning. ' "The philosopher's
curiosity,' he adds elsewhere, 'may be influenced by a catalogue
of the works of Boyle or of Bacon, as Themistocles was kept
awake by the trophies of Miltiades. '1 Johnson, as he says of Pope,
certainly was, in his early life, a man of great literary curiosity’;
and he understood the whims and foibles of the bibliophile and
collector. 'In the purchase of old books,' he remarks, 'let me
recommend to you to inquire with great caution whether they are
perfect. ” He approved of the famous collection of editions of
Horace by James Douglas, whose catalogue was ultimately
published in 1739; and he adds: 'Every man should try to collect
one book in that manner, and present it to a public library. ? ?
William Beloe, a pupil of Samuel Parr, and a graduate of
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, produced, in 1806–12, six
volumes entitled Anecdotes of Literature and Scarce Books, in
which he had the advantage of having a large number of rare works
placed at his service by many eminent owners of libraries. Beloe's
Sexagenarian, published in two volumes after his death, contains
anecdotes of the author's literary contemporaries; but the notices
of Porson are known to be inaccuratet. Bibliographia Poetica, a
catalogue of English poets of the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries,
with a short account of their works, was published by Joseph Ritson
in 1802. It was severely handled by Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges
in his Censura Literaria. In allusion to Ritson's abusive, yet often
just, Observations on Warton's History of English Poetry, he adds
that, above all men, the late Laureat, whom this pitiable critic has
loaded with the coarsest epithets, has taught us what use to make
2
3
1 The Adventurer, no. 81.
Croker's edn of Boswell, vol. II, p. 63.
3 Ibid. vol. VIII, p. 277 ; cf. David Murray's Bibliography : its Scope and Methods,
Glasgow, 1915, pp. 3, 7, 8, 53, 54.
• Many passages were omitted in the second edition published in 1818.
## p. 364 (#388) ############################################
364
[CH.
Bibliographers
of dark and forgotten materials. '1 Ritson's Select Collection of
English Songs (1783 and 1813) won the praise of Sir Walter
Scott, who, however, describes his Collection of all the Songs etc.
on Robin Hood (1795, etc. ), as a notable illustration of the ex-
cellences and defects of his system? He was a laborious and
accurate investigator, but there was an almost morbid bitterness in
his criticisms of other men's labours. His place in the literary
world is thus summed up in The Pursuits of Literature :
In Theron's form, mark Ritson next contend;
Fierce, meagre, pale, no commentator's friend 3.
Scott, in his song One Volume More, calls him as bitter as gall, and
as sharp as a razor. ' His critical powers were, however, well applied
in his detection and exposure of the Ireland forgeries in 1795.
Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges, 'a name to all the book-tribe
dear, produced, in the ten volumes of his Censura Literaria, of
1805—9 and 1815, 'titles, abstracts, and opinions of OLD ENGLISH
BOOKS. ' He also published The British Bibliographer (1810—14),
and Restituta ; or Titles, Extracts, and Characters of OLD BOOKS
in English Literature Revived (1814–16). He printed a large
number of rare Elizabethan texts at the private press of his son,
Lee priory, near Canterbury.
A literary interest of a wide range is represented by the dis-
cursive works of Isaac D’Israeli, entitled Curiosities and Amenities
of Literature, and Calamities and Quarrels of Authors. Curiosities
of Literature begins with essays on libraries and on bibliomania,
and ends with the “Life and Habits of a Literary Antiquary’;
it also includes a passage, to our present purpose, in the chapter
on the Bibliognoste':
Many secrets we discover in bibliography. . . . Bibliography will show what
has been done, and suggest to our invention what is wanted. Many have
often protracted their journey in a road which has already been worn out by
the wheels which had traversed it: bibliography unrolls the whole map of
the country we propose travelling over-the post-roads and the by-paths.
Of Calamities of Authors it was said by Southey :
The matter is as amusing as any lover of light reading can desire, and of
such a desultory kind that a comment might easily be made as extensive as
the text4.
The second series of Curiosities was published in 1823; and, ten
:
1 Vol. 1 (1805), p. 55.
? See Scott's introductory remarks to his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, p. 549 a
of Poetical Works, ed. 1865.
3 [Mathias, T. G. ] See Dialogue 1, 11. 245 f.
* The Quarterly Review, vol. vIII (1812), p. 93.
## p. 365 (#389) ############################################
xv]
365
Englana
years later, Allan Cunningham said of these works in general that,
while they shed abundance of light on the character and condition
of literary men, and show us the state of genius in this land, they
have all the attractions, for general readers, of the best romances. '1
Among collectors of books a prominent place must be assigned
to the duke of Roxburghe, whose books were ultimately sold in
10,120 lots on 18 May 1812, and on forty-five subsequent days.
The excitement then produced by the competition between
Lord Spencer and the future duke of Marlborough for the
Valdarfer Boccaccio, printed at Venice in 1471, led to the
formation of the Roxburghe club, with Lord Spencer as presi-
dent and Dibdin as secretary. Much literary work of high value
was accomplished by this club, when it had outgrown the pedantries
in which it had been reared, and had come under the fostering
care of the scholarly Beriah Botfield', and had secured the services
of men like Sir Frederic Madden, and Thomas Wright. In 1819
the duke of Marlborough's books were sold and the Boccaccio
was now secured by Lord Spencer (who died in 1832), and thus
passed, with the rest of the Althorp collection, into the hands
of Mrs Rylands in 1892, and into the John Rylands library at
Manchester, founded by her in 1899.
150,000 volumes were collected by Richard Heber, the half-
brother of bishop Reginald Heber, at a total expense of more
than £100,000, and were sold in 1834—7 for not much more than
half that sum. From his very childhood he was an eager book-
collector; and, in his maturer years, as library after library was
sold, he added to his stores the choicest treasures from the shelves of
great collectors such as Richard Farmer, George Steevens, the duke
of Roxburghe, Benjamin Heath, Malone and Sir Mark Masterman
Sykes. On hearing that a curious book was for sale, he would
himself enter a mail-coach and travel three, four, or five hundred
miles to obtain it, fearful to entrust his commission to a letter.
He had a library at Hodnet, a second in Pimlico, a third in West-
minster, besides those at Oxford, Paris, Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent
and other places in the Low Countries, and in Germany: Heber
knew his books, and was an expert bibliographer. He was the
'Atticus' of Dibdin's Bibliomania, and the friend of Scott, who
has commemorated him in the introduction to the sixth canto of
1 Biographical and Critical History of British Literature of the last Fifty Years,
Paris, 1834, p. 241, reprinted from The Athenaeum, 14 December 1833, p. 851.
2 See ante, p. 355.
3 The Gentleman's Magazine, January 1834.
## p. 366 (#390) ############################################
366
Bibliographers
[ch.
Marmion. He was also a generous lender of rare volumes to
needy scholars and black-letter editors.
In 1809 John Ferriar, of Manchester, who, in his Illustra-
tions of Sterne, ‘has traced our author through the hidden
sources whence he borrowed most of his striking and peculiar
expressions,'' addressed to Richard Heber a poetical epistle
entitled Bibliomania, large portions of which are quoted by
Dibdin, who borrowed the name as the title of his own amusing
and instructive romance. Here is one of these quotations :
At ev'ry auction, bent on fresh supplies,
He cons his catalogue with anxious eyes :
Where'er the slim Italics mark the page,
Curious and rare his ardent mind engage. (1. 29)
It was in 1802 that Thomas Frognall Dibdin published the first
edition of his Introduction to the Greek and Latin Classics. This
was followed, in 1809, by the first issue of his Bibliomania, a small
octavo volume of 87 pages, an enlarged edition of which appeared
in 1811, with A Bibliographical Romance added to the former
title, while a third edition, that of 1842, includes a key to the
several characters in the story. On receiving a copy of the second
edition, Isaac D'Israeli wrote to the author: 'I have not yet
recovered from the delightful delirium into which your Biblio-
mania has completely thrown me. ' After fully describing the
various symptoms of the form of madness known as bibliomania,
the author suggests several cures for the disease, the fifth and
last being the study of bibliography.
The first edition of Dibdin's Bibliomania was followed by the
four volumes of his enlarged edition (1810—19) of Ames's Typo-
graphical Antiquities, already mentioned? Dibdin was librarian
to Lord Spencer, at Althorp, and, in that capacity, prepared
Bibliotheca Spenceriana. The four volumes of this catalogue,
published in 1814, were soon followed by a supplement in 1815, by
the two volumes entitled Aedes Althorpianae, being a description
of the house and its artistic treasures (1822), and, finally, by a
seventh volume, containing the catalogue of the Cassano library.
The author, in reviewing the result of his endeavours, has the
satisfaction of adding:
I have done every thing in my power to establish, on a firm foundation,
the celebrity of a library of which the remembrance can only perish with
every other record of individual fame.
1 See Scott's Prefatory Memoir to Sterne in John Ballantyne's The Novelist's
Library, vol. v (1823), pp. xvii f.
2 Ante, p. 362.
## p. 367 (#391) ############################################
XV]
England
367
3?
9
6
Of the three royal octavo volumes entitled The Bibliographical
Decameron, or Ten Days' Pleasant Discourse upon illuminated
Manuscripts, and subjects connected with Early Engraving,
Topography, and Bibliography (1817), Isaac D’Israeli wrote: 'The
volumes not only exceed my expectation, but even my imagination. '
Overtures were made for the re-publication of this beautifully
illustrated work in France; but they were too late. The costly
woodcuts, which had been executed for its production, had already
been purposely destroyed by Dibdin and his friends, who had used
them to feed the fire on a convivial occasion. In 1821 Dibdin
published his Bibliographical, Antiquarian, and Picturesque
Tour in France and Germany. Scott welcomed this 'splendid
work' as one of the most handsome which ever came from
the British Press. ' Dibdin's Library Companion (1824) has
been severely criticised by some, but has been more justly re-
garded by others as a work of considerable value. It was followed
in 1827 by the fourth edition of his Introduction to the Greek
and Latin Classics, and by an anonymous pamphlet entitled
Bibliophobia: “Remarks on the present languid and depressed
state of Literature and the Book Trade' (1831), an entertaining,
but, in some respects, melancholy work. His Reminiscences of
a Literary Life, 'a store-house of biographical and bibliographical
anecdote,' appeared in 1836, succeeded in 1838 by his Biblio-
graphical, Antiquarian, and Picturesque Tour in the Northern
Counties of England, a handsome work, but inferior to that on
his tour in France and Germany. Dibdin must have been well
content with the tribute paid him by Scott for the charm with
which he had invested the dry details of bibliography:
You have contrived to strew flowers over a path which, in other hands,
would have proved a very dull one; and all Bibliomanes must remember you
long, as he (sic) who first united their antiquarian details with good-humoured
raillery and cheerfulness.
The library of the duke of Sussex was catalogued in two
splendid volumes (1827—39) by Thomas Joseph Pettigrew, who,
apart from his publications on the history of medicine, pro-
duced in 1849 a Life of Lord Nelson, including upwards of six
hundred letters and documents, then published for the first
time. The keeper of the Lambeth manuscripts from 1837 to
1848 was Samuel Roffey Maitland, who published, in 1843, a
list of some of the early printed books in that library, and, in
1845, an index of the English books printed before 1600. His
historical productions are noticed elsewhere?
1 See vol. XIII.
## p. 368 (#392) ############################################
368
[CH.
Bibliographers
Memoirs of Libraries, together with a practical hand-book
of library economy, was published in 1859 by Edward Edwards,
who subsequently wrote Lives of the Founders of the British
Museum (1870). The plan of the great reading-room of that
Museum was first formed by Antonio (afterwards Sir Anthony)
Panizzi, keeper of the printed books from 1837, and chief librarian
from 1856 to 1866. In addition to many other public services, it
was owing to Panizzi's personal influence that, in 1846, the bequest
of the Grenville library was obtained for the Museum.
Two bibliographical works of the highest importance were
produced by a London bookseller, William Thomas Lowndes:
(1) the four volumes of The Bibliographer's Manual of English
Literature, 'containing an account of rare, curious, and useful
books relating to Great Britain and Ireland, from the invention
of printing, with bibliographical and critical notices, etc. ,' the
first systematic work of the kind published in England (1834);
and (2) The British Librarian, or "book-collector's guide to the
formation of a library' (parts 1–11, 1839). The Bibliographer's
Manual was enlarged, with revisions and corrections, and with
interesting prefatory notes, in 1857—8, etc. , by Henry George
Bohn, whose own magnum opus was the Guinea Catalogue of old
books (1841), filling nearly 2000 pages and describing 300,000
volumes. Among Bohn's many other undertakings was The Anti-
quarian Library of thirty-five volumes, including (apart from
historical works of earlier date) George Ellis's Specimens of
Early English Metrical Romances, Thomas Keightley's Fairy
Mythology, Mallet's Northern Antiquities and Benjamin Thorpe’s
Yule-tide Stories. Bohn's Guinea Catalogue, vast as it was, was
surpassed in size, though not in quality or character, by the seven
volumes of Bernard Quaritch's General Catalogue of Old Books
and MSS (1887–9; index, 1892).
A bibliographical and critical account of the rarest books in
the English language was supplied in the Notes on rare English
Books, published in 1865 by John Payne Collier, who also printed
Extracts from the Registers of the Stationers' Company for
1555—70, and edited The Roxburghe Ballads, as well as several
works for the Camden, Percy and Shakespeare societies, and the
two volumes entitled Shakespeare's Library (1843). In 1849 he
published a large number of emendations of the text of Shake-
speare from the 'Perkins folio,' which he presented to the duke of
Devonshire, after whose death it was deposited in the British
Museum in 1859, with the result that the marginal corrections
6
## p. 369 (#393) ############################################
Xv]
England
369
were proved to be modern fabrications. A catalogue of the MSS
of the Chetham library, in Manchester, was produced in 1841—2
by James Orchard Halliwell(-Phillipps), who edited many works for
the Camden, Percy and Shakespeare societies, and produced a
magnificent edition of Shakespeare in twenty folio volumes, and
facsimiles of the Shakespeare quartos. He also wrote several
important works on the life of the poet, besides arranging and
describing the archives of Stratford-on-Avon, and compiling A
Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, and A Dictionary
of Old English Plays.
Richard Copley Christie bequeathed to the university of
Manchester a library rich in the literature of the revival of
learning. Walter Arthur Copinger, long Christie's colleague at
Manchester and, like him, a barrister in practice there, founded,
in 1892, the London Bibliographical society, printed in the same year
his Incunabula Biblica and published in 1895—8 his important
supplement to Hain's Repertorium Bibliographicum, in which
6832 works printed in the fifteenth century were added to the 16,311
registered by Hain. Three thousand incunabula (or early printed
books) in the Bodleian were catalogued in 1891–3 by Robert
Proctor, who included notes upon these in his Index of Early
Printed Books in the British Museum (1898). He also prepared
for the Bibliographical society in 1900 an illustrated monograph
entitled The Printing of Greek in the Fifteenth Century. This
able bibliographer met with a mysterious end in the Tyrol in 1903,
and his Bibliographical Essays, which everywhere reveal the wide
knowledge of an expert, were collected two years later. A useful
Register of National Bibliography was produced in two volumes
in 1905 by William Prideaux Courtney.
A remarkable knowledge of bibliography was possessed by
Henry Bradshaw, librarian of the Cambridge university library
from 1867 to 1886. His Memoranda,' which are of special
'
interest as indicating the processes by which advances in know-
ledge are made, are included in the Collected Papers published in
1889. A society for publishing rare liturgical tracts was founded
in his memory in the following year. The book rarities in the
university of Cambridge were reviewed with enthusiasm in 1829
by Charles Henry Hartshorne, who gives a complete list of Capell’s
Shakespeariana in the library of Trinity college. The fifteenth
century printed books, and the English books printed before
1601, in Trinity college library, at Cambridge, were catalogued,
i Cf. ante, p. 333.
E. L. XII.
CH, XV.
24
## p. 370 (#394) ############################################
370
Bibliographers
[ch.
in 1876 and 1885, by the librarian, Robert Sinker, who also wrote
a popular monograph on the library. The early English printed
books in the university library (1475 to 1640), and the MSS in
the college libraries, have likewise been catalogued.
Among the bibliographers specially associated with Scotland,
Sir Walter Scott was undoubtedly a sound bibliographer. It was
on a plan of his own that his library was catalogued by his
secretary; and (as already observed) he was president of the
Bannatyne club from its foundation to the day of his death? . But
the first great bibliographer of Scotland was Robert Watt, of
Glasgow, who published A Catalogue of Medical Books during
his lifetime (in 1812), and left behind him the materials for his
great Bibliotheca Britannica, or a general Index to British and
Foreign Literature, published in four volumes at Edinburgh in
1824, the first two containing the alphabetical list of authors
(with their works), and the third and fourth an alphabetical
classification of subjects.
'Dr Watt,' writes Isaac D’Israeli, 'may serve as a mortifying example of
the length of labour and the brevity of life. To this gigantic work the patient
zeal of the writer had devoted twenty years; he had just arrived at the point
of publication when death folded down his last page; the son who, during the
last four years, had toiled under the direction of his father, was chosen to
occupy his place. The work was in the progress of publication, when the son
also died; and strangers now reap the fruits of their combined labours.
'2
The work has been justly described as “a remarkable perform-
ance, despite of all its imperfections, and one in which Watt's
name will live for centuries to come. '
A catalogue of the law books in the Advocates' library,
Edinburgh, was produced in 1831 by David Irving, author of
Memoirs of. . . George Buchanan and Lives of Scotish Poets, and
of The History of Scotish Poetry. The bibliographical erudition
of Sir William Hamilton, professor of logic and metaphysics
in Edinburgh, is clearly shown in the notes to his published
works, such as Discussions on Philosophy and Literature of
1852—3, and his posthumous Lectures on Logic and Metaphysics.
Augustus de Morgan held that Hamilton was not a bibliographer:
'he knew nothing but the insides of books ’; but he suggested that
a list of the books quoted in Hamilton's lectures on logic would
form a good bibliography of the subject". The American editor of
his Philosophy regarded ‘his erudition, both in its extent and in
3
1
1 Ante, p. 358.
? Literary Miscellanies, p. 355, ed. 1867.
3 Enc. Brit. vol. xxi, ed. 1860, p. 778.
4 Notes and Queries, 1864, p. 102 (quoted in David Murray's Bibliography, p. 53).
1
1
## p. 371 (#395) ############################################
Xv]
371
Scotland
.
>
its exactness,' as 'perfectly provoking’l; and a fellow-countryman,
with all the instincts of a bibliographer, has more aptly said
of him:
Summing up the thousands upon thousands of volumes upon all matters of
human study and in many languages, which he has passed through his hands,
you think he has merely dipped into them or skimmed them, or in some other
shape put them to superficial use. You are wrong; he has found his way at
once to the very heart of the living matter of each one; between it and him
there are henceforth no secrets 2.
The Book-Hunter, a discursive volume describing the delights
of book-collecting, was written by John Hill Burton, the publica-
tion of whose History of Scotland led to his appointment as
historiographer royal for that country. A Scotsman who lived
long in England, Andrew Lang, wrote a delightful volume, The
Library (1881), besides discoursing on 'Elzevirs' and on ‘Biblio-
mania in France' in his Books and Bookmen (1887).
A Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous Literature
of Great Britain was published in 1882–8 by Samuel Halkett,
keeper of the Advocates' library (of which he planned the
catalogue), and John Laing, librarian of the New college, Edin-
burgh, author of the excellent catalogue of its library. The
religious history of the sixteenth century was the special
province of Thomas Graves Law, keeper of the Signet library,
Edinburgh, from 1876 to 1904, whose Collected Essays appeared
in the latter years. Finally, a new catalogue of the Glasgow
university library (with an excellent subject-index) has been
prepared by William Purdie Dickson, honorary curator of the
library, and papers on the bibliography of chemistry and tech-
nology have been written by John Ferguson, of Glasgow, author
of Bibliotheca Chemica (1906), Witchcraft Literature of Scotland,
and Some Aspects of Bibliography with a list of special
bibliographies in the appendix (1907)*.
)
1 Wight, O. W. , transl. of Cousin's History of Modern Philosophy, vol. II, p. 335,
1854. Cf. De Quincey's Essays, vol. v, pp. 314 f. , ed. Masson.
2 Burton, John Hill, The Book-Hunter, pp. 77 f. , ed. 1909.
s As to John Hill Burton, Andrew Lang and T. G. Law, see a later volume of this
History.
* See, also, the bibliography of the present chapter.
24-2
## p. 372 (#396) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
CHAPTER I
SIR WALTER SCOTT
I. MANUSCRIPTS
Scott's Journal and much of his correspondence are preserved privately
at Abbotsford, as are also the collections of ballad versions which he utilised
for Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. In the Abbotsford library, which
by his will is preserved intact as he left it, and is accessible for con-
sultation on certain conditions, are a number of miscellaneous MSS and
collections, including various translations of German dramas which he did
not publish, and also his notes when a student at the class of Scots law.
The original MSS of most of Scott's poems and novels are in existence, but
the majority are now in the hands of private collectors. Of several MSS
of the novels at one time in the possession of Ruskin, only that of The
Fortunes of Nigel is now at Brantwood. In the British Museum is the
MS of the most of Kenilworth; various letters of Scott to George Thomson,
with verses for his Scottish Airs; the proofsheets of Woodstock with the
author's corrections and additions; eighteen letters to James Ballantyne
about the work, and Ballantyne's criticisms; a copy of The Life of Napoleon
with MS corrections and notes by Scott; and a portion of an edition of
Swift's Works used by Scott, with MS notes by him. The MSS of Marmion
and Waverley are preserved in the Advocates' library, Edinburgh. Portions
of Kenilworth and The Legend of Montrose, original correspondence and
verses belonging to Scott and various letters from him, are included in the
Laing collection in the university of Edinburgh. The publishing firm of
A. & C. Black, London, possesses Scott's annotated edition of the Waverley
novels, in 44 volumes, full of textual corrections by him; and bound up
in vol. I are the MSS of the introductions, etc. published in the first
collected edition.
II. POETRY
A. Collected Editions
The Poetical Works of Walter Scott, with the Notes by the Author.
12 vols. Edinburgh, 1820.
Poetical Works. 7 vols. Paris, 1821 and 1827.
11 vols. Edinburgh, 1830.
Ed. Lockhart, J. L. , with illustrations on steel from drawings by Turner,
J. M. W. Edinburgh, 1833-4 and 1848.
Ed. , with memoir and critical dissertation, by Gilfillan, G. 3 vols. Edin-
burgh, 1857.
The Globe edition, with a biographical and critical memoir by Palgrave,
F. T. 1866, and later edns.
## p. 373 (#397) ############################################
CH. 1]
373
Sir Walter Scott
a
Poetical Works. With a critical memoir by Rossetti, W. M. , and illustrations
by Seccombe, T. 1870.
With prefatory notice, biographical and critical, by Sharp, W. 2 vols.
1885-6.
Ed. Minto, W. 2 vols. 1891-2.
Oxford complete edn. Ed. Robertson, J. L. 1904.
Ed. Lang, A. 1905.
B. Separate Works
The Chase and William and Helen: two ballads from the German of Gott-
fried A. Bürger. [Anonymous. ] Edinburgh and London, 1796.
Apology for Tales of Terror. Kelso, 1799. [Only about 12 copies printed.
Includes his Bürger translations, and a few other ballads afterwards
included in M. G. Lewis's Tales of Wonder, 1801. ]
The Eve of St John: a Border Ballad. Kelso, 1800.
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. Vols. 1 and 11. Kelso, 1802. Vol. III.
London and Edinburgh, 1803. (Includes original ballads by Scott and
others. ] 3rd and more complete edn. 1803. Various subsequent edns with
changes and additional notes. Posthumous edn with additional notes by
Lockhart, J. G. 1833. New edn with additional notes and various readings
by Henderson, T. F. 4 vols. Edinburgh and New York, 1902. Re-
arranged edn with introduction by Noyes, A. , in one vol. Edinburgh,
1908.
The Lay of the Last Minstrel. 1805. 6th edn with notes. 1807. 8th edn
with Ballads and Lyrical Pieces. Illustrated. 1808.
Ballads and Lyrical Pieces. 1806.
Marmion: a Tale of Flodden Field. 1808.
The Lady of the Lake; a poem. Edinburgh, 1810.
The Vision of Don Roderick. Edinburgh, 1811.
Glenfinlas and other Ballads, with the Vision of Don Roderick. Edinburgh,
1812.
Rokeby, a Poem. Edinburgh, 1813.
The Bridal of Triermain; or the Vale of St John. Edinburgh, 1813.
The Field of Waterloo; a Poem. Edinburgh, 1815.
The Lord of the Isles; a Poem in six cantos. 1815.
The Vision of Don Roderick, The Field of Waterloo and other poems. Edin-
burgh, 1815.
The Ettricke Garland, being two excellent new songs (one by Scott and the
other by Hogg, J. ). Edinburgh, 1815.
Various songs in Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice
by Thomson, George, 6 vols. , 1793-1811; and in Albyn's Anthology, ed.
Campbell, A. , 2 vols. , Edinburgh, 1816 and 1818.
Harold the Dauntless; a Poem in six cantos. Edinburgh, 1817.
Ballad of the Noble Moringer. In The Edinburgh Annual Register. 1817.
The Bridal of Triermain and Harold the Dauntless. Edinburgh, 1818.
Miscellaneous Poems. Edinburgh, 1820.
The Poetry contained in the Novels, Tales and Romances of the Author of
Waverley. Edinburgh, 1822.
Halidon Hill; a Metrical Romance in two acts. 1822.
Macduff's Cross; a Dramatic Sketch. First published in Joanna Baillie's
Collection of Poetical Miscellanies. 1822. Republished with the Doom
of Devorgoil, Halidon Hill and Auchindrane, or the Ayrshire Tragedy.
Edinburgh, 1830.
## p. 374 (#398) ############################################
374
[CH.
Bibliography
III.
pp. 31, 83 f.
3 Ibid. p. 84.
## p. 361 (#385) ############################################
Xv]
Ireland
361
manuscripts and compiled a catalogue, founded the Archaeological
society in 1840, acted as its secretary and contributed to its
publications and, finally, published his masterpiece, St Patrick,
Apostle of Ireland (1864). William Reeves, who ultimately became
bishop of Down, Connor and Dromore, published Ecclesiastical
Antiquities of Down and Connor in 1847, and, ten years later,
elaborately edited for the Irish Archaeological and Celtic society,
and for the Bannatyne club, The Life of St Columba by Adamnan.
The Irish Archaeological society, founded in 1840, has had for its
occasional collaborators several clubs of kindred objects, the
Ossianic, the Iona and the Celtic. Of these, the Iona was founded
in 1833, while the Celtic, founded in 1845, was merged in the Irish
Archaeological society in 1853.
Patrick Weston Joyce, principal of the training college,
Dublin, was also a commissioner for the publication of Ancient
Laws of Ireland. His love of Irish songs and of folk-music
bore fruit in his Ancient Irish Music (1882), Irish Music and
Song and Irish Peasant Songs in the English Language
(1909). It also led him to many lonely places, where he collected
half-forgotten local names, and thus prepared himself for the
production of what may, probably, prove to be the most perma-
nent of his works, The Origin and History of Irish Names of
Places (1869, etc. ). Of his various histories of Ireland, which were
familiar as household words in his own land and among his
countrymen in the colonies, the most important was The Social
History of Ancient Ireland (1893).
The historical antiquary, Sir John Thomas Gilbert, secretary
to the public record office of Ireland from 1867 to 1875, wrote
Celtic Records and Historic Literature of Ireland (1861), and
edited Historic and Municipal Documents of Ireland from the
Archives of the City of Dublin (1870), as well as Facsimiles of
the National Manuscripts of Ireland (1874–1880). These last
have been recognised as equally interesting in their historic,
palaeographic and artistic aspects? .
Whitley Stokes, who had studied Irish philology from an early
age, returned to England in 1882 after a legal career of twenty
years in India He took part in editing a series of Irish and
Celtic texts, and was associated with John Strachan in Thesaurus
Palaeo-Hibernicus (1901—3). Robert Atkinson, successively
1 An early copy of his Old Celtic Romances (1879), sent to Tennyson by Alfred
Perceval Graves, inspired the poet laureate in The Voyage of Maeldune.
2 Cf, a later volume.
'volux
,ون به ته وه
## p. 362 (#386) ############################################
362
[ch.
Bibliographers
professor of Romance languages and of Sanskrit in Trinity college,
Dublin, was also familiar with Tamil, Telegu, Hebrew, Persian,
Arabic, Chinese, Celtic and Coptic. He edited the Norman-
French poem, La Vie de Seint Auban, The Book of Leinster, The
Book of Ballymote, a collection of pieces, prose and verse, in the
Irish language, and a middle Irish work, The Passions and
Homilies from the Leabhar Breac (1897). In the following year,
he was joint editor of two volumes of the Irish Liber Hymnorum.
6
BIBLIOGRAPHERS
Bibliography has been defined as the systematic description
and history of books, their authorship, publication, editions, etc.
It is only the handmaid of literature; it cannot be identified with
literature any more than the bibliographer (as such) can be
regarded as an author. But, although bibliography has only an
ancillary position, it has, nevertheless, a lofty aim. The biblio-
grapher aims at completeness ; he dares not make any invidious
selection; of his domain, it may be said, as of the grave, that 'the
small and great are there'; and works of comparatively slight
importance have an undoubted right to his recognition.
In fact,
the only way in which he can conscientiously escape from this
obligation is by labelling his list a 'select bibliography. The
author, on the other hand, must always be making a selection out
of all the possible words which he may use ; and, against breaking
this law of selection, he is sufficiently warned by the proverb: tout
dire est rien dire. Sometimes, however, a bibliographer may
produce a work which may rank as literature. A Dibdin may
write a romance on bibliomania, and an Andrew Lang, who
himself describes bibliography as 'the quaint duenna of literature,'
may discourse on it with all his wonted charm ; but bibliographers,
as such, are not authors, and it is only because of their loyal services
to letters that they can claim a place in these pages.
The importance of a first-hand knowledge of books has been
recognised by all bibliographers worthy of the name. It was the
leading principle which guided Joseph Ames, a native of Yarmouth
and a prosperous inhabitant of Wapping, in preparing the materials
for his account of printing in England from 1471 to 1600. Dis-
carding printed lists, and resorting to the title-pages of the books
themselves, he also secured the direct cooperation of others in
gathering information respecting the 215 English printers with
whom he proposed to deal. He thus succeeded in producing his
Typographical Antiquities (1749).
## p. 363 (#387) ############################################
Xv]
England
363
One of the first of English bibliographers, both in order
of time and in talent, was Samuel Paterson, bookseller and
auctioneer. We are told that ‘his talent at cataloguizing was
unrivalled’; and that “perhaps we never had a bookseller who
knew so much of the contents of books generally. We also learn
that his catalogues were masterly, and, some of them, perfect
models of their kind. He was on terms of intimacy with his
older contemporary, Dr Johnson, who has himself a fair claim to
be regarded as a bibliographer. He took part in cataloguing the
Harleian library in 1742. In the preface to this work he observes
that 'by means of Catalogues only can it be known, what has
been written on every part of Learning. ' "The philosopher's
curiosity,' he adds elsewhere, 'may be influenced by a catalogue
of the works of Boyle or of Bacon, as Themistocles was kept
awake by the trophies of Miltiades. '1 Johnson, as he says of Pope,
certainly was, in his early life, a man of great literary curiosity’;
and he understood the whims and foibles of the bibliophile and
collector. 'In the purchase of old books,' he remarks, 'let me
recommend to you to inquire with great caution whether they are
perfect. ” He approved of the famous collection of editions of
Horace by James Douglas, whose catalogue was ultimately
published in 1739; and he adds: 'Every man should try to collect
one book in that manner, and present it to a public library. ? ?
William Beloe, a pupil of Samuel Parr, and a graduate of
Corpus Christi college, Cambridge, produced, in 1806–12, six
volumes entitled Anecdotes of Literature and Scarce Books, in
which he had the advantage of having a large number of rare works
placed at his service by many eminent owners of libraries. Beloe's
Sexagenarian, published in two volumes after his death, contains
anecdotes of the author's literary contemporaries; but the notices
of Porson are known to be inaccuratet. Bibliographia Poetica, a
catalogue of English poets of the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries,
with a short account of their works, was published by Joseph Ritson
in 1802. It was severely handled by Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges
in his Censura Literaria. In allusion to Ritson's abusive, yet often
just, Observations on Warton's History of English Poetry, he adds
that, above all men, the late Laureat, whom this pitiable critic has
loaded with the coarsest epithets, has taught us what use to make
2
3
1 The Adventurer, no. 81.
Croker's edn of Boswell, vol. II, p. 63.
3 Ibid. vol. VIII, p. 277 ; cf. David Murray's Bibliography : its Scope and Methods,
Glasgow, 1915, pp. 3, 7, 8, 53, 54.
• Many passages were omitted in the second edition published in 1818.
## p. 364 (#388) ############################################
364
[CH.
Bibliographers
of dark and forgotten materials. '1 Ritson's Select Collection of
English Songs (1783 and 1813) won the praise of Sir Walter
Scott, who, however, describes his Collection of all the Songs etc.
on Robin Hood (1795, etc. ), as a notable illustration of the ex-
cellences and defects of his system? He was a laborious and
accurate investigator, but there was an almost morbid bitterness in
his criticisms of other men's labours. His place in the literary
world is thus summed up in The Pursuits of Literature :
In Theron's form, mark Ritson next contend;
Fierce, meagre, pale, no commentator's friend 3.
Scott, in his song One Volume More, calls him as bitter as gall, and
as sharp as a razor. ' His critical powers were, however, well applied
in his detection and exposure of the Ireland forgeries in 1795.
Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges, 'a name to all the book-tribe
dear, produced, in the ten volumes of his Censura Literaria, of
1805—9 and 1815, 'titles, abstracts, and opinions of OLD ENGLISH
BOOKS. ' He also published The British Bibliographer (1810—14),
and Restituta ; or Titles, Extracts, and Characters of OLD BOOKS
in English Literature Revived (1814–16). He printed a large
number of rare Elizabethan texts at the private press of his son,
Lee priory, near Canterbury.
A literary interest of a wide range is represented by the dis-
cursive works of Isaac D’Israeli, entitled Curiosities and Amenities
of Literature, and Calamities and Quarrels of Authors. Curiosities
of Literature begins with essays on libraries and on bibliomania,
and ends with the “Life and Habits of a Literary Antiquary’;
it also includes a passage, to our present purpose, in the chapter
on the Bibliognoste':
Many secrets we discover in bibliography. . . . Bibliography will show what
has been done, and suggest to our invention what is wanted. Many have
often protracted their journey in a road which has already been worn out by
the wheels which had traversed it: bibliography unrolls the whole map of
the country we propose travelling over-the post-roads and the by-paths.
Of Calamities of Authors it was said by Southey :
The matter is as amusing as any lover of light reading can desire, and of
such a desultory kind that a comment might easily be made as extensive as
the text4.
The second series of Curiosities was published in 1823; and, ten
:
1 Vol. 1 (1805), p. 55.
? See Scott's introductory remarks to his Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, p. 549 a
of Poetical Works, ed. 1865.
3 [Mathias, T. G. ] See Dialogue 1, 11. 245 f.
* The Quarterly Review, vol. vIII (1812), p. 93.
## p. 365 (#389) ############################################
xv]
365
Englana
years later, Allan Cunningham said of these works in general that,
while they shed abundance of light on the character and condition
of literary men, and show us the state of genius in this land, they
have all the attractions, for general readers, of the best romances. '1
Among collectors of books a prominent place must be assigned
to the duke of Roxburghe, whose books were ultimately sold in
10,120 lots on 18 May 1812, and on forty-five subsequent days.
The excitement then produced by the competition between
Lord Spencer and the future duke of Marlborough for the
Valdarfer Boccaccio, printed at Venice in 1471, led to the
formation of the Roxburghe club, with Lord Spencer as presi-
dent and Dibdin as secretary. Much literary work of high value
was accomplished by this club, when it had outgrown the pedantries
in which it had been reared, and had come under the fostering
care of the scholarly Beriah Botfield', and had secured the services
of men like Sir Frederic Madden, and Thomas Wright. In 1819
the duke of Marlborough's books were sold and the Boccaccio
was now secured by Lord Spencer (who died in 1832), and thus
passed, with the rest of the Althorp collection, into the hands
of Mrs Rylands in 1892, and into the John Rylands library at
Manchester, founded by her in 1899.
150,000 volumes were collected by Richard Heber, the half-
brother of bishop Reginald Heber, at a total expense of more
than £100,000, and were sold in 1834—7 for not much more than
half that sum. From his very childhood he was an eager book-
collector; and, in his maturer years, as library after library was
sold, he added to his stores the choicest treasures from the shelves of
great collectors such as Richard Farmer, George Steevens, the duke
of Roxburghe, Benjamin Heath, Malone and Sir Mark Masterman
Sykes. On hearing that a curious book was for sale, he would
himself enter a mail-coach and travel three, four, or five hundred
miles to obtain it, fearful to entrust his commission to a letter.
He had a library at Hodnet, a second in Pimlico, a third in West-
minster, besides those at Oxford, Paris, Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent
and other places in the Low Countries, and in Germany: Heber
knew his books, and was an expert bibliographer. He was the
'Atticus' of Dibdin's Bibliomania, and the friend of Scott, who
has commemorated him in the introduction to the sixth canto of
1 Biographical and Critical History of British Literature of the last Fifty Years,
Paris, 1834, p. 241, reprinted from The Athenaeum, 14 December 1833, p. 851.
2 See ante, p. 355.
3 The Gentleman's Magazine, January 1834.
## p. 366 (#390) ############################################
366
Bibliographers
[ch.
Marmion. He was also a generous lender of rare volumes to
needy scholars and black-letter editors.
In 1809 John Ferriar, of Manchester, who, in his Illustra-
tions of Sterne, ‘has traced our author through the hidden
sources whence he borrowed most of his striking and peculiar
expressions,'' addressed to Richard Heber a poetical epistle
entitled Bibliomania, large portions of which are quoted by
Dibdin, who borrowed the name as the title of his own amusing
and instructive romance. Here is one of these quotations :
At ev'ry auction, bent on fresh supplies,
He cons his catalogue with anxious eyes :
Where'er the slim Italics mark the page,
Curious and rare his ardent mind engage. (1. 29)
It was in 1802 that Thomas Frognall Dibdin published the first
edition of his Introduction to the Greek and Latin Classics. This
was followed, in 1809, by the first issue of his Bibliomania, a small
octavo volume of 87 pages, an enlarged edition of which appeared
in 1811, with A Bibliographical Romance added to the former
title, while a third edition, that of 1842, includes a key to the
several characters in the story. On receiving a copy of the second
edition, Isaac D'Israeli wrote to the author: 'I have not yet
recovered from the delightful delirium into which your Biblio-
mania has completely thrown me. ' After fully describing the
various symptoms of the form of madness known as bibliomania,
the author suggests several cures for the disease, the fifth and
last being the study of bibliography.
The first edition of Dibdin's Bibliomania was followed by the
four volumes of his enlarged edition (1810—19) of Ames's Typo-
graphical Antiquities, already mentioned? Dibdin was librarian
to Lord Spencer, at Althorp, and, in that capacity, prepared
Bibliotheca Spenceriana. The four volumes of this catalogue,
published in 1814, were soon followed by a supplement in 1815, by
the two volumes entitled Aedes Althorpianae, being a description
of the house and its artistic treasures (1822), and, finally, by a
seventh volume, containing the catalogue of the Cassano library.
The author, in reviewing the result of his endeavours, has the
satisfaction of adding:
I have done every thing in my power to establish, on a firm foundation,
the celebrity of a library of which the remembrance can only perish with
every other record of individual fame.
1 See Scott's Prefatory Memoir to Sterne in John Ballantyne's The Novelist's
Library, vol. v (1823), pp. xvii f.
2 Ante, p. 362.
## p. 367 (#391) ############################################
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367
3?
9
6
Of the three royal octavo volumes entitled The Bibliographical
Decameron, or Ten Days' Pleasant Discourse upon illuminated
Manuscripts, and subjects connected with Early Engraving,
Topography, and Bibliography (1817), Isaac D’Israeli wrote: 'The
volumes not only exceed my expectation, but even my imagination. '
Overtures were made for the re-publication of this beautifully
illustrated work in France; but they were too late. The costly
woodcuts, which had been executed for its production, had already
been purposely destroyed by Dibdin and his friends, who had used
them to feed the fire on a convivial occasion. In 1821 Dibdin
published his Bibliographical, Antiquarian, and Picturesque
Tour in France and Germany. Scott welcomed this 'splendid
work' as one of the most handsome which ever came from
the British Press. ' Dibdin's Library Companion (1824) has
been severely criticised by some, but has been more justly re-
garded by others as a work of considerable value. It was followed
in 1827 by the fourth edition of his Introduction to the Greek
and Latin Classics, and by an anonymous pamphlet entitled
Bibliophobia: “Remarks on the present languid and depressed
state of Literature and the Book Trade' (1831), an entertaining,
but, in some respects, melancholy work. His Reminiscences of
a Literary Life, 'a store-house of biographical and bibliographical
anecdote,' appeared in 1836, succeeded in 1838 by his Biblio-
graphical, Antiquarian, and Picturesque Tour in the Northern
Counties of England, a handsome work, but inferior to that on
his tour in France and Germany. Dibdin must have been well
content with the tribute paid him by Scott for the charm with
which he had invested the dry details of bibliography:
You have contrived to strew flowers over a path which, in other hands,
would have proved a very dull one; and all Bibliomanes must remember you
long, as he (sic) who first united their antiquarian details with good-humoured
raillery and cheerfulness.
The library of the duke of Sussex was catalogued in two
splendid volumes (1827—39) by Thomas Joseph Pettigrew, who,
apart from his publications on the history of medicine, pro-
duced in 1849 a Life of Lord Nelson, including upwards of six
hundred letters and documents, then published for the first
time. The keeper of the Lambeth manuscripts from 1837 to
1848 was Samuel Roffey Maitland, who published, in 1843, a
list of some of the early printed books in that library, and, in
1845, an index of the English books printed before 1600. His
historical productions are noticed elsewhere?
1 See vol. XIII.
## p. 368 (#392) ############################################
368
[CH.
Bibliographers
Memoirs of Libraries, together with a practical hand-book
of library economy, was published in 1859 by Edward Edwards,
who subsequently wrote Lives of the Founders of the British
Museum (1870). The plan of the great reading-room of that
Museum was first formed by Antonio (afterwards Sir Anthony)
Panizzi, keeper of the printed books from 1837, and chief librarian
from 1856 to 1866. In addition to many other public services, it
was owing to Panizzi's personal influence that, in 1846, the bequest
of the Grenville library was obtained for the Museum.
Two bibliographical works of the highest importance were
produced by a London bookseller, William Thomas Lowndes:
(1) the four volumes of The Bibliographer's Manual of English
Literature, 'containing an account of rare, curious, and useful
books relating to Great Britain and Ireland, from the invention
of printing, with bibliographical and critical notices, etc. ,' the
first systematic work of the kind published in England (1834);
and (2) The British Librarian, or "book-collector's guide to the
formation of a library' (parts 1–11, 1839). The Bibliographer's
Manual was enlarged, with revisions and corrections, and with
interesting prefatory notes, in 1857—8, etc. , by Henry George
Bohn, whose own magnum opus was the Guinea Catalogue of old
books (1841), filling nearly 2000 pages and describing 300,000
volumes. Among Bohn's many other undertakings was The Anti-
quarian Library of thirty-five volumes, including (apart from
historical works of earlier date) George Ellis's Specimens of
Early English Metrical Romances, Thomas Keightley's Fairy
Mythology, Mallet's Northern Antiquities and Benjamin Thorpe’s
Yule-tide Stories. Bohn's Guinea Catalogue, vast as it was, was
surpassed in size, though not in quality or character, by the seven
volumes of Bernard Quaritch's General Catalogue of Old Books
and MSS (1887–9; index, 1892).
A bibliographical and critical account of the rarest books in
the English language was supplied in the Notes on rare English
Books, published in 1865 by John Payne Collier, who also printed
Extracts from the Registers of the Stationers' Company for
1555—70, and edited The Roxburghe Ballads, as well as several
works for the Camden, Percy and Shakespeare societies, and the
two volumes entitled Shakespeare's Library (1843). In 1849 he
published a large number of emendations of the text of Shake-
speare from the 'Perkins folio,' which he presented to the duke of
Devonshire, after whose death it was deposited in the British
Museum in 1859, with the result that the marginal corrections
6
## p. 369 (#393) ############################################
Xv]
England
369
were proved to be modern fabrications. A catalogue of the MSS
of the Chetham library, in Manchester, was produced in 1841—2
by James Orchard Halliwell(-Phillipps), who edited many works for
the Camden, Percy and Shakespeare societies, and produced a
magnificent edition of Shakespeare in twenty folio volumes, and
facsimiles of the Shakespeare quartos. He also wrote several
important works on the life of the poet, besides arranging and
describing the archives of Stratford-on-Avon, and compiling A
Dictionary of Archaic and Provincial Words, and A Dictionary
of Old English Plays.
Richard Copley Christie bequeathed to the university of
Manchester a library rich in the literature of the revival of
learning. Walter Arthur Copinger, long Christie's colleague at
Manchester and, like him, a barrister in practice there, founded,
in 1892, the London Bibliographical society, printed in the same year
his Incunabula Biblica and published in 1895—8 his important
supplement to Hain's Repertorium Bibliographicum, in which
6832 works printed in the fifteenth century were added to the 16,311
registered by Hain. Three thousand incunabula (or early printed
books) in the Bodleian were catalogued in 1891–3 by Robert
Proctor, who included notes upon these in his Index of Early
Printed Books in the British Museum (1898). He also prepared
for the Bibliographical society in 1900 an illustrated monograph
entitled The Printing of Greek in the Fifteenth Century. This
able bibliographer met with a mysterious end in the Tyrol in 1903,
and his Bibliographical Essays, which everywhere reveal the wide
knowledge of an expert, were collected two years later. A useful
Register of National Bibliography was produced in two volumes
in 1905 by William Prideaux Courtney.
A remarkable knowledge of bibliography was possessed by
Henry Bradshaw, librarian of the Cambridge university library
from 1867 to 1886. His Memoranda,' which are of special
'
interest as indicating the processes by which advances in know-
ledge are made, are included in the Collected Papers published in
1889. A society for publishing rare liturgical tracts was founded
in his memory in the following year. The book rarities in the
university of Cambridge were reviewed with enthusiasm in 1829
by Charles Henry Hartshorne, who gives a complete list of Capell’s
Shakespeariana in the library of Trinity college. The fifteenth
century printed books, and the English books printed before
1601, in Trinity college library, at Cambridge, were catalogued,
i Cf. ante, p. 333.
E. L. XII.
CH, XV.
24
## p. 370 (#394) ############################################
370
Bibliographers
[ch.
in 1876 and 1885, by the librarian, Robert Sinker, who also wrote
a popular monograph on the library. The early English printed
books in the university library (1475 to 1640), and the MSS in
the college libraries, have likewise been catalogued.
Among the bibliographers specially associated with Scotland,
Sir Walter Scott was undoubtedly a sound bibliographer. It was
on a plan of his own that his library was catalogued by his
secretary; and (as already observed) he was president of the
Bannatyne club from its foundation to the day of his death? . But
the first great bibliographer of Scotland was Robert Watt, of
Glasgow, who published A Catalogue of Medical Books during
his lifetime (in 1812), and left behind him the materials for his
great Bibliotheca Britannica, or a general Index to British and
Foreign Literature, published in four volumes at Edinburgh in
1824, the first two containing the alphabetical list of authors
(with their works), and the third and fourth an alphabetical
classification of subjects.
'Dr Watt,' writes Isaac D’Israeli, 'may serve as a mortifying example of
the length of labour and the brevity of life. To this gigantic work the patient
zeal of the writer had devoted twenty years; he had just arrived at the point
of publication when death folded down his last page; the son who, during the
last four years, had toiled under the direction of his father, was chosen to
occupy his place. The work was in the progress of publication, when the son
also died; and strangers now reap the fruits of their combined labours.
'2
The work has been justly described as “a remarkable perform-
ance, despite of all its imperfections, and one in which Watt's
name will live for centuries to come. '
A catalogue of the law books in the Advocates' library,
Edinburgh, was produced in 1831 by David Irving, author of
Memoirs of. . . George Buchanan and Lives of Scotish Poets, and
of The History of Scotish Poetry. The bibliographical erudition
of Sir William Hamilton, professor of logic and metaphysics
in Edinburgh, is clearly shown in the notes to his published
works, such as Discussions on Philosophy and Literature of
1852—3, and his posthumous Lectures on Logic and Metaphysics.
Augustus de Morgan held that Hamilton was not a bibliographer:
'he knew nothing but the insides of books ’; but he suggested that
a list of the books quoted in Hamilton's lectures on logic would
form a good bibliography of the subject". The American editor of
his Philosophy regarded ‘his erudition, both in its extent and in
3
1
1 Ante, p. 358.
? Literary Miscellanies, p. 355, ed. 1867.
3 Enc. Brit. vol. xxi, ed. 1860, p. 778.
4 Notes and Queries, 1864, p. 102 (quoted in David Murray's Bibliography, p. 53).
1
1
## p. 371 (#395) ############################################
Xv]
371
Scotland
.
>
its exactness,' as 'perfectly provoking’l; and a fellow-countryman,
with all the instincts of a bibliographer, has more aptly said
of him:
Summing up the thousands upon thousands of volumes upon all matters of
human study and in many languages, which he has passed through his hands,
you think he has merely dipped into them or skimmed them, or in some other
shape put them to superficial use. You are wrong; he has found his way at
once to the very heart of the living matter of each one; between it and him
there are henceforth no secrets 2.
The Book-Hunter, a discursive volume describing the delights
of book-collecting, was written by John Hill Burton, the publica-
tion of whose History of Scotland led to his appointment as
historiographer royal for that country. A Scotsman who lived
long in England, Andrew Lang, wrote a delightful volume, The
Library (1881), besides discoursing on 'Elzevirs' and on ‘Biblio-
mania in France' in his Books and Bookmen (1887).
A Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous Literature
of Great Britain was published in 1882–8 by Samuel Halkett,
keeper of the Advocates' library (of which he planned the
catalogue), and John Laing, librarian of the New college, Edin-
burgh, author of the excellent catalogue of its library. The
religious history of the sixteenth century was the special
province of Thomas Graves Law, keeper of the Signet library,
Edinburgh, from 1876 to 1904, whose Collected Essays appeared
in the latter years. Finally, a new catalogue of the Glasgow
university library (with an excellent subject-index) has been
prepared by William Purdie Dickson, honorary curator of the
library, and papers on the bibliography of chemistry and tech-
nology have been written by John Ferguson, of Glasgow, author
of Bibliotheca Chemica (1906), Witchcraft Literature of Scotland,
and Some Aspects of Bibliography with a list of special
bibliographies in the appendix (1907)*.
)
1 Wight, O. W. , transl. of Cousin's History of Modern Philosophy, vol. II, p. 335,
1854. Cf. De Quincey's Essays, vol. v, pp. 314 f. , ed. Masson.
2 Burton, John Hill, The Book-Hunter, pp. 77 f. , ed. 1909.
s As to John Hill Burton, Andrew Lang and T. G. Law, see a later volume of this
History.
* See, also, the bibliography of the present chapter.
24-2
## p. 372 (#396) ############################################
BIBLIOGRAPHIES
CHAPTER I
SIR WALTER SCOTT
I. MANUSCRIPTS
Scott's Journal and much of his correspondence are preserved privately
at Abbotsford, as are also the collections of ballad versions which he utilised
for Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. In the Abbotsford library, which
by his will is preserved intact as he left it, and is accessible for con-
sultation on certain conditions, are a number of miscellaneous MSS and
collections, including various translations of German dramas which he did
not publish, and also his notes when a student at the class of Scots law.
The original MSS of most of Scott's poems and novels are in existence, but
the majority are now in the hands of private collectors. Of several MSS
of the novels at one time in the possession of Ruskin, only that of The
Fortunes of Nigel is now at Brantwood. In the British Museum is the
MS of the most of Kenilworth; various letters of Scott to George Thomson,
with verses for his Scottish Airs; the proofsheets of Woodstock with the
author's corrections and additions; eighteen letters to James Ballantyne
about the work, and Ballantyne's criticisms; a copy of The Life of Napoleon
with MS corrections and notes by Scott; and a portion of an edition of
Swift's Works used by Scott, with MS notes by him. The MSS of Marmion
and Waverley are preserved in the Advocates' library, Edinburgh. Portions
of Kenilworth and The Legend of Montrose, original correspondence and
verses belonging to Scott and various letters from him, are included in the
Laing collection in the university of Edinburgh. The publishing firm of
A. & C. Black, London, possesses Scott's annotated edition of the Waverley
novels, in 44 volumes, full of textual corrections by him; and bound up
in vol. I are the MSS of the introductions, etc. published in the first
collected edition.
II. POETRY
A. Collected Editions
The Poetical Works of Walter Scott, with the Notes by the Author.
12 vols. Edinburgh, 1820.
Poetical Works. 7 vols. Paris, 1821 and 1827.
11 vols. Edinburgh, 1830.
Ed. Lockhart, J. L. , with illustrations on steel from drawings by Turner,
J. M. W. Edinburgh, 1833-4 and 1848.
Ed. , with memoir and critical dissertation, by Gilfillan, G. 3 vols. Edin-
burgh, 1857.
The Globe edition, with a biographical and critical memoir by Palgrave,
F. T. 1866, and later edns.
## p. 373 (#397) ############################################
CH. 1]
373
Sir Walter Scott
a
Poetical Works. With a critical memoir by Rossetti, W. M. , and illustrations
by Seccombe, T. 1870.
With prefatory notice, biographical and critical, by Sharp, W. 2 vols.
1885-6.
Ed. Minto, W. 2 vols. 1891-2.
Oxford complete edn. Ed. Robertson, J. L. 1904.
Ed. Lang, A. 1905.
B. Separate Works
The Chase and William and Helen: two ballads from the German of Gott-
fried A. Bürger. [Anonymous. ] Edinburgh and London, 1796.
Apology for Tales of Terror. Kelso, 1799. [Only about 12 copies printed.
Includes his Bürger translations, and a few other ballads afterwards
included in M. G. Lewis's Tales of Wonder, 1801. ]
The Eve of St John: a Border Ballad. Kelso, 1800.
Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border. Vols. 1 and 11. Kelso, 1802. Vol. III.
London and Edinburgh, 1803. (Includes original ballads by Scott and
others. ] 3rd and more complete edn. 1803. Various subsequent edns with
changes and additional notes. Posthumous edn with additional notes by
Lockhart, J. G. 1833. New edn with additional notes and various readings
by Henderson, T. F. 4 vols. Edinburgh and New York, 1902. Re-
arranged edn with introduction by Noyes, A. , in one vol. Edinburgh,
1908.
The Lay of the Last Minstrel. 1805. 6th edn with notes. 1807. 8th edn
with Ballads and Lyrical Pieces. Illustrated. 1808.
Ballads and Lyrical Pieces. 1806.
Marmion: a Tale of Flodden Field. 1808.
The Lady of the Lake; a poem. Edinburgh, 1810.
The Vision of Don Roderick. Edinburgh, 1811.
Glenfinlas and other Ballads, with the Vision of Don Roderick. Edinburgh,
1812.
Rokeby, a Poem. Edinburgh, 1813.
The Bridal of Triermain; or the Vale of St John. Edinburgh, 1813.
The Field of Waterloo; a Poem. Edinburgh, 1815.
The Lord of the Isles; a Poem in six cantos. 1815.
The Vision of Don Roderick, The Field of Waterloo and other poems. Edin-
burgh, 1815.
The Ettricke Garland, being two excellent new songs (one by Scott and the
other by Hogg, J. ). Edinburgh, 1815.
Various songs in Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs for the Voice
by Thomson, George, 6 vols. , 1793-1811; and in Albyn's Anthology, ed.
Campbell, A. , 2 vols. , Edinburgh, 1816 and 1818.
Harold the Dauntless; a Poem in six cantos. Edinburgh, 1817.
Ballad of the Noble Moringer. In The Edinburgh Annual Register. 1817.
The Bridal of Triermain and Harold the Dauntless. Edinburgh, 1818.
Miscellaneous Poems. Edinburgh, 1820.
The Poetry contained in the Novels, Tales and Romances of the Author of
Waverley. Edinburgh, 1822.
Halidon Hill; a Metrical Romance in two acts. 1822.
Macduff's Cross; a Dramatic Sketch. First published in Joanna Baillie's
Collection of Poetical Miscellanies. 1822. Republished with the Doom
of Devorgoil, Halidon Hill and Auchindrane, or the Ayrshire Tragedy.
Edinburgh, 1830.
## p. 374 (#398) ############################################
374
[CH.
Bibliography
III.
