Bibliography and the Editorial Problem in the
Eighteenth Century
[*]
by
William B.
Todd
OF THE MANY PROBLEMS THAT HARASS THE bibliographer of
eighteenth-century literature, perhaps the most vexing are
those involving the proper discrimination and ordering of
multiple editions. In this period undenominated reprints
are to be suspected everywhere, among elaborate editions
running to several volumes, among popular books of any
length, even among casual works of lesser size and
consequence. Though it would be futile to suggest an
occasion for all of this duplication, an explanation for
some may be found in a reported conversation between
Andrew Millar, a prominent bookseller of the day, and
several members of the clergy at St. James. When asked
what he thought of David Hume's essays, Millar replied, as
he later informed the philosopher, "I said I considered
yr Works as Classicks; that I
never numbered ye Editions as I did
in Books We wished to puff."[1] From this we
may presume that, for Millar and others of similar intent,
multiple editions may appear as the result of a deliberate
policy among the booksellers to disguise reprints of
standard works. The greater the importance of a book, they
must have reasoned, the less the necessity for pushing its
sale, and the more the inducement for duplicating the
original issue. A close facsimile would be readily
accepted by those who wished to buy the first,
authoritative printing. A close facsimile was, then, what
they oftentimes attempted to produce.
If Millar's statement can be inferred as expressing a general
policy, then we have not only been forewarned as to what
we may
expect in Hume's works and
advised as to what actually happened in those of
Fielding's which Millar published, but given some reason
for the presence of two or three concealed editions in
practically every major production in the eighteenth
century, and some anticipation of further discoveries and
other difficulties in this neglected province of
bibliography.
[1a]
For the presence of other reprints, however, Millar's
observation will not suffice, since it excludes all works
not considered—in the eighteenth-century
view—as classics. But where there are two or three
hidden editions of the major works, there seem to be among
certain kinds of minor productions as many as four, five,
or six, all very much alike and often undiscriminated in
bibliographies. The occasion for multiplicity of this
order arises, perhaps, from economic rather than literary
considerations. For obvious reasons, a publisher would be
reluctant to invest in such ephemera as topical poems,
plays, and political tracts, and would accordingly prefer
to underprint, and print again as necessary, than to
overproduce a lot of sheets which would then remain
unsold. Paper, in these days, was an expensive item,
amounting to forty per cent of the cost of production for
small issues, over sixty per cent for larger ones,[2] and therefore not to be squandered on
casual effusions of uncertain reception. Hence we may see
why Lawton Gilliver printed four limited editions of
Bramston's Art of Politicks (1729),
any one of which might be considered as a "first";[3] why Thomas
Cooper,
a prolific purveyor of literary trifles, found it
necessary to print five editions of Lord Lyttelton's
Court Secret (1741-42) before a
lagging demand required a "puff" with one called the
second; and why this same publisher, a year later, printed
no less than six editions of Edmund Waller's and Lord
Chesterfield's
Case of the Hanover
Forces (1742-43) prior to the publication of a
"second."
[4] Given the cause in
economic necessity, all of this reprinting becomes
credible, and should become a matter of record.
In addition to the literary and economic reasons, already
presented, another and more significant occasion for
reproduction in the eighteenth century is the removal of
all legal restrictions upon the size and frequency of
issue and the use and reuse of type. With the expiration
of the Licensing Act in 1695 and the gradual abrogation of
the powers exercised by the Stationers' Company, the
esoteric "arte and mysterie" of printing, as it was called
in the earlier period, became in this a common trade,
subject to few prohibitions, and producing on a scale of
greater extent and complexity than anything witnessed
before. Despite the laws of copyright, or perhaps because
of them, the publishers duplicated their own issues, not
infrequently copied those of their competitors, and, with
notable exceptions, resorted to the term "edition" for
successive issues only as an expedient for moving the
book. Thus for one reason or another, or for no reason at
all, reprinting became a custom, evident, as I have
indicated, among first editions of any sort, and, as well,
in several other categories: (1) among subsequent editions
properly described, as in the two fourth editions of
Gray's Elegy (1751), the two second
editions of Pope's Use of Riches
(1733), and, if I may again refer to variants
undifferentiated in the present accounts, the three third
editions of Pope's Epistle to
Burlington (1731);[5] (2) among
authorized but undesignated reprints, as in the double
editions of the 1723 Hamlet, the
1724 Othello, the 1729 Macbeth,[6] and the 1770 versions of Goldsmith's
Traveller; and (3) in outright
piracies, as in the three undiscriminated 1797 editions of
Burke's
Letter to Portland
[7] and the four misrepresented 1770
editions of Goldsmith's
Deserted
Village. And so the reprinting continues, to
be reported for relatively few books, to be observed in
many, to be suspected in all.
If multiple editions in different settings of type represent a
problem too often ignored in contemporary accounts, even
more of a problem, but one accorded even less recognition,
is that of multiple impressions from the same setting of
type. Where the seventeenth-century compositor, with a
limited amount of type at his disposal, usually had to
break down a setting after every sheet in order to recover
sorts for further use, the eighteenth-century compositor,
with apparently unlimited quantities of type at hand,
could on occasion set as many as 350 pages and allow this
enormous aggregate of metal to remain intact for
innumerable impressions. Some of these are labeled second
and third editions, some are not so dignified. Some appear
with substantial textual alterations, some without the
alteration of a comma. In one printing house no less than
94,900 pieces of type were composed for a certain book and
then retained for a series of impressions, all published
within seventeen days. The paper which went over the
presses in these seventeen days I conservatively estimate
at 137,500 sheets.[8]
For such extensive reimpression as this there is no precedent
in the sixteenth or seventeenth century, hitherto no
exposition of an expedient means for detecting it in the
eighteenth, and consequently, no reliable method for
interpreting the complexities in printing which have
developed over the years. To illustrate the resulting
confusion, let us consider the voluminous bibliographical
literature on Samuel Johnson, and particularly the
commentary on those of his works published by Thomas
Cadell. Since Cadell was an apprentice to Andrew Millar,
and later his successor, we should expect some
irregularity. And something is amiss, both in the
bibliographies and in the books. Of four works published
between 1770 and 1775 a "second edition," not otherwise
described, is recognized from its designation in the books
I will call A, C, and D,
and presumed
from the existence of a "third edition" in B. Actually
all, including B, have at least one "second edition," but
of a kind quite different from that which the term
implies. In A and the unknown B it consists of a partial
resetting and a partial reimpression; in C, a complete
reimpression; and in D, no less than three distinct
reimpressions. With the evidence now at our disposal, and
shortly to be divulged, all of this is easily perceived.
Without it, the second edition of B remains "suppressed,"
as we are now informed,
[9] the three second
editions (
i.e., impressions) of D
undiscriminated, and the problems inherent in all of these
entirely undisclosed.
From this example of misinformation we now turn to
bibliographies in which, though more may be expected,
occasionally less is fulfilled. In S. L. Gulick's account
of Chesterfield—recommended, I might add, by no less
an authority than R. W. Chapman as a model of accuracy
[10]—an examination of seven works
discloses all manner of confusion: two impressions
erroneously classified as states, two sets of two
editions, each described as one, and a third set entirely
overlooked. Similarly, in R. H. Griffith's bibliography of
Pope, a survey, again confined to seven works, reveals two
states classified as impressions, three sets of two
editions, each described as one, and one set of three,
likewise represented as a single entity. This production
has also been approved in the reviews, including, for
instance, those by George Sherburn and A. E. Case,[11] where it is reported in one (and
implied in the other) that the copies at Chicago and Yale
are identical with the ones described, when, as a matter
of fact, they differ from these, from others accessible to
the reviewers, and indeed from others in the same
collection. If this is the situation in the bibliographies
of Johnson, Chesterfield, and Pope, all of which are
considered as definitive, what may we expect to find in
those not so recognized? And what, we may inquire, is the
status of scholarly commentary based on the premises of
these bibliographies? To these questions we may
individually provide the answers which seem
appropriate.
Having the temerity to proceed thus far in what may be taken
as a general indictment, I must
go a step further. No one, least of all the present
writer, should presume to say what has happened without
suggesting the cause and the cure. As any insinuation of
incompetence would, of course, be irrelevant for
bibliographies regarded as authoritative, this may be
discounted and two other reasons advanced. For one, the
standards of examination so readily accepted ten or twenty
years ago, and so often in evidence today, have been
superseded by those which require, among other things,
some facility in the interpretation of various
technicalities, the comparison of such differentiæ
as headlines, the use of control copies or something that
will serve as a control, and—whatever the
inconvenience to the person concerned—the inspection
of numerous copies in addition to the several represented
in special collections. For the other, the books to be
examined, in the eighteenth century, are, as I have
intimated, the products of conditions of greater
complexity than those which apply in the earlier periods,
and therefore occasionally require supplemental techniques
for their analysis. It has not been sufficiently realized
that printing, in this century, has progressed beyond the
era of the simple handicraft and now represents one of
mass production, where not a few but hundreds of pages of
type may be retained and repeatedly returned to press,
where not one or two individuals but batteries of pressmen
and compositors may produce, in a matter of hours,
editions running into thousands of copies, where not one
but several books may be put to press and worked
concurrently by the same personnel. These practices,
though extraordinary in the seventeenth century, have
become commonplace in the eighteenth, and now demand a
consideration frequently evaded or ignored in our present
studies.
The only procedure that fully accounts for the altered
circumstances of book-production in this period is one
that utilizes the evidence peculiar to these
circumstances. Evidence of this sort, we may be assured,
is usually not to be found in the materials of production—in obvious
irregularities in type, paper, and ink—all of which
tend to be standardized and uniform, but in the actual process of production, as this
is revealed by the press figures. These little symbols,
appearing now and then in the lower margin of the page in
many eighteenth-century books, were first reported, I
believe, by Griffith in his Pope
bibliography, and have since become involved in several
suppositions as to their original use to the printer and
their present use to the bibliographer. Contrary to
McKerrow's prediction that they would prove to be of
little importance, recent investigation has shown that
they may be interpreted as signs of cancellation, variant
states, half- or fullpress operation (indicating the
employment of one or two men at the machine), type pages
arranged within the forme in some irregular pattern,
sheets impressed in some abnormal order, an impression of
the formes for each sheet by one man working both formes
in succession, or two men working both simultaneously,
impressions interrupted for one reason or another,
reimpressions or resettings of the book, in whole or in
part, copy distributed among several shops, overprints
involving an increase in the number of sheets machined for
certain gatherings in order to meet an unanticipated
demand for copies, and underprints consisting of a
decrease in the number of sheets in order to reduce the
issue and speed its publication.
[12] Now that they
are displayed in the figures, these various ramifications
in composition and presswork may not be overlooked by any
editor cognizant of his responsibilities, for here and
there in a process so involved he should expect to find an
unnoticed reading, an altered passage, or an entirely
different edition from that on record.
Since the figures disclose so much of possible textual
significance which might otherwise remain unrevealed, they
are, notwithstanding McKerrow, of some importance, not
only in the discrimination and analysis of concealed or
known editions, but in the bibliographical description of
the books examined. If the figures are included in the
record, any variant unknown to the compiler can be
immediately detected and appropriate measures taken to
establish its relationship to others in the series. If
they are not included, then, of all the variants already
mentioned, the most elaborate description will permit the
identification of only a few of the editions and none of
the impressions.
An interesting example of the relative value of the figures
and of the more conventional means of discrimination is
afforded by
Burke's
Reflections on the Revolution in France
(1790). According to Gathorne-Hardy's account, which is
duly offered on the basis of differentiae in catchwords,
ornaments, the spacing of type, and the length of a rule
preceding the text, the first two editions of this book
consist of sheets in two settings of type separate or
mixed in several combinations.
[13] As the
figures intimate, however, and as an inspection of the
discrepant copies will disclose, the type for this book
exists in one to four settings, each occurring in one to
four impressions, and all combined in a strange and
wonderful manner to produce five distinct variants. Among
these we may identify two editions—A, comprising a
single impression throughout, and B, comprising four
impressions, of which two (B1-B2) are undesignated and two
(B3-B4) called a "Second Edition." Now, with all of this
decided, unequivocally, the editor can proceed, in the
manner that Sir Walter Greg suggests, to select as his
copytext what is identified as the first edition, and then
to add to this the revisions which Burke introduced in the
edition called the "Third," an edition disregarded in the
previous commentary, and also, in part, a reimpression.
Though this is the required procedure, it has not been
followed for the
Reflections or for
numerous other works of a similar nature simply because
the problems incident to their manufacture have been
ignored or misconstrued.
Even when the variants are known, however, their relationship
may be undetermined, again for want of appropriate
bibliographical techniques. In some cases, as with the Reflections, the several
editions and impressions can be ordered on the evidence of
the figures alone, without reference to copy. In others,
the later edition may be identified by the usual criteria,
such as the inclusion of textual matter in the preliminary
gathering of the Deserted Village
piracies—those which are so highly esteemed as
"private issues," or the gradation in the size and format
of the Bramston, Chesterfield, and Lyttelton pamphlets to
which I have referred, or the correction of errata in Tom Jones and in Gibbon's Decline and Fall, or the absence
of cancels in Johnson's edition of Shakespeare, or
finally, in watermarks, imprints, and advertisements, all
of which materially assist in deciding the priority of the
Monk editions.
Other works not amenable to these
several approaches can be subjected to a mechanical
demonstration, such as the one Fredson Bowers exemplified
for Dryden's
Wild Gallant in his
address before this Institute last year.
[14]
Nevertheless, with all of these techniques at our command, we
still must contend with many eighteenth-century editions
which continue to be bibliographically intransigent. These
bugaboos infest what one writer has called "The
Bibliographical Jungle"[15]— a wild
locale visited by a goodly number of adventurers, all of
whom have hacked about in the bushes, but produced nothing
to show for their labors except a covey of unappealing
conjectures and misconceptions. To produce the results
desired, we should, once again, abandon the conventional
methods of attack, all of which would seem to be of little
avail, and devise for our purpose some unconventional
tool.
The one I would propose concerns the use of a third text of
known date and provenance, deriving independently from and
therefore identifying the first of the several editions
under consideration, yet, paradoxically, extraneous to
these editions, to their printer, and to the author, and
thus, in a strict sense, of no editorial or
bibliographical significance whatever. This anomalous text
is that provided by the literary reviews which, beginning
with those to be found in the early numbers of the Gentleman's Magazine,
[15a] usually appear
shortly after the publication of the first edition and
occasionally cite passages of considerable length "for the
interest of their readers," and now, we may say, for our
interest too. When the readings in the abstracts are
collated with those in the indeterminate editions they
will, of course, collate only with those in the text from
which they were copied, and thus establish the
priority of that edition in the
sequence. It is rather surprising that evidence so
abundantly available in the periodicals should be so
rarely employed. In fact, so far as I can recall, only one
scholar, Austin Dobson, has ever resorted to the reviews
for the purpose I recommend, and on that
occasion—some thirty years before the discovery of
the printer's ledger confirmed his decision—he was
able to demonstrate by a simple collation that, contrary
to normal expectation, the expurgated version of
Fielding's
Voyage to Lisbon (1755)
was issued prior to the one with the original text.
[16]
Of the many books which can be ordered through reference to
the journal readings, several may be mentioned here. The
first, Smollett's Humphry Clinker
(1771), has long confounded every attempt at analysis. For
the last twenty-five years a succession of bibliographers
have undertaken the disheartening task of collating the
800 pages in this novel, amassed reams of worthless notes,
and eventually confessed their failure to establish the
precedence of the editions.[17] For this, as for
numerous other works, a mixture of corrupted and corrected
readings precludes a demonstration of priority.
Undoubtedly, any approach to a solution in the case of Humphry Clinker has been
somewhat impeded by an uncertainty as to the number of
existing variants. Once the true editions are disengaged
from sophisticated copies, variant states, and "ghosts,"
all of which have crept into the discussion of this
riddle, it will be noted that there are, essentially, four
distinct settings:
Volume I
Edition
|
Title-page
|
|
Press figures
[18]
|
A |
1671 |
|
Throughout |
B |
1671 or 1771 |
|
Only in gathering M |
C |
1772 |
2d ed |
None |
D |
1771 |
2d ed |
None |
Now between June 18, 1771, the date of
original publication, either for A or for B, and September
1, the approximate date that work was completed on the
alternate "first edition," a total of seventy-four pages
from the novel were reprinted in four journals,
The London Magazine, The Gentleman's
Magazine, The Critical Review, and
The Weekly Magazine, or Edinburgh
Amusement.
[19] As these reprinted
pages represent 138 readings, all differing from those in
B, and all agreeing with those in A, the conclusion
follows that A is unmistakably the first of the two
editions. With the order of these determined, the
relationship of all texts, complete and abstracted, may be
represented in the stemma:
Thus
after years of misdirected activity, a little effort, very
little, has here provided a certain decision.
No less certain are the results to be obtained by the use of
figures and reviews, independently or together, in the
reconsideration of problems already known and decided. Two
instances may be cited, one reported within the past
several months, one on record for the last twenty years,
both entertaining versions of the kind, number, and order
of variants, and both entirely contrary to fact. The
first, appearing in the latest catalogue issued by Peter
Murray Hill, is a brief notice of The
Life of David Hume, Esq. (1777) — a book
about which Millar has given us ample warning. Concerning
this, Hill reports two "issues,"
with the first containing a reading "himself" and the
second containing the reading supposedly corrected to
"myself." Actually these are not "issues," as they are
called, or states, as we might infer from the description,
but separate editions, of which the figures indicate
different settings of type and the reviews a different
order of publication.
[20]
For the second instance, Edward Moore's periodical, The World (1753-56), the current
explanation is as simple as the one I have just refuted,
but the circumstances of printing somewhat more complex.
In J. H. Caskey's account we are informed that there were,
apparently, two simultaneous "issues" of every one of the
209 numbers.[21] First, it would seem,
came the issue bearing a vignette, and then, set from
proof-sheets of this, the one containing a headpiece of
printers' ornaments. Though the reasons for this facile
hypothesis are not made explicit, they seem to rest on a
reference to the fact that 2500 copies were required of
some numbers. Perhaps it was thought that Robert Dodsley,
the publisher, needed to have two settings for an
impression running over the limit established by
regulation, or that two were necessary in order to shorten
the time at press. From the point of view of those dealing
with the literature of the sixteenth or seventeenth
centuries, either explanation would appear to be
plausible. From our vantage ground in the eighteenth, both
must be considered irrelevant.
The size of an impression was certainly not determined, at
this time, by directives of the Stationers' Company. That
these had long since become inoperative is attested by the
printers' own accounts: William Woodfall cast off 4500
copies of Edward and Eleanora
(1739); Samuel Richardson, 2500 of The
Centaur Not Fabulous, third edition (1755);
William Strahan, 3000 of Tom Jones,
third edition (1749), 3500 of the fourth edition (1750),
5000 of Amelia (1752);[22] and each of these editions, I am
satisfied, is of a single impression. Nor can it be argued
that there was insufficient time to
produce an issue of
The World from
one setting of type. If two presses were used for the full
sheet, one for printing, the other for perfecting, and a
third press for the half-sheet, even as many as 2500
copies could be easily completed within three days, well
within the schedule for a weekly paper. With the liberty
and the time to do what he pleased, the publisher would
hardly put himself to the expense of a second, unnecessary
setting at the time of publication. The only reasonable
explanation therefore seems to be that the variant "issue"
was set at some time after publication to meet an
unexpected demand for certain numbers.
If the variants are, thus, nothing more than occasional
reprints, they should occur irregularly in the sequence of
numbers and not, as the previous hypothesis would require,
in every number. What, then, is the situation, and to what
extent may it be explained by the usual method of
analysis? Examination discloses that, among the copies I
have examined, the variants are not precisely two to a
number, nor can they be considered as "issues," nor were
they printed in the sequence described. From the 19th to
the 209th and last, all numbers bear the vignette. Among
the first eighteen numbers one encounters the usual
disorder in what is assumed to be entirely regular: three
editions of the first and second numbers, two from the
fourth through the eleventh, one from the twelfth to the
seventeenth, and two of the eighteenth. A distinguishing
characteristic of some of these editions is the headpiece,
of which there are, not two, but three variants:
A Five rows of ornaments
B Vignette of author at his desk
C The same vignette, broken diagonally
across the center of the block
Whenever one copy differs from another in any of
these respects it also differs in setting. And whenever
the settings B and C are found for the same number of the
periodical, we may assume from the evidence of the
fractured block that C was printed at a later date than B.
This date is fixed by the progressive deterioration of the
vignette in the numbers which exist as a single edition.
From the 19th to the 23rd number the block is sound; from
the 24th to the 87th it is broken in one place, as in
variant C; and beginning with some copies of the 88th
number a second break appears. Thus
the
C edition of the earlier numbers, though dated January,
1753, must have been printed after June 7 of that year,
the date of the 23rd number, and before September 5, 1754,
the date of the 88th.
Whereas B and C have the vignette in common, a collation of
the readings indicates that they are separated by an
intermediate text A without vignette. The precise
relationship of the three editions, wherever they occur in
the periodical, therefore corresponds to one of these
three stemma: Further than this
we cannot proceed by the critical method, for the
potentialities of that method have now been exhausted. But
if we choose to apply collateral evidence, a second series
of texts is made available, and the analysis can then
continue to a conclusion.
These texts, present in The London Magazine,
The Monthly Review, The Scots Magazine, and
The Universal Magazine,[23] abstract readings from the first two
numbers of the periodical. Among the readings in the
several editions of the first number the variants are
accidental, amounting to a few changes in capitalization.
Among those of the second, however, the variation is
substantial:
|
Reading
|
Editions
|
|
Reviews
|
7,8 |
shine, but |
A |
C |
MR |
SM |
|
shine but |
B |
8,29 |
nothing to say |
A |
C |
MR |
SM |
|
not a word to say |
B |
10,32 |
absence; |
A |
B |
MR |
SM |
LM |
UM |
|
absence: |
C |
A collation of the seven texts now at our
disposal demonstrates the literal sequence of the three
editions to be of the order A-B for the
one, A-C for the other. The chronological sequence, where
C with the broken vignette follows the unbroken B, is
therefore:
This determination
of the priority and relationship among the three editions
of one number of
The World
establishes a reasonable presumption for a similar
arrangement of the editions in others. Without reference
to the reviews any determination, even for one number, is
impossible.
From the evidence adduced in this and the preceding examples I
would suggest that by one method or another, and sometimes
by these methods alone, we are now in a position to
discover and decide problems presently unknown or
unresolved. To such a declaration it is hardly necessary
to add that these several techniques do not constitute a
panacea for all of the duplications and disorders to be
encountered in eighteenth-century literature. Some books
requiring differentiation are unfigured, figured in
uninformative patterns, or, in rare instances, exactly
reiterated in their figures. Some requiring arrangement
are unreviewed, reviewed by a synopsis not subject to
collation, or cited in portions where there are only a few
or no discrepancies. For these exceptional cases other
procedures must be found, or the project abandoned as
insolvable. For all except these, however, the methodology
now available will facilitate a solution to any problem
concerning the discrimination, description, and
classification of variants. Even in these elementary,
though fundamental preliminaries to editorial endeavor
there is much to do in the eighteenth century, and much of
what has been attempted must be done again.
Notes