From Aldine to Everyman: Cheap Reprint Series of the English Classics
1830-1906
by
Richard D. Altick
A PROMINENT BOOKSELLER," REPORTED AN English book trade journal at the end of the last
century, "lately affirmed that the dead are today taking the bread out of the mouths of the
living at a rate unparalleled in the history of literature. Even the popular novelist, he
said, feels the competition of those who 'rule our spirits from their urn.'"[1]
Not that Marie Corelli, Hall Caine, Rider Haggard, and the other best-selling writers of the
1890's were in any danger of starvation. Financially speaking, the profession of authorship
had never before been as rewarding. But it was also true that the flood of reprinted classics,
which had been steadily mounting for several decades, had reached a new peak. The full history
of this important branch of Victorian publishing, a task writer a leader-writer in the Times Literary Supplement a decade ago urged some "industrious
bibliographer" to undertake,[2] will
not be attempted here. Instead, we shall be concerned mainly with two aspects of cheap-reprint
publishing: its relation to the contemporary social and cultural background, and the way in
which it illustrates in microcosm some of the theories and practices of the Victorian book
trade generally.
From one viewpoint, Victorian England was not a very fertile ground on which to sow reprints
of the national classics. In some educated quarters, the work of English writers was still
looked upon, as it had been in Elizabethan times, as a second-class literature. This
attitude is implied in a letter Sir Alexander Grant wrote from Bombay to F. T.
Palgrave in 1862, discussing the possibility of adopting Palgrave's
Golden
Treasury as a classbook for Indian students: "I hope you won't think this a degradation.
English poetry is to these people what Homer is to us."
[3] Down almost to the end of the century, the old universities were
officially unaware of English literature as a subject for serious study. Again, their lofty or
complex style, their far-ranging allusiveness, and the sophistication of their thought placed
many English classics beyond the grasp of readers with limited education. The mass audience of
Victorian times was ill-equipped to understand, let alone find pleasure in, books that had
been addressed to the intellectual élite of preceding centuries. In that era, as in any
other, it was contemporary writers, speaking their audience's own language, and reflecting
their audience's own preoccupations, who had the greatest appeal. Finally, the
anti-imaginative bias of evangelicalism and utilitarianism was everywhere felt, especially in
the first half of the century. Reading belles lettres, it was alleged, was both sinful and
wasteful of time that could be put to far better advantage in "practical" pursuits.
But even more numerous and stronger counter-forces were at work. One was a backwash of
romanticism: the growing charm of the antique, exemplified in the bibliophily of men like
Lamb, Hunt, and the elder Disraeli. The sense that books, and particularly old ones, have a
magical glamor spread as the high place of imaginative and emotional experience in men's lives
was reaffirmed. Closely associated with this reaction against rationalism and gritty
utilitarianism was the increased importance literature acquired as a social institution. As
Lionel Trilling has pointed out, literature "came to be the medium and the repository of the
ethical values and the feelings that had once been peculiar to religion. And literature became
even more. Carlyle, under the influence of Goethe, formulated the notion of the Man of Letters
not only as a priest but as a hero and a seer and thus made him co-equal with the political
leader and the rival of the scientist. In short, literature took upon itself the very greatest
responsibilities and arrogated to itself the most effective powers."[4]
Furthermore, as democracy slowly spread, the age-old notion that literature was the concern
only of the cultural and social aristocracy faded. As early as 1819, Francis Jeffrey announced
that "the fame of a poet is popular, or nothing. He does not address himself, like the man of
science, to the learned, or those who desire to learn, but to all mankind;
and his purpose being to delight and be praised, necessarily extends to all who can receive
pleasure, or join in applause."
[5]
Literature of both the past and the present gradually came to be looked upon as part of the
cultural heritage of all the people.
As the limitations of the utilitarian philosophy became more apparent, the Victorians became
uncomfortably aware that in their society humanistic values had been more and more neglected;
and in an attempt to redress the balance, their journalists and public men joined to praise
books as the great medium of cultural enrichment. The countless essays and speeches they
composed on "The Blessedness of Books," "Little Books with Large Aims," "What a Single Book
May Do for a Youth," and similar topics were part of a continuous campaign to encourage the
habit of serious, profitable reading among the multitude. With opportunities for formal
education severely limited, the idea of self-help was part of the Victorian creed; hence books
were revered as fireside universities. Polite literature was prized not so much for its
capacity to give pleasure as for its extra-literary, or non-aesthetic, values. It was through
reading masterpieces of literature that the student could, for instance, enhance his
understanding of history. Such an approach was used by F. D. Maurice in his lectures on
English literature at King's College in the forties,[6] and by the author of the articles on literature in Cassell's
influential Popular Educator.
These were some of the reasons why non-contemporary English literature was constantly
brought to the attention of ordinary readers, through excerpts and appreciative comment, in
the pages of early mass-circulation periodicals like the Penny Magazine
and Chambers's Journal. Indeed, all the way down to the era of George
Newnes's Tit-Bits, some of the most popular cheap weeklies
unapologetically used extracts from classic English literature as fillers. Middle-class
newspapers gave generous space to reviews of current books and other literary topics.
Literature was a favorite subject for the mechanics' institute lectures which had so prominent
a part in middle-class cultural life in early-and mid-Victorian England. And, with the
adoption of Mundella's code in 1883, elementary schools began to require pupils in the upper
standards to read, parse, and memorize selected English classics. Full-length works, or
substantial parts thereof, replaced the old "beauties" anthologies which for many decades had
represented virtually the only chance children had to gain a glimpse of the standard classics,
at least in the schoolroom.

This, in brief, was the background against which the rise of the cheap classic reprint
series took place. Historically, the first important inexpensive reprints, made possible by
the momentous decision in Donaldson v. Beckett (1774), which killed the
legal fiction of perpetual copyright, were those of John Bell, John Cooke, and James Harrison,
each of whom produced two or more series devoted to out-of-copyright poets, prose writers, and
dramatists. The delight they brought to impecunious book-lovers in the last quarter of the
eighteenth century and the early years of the nineteenth was celebrated by Leigh Hunt,
Hazlitt, Henry Kirke White, and William Hone, among others. Of Cooke in particular, Augustine
Birrell wrote a century later: "You never see on a stall one of Cooke's books but it is soiled
by honest usage, its odour . . . speaks of the thousand thumbs that have turned over its pages
with delight. . . . He believed both in genius and his country. He gave people cheap books,
and they bought them gladly."[7]
Between 1790 and 1830 there was a scattering of relatively cheap series, appealing to a
class of readers who could not afford the better-remembered, but higher-priced, collections of
Alexander Chalmers (English Poets and British Essayists), Robert Anderson (British Poets),
Robert Lynam (British Essayists), Mrs. Inchbald (British Theatre), Mrs. Barbauld (British
Novelists), and Sir Walter Scott (Ballantyne's Novelist's Library). The bookseller John Sharpe
brought out a long series of English poets, another of the eighteenth-century essayists, and a
third of the dramatists. John Fowler Dove's miniature (24mo.) reprints of the English
classics, ranging from The Compleat Angler to Pope's Poetical Works, ran to well over 100 titles. The Chiswick printer Charles Whittingham,
producer of a typographically distinguished 100-volume set of the British poets for the
carriage trade, served the humbler public with his Cabinet Library and Novelists Library (or,
as it was also called, Whittingham's Pocket Novelists). The price range of all these series
was rather wide—in the case of Whittingham's, from 2s. to 4s. 6d. per volume. The cheapest series of all
during this period seems to have been that of John Limbird, publisher of the 2d. weekly Mirror of Literature, who brought out a
series of British novels, with prices running from 6d. to 3s. 6d., and another of miscellaneous British
classics, from 8d. a volume upward. In addition to reprints dignified
by a series title, individual cheap editions of classic authors were also issued by various
publishers, nearly all of whom were despised by the genteel firms of Paternoster Row.
Conspicuous among them was Thomas Tegg, the energetic scavenger of
remainders and expired copyrights, whose products were memorable for their low prices, miserly
format, and slovenly, not to say slashed, texts.
The period 1827-32 saw the first important burst of interest in cheap books among
"respectable" publishers. The appearance of Constable's Miscellany, the Society for the
Diffusion of Useful Knowledge's twin Libraries of Useful and Entertaining Knowledge, Murray's
Family Library, Cadell's reissue of Scott's novels at 5s., and Colburn
and Bentley's Standard Novels touched off a virtual mania in the trade. No firm was without at
least one hastily contrived "library" in its bid for the shillings of the suddenly-discovered
mass reading public, whose size was now as much exaggerated as it had previously been
underestimated. Cheap reprints of literary classics inevitably figured in the boom. In 1830
appeared the first volumes of the Aldine Edition of the British Poets, the result of the
collaboration of the bookseller William Pickering and the printer Charles Whittingham. The
most memorable classic-reprint series of the period, it held an honorable place in an
increasingly competitive field down into the present century. For these reasons, it is
convenient and fitting to settle upon the year 1830 as the beginning of the era when
publishers developed cheap classic libraries as an integral—not merely
incidental—part of their lists.
The two following sections of this article are based upon a list I have compiled, from all
available sources, of cheap reprint series of English classics from 1830 to 1906. At the
outset, the criteria of eligibility I have used should be made clear: (1) No hard-and-fast
test of "cheapness" has been adopted; but series designed chiefly for the specialist or
scholar (such as the Fuller Worthies Library and W. E. Henley's Tudor Translations), or
published at a price that was clearly beyond the reach of any but the well-to-do, have been
omitted. (2) What is a "classic"? Since value judgments are irrelevant to our present
purposes, perhaps the best definition is the one implied in the statement, attributed to the
publisher Stanley Unwin, that "it takes two generations to make a classic."[8] Obviously some books become
established classics even within the lifetime of their authors, as did the novels of Scott and
Dickens and the poetry of Byron and Tennyson, so that the demarcation between classics and
recent books of evidently lasting popularity is vague indeed. But since a line must be drawn
somewhere, series composed mainly of nineteenth-century titles have
been
excluded, except for series late in the century, by which time works surviving from the
generation of Wordsworth, Shelley, and Lamb had achieved, by any definition, the status of
classic. (3) Series expressly designed for schoolroom use have been excluded. (4) Series which
were virtually abortive, running to only a few titles and then vanishing, have also been
omitted.
The remarkable thing is that even with these severe restrictions, the list of cheap classic
reprint series for the period 1830-1906 runs to between ninety and one hundred. Even if we
make liberal allowance for series which appear more than once, under different names—for
the bibliographer, a source of exasperation which will be commented on in a little
while—the number would in any event exceed seventy-five: an average of one new classic
reprint series for every year in the period covered.
Some of the main cultural reasons for the proliferation of cheap classics after 1830 have
already been mentioned. In addition, a powerful economic factor encouraged publishers to
launch such series: the simple circumstance that most standard classics are in the public
domain and therefore are cheaper to reprint than works still in copyright. As the literacy
rate increased and the reading habit became more widespread, the demand for cheap books grew.
For various reasons, among them the tyranny of the circulating-library system and the higher
prices authors were getting for their work, books by contemporary writers were expensive and,
despite the developing practice of issuing 6s. reprints of successful
works some time after first publication, they remained so until the 1890's. Thus the hunger
for cheap reading matter was met, in part, by printing non-copyright works. In 1894 Augustine
Birrell observed that "you may buy twenty books by dead men at the price of one work by a
living man."[9]
The prices charged for volumes by "dead men" more or less followed the broad tendencies in
the publishing trade as a whole. Technological improvements—the use of steam-driven
presses; the cheapening of paper by the introduction of paper-making machines, the
substitution of esparto and chemical woodpulp for expensive rags, and the reduction and
eventual repeal of the paper tax; the invention of machine-made casings to replace hand-sewed
bindings—made the production of cheap books more and more rewarding. The low profit per
copy was compensated for by the enlarged quantity sold.
Down into the fifties and sixties, the usual price of a classic reprint was between 3s.6d. and 5s.. The lower
figure was that charged, for instance, for a volume in Bohn's Standard Library and British
Classics
(series begun in 1846 and 1853 respectively); the higher was the
price of most of the other Bohn libraries, which in the aggregate comprised one of the
century's two or three most famous reprint lists. Into this price range fell also the other
leading series of the period—Routledge's British Poets, Bell and Daldy's reissue of the
old Aldine Poets, Warne's Popular Poets and Chandos Library, Nelson's Illustrated Series of
the Poets, Nimmo's Cheap Edition of the Poets, and Macmillan's Globe Library. But already,
because the 3
s.6
d. price for non-copyright
reprints compared unfavorably with the shilling or two charged for "railway library" reprints
of copyright works, certain firms experimented with lower prices. The highly diversified
Cottage Library of Milner and Sowerby, a firm originally of Halifax but later of Paternoster
Row, sold for a shilling a volume. Robert Bell's Annotated Series of the English Poets came
out at 2
s.6
d. in 1854-57 and was reissued in
1864 in monthly volumes, 1
s. in paper and 1
s.6
d. in cloth. In the sixties Griffin's Universal Library and
Warne's Chandos Classics sold at 2
s. or less.
This trend toward lower prices was hastened by two spectacular free-for-alls in the reprint
trade. One was occasioned by the Waverley novels, the "Author's Edition" of which, issued in
1829, had initiated the 5s. or 6s. copyright
reprint. Cadell's "People's Edition," issued in weekly numbers (i.e., parts of volumes) in
1844, sold over 7,000,000 numbers of the novels alone, and 674,000 of the poems. After
Cadell's death in 1849, his Scott copyrights were bought by the firm of A. and C. Black, who
felt that there still was life left in the fabulous old property. For the "Railway Edition" in
1858-60 the price per volume was reduced to 1s.6d., and in 1862-63 it was further cut, to a straight shilling. At this point the novels
began to fall out of copyright, and other firms scrambled to pick them up. One publisher, John
Camden Hotten, brought out 6d. monthly volumes, each containing a
complete novel. Black responded with a competitively priced series, which had the extra
attraction of Scott's own revisions and notes—material that was still in copyright. But
within a few years (1873) even this sensationally low price was halved when John Dicks, a
reprint publisher whose activities deserve more study than the extant records permit, brought
out complete Waverley novels at 3d.
[10]
There was also the episode of the shilling Shakespeares. In 1864, the year of the poet's
tercentenary, John Dicks brought out the plays at two for a penny, and sold about 150,000
copies. Collecting them into a 2s. cloth-bound volume, he sold 50,000
more. Then, hearing that Hotten was planning a complete Shakespeare to sell at 1s., Dicks cut
the price of his own edition in half,
substituting wrappers for cloth, and sold 700,000 copies in the next three or four years. For
his shilling the Shakespeare lover got 1,020 pages of closely packed text and thirty-seven
woodcuts. In 1868 both Routledge and Warne issued editions at the same price.
[11]
In the seventies, the increased demand created by the schools, further economies in
production, and, we may suppose, the example of the irrepressible Dicks, who had followed up
his shilling Shakespeare with a 473-page illustrated Byron at 7d., a
Thomson at 6d., and about a dozen other classic authors at similar
reductions, pushed prices down still further. The Aldine Poets were reissued at 1s.6d., and in response Bell's Annotated Edition was
cut to 1s.3d. Later in the decade the Moxon
Library Poets, originally priced at 5s., were taken over by Ward, Lock
and Co., and, renamed the Standard Poets, sold at 1s.6d. in paper and 2s. in cloth.
In the eighties, houses like Routledge and Cassell, by then the titans of the reprint trade,
waged an all-out price war. Routledge's Universal Library, edited by Henry Morley, began in
1883 at a shilling a volume. Two years later Cassell hired Morley to edit the firm's new
National Library, issued weekly at 3d. in paper and 6d. in cloth. This proved the most popular classic series yet produced, and in quick
retaliation Routledge brought out their World Library at the same price. The bitterness of the
rivalry between these houses can be judged from a squabble they conducted in the
correspondence columns of the London Times for March 20, 22, and 23,
1886. Cassell vigorously objected to Routledge's issuing, in their World Library, the same
titles that had been announced for Cassell's National Library; Routledge retorted that they
had been forced to do so by similar "illegitimate competition" on the part of Cassell. Morley
managed to smooth the ruffled feathers of both his employers, but among other questions left
unanswered was that of the ethics involved in an editor's managing two rival series at once.[12]
The gradual but steady reduction in price during the second half of the century is
exemplified by the fact that Sampson Low's Choice Editions of Choice Books, originally
published in the late 1850's at 5s. a volume, were reprinted in the
seventies at 2s.6d., and again in the nineties
at 1s. (There was also a progressive shrinkage in size, from "small
quarto" to "small octavo" to "royal 16mo.") By the end of the century, one or two shillings or
a half-crown was the standard price for a full-length pocket classic bound in cloth. The
enterprising W. T. Stead, to be sure, undercut even the 3d. National
and World Libraries with his Masterpiece Library (1895), composed of weekly leaflets in two
series, the Penny Novelists and Penny Poets. But this venture, though initially successful,
was short-lived and set no precedent.
Our modern era of cheap-reprint publishing may be dated from 1906, the year with which the
present study ends. It was then that J. M. Dent, who had gained experience as the publisher of
the Temple Shakespeare, the Temple Dramatists, and the Temple Classics, fulfilled a
long-standing ambition by issuing Everyman's Library at 1s. a volume:
not one title at a time, but fifty. The frenzied editorial and production activity and
financial maneuvering necessary to issue a classic library on so grandiose a scale—a
"small army" of "British Museum foragers" and introduction-writers was employed, extended
credit was wheedled from papermakers—is a vividly recorded episode in British book trade
history.[13] But the larger
significance of the Everyman series (and in this connection, the World's Classics, begun a few
years earlier by Grant Richards but soon transferred to Henry Frowde, must also receive
honorable mention) is twofold: it reintroduced into reprint publishing the concern for
attractive format which had been largely neglected since the days of Whittingham and the
Chiswick Press, and it boldly departed from the conventionalized lists of classics, reprinting
for the first time scores upon scores of good books which had never before been available in
inexpensive editions.
The practices adopted in producing and marketing the cheap classic series often throw
interesting light upon contemporary publishing theory and book-buying habits. The "library"
idea—selling a frequently miscellaneous list of books under a generic
title—reflects three familiar merchandising premises, now known as "package psychology,"
"brand name psychology," and "snob appeal" respectively. The first assumes
that when a buyer owns a few volumes in a given series (the "package"), he is likely to want
to acquire the rest. The second assumes that a reader who is already pleased with one or two
books belonging to such-and-such a "library" will regard the name of that series as a
guarantee of excellence. The third depends on the connotation of "library," a term which in
the nineteenth century was frequently preceded by "gentleman's." Possession of a shelf or two
of books prominently labeled "library" gave a man a pleasant feeling of added status, however
humble his actual circumstances.
Closely associated with the series concept—they developed side by side in the
eighteenth century—is the practice of publishing a book in instalments. From the
publisher's standpoint, number- or part-issue not only has the advantages just attributed to
the series but in addition, by spreading the book's cost to the purchaser over a period of
time, makes it seem lower than it actually is. Many classic reprint series during the first
two-thirds of the century—Cassell's various illustrated editions of literary
masterpieces offer examples from the 1860's—were initially issued in weekly or monthly
numbers at a few pennies each, with the completed volume becoming available immediately upon
the end of the part-issue. This, of course, was exactly the procedure followed in the case of
well-known Victorian novelists, from The Pickwick Papers on into the
early seventies.
Frequently, too, the principle of publishing at stated intervals was applied to complete
volumes, without the preliminary step of issuing in several separate numbers. Thus book
publishers exploited the habit of regular purchase which became increasingly prevalent as
cheap periodicals won the allegiance of the mass public. If a reader was used to buying a
favorite paper each Saturday, why should he not acquire the custom of buying the latest issue
in a certain reprint series at the same time? This was the reasoning behind the weekly or
monthly issue of series like Walter Scott's Camelot Classics and Canterbury Poets, Routledge's
Universal Library, and Cassell's National Library. Like the yellow-backs that had won immense
popularity a generation earlier, the classic reprint series of the nineties, priced at 3d., and 1s., used the newsagents' stalls to reach a
large public that never ventured inside a regular bookshop. Then as now (at least in certain
outlets) classic reprints were displayed alongside soft-bound copyright reprints and
mass-circulation weeklies.
In their anxiety to squeeze every possible farthing of profit from the plates and sheets of
their classic titles, publishers used almost every conceivable merchandising device.
Frequently an old series whose component
titles had not originally appeared
at regular intervals—the Aldine Poets, Bell's English Poets, and Kent's (later
Cassell's) Miniature Library of Poets are cases in point—was reissued in periodic
volumes, fortnightly or monthly. Sometimes, as was true of Moxon's Old Dramatists, a series
previously issued in complete volumes was reintroduced in numbers. Almost every successful
series was reissued, sometimes more than once, in cheaper format. Occasionally the process was
reversed, and a cheap series (for instance, Bell and Daldy's Pocket Volumes) was transmuted
into a more expensive one (the Elzevir Series) "so as to be more suitable for Presents and
School Prizes."
[14]
Some series had relatively brief lives, at least in the catalogues of their original
publishers. They strutted their brief moment on the stage, heralded by blaring publicity, and
then were heard no more. In 1866, for example, Frederick Warne proclaimed the debut of the
Clydesdale Classics, "Marvels of Standard Cheap Literature, without a parallel as yet in
English Publishing"; their first number, a Pilgrim's Progress, offered
eighty pages of original colored designs, new type, and fine paper—all for 6d. "One Hundred Thousand of this elegant Pocket Edition is all that can be
produced this year," Warne advertised.[15] But the supply must have exceeded the demand, for nothing more is recorded of
the series.
Series with longer lives often were transferred from firm to firm. Sometimes they retained
their baptismal name, as did the Aldine Poets, acquired after Pickering's death in 1854 by
Bell and Daldy and later inherited (1873) by their successors, George Bell and Sons. Still
others suffered a name-change every time they passed to a new house, and a few appeared
simultaneously, under different names, in the catalogues of two or more firms—the result
of the practice, not infrequent in that era, of a "publisher-jobber [selling] other firms'
sheets over his own imprint."[16]
Even libraries retained by the original publisher were not exempt from rechristening whenever
sales needed a boost. The firms that purveyed serial shockers to the pavement market often did
the same thing when they started a fresh issue of an old favorite, and the practice is hardly
extinct today, when individual soft-bound reprints sometimes bear titles different from those
under which the hard-cover edition appeared.[17]
Renamed series and series that led double or triple lives under the

auspices of different firms are the bibliographer's despair. As he attempts to establish their
provenance and history from the published records of the trade, he feels as if he were
reviewing a stage army: the same lists of titles turn up again and again under different
series designations. For example, unless the firm's archives were painstakingly examined, it
would be an almost hopeless task to disentangle and properly label the various series of
reprints which the Edinburgh house of Nimmo advertised over two or three decades. Nimmo seems
to have made a specialty of buying up odds and ends; and he displayed remarkable energy and
ingenuity in dressing his wares in new bindings and marshaling them under new series titles.
There is a striking family resemblance between his Cheap Edition of the Poets, Red Line
Editions (later retitled Popular Edition of the Works of the Poets), and Crown Library, all
published in the sixties. Nimmo's Library Edition of the British Poets was a reissue of George
Gilfillan's British Poets, an expensive series originally published by Nimmo's townsman, J.
Nichol. In 1870 the sheets of this edition were remaindered to a third owner, Cassell, who
sent them forth again in 6
d. parts as Cassell's Library Edition, and in
cloth-bound volumes as Cassell's Three-and-Sixpenny Edition.
[18]
Or take the case of Moxon's Popular Poets, first issued about 1870 at 3s. 6d., then presented in more expensive formats as Moxon's
Royal Poets (7s. 6d.) and Moxon's Library Poets
(5s.) As if membership in three separate series were not enough, the
collection was subsequently acquired by Ward, Lock, who reissued it in cheaper form as Ward,
Lock's Standard Poets, and in turn by Collins, who converted it into the Grosvenor Poets.
After coping with genealogies like these, one is grateful for the comparative simplicity of
concurrent series within a single house. There is no problem, for instance, with Warne's five
series of the 1860's and '70's: the Chandos Classics, which eventually extended to over 120
titles, were a cheaper edition of works printed earlier in the Chandos Library of prose
writers and the Chandos Poets; and the Lansdowne and Arundel Poets were simply alternate
formats, the one cheap, the
other expensive, for certain titles in the
Chandos Poets. In 1882 Warne published Longfellow's
Poems in no fewer
than four series—the Chandos Poets, the Chandos Classics, the Arundel Poets, and the
Lansdowne Poets. Warne, indeed, was one of the most resourceful of all Victorian publishers
when it came to getting the maximum mileage out of his stock of standard authors. In addition
to the series already named, in the eighties he offered a dozen or so titles (all of them long
familiar to readers of his advertisements) in the Imperial Poets, and at the same time a
virtually identical list in the Albion Poets. The latter genus was divided into several
species according to binding: 3
s. 6
d. cloth
gilt, 5
s. imitation half-roxburghe, 7
s. 6
d. limp French morocco, 10
s. 6
d. full calf.
This diversification of binding styles, either under a single series heading or under a new
name for each style, was common Victorian practice. Many, if not most, series were offered in
both paper and cloth, and some also were available in at least one kind of leather. In an age
when middle-class taste favored highly ornate household objects, more than a few publishers
regarded the printed sheets of a classic work primarily as something around which to sew or
glue a pretty binding. Nimmo, for instance, devised new bindings every season; between 1870
and 1873 his Popular Edition of the Works of the Poets could be had in (among others) "Cloth
Extra, Gold and Colours," "Morocco Extra, with novel prismatic effect and floral silk centre,"
and "entirely new cloth binding, with beautifully illuminated imitation ivory tablet on
side."
Elaborate bindings and lavish internal "embellishments" of course tended to remove such
books from the cheap-reprint category. But even among reprints whose price was unquestionably
low, the quality of physical makeup varied widely. The Aldine Poets set a high standard of
typography and general design that was seldom equalled until the advent of J. M. Dent and his
Temple and Everyman series. It would be hard to say which series, of the several scores
published, marked the nadir of cheap book production. The 6d. plays and
novels of John Dicks would be a strong contender for the distinction, but numerous other
series would be in the running. Strenuously small (and often badly worn) type; thin margins,
sometimes crowded with legends advertising tea, baking powder, or patent medicines; poor
paper; paper wrappers; flimsy sewing—these were too often the result of the pressure to
cut prices. Whatever aesthetic satisfaction the impecunious reader derived from his purchase
came from the text alone, not from the volume's appearance.
Though some series were designed for parlor display and thus were of a size that would catch
the eye, the majority were in small octavo or 12mo., or even as tiny as 32mo.—true
"pocket books."[19] Not only were
these smaller sizes, requiring less paper and binding material per volume, more economical to
produce; they were best adapted to the living habits of the period. Popular books had to be
portable, for an ever-increasing amount of reading was done in railway carriages and buses,
and they had to be small enough to find room in the cramped households of the lower-middle and
working classes, who were coming more and more to constitute the bulk of the reading audience.
The day of the folio and quarto was over.
The quantity and quality of text in these series varied as greatly as did the format. Some
series provided complete texts of the works described on the title-page, while others provided
only selections or truncated texts, a fact that was often suppressed in advertisements and on
title-pages. A buyer of Spenser's "works" in one volume, for example, was not likely to
acquire the whole of the Spenser canon thereby. A reprint publisher especially notorious for
his cavalier handling of texts was Thomas Tegg, who, according to some of his contemporaries,
included only as much of a given classic in a volume as the paper set aside for the job
permitted. Tegg was scarcely unique in this respect. While they may not have been so
completely lacking in concern for textual accuracy and completeness as to give rise to trade
legends, most publishers were content to reprint whatever version of a masterpiece came to
hand, however corrupt or fragmentary the text might be. Even if accuracy had been prized as
highly in Victorian times as it is today—at least among scholars—the economics of
the cheap reprinting business made careful scrutiny of the printer's copy, and subsequently of
proofs, a dispensable luxury. Editorial supervision in the modern sense was rare, except in
the interests of bowdlerization. Money laid out to oblige Mrs. Grundy was a thoroughly
justifiable business expense.
The contents of the various series, if subjected to close statistical analysis, would
provide an interesting, if not always dependable, index of Victorian literary taste and of the
comparative reputations of classic authors in Victorian times. The relative frequency with
which various standard works were reprinted, as well as the decline in availability of
certain classics and the rise of others, can be documented by studying the
advertisements in the trade journals and the lists of reprints-in-series in the
Reference Catalogue and Appendix B of the cumulated volumes of the
English Catalogue. But one cannot assume that the reprint libraries were
an unerringly faithful barometer of the literary climate, the publishers readily responding to
changes in the critical and popular standings of classic authors. Practical considerations,
such as the publishers' desire to get their full money's worth out of their investment in
plates and stock, may well have caused certain old standbys, such as Dryden, Pope, Goldsmith,
Johnson, and Cowper, to overstay their welcome. Accessibility, in short, must not be equated
with popularity. The fact that Author A was represented in 75 percent of the reprint series
current at a certain date, while Author B was in only 10 percent, does not prove that Author A
actually stood that much higher in contemporary esteem. Thus it is quite posssible that by
artificially prolonging the dominance of certain classic writers in the reprint libraries,
publishers not only impeded the normal fluctuations of taste but left us a record of popular
preference which is easily misinterpreted. (Future historians of a classic author's reputation
in the nineteenth century, take note.) However, until much more information on the inner
workings of the English book trade is available, the problem of how far the reprint publisher
was responsive to public taste, and how far he influenced it, must remain a matter for
speculation.
The selection of titles for a classic reprint series and the preparation of introductory
matter often gave employment to well-known men of letters, just as they do today. Robert Bell
consulted Leigh Hunt when planning his Annotated Edition of the English Poets; it was Hunt who
encouraged Bell to stray from the beaten path and include some little-known poets in his
collection.[20] After Bell and
Daldy acquired the Aldine Poets, they called upon men like Lord Houghton, W. M. Rossetti,
Buxton Forman, and Edward Dowden to prepare new titles for the series. The individual volumes
in Macmillan's Globe Edition, one of the few relatively authoritative series, were edited by
men of the stature of David Masson, F. T. Palgrave, and A. W. Ward. William Michael Rossetti
was the general editor of Moxon's Popular Poets during the brief period before Ward and Lock
took over the series. He specifically states in his autobiography that revision or emendation
of the text was not part of his job.[21] The Camelot and Canterbury series, issued by Walter Scott, a wealthy Newcastle
dock and railway
contractor and colliery owner who turned publisher in his
late fifties, were edited in part by the self-taught collier-poet Joseph Skipsey, the novelist
William Sharp, and Ernest Rhys. But perhaps the brightest galaxy of "name" editors was the one
associated with Kegan Paul's Parchment Library, begun in 1880. It included Dowden, Edmund
Gosse, Andrew Lang, Richard Garnett, Mark Pattison, Austin Dobson, and George Saintsbury.
Until Ernest Rhys became the living symbol of Everyman's Library, the single figure most
conspicuously associated with cheap classic reprints in the public mind was the critic and
lecturer, Henry Morley. His son-in-law and biographer, Henry Solly, implies that his fame as
editor of various reprint series somewhat embarrassed his family. "There seemed real danger,"
wrote Solly, "that he would be remembered after his death only in connection with his services
for the diffusion of cheap literature"—a fear which proved not unfounded.[22]
Punch praised him thus, in lines whose sentiment is more to be admired
than their execution:
John Bull is not sweet on the type of "Professor,"
But good Henry Morley was happy possessor
Of John Bull's respect, John Bull, Junior's, love.
He made Good Letters Cheap! 'Tis a title above
Many Dryasdust dignities told in strung letters.
Ah! many who felt Iron Fortune's stern fetters
In days ante-Morleyish, look on the rows
Of cheap Classics, in musical verse and sound prose,
Which bear the well-known editorial "H.M.,"
And sigh, "If my youth-time had only known them,
These threepenny treasures, and sixpenny glories,
These histories, treatises, poems, and stories,
Which cost in my time a small fortune, what thanks
And what joys would have swelled o'er their neat-rangèd ranks!"
Ah! studious boys must feel gratitude, surely,
To have lived in the times of the good Henry Morley![23]
Comment in trade journals suggests that the National Library, which Morley edited for
Cassell, had the greatest success of any classic-reprint series down to that time. As Solly
said, "At a cost not exceeding the gas or water rate, a constant supply of good literature
could be 'laid on' to any house in town or country, and a circulation varying
from 50,000 to 100,000 copies for each volume attests the popular appreciation of the
enterprise. Letters, which Professor Morley greatly prized, came from the far West in America,
and from other lands on the borders of civilization, expressing gratitude for these cheap and
handy volumes, which seemed almost as ubiquitous as Palmer's biscuits."
[24]
Which raises the question, Just how influential were these reprint series in stimulating an
interest in English masterpieces among the expanding reading public? In a period when cheap
weeklies like the Family Herald and Tit-Bits
achieved individual circulations of from 500,000 to a million, what place had older works of
established literary merit in the reading diet of the multitude? One view of the matter was
reported at the beginning of this article. But what were the facts?
We have the boasts of certain reprint publishers, for whatever they may be worth. Of
Macmillan's Globe Edition, "upwards of 140,000 volumes" were sold to the end of 1870;
presumably this figure includes the sales of the first and most famous member of the series,
the Shakespeare, which had found 95,000 buyers since publication in December, 1864.[25] Between the spring of 1870 and May,
1872, Moxon's sold 150,000 volumes of their Popular Poets.[26] Over a quarter-million copies of the Miniature Library of the
Poets were disposed of in the period 1879-1884, according to the publishers, William Kent and
Co.[27] In 1884 Warne and Co.
advertised that their Chandos Classics, then numbering over 100 titles, had sold 3,500,000
volumes since publication had begun in 1868.[28] Through what seems to have been either unaccountable dereliction or heroic
restraint on the part of their advertising writer, this figure remained unchanged for several
years. In 1894, however, Warne revised their copy, and the total to date for the Chandos
Classics was announced as six million.[29] The Canterbury Poets were reported to have sold "about a million volumes"
within ten years of their beginning in 1884.[30] Ward and Lock's Minerva Library
sold over 150,000 between
1889 and 1894.
[31] For some years
after first publication in 1894-96, the Temple Shakespeare, a forty-volume series, sold
250,000 volumes annually (and the total between 1894 and 1934 was five million).
[32] Of W. T. Stead's Penny Poets,
almost five million copies were published in a year, a figure exceeded by Stead's condensed
Popular Novels, which were said to have sold "about six and a half million."
[33]
These are staggering totals indeed; but in estimating their significance, one must remember
several things. One is that since most of the series mentioned included some copyright works,
or at least works whose copyright had only recently lapsed, the figures are not a good
indication of the current appetite for older literature. Another is that the figures are for
the total sale of a whole series, which might comprise twenty, fifty, or a hundred volumes.
The average sale per title would, of course, be only a fraction of the total. Unfortunately,
with one or two exceptions, such as the Globe one-volume Shakespeare, sales figures for
individual titles in the various series are unavailable.[33a] A further consideration is that the totals often, if not always, include export
sales. Of the annual total for the Temple Shakespeare, for example, 100,000 copies went to
America;[34] and the Empire itself
provided a large audience for books published in the British Isles.
Although the books we are concerned with here were designed for the general trade, not for
classroom use, they were in great demand as school prizes. And, as the advertisements also
show, they were among the items most favored for family Christmas giving, or for a decorous
exchange of presents between swain and sweetheart. The extent to which school prizes or
sentimental gifts were actually read, let alone understood, is, however, something else again.
As George Gissing observed, "Hardly will a prudent statistician venture to declare that one in
every score of those who actually read sterling books do so with comprehension of their
author. These dainty series of noble and delightful works, which have so seemingly wide an
acceptance, think you they vouch for true appreciation in all who buy them? Remember those who
purchase to follow the fashion, to impose upon their
neighbor, or even to
flatter themselves; think of those who wish to make cheap presents, and those who are merely
pleased by the outer aspect of the volume."
[35]
Gissing's pessimism was widely shared throughout the Victorian period; more widely than ever
at the end of the epoch, when the reading preferences of the masses had been fully expressed
at public libraries and newsagents', and the verdict was overwhelmingly in favor of light
novels and penny papers. "The constant flow of new editions of Great Authors," observed a
writer in the Academy in 1903, "is deceptive. They are regarded as part
of the necessary furniture of the house—not of the mind; and having been duly and
dutifully bought they are taught to know their place on the appointed shelf. They are taken as
read. . . . There are few men now who, when a new book is published, read an old one."[36]
In such views — and examples could be multiplied from the annals of the
nineteenth-century reading public—there is more than a hint of snobbery. The phenomenon
of a semi-literate reading audience numbering in the millions stirred the residual social
prejudices of the class who wrote for, and read, the leading literary journals, and it was
only to be expected that they would exaggerate the situation they deplored. On the other hand,
there were sturdy believers in the common man's capacity for literary culture and his active
interest in acquiring it. The best-known of these was Charles Dickens, who told the Birmingham
Society of Artists in 1853, "I believe there are in Birmingham at this moment many working men
infinitely better versed in Shakespeare and in Milton than the average of fine gentlemen in
the days of bought-and-sold dedications and dear books."[37] Every public man who had faith in mechanics' institutes and free
libraries as disseminators of culture among the middle and lower classes, everyone who
advocated the repeal of the newspaper tax, the amendment of the copyright law, and other
schemes connected with spreading the blessings of cheap print, asserted that the multitude was
ready and eager for good literature.[38]

As events proved, there was just as much exaggeration on this side of the issue. The bright
words of hope uttered at mid-century, when the "taxes on knowledge" and the absence of free
libraries were alleged to be the only barriers to the development of a broadly cultured
populace, were seldom echoed a generation later. It was indisputable that the widening of
educational opportunity had not been accompanied by the same degree of literary enlightenment.
In 1886 a writer in the Nineteenth Century said: "Cheap editions have
brought standard works within their [the workers'] reach, and though the privilege is not
largely availed of, it is not altogether neglected. . . . Lots of working men have studied
with great care one or two of Shakespeare's plays; others know one or two of Dickens's works
almost by heart. . . . At the same time there are working men who will devour every book they
can buy or can secure from friends, and a curious undigested, if not indigestible, mass they
do sometimes get hold of. Hundreds, on the other hand, have never read a line of a book." But
having achieved this precarious balance on the fence, the writer continued: "The chief
difficulty about literature for the working classes is to reach them. If the literature were
lying on their table they would often read, but they seldom sally forth into the highways and
byways of the literary world to discover what they shall purchase."[39] Since it was at this very time that paper-bound classic
reprints were finding wider distribution through newsagents and other channels, one would
expect to hear no more complaint that cheap reprints were difficult to obtain. Yet fifteen
years later—in 1901—another writer, committed to the assumption that "hordes of
men and women . . . are waiting to respond to an offer of really good and really cheap books,"
alleged that the trouble still lay in distribution (more specifically, the high postal rate
charged for books as against the negligible cost of mailing sensational papers) and price. The
solution he put forth was the issue of weekly volumes in a "General Library" subdivided into
series, to be sold by subscription: 104 volumes in two years, total cost £4 in paper,
£6 in cloth.[40]
There was nothing really new in this proposal; but the very fact that it was reiterated
defines the position of the idealist confronted with a situation in whose permanence he
refuses to believe. The hard fact seemed to be that the constant activity in cheap reprint
series for the
past seventy years had not made the common man a devotee of
great literature; no combination of merchandising devices, no amount of cheapening, had
achieved that goal. But men who shared Dickens' and Sir John Herschel's and Wilkie Collins'
faith in the common man's latent hunger for literary experience clung to the familiar
Victorian reliance on "the proper measures." Fortunately for us, that spirit is not lost in
our own time, as the many recent experiments in reprinting books of great worth in soft covers
attest.
However short the cheap reprint series fell of the most optimistic expectations in Victorian
times, they were responsible for a wider popular interest in classic English literature than
would otherwise have prevailed during the era. Concurrently with them, designed especially for
students facing the various examinations for university admission and civil service posts, but
undoubtedly finding an additional market beyond the crammers, were published a score or more
of concise manuals, outlines, and other study-guides of English literature. Chambers's Cyclopaedia of English Literature, originally published (1842-43) in weekly
numbers, and in two volumes (1844), within a few years sold 130,000 copies in England
alone.[41] During the Victorian
period, too, there was a revival, to which the proliferation of cheap classic reprints
undoubtedly contributed, of appreciative literary journalism. In both periodicals and
collected volumes, the bookish commentaries of men like Gosse, Lang, Birrell, Dowden, and
Saintsbury delighted readers who, in another age, would have read Lamb, Hazlitt, and Hunt.
Demand increased for popular biographies of literary figures. Macmillan's English Men of
Letters series, a pioneer in its field, sold over 300,000 copies between 1878, when the first
volumes, priced at 2s. 6d., were published, and
1887, when a reissue in monthly volumes, at 1s. in paper, 1s.6d. in cloth, was begun. Some of the titles were
reprinted from three to six times in the first ten years, while others had only a single
reprinting.[42] The popularity of
the various volumes evidently depended on the contemporary interest in the author treated and
on the reputation of the man who wrote the biography itself.
The great majority of the boys and girls and men and women into whose hands fell copies of
cheap classic reprints did not leave any printed record of their pleasure. Only occasionally
did the mute, inglorious common reader take pen in hand, in the manner of the
Lancashire workman who wrote to Cassell's that the first twenty-three volumes of the
National Library "have done a great deal of good even in my own neighbourhood, for several of
my own friends have given up drinking for the sake of taking and reading your beautiful little
books."
[43] But a systematic
combing of the memoirs of eventually well-known people who grew up in the Victorian period
would reveal how many cultivated and expanded their literary taste by reading these
inexpensive volumes. Thomas Hardy's first copy of Shelley was an edition of
Queen Mab and Other Poems published in the Cottage Library.
[44] Havelock Ellis' interest in the Elizabethan drama,
which was to bear fruit in his editorship of the Mermaid series, was nurtured by his buying,
as a schoolboy at Mitcham in the early 1870's, successive penny numbers of Dicks's Standard
Plays.
[45] Dicks's penny-number
edition of Shakespeare was affectionately remembered by Thomas Burt, the Labour politician:
"No matter that the print was small and the paper poor; no matter that there were neither
theatre nor stage, neither actors nor orchestra. All the more scope was given to fancy and
imagination."
[46] Perhaps the final
word may be that of the journalist Sir John Hammerton, looking back on his early days in
Glasgow, about the time he left school and went to work as a correspondence clerk. In his
reminiscences he exclaimed of Cassell's National Library: "What an Aladdin's cave that proved
to me! Addison, Goldsmith, Bacon, Steele, DeQuincey. . . ., Charles Lamb, Macaulay and many
scores of others whom old Professor Morley introduced to me—what a joy of life I
obtained from these, and how greatly they made life worth living!"
[47]
Notes