John Partridge and the Company of
Stationers
by
Richmond P. Bond
John Partridge, the successful London astrologer and almanac maker
who entered his fame during the latter years of the seventeenth century, was
in 1709 brought before the Lord High Chancellor by the Worshipful
Company of Stationers in a significant suit which concerned monopoly in
publishing. Early in the reign of the first James the Stationers had obtained
royal grants for the virtually exclusive rights of publishing almanacs, if
allowed by the Church authorities, and by the end of the century these
annuals were established as a kind of publication so popular that the profits
therefrom were central to the business life of the Company.[1] This cheap booklet apparently
offered the
right mixture of instruction and innocent merriment to attract regular
purchase by any man of city, town, or farm; here he might find such
diverse matter as a Calendar, reference tables, entertaining prose and verse,
forecasts, astrological lore, a budget of
advertisements, and (if interleaved) space for scribbled memoranda.
The seventeenth century produced two thousand titles and issues of
almanacs by three hundred writers, and the total figures for distribution are
estimated at three to four million copies.[2] Among Partridge's predecessors
or rivals
as astrological compilers were Andrews, Booker, Coley, Dove, Gadbury,
Lilly, Pond, "Poor Robin," Rider, Saunders, Swallow, Tycho and Vincent
Wing, and many another astrologer with a public devoted to his special kind
of almanac, full of husbandry or commercial aids or facetious matter, or
offering the standard wares
fashioned in his individual mode. Not infrequently an almanac was so well
esteemed that its author's name continued to appear on its title page long
after his death. These ephemerides had a place, positive and negative, in the
history of the Enlightenment,
[3] and
the charlatan as astrologer naturally found his way into the works of the
satirists in several genres of the period. By the time Anne ascended the
throne almanacs had taken sure rank in the progress of the printed word as
one of the most profitable, influential, indicative, and interesting types of
profane publication, and John Partridge had become the leading almanac
maker.
[4]
The industrious Partridge published miscellaneous readings of the
stars, engaged in public quarrels with other pseudo-scientists, claimed to
have a medical degree, sold purging pills, and cast nativities for private
patients. In his almanac, Merlinus Liberatus, his
prognostications courted the obvious and equivocal, all in solemn phrase,
so it was natural that the master of precise imprecision should be chosen for
the principal role in one of the truly distinguished hoaxes in the history of
satire. Setting out to expose the mischief of astrology, Jonathan Swift made
the prominent astrologer-quack the butt of his irony. Under the putative
authorship of Isaac Bickerstaff, Esq. he published the Predictions for
the Year 1708, in which he specifically foretold the death of John
Partridge, and on the appointed day Swift brought forth a paper stating the
fulfillment of this special prediction, which Partridge answered in his next
almanac with a serious protest that he was
still alive and had been alive all the time. Town wits joined in the flimflam
by replying to Bickerstaff or by venturing further predictions in his name,
and in April of 1709 Richard Steele adopted the popular nom de guerre for
the editor of the Tatler, enlisting Partridge as a gambit and
Bickerstaff as a periodical eidolon.
This was all very tiresome for Partridge especially since his ill
fortune had not been completely of his own making. In the summer of
1709, however, the astrologer found himself in further trouble—this
this time with the powerful Company of Stationers and this time a difficulty
which he had clearly brought on himself.
The Court of Chancery
Year after year Partridge's work as a maker of almanacs had been
following the pattern usual among his kind. The astrologer prepared an
annual pamphlet for the Company of Stationers, receiving a flat fee for his
copy, and after the material had been allowed by the representatives of the
Church the Company proceeded under royal prerogative to arrange for
printing and distribution at a profit. The sales of almanacs and certain kinds
of books accounted for most of the Company's revenue, which was used for
the expenses of the corporation, charities, and excellent dividends.[5] In 1709 Partridge attempted to
negotiate
with the Stationers for an increase in his fee but received no satisfaction
from that shrewd organization. He then withheld the Merlinus
Liberatus from its normal and legal publication and sold the text of
his 1710 compilation to John Darby, a member of the Company who had
printed some of his early almanacs. No doubt under this
arrangement Partridge received a sum greater than the amount expected
from the Stationers.
When Partridge and Darby decided to become independent of the
authority of the Company, it quickly sought justice for its special privileges
and initiated a suit in the Court of Chancery.[6] At a private meeting on 7 July
1709 the
Court of Assistants of the Stationers' Company, the governing body of the
corporation, considered "some matters in Difference between the Company
and Dr. Partridge Concerning his Almanack for the Year
Ensueing,"
and a committee was ordered to meet with Partridge as soon as possible "to
Accomodate
and end the said matter in Dispute." On Saturday the 24th a letter from
Partridge (presumably a statement of hopes and plans) to Mr. Churchill, a
member of the committee, was read by the Court, and a larger committee
was appointed to meet on the following Tuesday at two o'clock to examine
the question. About this time the Company apparently made its decision to
prosecute Partridge and Darby, and to act speedily. On 30 July upon
petition of the Stationers as plaintiffs to the Master of the Rolls the two
defendants were ordered to appear and answer the bill of complaint. Two
days later the Court of the Company "Ordered that the Master and Wardens
and whom else they shall think fitt do goe into such printing houses as they
have reason to Suspect are printing any of the Companyes Coppyes or
Almanacks to See whether they are printing any of the Companys
Coppy's." Meanwhile the bill had been prepared in the customary repetitive
detail.
[7]
This important document cited first the privilege granted by the
Crown in letters patent, notwithstanding which "within these Two Months
last past He the sd. John Partridge hath fframed &
Compiled &
the sd. John Darby . . . hath Printed or Caused to be
Printed or they
or one of them are now Printing or Causeing to be Printed
wth.in the
Realme of Great Brittaine & diverse Parts beyond the Seas upon their
or
one of their Account" great quantities of an almanac for 1710 by Partridge
and other almanacs by Fowle and Turner. Such a printing at home or
abroad by individual members of the Company on their own account and
without the authority of the Company was against the letters patent;
authorized printing should be carried out by printers appointed or approved
by officers of the Company, "managed & Carryed on by a
Comon
Stock deposited by the sd. membrs. who
were to have answerable
propor&c.ilde;ons of Advantage over & besides wt.
was so as
aforesd.
limitted for the poor of ye. sd.
Company." The plaintiffs offer "not
to take the Advantage of any Penalty whatsoever" but desire complete
information on all the transactions of the confederates concerning their
fraudulent almanacs. They say that unless the complainants are supported
the privilege and interests granted by the Crown "must otherwise be
Defeated & not only the sd. poor Widows &
Orphans must perish
but others." They ask that the defendants and their "Confederates their
Jorneymen Workemen Servts. & Agents may be
Injoyned
. . . from Printing Importing binding Selling Publishing Vending uttering
& Bartering away all such Books Almanacks Sheet Almanacks &
all
other Bookes Sheets or Papers wherein shalbe Inserted or Contained the
Callend
r. of & belonging to your
Orat
rs. granted to them &
their P
redecessors" by the letters patent. On the 5th of
August
counsel for the Company repeated the substance of the bill, gave in
evidence the letter Partridge had written to Churchill, and prayed that an
injunction be issued to prevent the publication of Partridge's almanac until
he should answer the bill and the court make other order to the contrary,
and the court agreed (P.R.O., C. 33/312/363).
In the record of Company disbursements an entry of 8 August states
that the Master and Warden (or Wardens) went to search Darby's house at
the Oxford Arms, spending three shillings on the expedition, and that eight
shillings threepence were consumed at the Queen's Head "on Patridges
Affair." In the next two months no orders or decrees were issued save those
to force the defendants to answer the bill of complaint (P.R.O., C. 33/ 312/
469, 438-438v; 25 August, 10 September 1709). But with the approach of
the season for the sale of almanacs the Company thought fit to publish an
advertisement concerning the injunction, and on 3 October 1709 a notice
was approved for printing in the newspapers. It appeared in the Post
Boy, stating the fact of the prohibition by the Lord Chancellor and
warning that the Company was "resolv'd to prosecute all such Persons that
shall do any Act in Contempt thereof."[8] The advertisement ended with a
notice of
the
days of publication for the forthcoming authorized almanacs.
By this time the quarrel had got into the public domain. A minor
periodical called the Whisperer, conceived in imitation of the
Tatler and written by Bickerstaff's sister Jenny Distaff, took
note of the affair. At the end of the first and probably only essay an
incident is recorded of a man who escaped from his own wedding; the
disappointed bride comes to Jenny for advice, and Jenny asks her what
person can give a solution. Jenny goes on —
She told me, she had some Thoughts of my Brother. I assur'd her,
he car'd the least for Astrology, ever since
Partridge had the
Confidence to appear in Contradiction to his Art; and, animated by some
malicious Fiend, imposes still on the Vulgar, notwithstanding the plain
Proof of the
Stationers Company, who are fully satisfied of
the
diabolical Illusion, by his unreasonable Demands for the next Year's
Almanack; But they resolve to
stand by their Patent, and make this Familiar submit, or hang him up in
Chancery.
[9]
After some delay the Court of Chancery received the answer of
Partridge and Darby (P.R.O., C. 33/ 312/ 448, 458; 13, 22 October 1709.
C. 7/ 299/ 3; 27 October 1709), wherein it was admitted that before the
exhibiting of the bill of the complainants Partridge had sold the copy of his
1710 Merlinus Liberatus to Darby and had granted him the
right
of printing the same for his own advantage, and that Darby had printed part
of this almanac but not yet the whole of it. The defendants objected that the
letters patent, so important to the plaintiffs' case, were not "sufficient in
Law" to give the Company the right to exclude from the defendants their
own publishing rights. They further claimed that their almanac had not been
allowed by the Archbishop of Canterbury or the Bishop of London and
therefore that the authority of the Stationers, by their own showing, to
publish such almanacs as had been allowed by the church officials did not
apply to the pamphlet in question. Partridge
and Darby then humbly prayed "to be hence dismis't with their reasonable
Costs and charges in this behalf wrongfully sustained."
The case appeared in the Court of Chancery twice in the month of
November (P.R.O., C. 33/ 314/ 9v, 30; 5, 28 November 1709). The
defendants asked that they be permitted to print and sell the offending
almanac under proper accounting during the period of legal delay, but it
was ordered instead that the case be argued more promptly. The great
hearing took place on 6 December 1709 before the Right Honorable the
Lord High Chancellor, William Lord Cowper.[10] The arguments repeated much that
had
already been said and written. The validity of the letters patent was the
principal point at issue, and it had great force and convenience. In the end
his Lordship held with the accepted doctrine and ordered that the demurrer
of the defendants be overruled.
The decision for the Company of Stationers received immediate
but brief and matter-of-fact reporting in the
Supplement, Post
Boy, and
British Apollo, and was entered by
Narcissus
Luttrell in his private
Relation.
[11] But the most detailed account, and
the
only one with a turn of wit the time could relish, was that of Abel Boyer
in his own
Post Boy, which read in part as follows:
The Council for the Company alledg'd, That they have a PATENT
for Printing all Almanacks and Calendars, the same being first revised by
his Grace the Archbishop of Canterbury's Chaplains; to which Revisal, Mr.
Partridge refusing to submit, the Company would not print his Almanack.
On the other hand, the Council for Mr. Partridge insisted on his Natural
Right, to have the disposal of his own Labours and Lucubrations: But my
Lord Chancellor gave it for the COMPANY; who, by their Patent, have the
sole Property of Printing all Calendars. Thus the Prophecy, of Isaac
Bickerstaff, Esq; is, at last, accomplish'd: For, altho' Mr. Partridge may
still be alive, as to his Animal Functions, yet he is, at present, Dead,
quatenùs an Astrologer and Almanack-Writer
(Post
Boy, by Abel Boyer, No. 2275, 8 December 1709).
Partridge made public his own views in A Letter to a Member
of Parliament from Mr. John Partridge, touching his Almanack for the Year
1710. and the Injunction, whereby the Publishing of it is staid for the
present, a four-page, folio pamphlet dated 10 December 1709. This
polemical epistle begins with a reassurance that the writer is not dead, "as
you have been told in Print by a merry witty Gentleman under a feign'd
Name," and that the "Injunction was not granted upon the Suggestion of my
being dead, as some have foolishly imagin'd." The writer proceeds to give
the historical background of the dispute and to reproduce and answer
various arguments of the Company: the way people could be misinformed
in almanacs written by ignorant men, the use of the Church Calendar, and
the "mischievous consequence to the State" of prognostications by
ill-affected astrologers. Partridge more than once makes plain his adherence
to the principles of the Glorious Revolution and contends with
much logic "That the Legislative Power of this Kingdom is not in the
Crown (alone) but in the Crown, Lords and Commons" and
that
printers should not be restrained by a royal prerogative. All of this is
clearly an appeal to Parliamentary authority against monopolistic privileges
granted at the time of James I, "when Patents were growing in, and
Parliaments growing out of fashion." The whole presentation is carefully
reasoned, strongly and succinctly stated, and entirely different from the
astrological
works of Dr. John Partridge. Perhaps counsel wrote the pamphlet for him,
but it appeared as if prepared by the defendant in the current suit and so
must be associated with his name as a worthy document in the history of
the liberty of the press.
[12]
With the new calendar year of 1710 Partridge and Darby submitted
a further answer to the charges, repeating some of the points in the
Letter and claiming that any pretended right of the plaintiffs
was
"a Matter cognizable and determinable at the Common Law." They denied
that they had imported any almanacs, admitted they had had no license from
the Company to print or sell almanacs, and protested that they were being
prohibited "from the exercise of their lawfull Employmts.
for the
maintenance and support of themselves & their familys and for the
enabling them to pay what is and shall be assessed and laid on them for and
towards the publick taxes" (P.R.O., C. 7/ 299/ 3; 23 January 1710). The
case reappeared in Chancery for several legalistic maneuvers, but the
injunction remained operative (P.R.O., C. 33/ 314/ 213, 145v, 176, 295v;
23 January, 1, 9, February, 27 May 1710).
On 22 February 1711 the whole business was thoroughly reviewed
before the Lord Keeper of the Great Seal, whereupon he ordered that a case
be made upon the letters patent and two questions be stated —
whether
the grant given to the plaintiffs be general or restrained as to which
almanacs must be allowed by the Church, and whether the Crown has the
prerogative to grant exclusive power. The case would be referred to the
Queen's Bench for opinions, which would be considered by the Lord
Chancellor, who then would "proceed to give his finall
Judgmt. in this
Case" (P.R.O., C. 33/ 316/ 525-525v. Cf. C. 33/ 318/ 129v; 7 January
1712). And there the matter rested for more than sixty years — a
period
of delay beyond what might reasonably be expected of Chancery
proceedings. In 1769 the great Lord Mansfield after a full study of the case
commented as follows:
Lord Harcourt afterwards heard the cause. He did not choose, in a
case about almanacs, to decide upon prerogative. He therefore made a case
of it, for the opinion of this Court; Lord Parker being then Chief Justice.
This Court, so far as it went, inclined against the right of the Crown in
almanacs. But, to this hour, it has never been determined: and the
injunction granted by Lord Cowper still continues.
[13]
The rights and liberty of the British subject were not truly vindicated in the
publication of almanacs until Thomas Carnan in 1775 won from the Court
of Common Pleas the answers to the two questions propounded in 1711
— that the royal grant applied only to ecclesiastically approved
almanacs
and that the Crown had no power to grant exclusive rights.
[14]
In such a manner did a quack astrologer who wanted more money for
his famous-infamous almanac pose the problem of an author's choice to
publish his work wherever he pleased and not of necessity through the
Stationers' Company, which had long been enjoying the profits of a
monopoly awarded by a monarch with no concurrence by his legislature.
Whatever the intention or status of Partridge he served as unwilling victim
of an old inequity, and the suit against him has an interesting place in the
history of legal challenge to official privilege. Though this suit was never
determined and the liberty which Partridge claimed was not sustained until
three score years after his actual death, it raised a pertinent issue and stated
distinctly its central questions. By not being allowed to publish an almanac
Partridge helped in a small way to create a better position for his
successors.
This official circumstance in Partridge's career has never received
comprehensive study. A persistent and dogmatic error has prevailed that the
Stationers struck the name of Partridge from their rolls, with perhaps the
implication that the poor fellow was thereby forced out of employment. The
Stationers have furthermore been credited with assuming Partridge to be
dead or acting on that assumption by others. The more fanciful interpreters
have maintained a kind of competition in artlessness, so that it becomes
almost a sport to discover the best misunderstanding. For example, "The
Stationers' Company gravely walked into the trap, and officially forbade the
publication of further Almanacks bearing Partridge's name, because no one
had a right to misuse the name of a dead writer." Or another: "In October
1708, the Stationers' Company published Partridge's almanack for 1709,
in which also appeared a denial, but after this actually refused to issue any
more of his almanacs on the
ground that he was dead!"[15]

This of course is nonsense. The Stationers had a patent to publish
almanacs, which it was their wish, need, and habit to protect. When one of
their most popular writers decided to withhold his work from their
authority, they sought to prohibit him; if he successfully defied the
organization, the Stationers would lose the profits of his annual publication
and might lose also their power over other almanac makers. The Company
did not strike Partridge from its roll of members — he was not a
member
and so could not be expelled; and the Stationers certainly were not striking
him from their roll of astrologers but rather were trying to retain his
almanac over their own imprimatur. The Stationers were not primarily
interested in a hoax by a pseudonymous prankster or in a continuance of the
joke by the town jesters, and they did not for a moment "assume" him
dead. The Stationers were hardheaded men of business concerned with their
own monetary matters, and they would hardly request
an injunction against a ghost.
A few people who were naïve or somber or ready to believe
anything they read or heard doubtless accepted Partridge's "death" no
matter what the source of the news. But in actuality the Bickerstaff
predictions and the prominence Partridge received therefrom had no
necessary connection with the legal action of the Company, unless we may
suppose that Partridge thought the publicity he had been getting made his
services more valuable. The groundless affirmations about Partridge and the
Stationers in sober works by prominent scholars present a better than
normal example of adherence to received legend and reluctance to consult
solid sources. The story of Partridge in Chancery and his relation to the
Stationers is interesting enough without recourse to scholarly
romancing.
Harris the Pirate
Related to the dispute between Partridge and the Stationers was
Benjamin Harris, a prime rascal who spread his deeds over the several
careers of author, printer, bookseller, journalist, pirate, and salesman. He
spent a term of years in New England and by issuing in Boston the sole
number of Publick Occurrences became in 1690 the "first
American journalist."[16] Harris
returned to London, where he acquired a very poor reputation in the trade
as well as a degree of shrewd effectiveness.
In the
Merlinus Liberatus for 1706 Partridge warned the
reader
against "a Supplement added to my Almanack, forged and contriv'd by
Benj. Harris and his Son, and Printed as mine, tho' I knew
nothing of it till it was printed"; the next year he repeated his warnings
against additions made by Harris to his almanac "either in the Middle or
End of it."
In February of 1708 the Company of Stationers filed a bill in
Chancery against Harris and his sons Benjamin and Vavasour, all freemen
of the Company, accusing them of subverting the letters patent "lately
within these ffour Years last past" and particularly of printing the almanacs
of Partridge and others for 1708, and prayed for an injunction restraining
the Harrises from any unauthorized use of the Calendar (P.R.O., C. 5/ 270/
20; 9 February 1708). In their joint answers the father admitted that he "did
in his own Right & sayd way of Trade print or cause to be printed in
London some Thousands a Sheet Almanacks goeing under the borrowed
Name of one Vincent Wing."[17] On
4 October 1708 the Court of the Company ordered its committee to advise
with counsel and move the court for an injunction; the officers spent
considerable time away from the Hall in conferences about Harris, with at
least three on the 19th; and on the 21st the Lord Chancellor
awarded an injunction against the unauthorized publication and sale by
Harris of any more almanacs until the hearing (P.R.O., C. 33/ 310/ 490).
On 18 November the Courant carried an advertisement
announcing that Harris the bookseller had at his shop, the Golden Boar's
Head in Grace Church Street, all kinds of almanacs for 1709 "Bound or
Stitcht, Wholesale or Retale" and that annexed to the Partridge almanac
there would be a printed list of the current members of Parliament at no
extra cost.[18]
After this, Harris apparently rested dormant for a year as an open
enemy of the Stationers, or else crafty without record.[19] However, on 15 November of
1709, when
the suit against Partridge was in full stride and the injunction in operation,
the Courant had an advertisement of a Merlinus
Liberatus for 1710 by J. Patridge, "Printed for the Author, and Sold
by most Booksellers," etc. with no reference to Harris at all. Shortly a
notice was published in the Post-Man that the Merlinus
Liberatus by Patridge (again so spelled) had been published on the
24th "with an ALMANACK for the said Year, Printed by Allowance, and
Conformable to an Injunction in Chancery," price bound 6 d.
[20]
On the 5th of December at a Court of the Company "A ffalse
Almanack of Partridges was produced wherein is a
Kallendr. and
suspected to be Printed and Published by Benja. Harris."
The Stationers
apparently knew Harris well, so the Master and Wardens were directed to
investigate. Three days later the Court ordered that an advertisement
concerning this publication by Harris of Partridge's almanac with the
Company's Calendar "be put into the Gazett and several other publick News
Papers," and also that advice be taken as to whether this action by Harris
constituted a breach of the injunction against him. The proposed
advertisement appeared in the Courant the next day to say
that
the Merlinus Liberatus was "pretended to be made by J.
Partridge, but in Truth was patched together by Benjamin Harris (famous
for Practices of this Nature)" and that there would be no almanac for 1710
by Partridge because of the injunction by the Lord Chancellor. This notice
got wide
distribution.[21] Later in the same
month of December Robert Mawson, codefendant with Partridge and Darby
in the Stationers' suit of 1709, bought copies of a sheet almanac from the
Company's warehouse keeper and of the 1710 Merlinus
Liberatus from Harris; he said in his formal answer to the charges
of
the Company that he had never to his knowledge disposed of any almanac
"which had not been printed according to the said priviledge and having
only bought a different Title containing noe part of a Calendar and therefore
noe essentiall part of an Almanack, and for which hee humbly hopes if any
person is Answerable it ought to be the said Benjamin Harris."[22]
The method used by Harris is best described in a Chancery record of
28 November 1710. The counsel for the Stationers alleged:
That the Def
ts the Harris's the last year as alsoe this
p
resent yeare have
bought of the p
ls. severall quantityes of their single Sheet
Almanacks
& haveing putt them into four parts have paisted the said four parts
being
the whole Callendar with other Sheets p
resumed to be printed
by them in a booke or Almanack intitled Merlinus Liberatus with an
Almanack printed by allowance for the year 1711 under the name &
by
(J Patridge) & not Partridge the letter R being left out thinking thereby
to evade & elude the breach of the s
d. Injun&c.ilde;on.
[23]
At this time in 1710 the Stationers prayed that the injunction formerly
granted be extended to enjoin Harris from publishing the Merlinus
Liberatus by J. Patridge, and the Court of Chancery so
ordered.[24] The clerk of the Stationers
refused to register in the Hall Book the copy of the 1711 Merlinus
Liberatus by Harris, and this refusal was publicly recorded.[25] The Company promptly disclaimed
in
print the new Merlinus Liberatus as published by Harris
"with an Almanack printed by Allowance" and pretended to
be
written by Partridge; the Company further denied that Harris's almanac had
been registered at Stationers' Hall, announced that the High Court of
Chancery had granted an injunction prohibiting the printing and sale of the
said book, and stated that there would be no almanac by Partridge for
1711.[26] A year later the Company
again requested an extension of the
injunction against Harris, this time to prohibit his printing three certain
almanacs for 1712, and again Chancery so ordered (P.R.O., C. 33/ 318/
49-49v; 10 December 1711). And when Partridge prepared a 1714 almanac
for the Stationers entitled Merlinus Redivivus, he said he
could
not doubt "that those beggarly Villains that have scarce Bread to eat without
being Rogues, two or three poor Printers and a Bookbinder, with honest
Ben, will be at their old Trade again, of Prophesying in my
name," and gave a similar warning in his almanac for 1715 without naming
the offender.
Such is the incomplete and varied evidence about Harris from the
documents of Chancery, the records of the Stationers, and the
advertisements in the periodic press. An additional archive of his piratical
activity is the almanac itself that he succeeded in publishing, the
Merlinus Liberatus for 1710 and 1711, copies of which have
quite recently become known and now confirm what may be surmised from
the official records. The title page of each of these two almanacs is a close
imitation of that of the legitimate
Merlinus, but the subtitle
has
been altered from "Being an ALMANACK" to "(With an ALMANACK
Printed by Allowance.)" The compiler's name is spelled Patridge. Each
almanac was "Printed for the Author," not for the Company of Stationers,
and the 1711 pamphlet contradicted the statement of the Stationers about
registry at the Hall with the claim that it had been "Register'd in the
HALL-BOOK of the Company of Stationers, pursuant to Act of
Parliament." The first three leaves and the last five contain matter, in verse
and prose, of a sort common to almanacs of the time or to Partridge's
anti-French diatribes. Between the miscellaneous features are six leaves in
which one page is devoted to each month and filled with a few lines of
verse, some "Monthly Observations," and for 1710 "Remarkable
Occurrences this Month" chosen from previous years and for 1711 "An
Astrological Judgment."
The distinctive component is the Calendar. The year's quarters were
cut from a folio sheet almanac, verso blank, of the kind that bore the name
of Vincent Wing, and each section, measuring about 5 by 6½ inches,
was folded down the middle and pasted at the folded edge to the inner
margin of one of the three appropriate pages, i.e. in these copies the pages
for the months of March, June, September, and November. The scissors
and paste were clumsily applied, and the tipped-in portions are smaller than
the book, so these factitious enterprises have a rather shoddy appearance.
Obviously, Harris argued that by using a Calendar actually printed by
allowance he might evade the injunction against his publication of the
almanac.
At the end of the 1710 Merlinus there appears this
particularly interesting sentence, signed J. P.: "Whereas it has been
industriously given out by Bickerstaff Esq. and others, to
prevent the Sale of this Years Almanac that John
Partridge is Dead: This may inform all his Loving Countrymen that
(blessed be God) he is still Living, in Health and they are Knaves that
Reported otherwise." Such an advice in this place provides of course no
sign of participation by Partridge himself. Harris permitted only one use of
his own name in the two pamphlets — in the 1711 almanac
advertisements were entered for four items sold by him, one devotional
publication and three nostrums.
The manifest conclusion from these almanacs and from the official
records is that Harris was certainly a nuisance to the Stationers. It is
possible that his unauthorized work in 1708 or earlier somehow gave
Partridge and Darby the idea, or strengthened the notion, of establishing the
Merlinus Liberatus as their own property despite the
Stationers'
monopoly, but it is not likely that his work in 1709 came in time to
influence such a decision. During the closing months of 1709, when
Partridge was restrained by Chancery and the conditions in the almanac
business were somewhat confused, Harris, who was already an experienced
pirate, captured this special opportunity to use Partridge's name and the title
of his almanac, and he repeated the performance the following year. Under
legal restriction himself, he bought legally published sheet almanacs, from
which he extracted the essential Calendar and attached it to other pertinent
matter, gave the almanac the popular title of
Merlinus
Liberatus, and signed it with the name of J. Patridge, a name close
enough to that of the eminent astrologer to cheat the careless or unlettered
eye. Thus honest Ben employed a real title and a
near-name to escape the court and turn a bad penny. We may be reasonably
certain that no almanac prepared by Partridge and sponsored by the
Company was issued for 1710 or 1711, and without further testimony we
must suppose that Partridge had no hand in the juggleries of Benjamin
Harris, a knave of all trades.
Partridge Redivivus
During the months when the Chancery suit against Partridge was most
active, when Mr. Bickerstaff was thriving as an editorial astrologer in the
Tatler with Partridge still serving as an occasional target, and
when Harris was contriving an illegal substitute for the proscribed
ephemeris, the Stationers themselves elected to sponsor a new almanac
which would perhaps take the place of the one stopped by the action of
their suit. On 15 August 1709 the Warden spent several shillings "at
ye
Queens head with the Master &c about ye Tatlers
Almanack." Quite
probably the high officers realized that the profit from Partridge's almanac
was lost to them indefinitely and an anti-Partridge almanac might subtract
from that loss.
The plan was to produce not a tract mocking the almanac maker but
an almanac itself, written under the name of Bickerstaff and continuing to
ridicule the astrologer. This plot, or at least the title of the prospective
pamphlet,[27] came to the notice of the
Tatler's alert distaff rival, the Female Tatler,
written
by "Mrs. Crackenthorp, a Lady that
knows every thing," who thus began her fiftieth issue on the last day of
October 1709:
From the Advantages I have over other People of knowing
every
Thing, I have this Opportunity put into my Hand of obliging the
Publick with the Preface Mr. Bickerstaff has
made
to his Almanack for the succeeding Year; wherein you will find plain, that
Mr. Partridge is dead, notwithstanding all the Noise made
about
him, so that the Company of Stationers might have spar'd the
Charge of obtaining an Injunction against him, and prohibiting every body
from Printing the said Partridges Almanack. Besides, it was
easie for the said Mr. Bickerstaff from his Knowledge of
Futurity, to foresee no body wou'd attempt to Print or Reprint his
Predictions, because whoever shou'd must expect to incur the Penalty of the
Company's Injunction.
The all-knowledgeable lady then offers a preface she has somehow
acquired; here Bickerstaff gives his reasons for considering Partridge dead
and advances his own claims to see into all secret follies. A mediocre piece
not worthy the signature of the male Tatler, or the female.
A good fortnight later the proper Mr. Bickerstaff announced at the
end of Tatler No. 94 that his almanac would appear on the
22nd
of November and "from that Instant, all Lovers, in Raptures or Epistles,
are to forbear the Comparison of their Mistresses eyes to Stars, I having
made Use of that Simile in my Dedication for the last Time it shall ever
pass."[28] After such an announcement,
specific in date and content, we are prepared for the publication of
Bickerstaff's Almanack. It did appear — and on
schedule, we
may presume, with the other seasonal booklets — and Steele's own
prediction was fulfilled in its dedication to Urania, which obviously held no
resemblance to the preface devised by Mrs. Crackenthorpe.
The Situation of the Earth, the Force of Cælestial Bodies which
move around it, as well as the different Stations they possess, and their
various Influences on the inferiour Part of the Universe, are admirably well
described in the Book which I herewith send you; wherein the Doctrine of
the Plurality of Worlds is delivered in a plain but courtly
Manner, at once to entertain the Imagination, and inform the Judgment, of
an Intelligent Woman, with whom he feigns a Conversation. I urge his
Authority for addressing an
Almanack, as he does a System
of
Philosophy; and I acknowledge as great a Disproportion between the Merit
of the Authors, as there is between the Value of their Works. These,
Madam, are the Stars so often mentioned in my Epistles to you: and you
will now see how justly your
Eyes have been call'd such, by the Effect they have had on the Behaviour
of their Beholders. When you consider the mighty Orbs and Worlds around
you, it will encrease your Contempt of this little Life; but at the same
Time, I hope it will add to the Enjoyment of it. . . .
Have we here a new bit of frolicsome prose by Richard Steele? The allusion
in the Wardens' Accounts to the "Tatlers Almanack," the warning in the
Tatler against the forthcoming conceit of a mistress's eyes,
and
the style itself are consistent with an attribution of this dedication to the
editor of the
Tatler papers.
This almanac was so unPartridgean that it had no prognostications at
all but monthly observations of a horticultural character. It purported to be
a vindication of the stars against the false assertions of the late Partridge
and other mistaken astrologers, and it contained a sizable, sensible essay on
almanacs proving "That the Art of Telling Fortunes, is an Imposture upon
Innocent Persons by Mock-Astrologers and
Gypsies"
and twice naming Partridge. In a letter of testimonial about Partridge's
death a Jeremy Wagstaff accused the astrologer (wrongly) of making a
mistake in his prediction of a certain phase of the moon and then resorted
to Swift's quibble that "No Man alive" could commit such an
error.[29] The quality of the wit in the
body of Bickerstaff's Almanack scarcely competes with that
of
the essays by the reigning Bickerstaff.[30] But this diversion in the
controversy
between Partridge
and the Stationers raises questions. Did the Company design the almanac
merely as a financial venture or as an experimental publication or only as
a gesture against their forbidden writer? Did the Company contract with
Steele to introduce and puff an almanac compiled by some hack astrologer?
And who wrote the rational essay on prognostications?
Among the early and inevitable imitations of the Tatler
there appeared Titt for Tatt in March 1710, closely imitative
in
format, devices, and contents. Its writer was "Jo. Patridge, Esq.," who had
not died after all but instead had "only made a Tour for Conversation
amongst the Stars." His heavenly connections enabled him to find "a
dreadful Fate hang over the Principal of the Family of the
Staffs." Report discovers Bickerstaff in a vault in Lincoln's
Inn,
and on a visit to the tomb 'Squire Patridge is told:
For when Men of Parts have got their Ends, they naturally Lapse into
the State of the Dead, and being pamper'd with Plenty, their
briskness and vivacity of Ingenuity, from too great Indulgence of Luxury,
suddenly Decays, and brings on 'em a fatal Stupidity, or
Morosis, as the Physicians call it, so that in few Months they
sleep Life away.
Titt for Tatt was an amiable and able follower of the
Tatler, here worth remark as making a neat turn of the tables
by a fictive Partridge against his "Ingenious Brother
Bickerstaff."
Meanwhile Partridge's name had also appeared over several
pamphlets. In 1709 there was Mr. Patridge's Judgment and Opinion
of this Frost, comparing the current visitation with the great frost
of
1683. And during his rustication two twelve-page tracts for the times also
exploited the fame of this prophetical Doctor with the syncopated name.
The Right and True Predictions of Dr. Patridge's Prophecy For the
Year 1712 gave monthly observations on affairs in general, heavenly
data, and forecasts of weather, as well as facts on the quarters, eclipses,
and terms, and contained two handy lists: a "Speculum" by Mrs. Dorothy
Patridge "foretelling the Good and Bad Days" for love or marriage or travel
or removing or business by assigning a single descriptive phrase, as
"indifferent good" or "very good" or "lucky" or "dangerous," and so on,
and a final section setting down the rates for hackney coaches and chairs to
all parts of London. For the next year Dr.
Patridge's
Most Strange and Wonderful Prophecy provided similar astrological
judgments, but concluded with a list of the market towns in England and the
day of the week "on which each of them are kept." The shade of Partridge
was becoming a help to history.
No almanac by Partridge appeared for the years 1710 to 1713, but
late in 1712 the officials of the Stationers began holding conferences about
him and early in 1713 about the peril of counterfeit almanacs.[31] In May the Court of the Company
ordered
a committee to meet with Partridge and Darby "in order to accomodate the
matters in Difference." The astrologer, through a representative, insisted
on £150 for a licensed almanac that year, with the allowance in
succeeding years to be negotiated. The Stationers agreed to give £100
"for this yeare for his Almanack in Expectacon there will be a Considerable
Sale thereof,"
and thereafter to consent to a reasonable settlement, with an umpire if
necessary. Partridge accepted this compromise and thus quite probably got
a larger sum than he had ever obtained before (Stationers' Court Book G:
14 May, 1 June, 7 September 1713). In the regular announcement by the
Stationers of the publication of all the almanacs for 1714, Partridge's work
received special note, "not having been printed these four Years last past"
(
Post Boy, No. 2873, 8 October 1713). The injunction was
of
course still in force, but if the Stationers were ready to exploit their victory
and found Partridge willing to reenter the ranks of their almanac makers,
no one had cause to complain or demur.
For his resumed work Partridge revived one of his old titles,
Merlinus Redivivus, and again called himself "A Lover of
Truth." The portion worthy of remark is a letter to Bickerstaff on the verso
of the title page. This was the injured astrologer's first chance in five years
to answer his adversary in an almanac, and it must be said that he
responded with temperance. Perhaps his sobriety here came from a sincere
forgiveness or the weakness of age, perhaps from a desire to squeeze the
last bit out of popular remembrance of the affair. In his final words on the
matter, nearly three years after the end of Steele's Tatler,
Partridge addresses Steele through Bickerstaff and condemns Swift by
name.
There seems to be a kind of fantastical Propriety, in a Dead
Man's Addressing himself to a Person not in Being. Isaac
Bickerstaffe is no more; and I have nothing now to dispute with, on
the Subject of his Fictions concerning me, sed magni nominis
umbra, a Shadow only, and a mighty
Name.
. . .
Now, Sir, my Intention in this Epistle, is to let you know, that I shall
behave my self in my new Being with as much Moderation as possible, and
that I have no longer any Quarrel with you, for the Accounts you inserted
in your Writings concerning my Death, being sensible that you were no less
abused in that Particular, than my self. The Person from whom you took
up that Report, I know, was your Name-sake, the Author of
Bickerstaffe's Predictions, a notorious Cheat.[*] And if you had been indeed as
much an
Astrologer, as you pretended, you might have known that his Word was no
more to be taken, than that of an Irish Evidence, that not
being
the only Tale of a Tub he had vented. . . .
For the next two years Partridge's ephemeris was called merely an
Almanack with no distinguishing title, and bore the motto
"Melius semel quam semper." Partridge died in 1715, but his almanacs for
1716 and 1717 carried the assurance that they had been "written with the
Doctor's own hand." All of these almanacs were printed for the Stationers.
The 1717 almanac took its title from Partridge's greatest success —
the
Merlinus Liberatus, now a completely appropriate phrase
—
and it held the perfect motto, "Etiam mortuus loquitur." This actually dead
Partridge continued to speak for more than a century and a half, with timely
alterations of method as well as material, and thus became the nearest rival
to Old Moore in posthumous longevity.
[32] For frequency of publication
Partridge had
outlived many of his more worthy critics, at least in the use of a
name.
[33]
Notes