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The Descriptive Bibliography of American Authors
by
G. Thomas Tanselle
In 1942 Jacob Blanck remarked that "one who attempts a bibliography of almost any nineteenth-century American author has embarked on a task that may prove endless."[1] All bibliographies are endless tasks, but this statement calls attention to the paucity of bibliographical work upon which the student of an American author can draw. One may feel that the situation has now improved, as a result not only of the bibliographies published in the intervening twenty-five years and the increased attention to American literature in bibliographical journals but also of the monumental Bibliography of American Literature (1955- ), effectively conducted by Blanck himself. This work is currently providing the first bibliographies of many authors and the first dependable ones of many others. But the BAL is not — nor is it intended to be — a substitute for full-length detailed bibliographies of individual American authors. Unhappily, then, it is still possible to say that we do not have an entirely satisfactory bibliography for a single major American writer.
That this judgment is not unduly harsh can be demonstrated by a brief survey of past accomplishments — or, indeed, by momentary reflection. For, aside from BAL, what is there for Emerson and Hawthorne? Where does one go for Melville or Whitman or Thoreau, for Hemingway or Faulkner? The bibliographies of Poe and Mark
Too often the question of approach is narrowed down to one of technique or form, and many futile misunderstandings have arisen because one man did not approve of the collation formula used by another or did not want to make the effort required to comprehend it. Prefaces to bibliographies abound with deprecatory allusions to bibliographical debates, which the author of the bibliography has avoided by his wholesome "common-sense" (and often quite unscholarly) method. Such a passage as the following, from W. B. S. Clymer and C. R. Green's 1937 bibliography of Robert Frost, belies certain very real merits which the work possesses:
One of the most important services which the BAL is performing may well turn out to be the widespread attention it is drawing to the fact that scholars and collectors require the same kind of bibliography. It gives collations of gatherings (not simply pages) for nineteenth-and twentieth-century books; it is more precise than previous bibliographies in describing publisher's cloth, with all references keyed to photographs; and, most important of all, it records later impressions and editions, not just the first or second. The writers of author-bibliographies must recognize that their research provides information not merely about one author but about the publishing and printing practice of his time; if a bibliography is not conceived of as a record of the forms of publication of certain written works (rather than the minimum amount of information deemed necessary for identification of certain editions or impressions), it is not contributing to the store of bibliographical knowledge that will enable the next author-bibliographer to reach conclusions otherwise impossible.[2] One can never know which facts, considered unimportant at present, may take on significance in the future through the fuller accumulation and analysis of data. The record should therefore be as full as possible, and it is at this point that formal considerations enter. Clearly, as Madan pointed
American literary scholarship at the present time offers a unique opportunity for the production of this kind of author-bibliography on a wide scale. The intensive textual work now in progress on many major nineteenth-century authors under the general leadership of the Modern Language Association's Center for Editions of American Authors forms the perfect base for descriptive bibliographical scholarship, for most of these projects are forming excellent collections of books (both early and late printings) and are inevitably in the process discovering many new textual changes, binding variants, impressions, and issues. For example, the discovery of duplicate typesetting in the first edition of The Scarlet Letter and of altered standing type in the second, as announced in the Centenary Hawthorne, provides a striking demonstration of the interdependence of detailed physical description and textual decisions. It would be a sad loss if such information were not organized into bibliographies, and most of these projects have happily made arrangements for the preparation of a bibliography in connection with their new edition — among those so far announced are bibliographies of Irving, Hawthorne, Melville, Whitman, and Mark Twain. On the eve of so much activity, it seems appropriate to review the past course of American author-bibliographies. The story is not only a chapter in the history of American scholarship; it is an object lesson as well.
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Interest in American bibliography was at first directed toward the broad field of "Americana" in general, and it would be possible to see
In the same year that Stevens was remarking in his Nuggets, "We have never seen a perfect Catalogue" (III, vi), the New York firm of
The growth of interest in collecting and in bibliography, of which these works give evidence, forms the background against which the development of the book-length single-author bibliography should be viewed. One does not begin to look for this sort of publication before the last years of the nineteenth century, the period when many scholarly organizations were founded on both sides of the Atlantic. In the United States attention was first given to the statesmen, with the Bibliotheca Hamiltoniana (by Paul Leicester Ford, 1886), Bibliotheca Jeffersoniana (by Hamilton B. Tompkins, 1887), and Bibliotheca Washingtoniana (by William S. Baker, 1889); and Wilberforce Eames in 1890 and 1891 investigated the bibliography of Eliot's Indian works. By the turn of the century the only literary figures who had been treated were Franklin (by Paul Leicester Ford, 1889), Thoreau (by Samuel Arthur Jones, 1894), and Thomas Bailey Aldrich (by Francis Bartlett, 1898). These contained little description; but the indication of line-endings, format, and pagination in Jones's Thoreau, for example, provided at least as much information as was available in the English bibliographies then published — James Gibson's Burns (1881), Wise and Smart's Ruskin (1893), Temple Scott's or Buxton Forman's Morris (both 1897), or Wise's Browning (1897).
The first decade of the twentieth century saw a flurry of American author-bibliographies, largely created by the Houghton Mifflin Company's consciousness of its heritage, as the successor to the great firm that had published so much of the important nineteenth-century literature. In 1905 it began the first American series of author-bibliographies, with Nina E. Browne's A Bibliography of Nathaniel Hawthorne. The works in this series were not really descriptive at all (since they gave a short — or sometimes full — title for each book, followed by pagination and a symbol to represent size), but — since the publisher's files were at hand — they furnished more information about publication and number of impressions than one might have expected, particularly the full listing of later editions (with no attempt, however, to show relationships of plates). The bulk of each volume consisted of an alphabetical list of individual works, with an indication of the first periodical and first book appearance of each. Hawthorne was followed in 1906 by George W. Cooke's Lowell, in 1907 by George B. Ives's Holmes, and in 1908 by Francis H. Allen's Thoreau and Cooke's Emerson. All five volumes were arranged on the same plan, but some
Earlier in the decade Oscar L. Triggs had prepared a Whitman bibliography (in Complete Writings, X [1902], 139-233), but it was inconsistent in providing title-page transcriptions and was not intended to be descriptive. Two library lists of this period were Hamilton B. Tompkins's George Henry Calvert (1900) and Winifred Mather and Eva G. Moore's Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1906). Victor H. Paltsits in 1903 made a step forward in A Bibliography of the Separate and Collected Works of Philip Freneau. Not only did he give line-endings and an indication of size (in format terms); he also recorded signatures (as "[A]-C in fours"), reproduced many title pages, and listed locations of copies. In 1905, besides Browne's Hawthorne, two other bibliographies of Hawthorne appeared. One of them, by Wallace Hugh Cathcart for the Rowfant Club, was clearly aimed at collectors and thus complemented Browne's: while it took up only first "editions," it indicated line-endings and bindings, even offering some discussion of states and binding variants. The other was Jacob Chester Chamberlain's description of his own collection, which in a sense began another series, for Luther S. Livingston's Longfellow in 1908 was presented as one of "The Chamberlain Bibliographies" (Livingston noted line-endings and bindings but gave collations of gatherings only if signatures were present). One other bibliography of this decade was LeRoy Phillips's A Bibliography of the Writings of Henry James (1906); though it indicated line-endings, it was very meager in its offering, allowing "Cloth," for example, to suffice for a binding description and declining to investigate the complicated matter of James's transatlantic publication — nor were its faults removed in the "enlarged edition" of 1930.[7]
Near the end of the decade the theory of bibliographical description was enormously advanced by the remarks of Pollard and Greg,[8] but the result was not to stimulate author-bibliographies on this side of the Atlantic, for only two are noteworthy in the entire second decade: Livingston's Lowell in 1914 (parallel to his Longfellow) and Charles F. Heartman's Hugh Henry Brackenridge in 1917 (not the first and by no means the last of his bibliographical publications). These were
The other bookshop which issued bibliographies in the twenties — even more actively — was the Centaur Book Shop of Philadelphia. Each volume in "The Centaur Bibliographies of Modern American Authors" was a small, attractively produced limited edition, printed at the Torch Press, generally carrying a prefatory essay by the author involved; since many of the authors were only in mid-career, blank pages were included at the end labeled "Future Collations." The first in the series, in 1922, was H. L. R. Swire's A Bibliography of the Works of Joseph Hergesheimer. For each first edition it gave a title-page transcription with line-endings marked (not quasi-facsimile); then a paragraph called "Collation," which began in the pattern of "pp. (vi) + 327, consisting of . . ." and proceeded with the contents; then a paragraph indicating size (as "Crown 8vo, 7¼ x 4⅞"), binding material, lettering on the binding (transcribed), end papers, and edges; and finally a note on variant bindings, special issues, or later editions. It represented what was generally expected of a collector's bibliography at the time, and the other volumes followed in an unusually consistent fashion: Vincent Starrett's Stephen Crane in 1923; Guy Holt's James Branch Cabell, Carroll Frey's H. L. Mencken, and Scott Cunningham's
The other bibliographies of the twenties were less satisfactory. Carolyn Wells and Alfred F. Goldsmith's A Concise Bibliography of the Works of Walt Whitman (1922) was generally vague, though it gave brief binding descriptions.[10] Henry Cole Quinby's Richard Harding Davis (1924) used the form "12mo, 19 cm." for size, followed by contents, total pagination, binding, publication information, and very discursive notes. Only occasionally would he mention gatherings, in footnotes which illustrate the unnecessary complications created by the use of format designations for size: one footnote on "12mo" reads, "So according to the size rules of the American Library Association and in the publishers' advertisements; but really and truly, it is composed of eight-leaf signatures" (p. 18). Joseph Lawren's James Gibbons Huneker (1925) gave nothing more than title-page transcriptions and lists of contents; Oscar Wegelin's John Esten Cooke (1925) was another in Heartman's Americana series. In 1929 Vrest Orton's Dreiseriana (labeled as one of "The Chocorua Bibliographies") presented details about the publication of Dreiser's work (including some later editions) in essay form, with occasional interspersed collations; it is best described by its subtitle, "A Book About His Books." To find the outstanding author-bibliography of the decade, one must turn from these separately published works to one which was part of a larger undertaking, Wilberforce Eames's bibliography of John Smith for the twentieth volume (1927) of Sabin (pp. 218-265). His title-page transcriptions (with line-endings) and formula for pagination, as "4to, pp. (8), 1-19, 24-42," were not above the general standard, but they were followed by an enormous quantity of annotation in small type, giving the contents and facts of publication and revealing the painstaking work which lay behind the bibliography. Thomas H. Johnson has with justice called it a "model of bibliographical scholarship in dealing with an extraordinarily complex subject";[11] if Eames's formulas have been surpassed in precision, his careful notes are still impressive.
Despite the Depression, a large number of bibliographies were published during the thirties. If the collecting fever had called attention to the need for bibliographical studies of American authors, the wholesale revaluation of the American past in the twenties intensified
The general output of these years was characterized by continued attention to contemporary or recent writers, as in the twenties, with a simultaneous effort to treat the standard nineteenth-century authors in more detail. As for the moderns, Bradford F. Swan's Henry Blake Fuller came in 1930; and 1931 alone saw Lucius Beebe and Robert J. Bulkley's Edwin Arlington Robinson, Ralph Sanborn and Barrett Clark's Eugene O'Neill (which included English editions), Cecil Johnson's George Sterling, Edwin O. Grover's Percy MacKaye (a "biographical bibliography"), and Louis H. Cohn's Ernest Hemingway. These were not distinctive, but they generally provided the expected notes on pagination, contents, and binding (collation of gatherings was not expected) and sometimes offered title-page reproductions. The Hemingway, though it gave no publication data, did recognize textual matters, to the extent of saying, "There are slight textual differences between the American and English editions of Men Without Women"
Against this background six bibliographies of the thirties, on six major authors, stand out. First, William R. Langfeld and Philip C. Blackburn's Washington Irving (1933) — which originally appeared in installments in the Bulletin of the New York Public Library in 1932 — provided very careful discussions of each work, including comments on textual variations among the earliest printings or editions; its weaknesses were a failure adequately to define terms like "issue" or
Next, in 1935, appeared Merle Johnson's Mark Twain (a revision of a 1910 work, but essentially a new bibliography) — not an unusual production except in one respect, its detailed examination of various states, especially those produced by type batter (as in the six-page discussion of Huckleberry Finn). Individual items are difficult to locate (since there are no item numbers or running titles) except through the extremely full index, which is an integral part of the work, providing the only consecutive listing of the reappearance of specific titles. (In its index and style of description, the Mark Twain was parallel to Karl Yost's 1937 Edna St. Vincent Millay, issued by Harpers in an identical binding, to form a brief "series" of bibliographies of Harper authors; Yost was careful in his comments on bindings and on publication and copyright data but was interested only in firsts and confused in his use of "edition.") The year following the Mark Twain, Charles Beecher Hogan published A Bibliography of Edwin Arlington Robinson (Yale, 1936) — supplementing it in PBSA, XXXV (1941), 115-144, with "New Bibliographical Notes," also issued as a separate. The result of prolonged collecting and research, it may be criticized more for its omissions than for its treatment of the details chosen for inclusion; in an article on his experiences as a bibliographer Hogan asserted, "my book was written with the intention of aiding collectors rather than graduate students, and if one is comparing my description in the presence of the book itself, a listing of the book's contents seemed to me to be quite supererogatory"[17] — a point of view which ignores the fact that more information may make possible the detection of previously unsuspected variants and distorts the whole purpose of descriptive bibliography. The sixth of these major bibliographies has received more praise than any of the others: Thomas F. Currier's A Bibliography of John Greenleaf Whittier (1937), which Jacob Blanck in 1942 called "probably the best single-author bibliography ever done in the United States."[18] The work is particularly full in its listing of reprints and later editions, and it belongs in that very small group of bibliographies of this time which paid any attention at all to gatherings (in
In the early 1940's only three bibliographies were in any way distinctive. Despite the fact that Greg's "A Formulary of Collation"[19] had been available long enough to be assimilated, most bibliographers still ignored the basic physical structure of the book and were content with the old formula of size-pagination-contents-binding, or less — as Julian Sawyer's Gertrude Stein (1941), and the even less descriptive Yale catalogue of the same year; Oscar Wegelin's revised 1941 edition of his William Gilmore Simms (giving only transcriptions, pagination, and locations of copies), and A. S. Salley's complementary work (1943) listing the contents; Malcolm Young's "bibliography" of Paul Elmer More (1941), only a checklist; Robert W. Daniel's brief catalogue of Faulkner (1942), which did use quasi-facsimile transcriptions and listed reprints; and George R. Preston's Thomas Wolfe (1943), again with reprints. Of the three major bibliographies, one was another Poe (1940; revised, 1943)[20] — this time by Charles F. Heartman and James R. Canny as part of "Heartman's Historical Series." Although at the opposite pole from Robertson's in point of physical appearance, it was more dependable, revealed thorough checking, and provided a good census of copies (but unfortunately did not make clear which ones had been examined). As its title indicated (A Bibliography of First Printings), it did not include overseas editions, a particularly fascinating study in the case of Poe. There were no collations of gatherings, but the authors at least saw that a well-executed bibliography could serve the needs of all, since they specifically aimed their book at "the Poe scholar, the research worker, and to a certain extent the collector and dealer" (p. 11). Also in 1940 Thomas H. Johnson published The Printed Writings of Jonathan Edwards. Its descriptions were brief (the
This bibliography was dedicated to J. K. Lilly, whose interest in book-collecting was to become increasingly prominent in succeeding years, for it was his generosity that made possible the next landmark in American author-bibliography — the series of four volumes on Indiana writers published by the Indiana Historical Society between 1944 and 1952: Anthony J. and Dorothy R. Russo's James Whitcomb Riley (1944); Dorothy R. Russo's George Ade (1947); Dorothy R. Russo and Thelma L. Sullivan's Booth Tarkington (1949) and Bibliographical Studies of Seven Authors of Crawfordsville, Indiana (1952).[22] All four were handsomely produced by the Lakeside Press (with many collotype illustrations), and all followed the same pattern. For each book there was a title-page transcription (in quasi-facsimile) and paragraphs on collation (formulary collation of gatherings, with measurement of leaves and description of paper), pagination (contents), illustrations, binding, publication date and price, and notes. When the contents of a book had previously appeared in periodicals, full details of original publication were also given (the periodical items were again listed in a later section, without mention of the book, but all the references were brought together in an excellent index). Unfortunately the location of copies examined was not indicated (except in a few unusual instances), and only first "editions" were described (though later ones were listed, and even states of Grosset and Dunlap reprints were sometimes differentiated), with a resulting lack of attention to
During these years there were a few more bibliographies of importance, set off against an increasing number of author-checklists.[24] In 1948 the New York Public Library published another in its outstanding series, William M. Gibson and George Arms's William Dean Howells (serialized in the Bulletin in 1946-47). The great amount of material unhappily necessitated not merely an unattractive double-column layout but a severely condensed form of description: the transcription of the title was followed in one paragraph by pagination and size, in the pattern "p. ii + x + 134, 7¼ x 4½ inches" (with no collation of gatherings), contents, end papers, and binding. Later editions were briefly mentioned, but the numbering system — with each book lettered consecutively under its year, as 70A, 70B, etc., for 1870 — was not designed to show relationships between various printings and editions of a single work.[25] Also in 1948 appeared a new version of Vincent Starrett's 1923 Stephen Crane, by Ames W. Williams and Starrett. The thorough rewriting brought the book into line with modern bibliographical practice in many respects (formulary collation, careful listing of contents, use of data from Publishers' Weekly), so that it is above the level of the average bibliography. The New York Public Library in 1949 published its next bibliography, at the opposite extreme from the Howells in size — Winthrop Wetherbee's Donn Byrne. Its strong points were an equal attention to American and English first printings (with reprints listed) and detailed notes with publication (but not copyright) information; its collations, however, were overly condensed,
In the remainder of the 1950's there were four bibliographies of special significance, beginning with the posthumous publication of Thomas F. Currier's Oliver Wendell Holmes (1953), edited by Eleanor M. Tilton for the Bibliographical Society of America. This huge work surpassed the high standard of Currier's Whittier and was especially noteworthy for its use of publishers' files and account books. Its plan was similar to the Whittier, with books and pamphlets (English as well as American firsts) described chronologically and individual poems arranged alphabetically. Gatherings were noted, in words rather than formulas, and paragraphs covered binding, inserted advertisements, impressions, contract, and contents; later English and American (other than Houghton Mifflin) editions were briefly recorded in an appendix. The most noticeable defect (as in the Whittier) was the inadequate (and inconsistent) transcription of title pages. One may
Between the time of these bibliographies and the next Soho on an American figure, in 1963, the numerous brief "bibliographies" can simply be listed. When no comment is made, one may assume that, despite the excellent examples of the late 1940's and 1950's, the standard is about the same as in the 1920's, with no formulary collations and minimal notes on contents and bindings: Samuel French Morse's Wallace Stevens (1954; revised and enlarged in 1963 as one of the checklists published by Alan Swallow of Denver); H. D. Rowe's Hart Crane (1955), also published by Swallow; Klaus W. Jonas's Carl Van Vechten (1955), not really descriptive; Frank dell'Isola's Thomas Merton (1956); C. Harvey Gardiner's William Hickling Prescott (1958); Martha Cox's Maxwell Anderson (1958), not intended to be descriptive; Elmer D. Johnson's Thomas Wolfe (1959); W. H. Hutchinson's Eugene Manlove Rhodes (1959); Edgar Branch's James T. Farrell (1959), a checklist only; William White's John Ciardi (1959), W. D. Snodgrass (1960), and Karl Shapiro (1960); Dan H. Laurence's Robert Nathan (1960), which follows Gallup's Eliot in pagination formula;[30] George J. Firmage's E. E. Cummings (1960); Betty Adler and Jane Wilhelm's H. L. Mencken (1961), a thorough checklist; Henry Hardy Heins's Edgar Rice Burroughs (1962; revised, 1964); David Kherdian's William Saroyan (1965), which includes descriptions and (even two illustrations) of dust jackets; Hensley C. Woodbridge, John London, and George H. Tweney's Jack London (1966), the largest of the Talisman Press bibliographies; and the series compiled by Eugene P. Sheehy and Kenneth A. Lohf, including Marianne Moore (1958), Yvor Winters (1959), Frank Norris (1959), and Sherwood Anderson (1960).[31]
Three bibliographies stand out from this group because they employ a formulary collation of gatherings: Charles M. Adams's Randall Jarrell (1958); J. M. Edelstein's Thornton Wilder (1959); and Cecil K. Byrd's "Check List of the Melcher Lindsay Collection" (Indiana University Bookman, December 1960), a praiseworthy job. James B. Meriwether's The Literary Career of William Faulkner (1961), though not strictly a bibliography, is the indispensable bibliographical tool for Faulkner and takes account of the English editions. The eighteenth volume of the Soho series was Donald Gallup's second bibliography of a major modern writer, Ezra Pound (1963), which maintained the high standard he had set in the Eliot; it employed his special system for recording pagination but did not treat later editions and impressions. In 1964 the University Press of Virginia published another bibliography which used the same analytical techniques as Bruccoli's Cabell: William W. Kelly's Ellen Glasgow, edited by Oliver Steele. All the impressions of each edition were noted, with the evidence for the classification; but the book is not a bibliography in the usual sense because only the distinguishing points are given: "the notes are sufficient to identify any copy of an Ellen Glasgow book printed to date." The aim was to provide a guide for identification rather than a record of the forms of an author's publications. In the editor's words, "although the descriptions are not fully analytical, the notes are the result of a thorough bibliographical analysis." At the end of our survey, then, we have returned to a work superficially like the earlier collector's handbooks, but scholarly in method and intent. It is an analytical study, not a descriptive bibliography; but it has demonstrated some of the tools which must be a part of any future bibliographer's equipment.
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A glance at the record reveals how much remains to be done before even the principal authors are adequately covered. For the colonial and federal periods, only the Mathers, Edwards, and Webster have been carefully treated, though C. William Miller's work on Franklin is nearing completion. Of the early nineteenth-century writers, Cooper, Irving, and Poe have been provided with usable bibliographies; but among the major mid-century authors — Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, Whitman — not a single one has been given a satisfactory account. If Whittier and Holmes have been dealt with handsomely, there is nothing for Bryant, Longfellow, and Lowell. Mark Twain, Howells, Henry James, and Crane have been provided for, but in varying degrees. And in the twentieth century, the vogue of certain writers has produced erratic patterns, whereby there are three bibliographies
No doubt the public reaction to author-bibliographies partly accounts for this state of affairs. They are notoriously bad risks for a publisher, and there is constant pressure to prune each work and reduce the printing costs. Only Houghton Mifflin among major American publishers has ever shown any extended interest in author-bibliographies, although Harpers did begin an informal series with Mark Twain and Millay, and other commercial publishers have occasionally issued bibliographies of their own authors' works. For the most part, however, American author-bibliographies have appeared under the imprints of bookshops (Brick Row, Centaur), libraries (New York Public, Yale), or scholarly (nonprofit) organizations (Indiana Historical Society). The phenomenon of Rupert Hart-Davis is unusual in England, and he has no American counterpart. But the publishers by no means should bear the principal blame for the poor quality of most author-bibliographies: the profession itself is at fault. Bibliographers in university positions continually find that their colleagues have little idea what they are up to; professors of literature concede the necessity for good bibliographies but often give little evidence of knowing how to judge bibliographical work. If their reviews would not call a sketchy bibliography "detailed" or refer condescendingly to a study of "misprints" but instead would enumerate errors and demand a scholarly approach, the general level of bibliographies might gradually rise. But an understanding of the purposes of bibliography cannot be expected in an atmosphere which supports such statements as the following, about Hogan's Robinson: "frankly for collectors rather than scholars, with emphasis upon exact descriptions of editions, bindings, and text, and a minimum of biographical material."[32] There have been, of course, some responsible reviews in the past — one thinks of David Randall's long series for Publishers' Weekly [33] — but there have not
On the other hand, it is easy to abuse bibliographies unfairly, and there are few bibliographies so bad that they are worse than none at all. As the Times comments, "A reviewer . . . is always conscious that the sheer ballast of fact in an author bibliography, however inadequate, will always give it useful substance of a kind that unoriginal history, biography or criticism can never have."[36] And if, as Lawrence Wroth once said of bibliographical analysis, "There are few tasks more exacting, more demanding of sustained reflection and of the exercise of the constructive imagination,"[37] then a relatively small number of good bibliographies can be expected. Nevertheless, no valid excuse can be found for haphazard and sloppy work. To quote the Times once more, in its general survey of the Soho bibliographies, the amount and kind of detail in a bibliography may reflect the state of the source material but always reveal "the degree of enthusiasm and understanding which the individual has brought to his task."[38] Though the gradual advance of bibliographical knowledge may alter the particular demands made upon an author-bibliographer, his "understanding," or approach, is the fundamental test.
The history of the descriptive bibliography of American authors bears out this point. But it also demonstrates that the less narrow the approach, the more likely that future specialized demands will be met. If past experience is to be instructive, the bibliographer must realize that he cannot ignore anything as irrelevant. Information which seems to him useless can furnish someone else with essential data on book-trade or publishing practice that will, in turn, provide a meaningful context for the original facts.[39] More specifically, this inclusiveness
Notes
"Problems in the Bibliographical Description of Nineteenth-Century American Books," PBSA, XXXVI (1942), 124-136. See also Rollo G. Silver's "Problems in Nineteenth-Century American Bibliography," PBSA, XXXV (1941), 35-47, which discusses the lack of information about technological developments in nineteenth-century printing and publishing. — I should note here, as the context ought to make clear, that this survey deals only with book-length separately-published descriptive bibliographies; it does not take up checklists of secondary material or brief contributions to descriptive bibliography published in journals. Also I should explain that I have generally abbreviated the titles of bibliographies to the name of the author treated.
Cf. Fredson Bowers, "Purposes of Descriptive Bibliography, with Some Remarks on Methods," Library, 5th ser., VIII (1953), 19. The point was made as early as 1928 in Michael Sadleir's pioneering Trollope: bibliography, he said, "can be made to illustrate, not only the evolution of book-building, but also the history of book-handling and the effect of a gradually perfected book-craft on the aims and achievements of authorship." His Trollope, he went on, "is not only a reference work for collectors of that particular author but also a commentary on the book and publishing crafts of mid-Victorian England" (p. ix).
Falconer Madan, "Degressive Bibliography," Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, IX (1906-09), 53-65. See also the series of letters on "The Degressive Principle" in TLS, 4 August (p. 716), 11 August (p. 732), 1 September (p. 781), and 22 September 1966 (p. 884).
See Madeleine B. Stern, "The Mystery of the Leon Brothers," Publishers' Weekly, CXLVII (1945), 2228-32.
See Lyon N. Richardson, "On Using Johnson's American First Editions and Other Sources," American Literature, IX (1937-38), 449-455. Lesser checklists continued to appear in these years, such as those of William Targ at the Black Archer Press in Chicago or H. W. Schwartz at the Casanova Press in Milwaukee.
See Gilbert M. Troxell's review, labeling it "unsatisfactory," in the Saturday Review of Literature, VII (27 December 1930), 494; P. H. Muir said that it "falls short of many of the essential requirements of a modern work," in "Bibliographies Reviewed," Points: Second Series (1934), p. 53.
A. W. Pollard and W. W. Greg, "Some Points in Bibliographical Descriptions," Transactions of the Bibliographical Society, IX (1906-09), 31-52; Pollard, "The Objects and Methods of Bibliographical Collations and Descriptions," Library, 2nd ser., VIII (1907), 193-217.
Also in 1922 Michael Sadleir included a descriptive bibliography of Melville in his Excursions in Victorian Bibliography (pp. 222-233); though briefer than Minnigerode's it provides some additional information, such as the measurement of pages in inches.
Robert E. Spiller, in American Literature, V (1933-34), 372-374, criticized the subjectivity of its biographical and critical comments but considered it "a monument of scholarship." When completed, the whole work was widely reviewed: by Spiller again in American Literature, XIII (1941-42), 75-76; by R. L. Rusk in American Historical Review, XLVI (1941), 922-924; and by Thomas H. Johnson, calling it "a land-mark in American bibliographical scholar-ship" in the New England Quarterly, XIV (1941), 158-161.
E. K. Brown, in American Literature, V (1933-34), 288-290, noted some omissions in the Davis work and its "cursory" attention to English editions.
The earlier (1936) Wesleyan exhibit catalogue of Frost is not descriptive but does give information on binding states.
American Literature, VI (1934-35), 361-364. Langfeld then reviewed Williams's later work in VIII (1936-37), 223-225.
"If You Must Write a Bibliography," Colophon, n.s. II (1936-37), 165-175. Bowers, in Principles, p. 368, comments on the weakness of his position. (One may note here, parenthetically, that Lillian Lippincott's 1937 book, the third so-called "bibliography" of Robinson within seven years, was not descriptive in any sense.)
Blanck, p. 134. Cf. Thomas H. John-son's comment, in the Literary History, that it is "one of the finest single-author American bibliographies" (III, 772), or J. A. Pollard's description of it as "superb" in the New England Quarterly, X (1937), 596-597.
Library, 4th ser., XIV (1933-34), 365-382. At this time John Carter pointed out the way in which author-bibliographies in the preceding twenty-five years had assumed a "predominant place in the total of bibliographical output" — "Stocktaking, 1941," Publishers' Weekly, CXL (1941), 2241-45. Also at this time David Randall and John T. Winterich were providing, in the columns of Publishers' Weekly, a series of excellent bibliographical descriptions of famous novels. Among the American works included were Moby-Dick, The Scarlet Letter, Uncle Tom's Cabin, Ethan Frome, Two Years Before the Mast, Ben-Hur, and Portrait of a Lady — CXXXVII (1940), 255-257, 1181-82, 1931-33; CXXXVIII (1940), 191-192, 1173-75; CXXXIX (1941), 860-862; CXL (1941), 186-187.
The work was actually a rewriting of an earlier bibliography which had appeared in the pages of Heartman's American Book Collector and then separately in 1932.
See reviews by Theodore Hornberger in American Literature, XIII (1941-42), 179-180, and by C. H. Faust in New England Quarterly, XIV (1941), 566-568 (remarking on the incompleteness of the lists of copies and reprintings).
The seven authors are Lew and Susan Wallace, Maurice and Will Thompson, Mary Hannah and Caroline Virginia Krout, and Meredith Nicholson.
Such as Ernest J. Halter's Collecting First Editions of Franklin Roosevelt (1947), which provided no title-page transcriptions but did discuss bindings in some detail; Louis and Esther Mertins's The Intervals of Robert Frost (1947), called a "critical" bibliography but without indication of pagination, collation, or other usual features; Thomas S. Shaw's Carl Sandburg (1948); Carl J. Weber's Jacob Abbott (1948), and Clara C. and Carl J. Weber's Sarah Orne Jewett (1949), with no title-page transcriptions, and notation only of the total number of pages, measurement, and color of cloth; Lucille Adams's Huckleberry Finn (1950), not descriptive at all but with some discussion of bindings; Lee Samuels's A Hemingway Check List (1951); Guy R. Lyle and H. T. Brown's Christopher Morley (1952), supplementing Lee; and Sophie K. Shields's Edwin Markham (1952).
This system was called "highly usable" by C. T. Miller in the New England Quarterly, XXI (1948), 558-559, who also commended the "detailed collations" and considered the work "a model for bibliographies of difficult and extensive subjects." Cf. E. F. Walbridge's review in PBSA, XLII (1948), 264-266.
See the review by John S. Van E. Kohn in PBSA, LII (1958), 326-328, and the letter from R. Toole Stott about color terminology on pp. 329-330; C. W. Barrett reviewed it for the Library, 5th ser., XIV (1959), 68-69.
See Matthew J. Bruccoli's comments on the Nathan in PBSA, LV (1961), 265-266, which point out its failure to take adequate account of later impressions.
Some of the faults of the Anderson are enumerated in my review in Wisconsin Studies in Contemporary Literature, III (1962), 106-112. As for Norris, an early effort to tackle the problem of plated books was Willard E. Martin's "The Establishment of the Order of Printings in Books Printed from Plates: Illustrated in Frank Norris' The Octopus," American Literature, V (1934-35), 17-28. Other lists of these years, which are not — and do not call themselves — bibliographies, have served in the absence of more detailed treatment: catalogues of library exhibits, like Joan Baum and Roland Baughman's L. Frank Baum (Columbia, 1956), or those prepared by John D. Gordan for the New York Public Library and Richard Gimbel for the Yale Library; or checklists of library holdings, like the series from the Barrett Library of the University of Virginia (for example, Bret Harte, 1957; Charles Timothy Brooks, 1960; Edwin Lassetter Bynner, 1961.)
See, for example, his remarks on Davis's Wharton (17 June 1933, pp. 1975-76), Langfeld-Blackburn's Irving (18 November 1933, pp. 1757-58), Robertson's Poe (21 April 1934, pp. 1540-43), Johnson's Mark Twain (22 February 1936, pp. 917-918), or Yost's Millay and Clymer-Green's Frost (15 May 1937, pp. 2034-36). — It should be noted here that, because of the general state of bibliography-reviewing, no attempt has been made in this article to list all the reviews; the ones cited represent a sampling of those which are above the average level or unusual in some respect.
Curt F. Bühler, James G. McManaway, and Lawrence C. Wroth, Standards of Bibliographical Description (1949), p. 118.
This point is often made but cannot be overemphasized. One recent statement of it is by R. A. Sayce, who suggests that the knowledge of compositorial practices which can serve to localize the work of unidentified printers might be considerably furthered if additional (and more detailed) elements were included in bibliographical descriptions. See his "Compositorial Practices and the Localization of Printed Books, 1530-1800," Library, 5th ser., XXI (1966), 45. This more inclusive approach does not, of course, absolve the bibliographer from the chore of arranging material into meaningful (or suggestive) patterns.
There has been an increasing awareness of the importance of English editions of American writers, from the time of I. R. Brussel's Anglo-American First Editions (1936) to Roland L. Shodean's "English Editions of American Authors 1801-1863" (Master's thesis, University of Chicago, 1958) and the recent paper, "Transatlantic Texts," read by Matthew J. Bruccoli to the Bibliographical Society (15 March 1966). Such work as Clarence Gohdes's "A Checklist of Volumes by Longfellow Published in the British Isles During the Nineteenth Century," in Bulletin of Bibliography, XVII (1940), 46ff., will be a great help to the future Longfellow bibliographer, but there has been very little research along these lines.
When the Centennial Edition of Sidney Lanier was being prepared — and for many years it was the only scholarly collected edition of an American author — provision was made for a "bibliography" (by Philip Graham and Frieda C. Thies, in VI [1945], 379-412), but it was only a checklist, with no description.
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