II
Thus launched, the journal proceeded steadily to make its annual
appearance, presenting the same mix of bibliographical and textual scholarship.
Although The Library had already shown its hospitality
to textually oriented bibliographical analysis, Bowers was clearly staking out
this area as a particular concern: what one could infer as a direction in the
first volume was confirmed in the succeeding ones. (With the second volume, the
title became the now familiar Studies in Bibliography--
often referred to in short form as Studies or
SB, which I shall use interchangeably--and the old main
title, which Bowers thought too parochial, became the subtitle, until it was
dropped in 1972.)[5] The second volume (about the same length as the first, containing eleven articles and eight notes) opened
indicatively with an article by William B. Todd that sorted out the early
editions and issues of Matthew Lewis's The Monk. Bowers
had been able to hear an earlier version of this article when it was delivered
before the Society on 17 December 1948, and his request to be allowed to
consider it for publication can stand as a prominent example of a scene that was
repeated many times in later years--Bowers's
securing of articles at the time of
their oral presentation at conferences. The episode also symbolizes Bowers's
willingness--indeed, eagerness--to support the work of unknown scholars, as long
as it was of high quality, for Todd was at that time a graduate student (though
a mature one, whose graduate work had been delayed by European service during
World War II), with no publications to his credit but with a pioneering
University of Chicago dissertation in progress on the application of analytical
bibliography to eighteenth-century English books.
[6] With the publication of Todd's first article coming a year after the publication
of Stevenson's first bibliographical article, Bowers's journal had the
distinction of introducing two major bibliographical scholars in its first two
volumes; and both were loyal to it, Stevenson publishing there four more times
and Todd fifteen more (as of 1997). This nurturing of talent not only resulted
in distinguished contributions but fostered the identity of the journal with a
"school" of bibliographical work and as the place where the most advanced
developments in analytical bibliography were likely to be found.
The second volume contained other analytical pieces, one of them by
Bowers (on type-page width as a clue to compositor identification) and two
others by two of Bowers's students who had received their doctorates a few
months earlier: both Philip Williams, writing on Troilus and
Cressida, and Lawrence G. Starkey, writing on the Cambridge
Platform of 1649, dealt with half-sheet imposition, a
subject treated by Bowers in the preceding volume. The Starkey piece was
notable for being one of the rare instances in which techniques being developed
in the study of Renaissance English books were applied to an early American
imprint. The volume also treated a field not represented in the first volume,
the history of bookbinding, with its inclusion of Eunice Wead's study of early
binding stamps, accompanied by six pages of illustrations. The presence of Paul
S. Dunkin's piece on the imprint of Dryden's Troilus and
Cressida illustrated Bowers's willingness (displayed many times later) to
print articles taking different points of view from his own: Dunkin found
Bowers's 1949 Harvard Library Bulletin article on this
subject unconvincing, and he presented two alternative explanations.[7]
Among the bibliographical scholars reappearing from
the first volume were Giles Dawson and C. William Miller; among those
contributing for the first time were Leslie Hotson and Edwin E. Willoughby.
This volume, as W. W. Greg said in his review, "fully maintains . . . the high
standard set by the first" (
Modern Language Review, 45
[1950], 524). The Society already had reason to take pride in this
accomplishment, and pride is evident in Massey's presidential report for 1949
(dated 11 January 1950):
Largely through the means of a generous grant by the Research Committee
of the University of Virginia, the Society was able to publish on schedule the
second volume of its Studies in Bibliography under the editorship of Mr. Bowers.
Volume One had already received wide acclaim, "establishing a new standard in
bibliography" as one distinguished critic had ventured to assert. Publication
of Volume Two, which is superior to the first in many respects, should vastly
enhance the authority and prestige of the Society. Our thanks are due Mr.
Bowers for his impeccable scholarship on, and his untiring devotion to, this
project.
The "authority and prestige" of the Society were indeed publicized shortly
thereafter (14 July 1950) by the review in the
Times Literary
Supplement, which said that with this volume the Society "firmly
establishes its sponsorship of a journal which should be on the shelves of every
great reference library."
Bowers's role in the immediate success of Studies
went beyond his astute choice of contributors, for he also entered actively into
the shaping of the contributions. Sometimes he offered detailed suggestions for
revision, and at other times he made the revisions himself. George Walton
Williams, Bowers's graduate student at the time of the second volume, has
recently described how Bowers handled his article in that volume:
Bowers sought out from students material that was suitable for
Studies, and he saw to it that what he printed was made even more suitable than it had been. Reading galley proofs on my
second "submission" to
Studies, I was
surprised to find set up in type in the center of my article
paragraphs I had never seen before. When I asked him what had
happened, Bowers acknowledged that they were his: he had had a few
thoughts on the topic of my paper and had just slipped them into my
argument. "That's what a good editor does," he explained. And so his
thoughts became part of my article and were published as if mine.
Some months after publication of these "joint" thoughts, W. W. Greg
commented on them in an article of his; he particularly praised me for
certain insights; they were Bowers's insights, of course. By this
silent editorial accretion, a graduate student was helped on his way,
an article was strengthened, and a volume of
Studies was made a better book. Though such
supplements were, I am sure, rare and probably were not offered to the
work of mature scholars, this one represented the concern for both the
student and the scholarly level of the volume.
[8]
That graduate students were not the only contributors given such assistance is
shown by Curt Bühler's experience in connection with the first volume. In his
review, Bühler explained why he did not regard it a "breach of good taste" to
comment on a publication to which he had contributed: "there may be advantages
in these special conditions since I can testify, not only as a contributor but
also as a very minor assistant in regard to another paper, to the great care
exercised by the editorial board [i.e., Bowers]. It is not too much to say that
Professor Bowers virtually rewrote a whole section of my own contribution." The
fullest comment on this matter in a review appeared in Philip Gaskell's 1953
review of the first five volumes (
Book Collector, 2:
159-160):
Professor Bowers was dissatisfied with many of the current
bibliographical journals, feeling that their editors were too ready to
accept ill-considered or incomplete contributions. It was his
intention that the editor of the Society's chief periodical should be
responsible for the quality of its contents to a greater extent than
had hitherto been thought desirable. The editor, in other words,
would criticize and suggest improvements to papers submitted to him
while they were still in manuscript; and he would not publish anything
unless he were prepared to answer for its reliability.
Whether these remarks had their source in personal experience (since Gaskell was
a contributor to the fifth volume) is not clear, but they do suggest the
editorial care that was a constant in Bowers's handling of
Studies over the next four decades. His willingness to
invest time in the journal is suggested by a comment he made in a letter to
Linton Massey (14 April 1949) when material for the second volume was being
assembled: "These
Papers have really got such a hold on
my imagination that I take them more seriously than anything else I am doing."
Distinguished as the first two volumes were,
Studies fully came into its own with the third volume (dated
1950 and designated as for "1950-1951"), which brought together as impressive a
group of contributors as any volume of bibliographical essays has ever had. It
opened with four major essays on textual matters: R. C. Bald's "Editorial
Problems--A Preliminary Survey," W. W. Greg's "The Rationale of Copy-Text,"
Bowers's "Some Relations of Bibliography to Editorial Problems," and Archibald
A. Hill's "Some Postulates for Distributional Study of Texts." All four had
been delivered at the English Institute on 9 September 1949, and Bowers's
chairing of the bibliographical part of the program indicates
how these papers
came to reside in
Studies.
[9] He was particularly pleased to secure Greg's essay,
which (as he reported to Massey on 16 September 1949) he "had been sweating
blood to get." This "magnificent paper," which Bowers had in fact helped Greg
to formulate, was to become one of the most seminal papers in the history of
English scholarship. Its argument for constructing authorially intended texts
of Renaissance drama--by combining wording from revised editions with the
punctuation and spelling of early editions--served as the point of departure and
often of contention for textual critics throughout the next half-century.
[10]
Following these articles came pieces by Curt F. Bühler, the bookbinding
scholar Ernst Kyriss, Philip Williams, Charlton Hinman (who had written a
doctoral dissertation under Bowers's direction in 1941 and who was to become the
leading analytical bibliographer with the publication in 1963 of
The Printing and Proof-Reading of the First Folio of
Shakespeare), C. William Miller, William B. Todd (contributing a basic
article on press figures), Rollo G. Silver (who was to become the most
distinguished historian of American printing), and J. Albert Robbins. These
twelve articles by themselves came to more pages than either of the first two
volumes, and they were followed by fourteen bibliographical notes (ranging from
Chaucer to Poe) and "A Selective Check List of Bibliographical Scholarship for
1949," which brought the total number of pages to 314, a hundred more than the
earlier volumes. It is easy to see why John Carter, writing anonymously in the
Times Literary Supplement for 23 March 1951, said that
"for the interest and importance of its contributions this third volume of
Professor Bowers's periodical must take its place in the first rank of such
publications anywhere in the world."
When, a year later, the fourth volume appeared in hard covers--grayish
blue paper-covered
boards with paper labels on the spine and front cover
Studies had assumed most of the formal features that would
characterize it in the ensuing decades. The first three volumes were bound in
stiff paper wrappers--cream for the first volume, medium blue for the second,
and reddish orange for the third. Labels on paper-covered boards continued to
be the pattern through Volume 19 (1966), after which the casing was cloth, with
stamped panels replacing the paper labels. (The only later change in the
appearance of the volumes on the shelf was the reduction in leaf size as of
Volume 31 [1978] and the consequent shortening of the spine height from 10" to 9
1/2".) With each year's casing in a different color (pair of colors, actually,
since the panels differed from the basic cloth), the ever-growing presence of
SB on the shelf has been a colorful one from the start
(and now amounts to a six-foot display).
Inside the volumes, small changes in design took place in the early
years: the separate title leaves for major articles were eliminated as of the
second volume (a change praised by W. H. Bond, who had found those titles
"rather heavy" when he reviewed this volume in the first number of
Shakespeare Quarterly in January 1950);[11] and the layout of the major article openings was
revised in the second and again in the third volume, at which point it achieved
the form that has been followed ever since, with the title and author's name
(joined on an intervening line with an italic "by")
placed between a double rule (above) and a single rule (below). (See Figure 7.)
The size of the text block on each page has remained virtually the same from the
third volume (about 7" x 4 3/4"), though with the reduction of leaf size in 1978
the margins obviously became smaller (and, beginning in the same volume, the
layout of footnotes changed from double- to single-column).[12] The Garamont type of the early volumes gave way for
several years to Granjon and then, in Volume 9 (1957), to Linotype Baskerville,
which has been used ever since; the last identifiable use of Strathmore Pastelle
was in Volume 14 (1961), from which point the deckle edges also vanished.[13] As each of the first four volumes shows, halftone
illustrations on coated paper were included when useful,
and later volumes
continued this practice. Although the absence of a colophon in many volumes
after the eleventh (1958) makes tracking the printers uncertain, it can be said
that in the earlier years the printer was likely to be the William Byrd Press of
Richmond, Virginia, and in more recent years Heritage Printers of Charlotte,
North Carolina.
Most of the printed matter outside the body of articles and notes evolved
to its standard form in the first few volumes as well. The major development
was the inclusion in Volume 3 of a current checklist of bibliographical
scholarship; such a listing became a prominent feature of
Studies through Volume 27 (1974), often amounting to twenty
double-column pages in small type and conveying a sense that
Studies was not simply an annual but a yearbook, despite its
policy of not including book reviews. (More on these lists below, in section
III.) Another change involved a discontinuation rather than an addition: the
elimination of advertising. In the first volume, as promised in the prospectus,
there was a section called "Informative Listings"--that is, classified
advertisements--following the "Notes on Contributors" (which have continued ever
since to be the first element in the end matter). This department did not
flourish, with five listings of book dealers in Volume 1 and fourteen in Volume
2. It did not appear thereafter, but in Volumes 4 and 5 display advertising was
accepted and placed at the beginning of the volumes. Henry Stevens, Son &
Stiles took a full-page advertisement in both volumes (in Volume 4 it faced the
title page), and in each volume there were nine half-page advertisements
(including some for major firms, such as Berès, Eberstadt, Rosenbach, and Seven
Gables). No advertising appeared in any volume after the fifth. Information
about the Society, divided between the preliminaries and the final pages in the
first three volumes, was interspersed among the advertisements in Volume 4 and
entirely moved in Volume 5 to the last pages, where it has remained. One other
way--it may be noted in passing--in which the first five volumes were different
from those that followed is that they were dated in terms of academic years,
which incorporate parts of two calendar years (such as "1948-1949"), whereas
beginning with Volume 6 (1954) each volume has been assigned a single calendar
year (for more on this point, see footnote 26 below).
As for the financial situation of the journal during its first five
years, some glimpse is afforded by the Society's balance sheets that were
published in the Secretary's News Sheet. Because the
Society was bringing out other monographs at the same time and because they were
sent without further charge to dues-paying members, it is not realistic to look
at the finances of Studies in isolation. But it is
clear that the printing costs for Studies were by far
the Society's largest expense (running about $2200
for Volumes 2 and 4, $3200
for Volume 5, and $3700 for Volume 3--in a budget where most items were in the
low hundreds of dollars, if not below $100); and it is also evident that dues
(which increased from $2.50 to $4.50 as of the second volume) and sales to
nonmembers would not have covered these costs if there had not been
contributions from the University's Research Committee (amounting, for example,
to $1500 for Volume 2 and $1700 for Volume 3), the Richmond Area University
Center, and--most important of all--a perennial anonymous donor (in fact, Linton
Massey).
[14] With those contributions, however, the Society did not show a deficit in any of these years, even though none of the
thousand-copy editions sold out until later. One would not of course have
expected these editions to be exhausted quickly, and the sales of Volume 1 were
in fact encouraging; a year after its publication, about half the edition
remained in stock, and thus about a hundred copies had been sold to nonmembers--
a figure that does not seem particularly low when one considers that the journal
was new and that many institutions received their copies through memberships.
The next year 120 more copies of Volume 1 were sold; and by January 1954, just
after the publication of Volume 6, the total remaining stock of the first five
volumes was 1200--the figures for individual volumes ranging from 163 for Volume
2 to 333 for Volume 4.
The scholarly contents of the fourth and fifth volumes reflected the now
well-established pattern. The fourth one (for 1951-52) contained nine articles
and fifteen notes (totaling 237 pages), with important contributions by several
familiar names--McManaway, Todd, Stevenson, Dawson, Pace, Bühler, and Silver--
and major articles by two significant newcomers, G. I. Duthie (on the text of
Romeo and Juliet) and Ralph Green (on early American
power printing presses). The fifth volume (for 1952-53), with eleven articles
and fourteen notes (totaling 230 pages),[15] opened imaginatively with an essay on "Problems of Literary
Executorship" by Norman
Holmes Pearson, whose experience with this subject was legendary. It also
contained, along with more work by Todd and Bühler, the first contributions from
two important bibliographers, Philip Gaskell and Allen T. Hazen (the former with
his influential study of eighteenth-century type sizes and the latter with one
of his investigations of eighteenth-century paper). Among the comments made in
reviews of these volumes was a lament (in the
Times Literary
Supplement review of the fourth volume on 7 March 1952) that so little work
on books after 1800 had appeared in the pages of
Studies. Bowers's reply (published in the number for 9 May
1952) gives further hint of his active pursuit of contributions: "we are
particularly conscious of an imbalance in our material, and we do our best to
beat the bushes for contributions treating more recent books. If we do not
print more of such studies it is solely because we are not offered more and
cannot secure them by personal solicitation." The spirit conveyed by these
first five volumes was effectively caught by Philip Edwards in his review of the
fifth one for
Shakespeare Quarterly in 1953 (4: 185-
187): "Professor Fredson Bowers has created a new aristocracy in the world of
bibliography, and the works he has here collected (so often revealing his own
inspiration) have that kind of energy and sense of discovery which moved the
Bibliographical Society [of London] in the days of Pollard, Greg, and McKerrow."