University of Virginia Library

Search this document 
  
  
  
  

expand section 
collapse section 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
Thomas J. Wise and the Pre-Restoration Drama
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
  
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
expand section 
  
expand section 
expand section 
  
  
expand section 
expand section 
  
expand section 
  
  
  
  
  
expand section 
  

Thomas J. Wise and the Pre-Restoration Drama

Later in the fifties Foxon increased his public profile through a
further and more dramatic encounter with T. J. Wise. In a letter to The
Times
of 18 October 1956 he revealed that Wise had been sophisticating
his own books with leaves stolen from copies in the British Museum
Library. The extraordinary bibliographical authority Wise had assumed
in the early years of the century had already been severely dented by
John Carter and Graham Pollard in An Enquiry into the Nature of
Certain Nineteenth Century Pamphlets
(London, 1934), but Foxon's
researches revealed a different order of villainy.[18]

Foxon's discovery came from his cataloguing the Ashley Library,
and began with a typical small puzzle. Ben Jonson's The Case is Alter'd
turned out to have four leaves at the end inlaid, with missing elements
at the head and tail of each leaf restored in pen-and-ink facsimile. When
Foxon checked the Museum's copies, one turned out to lack just those
leaves, and to be cropped at head and tail. This set Foxon in search of
stolen Museum leaves, first in the Ashley Library and then in the library
Wise had helped assemble for John Henry Wrenn in Texas. After preliminary
announcements in The Times and the TLS, the whole business
was thoroughly examined in a short monograph, published as a supplement
to the Bibliographical Society's publications in 1959. The results
of the investigation were striking. In all, 206 leaves were stolen
from the Museum's copies; 89 of them were found in Ashley copies and
60 in Wrenn copies; 15 more were suspected but the copies had not been
examined. Of the 47 plays with missing leaves, 41 have had at least some
of their leaves traced.


95

Page 95

Foxon's account is remarkably free from censoriousness. Wise's behaviour
is studied with the same dispassionate interest that Foxon might
have granted the practices of an eighteenth-century printer, and, significantly,
with the same sense of historical perspective. The second
section of the essay describes the turn-of-the-century patterns of behaviour
that made Wise's frauds comparatively easy. There was a general
willingness among collectors to make up plays with loose leaves
that they might have lying around. Wise makes no secret of it; Gosse
and Aitken accepted the practice without question; Wrenn makes no
objection. Wise, however, took the practice to new lengths by developing
a regular habit of exchanging leaves in his own copies for those in
copies he was selling to Wrenn. Of course this confused the bibliographical
evidence, and Foxon gives two nice examples of Wise discarding
bibliographically valuable leaves because of their inferior appearance:

The Ashley copy of Eastward Hoe, 1605, is the only recorded copy of the first
issue of the first edition; yet because its title was cropped he exchanged it
with that from the third edition . . . which he sold to Wrenn. Two copies of
Ben Jonson's The Alchemist, 1612, were intermingled; in the course of this
Wise discarded an unrecorded cancelland, no doubt because it had been slit
as a reminder to the binder'

(6).

The first section of the essay demonstrates that Wise had taken this
practice further by stealing leaves from the copies in the Museum. It
sketches the conditions under which Wise would have had access to the
books, and the lack of supervision so distinguished a figure would
have enjoyed. Wise probably took the books home at night, removed
the leaves, and returned them in the morning. Foxon calculates that
the financial gains Wise would have made by the thefts bore no relation
to the risk of discovery and disgrace: `clearly there are irrational motives
at work which are beyond the scope of this enquiry' (5).

The final section of the discussion turns to technical matters and the
evidence for Wise's thefts. Wise made no attempt to match up watermarks
or chain lines, and most of his made-up copies can be detected
through absence of conjugacy. Evidence to identify a leaf with its source
may come from a number of indicators: stab-holes (with a discussion of
problems from refolding and binding); worm-holes and patterns of
worm-holes; stains; and flaws (`foreign bodies', `ill-digested lumps',
`wrinkles') which the binder presses into adjacent leaves. These forms
of evidence then become the basis for the fascinating discussions that
follow in the list of `Plays with Stolen Leaves'. Each entry gives the Greg
reference number, the details of the missing leaves in the Museum
copies, and the description of the Ashley and/or Wrenn copy. The information
is presented economically, but the typical final line, `Conclusion:


96

Page 96
The stolen leaf is in the Ashley copy', is thoroughly earned.

This study is another venture involving collaborators—Fannie E.
Ratchford, Emeritus Curator of the Wrenn Library, who travelled with
the Wrenn books from Texas, is thanked with eleven other individuals—
but the skill lay in the initial identification of the theft, the recognition
of what further needed doing to advance the enquiry, and the martialling
of the evidence in a particularly accessible and attractive form. Foxon
himself says,

The primary purpose of this study is to warn students of the early drama of
specific made-up copies, and to reconstruct as far as possible their constituent
parts. It should follow that other made-up copies will be found which
will fill gaps in my reconstructions and bring to light stolen Museum leaves
as yet untraced. But above all I hope that it may encourage bibliographers
to cast a critical eye on the copies from which they are working so that they
may not be led into error or waste of time by past sophistication.

Given the importance of the British Museum Library as a source for
texts of early drama, the first of these aims is an important one, but
Thomas J. Wise and the Pre-Restoration Drama is also successful in
giving readers a set of clear techniques for investigating sophisticated
copies.

 
[18]

Foxon liked Wilfred Partington's Thomas J. Wise in the Original Cloth: The Life
and Record of the Forger of the Nineteenth-Century Pamphlets
(London, 1946), which tells
the story as it was known before Foxon's own discoveries. For subsequent reflections, see
note 23.