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Archive for 2007

The Luminous Historian, Part III

Remember, this week is your last chance to see the exhibit. We’ll be closed after Friday until the New Year, when I have to take it down.

The first volume of the Decline and Fall was originally planned for a run of 500 copies, but halfway through printing advance demand was such that this was increased to 1,000. Nevertheless, the entire edition sold out within a fortnight, necessitating a second edition of 1,500 copies. This too sold briskly, and the work was in its fourth edition by 1781, notwithstanding the appearance of a cheaper Dublin piracy. This receipt for the profits from the first two editions of the first volume is signed by Gibbon and the publisher, Thomas Cadell.

Edward Gibbon Decline and Fall receipt

Gibbon was just ten years old when his mother died, after which he was largely raised by his aunt, Catherine Porten. Some sense of the bond between them can be gleaned from the gratitude that comes through in his presentation inscription on this volume, despite its 18th century formality.

Eward Gibbon inscription to Catherine Porten

Published in:John Overholt |on December 19th, 2007 |Comments Off on The Luminous Historian, Part III

The Luminous Historian, Part II

As I mentioned last time, Edward Gibbon had a very large personal library, which he kept track of with a then very modern device: the card catalog. Though most of the catalog now resides in the British Library, we’re fortunate enough to have one of his cards which, like the majority of them, is written on the blank back of a playing card, in this case an ace of diamonds. In the exhibit, I’ve propped it up in front of a mirror so that visitors can see both sides of the card.

Edward Gibbon catalog card

In 1774, Gibbon was elected to The Club (also known as The Literary Club) a group founded by Sir Joshua Reynolds and consisting initially of Samuel Johnson’s circle of friends, but eventually expanding to include most of the great minds of the period. Gibbon was apparently admitted over the objections of James Boswell, who disliked him intensely. Gibbon later served as president of The Club, and in that capacity sent this letter to the great Shakespearean scholar Edmond Malone, informing him of his admission.

Edward Gibbon welcomes Edmund Malone to The Club

One more post still to come, hopefully before the exhibit ends!

Published in:John Overholt |on December 2nd, 2007 |Comments Off on The Luminous Historian, Part II

“Luminous Historian” makes the news!

Ken Gewertz of the Harvard University Gazette has written a very nice article about my Edward Gibbon exhibit which is now available online. Sadly you’ll have to locate a print copy to see the picture of me, or more specifically, my left hand and a bit of my favorite tie.

Published in:John Overholt |on November 15th, 2007 |Comments Off on “Luminous Historian” makes the news!

The Luminous Historian, Part I

This week I put up my first exhibit as Assistant Curator: “Edward Gibbon: The Luminous Historian”. Christopher Jones, a professor in the Classics Department is teaching a course this semester on Gibbon, the renowned author of The History of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. You’ll have to stop by Houghton to see the full exhibit, which will be up until December 22nd, but I thought I’d share a few highlights here.

Gibbon was a passionate book collector (in fact he once compared his library to a seraglio) but it was more than just a hobby: his tremendous collection of original sources in Roman history made the Decline and Fall possible. Houghton owns several books from Gibbon’s library, but I chose to show his copy of Taylor’s Elements of the Civil Law because it bears not only his simple booklabel, but also his less common armorial bookplate.

Edward Gibbon Booklabel

Edward Gibbon Bookplate

Perhaps the best way to get a sense of the scale of Gibbon’s library is this bill from a master cabinet-maker named Bocion, who constructed the library in Gibbon’s house in Lausanne, Switzerland. This is just page one of three, and the total comes to over £700. As we’ll see in a later installment, that’s almost as much as Gibbon was paid for the first volume of the Decline and Fall.

Edward Gibbon Bocion Receipt

Stay tuned for more from this exhibit.

Published in:John Overholt |on November 4th, 2007 |Comments Off on The Luminous Historian, Part I

Going once, going twice, sold!

Bloomsbury auction house is selling this amazing Rowlandson watercolor of an early 19th-century book auction on 10/24. Anybody got $40,000-60,000 to lend me?

Published in:John Overholt |on October 22nd, 2007 |Comments Off on Going once, going twice, sold!

Discoveries in the back stacks, Part II

Clearly the second-greatest work of literature whose title starts “Boswell’s Life of …”

Boswell's Life of Boswell

Published in:John Overholt |on October 8th, 2007 |Comments Off on Discoveries in the back stacks, Part II

Discoveries in the back stacks, Part I

I moved offices last week, and in the process of cleaning up and putting things away, I found a few interesting odds and ends that show how truly thorough the Hydes were as collectors.

It looks like this calendar will be right again in 2010, but don’t worry, I won’t tear off the pages.

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Published in:John Overholt |on September 30th, 2007 |Comments Off on Discoveries in the back stacks, Part I

This is why we can’t have nice things

Samuel Johnson was certainly a man who provoked strong reactions, both positive and negative, during his life. Apparently he retains that power centuries later:

An art vandal who repeatedly struck at a £1.7m Joshua Reynolds portrait with a hammer has caused more than £10,000 worth of damage to the painting held at the National Portrait Gallery. Mark Paton, 44, from Ilford, east London, yesterday pleaded guilty to damaging the 18th century portrait of Samuel Johnson – one of the gallery’s most prized works – shortly before closing time on August 8.

(Via the Bibliothecary Blog and Philobiblos)

Published in:John Overholt |on August 20th, 2007 |Comments Off on This is why we can’t have nice things

Garrick at the Folger

I had the pleasure of touring the Folger Shakespeare Library yesterday while I was in Washington for the ALA Annual Meeting. In addition to its world-famous Shakespeare holdings, it has an outstanding collection relating to Johnson’s lifelong Lichfield friend David Garrick. A very nice online exhibition and sampling of the Folger’s Garrick resources is available here.

Published in:John Overholt |on June 26th, 2007 |Comments Off on Garrick at the Folger

A pint of your best bitter, please

A question from a patron led me to look through the iconography collection for the first time. It’s six boxes full of loose prints and photographs of Johnsonian interest, and I suspect I’ll find lots of interesting things to post here. These beer labels caught my eye right away.

After Henry Thrale’s death in 1781, Samuel Johnson (as executor of Henry’s will) and Hester Thrale sold his Anchor Brewery to the newly formed Barclay Perkins & Co., who would operate it until their 1955 merger with Courage Ltd., later Scottish & Newcastle. On a visit to England in 1950, the Hydes visited the Anchor Brewery, and later obtained these Barclay Perkins beer labels which pay tribute to the brewery’s connection with Samuel Johnson.

Barclay Perkins beer labels

Barclay Perkins letter to Donald Hyde

Published in:John Overholt |on May 1st, 2007 |Comments Off on A pint of your best bitter, please

Big Hyde Collection news!

First of all, I’ve finished cataloging the books, as has Rick Stattler with the manuscripts, so the entirety of the collection is now findable through HOLLIS and OASIS. Secondly, I’ve been hired to stay on permanently as Assistant Curator. I’m grateful to Tom Horrocks, Associate Librarian for Collections and Acting Curator of the Hyde Collection, for giving me this opportunity, and I’m tremendously excited that I’ll get to continue to work with this wonderful collection. Now that I’m done cataloging, there will be fewer updates to the Catablog, but thanks to the Hydes’ generosity, we will continue to acquire new and interesting items for the collection, and when we do, I’ll be telling you about them here.

Published in:John Overholt |on April 27th, 2007 |Comments Off on Big Hyde Collection news!

Johnsoniana on the Internet Archive

Although Google’s book digitization program is the one that gets most of the attention (and Harvard’s cooperation) an equally worthy project is also underway at the Internet Archive. They’ve already scanned in an impressive selection of Samuel Johnson books and related works, as well as books by James Boswell and Hester Thrale Piozzi. I especially like the fact that the scans can be either viewed in your browser through their “flip book” interface, or downloaded as a high-resolution, searchable PDFs (look for the entries that have a rotating series of thumbnail images next to them).

Published in:John Overholt |on February 26th, 2007 |Comments Off on Johnsoniana on the Internet Archive

Presented without further comment

From John Wilkes’ annotated first edition copy of James Boswell’s The Life of Samuel Johnson, LL.D.

Wilkes' Boswell (1)

Published in:John Overholt |on January 15th, 2007 |Comments Off on Presented without further comment