Lyman Harry Koopman - The Booklover and His Books
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Project Gutenberg's The Booklover and His Books, by Harry Lyman Koopman
This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net
Title: The Booklover and His Books
Author: Harry Lyman Koopman
Release Date: September 15, 2007 [EBook #22606]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE BOOKLOVER AND HIS BOOKS ***
Produced by Suzanne Lybarger, Meghan, and the booksmiths
at http://www.eBookForge.net
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected in this text. For a complete list, please see the bottom of this document.
From the copy in the Library of Brown University
HIS BOOKS
BOSTON
THE BOSTON BOOK COMPANY
1917
Copyright, 1916,
By The Boston Book Company
THE UNIVERSITY PRESS, CAMBRIDGE, U. S. A.
THE AUTHORS AND THEIR PRINTERS
WHO HAVE GIVEN US
THE BOOKS THAT WE LOVE
HE following chapters were written during a series of years as one aspect after another of the Book engaged the writer's attention. As they are now brought together, the result is not a systematic treatise, but rather a succession of views of one many-sided subject. In consequence there is considerable overlapping. The writer hopes, however, that this will be looked upon not as vain repetition but as a legitimate reinforcement of his underlying theme, the unity in diversity of the Book and the federation of all who have to do with it. He therefore offers the present volume not so much for continuous reading as for reading by chapters. He trusts that for those who may consult it in connection with systematic study a sufficient clue to whatever it may contain on any given topic will be found in the index.
Most of these chapters appeared as papers in "The Printing Art"; two were published in "The Graphic Arts," and some in other magazines. The writer expresses his thanks to the proprietors of these periodicals for the permission to republish the articles in their present collective form. All the papers have been revised to some extent. They were originally written in rare moments of leisure scattered through the busy hours of a librarian. Their writing was a source of pleasure, and their first publication brought him many delightful associations. As they are presented in their new attire to another group of readers, their author can wish for them no better fortune than to meetpossibly to makebooklovers.
Brown University Library ,
Commencement Day, 1916
Books and Booklovers |
Fitness in Book Design |
Print as an Interpreter of Meaning |
Favorite Book Sizes |
The Value of Reading |
The Book of To-day and the Book of To-morrow |
A Constructive Critic of the Book |
Books as a Librarian Would Like Them |
The Book Beautiful |
The Reader's High Privilege |
The Background of the Book |
The Chinese Book |
Thick Paper and Thin |
The Clothing of a Book |
Parchment Bindings |
Lest We Forget the Few Great Books |
Printing Problems for Science to Solve |
Types and Eyes: The Problem |
Types and Eyes: Progress |
Exceptions to the Rule of Legibility |
The Student and the Library |
Orthographic Reform |
The Perversities of Type |
A Secret of Personal Power |
Index |
BOOKS
HE booklover is distinguished from the reader as such by loving his books, and from the collector as such by reading them. He prizes not only the soul of the book, but also its body, which he would make a house beautiful, meet for the indwelling of the spirit given by its author. Love is not too strong a word to apply to his regard, which demands, in the language of Dorothy Wordsworth, "a beautiful book, a book to caresspeculiar, distinctive, individual: a book that hath first caught your eye and then pleased your fancy." The truth is that the book on its physical side is a highly organized art object. Not in vain has it transmitted the thought and passion of the ages; it has taken toll of them, and in the hands of its worthiest makers these elements have worked themselves out into its material body. Enshrining the artist's thought, it has, therefore, the qualities of a true art product, and stands second only to those which express it, such as painting and sculpture; but no other art product of its own order, not the violin nor the jewel-casket, can compare with the book in esthetic quality. It meets one of the highest tests of art, for it can appeal to the senses of both beauty and grandeur, either separately, as in the work of Aldus and of Sweynheym and Pannartz, or together, as in that of Jenson.
Books have doubtless had their lovers in all ages, under all their forms. Even the Assyrian clay tablet, if stamped with the words of poet or sage, might have shared the affection which they inspired. So might the papyrus roll of the Egyptian, and so does even to-day the parchment book of the middle ages, whenever its fortunate owner has the soul of a booklover. From this book our own was derived, yet not without a break. For our book is not so much a copy of the Roman and medieval book as a "substitute" for it, a machine product made originally to sell at a large profit for the price of hand-work. It was fortunate for the early printed book that it stood in this intimate if not honored relation to the work of the scribes and illuminators, and fortunate for the book of to-day, since, with all its lapses, it cannot escape its heritage of those high standards.
Mr. John Cotton Dana has analyzed the book into forty elements; a minuter analysis might increase the number to sixty; but of either number the most are subsidiary, a few controlling. The latter are those of which each, if decided upon first, determines the character of the rest; they include size, paper, and type. The mention of any size, folio, quarto, octavo, twelvemo, sixteenmo, calls up at once a distinct mental picture of an ideal book for each dimension, and the series is marked by a decreasing thickness of paper and size of type as it progresses downward from the folio. The proportions of the page will also vary, as well as the surface of the paper and the cut of the type, the other elements conforming to that first chosen.
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