Subject: Reading
I see in Douglas Leighton, _Modern Bookbinding: A Survey and a Prospect_ (1935), 7: J. M. Dent... in his Memoirs... tells how,... apprenticed... to a bookbinder,... while... working at the bench... he acquired much of that knowledge of literature which later in life stood him in good stead. `Many an hour,' he writes, `was taken up by dipping into books which I was binding, which had to be made up by working late into the night.' To that reminiscence there is an interesting parallel in the life of another great son of the bookbinding trade, Michael Faraday, who, so the tale goes, owed his introduction to Sir Humphry Davy to his having been discovered by a customer studying a book which he should have been binding. Likewise I see in Thomas James Holmes, _The Education of a Bibliographer, an Autobiographical Essay_ (1957), 1-13, passim: I spent three summers working in the library of the Duke of Sutherland.... In that ancestral library of some twenty thousand volumes... I widened my acquaintance with European and Classic literature. I was delighted to find there and to read much of a XVI century illuminated vellum manuscript of Boccaccio in English, a fine old quarto edition of Froissart, a noble folio of Holinshed's Chronicles. In the Duke's room I found a volume of Gaelic ballads in English, the reading of which kindled my interest in ballad lore. Many other gems of the older literature I found in that great library.... When I arrived in London the Bookbinder's Union had won its demand for an eight-hour day.... The employers... compensated themselves by abolishing the leisurely approach to the day's work. Time clocks measured time by minutes to be accounted for exactly.... Gone were the privileges and perquisites allowed in former years. No longer was there an occasional glance at the text of a book.... On Monday, October 14, [1902] I began work at the celebrated Club Bindery in that city [New York].... In New York, bookbinders, I found, followed the long day and leisurely system I had known in Newcastle, Staffordshire. Even after the general adoption of the eight-hour day, about 1906, the private Club Bindery was excepted from it. The long hours--6:30 a.m. to 6 p.m.--and the unhurried, tranquil, Old World atmosphere of the remarkable Club Bindery afforded its forwarder many a surreptitious reading of a passage or page in the hundreds of treasured volumes which came to us for binding. During the lunch hours of several days I recall... reading Robert Burton's world-famous Anatomy of Melancholy in the... first (1621) edition.... I made fair progress in reading Chaucer's English in his Caxton edition.... It may be significant that the modern commercialization of the craft of bookbinding, like the commercialization of printing, has left no room in the shortened, intensified work day for any leisurely admixture of scholarship with craftsmanship or industry.... Question: Do bookbinders still read the books that they bind--and by extension conservators the books that they treat? Recognizing that the answer to this question may be a trade secret, I will be happy to preserve the anonymity of respondents by receiving replies directly and summarizing to the list. Donald Farren 4009 Bradley Lane, Chevy Chase, MD 20815 301-951-9479 Fax: 301-951-9479 *** Conservation DistList Instance 8:89 Distributed: Sunday, May 7, 1995 Message Id: cdl-8-89-010 ***Received on Wednesday, 3 May, 1995