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CHAPTER X.

Literary Pursuits of Booksellers and Printers. Gesner; Aldus Manu

tius, Paul, and Aldus the Younger; R. Stephens; H. Stephens ; Scapula; Colinæus; Badius; Froben; Oporinus; Ruddiman; Bowyer; Nichols; Richardson.

MANY of our readers are probably familiar with the English translation of the popular German work, the Death of Abel. SOLOMON GESNER, the celebrated author of this production, and of many others written in a similar style that rank high in the literature of his native country, carried on the business of a bookseller at Zurich, in Switzerland. In his case, how

ever, as in that of the Dutch poet, Vondel, whom we have already mentioned, the cares and interruptions of business were, during the latter part of his life, rendered less annoying by the attention of his wife, who is said to have charged herself with the principal management of his commercial concerns, that he might have more leisure for literature. But it was amid the drudgery of the shop that almost all his earliest studies were carried on, and his literary taste nourished. We are told that Gesner was accounted a dunce by his first schoolmaster, who predicted that he never would get beyond reading and writing; and yet the person who was thus unsuccessful in developing, or even discerning, the talents of the future poet, was no other than the celebrated Bodmer, one of the distinguished names of German literature, and who afterwards became a great poet himself. This anecdote shews that even genius will not always discover genius in another; although possibly some may think that Bodmer must have been but an indifferent

teacher, whatever he was in another capacity. Young Gesner was afterwards sent by his father, who, like himself, was a bookseller in Zurich, to the house of a clergyman in the neighbourhood, who, having probably no poetical powers of his own, had more leisure to attend to the intellectual character of his pupil, and soon drew forth from the condemned dunce no doubtful indications of the light that was hidden within. But the young poet was after some time removed from the care of this congenial, or judicious, instructor, and despatched to Berlin, to take up his abode with a bookseller of that city, in quality of his apprentice or shop-boy. Here he was of course surrounded with books; but, either disliking the business, or not finding that it left him sufficient leisure to derive much advantage from the treasuries of knowledge that were within his reach, he soon abandoned it, and took lodgings, under the idea of supporting himself by poetry and paintingfor he had already, without having any one to give him lessons, begun to apply himself also to the latter In this scheme he encountered at the outset the difficulties which naturally beset one in his situation. There was no deficiency of talent, but a sad lack of experience, and ignorance of many things that a person more regularly instructed could not have failed to know. Having shewn his verses to some of his literary acquaintances, he was told that they were so awkwardly constructed that he certainly never would be a poet, and advised to turn his attention forthwith to some less difficult species of composition. His paintings were still more literally the efforts of his own unaided genius than even his poetry. Here he had neither any model to imitate, nor was even acquainted with the elementary rules and most common methods and processes of the art. He had covered the walls of his humble lodging with land

art.

scapes, and he one day prevailed upon a painter of some reputation and talent, who resided in the city, to come to see what he had done. His visitor had taste enough to discern the genius that animated many parts of his strange and lawless performances; but was not at all surprised, when, upon asking him after what models he worked, he was told that he had no models, and that the whole was merely the inspiration of his own invention. He was somewhat amused, however, when Gesner, in his ignorance of the way of managing his oil-colours, complained to him that his pictures never dried. The end of all this was, as might have been anticipated, that the runaway was soon forced to throw himself once more upon the protection of his friends, when he was again placed by his father at his own business. He did not, however, relinquish literature; and although his first productions were not very flatteringly received, he persevered in writing and publishing until he had established for himself a distinguished reputation. He began, too, after some years to add to his other employments that of an engraver, having already matured his taste and skill in painting by the study of the great masters of the Flemish school. The father of his wife possessed a valuable collection, the inspection of which had the effect of strongly exciting his early ardour. The remainder of Gesner's life was divided between his business, his duties as a public man, (for he had now become a member of the legislative council of his native city,) and those different intellectual occupations and elegant arts in each of which he had attained so honourablé a celebrity. His works were not only in general published by himself, but often embellished with engravings by his own hand from his own designs. Many of them were still more popular in other parts of Europe, especially in France, than even in Ger

many; and among the testimonies of affection and respect which he received from his foreign admirers, he was presented with a gold medal by the Empress Catherine of Russia. He died of an attack of apoplexy, in 1788, in the fifty-eighth year of his

age.

A pretty long catalogue, indeed, might be given of literary booksellers and printers, among whom, in former times especially, even profound learning was not uncommon. At the head of this list would stand the celebrated ALDUS MANUTIUS, one of the earliest of the Italian printers, whose services to literature, and we may add to civilization, it is scarcely possible to Manutius received a learned education, and passed the early part of his life in literary pursuits, and in the society of some of the most distinguished scholars of his time. He was forty years

enumerate.

old before he set about the establishment of his printing office at Venice; and it was six years later before the first production of his press made its appearance. The period, therefore, of his labours as a printer, as he died at the age of sixty-six, only extended over twenty years; and even this space was broken in upon by various difficulties and interruptions, arising from his limited resources and the distracted condition of the country. The latter cause, on one occasion, obliged him to retire altogether from Venice for above a twelvemonth; when not only was his property pillaged during his absence, but he himself, on quitting the city of Milan, in which he had taken refuge, was seized as a spy, and consigned to a prison, from which he only obtained his deliverance through the good offices of one of his friends, who happened to be vice-chancellor of the Milanese senate. All this being kept in mind, it is impossible not to be astonished at the immense professional labours of this father of the typographical art. During these

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twenty years, partially disturbed as they were, and in spite of the scanty means by which his spirit of enterprise was frequently cramped and restrained, he gave to the world editions of nearly all the Greek and Roman authors whose works were then known to be in existence-transcribing the text, in almost every instance, from manuscripts which it required the utmost learning, sagacity, and patience to decypher; and, with great critical acumen, selecting from the various readings which presented themselves, those which appeared best entitled to be considered genuine. He was, in fact, the editor of nearly every work which he published; and, in the performance of his duties in that character, had difficulties to struggle with and surmount, with which those that have fallen to the share of the generality of his successors are not for a moment to be compared. And yet it was in these circumstances, as we have said, that he produced, in the course of a few years, the first printed editions of many of the Greek and Roman classics; thus entitling himself, in common with other editors of editiones principes (original editions), to the gratitude of all succeeding times, as not only the author of the earliest general diffusion of this most precious literature, but not improbably the preserver of much of it from irretrievable destruction. Had Manutius not exerted himself as he did to rescue the writings in question from their insecure existence in a few half-defaced and rapidly-perishing manuscripts, and to bestow on them a sure immortality through the printing press, we know not how many of those of them we now possess it might never have been our fate to look upon, nor how much slower that march of civilization might have proceeded which owed to their wide-spread influence so much both of its excitement and of its conquests. For, whatever opinion may be entertained as to the present and future

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