On this page
- Departments (1)
-
Text (4)
-
• • s-rm ^ 1058 The Publishers' Circular...
-
188 Fleet Street, London : December 6, 1881
-
IF the t voices in the air 1 do not, as ...
-
Messrs. Baker &. Sonsof Cliftonwho are m...
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
-
-
Transcript
-
Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
• • S-Rm ^ 1058 The Publishers' Circular...
• • s-rm ^ 1058 The Publishers' Circular ^ 6
188 Fleet Street, London : December 6, 1881
188 Fleet Street , London : December G , 1881
If The T Voices In The Air 1 Do Not, As ...
IF the t voices in the air do not , as of old , proclaim the coming of the Christmas season those whose ways — lead them among book-makers , book-sellers , and book-reviewers can — feel
- - ——« no doub •* ^ t of its * ¦ approach , for /» laden * i ^ shelves "ii , welcome 1 orders - « , and heavy *• ni ght ^ -work tell their ~^*^^ a story with unmistakable significance . And , in truth , books may fairly « r claim their share - ¦» - »» in
^ T ^ r — , ^^ ' ill . the pleasant task of proclaiming the return of the Yule-tide , which all but the misanthrope or the niggard are prepared to greet with hearty welcome , for it is their function to enable us
To meet the spirit of the olden time , and there is no period of the year when we are more disposed to revisit the past , with which the
book—brought in , perchance , as a gift to the little ones by the friend who shares our Christmas fare—forms a powerful link . There is , it may be , a shade of sadness in this view of the great
feast-day of the year , for as we take up many a volume we find ourselves insensibly hearing once more , in the music of its pages , * the sound of a voice that is still' ; and yet Christinas
without these memories , would be but the ghost of its true self . Looked at in this light we turn over the pages of favourite old authors , environed with all the richness of modern binding
and the luxe of thick — toned paper , and we rejoice that , however changed in outward guisethe © books themselves , like true friendship , are still among the few things which do not follow , tie
fashion of the hour , but stay with us until we ourselves pass away . Aiid while we welcome tlie friends of our youth , we look not askance at the new-made treasures fresh from the
mindmint of our own times ; and this year , as in loyalty bound , we give a special word of welcome to the volume in which a Princess of our own Royal House has used her pencil for the
garniture of some beautiful thoughts borrowed from poets of the past and of the present . While the Queen ' s youngest child has thus entered the lists , Her Majesty ' s faithful subjects in
goodly number have followed her example ; and Christmas books , or , in other words , the books which , whether new or old , are primarily intended for use as gifts , come to us in rich
profusion . That the children this year , as last , have the lion's share of the dainties cannot be denied ; but if John Keble was right—and who will venture to dispute it ?—when he wrote :
Oh , say not , dream not heavenly notes To childish ears are vain ,
That the young mind at random floats And cannot catch the strain ,
we may apply the same principle to earthly legend as well as to sacred story , and welcome rather than condemn the effort to fill the little arms with printed page jiand picture . The
ju u ^ r •*• 1 advance made of late years in the various processes of book illustration has been so great that even the ordinary V p icture-book has passed A . into the hig «_? her reg <_ ion of art-work , and the
interesting facsimile of the original edition of ' Goody Two Shoes / which a London publisher has opportunely edited , serves to remind us of the distance travelled since the little
volume , which was then an achievement , was issued with its quaint woodcuts . But while it is meet that at the children's festival' the children should have the first place , we can promise
ample satisfaction for readers of all ages ; and , to prove the sincerity of our words , we invito our readers to join us in our glance at the food which the gods ( yclept the publishers ) have
provided .
Messrs. Baker &. Sonsof Cliftonwho Are M...
Messrs . Baker & . Sonsof Cliftonwho are manufacturers abroadbesides being impUJL porters l > t / JL » , , have XICUVC ; OCJLJUj sent us UO th IiJLJ eir CLA , two LWU aaddenda * U . U . OJ . I . U . < a , of UJL their Hl . t 3 J . JL trade LlctU . CS catalogue UailalUgUtJ . . Among jC \ . llL \ JlLg , the t / Xi «^ jnovelties . h- ' r v- * . ~ - — ture are
medallions 1 Child-life Pictures which are ' is photograp a considerable hic copies serie of s p of ictures scenes in or the events Dresden in the Gallery lives , of and children of sculp . ^ dle ne . . of Messrs . Baker ' s items is a candlestick which gives a light without the help of a can veivt
Prominent frames PpnmiTi , they f among Qmnn form exceeding the +. V » £ > newer r-i / utimi ^ ly articles ot » pretty 4-i / - »! /^ a are o p ictures £ i ^ c paintings nriir « , which fir »/ ya on r \ , -n considering porcelain wnr »/» nlni * i , p rvlomiaa the laques artistic , and O T" » treatment r \ p l" lates l Jl . T . f ^ S . , I n are very 'l '* - ' low in pricethis believe that Baker execute ies lm from kjui 7 hotographic WU
cartes to to iuw irames frames an de pj - i ior for visite -ue . . pnotographs r > hotoDTar jlju In , which ljui » manner nuMmer > thus hs . . These These become we wt ? , ueneve we we an hnd find improved that that Liicit Messrs Messrs ivj Messrs _ revival oaai » . . . ju Baker Baker cuv of the t otter o ffer . old t 5 uiH , in in / miniature t 3 cop uupico varieties varieties . 01 of We mak maiv p n ne ei , , xt o in coin ^ o 1
that wood the , ebony £ . ftne V , -ar oak MfA t « J , medallions AAJk and walnut / AAM of \ A ; paintings as , also scrap and albums statuary , which ' can are at des surprising , irebe worked ly _^ cheap up . into ^ We *
simile comp 1 / AAMfV VAAV lete pictures ' a >^ series A « . * ; and that VVAMIAAAV we every see bookseller ~* that . |^/ LVJLJL the A UJLAAC framed , almost MIAA , \ A KJ p , hotograp > can V * - * l * A be . J suited V hic ^ UUAX , m views *~* l \ J with >_* . KJhJ M . JL of . regard X > , * Eng ^~* * -r * lish » to his scenery article own j . loc ar w V ^ ., . ^ I
Let us not forget the glass inkstands , which are a pretty example of a minor grateful everyone to has the a use enterp for . rising The firm retail at trade Clifton , m for ore especiall preparing y in articles the country which commend , have reason theins ° . 1 I
by their artistic < get up ' and are readily saleable on account of their extreme cxieapiw [ Yidej ^ age ^^^
-
-
Citation
-
Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), Dec. 6, 1881, page 1058, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_06121881/page/2/
-