In 1809, the
Englishmen Thomas Frognall Dibdin published a detailed description of a disease
that was instantly recognizable in the manifestation of a few key symptoms: a desire
for black letter, a passion for luxurious illustrations, and an intense focus
on first editions. These were indicators
of bibliomania or the book-madness, which Dibdin
outlined in his treatise. The bibliomaniac was
easily seduced by the physicality of
books: fine bindings and elaborate
frontispieces were more valuable than content. Bibliomania was described
as a feverish passion that could quickly escalate into hoarding. In extreme
cases, the bibliophile might not have any intention of actually reading the
prized books in his possession. Dibdin followed his original eighty-page tract
with a new edition in 1811 that was ten times longer; the swollen second
edition literally embodied the concept of the disease with its extensive
bibliographic footnotes, supplements, and not one, but three indexes—one chronological,
one bibliographical, and one general.[1]
Dibdin, a bibliographer and
book collector himself, was showing
all the signs of being gravely stricken by the disease. Bibliomania was, of course, a
mock exposition that treated book collecting as pathology. As the founder of
the Roxburghe Club—one of the world’s
oldest societies for bibliophiles—Dibdin’s work was a clever satire of the
elite English book collecting culture in which he and his friends proudly
participated. In jest, he remarked that bibliomania was raging in Europe, with
England being disproportionately afflicted. In reality, only a very small
subset of the population could afford to fall ill.
By the late
nineteenth century, however, American newspapers were reporting that the
disease had crossed the Atlantic. Often employed sardonically, bibliomania was
also used more earnestly in print social commentary on elite American culture. Employing
Dibdin’s rhetoric, newspapers and magazines ran stories that covered the
highest selling items at book auctions, described the country’s largest private
collections, and detailed the increasing interest in books as pricy
commodities. Some Gilded-Age articles also suggested that book collecting was becoming
a legitimate social ill. As early as December of 1845, the Boston
Evening Transcript
described bibliomania as “a complaint formerly of rare occurrence” in the United
States, which was prevailing “to an alarming extent.”[2] While
Washington’s Daily National Intelligencer
defined bibliomania as an amabilis
insania, or a pleasing madness, some depictions of book collecting were
more scathing; in 1878, The New York Times asked, “When will Bibliomania cease?”
and lamented that it had been “predicted over and over again that it must come to
an end.”[3]
The next year, the Times republished an opinion piece from England’s popular magazine The
Fortnightly Review that chided: “Collecting rare books and forgotten
authors is perhaps, of all the
collecting manias, the most foolish
in our day.”[4] Book
collecting was comparable to other trivial pursuits, such as a penchant for collecting
rare china or “curious beetles,” but the author noted “china is occasionally beautiful; and the beetles,
at least, are droll.”[5] Bibliomania, according to the article,
“seizes hold of rational beings and so perverts them, that in the sufferer’s
mind the human race exists for the sake of the books, and not the books
for the sake of the human race.”[6]
Dibdin’s work was satire, but these selections from The New York Times reflect
a sincere anxiety over book collecting as a form of idolatry.[7]
Despite its
association with extreme materialism,
American bibliomania proved to have some social
good in the last decades of the century. By
the 1870s, most of the country’s original book collectors—men like John Carter
Brown, James Lenox, George Brinley—were dead.[8]
As a result, their abundant private libraries were auctioned off, initiating a
new wave of interest in the purchase and preservation of books, especially
those with American content. Many of these books were bought by the first state
historical societies and public libraries in the U.S., including the Library of
Congress. Some bibliophiles also collected with an explicit intention of
leaving a cultural legacy. James Lenox, for example, inherited a fortune from
his father, a wealthy merchant
and landowner in Manhattan and retired young to collect books. He originally hoarded
thousands of rare books behind the locked doors of his New York City mansion, but
eventually wanted to establish a library “of
unusual character and scope.”[9] Lenox’s wish was
fulfilled in 1870, when the doors of the Lenox Library—later incorporated into
the New York Public Library—opened.[10]
Although characterized as a borderline sin and analogized as an infectious
mental disorder, bibliomania in America also resulted in a greater public good,
as more books were preserved in the country’s cultural heritage institutions.
[1]
Thomas Frognall Dibdin, Bibliomania: Or Book Madness; A Bibliographical Romance, in Six Parts (London: Printed for the Author, by J. M'Creery, and sold by Messrs. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, and Brown, 1811).
[2] “The
First Charter of Massachusetts Bay,” in
Boston Evening Transcript
(Boston, Massachusetts), December 8, 1845.
[3] “Notes on New Books,” Daily National Intelligencer September
23, 1858; “Bibliomania,” The New York Times, October 20 1878, p
4.
[4] F. Harrison,
“The Mania For Rare Books,” The New York Times, April 27 1879,
p. 3.
[5] Ibid.
[6]
Ibid.
[7] Nicholas Basbanes also locates a shift in book culture
in the mid-nineteenth century, noting that books “had become valuable
objects in their own right;” Basbanes, A Gentle Madness: Bibliophiles,
Bibliomanes, and the Eternal Passion for Books (New York: H. Holt and Co., 1995), 155.
[8]
Book collectors were overwhelmingly male in this period the author has had
little success in finding examples of female book collectors in the United
States and Canada until the 20th century.
[9]
Francis J. Bosha, “James Lenox,” in American Book-Collectors and Bibliographers (Detroit: Gale Research, 1994):
114.
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