What type of reader are you? This image might make some cringe, but it is evidence of a well-loved book.
Cornelius Tacitus, The Works of Tacitus (London, 1753).
The
reader, Founding Father John Dickinson, precisely, deliberately, bent hundreds of page corners
to point to paragraphs of note. This evidence of use can provide the historian
valuable insight into the reader’s thinking, which would be lost if the corners
were unfolded. A typed note on the book tag ensures that a well-meaning user
won’t be tempted to “fix.”
We found this note while cataloging our copy of Phoebe Cary’s Poems and Parodies (Boston, 1854). The note is on the final page of the text and states: Nothing worth reading in the book #everyonesacritic
TGI #FinisFriday! We’re feeling uplifted by these cherubs, found in William Hobby’s Self-examination in it’s Necessity and Advantages (Boston, 1746).
The Age of Enlightenment
filled the minds of men and women with wonder. It was a period of observation
and discovery. Books furnished an avid public with new knowledge of the earth
and the heavens. Information was presented in novel ways to captivate and educate
the reader.
The book featured in the video is John Lodge Cowley’s An Illustration and Mensuration of Solid Geometry (London, 1787), which contains several plates that fold into geometric forms that rise up out of the page.
You can see this book on display in our current exhibition The Living Book : New Perspectives on Form and Function open through January 5, 2018. Remember to take a handout of this geometric form while you’re in the gallery!
John Lodge Cowley, An Illustration and Mensuration of Solid Geometry in Seven Books (London, 1787).
We’re sharing this terrifying (though beautifully stamped) seven-headed dragon as part of the June #FantasticBeastsintheLibrary challenge. We especially love the cluster of stars around the beast’s tail, maybe because it distracts us from all those teeth…
This gorgeous circa 1846 publisher’s binding is our ‘offering’ for #FloralFriday. We love the delicate floral patterns surrounding the gold-stamped cover title, especially against the rich color of the cloth binding.
Browse the Library Company’s database of 19th-Century Cloth Bindings to see more!
Check out the gorgeous decorated paper wrappers on our copy of Luke Howard’s Christian Momento (Philadelphia, 1824) #WrapperWednesday
It’s #MarbledMonday, and we’re flipping for these marbled edges and endpapers found on our copy of Thomas Jefferys’ The Natural and Civil History of the French Dominions in North and South America (London, 1760).
Our conservation department recently uploaded a collection of Pennsylvania German catechisms on Flickr. The 18th-century block-printed decorative papers provide a unique personality to these bindings. To see their full covers visit the Library Company Conservation Dept. Flickr page: https://www.flickr.com/photos/librarycompany/34392956223/in/album-72157681837145234/
Each of the five panels folds at the top and bottom to create three illustrations. This book form, called “metamorphosis,” was so popular that thirty-nine editions were printed in America before 1820. Other manuscript copies exist, but all copies are unique.
You can see this book in person in our current exhibition, The Living Book: New Perspectives on From and Function on display through January 5th, 2018.