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ENGLISH
PRINTERS' ORNAMENTS
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ENGLISH
PRINTERS' ORNAMENTS
BY
HENRY R. PLOMER
AUTHOR OF "A SHORT HISTORY OF
ENGLISH PRINTING," ETC.
LONDON, W.C.i
GRAFTON y CO.
COPTIC HOUSE
1924
Printed in Great Britain
ly Tumbull &> Shears, Edinburgh
PREFACE
HE subject of printers' ornaments can
be defined in its stricter meaning
as the decoration of books as apart
from book illustration, the aim of
both decoration and ornamentation
being to heighten the attraction of
the letterpress, although the one is
loan of blocks.
of the block ; also to Messrs Bowes & Bowes for the loan
H. R. PLOMER
London
Xmas I923
IX
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
CHAPTER II
CHAPTER III
Borders . ....
CHAPTER IV
CHAPTER V
Head and Tail Pieces — Decorative Blocks .
CHAPTER VI
Miscellaneous Ornaments
xi
English Printers' Ornaments
CHAPTER VII
87
CHAPTER VIII
ILLUSTRATIONS
Descriptive Catalogue .119
.........
. . . . . .
Borders
191
Tail-pieces .211
.........
, . . . . . . .
Ornaments 229
Modern Work . . . . . . .
249
xi 1
THE GENESIS OF
PRINTERS' ORNAMENTS
Referring books printed in Venice by Erhard Ratdolt in the years
to the
1476 and 1477, Mr G. R. Redgrave writes: "They are plentifully
enriched with initial letters, sometimes printed in red ink, and they have all
of them the gracefully designed title-borders for which the books of Ratdolt
are so deservedly famous."
" The
******
Erhard Ratdolt and His Work at Venice, p. 13 (Biblio-
typography and
graphical Society's
illustrations
Monograph, No. 1).
On a certain
******Antoine
day in
dialogue took place between Robert Copland,
Verard,
the year
by
graphical Society's
John Macfarlane, 1900
Monograph, No. 7).
at the
sign of the Rose Garland in Fleet Street, and a customer of his, who
desired him to print a quaint conceit which he called the Seven Sorrows that
Women have when their Husbands he Deade.
The printer naturally wanted to see the manuscript, but the author
replied that it was in his brain and not in his pocket.
Quidam.
" I have no bokc, but yet I can you shewe
The matter by herte and that by wordes fewe,
Take your penne, and wryte as I do say
But yet of one thyng, hertely I you praye.
Amende the Englysh somewhat if ye can
And spel it true, for I shal tel the[e] man
By my soule ye prynters make such englyshe
So yll spelled, so yll poynted, and so pevyshe
That scantlyone can rede lynes tow
But to fynde sentence, he hath ynoughte to do."
This confession of Copland's, coupled with the fact that the author had
a moment before expressed the opinion that a '
penny '
was enough to
spend on books, shows how great was the gap that separated the Con-
tinental from the English printer in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries,
and accounts for the paucity of borders and ornaments found in English
books up to 1500, noted by Mr E. G. Duff in the chapter which he
added to Mr A. W. Pollard's work on Ear/y Illustrated Books.
—
Chapter I
not only for the models of their types, but for other hints
and what did they find ? They found that the scribes generally
for margins and for evenness of line. They found that the
title of the work was put at the head of the text, and that the
first page of the text was enclosed within a richly illuminated
border, sometimes merely decorative or conventional, but more
often consisting of exquisitely drawn and coloured pictures,
3
English Printers' Ornaments
illustrating, if it were a service book, scenes in the life of Our
Lord or fragments of sacred history.
4
The Genesis of Printers'* Ornaments
They sometimes put a border partially round this first
They left the spaces between the divisions of the work blank,
but they generally put on the last leaf below the colophon or
on a leaf by itself a woodcut embodying their name or initials
or the sign of the house in which they carried on their trade.
They also adopted the paragraph mark and the Maltese cross,
5
—
them (i.e. fleurons), what makes the system, is the fact that
the unit of decoration is itself an ordinary metal type, of the
1
The Fleuron, a journal of typography, edited by Oliver Simon, 1923.
6
The Genesis of Printers'' Ornaments
varying type sizes, cast by the type-printer, set as type, and
bearing, instead of a letter symbol, a formal design. . . . This
simple tool was originally used on an Aldine binding as early
as 1499, but not until 15 15 have the writers discovered its
the author, " are cast to all the regular bodies of letter, from
great primer to nonpareil included ; besides several sorts that
head of such pages that either began the main work, or else
row.
7
English Printers' Ornaments
" But with the growth of printing, and when letter-cutters
9
English Printers" Ornaments
preserve the substance of his invention intire, for occasional
use.
I I
English Printers" Ornaments
of the fifteenth century. At first the art of the inventor was
a mystery divulged to none. But the Sack of Mentz in
'3
ENGLISH PRINTERS AND
THEIR ORNAMENTS
;
Chapter II
type, which after all was his chief pride, and that the
decoration of the book did not distract the reader's attention
from the subject-matter. Moreover, woodcutting was a
18
:
prettiness, but for the matter that was in them. Hence all
19
:
20
1
books.
Wynkyn de Worde, immediately after his master's death,
obtained a fount of type and various blocks from a printer
in Gouda, Govaert van Os. The type he used once, the
blocks he used until they were worn out, and there is no
doubt that he obtained border-pieces from other printers
22
English Printers and their Ornaments
Europe was ransacked to provide ornamental initials, of
which great numbers were required. How far native talent
^3
English Printers' Ornaments
But it was not until after the accession of Queen
Elizabeth, and the appointment of Archbishop Parker as
Some of the blocks found in his books bear the initials I.D.,
1
C. Sayle, " Initial Letters in Early English Printed Books" (Transactions of the
Bibliographical Society).
24
English Printers and their Ornaments
centuries and carrying the traditions of one century into the
other.
said that the types for this last were supplied by the four
licensed type-founders in London.
But the ornaments found in these books consisted of a
the seventeenth, almost every head and tail piece and initial
and examining them with great care can the points of differ-
28
English Printers and their Ornaments
pieces, that had done duty for a century and a half, were
substituted metal blocks of a more ornate character, and
this was the case also with the initial letters. It would be
interesting if one could trace the causes of this change, but
29
BORDERS
1
Chapter III
Borders
THE earliest
printed in
important ornament found in a book
England is a woodcut border to a title-
they were in the habit of printing with red ink. From this
c 33
English Printers' Ornaments
round the colophon and device on the last leaf, and the
practice quickly spread over the Continent. For Books of
Hours and Missals blocks were cut representing scenes from
the life of Christ or other Bible subjects, but more decora-
tive and lighter borders were designed for such books as
Only some copies of this book have the border, and the
Bodleian Library has no copy in which it is found. Mr
E. G. Duff, in his English Provincial Printers, etc. (Cam-
bridge, 191 2), suggests that its insertion was an afterthought
of the printer; but it is a curious circumstance that he used
34
Borders
Fortunately a leaf of the Jeremiah is in the Bagford
collection,
1
and from this I am able to describe it. The
border is made up of four blocks, each of a different width.
That at the top measures 199 by 34 mm., and it will
35
English Printers* Ornaments
quarters. They appear to me to be both cleverly designed
and to show no little skill on the part of the woodcutter.
They were probably French work, as blocks similar to them
may be seen in service books printed by Jean du Pre in
Paris. As stated above, each border consisted of four pieces,
for inspiration.
that Caxton set up these pages — not the artist who was at
fault, and who was responsible for their clumsy and slovenly
appearance. No attempt was made to space them out in
36
Borders
order to make them meet, and not a few were put in upside
down. Had the printer shown as much skill as the artist
there would be little to find fault with. This border passed
into the possession of De Worde, who used it as a whole, or
parts of it, in several books.
37
English Printers' Ornaments
before he became Archbishop of Canterbury in i486. He
was a lover of books, and in 1500 he commissioned Pynson
to print a Missal that should equal in beauty of letterpress
and decoration anything of that kind that had been produced
on the Continent. We cannot doubt that he financed
Pynson during the preparation of this work, and we may
go even further and say that the decorative work seen in it
but the other half had at some time been damaged, and a
part of the lower corner had gone altogether, giving the
whole an uneven appearance. Further, in order to fill up
the space between the illustration at the top and outer border,
two smaller pieces, but of different sizes and design, were
inserted. The general design in these blocks is spirals of
flowers and foliage, the flowers being apparently pinks, or
carnations, and daisies.
below the cut of the Crucifixion, is also absent from this, its
forgot (or did not trouble himself about the matter) that the
device in the earlier edition was set horizontally, whereas the
block of the Crucifixion, which he chose to replace it, had to
40
Borders
and not the ends of the blocks. All of them are crible, and
each is enclosed within rules.
1 20 by 12 mm. L. and C.
2. Three monkeys and trees. 120 by 10 mm.
L. and C.
62 by 15 mm. L.
1 8. Spirals of conventional foliage issuing from mouth
and tail of grotesque animal. 62 by 15 mm.
L. and C.
19. Spiral of foliage and flowers. 120 by 5 mm. C.
20. Chain ornament. 1 20 by 5 mm. G.
21. Spiral of conventional foliage. 62 by 6 mm. C.
(Description of England.)
22. Spiral of leaves and flowers. 62 by 6 mm. C.
(Description of England.)
42
Borders
In another edition of this Chronicle, printed at a later
lower one the soldier with the pike which De Worde had
used in the play of Hickscor?ier. The border was made up
by the repetition of five small ornaments — (1) The ribbon;
(2) The cable ; (3) A variant of the fleuron ; (4) A flower
or star ; (5) A Maltese cross. Altogether 1 26 separate units
went to make up this very singular border.
In 1504 William Faques printed the Statutes of the
19th Henry VII. in folio, and placed round each page a neat
43
English Printers' Ornaments
likely that Pynson obtained them from thence, but they
appear to have been a stock pattern, as Wynkyn de Worde
had an identical set.
the other a man and woman, the man impaling a bird that
is seated in the centre between two sprays of flowers. These
look French in style, both are crible, and they bear a close
resemblance to those in use by Notary. On the left-hand
side of the device are two narrow blocks, each measuring
45
English Printers' Ornaments
Again, on the last leaf of this book is Faques' device
surrounded by a border built up with whole or portions of
the lozenge ornament arranged within borders of the fleuron
unit seen on the front page. These lozenge ornaments are
1 Sandars
English Provincial Printers, Stationers and Bookbinders to 1557.
Lectures, 191 1. Cambridge, 191 2, 8vo.
47
English Printers Ornaments
combination of four or eight units repeated over and over
again to form a frame, sometimes left with rough edges,
sometimes enclosed within rules or other printers' ornaments.
Some of the most delicate and beautiful of these lace borders
are to be seen on the title-pages of books printed by Henry
Bynneman, Thomas Creede, Henry Denham and Thomas
East, although they were adopted by all the English printers
of the second half of the sixteenth century, and have continued
in popularity to the present day.
Borders
Fleming's books, 'The Diamond of Devotion, was printed by
Peter Short, and each page of this, like its predecessor, had
a border, and these show variations from those used before
(i) a border of flowers in an interlaced design, seen on
sig. M 2 and elsewhere throughout the book, and (2) a
5°
Borders
artistic appearance. The use of rules, not only on the title-
special notice.
52
HEAD AND TAIL PIECES-
SMALL ORNAMENTS
Chapter IV
Head and Tail Pieces — Small Ornaments
•
55
English Printers' Ornaments
Sections of a work, or Chapters. They were also frequently
use some years and became very popular, and a few more
that have been met with may be mentioned. Three found
in Sophocles' Antigone, printed in 158 1, illustrate the manifold
ways in which the fleuron could be treated. The first is
triangular in form, while the other two are square but set
58
Head and Tail Pieces
are placed horizontally, thus giving a complete alteration in
appearance.
A fourth example is built up of two units only — arranged
as seven central groups of four, with a border top and
bottom consisting of seven pairs ; and by leaving out the
bottom row yet another change was wrought. Indeed, the
possible combinations were endless. No wonder that the
fleuron ornament has kept its place in the compositor's box
until the present day.
the star, the rose, the crown, the thistle, the tieur-de-lys and
the acorn, cast in various sizes — shared with the Heuron the
duty of supplying head and tail pieces, or dividing sections
of a book.
In 1662 we come upon another example — an urn with
a flower growing in it, used in the Liber precum publicarum,
printed in 1662, where at the head of the licence fifteen of
them are used at the head of the page and again on the verso
of the same page ;
but, whether purposely or not, in each
case units of a different design are introduced.
6l
English Printers' Ornaments
inference is that he was more concerned with the cutting of
type-faces than ornaments. In the specimen book of 1764
the flowers fill no less than four pages, and in addition to
the fleuron, which is shown in many sizes and some new
variations, the type-founder had introduced several new
designs, such as minute circles that could be arranged in
63
English Printers" Ornaments
the hrmness and the grace seen in those of the sixteenth
century. The ribbon ornament, No. 5, seems to be a survival,
or perhaps revival would be the better word, of the ornament
found in the hands of Pynson and Wynkyn de Worde.
Altogether the printers of the eighteenth century could
obtain a wealth of small ornaments such as they had never
possessed before.
64
HEAD AND TAIL PIECES-
DECORATIVE BLOCKS
E
Chapter V
Head and Tail Pieces — Decorative Blocks
pieces.
67
English Printers' Ornaments
the end of Michaelmas term (sig. K 2), where a geometrical
and architectural block, measuring 119 by 19 mm., is very
effective. This had previously belonged to Wynkyn de
Worde.
Another may be seen at the end of A Newe Booke — An
Exhortation to the Sicke, printed by John Oswen at Ipswich
in 1548, where above and below the imprint are the two
blocks here reproduced. They were clearly not specially cut
match it.
books before 1580, but the earliest I have met with is the
6y
English Printers" Ornaments
artistic head-piece seen in sig. A of Bynneman's edition of
Morelius' Verborum Latinorum, printed in 1583. In the
centre we see a figure holding in each hand a bird with long
tail feathers. On either side is an archer with a drawn bow
and arrow, with rabbits sitting behind him, while at each
of the lower corners is an animal with very long and curving
horns. This block measures 139 by 34 mm. It was after-
70
Head and Tail Pieces
were lent by one printer one is found
to another, as this
7^
Head and Tail Pieces
without exception; but Felix Kingston, another London
printer, had a block so similar that it is almost impossible
to tell one from the other. It makes a very handsome
head-piece.
The other two examples here shown are also from A
Copy, etc., and both were in use, the one
1644 as late as
and the other to 1650. The one with the squirrels was
copied repeatedly, and several variants of it are met with
in other books. The blocks of the national emblems when
used together formed an effective head-piece, but they were
sometimes used in pairs to form side-pieces to other blocks.
73
English Printers' Ornaments
A good decorative head-piece was that used by H.
Lownes in |. Dowland's Pi/grimes Solace, printed in 1612.
memoir of him, but has very little to say about the vast
amount of work he did and his skill as an artist. On
these points all he says is, " He was looked upon as the
best general engraver in England, and had always till very
lately, within these last two or three years, a vast deal of
Oxford."
This is a poor account of a man whose work was not
confined by any means, as the Dictionary of National
Biography would lead one to think, to the engraving of
portraits, but who executed engravings for many books.
None of his biographers call attention to the wonderful
series of head and tail pieces and initial letters which Burghers
designed and engraved for the folio edition of Clarendon's
1
Harl. 5929.
75
English Printers' Ornaments
the same volume was evidently designed for an Knglish book
on Science, printed about 1696. In the centre is seen
Britannia, with shield and trident, looking out over the sea.
Beneath her is the date 1696, the whole being surrounded
by a laurel wreath. On either side are open books, that
on the left apparently dealing with Euclid and that on the
right with architecture. Other books and rolls and mathe-
matical instruments have also a background of laurel, and
the design is surrounded by a decorative frame.
The tail-pieces designed by Burghers are even more
splendid than the head-pieces. The two we have chosen
tor illustration are entirely different in character, but are
itself; but the alteration went even further than this, and
76
Head and Tail Pieces
heralded a change in taste on the part of printers, who
seem to have been captured by a different school of de-
signers altogether. We suspect that this was largely due
to the influence of the Oxford engraver, M. Burghers.
Whether the blocks produced during this century were or
were not more artistic than those they supplanted must be
left to experts to decide. My work is to record the change
and show its development.
In 171 2 William Bowyer printed a great folio,
fashion.
77
English Printers' Ornaments
forth by the text, and perhaps more in the nature of
illustrations ; the tail-pieces have a character of their
one.
Another fine head-piece is seen in the first volume of
the Works of Sir William Temple (sig. B ij), printed in
folio in 1720, and is matched by the tail-piece on the
79
English Printers' Ornaments
Topography, describes the larger of the two tail-pieces as
' gorgeous.'
Coming south again, the printer at Truro, from whose
press came the unfinished work called the Compleat History
of Cornwall used the head and tail piece here reproduced.
80
MISCELLANEOUS
ORNAMENTS
Chapter VI
Miscellaneous Ornaments
an instance.
But there was at least one printer in the sixteenth
century who did not follow this custom, and that was
Henry Bynneman. It was not that he had no small block
of the Mermaid to put on his title-pages, because we know
that he used such a block at the end of one of his books.
From the care he took in the printing of his books we may
suppose him to have taken a pride in their appearance,
and this probably arose from his chief patron being Sir
Christopher Hatton, who at that time was the most powerful
of Elizabeth's favourites, and was the friend and helper of
84
M iscellaneous Ornaments
literary men. At any rate Bynneman frequently placed the
crest of that nobleman, a hart surrounded by the motto,
" Cerva charissima et gratissimus hinnulus," with a very
elaborate frame, on his title-pages. It is seen in the fourth
part of Gabriel Harvey's Gratulationis Valdinensis, the other
three parts of which have on the title-page : the first,
the royal arms ; the second, the crest of the Leicester family
— the bear and ragged staff ; and the third, the crest of the
Burleighs — a sheaf of corn with two lions rampant as sup-
porters, and the motto, " Cor unvm via una," within a border
of fleurons.
Several of the blocks reproduced by Mr McKerrow in his
was the " Veritas felix temporis " block, a copy from a
85
English Printers' Ornaments
sitting under overhanging sprays of foliage that are part of
the contents of an urn or basket of fruit and flowers are busily
playing, one a guitar and the other a viol or violin, but
whether they are serenading the lady whose head forms part
86
INITIAL LETTERS
AND FACTOTUMS
Chapter VII
Initial Letters and Factotums
filled by the initial letter blank for the illuminator to fill in.
But before long they began to cut the initials for their books
in wood, and they went to the manuscript books for their
earliest model, hence the ecclesiastical character of the first
91
English Printers Ornaments
For the purposes of this section I have divided the letters
92
Initial Letters and Factotums
senting Samuel and Eli, first used by Herford in 1544, is
93
English Printers' Ornaments
As Mr Sayle very rightly says, these initials are worth a
monograph in themselves.
94
Initial Letters and Factotums
are found other initial letters bearing the crest and arms of
his patron, Francis Walsingham.
The group I have called Miscellaneous is so vast that the
examples here noted are barely a fraction of them. They
range from all sizes, and are chiefly ornamental — that is, their
design illustrates no particular subject.
The E used by Siberch in 152 1, in the Libellus de Con-
scribendis, consists of decorative spirals, white on a black
ground, and is very effective. The O and S from the same
alphabet are equally fine. These letters bear some relation
to those used by Pynson at this time. Stipple work and
ornament of a different kind are the main features of the
fine H used on sig. A 2 of Pynson's Libello huic regio hac
insunt, printed in the same year.
95
English Printers' Ornaments
for illustration, but there is only room here to include one of
two exquisite little examples that were amongst Denham's
stock, and which he used in 7be Footepath to Felic'itie in
1
5"
8 1 . These are two T's, both the same size but differing
in design.
the number of circles in the frame that one can tell the
difference between the Eliots Court letters and those of
Robinson, Middleton, and various other printers of the
seventeenth century who used similar alphabets. By the
kindness of Professor A. W. Pollard I am enabled to show
two of these Apostle letters which appeared in my article;
crowned.
Mr Sayle, in a footnote to his paper mentioned above,
calls attention to the heraldic initials found in Thos. Fuller's
Church History, 1655, each section of which was dedicated
to a nobleman, whose arms are show n in the initial of
T
the section on head and tail pieces, the initials carry on the
unity of design and are in every way suitable. Though
small in size they fit in with the type admirably and add to
Factotums
modern name, are not without merit, and in the case of large
ones they could be made artistic or decorative. Thev were
made both in metal and wood, and certain patterns were
98
Initial Letters and Factotums
apparently turned out by the foundries in large numbers and
supplied to all printers alike. Two of the commonest and
perhaps the earliest forms were small frames measuring
22x21 mm. and were of classic design, in one case the
filials rising from two cornucopire apparently fastened to-
gether with bows and ends of rope (?). In the other instance
the cornucopise are more floral in treatment. In one the
filials consist of a female head at the end of an elongated and
curved neck and are both alike, but in the other the upper
portions of a male and female are seen. Another feature of
these two factotums is some kind of drapery and they were
enclosed within single rules. Both of them are found in
«
Salome.
A series of factotums found in Grover's printing office
99
English Printers" Ornaments
foundry was in use by the Clarendon Press in 1759.
1
They
are evidently by the same hand that cut the tail-piece seen
1
H. Hart, Notes on a Century of Typography, 1900, p. 145.
I OO
MODERN WORK
Chapter VIII
Modern JVork
advent.
Charles Whittingham the younger, the printer of this
IO4
Modern W ork
the two that resulted in the production of some notable
books. Whereas Whittingham the elder had been noted
for his printing of pictures, Whittingham the younger made
it the peculiar " grace of his craft to bedeck books with
borders, comely head-pieces, and other alluring devices. He
carried this branch of his work to such an extent that you
shall find nothing lovelier between book-covers until you
turn back to the illuminated manuscripts of the Middle
Ages." For these ornaments for his books Charles Whit-
tingham the younger went back to the printers of the
eighteenth century — to Geoffrey Tory of Paris, to Henry
Bynneman and Henry Denham of London. He taught
his family to appreciate their beauty and to perpetuate it,
of their publications.
But the Diary of Lady Willoughby was as remarkable
for the type as its ornaments. Whittingham the younger
wanted something better than the founts of type then in
Modern W irk
decorating firm in which artists such as Rossetti and
Burne-Jones were partners. Towards the close of his life
with the Golden Type, and the issue was limited to 200
ordinary copies and six on vellum.
It was at once evident that Mr Morris had gone back
to the fifteenth century for both his type and ornaments.
The first page of the text was surrounded by a border
designed by Mr Morris himself and showing traces of the
Venetian school. It was printed in a specially cast fount
of Gothic.
On September 24, 1891, another quarto was issued,
Poems by the Way, and during the next twelve months five
the last five and twenty years. What our printers and type-
founders can do at the present day in the way of book
1 10
1
Modern Work
decoration will be seen by a study of the following pages,
in which, by the kindness of the various firms, we are able
to bring together a representative collection of modern
Printers' Ornaments.
The modern Caslon foundry still carried on by H. W,
Caslon & Co. in Chiswell Street, to which William Caslon
the first transferred his business in 1 734, is still one of the
leading foundries in this country. After his death his son
William the second reigned in his stead and carried on the
traditions of the foundry, and was in due course succeeded
by his son William the third, who in 1792 gave up his
(p. 238).
But the firm was not yet through its difficulties. In
1865 a strike of some of the workmen, on a question of
wages, was followed by a lock-out that lasted for eight
months and brought its fortunes to their lowest ebb. Then
in 1872 Mr Thomas W. Smith, who had for some years
acted as traveller to the foundry, was asked to take over
the management. His position was a difficult one. Old
fashions die hard, and the foreman and many of the work-
men had been with the firm all their lives and resented
change. But Mr Smith persevered, his object being, as he
himself declared, to work up arrears of production and to
1 1 2
Modern W ork
Magazine made a feature of its ornaments. These included
reproductions of famous head and tail pieces and initials by
various foreign masters of the sixteenth century belonging
to the French, German, and Dutch schools, the work of -
school.
and well cast. Many of the old forms are retained and some
variations of the fieuron introduced.
Messrs Shanks, of Red Lion Square, have sent some
head and tail pieces shown in their most recent specimen.
These, both in design and treatment, recall French work of
the sixteenth century, while the Cubist idea that marks
their Athenian border brings us back to the twentieth
century.
The Curwen Press are well known to
productions of the
all bookmen. Much of its art work came from the pencil
of the late Claude Lovat Fraser, who also designed many
of the ornaments and tail-pieces. His successor, Mr P. J.
F. Brangwyn.
The specimen sheet of the Pelican Press, which was
established in 19 17, is an ambitious one. It reproduces for
the consideration and choice of its customers borders designed
after those of Ratdolt of Venice, Geoffrey Tory of Paris, and
some of the printers of Lyons.
In ornaments it produces a large selection modelled on
the old forms of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, one
of which resembles very closely an ornament used on the
114
Modern W irk
title-page of John Bodenham's Garden of the Muses, printed
in 1610, and in addition to all kinds of fleurons, they
reproduce the fleur-de-lys, the acorn, and various stars. They
also show a fine collection of initials, French and Italian, that
since relegated the once famous Fell and Junius types to the
116
Modern Work
" Besides, Sir, it is the great excellence of a writer to put
into his book as much as his book will hold. . .
."
117
DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE
OF THE
ILLUSTRATIONS
BORDERS
1. Machlinia. Border used by R. Pynson. William de 1483
Machlinia printed a Book of Hours with borders
which later passed into Pynson's hands. The
design consists of spirals of flowers and foliage.
separate.
13. Treveris. Border from the Greate Herball, two pieces 1526
of which formerly belonged to Wynkyn de Worde.
125
HEAD-PIECES
37. Kingston & Sutton. Missale ad usum Sarisburiensis. 1555
Flowers and figures.
127
2
unicorn.
Description of Head-pieces
59. Haviland. Fruit and flowers issuing from a jar. 1634
130
TAIL-PIECES
78. Middleton. Statutes II. Henry VI. Long narrow c. 1540
architectural block, formerly De Worde's.
80. Redman. Tear Book II. Henry VI. Seven lozenge c. 1540
ornaments.
131
5
Description of Tail-pieces
102. Tonson & Watts. Lucretius, De rerum natura. A 171
specially designed tail-piece to Book IV.
l
33
1
ORNAMENTS
in. Pynson & De Worde. Chain ornament. 1500-30
piece if desired.
l
37
9
INITIALS
149. T De Worde. The Golden Legend. Large orna- 1493
mental letter of ecclesiastical design with decora-
tive sprays.
(Bibliographical Society).
140
Description of Initials
170. I Eliots Court Press. Especially used by Brad- 1603-27
wood. Rose and thistle crowned.
141
MODERN WORK
177-187. H. W. Caslon & Co., Ltd. Old English 18th
borders. century
225. P. M. Shanks & Sons, Ltd. Bold foliage design for 1920
border.
228. P. M. Shanks & Sons, Ltd. Bold foliage design for 1920
border same as 225.
K 145
ILLUSTRATIONS
Borders
APHTHONII SOPHI
STAEPRAEEXERCI
TAMENTAIN
TERPRETE
VLRO DO
CTISSI
MO*
IMPRESSA Londinf perRf*
chatdtimPynfon regiu impreffo*
tern cumpriuilegioaregein»
dulto/ne quis nunc in re*
gno Angti* imprimat/
aut alibi imprelTum/
fmportatuueineo
de regno AngHg
vendat*
149
Borders
15 1
Borders
Borders
w3lnglmp«pewojB:nbiDari^i^^mu|^o5.
\y ^erperuumnometupecpctitum^Decus. I
^epttmuglj^ncus^apieflcetlRcguiamo^inu \'
»55
Borders
»57
Borders
Borders
Borders
REVERENDI SSI.
magnificent wince : mpne mo in Chnlto patri ac dno:dno
bumble fetupct Due tmto
;
Ioanni Veyfy Exonien epifcopo
pout grace. Blno ttjebebe* Alexander Barclay prefbytcr de
Imft affection u tjfebe J qa<
uetonto pour bonoutfr pec*
bi'ta cum obferuantia.S.
_ Ipetual fame ; impelletb mg
often tpmcs to Deupfe/anD tcoolue tn mpnbe:
*b&atrecuu*ojpleafucmpfimpIenelFemlg&t
MEMINI mefupcrf
tinbua arms cu ad»
hucfacelli tegij pre*
Oo/c6uen(entanD acceptable tmto pout bpgb'
nelTe : to tefttfp Hje bonouc / tbe loue/i
ttjertrp
ful efles:paltor vigi U
tiffime : tins fuafiombus inmatft:
obfeciup:n)b(cbe 3
fenourfege mp
felfe to o toe vr Cdfpi Salufrij hyftoriaCqui Iti
Unto poutmagmftcccc* ©ut tt&an J eofpoec gurthynuin belluvocant )eroma»
anocopate a alia*
163
Borders
1
Borders
167
Borders
169
Borders
13
171
Borders
l
75
Borders
Borders
To The
George THE
Right Woorfliipfull, Sir
Carey, Knight, Knight
Mai'efhes moft Honorable houfliold,
MarfhaU of hir FOOTEPATH
Sonne and heire apparent to the right
to Felicitie,
nondurable LordH ENSil,
Lordof Hunfdm,&c Which euerie Qhrifliw
if
muft walke in, before
he can ante to the Uni
.And of Canaan.
0 [
j
at greatejt iifagreement,
the motions of mans
mi»4, by the tudgement
sAfoc.Xi. 14.
14 Bleffed are they that doe Cods
commaundements , that their right
si
v(
CU3Q11
22 23
179
Borders
25
181
Borders
27
183
.
Borders
Youths Jnftrudtion
COMPOSED
A N D WRITTEN
n
by William Martyn *
Ejquires .
LONDON
Jlsa-JtJ'v,!)
Printed by lohn Beale, for Richard
Rcdmir, and arc to be lold at the Star at
^
nc^aKW
the weft end of TWj. i^ij. ^Ca3uA
28
185
Borders
29
3°
31
32
53
.87
Borders
Head-pieces
38
43
191
Head-pieces
Head-pieces
51
l
95
Head-pieces
Head-pieces
201
Head-pieces
66
67
68
Head-pieces
Head-pieces
Head-pieces
75
76
77
O 209
1
Tail-pieces
85
21
Tail-pieces
2I 3
Tail-pieces
Tail-pieces
Tail-pieces
104
221
223
Tail-pieces
Tail-pieces
Ornaments
III
112
115
"3
in
116
**>FINIS^
117
229
Ornaments
125
231
Ornaments
THE
GARDEN
OF THE
Mufes.
Qucm referent Muja vtuet dum rohorA tellus^
Dum itilumJIcIIas^ dum vefyet minis aquas.
126
233
Ornaments
* + * * V * * * * * + **
;:;*
:>.•
:
it
;
*** ;
: ; : -:>:Y>:i;
:
^ \mf- nfti •tf** *tQ*« •jflg* **Q»* **Q»* *^>* Np** *«Q«* *j(>» *tfl** "%Q** •^C#» Nflf ^6** Nfii* "tQv* *^«* *tftaB *A* *-
(
-°
0 @EBEBBSBhBEEBEBEBBEB
bebbhbbe *% ebsese®
ebbb bbss
f
0>
EBBE EBB®
5^ BBBBBSB® *** EEBSHBE
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«^ *V» «^2*» *C*» *V* *V» *^»» *W» ^» ^» v^te f^b «lfb /^%»***,
128
134
235
Ornaments
Ornament 1
Ornament 2
Ornament 3
Ornament 4,
Ornament 5
Ornament 6
Ornament 7
Ornament 8
Ornament 9
Ornament 10
Ornament 11 Ornament 13
KRW«HHHRHHH«»»J!HHKHH»HH»HHHnnHHXm
Ornament 12 Ornament 14
©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©©ft©©©©©©©
I3S-H 8
237
Initials
Initials
Initials
Initials
Initials
Modern W irk
177
178
179
180
182
249
Modern W irk
184
185
187
2 5*
Modern W irk
188
253
Modern W irk
Modern Work
Modern W irk
Modern Work
Modern Work
Modern W irk
219
221
220
WW
223 224
Designs from the Foundry of Messrs P. M. Shanks & Sons, Ltd. (219,
220, 222), and from The University Press, Oxford (221, 223, 224).
265
Modern Work
Modern Work
231
Messrs P. M. Shanks & Sons, Ltd.
269
Modern W irk
232
271
Modern W irk
u w ttf a ta wi
ENGLISH FLOWER
No. !
ft*
35
ft
233-240
s 2 73
Modern Work
Modern W irk
277
Modern W irk
279
M odern W irk
^£,3^
*;u
^£3^ ^£3^ ^£3P
jukj- sUK* JtJKJ'
<t^ ¥^ ¥^
281
Modern W irk
9
/f\ o /TV o /T\
5g ^ \
^ ^ *r ^* ^ ^ ^s"^ ^
< -
**&",9"i&"*&' ^
261-274
283
Modern W irk
275-284
285
1 1
INDEX
A Bradwood, M., 25, 72
Acorn ornament, 60 Brangwyn, F., 114
Aldus, 34, 113 Brieje Treatise oj Testaments and
Allde, Eliz., 86 Wills, 85
1
English Printers' Ornaments
Ciceronis, Epistola?, 69
Clarendon's History oj the Rebellion, Early English printers of fifteenth
75 century, 18
Clark, R. & R., 113 Early Newcastle typography, 80
Clavis Apocalyptica, Border to, 52
Early printers, Methods of, 4, 5
Classical designs of initials, 93
Early Venetian Printing, 90
Combination of fleuron and decora- East, T., 48
tive block, 50
Ecclesiastical character of first
Commentary, Lathbury's, 34 initials,
89
Complete History oj Cornwall, 80 Edward IV., patron of Caxton, 21
Copland, R., 20 Eliots Court Press, 25, 28, 70, 85, 86
Copy oj a Letter, etc., 72, 73 Eliots Court printers, Initials of, 91
Copyists, Work of, 27 96
Cosmographical Glasse, 57, 93 Elizabeth, Queen, 24
Cowley, Dr, 38 English Illustrated Magazine, 113
Crane, W., 113 Engraved borders to Bibles, 22
Creede, T., 48 Engraved title-pages, 49
Crown ornament, 60 Enterlude called Lusty Juventus, 59
Crownfield, C, 79 Euphues, his Censure to Philautus, 86
Curious head-piece design, 73 Exhibition of twentieth century
Curwen Press, 1 14 books, no
Exposition on Epistle to Romans, 73
D
Daniel, R., 52
Day, 23, 93, 94
J.,
De Anima, Aristotle's, 34 Factotums, 98, 99
Decorative blocks, date of introduc- Faques, Border used by, 43, 45, 59,
tion, 67 92
Eighteenth century, 28 Fenton, G., 71
used by Eliots Court printers, 71 Field, R., 71
Decorative head and tail pieces, 69 Fifteen Oes, 35, 39
Denham, H., 24, 25 Fior de Virtu, 21
Borders used by, 48 Fletcher, M., 73
Initials used by, 96 Fleuron, 6, 7, 26 et passim
De Rep. Anglorum, 69 borders, 47
Description oj New England, 86 Date of introduction of, 57
Diary oj Lady Willoughby, 105, 112 as head and
tail piece, 63
288
Index
Foxe, J., Book of Martyrs, 95 Housman, L., 1
13
France, Use of flowers in, 9 Hughes, A. P., 113
Fraser, C. L., 114 Huvin, J., of Rouen, 37
Fuller's Church History, 97 Hypnerotomachia, 21
G I
290
1
Index
R Star ornament, 60
Ratdolt, E., 17, 34, 114 Statutes jth Henry VI., 6y
Redman, R., 59,
Statutes lyth Henry VII., 43
84
Initial of,
Stephenson, Blake & Co., Ltd., 113
95
Redmer, R., 86 Stepneth, 86
Stokes, M., 113
Reed, T. B., 24
Reformation, its effect on book Sun Printing Office, 1
decoration, 22 Sylvius, Anton, 24, 93
Reynes, John, Initial of, 94
Ribbon ornament, 60 T
Baskerville's, 64 Tail-piece in 1679 Herodotus, 27
Rivers, Earl, 21 Thistle ornament, 60
Rood, T., 20, 34, 38 Thomas, T., 26
Rose ornament, 60 Thomson, J., Poem on Liberty, 78
Royal Arms as ornament, 85 Tonson, J., and J. Watts, 77
Tory, G., 114
S Tottell, R., 23
Treatise made by Athanasius, 57
St Albans Chronicle, 40, 41, 42, 43
Treveris, P., 46
S alius t, Border to, 45
Two Centuries oj Type-jounding, 61,
Sanderson, Cobden, no
in
Sarum Missal, 68
Type-founders in England, 27
Saxon type cut by J. Day, 24
Sayle, C, 24, 55, 91, 97
Scolar, John, 25
u
Seres, W., 23 Urn ornament, 60
Sermon preached at Stafford, 63
Seven Sorrows that Women have, etc.,
V
20, 21 Vautrollier, 60, 69, 84
Shanks, Messrs, 114 Initials used by, 95
Short, P., 24 Venetian printers, 33
Shyp oj Folys, Borders in, 44, 45 Verard, A., 89
Siberch, John, 26 Vostre, 34
Border used by, 51
Initials used by, 93, 95 W
Siegburg, see Siberch Waldegrave, 99
Sandwich, 63
Silver, S., of Walker, Emery, no, 113
Small ornaments of the eighteenth Walsingham, F., Crest and Arms of ;
century, 62, 63 95
Smith, P. J., 91, 114 Watts, John, 61
Smith, T. W, 112 Whitchurch, Ed., 23, 94
Stafford, S., 73 White, John, 79
291
/