Producing
Fiction in Britain, 1800–1829
Peter Garside and
Anthony Mandal
According to Lee Erickson, in a recent essay,
Walter Scotts refusal of the poet laureateship in 1813
and the publication of his first novel, Waverley, a
year later were sure signs of a coming shift in the
readerships taste, and he goes on to trace a turnabout
in the relative popularity of poetry and prose fiction in
the later Romantic period. [1] As
we are now aware, however, Scotts first novel was written
in at least two stages: Scott himself, in the first chapter
of Waverley, suggests 1805 as the starting-point, but
evidence survives of a clear intervention in 1810, whichas
I have argued elsewheremay represent the true inception
of the project (put bluntly, it is not unlikely that Scott
started the novel in Autumn 1810). Scott would then
have known about the popular success of Jane Porters
Scottish Chiefs (published March 1810), [2]
which offered a clear signal that Scottish subjects could
be profitably used in the novel, and by 1810 he would have
had a much clearer view of the potential of the national
tale as developed by Sydney Owenson and Maria Edgeworth. In
fact, a cynical view would be that by predating his intervention
at 1805, Scott constructed a literary history which placed
him at the helm.
Another perspective
here is provided by Ina Ferriss excellent study of the
Waverley Novels as institution, The Achievement of Literary
Authority (Ithaca, NY and London: Cornell University Press,
1995), which sees Scott as the main agent in a wholesale shift
from a generally female-authored common novel,
to a new kind of serious/historical novel, which
allowed main subjectivity to enter into a female genre without
compromising masculinity. Ferriss
thesis on one level echoes earlier claims by feminist literary
historians such as Dale Spender that the novel was predominantly
a female form, while tending to corroborate the
more specific allegation made by Gaye Tuchman, in Edging
Women Out (London: Routledge, 1989), that the Waverley
Novels somehow represent an untypical male capturing of the
novel form. But Ferris also more broadly points
to a larger underbelly of new readers, connected with commerce
and manufacturing, who were already turning in increasing
numbers to fiction. At what point the novel became
unstoppable is a moot point, but the statistics
shown below in Fig 1, based on the number of new items in
J. R. de J. Jacksons Annals of English Verse
(New York: Garland, 1985) against Andrew Blocks The
English Novel 17401850 (1939, rev. 1961; London:
Dawson, 1968), indicate that the first year in which the output
of fiction outnumbered that of poetry was 1810 (which is followed
by a more general overtaking in the 1820s, as shown in Fig
1).
Fig 1.
Poetry vs. Fiction, 17801829
Poetry vs.
Fiction, 17801829 [Fig 1]: Here it is necessary
to own up to some manoeuvring in order to get the figures:
comparing different genres by output is, of course, always
likely to bring some mixed results. But most damaging of all,
in the present instance, is the unreliability of Blocks
catalogue (the by-product of a career as an antiquarian bookseller
in London), which jumbles together chapbooks, shilling shockers,
miscellanies, non-existent ghost titles, works
which on examination prove not to be fiction, and other such
flotsam, alongside mainstream novels. More immediately pertinent
is Blocks habit of rounding off dates to
the nearest decade in cases of uncertainty, which partly explains
the unusually large number of 1810 items. A number
of gender-selective studies have also appeared since the 1980s,
but these raise their own difficulties: clearly women wrote
much more fiction than was ever given credit for before, but
(to put it crudely) a lot from how much?
It was such
issues relating to Romantic fiction that nearly twenty years
ago led me to start compiling a catalogue of fiction titles
between 1780 and 1830, in what now looks the incredibly quaint
form of a card index file. This was assembled in
an eclectic way, making use of modern sources as they became
available, such as the Eighteenth-Century Short-Title Catalogue
(ESTC), as well as a variety of documents contemporary with
the period (over fifty circulating library catalogues, William
Bents London Catalogue of Books, review listings,
and so on). The index finally settled down as a
collection of some 2,897 items, representingI then felt
confidentmore than 90% of original titles in this period. It
allowed a number of special observations to be made about
the production of fictionfor instance, the spread of
publishers, and gender of authorsbut always with the
proviso that in many cases information was not based on copies
seen at first hand. This was brought home to me
by Mervyn Janetta, editor of The Library, when I wanted
to add a Checklist to an article about the publisher J. F.
Hugheshe argued that only bibliographies based on copies
actually examined at first hand carried weightit was
he too who used the word quaint about card index
files. [3] So,
I shuffled back to Cardiff, feeling terribly provincial, and
stopped working on it
The project
then revived, unexpectedly, in 1990 through contact with the
collection of English novels in the Library of Corvey Castle
and with Projekt Corvey at Paderborn University Schloss
Corvey is near Höxter on the River Weser, about thirty
minutes drive from Paderborn (itself a cathedral town
in Westphalia). Die Fürstliche Bibliothek
(Princely Library) is an aristocratic family library, containing
about 67,000 volumes, mainly in German, French, and English,
with a tailing off circa 1834. One striking feature
of the collection is the large number of English novels belonging
to the Romantic period, which is quite exceptional in view
of the fact that in Britain fiction was more often borrowed
than bought, and even when bought rarely preserved in libraries. Projekt
Corvey is co-headed by Professors Rainer Schöwerling
and Harmut Steinecke (a Germanist), and since the late 1980s
has been involved in processing the contents of the library. Books
were brought over in single vanloads to the project room in
Paderborn for processing in three ways:
 All
title pages were Xeroxed
 Bibliographical
details for each item were then taken, and sent to the central
German computing system at Cologne
 Microfiches
were made of the full text of each title.
When I first arrived in May 1990, the cataloguing
of the first phase, focusing on belles lettres, was under
way, and I was kindly given a microfiche containing all the
title information compiled for the Cologne central computing
system.
Through collation
of the Corvey titles against my original card index file, it
was possible to make a number of generalisations about the Corvey
holdings in relation to the output of fiction in the Romantic
period. The serious purchasing of English titles
clearly began in the mid-1790s. By the early 1800s, the
library appears to have been taking about 80% of production,
with a regular intake of fifty new novels annually. In
the 1820s, accessions reached a new level, with the library
in two single years (1822 and 1829) actually taking all but
one of the novels in my index file. This exercise
also threw light on the kinds of novel that are absent
from the library. Prominent here are translations
into English of works previously published in French or German. Other
omissions include subscription novels and works published
for the author (e.g. Sense and Sensibility), which
for commercial reasons were not pushed by the book trade; titles
issued by publishers who were not fully established (e.g. Henry
Colburn in his early days), or by those who were never
respectable (e.g. J. F. Hughes), and scurrilous titles which
might be taken to indicate a bawdy content. Also
discovered by this process were some fifty to sixty titles which
had been previously unknown to me, and comparison against sources
such as the Nineteenth-Century Short-Title Catalogue
(NSTC) and the National Union Catalog (NUC) suggested
that a small but significant proportion of these are probably
unique to Corvey. [4]
A decision was
taken to compile a new Bibliography to replace Block, bringing
together my original file, the holdings of Corvey Castle, and
also involving collaboration with James Raven, the compiler
of British Fiction, 17501770, whose team would
deal with 177099. This lead to a contract with
Oxford University Press for English Novels 17701830:
A Bibliographical Survey of Prose Fiction Published in the British
Isles, in two volumes (177099 and 180029)and,
delivery is due in 1998. All entries in the new Bibliography
whenever possible are based on physical examination of a first
editionthis has been achieved in all but a handful of
cases for 180029and they record the full title,
details of authorship, and imprint information as they appear
on the original title-page. Below are some typical
entries from the year 1820, which will give an idea of procedure.
1820: 12
#AUT# ANON.
#TIT# ZELICA, THE CREOLE; A NOVEL, BY AN AMERICAN. IN THREE
VOLUMES.
#PUB# London: Printed for William Fearman, Library, 170, New
Bond Street, 1820.
#COL# I 243p; II 254p; III 309p. 12mo. 21s (ECB).
#REV# ER 35: 266 (Mar 1821); WSW II: 41.
#CAT# Corvey; CME 3-628-47473-6; ECB 654; NSTC 2A10533 (BI
BL).
#NOT# ER gives Madame de Sansée as the
author. For another work probably by the same author see Entry
1823: 12.
1820: 13
#AUT# [BARHAM, Richard Harris].
#TIT# BALDWIN; OR, A MISERS HEIR. A SERIO-COMIC TALE.
IN TWO VOLUMES. BY AN OLD BACHELOR.
#PUB# London: Printed at the Minerva Press for A.K. Newman
and Co. Leadenhall-Street, 1820.
#COL# I vi, 245p; II 270p. 12mo. 11s (ECB, ER, QR).
#REV# ER 34: 509 (Nov 1820); QR 24: 276 (Oct 1820).
#CAT# Corvey; CME 3-628-47091-9; ECB 36; NSTC 2B7767 (BI BL,
C, O; NA MH).
#NOT# Dedication To Anybody, signed G.H.E..
Copy at Harvard (*EC8.B2395.8206) includes authors MS
revisions, in preparation for a 2nd edn.
1820: 14
#AUT# BARRON, Edward.
#TIT# THE ROYAL WANDERER, OR SECRET MEMOIRS OF CAROLINE: THE
WHOLE FOUNDED ON RECENT FACTS, AND CONTAINING AMONG OTHER
THINGS, AN AUTHENTIC AND HITHERTO UNPUBLISHED ACCOUNT OF COURT-CABALS,
AND ROYAL TRAVELS. BY EDWARD BARRON, ESQ. EMBELLISHED WITH
ENGRAVINGS.
#PUB# London: Printed and published by H. Rowe, 11, Warwick-Square,
Paternoster-Row, 1820.
#COL# 860p, ill. 8vo.
#CAT# NN CK.Barron; NSTC 2B9759 (NA DLC).
#NOT# Preface dated January 1st. A secret
history of Princess Caroline, and distinct from The
Royal Wanderer, by Algernon, 3 vols.see
Entry 1815: 15. The copy seen is bound with the same authors
The Wrongs of Royalty; Being a Continuation of the Royal
Wanderersee 1820: 15. Collates in fours.
Further edn: 1823 (NSTC).
All entries are
contained within a predetermined mask, with seven fields signalled
by flags which will be later edited out.
#AUT# is the
author field. Where not known, ANON is given, and
these appear arranged alphabetically by title at the beginning
of each year. Where the authors name does appear
on the title-page, this is given in the form it appears there,
and with additional information, such as expanded Christian
names, appearing in square brackets. Where the author
does not appear on the title-page, but has been identified,
the name is given though contained within square brackets.
#TIT# gives accurate
details of the imprint title-page, with punctuation exactly
as there, though always in capital letters. In the
very few cases where the first edition has not been located,
and the entry reconstituted from secondary materials, this is
indicated by an asterisk at the beginning.
#PUB# The first-named
main place of publication is always recorded at the beginning
of this field, followed by a colon: the rest of the imprint
is then given exactly as it appears, though a comma is always
used to precede the date.
#COL# details
collation of the text. Page numbers are given for
each volume, followed by format, which is determined by counting
leaves between signatures. Price information is also
given here, the main sources for this being review listings,
and, in the case of vol. 2 of the Bibliography, the English
Catalogue of Books, 18011836 (ECB). [5]
#REV# delineates
review information, butin the case of post-1800 entries
especiallythis is not to be taken as a guide to review
material as such: there are several extant guides, such as William
S. Wards Literary Reviews in British Periodicals
(New York: Garland, 1972 etc.). Rather, it points
to our main sources of information about price and date. Vol.
2 follows on from its predecessor by featuring at its start
the Monthly and Critical reviews, though these
are superseded in due course by the Edinburgh and Quarterly
respectively. Most of the information in the latter
two cases comes from the Novels and Romances section
in their lists of New Publications at the end of each number,
though when full reviews are given this is noted. When
additional reviews are to be found in Ward (WSW), this is indicated
also.
#CAT# returns
cataloguing details, and always begins with the library source
and shelfmark number for the copy used. When Corvey
is the source, this appears as such (i.e. Corvey);
in other cases the abbreviation system employed by the ESTC
is used (C for Cambridge, E for National Library of Scotland,
etc.). This is followed by the ISBN number of the
Corvey microfiche, where applicable. Also, in the
CAT field, reference is given to the English Catalogue of
Books; and to an NSTC number, along with the holding libraries
listed there. The tag xNSTC is used to
indicate that a copy is not to be found in NSTC.
#NOT# provides
pertinent notes on the title: the foreign source work, for example,
for translated novels, is always given where known; information
concerning authorship and publication history found in preliminaries
is also provided here, though this practice has been approached
optionally rather than systematically. Each entry
ends by given a brief record of further editions: British and
Irish editions to 1850; the first American edition; and the
first French and German translations (with title if differing
interestingly); also details are provided of modern facsimile
editions.
Since 1990 Cardiff
and Paderborn teams have been working to compile entries for
every novel known to have existed between 1800 and 1829 inclusive. As
a rule, we have excluded non-standard works such as miscellanies,
shorter tales, childrens literature, and religious tracts. Usually,
the copy at Corvey was used for our entries, unless there are
good reasons for not doing this (e.g. an imperfect copy, not
a first edition). In cases where Corvey couldnt
provide the copy (approximately 28% of cases), we have usually
gone first to the British Library, then (if not available there)
to the other main copyright libraries (Bodleian, National Library
of Scotland, Trinity College Dublin, etc.). An invaluable
help here was NSTC (the second series of which (181670)
was being completed as we ourselves were proceeding, and now,
of course, both series I and II are available on CD-ROM). Having
a fullish core collection held electronically also allowed cross-checking
of the titles given as by the author in our #TIT#
line, which produced a number of fresh novels then locatable
through online facilities such as Blaise and the OCLC database.
A fast laptop (a thing unheard of when we started) also aided
stack checks against specialist collections at Aberdeen and
Bristol. When a title was not locatable in Britain and
Ireland, we turned to the USA with our list of remain titles
to be found. A full check was made against the card
index file at the Houghton Library, Harvard University, left
by Sidney Greenougha kind of American Block. There
were also visits to other US libraries, notably to the large
holdings at Urbana (Illinois), and the Sadleir-Black collection
at the University of Virginia. By now we were experiencing
diminishing returns, and thirty or so titles that we know to
have existed but were unable to find have been reconstituted
from available secondary evidence.
The total file
(all three decades) is now closed, with 2,256 titles in all
for the years 180029 inclusive. This research
has been used as the basis for the creation of a dynamic database,
designed by Anthony Mandal in collaboration with Peter Garside,
using Microsoft Access 97this time employing the latest
technologies, rather than other, quainter methods! It
is now possible, for the first time, to draw statistical conclusions
from what we have gathered together over the past two decades. As
well as this, the database is fully searchable, and contains
complete details of the texts, and additional material which
it was impossible or unnecessary to include in the original
bibliography. Such fields as authorial status (whether
the author published pseudonymously, anonymously, or with an
authenticated name), publishing concerns (enabling the analysis
of the fortunes of the major publishing houses over the three
decades), and full gender categorisations have been included. The
second phase is underway, which includes ascription to each
entry of Genre/Style (e.g. Gothic, Historical, Domestic, etc.)
and Narrative Structure (e.g. Epistolary, Direct Narrative,
etc.), as well as pricing statistics for the various volume-sizes
of the novels.
Examples of what
is being achieved with this combination of dedicated scholarship
and modern advances in IT and data-manipulation is provided
in some of the sample graphs contained below.
Fig 2. Total Output
of Fiction, 18001829
This graph shows
that the new level of output achieved during the late 1790s
was largely sustained during the 1800s. Output in
the 1810s, however, is 3% lower than in the 1800s, but then
builds up into the period of most output during the earlier
1820s. One
particularly noteworthy feature is the fact that the largest
year of all is not 1810, but 1808. Another interesting
figure is the trough which occurs midway in the 1810s (the time
of the earliest Scott novels). Why? This
could be a lot to do with the cost of paper, which rose during
this period. Also noteworthy is the disruption of
the steady rise in the 1820s, as novel production was buffeted
(but not seriously dented) by the financial crash
of 1826 in the publishing trade.
Fig 3. Top Five
Publishers: Womens Novels (Total vs. Anon), 18001829
Fig 3 compares
womens novels as published by the most prolific concerns
of the period 180029: Minerva, Longmans, Henry Colburn,
J. F. Hughes, and Whittakers. Here, works by women
are taken to include female-implied (By a Lady,
By Lady , etc.) and pseudonymous novels, as
well as those whose authors are named on the title-pages or
have been subsequently identified. The blue cylinders
show womens output as a percentage of the total production
by each concern. The magenta cylinders again are
percentages of the publishers total output, indicating
how many novels written by women were published anonymously
(i.e. no name or variant thereof given on title-pages). What
is of interest is the similarity between Minerva and Longmans,
the top two publishers: both have a female authorship of between
54% and 55.5%, of which only around 15% were published anonymously.
Compare this with the more male-inclined Henry Colburn and Whittakers,
which only had a female authorship of around 30%, half of which
was published anonymously. Finally, J. F. Hughes,
a far more controversial figure, while not having such a high
total output of female-penned works as Minerva or Longmans,
only published around 4.3% of his female authors anonymously. What
this might be taken to indicate is that the publishers of the
earlier part of the period (most significantly, Hughes) were
more inclined to openly publish female-penned works as such,
while concerns which appeared at a later date (Colburn did not
begin publishing until 1807) not only published fewer works
by women, but were even less inclined (proportionately speaking)
to advertise when they did publish them.
Fig 4. Gender Breakdown:
Minerva Press, 18001829
The final graph
presents details of the output of the Minerva concern (under
William Lane, Lane, Newman & Co, and then A. K. Newman &
Co) over the three decades. The gender divisions
represent the status of the works as deduced from the title-page
(see above). The terms correspond with the Bibliographys
#AUT# field: Named texts indicate an authenticated
name given in the title-page; Identifed texts are
based on scholarly discoveries, deduced associations (i.e. By
the author of
), or established ascriptions; Implied
texts are based on unidentified pseudonymous works or those
whose title-pages indicate some gender type (e.g. By a
Lady, By a Reverend, etc.); Unknown,
unsurprisingly, indicates no further substantial knowledge of
authorial gender is available. What is noteworthy
of Minervas output over the three decades is the precedence
of Female Named texts, which is in keeping with the data of
Fig 3. Furthermore, female-penned works outnumber male-penned
works by 23% (approximately 121 novels), although the average
output of womens novels had dropped from 64% in the latter
half of the 1810s to around 51% during 18259. Of
their average yearly production of novels, Minerva managed just
over twenty-one books per year in the 1800s (best year, with
twenty-eight novels, was 1805), compared with slightly more
than fourteen per year in the 1820s (worst year, with nine novels,
was 1829). Perhaps this emphasis on the female market
explains the demise of Minerva in the 1820s, with their rather
unfashionable touting of female-penned works at
a time which anticipated the dominance of the Victorian male
author in the light of Scotts phenomenal achievement.
One
last point brings us finally back to Scott. As noted
in Fig 2, as far as the output of new titles is concerned, 1810
it turns out is not the optimum year; rather, it is 1808, where
we have a clear peak of 111 titles. Of these, forty-one
are by male authors, fifty by women, and twenty remain to be
identified. The titles themselves are a mixed bunchat
the head used to be Atrocities of a Convent, until examination
of the only surviving copy at UCLA revealed that it was authored
by Thomas Rickman (and is more a radical satire than a Gothic
potboiler). There are, however, a few genuinely salacious
titlesThe Noble Cornutos, The Rl Stranger,
The Royal Sufferer, Royal Intriguesreflecting
a royal scandal (between the Prince Regent, later George IV,
and his wife, Princess Caroline) not unlike the one current
now. In the middle of this squarely sits Hannah Mores
Clebsan attempt at moral re-armament from
within the enemy camp if ever there was one! [6]
Also among the few more heavy titles is Joseph Strutts
antiquarian novel, Queenhoo Hall, which was completed
by Scott for the publisher John Murray. [7]
Murray was then angling for a share of Scotts poetry;
Scott was trying to offload a number of projects, including
a collected set of British Novelists, which were meant to keep
James Ballantynes press busy and help launch John Ballantyne
as an Edinburgh publisher (both concerns were secretly owned
by Scott). Early in 1809 James Ballantyne (acting
as Scotts literary agent), met Murray at Boroughbridge
in Yorkshire and took a memorandum of the meeting which has
survived. One project itemised there is New
poem, against which is recorded Murrays comment,
Most certainly. Another, called Anonymous
work, is undeniably Waverley. Scott
in this new light can thus be seen embarking on a career as
a novelist at a time when fiction, if at a low ebb in reputation,
was undeniably reaching a high watermark in terms of output.
Notes
1. Lee
Erickson, The Poets Corner: The Impact of Technological
Changes in Printing on English Poetry, 17501850,
in English Literary History 52 (1985), 902. Reprinted
in his The Economy of Literary Form: English Literature and
the Industrialization of Publishing, 18001850 (Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins Press, 1996).
2. A
second edition of Scottish Chiefs (1811) can be found
in the Corvey Microfiche collection at Cardiff, ISBN CME 3-628-48361-1.
3. Q.v.,
Peter Garside, J. F. Hughes and the Publication of Popular
Fiction, Library 9 (1987), 24058.
4. Cardiff
University holds both the NSTC (1st and 2nd series) and NUC
for inspection on the ground floor of the Arts and Social Studies
Library. The ESTC is also avaliable for consultation at
any of the computer bays in the ASSL.
5. The
English Catalogue of Books, Preliminary Volume, 18011836,
edd. Robert Alexander Peddie and Quintin Waddington (1914; New
York: Kraus Reprint Corporation, 1963).
6. So
rapid was its success, this title was not acquired for the Corvey
collection until the 14th edition of 1813! Again,
this is available for inspection, under CME 3-628-47303-9.
7. Queenhoo
Hall is also held on the Corvey microfiche: CME 3-628-48681-5.
Copyright Information
This article is copyright © 1999 Centre for
Editorial and Intertextual Research, and is the result of the
independent labour of the scholar or scholars credited with
authorship. The material contained in this document may be freely
distributed, as long as the origin of information used has been
properly credited in the appropriate manner (e.g. through bibliographic
citation, etc.).
Referring to this
Article
P. D. GARSIDE and A. A. MANDAL. Producing
Fiction in Britain, 18001829, Cardiff Corvey:
Reading the Romantic Text 1 (August 1997). Online: Internet
(date accessed): <http://www.cf.ac.uk/encap/romtext/articles/cc01_n01.html>.
This article was originally presented
as a paper by Dr Peter Garside during the SHARP Conference at
Magdalene College, Cambridge, in June 1997. The graphs were
produced also in June, and this article emended for the Cardiff
Corvey website, with additional material and commentary
(esp. for Figs 3 and 4), by Anthony Mandal in August 1997 (with
updated versions provided for this archived version, in June
1999).
Contributor Details
Peter Garside (MA Cantab., PhD Cantab., AM Harvard)
is Professor of English Literature at Cardiff University and
Chair of the Centre for Editorial and Intertextual Research.
As well as specialising in Romantic and Augustan literature,
he has recently completed work on a Bibliographical Survey
of Prose Fiction Published in the British Isles (with James
Raven and Rainer Schöwerling; OUP forthcoming), and is
currently editing James Hoggs Private Memoirs and Confessions
of a Justified Sinner.
His other involvements include
participation in the advisory board of the Edinburgh Edition
of the Waverley Novels (from 1985) and the Stirling/South Carolina
Edition of the Collected Works of James Hogg (from 1991), as
well as editing for both projects. He has published widely in
the field of Scottish fiction, publishing history, and Romantic
literature, and recent publications relevant to fiction of the
Romantic period include a chapter on Romantic Gothic,
in Literature of the Romantic Period, ed. Michael ONeill
(Oxford, 1998), pp. 31540.
Anthony Mandal (BA Dunelm, MA Wales) is a PhD
student at Cardiff University, examining the literary and publishing
world faced by Jane Austen in the 1810s. His thesis seeks to
consider a number of pertinent questions: What were contemporary
novelists writing? How easy was it for a woman writing
in the nineteenth century? How successful was Austen
compared to her peers? How astute was she, entering
the literary marketplace at a time when female authors were
at their most prolific? Answering these questions
might lead to Austen being considered, not as an isolated author,
but as one who was very much a part of the dynamic world of
the early nineteenth century.
Published contributions include
entries in the forthcoming Cambridge Bibliography of English
Literature (3rd edn.), and New Dictionary of National
Biography, as well as articles in Fitzroy-Dearborns
Encyclopedia of the Novel (1999). Other main interests
include information technology and the Internet, and how these
advances can be combined with traditional scholarly skills to
produce dynamic tools for researchers.

Last modified
19 September, 2005
.
This document is maintained by Anthony Mandal
(Mandal@cf.ac.uk).
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