| The Mosher Press | Bibliography |
Bibliography of Thomas Bird Mosher
(a work on, about or mentioning Mosher)
Selectively Annotated
and with a Quotation
Alphamu. "Thomas Bird Mosher (1852-1923)" in The Calcutta Review -- An Illustrated Monthly. Vol. 9, No. 3 (Third Series). Calcutta, India: Calcutta Review, December 1923, pp. 459-465. This monthly literary periodical was distributed through agents in London, New York, Bombay, New Delhi, Patna, and Calcutta.
Thomas
Bird Mosher, for nearly half a century publisher of rare editions of books
in belles
lettres and dean of the world's book lovers, died on the 31st August,
1923.
Beginning life as a book-keeper Mr. Mosher lived to establish a business
which
has no equal. He was a writer of fine discernment, a critic and an
authority in
the branch of literature to which he devoted his life.
Mr.
Mosher
occupied a unique position, in that he was so busy supplying the people of
distant lands and places with books that his townspeople were scarcely
familiar
with him. Beloved by the comparatively few who were privileged to know him
in
the City of Portland, Maine, U. S. A., where he practically spent his
life, his
name is a household word in the cities and towns of the West and South, in
which there is apparently a greater demand for books of the quality
published
by Mr. Mosher than in Portland. It might even be said in this connection
that
the distinguished bookman was better known in Australia and in India than
he
was to the people of Exchange Street, where in 1871 he entered the
publishing
business as a clerk in the store above which his office was afterwards
located.
It
was
here, however, that Mr. Mosher was able to throw himself into the work
which
made life for him "the sunlit road," which he declared he had
found
it. Here he lived surrounded by his books, pictures and bric-a-brac,
receiving
his patrons and friends from the literary centres of the world, attending
to
his immense correspondence and to a still greater extent finding
companion-ship
with the great men of letters of the past. Broadminded and with a literary
outlook of the widest, he was also ready to welcome the good work of men
of today,
as well as to help preserve and to send down the productions of the great
authors and scholars of the past. His own scholarship was exact and
comprehensive along special lines and it would be hard to set any bounds
to his
field of literary observations and research.
Mr.
Mosher
was born in Biddeford, September 11, 1852, the son of Benjamin and Mary
Elizabeth (Merrill). He was educated in the public schools of Biddeford
and
Boston and in 1906 Bowdoin College conferred the honorary degree of A. M.
upon
him. He married Anna M. Littlefield of Saco, July 2, 1892. He is survived
by
his wife and two sons, Harrison Hume and Thomas Bird Jr. and by one
sister,
Mrs. Elizabeth Cowan of Biddeford.
He
began
publishing choice and limited editions of books in belles lettres in
October,
1891. His work of editing and publishing the Bibelot [titles not
italicized in
this article] was begun in January, 1895; he thus completed a reprint of
poetry
and prose, largely from scarce editions and sources not usually known, in
twenty-one volumes with index, in 1915. He edited and published an
American
edition of The Germ, 1898; Swinburne's Poems and Ballads, 1899; Rossetti's
Poetical Works, 1902. The first absolute facsimile reprint of Fitzgerald's
Omar
Khayyám of 1859 was produced by Mr. Mosher in 1902. He also edited and
compiled
a bibliography in Old World editions of Fitzgerald's entire texts of
Omar.
It is
of
interest to know that the first time Mr. Mosher ever heard a word about
the
Rubaiyat was in 1879 and the man who quoted "the moving finger
writes" was a doctor of medicine, F. H. Gerrish, of Portland who was
very
well known in the medical profession. It was in a little lecture room in
Congress Street on the subject of hygiene that the latter quoted those
four
lines, and from that time to the last day of Mr. Mosher's life, as it
were,
Omar was with him. "I think I need Omar every hour," he was fond
of
saying.
At
that
time Mr. Mosher's day had not dawned. He was a hard working bookkeeper who
was
carrying burdens and had not seen his way to publish the "Mosher
books," or indeed any books except the ordinary folios used in his
professional career. From 1882 to 1890 he was one of the partners of the
firm
which was known as McLellan, Mosher and Co. Leaving Portland in 1879, he
returned to Maine and went into business with the late Reuel T. McLellan
in
1882.
He
came in
touch with the particular interest which proved to be the ruling hobby of
his
life through wanting to publish things according to his idea of how they
should
be published. He intuitively felt that such work would have place. Then,
too,
expression was doubtlessly a motive,-the impulse which shows itself in the
desire for good workmanship. These combined with perseverance, the faculty
which gives one the power to accomplish a piece of work without allowing
one's
self to be turned aside from purpose, either by the initial difficulties
involved or by the obstacles that multiply as one progresses with his
task, led
to the goal.
Mr.
Mosher's first book was Modern Love by George Meredith. It faithfully
reproduced the text of 1862 and was later revised with other poems by
Meredith
in his Old World Series. The closing words of that poem better than
anything
else, tell what Mr. Mosher tried to do as a publisher, as he once
said,-"To throw that faint, thin line upon the shore." He
considered
the greatest achievement of his career to be, not his Bibelot, by which he
was
best known, but the reproduction of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass, in the
author's memorial year. Mr. Mosher not only had the extremely great
pleasure of
publishing this book, but he had an equal amount of gratification of
seeing the
edition sold out without a word of advertising, although this interest was
in
no sense from the commercial standpoint. It was simply a case of
"throwing
out that faint, thin line upon the shore." His last published work
was
Odes, Sonnets and Lyrics of John Keats.
Mr.
Mosher
once made the statement that he rarely ever read the newspapers for the
reason
that he could not indulge in the habit without enfeebling his taste for
literature, although he admitted that his early dreams were of a
newspaper.
He
claimed
it was his father who gave him his greatest education when he allowed him
to go
to sea for five years. He often declared that he was grateful to his
father for
saving him from a college education. He attributed his love of reading to
the
fact that having little school training, he needed and loved
literature.
Mr.
Mosher
published nearly 500 titles reproducing upon the finest papers, by means
of the
most beautiful fonts of type and in the most artistic bindings, some of
the
most exquisite editions of literary works. Thus the best traditions of
English
literature have been preserved, and through "the faint, thin
line"
which the Portland publisher eminently succeeded in throwing, these
traditions
should and undoubtedly will pass into the possession of coming generations
whose pleasure it will be to cherish them and whose duty it will be to
perpetuate
them. Much also might be said of Mr. Mosher's cultured home life, and of
the
gaiety, optimism and irony, combined in his delightful personality. He
lived
profoundly, which indeed was the secret of his producing greatly. But it
is as
a publisher of unique volumes, as an editor and poet that he will be
remembered, and this will be as he wished, if one may judge from the
preface of
one of his own works in which he wrote in part as follows:
"To
you who have bought and loved my books and know what they have signified
during
the past years I need give no stronger assurance as to the tenor of my way
than
is set forth in these solemn affirmations. To believe that literature is
the
lasting expression in words of the meaning of life, has been and will ever
remain an ideal as long as I am permitted to publish at all."
"And
when the curtain comes down for the last time, I want not a few
half-wearied
spectators and a fast emptying house, but a still appreciable
audience."
"I know the night is
near
at hand,
The mist lies on the
hill
and bay,
The autumn leaves are
drifting by,
But I have had the
day."
Wilbur Needham has made the
following fine attempt at appreciation of the rare spirit which pervaded
all
that Mosher did:
[quotes Needham's
three-part
article, in toto, from the Chicago Evening Post]
The latest books which Mosher lived to place in the hands of his readers
were in his best style. One of these is "a Freeman's Worship"
[sic] with special preface by Bertrand Russell, the other is "a
Children's Crusade" [sic] translated from the French of Marcel Schwob
in the same format as originated by him.
We are
delighted to find that although no more new books will be published in
these series, the Mosher books will be reprinted as called for. Truly may
the words of William Watson be applied to Mosher:
In light, in night, in
twilight,
I sought for very
Thee:
But my
light, was it 'Thy light?
I sought, and nought could
see.
I strove by inward
eyesight
To gaze on things to
be:
But my sight,
was it Thy sight?
I gazed, and nought could
see.
Along Thy starlit
highway
Thou lead'st me, bound or
free!
If my way,
then, be Thy way,
O whither lead'st Thou
me?