| The Mosher Press | Bibliography |
Bibliography of Thomas Bird Mosher
(a work on, about or mentioning Mosher)
Selectively Annotated
and with a Quotation
Foley, John.
"Foreword" in Amphora, a Second Collection. Portland, ME:
Mosher, 1926, pp. xiii-xviii.
My
aim has been, and is, to print only those things informed by the spirit of
beauty--of the souls of books--not hackneyed, by reason of constant use or
display. If the book has any demonstrable raison d' être, it is more
especially that I have got out of the beaten highway and wandered into
bypaths, seeking for fine flowers of the forest rather than for floral
displays of the classical literary garden. [T.B. Mosher]
That Thomas Bird Mosher accomplished his difficult task of gathering
"the lesser known, but imperishable utterances" which earlier
editors "had never found or had never set out to find," is clear
not only from the gratifying response to the first Amphora, which
he brought out in 1912, but also from the singular measure of praise which
it has won from judicious critics. It had long been Mr. Mosher's purpose
to make a second collection of rare prose and verse championed by him from
writers of distinction, many of whom had had to wait for just recognition.
These selections which he had included in his catalogues from 1912 to
1923, he was intending to publish in a satisfying format when death
frustrated his plan. Since that time many persons have requested that
these choice passages, as yet scattered, be brought together under one
cover, and many have asked for some account of Mr. Mosher's life.
Amphora: A Second Collection, while fulfilling his purpose, also
preserves his Forewords, which are essays in themselves, and three of his
poems not heretofore printed over his name; presents an admirable likeness
of him; and records several distinguished tributes to his life and work.
This volume, then, rightly takes on the character of a memorial.
But no memorial volume can have any claim to being complete unless it
defines Mr. Mosher's position as an editor and publisher, and unless it
sets forth his personality among his friends. The former is established by
the very individual and creative publishing he achieved and sustained in
America over many years; the latter can really be appreciated only by
those who knew him in the intimacy of his remarkable library. There he
lived in an other-worldliness of ideal beauty--to him the essential
reality--and this escape he offered to many other seekers through the
exquisite reprints which he put within their reach.
Entirely
independent of what the public wanted, Thomas Bird Mosher published what
he liked--and no more. While other publishers were, and are, satisfied to
supply very profitably the latest variation in public preference, he set
himself, in his own words, "to awaken a passion for the language of
the absolute which from the reading of my books is discoverable in ever
living beauty." To follow such an elusive ideal was to travel a
lonely way in a young nation and in an age which must be busied about the
insistent material needs of a swiftly changing world. Of the men in his
field, however, no one held more steadfastly than he to a venture which
must go unappreciated by the majority of his contemporaries, for he was a
fearless soul who dared to do the unpopular, one of those who are weavers
of intellectual and spiritual beauty against the need of a newer day. He
was, in fact, a publisher who turned poet in the making of beautiful
books, and for this he holds in the history of American publishing a place
apart.
Quickened by the flame which stirred
William Morris, Rossetti, Burne-Jones, and Ruskin, he began in the
Eighteen-Nineties a pilgrimage to the spirit of beauty. As Arthur Symons
says in his conclusion to Studies in Prose and Verse, "Art
begins when a man wishes to immortalize the most vivid moment he has ever
lived." Mr. Mosher immortalized his highest moments as a pilgrim
along the road "to the best that is thought and known in the
world" in his reprints and in The Bibelot, both fast becoming
classics. And what better single evidence of his craftsmanship can one
offer than his beautiful edition of Sir Richard Burton's The
Kasidah? What more conclusive proof of his exact literary judgment and
unerring taste in editing than the fruits of his many years, which William
Marion Reedy commended thus: "The complete Bibelot, in twenty
volumes, is an encyclopedia of the literature of rapture with the spirit
of beauty"? Similarly, his first Amphora and this his second
Amphora together bring to a consummation the record of his
distinctive work in publishing those things which from his viewpoint
possessed permanence in literature.
His genius
for discerning the durable and less known excellence in books was
paralleled by his kindliness and keen humor. Those who knew him best will
always see him as the booklover and humanist before his hearthfire in his
immense library at home, a large oblong room solid with unusual books from
floor to ceiling. There the man whom readers of his Amphora must
know indirectly, roamed at will, drawing down from shelf on shelf, times
without number, some edition long sought by collectors, and immediately
opening it to humorous or illuminating sections, laughing like a boy, yet
serious in an instant and alert to champion, as ever, unrecognized worth,
or to right some wrong to literary fame. Lover of beauty and stoic, he
may be imagined as writing in his second Amphora as he wrote in the
first selection of 1912:
My
Amphora, then, O friends whom I may never meet nor greet other than in
these words, is not a cinerary urn such as Sir Thomas Browne
discovered..... but rather a vessel still containing in unspoiled solution
a genuine and generous juice of the most high Muses!
Indeed, this second collection reveals once more the gifts and personality
of Thomas Bird Mosher whose editing and publishing of fine books has
helped to make the best in literature available in America, and whose work
may be described in Walter Pater's words on art, as devoted "to such
presentment of new or old truth about ourselves and our relation to the
world as may ennoble and fortify us in our sojourn here."
John Foley. "Foreword" Amphora II, pp. xiii-xviii. Foley was a New York newspaperman and writer.