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Thomas Bird Mosher
1852-1923
Like Aldus Manutius, the fifteenth century
Venetian printer, Thomas
Bird Mosher entered the publishing world late in life. Mosher was
thirty-nine when he embarked upon his career as publisher and editor. Also
like Aldus he produced small, finely printed books at a reasonable price
affordable by the middle class. Unlike Aldus, however, whose book designs
and contents were often stolen by other printers, Mosher himself became
notorious as the impassioned “Portland Pirate” of the turn-of-the-century
printing world.
He was born in 1852 in Biddeford, Maine, the son of Captain Benjamin
Mosher, a skipper in the China trade, and Mary Elizabeth Merrill. The
Mosher family had deep roots in Maine, having settled there in the middle
of the seventeenth century. Mosher’s parents saw to his early education in
Boston, and his mother kept him supplied with numerous magazines, dime
novels, and other popular publication to support his voracious appetite
for reading.
Mosher’s formal education was limited to graduating from the Quincy
Grammar School at twelve and reading under the supervision of a local
Biddeford minister; however, he acquired an extensive informal education
during several seafaring voyages aboard his father’s vessels. Trips to
Liverpool and even to New Orleans on the Civil War troop transport, the De
Witt Clinton, were propaedeutic to the now legendary 1866-1870 family tour
aboard the clipper Nor’wester, when Mosher was but a lad of fourteen.
Beyond the dime novels, Mosher listed Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s
Progress, Fox’s Book of Martyrs, and Buckle’s History of Civilization as
his earliest literary influences. None of these would stir his soul and
passions, however, like the thirty-four volume set of “dumpy eighteenmos”
his father bought him in Hamburg at the outset of their world tour:
Bell’s British Theatre. Along with other literary acquisitions, including
a Virgil, these books provided the young autodidact with a treasure trove
of English literature. The adult Mosher would wistfully reflect in his
1912 catalogue:
No! I shall never again read books as I once read them in my early
seafaring when all the world and love were young! Nor shall I ever forget
those days of tropical splendor, or nights when only a faint and oily lamp
swung in the lonely cabin; the plunging ship midst ocean’s gray and
solitary waste, and the long wintry passage around Cape Horn.
One would think that a three-and-a-half-year world voyage to England,
Europe, South America, San Francisco, and Puget Sound, to the mysterious
Pacific Islands, and four times past Cape Horn would fill a traveler’s
head with the rich experience of a Melville, a Dana, or a Masefield, but
not so with Mosher. Often, while his sister Elizabeth was topside,
excitedly drinking in the sights, Tom’s nose was buried in a book below
the deck. (-1-) Cast away were any hopes
that Captain
Mosher might have
entertained for his son to see something of the world and to be made a man
by the sea’s discipline. Instead, Tom busied himself with a daily regimen
of study and exercise, both of the mind and the body. He apparently took
little note of the world about him, focusing instead on the book before
him or attending to the “readings” of his own inner world.
In 1870, with the world of sea travel behind him, Mosher sallied into
a different world of high and rough romantic seas. It was shortly after
his return that another try at formal education ended almost as quickly as
it began at the Phillips Exeter Academy in Andover, Massachusetts. Soon
after this aborted attempt, Mosher began courting a hometown girl, Ellen
S. Dresser. The two became romantically involved, so much so that in June
1871 they eloped. They tried to keep their marriage a secret, but when Tom
was discovered late at night in Ellie’s bedroom, they were forced by their
somewhat disgruntled families to make the union formal and public on July
4. Any hopes for further schooling were dashed when his father demanded
that Tom leave the Biddeford home to take up the adult responsibilities of
work and running his own household. As a result, Tom Mosher began his
first employment as a clerk with his wife’s uncle at the stationery firm
of Dresser, McClellan and Company in Portland, Maine.
A remarkable set of failures punctuated the next twenty years. Mosher
soon quit his position. He tried working in bookshops and selling printing
supplies and equipment in New York City and Philadelphia, and even landed
a position as a clerk in a St. Louis bookstore, which he held for two
years. While all these dead ends were piling up, his wife suffered a
miscarriage. After several stressful years, she abandoned him in the fall
of 1879.
Repeated attempts to regain Ellie’s love failed, and the divorce
became final in September 1882. Historians have indicated that Ellie moved
to New York City and apparently died there shortly thereafter. What was
not known by Mosher’s second wife and by most of his biographers was that
Ellen, in fact, changed her name to Aimee Lenalie, an alias she used until
her death in 1824. Mosher both visited and corres-ponded with her
throughout the years. He arranged for her to translate several books for
the Mosher Press, most notably Mimes and “R.L.S.” An Essay, both by Marcel
Schwob (Lenalie was, by that time, Schwob’s authorized translator).
Mosher also arranged two important connections for Lenalie. One was a
stint with his friend, William Marion Reedy of St. Louis, as the New York
correspondent and French translator for Reedy’s The Mirror. The other was
an introduction to Mosher’s close friend, the noted British-born New York
publisher and owner of the famed Anderson Galleries—Mitchell Kennerley.
(Kennerley’s biographer, Matthew J. Bruccoli, refers to Lenalie as
“Kennerley’s erstwhile inamorata.”)
The 1880’s were marked for Mosher by a series of sorrowful events. In
1879 his dearest friend and literary soul mate, Leopold Lobsitz, suffered
an untimely death while attending Harvard Medical School. Three years
later the divorce took place, followed in 1884 by the death of Mosher’s
old friend and employer, Aurin Dresser, and in 1885 by that of his father.
The attempt to revive Dresser’s law book and stationery business under the
name of McClellan, Mosher and Company ended in bankruptcy around 1889.
Yet Mosher’s life had its joys and accomplishments. He wrote poetry
and articles for New England periodicals and newspapers (using his dead
uncle’s name, Richard Merrill, as a nom de plume) and a preface for A
Brief History of Maine, published in 1888 by McClellan, Mosher and
Company. He also managed to build a sizable library (-2-)
and had become
familiar with the intricacies of printing and binding. Furthermore, Mosher
resurrected a business out of the ashes of the bankruptcy. The Thomas B.
Mosher Company, a wholesale stationers’ business, manufactured lithographs
and legal blank books and sold law books. The income from this venture
allow him to begin publishing literary works, his true love.
In October 1891, Mosher published George Meredith’s Modern Love
( see reviews ), a
book ignored by other American and English publishers. Next to appear, in
1892 (the year of his second marriage, to Anna M. Littlefield), was The
City of Dreadful Night by James Thompson. These first two publication did
not meet with great success, but Mosher had begun to establish his
trademark style of bookmaking, and the pace of his publishing quickened.
In 1893 two books were published, followed by two more books and his first
catalogue in 1894. In 1895 the first issue of his magazine, The Bibelot,
appeared, along with eight additional books. By 1898 thirty-nine
publication had firmly established Mosher’s name and reputation.
Part of the credit for the fame and successful dissemination of the
Mosher books rests on his piracy of English authors. The international
copyright laws of 1872 [and 1891] were still misunderstood and commonly
flouted. If foreign publishers neglected to issue an American edition of
their book, that book became fair game for American publishers. When
Mosher published works that had no American edition, without authorization
from either author or publisher, he was acting legally but broke the
customary, extralegal right of prior publication —hence the controversy.
Articles attacking his methods, such as
"Thomas B. Mosher, The American Book Pirate: A Warning to
Booksellers," (-3-) and
"The Methods of Mosher," (-4-)
appeared in a variety of English and American periodicals
between 1896 and 1914. Although Mosher defended himself vigorously against
these accusations, he was not unhappy with the controversy, since instead
of putting an end to the Mosher Books it gave them free publicity, thereby
increasing his notoriety and the sale of his books.
Mosher’s publishing career extended over thirty-three years. During
that time he personally supervised an enormous output of over 700 books
(multiple editions included) covering over 400 titles. He chose the
papers, selected the typefaces and page arrangements, and followed the
books’ production from start to finish, all the while publishing “only the
things I love, and desire other to love.” He introduced the American
public to the riches of the Irish Revival, the English Aesthetes, the
French Symbolists, and many forgotten ancient and medieval texts.
The American public had Mosher to praise for many fine literary
introductions, but it is a pity that he failed to introduce two of
America’s own. The young Robert Frost was a good friend but could not coax
Mosher into publishing his books. Another young poet, Ezra Pound, was
equally unsuccessful. (-5-) These authors’
desire to have their works become Mosher books speaks of the high regard
many held for the books from Portland.
In many respects Mosher was a peculiar fellow. He sailed the world’s
seas for over three years but spent much of that time reading or, while
ashore, visiting bookshops (or frequenting graveyards to read tombstone
epitaphs). (-6-) He lived and worked in
Portland, but few locals even knew he
existed. For the most part, he eschewed close contact with the members of
the Boston printing renaissance. He befriended very few people and seemed
to prefer conducting intense friendships via correspondence rather than in
person. He enjoyed Epicurean fare during his travels yet bought his
groceries out of town so as to avoid local contacts. The man of refined
literary taste enjoyed racy stories and showed his swashbuckling side to
intimates, admitting that the things he liked most were “blue china,
poetry, and the smell of women offshore,” adding that his only regret in
life was to have missed two hangings because his father would not allow
him to go ashore. In short, he was an eccentric.
Norman Strouse
points out that amid an American society with an
intense drive toward mechanization and mass production, “there have been
those who have found a way to live quiet and modestly successful lives
while seeming to defy the normal rules for success… These seemingly
eccentric individuals have been found living in places quite isolated from
our vast centers of population, and though only one in ten thousand may
ever have heard of them, they have provided a singular and permanent
leaven in our cultural life. (-7-) Such a
man was Mosher.
Notes:
(1) Interview with Elizabeth [Mosher] Cowan, in preliminary chapter of
Dan Yorke'’sThat Man Mosher, Biddeford, Maine, unpublished, ca 1942,
p. 22. [Back]
(2) In 1897 Mosher commissioned a bookplate from Frank R. Rathbun of
Auburn, New York; two double-breasted griffins facing one another and framing
two dolphins holding a book. The original plate, printed on Japan vellum,
was part of an exhibit of bookplates from the collection of the Club of
Odd Volumes at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in 1898.
[Back]
(3) The Publisher’s Circular, January 23, 1909
[Back].
(4) Ibid, June 6, 1909. Other articles appeared in such publications as
The Critic (New York), The Glasgow Herald, The Manchester Guardian,
The Academy, and The Literary Digest, to name must a few.
[Back]
(5) Thomas A. Goldwasser. “Ezra Pound’A Lume Spento: A Preliminary
Census.” The Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America, Vol.
83 (March 1989); pp. 18, 21, 30-31. [Back]
(6) Yorke, op. cit.[Back]
(7)
Norman H. Strouse, The Passionate Pirate. North Hills, PA: Bird
& Bull Press, 1963, p. 14. [Back]
The above biographical sketch appears as the first chapter in Vilain and
Bishop's Thomas Bird Mosher and the Art of the Book. Philadelphia,
PA: F. A. Davis Company, 1992, pp. 1-4, and is used with the publisher's
kind permission.
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