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Jacob Tonson

Jacob Tonson, sometimes referred to as Jacob Tonson the Elder (1655–1736), was an eighteenth-century English bookseller and publisher.

Jacob Tonson
Portrait of Jacob Tonson by Godfrey Kneller, 1717
Born12 November 1655
Died17 March 1735/6
NationalityEnglish
Occupation(s)Bookseller and publisher
ParentJacob Tonson

Tonson published editions of John Dryden and John Milton, and is best known for having obtained a copyright on the plays of William Shakespeare by buying up the rights of the heirs of the publisher of the Fourth Folio after the Statute of Anne went into effect. He was also the founder of the famous Kit-Cat Club. His nephew, Jacob Tonson the Younger (1682–1735), was his business partner. The business was continued by the younger Tonson's son, Jacob Tonson (1714–1767).

History

Scholars have not always been sure of Tonson's birthdate, and it has in the past been listed as occurring in 1655 or 1656. But the register of christenings in the parish of St Andrew Holborn demonstrates that Tonson was born on 12 November 1655 and baptized 18 November 1655.[1] The register lists Tonson as the "sonne of Jacob Tonson Shoemaker and of Elizabeth his wife neare Grayes Inn Lane." He is believed to have been related to Major Richard Tonson, who obtained a grant of land in county Cork from Charles II, and whose descendants became Barons Riversdale. His father's will left him and his elder brother Richard, as well as three sisters, each £100, to be paid when they came of age. On 5 June 1670 Jacob was apprenticed to Thomas Basset, a stationer, for eight years. Having been admitted a freeman of the Company of Stationers on 20 December 1677, he began business on his own account, following his brother Richard, who had commenced in 1676, and had published, among other things, Thomas Otway's Don Carlos, Prince of Spain. Richard Tonson had a shop within Gray's Inn Gate; Jacob Tonson's shop was for many years at the Judge's Head in Chancery Lane, near Fleet Street.

It has been said that when Tonson bought the rights to Troilus and Cressida (1679), the first play of John Dryden's that he published, he was obliged to borrow the purchase money (£20) from Abel Swalle, another bookseller. The names of both booksellers appear on the title-page, as was often the case at that time. Tonson was sufficiently well off to purchase plays by Otway and Nahum Tate. In 1681 the brothers Richard and Jacob joined in publishing Dryden's Spanish Friar, and in 1683 Jacob obtained a valuable property by purchasing from Barbazon Ailmer, the assignee of Samuel Simmons, one half of his right in Paradise Lost. The other half was purchased at an advance in 1690. Tonson afterwards said he had made more by Paradise Lost than by any other poem.

In the earlier part of his life Tonson was much associated with Dryden. A step which did much to establish his position was the publication in 1684 of a volume of Miscellany Poems, under Dryden's editorship. Other volumes followed in 1685, 1693, 1694, 1703, and 1708, and the collection, which was several times reprinted, is known as both as Dryden's Miscellany and Tonson's Miscellany. During the ensuing year Tonson continued to bring out pieces by Dryden, and on 6 October 1691 paid thirty guineas for all the author's rights in the printing of the tragedy of Cleomenes. Joseph Addison's Poem to his Majesty was published by Tonson in 1695, and there was some correspondence respecting a proposed joint translation of Herodotus by Boyle, Richard Blackmore, Addison, and others.

Dryden's translation of Virgil, executed between 1693 and 1696, was published by Tonson in July 1697 by subscription. Serious financial differences arose between the poet and his publisher, and Dryden's letters to Tonson (1695–1697) are full of complaints of meanness and sharp practice and of refusals to accept clipped or bad money. Tonson would pay nothing for notes; Dryden retorted, "The notes and prefaces shall be short, because you shall get the more by saving paper." He added that all the trade were sharpers, Tonson not more than others. Dryden described Tonson thus, in lines written under his portrait, and afterwards printed in Faction Displayed (1705):

With leering looks, bull-faced, and freckled fair;
With two left legs, and Judas-coloured hair,
And frowzy pores, that taint the ambient air.

Subsequently the letters became more friendly, and on the publication of Alexander's Feast, in late 1697, Dryden wrote to Tonson, "I hope it has done you service, and will do more."

Dryden's collection of translations from Boccaccio, Chaucer, and others, known as The Fables, was published by Tonson in November 1699; a second edition did not appear until 1713. There is an undated letter from Mrs. Aphra Behn to Tonson at Bayfordbury, thanking him warmly for what he had said on her behalf to Dryden. She begged hard for five pounds more than Tonson offered for some of her verses. In connection with Jeremy Collier's attack on the stage, the Middlesex justices presented the playhouses in May 1698, and also William Congreve for writing the Double Dealer, Thomas d'Urfey for Don Quixote, and Tonson and Brisco, booksellers, for printing them. Tonson published Congreve's reply to Collier, and at a later date The Faithful Friend and The Confederacy by his friend, Sir John Vanbrugh.

 
Jacob Tonson took into partnership his nephew (pictured), also named Jacob Tonson and sometimes referred to as Tonson Junior.

Before the end of the century Tonson had moved from the Judge's Head to a shop in Gray's Inn Gate, probably the one previously occupied by his brother Richard. It is not unlikely that Richard was dead, and that Jacob, who had no children, and seemingly never married, now took into partnership his nephew Jacob, whose son was afterwards to be his heir. It is not always easy to distinguish the uncle from the nephew in later years; the latter is sometimes referred to as Tonson Junior.

By 1700 Tonson's position was well established, and about that time the Kit-Cat Club was founded, with Tonson as secretary. The meetings were first held at a mutton-pie shop in Shire Lane, kept by Christopher Cat, and may have begun with suppers given by Tonson to his literary friends. About 1703 Tonson purchased a house at Barn Elms, and built a room there for the club. In a poem on the club, attributed to Sir Richard Blackmore, we find:

One night in seven at this convenient seat
Indulgent Bocaj [Jacob] did the Muses treat.

Tonson was satirised in several skits, and it was falsely alleged that he had been expelled by the club, or had withdrawn from the society in scorn of being their jest any longer.

In 1703 Tonson went to the Dutch Republic to obtain paper and engravings for the fine edition of Caesar's Commentaries, which was ultimately published under Samuel Clarke's care in 1712. At Amsterdam and Rotterdam he met Addison, and assisted in some abortive negotiations for Addison's employment as travelling companion to Lord Hertford, son of the Duke of Somerset. In 1705 Tonson published Addison's Remarks on several Parts of Italy.

Verses by young Alexander Pope were circulating among the critics in 1705, and in April 1706 Tonson wrote to Pope proposing to publish a pastoral poem of his. Pope's pastorals ultimately appeared in Tonson's sixth Miscellany (May 1709). William Wycherley wrote that Tonson had long been gentleman-usher to the Muses: "you will make Jacob's ladder raise you to immortality."

Nicholas Rowe's edition of Shakespeare, in six volumes, was published early in 1709 by Tonson, who had previously advertised for materials. Richard Steele dined at Tonson's in 1708–1709, sometimes to get a bill discounted, sometimes to hear manuscripts read and advise upon them. There is a tradition that in earlier days Steele had had a daughter by a daughter of Tonson's; if this is true, it must apparently have been a daughter of Richard Tonson, Jacob's brother. In the autumn of 1710 Tonson moved to the Shakespeare's Head, opposite Catherine Street in the Strand; his former shop at Gray's Inn Gate was announced for sale in the Tatler for 14 October (No. 237); and it seems to have been taken by Thomas Osborne, stationer, the father of the afterwards well-known publisher, Thomas Osborne (died 1767). On 26 July 1711, after a long interval, Swift met Addison and Steele "at young Jacob Tonson's". "The two Jacobs", says Jonathan Swift to Esther Johnson, "think it I who have made the secretary take from them the printing of the Gazette, which they are going to lose.... Jacob came to me t'other day to make his court; but I told him it was too late, and that it was not my doing." Accounts furnished to Steele by Tonson of the sale of the collective editions of the Tatler and Spectator have been preserved; from October 1712 Tonson's name was joined with Samuel Buckley's as publisher of the Spectator. In November 1712 Addison and Steele sold all their right and title in one half of the copies of the first seven volumes of the Spectator to Tonson the younger, for £575, and all rights in the other half for a similar sum to Buckley. Buckley in October 1714 reassigned his half-share in the Spectator to Tonson junior for £500.

Tonson published Addison's tragedy, Cato, in April 1713; and, according to a concocted letter of Pope's, the true reason why Steele brought the Guardian to an end in October was a quarrel with Tonson, its publisher; "he stood engaged to his bookseller in articles of penalty for all the Guardians, and by desisting two days, and altering the title of the paper to that of the Englishman, was quit of the obligation, those papers being printed by Buckley." There are various reasons why this story is improbable; the truth seems to be that Steele was anxious to write on politics with a freer hand than was practicable in the Guardian. In the summer of 1714 we hear of Steele writing political pamphlets at Tonson's, where there were three bottles of wine of Steele's, and in October Tonson printed Steele's Ladies' Library. Tonson appears in Rowe's Dialogue between Tonson and Congreve, in imitation of Horace:

Thou, Jacob Tonson, were, to my conceiving,
The cheerfullest, best, honest fellow living.

In the same year Tonson, with Barnaby Bernard Lintot and William Taylor, was appointed one of the printers of the parliamentary votes. Next year he paid fifty guineas for the copyright of Addison's comedy, The Drummer, and published Thomas Tickell's translation of the first book of the Iliad, which gave offence to Pope. On 6 February 1718 Lintot entered into a partnership agreement with Tonson for the purchase of plays during eighteen months following that date.

 
The title page of a 1727 English translation of Plutarch's Parallel Lives, published by Tonson
 
The title page of volume 2 of Thornhagh Gurdon's A History of the High Court of Parliament (1st ed., 1731),[2] which was printed for "J. Tonson at Shakespear's Head in the Strand"

In one of several amusing letters from Vanbrugh, now at Bayfordbury, Tonson, who was then in Paris, was congratulated upon his luck in South Sea stock, and there is other evidence that he made a large sum in connection with Law's Mississippi scheme. "He has got £40,000" wrote Robert Arbuthnot; "riches will make people forget their trade." In January 1720 Tonson obtained a grant to himself and his nephew of the office of stationer, bookseller, and printer to some of the principal public offices; and on 12 October 1722 he assigned the whole benefit of the grant to his nephew. The grant was afterwards renewed by Robert Walpole, in 1733, for a second term of forty years. The elder Tonson seems to have given up business about 1720. He had bought the Hazells estate at Ledbury, Herefordshire, and in 1721 he was sending presents of cider to the Dukes of Grafton and Newcastle, the latter of whom called Tonson "my dear old friend," and asked him to give him his company in Sussex. Henceforth we may suppose, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, that "Tonson" in contemporary allusions means the nephew.

Steele's Conscious Lovers appeared in 1722, and Tonson assigned to Lintot half the copyright for £70. He had to apply to the court of chancery for an injunction to stop Robert Tooke and others printing a pirated edition of the play; the sum paid for the copyright was £40. In the same year Tonson published the Duke of Buckingham's Works, and in 1725 Pope's edition of Shakespeare.

Proposals were issued by Tonson in January 1729 for completing the subscription to the new edition of Rymer's Fœdera, in seventeen folio volumes (of which fifteen were then printed), at fifty guineas the set. The work was finished in 1735. Tonson published a quarto edition of Waller's works, edited by Fenton, in 1729, and an edition of Lord Lansdowne's works in 1732. Pope was annoyed to find in 1731 that Tonson was to be one of the publishers of Lewis Theobald's proposed edition of Shakespeare, in which he feared an attack on his own editorial work, but he professed to be satisfied with the assurances he received. In writing to the elder Tonson on this subject, Pope asked for any available information respecting the "Man of Ross," and, in thanking him for the particulars received, explained his intention in singling out this man as the centre of a poem. Earlier in the year the elder Tonson was in town, and Pope, writing to Lord Oxford, said that if he would come to see him he would show him a phenomenon worth seeing, "old Jacob Tonson, who is the perfect image and likeness of Bayle's Dictionary; so full of matter, secret history, and wit and spirit, at almost fourscore." On 19 March Lord Oxford, Lord Bathurst, Pope, and Gay dined with old Tonson at Barnes and drank Swift's health. In 1734 Samuel Gibbons was appointed stationer to the Prince of Wales in place of Jacob Tonson.

Jacob Tonson junior predeceased his uncle, dying on 25 November 1735, worth £100,000. His will, of great length, was written on 16 August and proved on 6 December 1735.

The elder Tonson's death at Ledbury followed that of his nephew on 17 March 1735/6. The elder Tonson's will was made on 2 December 1735 and proven in probate on 2 April 1736, when he was described as worth £40,000.

A painting of the elder Tonson by Godfrey Kneller is among the Kit-Cat portraits; it is best known through Faber's engraving. Pope says that Tonson obtained portraits from Kneller without payment by flattering him and sending him presents of venison and wine. Dryden's satirical account of his appearance has been quoted; Pope, in The Dunciad calls him "left-legged Jacob" and "genial Jacob". John Dunton describes Tonson as "a very good judge of persons and authors; and as there is nobody more competently qualified to give their opinion of another, so there is none who does it with a more severe exactness or with less partiality; for, to do Mr. Tonson justice, he speaks his mind upon all occasions, and will flatter nobody." No doubt this roughness of manner wore off as Tonson grew in prosperity.

Jacob Tonson the younger

Jacob Tonson (died 1767) (Jacob Tonson the younger) was the great-nephew of the Jacob Tonson the elder and son of Jacob Tonson junior. He carried on the publishing business in the Strand. In 1747 he paid Warburton £500 for editing Shakespeare, and he was eulogised by Steevens [sic] in the advertisement prefixed to his edition of Shakespeare 1778: "he never learned to consider the author as an under-agent to the bookseller . . . His manners were soft and his conversation delicate," but he reserved his acquaintance for a small number. Samuel Johnson spoke of him as "the late amiable Mr. Tonson."

In 1750 he was High Sheriff of Surrey, and in 1759 he paid the fine for being excused serving the same office for the city of London and county of Middlesex. There is a story of his having twice helped Henry Fielding when that writer was unable to pay his taxes. Tonson died on 31 March 1767, without issue, in a house on the north side of the Strand, near Catherine Street, whither he had removed the business some years earlier. His will was made in 1763. In 1775 letters of administration of the goods of Jacob Tonson, left unadministered by Richard Tonson, were granted to William Baker, esq. (M.P. for Hertfordshire), and in 1823, Baker having failed to administer, letters of administration were granted to Joseph Rogers.

Richard Tonson

Richard Tonson (died 1772), the third Jacob Tonson's brother, who took little part in the concerns of the business, lived at Water Oakley, near Windsor, where he built a room for the Kit-Cat portraits. His benevolence and hospitality made him popular, and in 1747 he was elected MP for Wallingford, and in 1768 MP for New Windsor. In some correspondence with the Duke of Newcastle in 1767, the duke spoke of his old friendship with Richard Tonson, "the heir of one I honoured and loved, and have passed many most agreeable hours with." Richard Tonson died on 9 October 1772.

Besides the papers at Bayfordbury, there is a considerable collection of Tonson papers in the British Museum, some relating to business and some to private matters; but many of them are damaged or fragmentary.

References

  1. ^ Gomez-Arostegui, H. Tomas (2010), "The Untold Story of the First Copyright Suit under the Statute of Anne in 1710", Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 25: 1247, 1263
  2. ^ Thornhagh Gurdon (1731), The History of the High Court of Parliament, its Antiquity, Preheminence and Authority; and the History of Court Baron and Court Leet, a Chronological History of Them from the Earliest Times Drawn Down to the Present. Together with the Rights of Lords of Manors in Common Pastures, and the Growth of the Privileges the Tenants Now Enjoy There, London: Printed for R. Knaplock at the Bishop's Head in St. Paul's Church-yard, and J[acob] Tonson at Shakespear's Head in the Strand, OCLC 5755818.

Attribution:

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain"Tonson, Jacob (1656?-1736)". Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900.
  • Gomez-Arostegui, H.T. (2010), "The Untold Story of the First Copyright Suit under the Statute of Anne in 1710", Berkeley Technology Law Journal, 25: 1247–1350.

External links

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Tonson" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 27 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 12.
  • Raymond N. MacKenzie, "Tonson, Jacob, the elder (1655/6–1736)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004; online edn, January 2008, accessed 11 January 2008
  • Works by or about Jacob Tonson in libraries (WorldCat catalog)

jacob, tonson, this, article, about, eighteenth, century, bookseller, british, novelist, reviewed, books, under, this, name, arnold, bennett, sometimes, referred, elder, 1655, 1736, eighteenth, century, english, bookseller, publisher, portrait, godfrey, knelle. This article is about the eighteenth century bookseller For the British novelist who reviewed books under this name see Arnold Bennett Jacob Tonson sometimes referred to as Jacob Tonson the Elder 1655 1736 was an eighteenth century English bookseller and publisher Jacob TonsonPortrait of Jacob Tonson by Godfrey Kneller 1717Born12 November 1655Died17 March 1735 6NationalityEnglishOccupation s Bookseller and publisherParentJacob TonsonTonson published editions of John Dryden and John Milton and is best known for having obtained a copyright on the plays of William Shakespeare by buying up the rights of the heirs of the publisher of the Fourth Folio after the Statute of Anne went into effect He was also the founder of the famous Kit Cat Club His nephew Jacob Tonson the Younger 1682 1735 was his business partner The business was continued by the younger Tonson s son Jacob Tonson 1714 1767 Contents 1 History 2 Jacob Tonson the younger 3 Richard Tonson 4 References 5 External linksHistory EditScholars have not always been sure of Tonson s birthdate and it has in the past been listed as occurring in 1655 or 1656 But the register of christenings in the parish of St Andrew Holborn demonstrates that Tonson was born on 12 November 1655 and baptized 18 November 1655 1 The register lists Tonson as the sonne of Jacob Tonson Shoemaker and of Elizabeth his wife neare Grayes Inn Lane He is believed to have been related to Major Richard Tonson who obtained a grant of land in county Cork from Charles II and whose descendants became Barons Riversdale His father s will left him and his elder brother Richard as well as three sisters each 100 to be paid when they came of age On 5 June 1670 Jacob was apprenticed to Thomas Basset a stationer for eight years Having been admitted a freeman of the Company of Stationers on 20 December 1677 he began business on his own account following his brother Richard who had commenced in 1676 and had published among other things Thomas Otway s Don Carlos Prince of Spain Richard Tonson had a shop within Gray s Inn Gate Jacob Tonson s shop was for many years at the Judge s Head in Chancery Lane near Fleet Street It has been said that when Tonson bought the rights to Troilus and Cressida 1679 the first play of John Dryden s that he published he was obliged to borrow the purchase money 20 from Abel Swalle another bookseller The names of both booksellers appear on the title page as was often the case at that time Tonson was sufficiently well off to purchase plays by Otway and Nahum Tate In 1681 the brothers Richard and Jacob joined in publishing Dryden s Spanish Friar and in 1683 Jacob obtained a valuable property by purchasing from Barbazon Ailmer the assignee of Samuel Simmons one half of his right in Paradise Lost The other half was purchased at an advance in 1690 Tonson afterwards said he had made more by Paradise Lost than by any other poem In the earlier part of his life Tonson was much associated with Dryden A step which did much to establish his position was the publication in 1684 of a volume of Miscellany Poems under Dryden s editorship Other volumes followed in 1685 1693 1694 1703 and 1708 and the collection which was several times reprinted is known as both as Dryden s Miscellany and Tonson s Miscellany During the ensuing year Tonson continued to bring out pieces by Dryden and on 6 October 1691 paid thirty guineas for all the author s rights in the printing of the tragedy of Cleomenes Joseph Addison s Poem to his Majesty was published by Tonson in 1695 and there was some correspondence respecting a proposed joint translation of Herodotus by Boyle Richard Blackmore Addison and others Dryden s translation of Virgil executed between 1693 and 1696 was published by Tonson in July 1697 by subscription Serious financial differences arose between the poet and his publisher and Dryden s letters to Tonson 1695 1697 are full of complaints of meanness and sharp practice and of refusals to accept clipped or bad money Tonson would pay nothing for notes Dryden retorted The notes and prefaces shall be short because you shall get the more by saving paper He added that all the trade were sharpers Tonson not more than others Dryden described Tonson thus in lines written under his portrait and afterwards printed in Faction Displayed 1705 With leering looks bull faced and freckled fair With two left legs and Judas coloured hair And frowzy pores that taint the ambient air Subsequently the letters became more friendly and on the publication of Alexander s Feast in late 1697 Dryden wrote to Tonson I hope it has done you service and will do more Dryden s collection of translations from Boccaccio Chaucer and others known as The Fables was published by Tonson in November 1699 a second edition did not appear until 1713 There is an undated letter from Mrs Aphra Behn to Tonson at Bayfordbury thanking him warmly for what he had said on her behalf to Dryden She begged hard for five pounds more than Tonson offered for some of her verses In connection with Jeremy Collier s attack on the stage the Middlesex justices presented the playhouses in May 1698 and also William Congreve for writing the Double Dealer Thomas d Urfey for Don Quixote and Tonson and Brisco booksellers for printing them Tonson published Congreve s reply to Collier and at a later date The Faithful Friend and The Confederacy by his friend Sir John Vanbrugh Jacob Tonson took into partnership his nephew pictured also named Jacob Tonson and sometimes referred to as Tonson Junior Before the end of the century Tonson had moved from the Judge s Head to a shop in Gray s Inn Gate probably the one previously occupied by his brother Richard It is not unlikely that Richard was dead and that Jacob who had no children and seemingly never married now took into partnership his nephew Jacob whose son was afterwards to be his heir It is not always easy to distinguish the uncle from the nephew in later years the latter is sometimes referred to as Tonson Junior By 1700 Tonson s position was well established and about that time the Kit Cat Club was founded with Tonson as secretary The meetings were first held at a mutton pie shop in Shire Lane kept by Christopher Cat and may have begun with suppers given by Tonson to his literary friends About 1703 Tonson purchased a house at Barn Elms and built a room there for the club In a poem on the club attributed to Sir Richard Blackmore we find One night in seven at this convenient seat Indulgent Bocaj Jacob did the Muses treat Tonson was satirised in several skits and it was falsely alleged that he had been expelled by the club or had withdrawn from the society in scorn of being their jest any longer In 1703 Tonson went to the Dutch Republic to obtain paper and engravings for the fine edition of Caesar s Commentaries which was ultimately published under Samuel Clarke s care in 1712 At Amsterdam and Rotterdam he met Addison and assisted in some abortive negotiations for Addison s employment as travelling companion to Lord Hertford son of the Duke of Somerset In 1705 Tonson published Addison s Remarks on several Parts of Italy Verses by young Alexander Pope were circulating among the critics in 1705 and in April 1706 Tonson wrote to Pope proposing to publish a pastoral poem of his Pope s pastorals ultimately appeared in Tonson s sixth Miscellany May 1709 William Wycherley wrote that Tonson had long been gentleman usher to the Muses you will make Jacob s ladder raise you to immortality Nicholas Rowe s edition of Shakespeare in six volumes was published early in 1709 by Tonson who had previously advertised for materials Richard Steele dined at Tonson s in 1708 1709 sometimes to get a bill discounted sometimes to hear manuscripts read and advise upon them There is a tradition that in earlier days Steele had had a daughter by a daughter of Tonson s if this is true it must apparently have been a daughter of Richard Tonson Jacob s brother In the autumn of 1710 Tonson moved to the Shakespeare s Head opposite Catherine Street in the Strand his former shop at Gray s Inn Gate was announced for sale in the Tatler for 14 October No 237 and it seems to have been taken by Thomas Osborne stationer the father of the afterwards well known publisher Thomas Osborne died 1767 On 26 July 1711 after a long interval Swift met Addison and Steele at young Jacob Tonson s The two Jacobs says Jonathan Swift to Esther Johnson think it I who have made the secretary take from them the printing of the Gazette which they are going to lose Jacob came to me t other day to make his court but I told him it was too late and that it was not my doing Accounts furnished to Steele by Tonson of the sale of the collective editions of the Tatler and Spectator have been preserved from October 1712 Tonson s name was joined with Samuel Buckley s as publisher of the Spectator In November 1712 Addison and Steele sold all their right and title in one half of the copies of the first seven volumes of the Spectator to Tonson the younger for 575 and all rights in the other half for a similar sum to Buckley Buckley in October 1714 reassigned his half share in the Spectator to Tonson junior for 500 Tonson published Addison s tragedy Cato in April 1713 and according to a concocted letter of Pope s the true reason why Steele brought the Guardian to an end in October was a quarrel with Tonson its publisher he stood engaged to his bookseller in articles of penalty for all the Guardians and by desisting two days and altering the title of the paper to that of the Englishman was quit of the obligation those papers being printed by Buckley There are various reasons why this story is improbable the truth seems to be that Steele was anxious to write on politics with a freer hand than was practicable in the Guardian In the summer of 1714 we hear of Steele writing political pamphlets at Tonson s where there were three bottles of wine of Steele s and in October Tonson printed Steele s Ladies Library Tonson appears in Rowe s Dialogue between Tonson and Congreve in imitation of Horace Thou Jacob Tonson were to my conceiving The cheerfullest best honest fellow living In the same year Tonson with Barnaby Bernard Lintot and William Taylor was appointed one of the printers of the parliamentary votes Next year he paid fifty guineas for the copyright of Addison s comedy The Drummer and published Thomas Tickell s translation of the first book of the Iliad which gave offence to Pope On 6 February 1718 Lintot entered into a partnership agreement with Tonson for the purchase of plays during eighteen months following that date The title page of a 1727 English translation of Plutarch s Parallel Lives published by Tonson The title page of volume 2 of Thornhagh Gurdon s A History of the High Court of Parliament 1st ed 1731 2 which was printed for J Tonson at Shakespear s Head in the Strand In one of several amusing letters from Vanbrugh now at Bayfordbury Tonson who was then in Paris was congratulated upon his luck in South Sea stock and there is other evidence that he made a large sum in connection with Law s Mississippi scheme He has got 40 000 wrote Robert Arbuthnot riches will make people forget their trade In January 1720 Tonson obtained a grant to himself and his nephew of the office of stationer bookseller and printer to some of the principal public offices and on 12 October 1722 he assigned the whole benefit of the grant to his nephew The grant was afterwards renewed by Robert Walpole in 1733 for a second term of forty years The elder Tonson seems to have given up business about 1720 He had bought the Hazells estate at Ledbury Herefordshire and in 1721 he was sending presents of cider to the Dukes of Grafton and Newcastle the latter of whom called Tonson my dear old friend and asked him to give him his company in Sussex Henceforth we may suppose in the absence of evidence to the contrary that Tonson in contemporary allusions means the nephew Steele s Conscious Lovers appeared in 1722 and Tonson assigned to Lintot half the copyright for 70 He had to apply to the court of chancery for an injunction to stop Robert Tooke and others printing a pirated edition of the play the sum paid for the copyright was 40 In the same year Tonson published the Duke of Buckingham s Works and in 1725 Pope s edition of Shakespeare Proposals were issued by Tonson in January 1729 for completing the subscription to the new edition of Rymer s Fœdera in seventeen folio volumes of which fifteen were then printed at fifty guineas the set The work was finished in 1735 Tonson published a quarto edition of Waller s works edited by Fenton in 1729 and an edition of Lord Lansdowne s works in 1732 Pope was annoyed to find in 1731 that Tonson was to be one of the publishers of Lewis Theobald s proposed edition of Shakespeare in which he feared an attack on his own editorial work but he professed to be satisfied with the assurances he received In writing to the elder Tonson on this subject Pope asked for any available information respecting the Man of Ross and in thanking him for the particulars received explained his intention in singling out this man as the centre of a poem Earlier in the year the elder Tonson was in town and Pope writing to Lord Oxford said that if he would come to see him he would show him a phenomenon worth seeing old Jacob Tonson who is the perfect image and likeness of Bayle s Dictionary so full of matter secret history and wit and spirit at almost fourscore On 19 March Lord Oxford Lord Bathurst Pope and Gay dined with old Tonson at Barnes and drank Swift s health In 1734 Samuel Gibbons was appointed stationer to the Prince of Wales in place of Jacob Tonson Jacob Tonson junior predeceased his uncle dying on 25 November 1735 worth 100 000 His will of great length was written on 16 August and proved on 6 December 1735 The elder Tonson s death at Ledbury followed that of his nephew on 17 March 1735 6 The elder Tonson s will was made on 2 December 1735 and proven in probate on 2 April 1736 when he was described as worth 40 000 A painting of the elder Tonson by Godfrey Kneller is among the Kit Cat portraits it is best known through Faber s engraving Pope says that Tonson obtained portraits from Kneller without payment by flattering him and sending him presents of venison and wine Dryden s satirical account of his appearance has been quoted Pope in The Dunciad calls him left legged Jacob and genial Jacob John Dunton describes Tonson as a very good judge of persons and authors and as there is nobody more competently qualified to give their opinion of another so there is none who does it with a more severe exactness or with less partiality for to do Mr Tonson justice he speaks his mind upon all occasions and will flatter nobody No doubt this roughness of manner wore off as Tonson grew in prosperity Jacob Tonson the younger EditJacob Tonson died 1767 Jacob Tonson the younger was the great nephew of the Jacob Tonson the elder and son of Jacob Tonson junior He carried on the publishing business in the Strand In 1747 he paid Warburton 500 for editing Shakespeare and he was eulogised by Steevens sic in the advertisement prefixed to his edition of Shakespeare 1778 he never learned to consider the author as an under agent to the bookseller His manners were soft and his conversation delicate but he reserved his acquaintance for a small number Samuel Johnson spoke of him as the late amiable Mr Tonson In 1750 he was High Sheriff of Surrey and in 1759 he paid the fine for being excused serving the same office for the city of London and county of Middlesex There is a story of his having twice helped Henry Fielding when that writer was unable to pay his taxes Tonson died on 31 March 1767 without issue in a house on the north side of the Strand near Catherine Street whither he had removed the business some years earlier His will was made in 1763 In 1775 letters of administration of the goods of Jacob Tonson left unadministered by Richard Tonson were granted to William Baker esq M P for Hertfordshire and in 1823 Baker having failed to administer letters of administration were granted to Joseph Rogers Richard Tonson EditRichard Tonson died 1772 the third Jacob Tonson s brother who took little part in the concerns of the business lived at Water Oakley near Windsor where he built a room for the Kit Cat portraits His benevolence and hospitality made him popular and in 1747 he was elected MP for Wallingford and in 1768 MP for New Windsor In some correspondence with the Duke of Newcastle in 1767 the duke spoke of his old friendship with Richard Tonson the heir of one I honoured and loved and have passed many most agreeable hours with Richard Tonson died on 9 October 1772 Besides the papers at Bayfordbury there is a considerable collection of Tonson papers in the British Museum some relating to business and some to private matters but many of them are damaged or fragmentary References Edit Gomez Arostegui H Tomas 2010 The Untold Story of the First Copyright Suit under the Statute of Anne in 1710 Berkeley Technology Law Journal 25 1247 1263 Thornhagh Gurdon 1731 The History of the High Court of Parliament its Antiquity Preheminence and Authority and the History of Court Baron and Court Leet a Chronological History of Them from the Earliest Times Drawn Down to the Present Together with the Rights of Lords of Manors in Common Pastures and the Growth of the Privileges the Tenants Now Enjoy There London Printed for R Knaplock at the Bishop s Head in St Paul s Church yard and J acob Tonson at Shakespear s Head in the Strand OCLC 5755818 Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Tonson Jacob 1656 1736 Dictionary of National Biography London Smith Elder amp Co 1885 1900 Gomez Arostegui H T 2010 The Untold Story of the First Copyright Suit under the Statute of Anne in 1710 Berkeley Technology Law Journal 25 1247 1350 External links EditChisholm Hugh ed 1911 Tonson Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 27 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 12 Raymond N MacKenzie Tonson Jacob the elder 1655 6 1736 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press September 2004 online edn January 2008 accessed 11 January 2008 Works by or about Jacob Tonson in libraries WorldCat catalog Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Jacob Tonson amp oldid 1098861525, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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