1651: "If you ask, why its crowded in so scant a Volume? 'tis for your own sakes; we see it is such weather that the most ingenious have least money; else the Lines are as long as in Folio, and would equall those of trebble its price." Both the format and the type size, Moseley later explained, had been chosen purposely so as to bring down the volume's bulk. Here the publisher was able, after Cartwright's death, to act as seemed most appropriate in a trade environmentno compromise with the author needed to be sought.
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For readers, bulk and appearance were crucial, even if they did not always express this directly. Andrew Marvell, for example, responding to Paradise Lost first published as a small quarto of 344 pages in 1667wrote of Milton's unfolding his "vast design" in a "slender book." Tensions between Milton's concept and the material characteristics of the volume containing it were, for Marvell, an essential part of reading. His remarks in verse were thought sufficiently pertinent to be added to several later editions.
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Inevitably, as in the case of Matthew Prior's great folio collected edition of 1718issued with the encouragement of his friend and publisher, Jacob Tonson, and under the eye of Lord Harley, of whose household Prior was a partit is the exception to convention that is most noticeable. In such projects as his collected Dryden (1701), in a series of large quarto editions of Latin poets, and most of all, in an ambitious large folio edition of Julius Caesar (1712), Tonson had already shown himself to be a publisher of imagination and enterprise. His edition of Prior, printed on three different sizes of paper so as to challenge or meet the aspirations of his readers, stood also as a statement of authorial authorityand was both a consummation of earlier editions in smaller formats and a corrective to them. But even as a folio, it was produced by Tonson on a scalewith typography to match the paper sizethat set it apart from the quite recent habit of printing much poetry, on its first appearance, in folio. Dryden's Absalom and Achitophel (1681), a political piece, and Alexander's Feast (1697), composed for St. Cecilia's Day, were examples of this trend (especially noticeable in occasional poetry for royal or other occasions) which Prior and Tonson now took to extravagance.
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Indeed, if one looks at the edition of Prior in the context of contemporary poetry publishing other than by Tonson, one of its closest challengers for magnificence is not a contemporary author, but a past: John Urry's edition of Chaucer, published by Bernard Lintot in 1721 on both
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