Piracy_ The Intellectual Property Wars from Gutenberg to Gates - Adrian Johns [327]
76 Carey, Autobiographical ,Sketches, 2; "Circular" (May 1830), in Carey, Miscellaneous Essays, 401-2; see also the general "Preface," iv-v
77 Carey, Autobiographical ,Sketches, 12-13n, 144-5r Carey, Miscellaneous Essays, iii-v.
78 University of Michigan, William L. Clements Library, Henry Carey Letterbook (hereafter HCL), 33, 49-55, 65-7o, 99-102.
79 HCL, 55; for other instances of such moral arithmetic, see T. Angst, The Clerk's Tale: Young Men and Moral Life in Nineteenth-Century America (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2003), 50-51.
8o HCL, 77-83, 92-93, 99-102, 201-2, 259-62, 287-89.
81 HCL, 51, 482-83, 498-500; Clarkin, Mathew Carey, xv-xvi.
82 Pittsburg Gazette, July 12, 1828 (repr. as pamphlet, AAS, Dated Pams.); Rowe, "Mathew Carey," 120.
9 THE PRINTING COUNTERREVOLUTION
1 M. Woodmansee, "The Genius and the Copyright: Economic and Legal Considerations of the Emergence of the Author," Eighteenth-Century Studies 17 (1984): 425-48.
2 M. Butler, `Antiquarianism (Popular)," in An Oxford Companion to the RomanticAge: British Culture, -17715-1832, ed. I. McCalman (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999), 328-38, esp. 335. For "novel antiquities," see J. Chandler, England in r8rg: The Politics of Literary Culture and the Case of Romantic Historicism (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1998), 277-78. For the local history of Kentish antiquarianism prior to Brydges, see S. Bann, Under the Sign: John Bargrave as Collector, Traveler, and Witness (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1995).
3 J. Britton, The Rights ofLiterature (London: for the author, 1814), vi.
4 A. Grafton, Codex in Crisis (New York: Crumpled Press, 2008); R. Chartier, The Order ofBooks: Readers, Authors, and Libraries in Europe between the Fourteenth and Eighteenth Centuries (Cambridge: Polity, 1994), 61-88; P. Keen, The Crisis of Literature in the r79os: Print Culture and the Public Sphere (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), ioi-8.
5 R. C. Barrington Partridge, The History of th. e Legal Deposit of Books through. out the British. Empire (London: Library Association, 1938), 288-90.
6 B. Montagu, Enquiries and Observations Respecting the University Libluly (Cambridge: by F. Hodson; sold byMawman; and Deighton, 18o5), sig. a2 r; Partridge, History of the Legal Deposit of Books, 30-31.
7 E. Law, Observations occasioned by the contest about literal y property (Cambridge: byJ. Archdeacon; sold byT. and J. Merrill et al., 1770), 3-4; Partridge, History of the Legal Deposit of Books, 34-38
8 Keen, The Crisis ofLiterature in the 179os, ioi-8.
9 B. Montagu, Enquiries Respecting the ProposedAlteration of th. e Law of Copyright (London: fort. Butterworth, byJ. M'Creery, 1813), vii-viii-
Io Beckfordv. Hood, Term Reports VII, 620.
11 Partridge, History of the Legal Deposit of Books, 45n3.
12 U. G. Cochrane}, The Case Stated between the Public Libraries and the Booksellers (London: byJ. Moyes,1813),3-
13 Cambridge University v. Bryer, 16 East, 317.
14 Haslewood to Brydges, n.d. [1812), British Library (BL) MS Add. 25102, fol. 97'-; Partridge, History of the Legal Deposit of Books, 45-61.
15 Beinecke Library, Yale University, Gen MSS 176, vol. 2, January 7, 1815.
16 E.g., S. E. Brydges,Modern Aristocracy, or theBald'sReception (Geneva: A. L. Vignier,1831).
17 M. K. Woodworth, The Literal y Career of Sir Samuel Egerton Brydges (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1935), 7-8-
18 S. E. Brydges, TheAutobiography, Times, Opinions, and Contemporaries of ,Sir Egerton B1 ydges, Bart. K.J. (per legein terrae) Baron Chandos of,Sudeley, etc., 2 vols. (London: Cochrane and M'Crone, 1834),1:2-13,19-21.
19 Woodworth, Literary Career, 33. In the London Library's manuscripts, Brydges numbered his poems by line and work, and dated them; they extend into the thousands in this holding alone.
20 For his biography, see Brydges, Autobiography.
21 G. F. Beltz, A Review of the Chandos Peerage Case (London: R. Bentley,