The Portrait of a King

Wondering why it  reads '1648'? Until 1752, England held to the Julian calendar with New Year's Day as March 25th.

Wondering why it reads ‘1648’? Until 1752, England held to the Julian calendar with New Year’s Day as March 25th.

On January 30th, 1649, Royalists in England were dealt a heavy blow when the Rump Parliament executed Charles I for the charge of high treason. However, a mere ten days later, a book surfaced claiming to be the autobiographical writings of Charles during his imprisonment. A blend of spiritual meditations and political apologetics, the Eikon Basilike: The Portraicture of His Sacred Majestie in His Solitudes and Sufferings had a stunning impact on the English people. The depiction of Charles as a flawed yet earnest, determined yet contemplative leader elevated him to martyrdom and energized the Royalist cause. The Eikon Basilike quickly became one of the most popular books on the market, and in its first year alone saw over three dozen print runs in English and twenty more in other languages.

This frontpiece became a famous image of Charles I. This copy is an inset in a later edition.

This frontpiece became a famous image of Charles I. This copy is an inset in a later edition.

Parliament was quick to condemn it as a forgery and enlisted John Milton to pen his Eikonoklastes which, though it declaimed Charles as a tyrant, failed to slow the growing popular sentiment for the king. The question of authorship was reignited more than a decade later when a dean named John Gauden claimed to have written the Eikon Basilike based on the king’s notes. Meanwhile, a companion of the king through his last days named William Levet swore he had seen the king write it himself; his signed witness is often found in later editions. To this day, the origin of the Eikon Basilike remains a debated subject.

For an added bit of history, here's a clipping about a diary contemporary to Charles I found glued in the back of the Eikon Basilike.

For an added bit of history, here’s a clipping about a diary contemporary to Charles I found glued in the back.

Whether the original words of Charles or a production by an associate, the Eikon Basilike stands out as a treasure of our library and we are fortunate to have a first edition of this superb piece of literature and history available for scholars and enthusiasts.

Nor hath Gods Justice failed in the event and sad consequences, to shew the world the fallacy of that Maxime, ‘Better one man perish (though unjustly) then the people be displeased, or destroyed’.

In the second chapter, Charles laments yielding to Parliament’s demands for the execution of the Earl of Strafford, a long-time supporter of the king. Charles felt that by this, above all, he had damned himself. In his final speech on the scaffold at Whitegate it is recorded that he spoke ‘That an unjust Sentence that I suffered for to take effect is punished now by an unjust Sentence upon me’ in reference to Strafford.

This pocket-sized book is barely six inches long.

This pocket-sized book is barely six inches long.

As beautiful as the spring finally come is, consider taking an afternoon to experience some of the history that the Walter Havighurst Special Collections has to offer. For more on the debate between the Royalists and Parliamentarians, we also have a first edition of Claude Saumaise’s Defensio regia pro Carolo I, published just months after the Eikon Basilike, and another anti-monarchial response by Milton, Defensio pro Populo Anglicano. Or why not read through some of Charles’ known letters and decide for yourself whether or not you think the Eikon Basilike to be the king’s own words?

Marcus Ladd
Special Collections Librarian

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From the Stacks: The Cuala Press

Dun_Emer_Press_,c._1903In recognition of National Poetry Month, we’re highlighting a selection of our Cuala Press titles.  These elegant volumes, many of them volumes of poetry, are some of the finest examples of private press printing from the last century.

tynanEmertp050Emerging from both the international Arts and Crafts Movement at the turn of the century and the Celtic Revival in Ireland, the Cuala Press traces its earliest history to a joint venture between Elizabeth Corbet Yeats, sister of the poet William Butler Yeats, and Evelyn Gleeson, at the Dun Emer craft studio at Dundrum, Gleeson’s home near Dublin.  The name of the press, “Emer’s fort” in Irish Gaelic, is a reference to the wife of the Irish mythological hero, Cú Chulainn and the studio and the press were notable because of its all female staff of artists and printers.  In addition to the finely crafted books of the Dun Emer Press, run by Yeats, the studio also produced fine embroidery, tapestries and rugs, overseen by Gleeson.  Elizabeth Yeats is shown here (far right), along with fellow workers, at the Dun Emer Press in 1903.  One of the images most associated with the press is the Dun Emer pressmark of ‘Lady Emer and tree’ designed by Elinor Monsell and first used in Katharine Tynan’s Twenty One Poems (1907).

Bookplate

The goals of the enterprise were outlined in a prospectus written by Gleeson in 1903: “A wish to find work for Irish hands in the making of beautiful things was the beginning of Dun Emer. … Everything as far as possible, is Irish: the paper of the books, the linen of the embroidery and the wool of the tapestry and carpets.  The designs are also of the spirit and tradition of the country. … The first two books issued by the Dun Emer Press are now scattered over the world, and have given pleasure to our country people in America and at home and to strangers interested in the art of hand printing.” The full text of the prospectus can be found in Liam Miller’s history The Dun Emer Press, Later the Cuala Press published in 1973.

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In 1908, Elizabeth Yeats and her sister Lily left Dun Emer Industries and set up their own studio, bringing the printing enterprise with them and renaming it the Cuala Press.  From 1908 to 1946, the Yeats sisters, with the literary guidance of their brother, printed some of the most important works of the Irish Literary Revival, including first editions of works by Lady Gregory, Louis MacNiece, John Millington Synge, and, of course, William Butler Yeats.

GregoryCualaCover048In his introduction to The Revival of Printing: a bibliographical catalogue of works issued by the chief modern English presses published in 1912, Robert Steele writes of the Press: “Miss Yeats, who in time past had come within the circle of William Morris’s influence, has set herself the task of reviving fine printing in Ireland.  Her books…have the advantage of being in many cases important from their subject-matter, as well as desirable pieces of printing.  Technically her work, which in the early books showed many of the characteristics of amateurism, is now more satisfactory, though the press-work and the colour of the ink, especially of the red, are still open to improvement.”  Regardless of Steele’s judgement of the earlier products of the press, seventy-seven titles were published by the Dun Emer and Cuala Presses combined and they are highly prized by collectors and scholars today for their literary importance as well as their simple beauty.

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Special Collections has one title printed at the Dun Emer Press and eight others printed at the Cuala Press, including the last book printed there in 1946, Elizabeth Rivers’ Stranger in Aran.

The title page of the Rivers volume and one of the four hand-colored illustrations are shown here.

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Three of our Cuala imprints are volumes of Yeats poetry that were once part of the working library of Irish-American poet and critic, Louise Bogan.  Bogan wrote an article in The Atlantic in 1938 and praised the quality of Yeats’ verse: “…these evocations of Celtic beauty, heroism, and strangeness wakened, as more severe music could not then waken, Ireland’s ears to the sound of its own voice speaking its own music.”

BoganYeatsInscription

Shown here is Bogan’s copy of The Cat and the Moon by William Butler Yeats published by the Cuala Press in 1924.  The title page features the charging unicorn device designed by Robert Gregory and first used by the press in 1907.  Gregory, was the son of Lady Gregory and the subject of Yeats’ famous poem “An Irish Airman Forsees His Death“.  This copy is inscribed to Bogan by her second husband, Raymond Holden.

The Dun Emer Press and Cuala Press titles highlighted here, along with the over 1,000 volumes of the working library of Louise Bogan, are available to researchers in the Walter Havighurst Special Collections.  They are truly amazing examples of the art of fine hand-press printing and our copies’ association with an important American poet make them extra “special”.

Kimberly Tully
Special Collections Librarian

 

From the Stacks: Weeb Ewbank and the Cradle of Coaches

Weeb Ewbank was an NFL head coach for the Baltimore Colts (1954-1962) and the New York Jets (1963-1973), and was inducted into the  NFL Hall of Fame in 1978.  However, before he was a coach, Weeb was an athlete here at Miami University.

Coin from Weeb's father's shop

Coin from Weeb’s father’s shop

He grew up in Richmond, Indiana (only a few miles from Oxford) playing every sport he could.  This continued once he enrolled at Miami, where he participated in football, basketball and baseball from 1924-1927.  Baseball was his best sport, but football was his favorite.  While playing football for Miami, under Head Coach Chester Pittser, he met future colleague and coaching great Paul Brown.  This would lay the groundwork for future coaching success for both men.

After graduating from Miami in 1928, Weeb accepted the head coaching position at Van Wert High School in Van Wert, Ohio.  He remained there for two years before returning to Miami, in 1930, as a member of the Physical Education department and coach at McGuffey High School (an affiliate of Miami).

Weeb playing for Miami

Weeb playing for Miami

During this time, Weeb also coached Miami’s basketball team for a few years.  He remained at Miami until 1943 when he was enlisted in the U.S. Navy.  Weeb was stationed at the Great Lakes Naval Station in Chicago.  Former teammate Paul Brown, and Miami Alum Ara Parseghian were there as well.  During this time Weeb served on Brown’s staff.  In 1945 Weeb was released from the Navy and worked as an assistant coach at Brown University for one season, 1946, and as head coach at Washington University is St. Louis for two seasons, 1947-1948.

In 1949, he reunited with Brown as an assistant coach on Brown’s Cleveland Browns staff in the NFL.  Weeb remained in this position for five years, and in 1953 he became the Head Coach of the Baltimore Colts.  In nine seasons with the Colts, Weeb had a record of 59-52-1 (wins-losses-ties) and won two NFL Championships (1958 and 1959).  After a few mediocre seasons with the Colts, Weeb was released in 1962.  However, with his previous success it didn’t take long for him to land a head coaching position, even if it was in the fledgling American Football League (AFL).

Weeb and Paul Brown

Weeb and Paul Brown

In 1973, Weeb became the Head Coach of the New York Jets in the AFL.  Before this time the NFL had a monopoly on professional football, having bought out the All-American Football League (AAFL) years earlier, but the AFL was cutting into their market.  This lead to the idea for a Super Bowl, and the eventual merging of the leagues.  The Super Bowl was to be played between the champions of each league.  The first Super Bowl was played after the 1966 season between the NFL’s Green Bay Packers and the AFL’s Kansas City Chiefs.  Since the NFL was still the dominant league they were considered to have better teams and better players and this proved true when the NFL won the first two Super Bowls.  In 1968, Weeb’s Jets won the AFL Championship and were set to face the Baltimore Colts (Weeb’s former team) of the NFL.  The ’68 Colts were thought by some to be the greatest team ever to play and were heavy favorites over the Jets.  Behind the play of quarterback Joe Namath, the Jets stunned the Colts, winning the first Super Bowl for the AFL.  Two years later, in 1970, the AFL and NFL merged.  The new league kept the name of National Football League, but was split into two conferences: National Football Conference (former NFL) and the America Football Conference (former AFL).  These conferences remain intact today, though there has been some shuffling over the years.

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Weeb and Joe Namath

Winning Super Bowl III placed Weeb among the game’s all time greats.  He retired in 1972, and is the only coach in football history to win an NFL Championship (1958 and 1959), an AFL Championship (1968) and a Super Bowl (1968).  Weeb Ewbank is also a member of the Miami Athletic Hall of Fame, and the Cradle of Coaches Hall of Fame.

Here at Miami University Libraries within the Cradle of Coaches collection, we have a large inventory of Weeb Ewbank items consisting of playbooks, correspondences, plaques, photos, notes, newspaper articles, etc.

A letter from Weeb Ewbank to Joe Paterno informing him that he did not get the assiatant coaching position he applied for.

A letter from Weeb Ewbank to Joe Paterno informing him that he did not get the assiatant coaching position he applied for.

Plaque presented to Weeb after winning Coach of the Year in 1959

Plaque presented to Weeb after winning Coach of the Year in 1959

John Cooper, Visiting Librarian – Special Collections

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ABC for Book Collectors: Fore-Edge Painting

Fore-edge painting found on "Scottish Poems of the Sixteenth Century" published in 1801

Fore-edge painting found on “Scottish Poems of the Sixteenth Century” published in 1801

For anyone who has an interest in books, bookbinding, and book collecting, John Carter’s ABC For Book Collectors is an invaluable resource. It has long been established as the most informative reference book on the subject. With over 490 alphabetical entries, ABC for Book Collectors is a compilation of definitions and analysis of the technical terms used in book collecting and bibliography.

"The fortunes of Nigel" by Sir Walter Scott, published in 1871

“The fortunes of Nigel” by Sir Walter Scott, published in 1871

The Walter Havighurst Special Collections is home to many examples of the terms found in ABC for Book Collectors. One such term that is of particular interest to me is fore-edge painting. According to Carter, fore-edge painting can refer to any decoration found on the fore-edge of a book. Carter goes on to say “The term is most commonly used, however, for an English technique quite widely practiced in the second half of the 17th century in London and Edinburgh, and popularized in the 18th by John Brindley and (in particular) Edwards of Halifax, whereby the fore-edge of the book, very slightly fanned out and then held fast, is decorated with painted views or conversation pieces. The edges are then squared up and gilded in the ordinary way, so that the painting remains concealed (and protected) while the book is closed: fan out the edges and it reappears.”

I find fore-edge paintings to be particularly fascinating. The books that contain these hidden works of art appear quite normal at first glance, it’s only upon closer inspection that these tiny masterpieces are revealed. The following are examples of fore-edge paintings found in the Walter Havighurst Special Collections.

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Œuvres complètes de P. J. de Béranger, published in 1835

This example, a Bible from 1855, shows how the fore-edge looks when the book is closed. As you can see, the fore-edge painting is not visible at all until you fan the book open.

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“The Holy Bible: Containing the Old and New Testaments”, 1855

Here is another inconspicuous looking book, Leonidas: A Poem that reveals a beautiful painting when held just right.

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“Leonidas : A Poem” v. 1, published in 1804

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V.1 of “Leonidas” with the fore-edge painting visible

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The fore-edge painting found on v.2 of “Leonidas”

The Poetical Works and Essays by Oliver Goldsmith, closed with the fore-edge painting hidden from view, and then open, to reveal the painting.

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“Poetical Works and Essays” by Oliver Goldsmith, published in 1820

"Poetical Works and Essays" with the fore-edge painting visible

“The Poetical Works and Essays” by Oliver Goldsmith, published in 1820

Ashley Jones
Preservation Librarian

 

 

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Discovering Uncataloged Materials

Verso: 1st Chronicles 7:9-9:3

Verso: 1st Chronicles 7:9-9:3


Not all materials held by a library are necessarily cataloged. Recently, a single leaf of vellum was found in a frame with nothing more than a note on the back reading ‘1240 France Bible’. Although we have no more information about its origin (or about the credentials of the note-maker) we are not entirely in the dark.

Recto: 1st Chronicles 9:4-10:13

Recto: 1st Chronicles 9:4-10:13


Paleography helps scholars not only read old writing but suggest a time and place of composition based on the script. This manuscript is an excerpt from 1st Chronicles 7:9-9:3 (verso) and 9:4-10:13 (recto), as given at the head of the leaf in the ornate abbreviations PA (recto) LI I (verso) – the Vulgate Bible used the Septuagint’s Greek book title, Paralipomenon (‘the remaining things’).

On the left, the scribe wrote 'Maatha' and corrected the 't' with a superscript 'c' and a punctus (the dot) below. The right image is how it should be spelled.

On the left, the scribe wrote ‘Maatha’ and corrected the ‘t’ with a superscript ‘c’ and a punctus (the dot) below. The right image is how it should be spelled.


Despite the cramped style, the work was not done carelessly and the ruling lines of lead are still visible. Distinct is the red ink used for large capitals to mark the beginning of chapters and used to highlight capitals to mark the beginning of verses; otherwise, not even names are capitalized. The margins are used for two functions: the red numerals mark the beginning of chapters, and the words are spelling corrections accompanying the red underlines in the text. It is interesting to note that the handwriting and abbreviations of the corrections do not match those in the text – an editor or a vigilant reader? Finally, there is the 12L in the top right of the verso to consider, most likely a mark to ensure proper ordering of the once-complete manuscript.

The scribe wrote 'custodientes' but another hand added a correction in the margin: 'super'. How tired do you have to be to mix those two up?

The scribe wrote 'custodientes' but another hand added a correction in the margin: 'super'. How tired do you have to be to mix those two up?


The writing is a form of Gothic Textualis (bookhand), the dominant style of the late Middle Ages (c. 13th – 15th centuries), though this example is somewhat removed from the distinguished Quadratus of the most elegant and ornate manuscripts. This scribe was clearly concerned with function over form, as the most notable aspects of the manuscript are the size of the characters and the immense number of abbreviations used – each side is roughly 850 words if written in full!

'Vocavitque nomen eius phares'

‘Vocavitque nomen eius phares’

The handwriting appears to be an example of ‘pearl script’, a careful yet condensed style that developed in 13th century France to copy the ‘pocket Bibles’. At 7 ½” x 5”, the leaf is larger than many other extant examples, but it is possible that this leaf was originally part of one of the increasingly popular portable Bibles.

This is the leaf at its actual size!

This is the leaf at its actual size!

This is just one of the many fascinating items still being found and cataloged in the Walter Havighurst Special Collections.

Marcus Ladd
Special Collections Librarian

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On Their Way to the Stacks

I am responsible for getting books onto the shelves in Special Collections. While student employees shelve most of our books, for a variety of reasons many books end up on my desk. This last week there seemed to be such a varied assortment that I thought these books might make an interesting blog post.

The oldest book that I handled was Subnotata hic continentur Magni Athanasij in psalmos opusculum. Enchiridion Epicteti stoici. Basilij oratio de invidia. Plutarchus de differe[n]tia inter odiu[m] & invidia[m]. Tabula Cebetis Thebani . This book was published in 1508, the same year that Michelangelo began to paint the Sistine Chapel ceiling and five years before Juan Ponce de Leon set foot in what was to become Florida. This book, written in Latin, is concerned with Christianity, doctrinal theology and early Church history. There is a special feeling that comes from holding a book produced over five hundred years ago.

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Snowwhite

The next book that caught my eye was Walt Disney’s Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs. Our copy was printed in 1948. I had this Little Golden Book when I was a child. This classic was a favorite of mine, and modern retellings of this story still entertain me.

boyscout

The Boy Scouts of America; a handbook of woodcraft, scouting, and life-craft, published in 1910 triggered some very fond memories of “my year as a Boy Scout.” Since it was on my desk, I spent several moments looking at how to tie bowline and slip knots (one I remembered, one I had forgotten.)

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Til huttetuenes land is our Norwegian translation of Where the Wild Things Are by Maurice Sendak. I love the familiar cover with the unfamiliar Norwegian words. This book was used in a class on children’s literature.

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The last book I want to mention is The Great Airport Mystery by Franklin W. Dixon. This is a Hardy Boys adventure. I remember watching the Hardy Boys on the Mickey Mouse Club on our first TV, and reading several of the books in this series. This is one that I haven’t read.

Perhaps someday.

Jim Bricker
Senior Library Technician

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