Page:A history of booksellers, the old and the new.djvu/176

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
142
142

142 CONSTABLE, CADELL, AND BLACK, the saying that " Edinburgh never had a Grub Street ' is true, it must have arisen rather from the persever- ance of the writers than from the uniform generosity of the publishers. The agreement upon which the Encyclopedia was undertaken was still in existence when Kerr wrote Smellie's Life ; as a literary curiosity we quote it : " Mr. Andrew Bell to Mr. William Smellie. " SIR, As we are engaged in publishing a ' Diction- ary of the Arts and Sciences,' and as you have informed us that there are fifteen capital sciences, which you will undertake for, and write up the sub-divisions and detached parts of them, conforming to your plan, and likewise to prepare the whole work for the press, &c., &c. We hereby agree to allow you 200 for your trouble." The first proprietors were Andrew Bell, engraver, and Colin Macfarquhar, printer. The publication was commenced in weekly numbers in 1771, and completed in 1773, by which time the bulk in all con- sisted only of three small quarto volumes. A second edition was called for in 1776, and Smellie was offered a share in the property, but he declined to have any- thing more to do with it, as upon the recommendation of " a very distinguished nobleman " it was resolved to introduce a complete system of biography. The proprietors engaged, instead, James Tytler, a laborious miscellaneous writer, and a man of extraordinary knowledge. A large proportion of the additional matter, by which the work was extended from three to ten volumes, was due to his pen, but the payment for this labour is said to have been very small, and the unfortunate author was not able to support his