Page:A history of booksellers, the old and the new.djvu/306

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266 CHAMBERS," KNIGHT, AND CASSELL. Among them we find Charles Dickens, Mark Lemon, G. Cruikshank, Wilkie Collins, and R. H. Home. "A joyous time, this," writes Mr. Knight, who had played the part of " One Tonson, a bookseller," " left-legged Jacob" having, he adds, "but a paltry representative." Among Mr. Knight's chief literary labours, we must instance his " Half-Hours with the Best Authors " a book that has achieved a world-wide popularity ; " Once upon a Time ;" and " Passages of a Working Life for Half a Century" (in 3 volumes), a charming and interesting autobiography, to which we are in- debted for most of the facts in this short notice of his life. Full of years and of honours, Mr. Knight died at Addlestonc, in Surrey, on the Qth of March, 1873, aged eighty-one ; and five days afterwards was buried in the family vault at Windsor. The funeral was very large, from the number of literary men attending, who wished to show their feeling of affection and respect for the deceased. In the newspaper notices, too, the tribute of praise was unanimous and hearty ; and it was resolved that the gratitude of writers and readers should not stop here. A committee has been formed to erect some kind of memorial, and many of the leading men of letters, as well as some of the leading publishers, are taking part in it. It has been hoped that this memorial may assume the shape of a free public library for London, and thus initiate a move- ment that, to our shame, has made such successful way in our great provincial towns. Nothing else could so appropriately perpetuate the memory of a life so earnest in its purpose of spreading cheap literature far and wide, so brave in difficulty, so utterly unmindful of self-gain in the work planned out and done ; that none who know its story can gainsay Douglas Jerrold's most happy epitaph, "Good Knight."