Review of:
Görlach, Manfred.
1998.
An Annotated Bibliography of Nineteenth-century Grammars of English.
Benjamins. pp. 395.
During the nineteenth century, English
grammars were published in enormous numbers. These grammars are, in fact,
remarkably similar in content. Why, then, did they continue to flood the
market, was this due to commercial pressure, or to the stubborn
conviction that each individual author might have something new to
offer? This is a question asked by Ian Michael in his preface to Manfred
Görlach’s Annotated Bibliography of Nineteenth-century Grammars of
English, and it is the purpose of the book to assist scholars
interested in the phenomenon to find an answer to it. The bibliography,
which is the result of the combined efforts of Michael and Görlach,
contains over 1900 items, of which only less than half have actually
been seen by either of the compilers. The main reason for this appears
to have been lack of time and money, as Görlach himself observes on page
3 of his introduction. Indeed, the task to collect a complete database
of nineteenth-century grammars is a formidable one, and Görlach’s
attempt to do so at all is labelled ‘heroic’ by Michael. The best way to
determine to what extent the attempt can be called successful seemed to
be to assess the kind of information presented on the basis of a
comparison with what has already been published on the subject so far.
The two sources used here for such a comparison are R.C. Alston’s
Bibliography of the English Language (Vol. 1, English Grammars
Written in English, E.J. Arnold & Son, 1965) and Bernard Barr’s
inventory of the Murray holdings in the York Minster Library (‘Towards a
Bibliography of Lindley Murray’, in Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade, ed.,
1996, Two Hundred Years of Lindley Murray, Nodus Publikationen,
217–29).
While Alston’s bibliography includes
the year 1800, Görlach begins with this year: there is therefore a very
small amount of overlap. Of the eight items in Alston, six can also be
found in the main bibliography in Görlach, though with some differences:
the attribution to John Binns and Thomas Coar of the anonymous Essay
Towards an English Grammar for Ackworth School (no. 169) has been
accepted without indicating that the book had originally been published
anonymously (Alston uses square brackets in such cases). Such knowledge,
however, would be important to anyone studying the publication history
of a grammar. The following entry (no. 170) contains another title by a
John Binns. Here, the author’s life-dates have been given, 1772–1860,
while in the previous entry only his profession is mentioned (schoolmaster).
The question naturally presents itself whether these two men are one and
the same person; if they are (see also
below), the same question can be asked with respect to an earlier
item in Alston, i.e. The Youth’s Guide, to the English Language,
also by John Binns, which was published in 1788 when the author would
appear to have been only sixteen years old. William Angus’s Epitome
of English Grammar has been included in Görlach as well, and so have
Mrs Eves’s Grammatical Play-thing, William Woodbridge’s Plain
and Concise Grammar of the English Language, and J. Haywood’s
Short Introduction to the English Tongue, though without expanding
the initial to its full form (cf. Alston’s ‘J[ames]’). The anonymous
Short and Easy Rules for Attaining a Knowledge of English Grammar
can be found under S (the page headers, which do read "Anon.",
are not very helpful as a means to speed up a search); [Thomas] Wright’s
English Grammar has not been included, while Alexander Barrie’s
Epitome of English Grammar has been placed in the appendix, along
with many other works that ‘did not classify for [the] bibliography’ (p.
357) – but why this particular item would not have done so is not clear
at first sight. Comparing the items discussed here shows a different
interest on the part of Görlach compared to Alston’s: while Alston’s
bibliography is more aimed at providing the physical details of a book,
Görlach looks at content as well. Haywood is a good example: its comment
reads ‘Conventional but thorough; second edition much improved; nine
parts of speech’ (p. 169).
Ash’s Grammatical Institutes (1st
ed. 1760) and Lowth’s Short Introduction to English grammar
(1762) are not included, nor should they have been; they do, however,
occur in the appendix, in section ‘0. 18th Century Works’,
the reason given being that ‘they testify to the survival of earlier
grammars in the 19th century’ (p. 357). But the information
provided compares unfavourably with that in Alston: for Ash (no. 1941),
Görlach notes that he has located ‘at least 13 eds. up to 1823’, while
Alston lists about fifty editions and reprints until that year. The same
applies to Lowth (no. 1980), for whose grammar Görlach observes that
there were ‘At least 12 eds. up to 1811’: once again, Alston lists a
great deal more. As for Lindley Murray’s English Grammar (1795),
it is listed both in the main bibliography and in the appendix.
Apparently, Görlach did not consider Barr’s article for the publication
history he offers of the grammar (the article does appear in the list of
references following the introduction to the bibliography, p. 19). The
publication history of Murray’s grammar in its various forms is
extremely complicated. As Görlach observes on p. 253: ‘The editions need
a great deal of sorting out, between the one-volume and two-volume
editions, between British and American editions, between Murray’s own
books and versions bearing (and exploiting) his name’. Apart from
providing a list of the different publications by Murray currently in
possession of the York Minster Library, Barr in his article has
attempted to put order into the chaos of Murray reprints and editions by
sorting them out into regular and irregular editions. Incorporating the
material of the article would, moreover, have given a fuller picture of
the publication history of the grammar. Thus, Barr lists a ‘new edition’
for the 1808 two-volume edition of the grammar (no. 1294) in the same
year as well as Volume I of the 7th edition of 1842. As for
the grammar included in Appendix 0 (no. 1981), Barr’s list contains
twenty-two editions and reprints between 1800 and 1805 instead of
Görlach’s 7, as well as evidence for an 11th edition (1805),
a 19th (1809), 25th (1814), 27th
(1815), 48th (1836), 49th (1838), 50th
(1839), 52nd (1842) and 60th (1858) one;
furthermore, including the information from the article in the
bibliography would have provided the location as York Minster Library
for the majority of the editions and reprints in addition to the British
Library and the Bodleian.
The bibliography is an important work
in that it opens up a whole new area of research. Görlach even invites
prospective PhD students to tackle any one of the twenty-one research
questions listed in the introduction (pp. 8–10). In its present form,
the book represents work in progress, for the completion of which more
time and money deserves to be made available. In any case, Görlach must
be given full credit for having undertaken a significant beginning of
it. Given the new media of publication now at our disposal, the
publisher might well consider bringing out an updated version of the
bibliography – to contribute to which the reader is invited (p. 13) – on
CD-Rom or to make it available on-line on the Internet. To do so would
make the material much more accessible, so that searching for existing
correspondences between the grammars, such as all those items which
apparently draw on the popularity of Murray’s grammar, would become a
lot easier.
Ingrid Tieken-Boon van Ostade,
University of Leiden (contact
the reviewer).
Reaction from Phyllis Williams on
the above speculation as to whether the two John Binns listed in Alston
are one and the same person:
John Binns (1772-1860) was a liberal reform
activist (for which he was imprisoned and tried for sedition in 1799).
After his release from gaol in 1801 he emigrated to the USA where he
became a journalist and publisher.
A different Binns family who were Quakers were
involved with the founding of Ackworth School.
I would therefore think it extremely likely that
each of these men would published a book of English Grammar. However,
if the Grammar published by John Binns (1772-1860) was published after
1860 and in UK rather than the USA, I would suggest the dates attributed
to him are perhaps erroneous and that the Quaker Binns was in fact the
publisher.
See:
Political
Binns."
Contact Phyllis Williams. |