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Mr Serjeant Talfourd's Copyright Bill JS
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software. The text has not been manually corrected and should not be relied on to be an accurate representation of the item.
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Mr Serjeant Talfourd's Copyright Bill.*
fible fraction of that body receive any emolumeut from the use of the pen ; but by far the major part , by education and personal experience , are enabled to judge of the abstract claims of authors to the gratitude and protection of the nation . The House of
Commons agreed with the learned Serjeant that authors should no longer be deprived so suddenly of the fruits of their labours , of the fruits of things which they create a & much as nature creates
the trees and the flowers , the seed and richness whereof returns to herself , endowing her with added vigour for an increased fertility . The protection is the more needed , since
authors , by education and habits , are rarely fitted to cope with booksellers in the dealings of trade , which they do not comprehend . To the House of Commons , to the educated intellect of the
country , Mr Talfourd uttered what was just and wise ; " to the Teggs it is foolishness ?" No ; the Teggs fear lest some fraction of the horn of plenty
may be broken offiri the change . There is little fear , however , we hope , of the booksellers losing anything even of their superfluities . The increasing demand for books will probably make up for anv additional exnense to lor any additional expense to which they may be put . Mr Tegg endeavours to shew
• " Now _Barabbaa was a robber /'
Mr Serjeant Talfourd's Copyright Bill.*
that authors are already abundantly paid , and for a period of even of unnecessary duration , and he instances Sir Walter Scott . Out of one , however , in spite of the saying , we cannot
always judge of all . Mr Tegg , we believe , has made a considerable fortune by the sale of books ; will he inform us how many of the writers of those books have made equal fortunes ; and will he tell us which is
chiefly instrumental to the existence of a book , the bookseller or the writer ? Mr Tegg considers that the effectof Mr Talfourd ' s bill would be to force secondary writers upon the public , since he assumes that the best writers already receive a maximum . But
he forgets that some of the best authors are not known by the slow public to be such till , perhaps , twenty-eight years after they commence writing . And so Mr Tegg concludes this part of his argument with what is unintelligible , if not meant for a sneer at Wordsworth
But there are many exhibitions of taste on the part of Mr Tegg , which prove him of doubtful worthiness to be even a seller of books : for we cannot altogether agree with Lord Byron , that Barabbas was a type of the craft . *
i he bill , Mr Tegg fears , will raise the price of books . This is absurd . Booksellers must keep down the price of books
Mr Serjeant Talfourd's Copyright Bill Js
Mr Serjeant Talfourd ' s Copyright Bill JS
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Citation
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Monthly Repository (1806-1838) and Unitarian Chronicle (1832-1833), July 1, 1837, page 15, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/mruc/issues/mrp_01071837/page/13/
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