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! UTEBARY INTELLIGENCE .. ... 214—287 * ...
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f» |, Sr. Dunstan's Souse, E.C.
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I r/^IANADA is a country most difficult ...
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A friend of Mr. Gladstone has kindly bee...
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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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.
Additionally, when viewing full transcripts, extracted text may not be in the same order as the original document.
Mb^^_^____ :R!X; ^___ ' ^__J^__— _^_^___...
MB ^^_^____ : r ! X ; ^___ ' ^__ J ^__— _^_^___— . __ . ¦ "" . _ . " ... _ ' . . " ~ " " ~ " . . . ' . _ ..... . . ¦ ' ¦ '¦ ** l j » g' - J-- ' - V' - -. " | . . f 41 ^ • f t , 2 i 4 The Publishers' Circular March * , 188 9
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! Utebary Intelligence .. ... 214—287 * ...
! UTEBARY INTELLIGENCE .. ... 214—287 * COPYRIGHT IN CANADA . 215—217
| THE "UNDERSELLING- QUESTION IN GERj MANY 217 , 218
NOTES AND NEWS . i 218—220 CONTINENTAL NOTES . 220 , 221
AMERICAN NEWS AND NOTES 2 $ 1 , 222 j LORD HOPETOUN'S LIBRARY 22 J 2 , & 23
j PROPOSED RUSSIAN DICTIONARY 223 , 224 j OBITUARY 224 , i
TRADE CHANGES 224 , 225 ! ANNOUNCEMENTS 225—235 REVIEWS , < fcc ¦ ¦ 235—237 j ; ( _^
! Utebary Intelligence .. ... 214—287 * ...
Index to books pubiiIshed in great BRITAIN BETWEEN FEBRUARY 1 & < fe 23 .... 238 , 239
B 0 OK & PUBLISHED IN GEBAT BRITAIN FROM FEBRUARY 16 TQ 28 ; ... 28 fr—242 NEW BOOKS AND BOOKS LATELY
PUBUSHflD .. ; 242—277 , 296 MISOELIiANEOUS J ; 278-2 ^ 8
BUSINESS CARDS 284—286 ASSISTANTS WANTED * .. * ... 288
WANT SITUATIONS 288 ' BOOKS FOB SALE 289
BOOKS WANTED TO PURCHASE 289—295
F» |, Sr. Dunstan's Souse, E.C.
f » | , Sr . Dunstan ' s Souse , E . C . ' March 1 , 1889 .
I R/^Ianada Is A Country Most Difficult ...
I r /^ IANADA is a country most difficult to deal v ^ with in connection vith copyright , and
the report which we print in this number will j sufficiently show some of ' the marvellous
intri-[ cacies of a very peculiar colonial problem . On | referring to the pamphlet entitled ' Copyright
National and International' ( which we look upon ap the most concise and comprehensible
epitome of this vexed question yet published ) , we find the law clearly set forth in three
paragraphs : 1 . By the International- and Colonial Act ,
1886 , any native or foreign resident in Canada first publishing his work there or in Great
Britain or in any British possession , gets copyright throughout the Britinh Dominions .
2 . The works of a British author cannot fbe reprinted in Canada without his permission ,
but if he does not comply with the Canadian Law , reprints may be imported into Canada
from' foreign countries ( on payment of the Customs Duty [ 12 J per cent . ] aforesaid ) .
3 . The works of a British author who complies with the Canadian Xiaw can neither be
rejprinted in , nor imported into , Canada without his permission .
The new , or rather renewed , trouble seems to have ita origin in the terms of the Berne
Convention , which , to some extent , may interfere with Canadian manufacturing concerns ,
though ita provisions cannot in any degree affectotherwise than beneficially , the affairs
' I jof l _ i » authors ^ and publishers V 1 _ 1 _ . . The JTVL - ^ * appeal A _ l for J ? -. — -justice * which has been Advanced by the
[ Canadian trade is wholly attached to productive or business matters , much in the same
( way as an equitable copyright law is held in (( bondage by the working-classes of the United
States j the popular vote being against what jfc called a * tax on knowledge' without the
I R/^Ianada Is A Country Most Difficult ...
¦ ' v distinction of determining from whom the
knowledge has to come in future years and
what wiH be the reward thereof , \ i tQm ¦ i . Hi _
A Friend Of Mr. Gladstone Has Kindly Bee...
A friend of Mr . Gladstone has kindly been *
revealing to ~ the public that eminent statespresent man ' s views century regarding . These the views novelists were i of once the ' \
enunciated in private—when , is not precisely stated . We are told that the * palm was
awarded to Scott , and , though we rpay scarcely i be surprised at this decision , we are consider- j
ably astonished to hear that the * Bride * of Lammermoor' was preferred to all of the I
Wizard of the North's works : next to this being placed * Kenilworth . ' As to who should
come second in the order ofcmerit Mr . Gladstone seemed doubtful , but * supposed George
Eliot 'Silas , ^ the Marner best /" favoured 4 Adam Bede of her , ' < The books Mill being on
the Floss , ' and the * Scenes of Clerical Life / | AH this is very interesting , but many people
will be wondering what Thackeray has done that he should be thus relegated to an inferior
position , and even Dickens , though essentially a humorist , will not be wanting in his host of
disappointed admirers . But , indeed , thus to arrange novelists like boys in a class list is
simply impossible } , and for every great mind that would agree with Mr . Gladstone ' s award ,
another equally intellectual mind could be found to put one of the other scarcely less
distinguished writers at the head of the poll . Apprec J . JL iation of a novelist depends M . very Umuch
on the reader ' s individual tone of thought and tendency of sympathy . But H is at least
gratifying to know-that Mr . Gladstone thought * Jane Eyre * a great and powerful work , and
many readers will agree with him in failing to appreciate the genius of Emily Bronte . But
in here ' ' , ¦ : for again Mr emotional . Gladstone sympath ' s chief y seems objection to come ^^ to —^ oi y - - . . . . -j-i . l --- - . ^—— -l—— i-a . ^—^ . MMfcMiM * M *< k * mJi »^ ini ^* it<— W ^ P ** ^ T ^ 9
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Citation
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Publishers’ Circular (1880-1890), March 1, 1889, page 214, in the Nineteenth-Century Serials Edition (2008; 2018) ncse-os.kdl.kcl.ac.uk/periodicals/pc/issues/tec_01031889/page/4/
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