In the snowy spring of 1733, Samuel Croxall, a classical translator, travelled to Herefordshire to visit his retired publisher, Jacob Tonson.
Tonson was now an emaciated, deaf old man, who spent his days drinking
sack and reading by the fireside. According to Alexander Pope, however,
Tonson’s mind remained “full of matter, secret history, and wit and
spirit“. Croxall was hoping to extract some of this „secret history“ –
an account of the most important London gentlemen’s club of the early
1700s, founded by Tonson: the Kit-Cat Club.When Croxall roared his request, the near 80-years-old publisher
„came into it at once, said nobody could tell better what to say of them
[the Kit-Cats] than himself, for, to tell me the truth, he had been
drunk with every one of them.“
Given his humble birth, Tonson was proud to have caroused with so many aristocrats and famous authors. Son of a barber-surgeon and bookseller, he grew up during the Restoration, taunted for his lame left leg, red hair and freckled „bull face“. After apprenticeship to a stationer, Tonson set up his own firm, purchasing the works of major authors such as Dryden, and quickly establishing a reputation as the first professional London publisher.
Given his humble birth, Tonson was proud to have caroused with so many aristocrats and famous authors. Son of a barber-surgeon and bookseller, he grew up during the Restoration, taunted for his lame left leg, red hair and freckled „bull face“. After apprenticeship to a stationer, Tonson set up his own firm, purchasing the works of major authors such as Dryden, and quickly establishing a reputation as the first professional London publisher.