[195]
until he withdrew altogether.
The fifth and sixth editions of his “Quotations” were published by Little, Brown & Co., the seventh and eighth by Routledge of London, the ninth by Little, Brown & Co. and Macmillan & Co. of London, jointly; and of all these editions between two and three hundred thousand copies must have been sold.
Of the seventh and eighth editions, as the author himself tells us, forty thousand copies were printed apart from the English reprint.
The ninth edition, published in 1891, had three hundred and fifty pages more than its predecessor, and the index was increased by more than ten thousand lines.
In 1881 Mr. Bartlett published his Shakespeare “Phrase-book,” and in February, 1889, he retired from his firm to complete his indispensable Shakespeare “Concordance,” which Macmillan & Co. published at their own risk in London in 1894.
All this immense literary work had the direct support and cooperation of Mr. Bartlett's wife, who was the daughter of Sidney Willard, professor of Hebrew in Harvard University, and granddaughter of Joseph Willard, President of Harvard from 1781 to 1804.
She inherited from such an ancestry the love of studious labor; and as they had no children, she and her husband could pursue it with the greatest regularity.
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