searchIcon closeIcon
Cancel
icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The Photo Collector

Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After

Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After

Hamid Bawdekar
Linsey was stood up by her groom to run off with another woman. Furious, she grabbed a random stranger and declared, "Let's get married!" She had acted on impulse, realizing too late that her new husband was the notorious rascal, Collin. The public laughed at her, and even her runaway ex offered to reconcile. But Linsey scoffed at him. "My husband and I are very much in love!" Everyone thought she was delusional. Then Collin was revealed to be the richest man in the world. In front of everyone, he got down on one knee and held up a stunning diamond ring. "I look forward to our forever, honey."
Modern CEOMultiple identitiesArrogant/DominantFlash Marriage
Download the Book on the App

My Antecedents-How and Whence the Passion came to Me-My Father's People-And My Mother's-My Uncle-His Genuine Feeling for what was Old and Curious-A Disciple of Charles Lamb-Books My First Love-My Courtship of Them under My Father's Roof-My Clandestine Acquisitions-A Small Bibliographical Romance-My Uncle as a Collector-Some of His Treasures-His Choice, and how He differed from My Father-An Adventure of the Latter at a Bookstall-Bargains-The Author moralises upon Them-A New View-I begin to be a Bibliographer-Venice strikes My Fancy as a Subject for Treatment-My Want of Acquaintance with It-Mr Q

uaritch and Mr Ruskin do not encourage Me-I resolve to proceed-I teach Myself what was Requisite to enable Me to do so-Some of My Experiences-Molini the Elder-The London Library Forty Years Ago-What became of My Collections for the Work-Preparing for Another and Greater Scheme.

When one makes in later life some sort of figure as a collector, it may become natural to consider to what favouring circumstances the entrance on the pursuit or pursuits was due. In the present case those circumstances were slight and trivial enough. Although I belonged to a literary family, none of my ancestors had been smitten by the bibliomania or other cognate passion, simply because at first our resources were of the most limited character, and my grandfather was a man of letters and nothing more. He was without that strange, inexplicable cacoethes, which leads so many to gather together objects of art and curiosities on no definite principle or plea throughout their lives, to be scattered again when they depart, and taken up into their bookcases or cabinets by a new generation. This process, broadly speaking, has been in operation thousands of years. It is an inborn and indestructible human trait.

The earliest vestige of a feeling for books among us is unconnected with Collecting as a passion. My great-grandfather, the Presbyterian or Congregational minister, had his shelf or two of volumes, mostly of a professional cast. We hear of the Fratres Poloni, five stupendous folios, brimful of erudition-books which seem, to our more frivolous and superficial and hurrying age, better suited to occupy a niche in a museum as a monumental testimony to departed scholarship-books, alas! which those blind instruments of the revolutionary spirit of change, the paper mill and the fire, draw day by day nearer to canonisation in a few inviolable resting-places, as in sanctuaries dedicated to the holy dead. They will enter on a new and more odorous life: we shall look awfully upon them as upon literary petrifactions, which to bygone ages were living and speaking things.

The Rev. W. Hazlitt was, nevertheless, a man of unusually generous sympathies for his time and his cloth; he could relish secular as well as sacred literature, and his distinguished son thought better of him as a letter-writer than as a preacher. But neither engaged in the pursuit of books otherwise than as practical objects of study or entertainment. There was nothing 'hobby-horsical,' to borrow Coleridge's expression, about the matter. Hazlitt himself secured, as he tells us, stall copies of favourite books or pamphlets, devoured the contents, and then probably cast them aside. This I take to have been Shakespear's plan. I cannot believe the great poet to have been a bibliophile like Jonson. He merely recognised in other men's work material or suggestion for his own.

I conclude that with my father and the Scotish blood of his maternal progenitors, the Stoddarts and Moncrieffs, a certain share of taste for antiquities, or, at any rate, for memorials of the past in a literary shape, was inherited by the Hazlitts. My immediate paternal ancestor, the late Mr Registrar Hazlitt, undoubtedly possessed a strong instinctive disposition to form around him a collection of books. He was emphatically acquisitive almost to the last; and had he been a richer man, he would probably have left behind him a fairly good and extensive library. My father was deficient in knowledge and insight-I might add, in judgment. He bought the wrong copies, or he allowed the right ones to be massacred by a pagan binder; but he was a book-lover. The nucleus of his collection had been a set of Hazlitt's works, a few volumes given to him by Miss Lamb and others, and, of course, his own publications.

His alliance by marriage to the Reynells introduced another stage in our bibliographical evolution. My mother's brother, Mr Charles Weatherby Reynell, of whom I have so much to say elsewhere, was not only a book-buyer on a modest scale, but a gentleman with a vague, undefined liking for anything which struck him as quaint and curious-a coin, a piece of china, a picture, a bit of old painted glass, a Chippendale chair-it hardly signified what it was; but books had the first place, I think, in his heart, and he knew a good deal about such as he had purchased, and thought a good deal about them too, albeit they were, as copies, hardly calculated for the meridian of the fastidious connoisseur. In short, my relative was a disciple of the Lamb school; he selected for merit rather than condition, and his petite bibliothéque was part of his very being.

My father and Mr Reynell may be regarded as my bibliographical and arch?ological sponsors, and they have to answer for a good deal. Instead of becoming a distinguished civil servant, a prosperous trader, or a successful professional man, they contributed, I maintain, to mould me into what I was and am-a bibliographer, a collector, an antiquary.

Books, as they were my father's only, and my uncle's chief, paramours, were my first love. My father often laid out money on them, when I am now sure that he could ill afford it, and when the hour of pressure arrived, it was the books to which we had to bid farewell. How many I have seen come and go, while I was a boy under my father's roof-successive copies of the same favourite work, or little lots of different volumes. Stibbs's, opposite Somerset House, and next door to the Morning Chronicle office, is almost the earliest shop of the kind which I remember; a second was William Brown's, originally on the same premises. These two establishments witnessed the flux and reflux of many a brown paper parcel sent home in a moment of impulse, and launched on its backward voyage at a lower quotation in some financial dilemma-a contingency too frequent in the days before relief arrived in the shape of an official post.

I am haunted in all my maturer life by a feeling of remorse, that on two or three occasions I was betrayed into making foolish investments on my own authority, when neither my father nor myself could properly defray the expense. But the lues which was, in due course, to assume such enlarged dominion over me, and to branch into so many channels, was already an active agency; and my visits to the shop in the Strand, kept by Mr Brown, bore mischievous fruit in one instance at all events, when I secured for 24s. a set of Singer's Select Early English Poets, in boards, uncut. My father was terribly concerned, not knowing where this sort of fancy was likely to end; but he recognised, perhaps, his own teaching, and eventually the Singer was bound by Leighton in half-blue morocco. It was a beautiful little set, I thought, and brand-new in its fresh livery. The day came when we had to say good-bye to it-not to it alone; and I should have wished never to behold it again. I did, however; I met with it at an auction; it was faded, thumbed, disreputable. I had not the courage to touch it; it was no longer mine. I mused as I left the place upon its career and its destiny, and it made me really sad.

I have spoken of Mr Reynell as one of my teachers or masters. He was a person who had a genuine love for our older literature, and enjoyed even better opportunities than my father of indulging it. But his purchases were sparing and desultory, and he never attained any distinction as a collector. He had not studied the subject, and he never became wealthy enough to secure the services of competent advisers. In fact, his want of knowledge rendered him distrustful of counsel. The result was that he accumulated, during a very prolonged life, a singular assemblage of nondescript property, of which the really valuable proportion was infinitesimal. It was perfectly fortuitous, that he had picked up an exceedingly rare Psalter, in rather ragged state, for 25s., which at his sale, a year or two back, Mr Quaritch deemed worth £24, and a folio Roman de la Rose, which fetched a good price, and cost him the same moderate sum. As a rule, he invariably, from want of training and fine instinct, bought the wrong article, or, if the right one, in the wrong condition. He had not the eye of George Daniel, R. S. Turner, or Henry Huth, for form and fitness. Yet he was my instructor in a degree and a sense, and many delightful talks we have had about old books, which one or the other of us had seen or admired. He always listened with interest to my stories of adventures up and down the book-world, of which some are reserved for a future chapter; but he felt his inability, I concluded, to enter into the field with stronger competitors, and he usually returned to the contemplation of his own humble appurtenances with a sense of contentment, if not of superiority.

He was totally different from my father in his ideas about books. He did not, in general, care for the modern side, unless it was a first edition of his life-long friend Leigh Hunt, of Hazlitt, or of some other author to whom he was personally attached. On the contrary, my father never cultivated the older editions or original copies. The best standard text was his line. I had from him a little anecdote which shews him in the light of a book-hunter; but then it was for an immediate and isolated literary purpose. While he was engaged about 1840 in editing the works of Defoe, he tried to procure a copy of the Account of the Apparition of Mrs Veal, and went, among other likely resorts, to Baker of Old Street, St Luke's. That individual derided the notion of finding such a rarity; and my father, turning away, cast an eye on Baker's twopenny box outside. There what should he disinter but the identical pamphlet, and he takes twopence out of his pocket, which he hands to the boy, and puts the prize into it, which he carries home in triumph. It was the only bargain of which I ever heard him speak. He was not that way built. I sometimes wish that my experiences had not been infinitely more numerous.

The seeking and winning of bargains constitute an attractive pursuit and an equally attractive topic. You have the power of regaling your less fortunate or unpractical acquaintances with the strange chances, which enabled you to become the master for a trifle of such and such treasures and you gain confidence in your continued good fortune,-

'When a fool finds a horse-shoe,

Read Now
The Confessions of a Collector

The Confessions of a Collector

William Carew Hazlitt
Published in 1897, this autobiography of a bibliophile was praised by The New York Times as "entertaining" and "amusing." Hazlitt's self expression through book collecting shows him to be a man embracing of the flow and change of literature through the fifty years he collected.
Literature
Download the Book on the App
The Moving Picture Girls; Or, First Appearances in Photo Dramas

The Moving Picture Girls; Or, First Appearances in Photo Dramas

Laura Lee Hope
Trajectory presents classics of world literature with 21st century features! Our original-text editions include the following visual enhancements to foster a deeper understanding of the work: Word Clouds at the start of each chapter highlight important words. Word, sentence, paragraph counts, and re
Literature
Download the Book on the App
Tom Swift and His Photo Telephone or the Picture That Saved a Fortune

Tom Swift and His Photo Telephone or the Picture That Saved a Fortune

Victor Appleton
Tom Swift and His Photo Telephone is the 17th book in the original Tom Swift series."Every boy possesses some form of inventive genius. Tom Swift is a bright, ingenious boy and his inventions and adventures make the most interesting kind of reading.""These spirited tales convey in a realistic way, t
Literature
Download the Book on the App
I Rule the Underworld

I Rule the Underworld

Pamela
Once a mediocre man, and now a powerful Yama. His name is Evan Ye, the overlord of the underworld. He commands deceased historical figures and countless heroes from movies and cartoons. The sole purpose of his minions, whether it be the fearsome characters of computer games or the beautiful, sexy fe
Fantasy FantasyCharacter development
Download the Book on the App
Cute Mommy With Twin Babies

Cute Mommy With Twin Babies

Lotus root slice
On her escape out of an arranged marriage, she had a crazy night with a strange guy... Six years later, she came back from abroad with her twin babies and embarked on the journey of revenge. Her stepmother and sister, whoever had hurt her should pay the price! In the meantime, however, the stranger
Billionaires FamilyModernRevengeCute BabySchemingMultilinear narration
Download the Book on the App
Love In The Shadows

Love In The Shadows

The Rising
Julian's team had outdone themselves. The club sparkled with elegance, from the glimmering chandeliers to the sleek black and gold décor. Lexi's mural stretched across the main wall, its vibrant colors glowing under the soft lights. Guests gathered near it, admiring the art and snapping photos. "Yo
Adventure ThrillerSuspenseModernLove triangleCEOAttractiveBillionairesWorkplace
Download the Book on the App
Rejected By One; Claimed By Three

Rejected By One; Claimed By Three

The Godmother
BLURB. "I was sold without my will but never expected to have my heart to be stolen as well". Lila was forcefully given to the Lycan king without her will to be his surrogate since the Luna Queen, his mate, couldn't concieve for him but Lila never expected to discover that she would be his second ch
Werewolf R18+SuspenseFantasyForced loveLove triangleAttractiveArrogant/Dominant
Download the Book on the App
The Haunted Chamber

The Haunted Chamber

The Duchess""
The Haunted Chamber by The Duchess""
Literature
Download the Book on the App
HIS MALE SLAVE IS A WOMAN

HIS MALE SLAVE IS A WOMAN

The Pawn
To the ruthless Alpha Ashen Vladimir III, loyalty is everything,and disobedience is death. So when a sharp-tongued male slave named Nicholas is sent to serve in his brutal court as a server boy Ashen doesn't expect defiance... or attraction. But "Nicholas" is no ordinary slave. She is Nicolette Si
Romance FantasyBetrayalRevengeMultiple identitiesAttractiveRoyalty Lust/EroticaArrogant/DominantMediaevalRomance
Download the Book on the App
Survive among the Vikings

Survive among the Vikings

The Elisse
Can true love overcome all the pitfalls of destiny? The Vikings invaded the village where Rosalie lived. They murdered children and the elderly and abducted young women and strong men to their country to sell them into slavery. At the slave market, Rosalie is bought by a spirited young jarl. What wi
Romance FamilyForced loveFirst loveAttractiveKnightMediaeval
Download the Book on the App

Trending

Room to Fall Can You Keep A Secret Mated to Brianna ENDLESSLY MINE SHE S DECISIVE My Unexpected Marriage to the CEO: A Sweet Second Chance free download pdf
Loved By A Star

Loved By A Star

The Baker
A boy falls in love with a girl he once hated because of her pomposity...he then faces the test of letting her know his feelings
Young Adult SuspenseModernCelebritiesHigh schoolFriends to love Drama
Download the Book on the App
Revenge Against the Scoundrel

Revenge Against the Scoundrel

The Hunter
Here's the translation of the text into English: "When we were about to get married, I came across a post from my boyfriend asking: 'The betrothal gift is 28,000, and if she gets pregnant and has the baby after six months, can I ask for the betrothal gift back if things go south?' After being sho
Modern FamilyRevengeCourageous
Download the Book on the App
The Day Before the Wedding: My Mother and My Fiancé

The Day Before the Wedding: My Mother and My Fiancé

The Walrus
The day before my wedding, I caught my mom and my fiancé flirting in the house. As I watched these two about to put on a live performance, I felt no shock at all; instead, I was so excited that my hands were trembling a bit. Because I was going to win. The 20-year-long rivalry with my mom, this f
Modern FamilyRevengeForbidden love
Download the Book on the App
My Childhood Friend Has Long Been Coveting Me

My Childhood Friend Has Long Been Coveting Me

The Coral
I believe that if I really hadn't discovered his feelings for me, he wouldn't have told me. He cares too much about our relationship, so he would rather remain passive than try to disrupt this balance. "What if... what if I fall for someone else?" Before I could finish, he covered my mouth with hi
Modern ModernChildhood loveGXG
Download the Book on the App
Insatiable Desire.

Insatiable Desire.

The Possessor
Ana never expected Luiz, her ex-boyfriend, to come into her business meeting, let alone that it would lead to thirty days of searing love. ***** Ana is passionate about journalism, and now that she runs her father's newspaper, she will go to any length to keep it afloat. She didn't anticipate her
Billionaires R18+ModernRevengeSecret relationshipCEOAttractiveLust/EroticaArrogant/DominantBillionaires
Download the Book on the App
MUST NOT LOVE THE PREY

MUST NOT LOVE THE PREY

The magicpen
“Oh!.” I cuss under my breath as I stare down at the creature I had shot with the gun, lying still in front of me. Only this time, it isn’t a deer, as I think it is. It is a living being. Not just any living being but a female, one that lies there stark naked.   *** The cold-hearted Alpha Liam meets
Werewolf FantasyBetrayalRevengeAlphaTwistArrogant/DominantRomance
Download the Book on the App
Genius Twins And Their Mother

Genius Twins And Their Mother

Yi Ye
Lancy, a daughter of a wealthy family, is sold to an agent organization. During a mission, she is seriously injured and lost her consciousness. Years later she wakes up, unexpectedly finding that she has boy/girl twins. Her six-year-old boy is smart, with excellent business thinking; the girl is goo
Romance FamilyModernTwins
Download the Book on the App
Spells and Mates

Spells and Mates

The Marvel
When the Golden boy rejects Hermione for the Queen Bee; her cousin, the whole realm becomes set to experience a new emergence. "You!" I yell, pushing his shoulder. A small smile played on his lips, as he drinks in the sight of my drenched hair and dress. "Eyes here! You don't..." His lips suddenl
Werewolf ModernFantasyLove triangleVampireTwinsAttractiveHigh school
Download the Book on the App
Morbid Possessiveness

Morbid Possessiveness

Dorian The
"I don't want to be your brother anymore." When Xu Lie said this, he was exceptionally serious, even the act of kneeling on one knee was just as I had imagined it. However, thanks to him, I became the plaything of his brother.
Modern RevengeSweetRomance
Download the Book on the App
The Photo Collector novel read online freeThe Photo Collector pdf free downloadThe Photo Collector epub vk downloadThe Photo Collector novel redditThe Photo Collector
Read it on MoboReader now!
Open
close button

The Photo Collector

Discover books related to The Photo Collector on MoboReader. Read more free books online about The Photo Collector novel read online free,The Photo Collector pdf free download,The Photo Collector epub vk download.