Page:A history of booksellers, the old and the new.djvu/157

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123
123

CONSTABLE, CADELL, AND BLACK. 123 The business of Constable's house was now so large and extensive that he thought it a hardship that so much of his wares should pass through the hands of English agents, who not only absorbed a large share of his profits, but who could not be expected to serve him with the same zeal as his own immediate followers. He and his Edinburgh partner, therefore, in 1808, joined with Charles Hunter and John Park in com- mencing a general bookselling establishment in London, under the designation of Constable, Hunter, Park, and Hunter. Shortly after this a breach that had been created between Scott and Constable widened until at last they parted. Scott always maintained that the quarrel was directly caused by the intemperate language of Hunter, Constable's original partner; but the severance was probably in reality due to the influence of a third person James Ballantyne and was, perhaps to a certain extent, influenced by a feeling of pique at Jeffrey's recent conduct. In 1808 he took a part, perhaps as a suggester, certainly as a zealous promoter, in the establishment of the Quarterly Review, as a political and literary counterpoise to the Edinburgh Review. Already, in 1805, he had become a partner in the printing house of James Ballantyne and Company, though the fact remained for the public, and for all his friends but one, a profound secret. "The forming of this connection," says Lockhart, " was one of the most important steps in Scott's life. He continued bound by it during twenty years, and its influence on his literary exertions and his worldly fortunes was productive of much good and not a little evil. Its effects were in truth so mixed and balanced during the vicissitudes of a long and vigorous career, 82