Produced by David Starner, Keith M. Eckrich, and the Project Gutenberg
Online Distributed Proofreading Team
The Augustan Reprint Society
Daniel Defoe
A Vindication of the Press (1718)
With an Introduction by Otho Clinton Williams
Publication Number 29
Los Angeles
William Andrews Clark Memorial Library
University of California
1951
H. RICHARD ARCHER, Clark Memorial Library
RICHARD C. BOYS, University of Michigan
EDWARD NILES HOOKER, University of California, Los Angeles
JOHN LOFTIS, University of California, Los Angeles
W. EARL BRITTON, University of Michigan
EMMETT L. AVERY, State College of Washington
BENJAMIN BOYCE, Duke University
LOUIS I. BREDVOLD, University of Michigan
CLEANTH BROOKS, Yale University
JAMES L. CLIFFORD, Columbia University
ARTHUR FRIEDMAN, University of Chicago
LOUIS A. LANDA, Princeton University
SAMUEL H. MONK, University of Minnesota
ERNEST MOSSNER, University of Texas
JAMES SUTHERLAND, Queen Mary College, London
H.T. SWEDENBERG, JR., University of California, Los Angeles
A Vindication of the Press is one of Defoe's most characteristicpamphlets and for this reason as well as for its rarity deservesreprinting. Besides the New York Public Library copy, here reproduced,I know of but one copy, which is in the Indiana University Library.Neither the Bodleian nor the British Museum has a copy.
Like many items in the Defoe canon, this tract must be assigned to himon the basis of internal evidence; but this evidence, thoughcircumstantial, is convincing. W.P. Trent included A Vindication inhis bibliography of Defoe in the CHEL, and later bibliographers ofDefoe have followed him in accepting it. Since the copy herereproduced was the one examined by Professor Trent, the followingpassage from his ms. notes is of interest:
The tract was advertised, for "this day," in the St. James Evening Post, April 19-22, 1718. It is not included in the chief lists of Defoe's writings, but it has been sold as his, and the only copy I have seen, one kindly loaned me by Dr. J.E. Spingarn, once belonged to some eighteenth century owner, who wrote Defoe's name upon it. I was led by the advertisement mentioned above to seek the pamphlet, thinking it might be Defoe's; but I failed to secure a sight of it until Professor Spingarn asked me whether in my opinion the ascription to Defoe was warranted, and produced his copy.
Perhaps the most striking evidence for Defoe's authorship of AVindication is the extraordinary reference to his own natural partsand to the popularity of The True-Born Englishman some seventeenye