Bookplates normally included the name of the owner of the book as well as images that would remind the borrower who they borrowed a book from such as a family coat of arms or an image of the owner. They started out as individual works of art until the mid 1800s when they were mass produced, the printer only changing the name on the inscription.
Another tactic used in the 19th century to prompt a borrower to return a book was the use of book rhymes or sayings written in the front of the book.
Some popular sayings were:
"This book belongs to _____________________
Neither blemish this book nor the leaves double down,
Nor lend it to each idle friend in the town;
Return it when read; or, if lost, please supply
Another as good to the mind and the eye."
Neither blemish this book nor the leaves double down,
Nor lend it to each idle friend in the town;
Return it when read; or, if lost, please supply
Another as good to the mind and the eye."
"If thou art borrowed by a friend,
Right welcome shall he be,
To read, to study, not to lend,
But to return to me.
But to return to me.
Not that imparted knowledge doth
Diminish learning's store,
But books, I find, if often lent
Return to me no more."
Diminish learning's store,
But books, I find, if often lent
Return to me no more."
"If this book you steal away,
What will you say
On Judgment Day?"
- "Everytown is my dwelling-place
- America is my nation
- ______________ is my name
- And Christ is my salvation."
- Ex-Libris poems were more common in the 1700s and were later surpassed in popularity by bookplates which printers began to mass produce them cheaply.