Excerpt from The City of Crafts: A Phantasy Being Some Account of a Journey to the Court of the Printers' Guild
IN the summer of 1921 while in London, the writer of the City of Crafts one day, while sauntering down Charing Cross Road, chanced to see in the window of one of the many book-sellers in that street, a little pamphlet The Court of the Printers' Guild, written by W. Loftus Hare and decorated by the late Lovat Fraser.
The pamphlet had been issued some seven or eight years ago, primarily to advertise the Cran ford Press, which is the trade name of George Pul man £5 Sons, a firm of London printers, but the decorations by Fraser, whose untimely death is so generally deplored, soon made it sought for, and copies are not now easy to come upon. Issued origin ally at a shilling, the present writer paid seven and six for his copy, and glad to get it at that.
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