Endnotes 1The only recent source for the ornaments that is at all comprehensive are
the excellent facsimile reproductions of the first editions done by the Swedenborg
Institut of Switzerland; unfortunately however these include only nine of Swedenborg's
twenty-five theological first edition volumes. Swedenborg's ornaments have recently
appeared here and there as decoration: for instance, in J. Durban Odhner's self-published
Catechism for the New Christian Church (1996), and Swedenborg's Conversations
with Angels (Swedenborg Foundation 1996). For beautiful use of an ornament
from Swedenborg's pretheological publications see the cover and title page of
A Scientist Explores Spirit (Swedenborg Foundation 1997). Although that
book does not identify it as such or cite its origin, I see that ornament on
Swedenborg's Principia (Dresden and Leipzig 1734) 444. 2Many more adorn his pretheological publications. 3Not included in this study are the many oversized undecorated capitals boxing
out two or three lines of text to begin lesser divisions. These appear throughout
Swedenborg's highly ordered publications. 4Swedenborg himself calls them asterisks and uses them to point readers of
Apocalypse Revealed to its memorable relations, suggesting they read
them first. "In the same work are inserted various Memorable Relations
of my intercourse with the Spiritual World; they are separated from the text
of the work by asterisks, and are to be found at the end of the Explication
of each chapter; as they contain several remarkable particulars, they may probably
excite the reader to their first perusal" (Swedenborg, Letters and Memorials
611-12). 5I am also grateful to Erik E. Sandström, Curator of Swedenborgiana at
the Swedenborg Library, for giving me access to the First Editions collection
for the purpose of research and giving Amos Glenn access to Swedenborgiana's
scanning equipment. 6This sequence of publication for the five works published in 1758 follows
Swedenborg's sequence given both in the preface of Doctrine of the Lord
and on the last page of Conjugial Love in the first Latin editions. 7In the following notes the word "English" means fourteen point
type, "Pica" twelve point, and "Long Primer" ten point,
as they were known in Swedenborg's day. For a complete table of size names in
different countries see Updike vol. 1 p. 27. 8Compare Line Ornaments 13, 23, and possibly 08, and elements in Headpieces
05, 07, 11, 12, and 13 with Fleuron Anthology p. 29. 9George F. Dole and Robert H. Kirven, A Scientist Explores Spirit 14.
10Journal of Dreams 2d ed, Swedenborg Scientific Association: Bryn
Athyn, 1989, nos. 194 and 195, emphasis mine. As Swedenborg had these dreams
on May 4th and 5th 1744, old style, presumably his "work" here means
The Animal Kingdom. Thanks to Lamar Goodenough for bringing these passages
to my attention.