THE WANDERINGS AND
HOMES OF MANUSCRIPTS
The
Wanderings and Homes of Manuscripts is the title of this book.?To have
called it the survival and transmission of ancient literature would
have been pretentious, but not wholly untruthful.?Manuscripts, we all
know, are the chief means by which the records and imaginings of twenty
centuries have been preserved.?It is my purpose to tell where
manuscripts were made, and how and in what centres they have been
collected, and, incidentally, to suggest some helps for tracing out
their history.?Naturally the few pages into which the story has to be
packed will not give room for any one episode to be treated
exhaustively.?Enough if I succeed in rousing curiosity and setting some
student to work in a field in which and immense amount still remains to
be discovered.
In treating of so large a subject as this----for
it is a large one----it is not a bad plan to begin with the particular
and get gradually to the general.
SOME SPECIMEN PEDIGREES OF MSS.
I take my stand before the moderate-sized bookcase which contains the collection of MSS?span class="editorial">|p4
belonging to the College of Eton, and with due care draw from the
shelves a few of the books which have reposed there since the room was
built in 1729.
The first shelf I lay hands upon contains some
ten large folios. Four of them are a single great compilation,
beginning with a survey of the history of the world and of the Roman
Empire, and merging into the heraldry of the German noblesse. It
was made, we find, in 1541, and is dedicated to Henry VIII.?Large
folding pictures on vellum and portraits of all the Roman Emperors
adorn the first volume. It is a sumptuous book, supposed to be a
present from the Emperor Ferdinand to the King. How did it come here? A
printed label tells us that it was given to the college by Henry
Temple, Viscount Palmerston, in 1750 (he had previously given it to Sir
Richard Ellys on whose death Lady Ellys returned it: so much in
parenthesis). Then, more by luck than anything else, I find mention of
it in the diary of Thomas Hearne, the Oxford antiquary; his friend
Thomas Jett, F.R.S., owned it and told him about it in 1722: he had
been offered ?00 a volume for it; it was his by purchase from one Mr.
Stebbing. It was sold, perhaps to Palmerston, at Jett抯 auction in 1731.
The gap between Henry VIII. and Stebbing remains for the present
unfilled. So much for the first draw.
Next, a yet larger and more ponderous volume, |p5 Decreta Romanorum Pontificum----the
Papal decretals and the Acts of the Councils. It is spotlessly clean
and magnificently wrItten in a hand of the early part of the twelfth
century, a hand which very much resembles that in use at Christchurch,
Canterbury. I am indeed, tempted to call it a Canterbury book; only it
bears none of the marks which it ought to have if it was ever in the
library of the Cathedral Priory. Was it perhaps written there and sold
or given to a daughter-house, or to some abbey which had a less skilful
school of writers? Not to Rochester, at any rate, though Rochester did
get many books written at Christchurch. If it had belonged to Rochester
there would have been some trace, I think, of an inscription on the
lower margin of the first leaf. No; the only clue to the history is a
title written on the fly-leaf in the fifteenth century, which says: 揟he
book of the decrees of the Pope of Rome, and it begins on the second
leaf "tes viii.?That does not tell us much; I do not recognize
the handwriting of the title, though I guess it to have been written
when the book came to Eton College. All I can say is that here is an
example of a large class, duplicates of indispensable and common works,
which the abbey libraries possessed in great numbers, and often parted
with, in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, to colleges and
private purchasers.
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