P. R. Harris This is a celebration of the Reading Room which was built in 1854-57. It was however preceded



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Sketches by Boz

 he 


describes a well-known type of reader.

We were once haunted by a shabby-genteel man; he was bodily present to our senses all 

day, and he was in our mind’s eye all night.  The man of whom Sir Walter Scott speaks in 

his Demonology, did not suffer half the persecution from his imaginary gentleman-usher in 

black velvet, that we sustained from our friend in quondam black cloth. He first attracted our 

notice by sitting opposite to us in the reading-room at the British Museum, and what made 

the man more remarkable was, that he had always got before him a couple of shabby-genteel 

5

   Washington Irving, ‘The Art of Book Making’, in 



The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon

 (London, 1820),  

vol. i, pp. 152-5.



4

The Reading Room in Literature

eBLJ 2019,  Article 5

books – two old dogs’-eared folios, in mouldy worm-eaten covers, which had once been 

smart. He was in his chair every morning just as the clock struck ten; he was always the last 

to leave the room in the afternoon, and when he did, he quitted it with the air of a man who 

knew not where else to go for warmth and quiet.  There he used to sit all day, as close to the 

table as possible in order to conceal the lack of buttons on his coat, with his old hat carefully 

deposited at his feet, where he evidently flattered himself it escaped observation.

     About two o’clock you would see him munching a French roll or a penny  loaf; not 

taking it boldly out of his pocket at once, like a man who knew he was only making a 

lunch, but breaking off little bits in his pocket, and eating them by stealth.  He knew too 

well it was his dinner.

6

Dickens was very appreciative of the Reading Room, whatever its defects of ventilation (a 



problem which also affected the rooms at the north end of the King’s Library which were used 

from 1833 to 1857).  But another famous writer, Thomas Carlyle, was very critical of the room 

and of the readers.  This is part of his evidence to the Royal Commission on the British Museum 

which sat from 1847 to 1849.

There are several persons in a state of imbecility who come to read in the British Museum.  

I have been informed that there are several in that state who are sent there by their friends to 

pass away their time.  I remember there was one gentleman who used to blow his nose very 

loudly every half hour.  I inquired who he was, and I was informed that he was a mad person 

sent there by his friends; he made extracts out of books, and puddled away his time there. 

A great number of readers come to read novels; a great number come for idle purposes, – 

probably a considerable proportion of the readers.  And, on the whole, a vast majority come 

to the reading-room chiefly to compile and excerpt; to carry away something which they may 

put into articles for encyclopaedias or periodicals, biographical dictionaries, or some such 

compilation.  I do not suppose it to be very urgent that much more accommodation should be 

afforded to all those various classes of people.

7

 



Carlyle was of course notoriously irascible, and never forgave Antonio Panizzi, who became 

Keeper of Printed Books in 1837, for refusing to allow him the use of a private room in which 

to study.  Indeed he was so irritated by the failure of the British Museum to grant him the special 

facilities which he demanded, that he founded the London Library in order that he might not 

have to rely to any extent upon the British Museum. Even so, he could not entirely do without 

its resources, and so he employed an amanuensis to devil for him there.  The following extract 

is from the memoirs of his friend, the journalist Francis Espinasse, who was for two or three 

years in the 1840s on the staff of the Department of Printed Books.

For ordinary copying work at the British Museum and elsewhere Carlyle then employed an 

amanuensis, a forlorn-looking young Scotchman, whom he called a ‘much-enduring man’, 

and whom, I observed, he treated with considerable delicacy.  For something more than mere 

copying, however, he had himself often to visit the old reading-room of the Museum, the 

overcrowding, bad ventilation, and general stuffiness of which had given rise to a malady 

which  Carlyle  called  ‘the  Museum  headache’,  and  had  encouraged  the  propagation  of  a 

maleficent organism known to others as ‘the Museum flea.’  To these inconveniences was 

added a confused and almost chaotic catalogue (since superseded by one far superior to it), 

full of perplexing cross-references and of innumerable interlineations, made in an attempt 

to produce something like alphabetical sequence. It was painful to see Carlyle stooping as 

he groped, perplexed and irritated, in the confused and confusing catalogue trying to find 

out whether the book which he wanted was in it, and therefore in the library. If it was there, 

like every one else, he had next to write on a ticket the title of the work and the press-mark, 

6

  Charles Dickens, ‘Shabby-Genteel People’, in




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