(London, 1929), pp. 23-4.
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The Reading Room in Literature
eBLJ 2019, Article 5
Soon after the Reading Room opened Templeman was reprimanded for supplying more than
one book or MS at a time to a reader. He asked for clear guidance on the subject, and pointed
out that one reader had already asked for 48 MSS in one day. So although the readers were few,
some were very demanding.
In July 1759 the poet Thomas Gray was granted a reader’s ticket, and he wrote to friends in
Cambridge as follows:
I this day passed thro’ the jaws of a great Leviathan, that lay in my way, into the belly of
Dr. Templeman, Super-Intendent of the reading-room, who congratulated himself on the
sight of so much good company. […]
[The Museum] (as you will imagine) is my favourite Domain, where I often pass four
hours in the day in the stillness and solitude of the reading room, which is uninterrupted by
any thing but Dr Stukeley the Antiquary, who comes there to talk nonsense, and Coffee-house
news. The rest of the Learned are (I suppose) in the country; at least none of them come there,
except two Prussians, and a Man, who writes for Lord Royston. When I call it peaceful, you
are to understand it only of us Visiters, for the Society itself, Trustees, and all, are up in arms,
like the Fellows of a College. The Keepers have broke off all intercourse with one another,
and only lower a silent defiance, as they pass by. Dr Knight has wall’d up the passage to the
little-House, because some of the rest were obliged to pass by one of his windows in the way
to it. Moreover the trustees lay out 500£ a year more than their income; so you may expect,
all the books and the crocodiles will soon be put up to auction.
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As a resident first of Peterhouse and then of Pembroke College, Gray could speak from
personal knowledge of disputes in academic communities. In the case of the British Museum,
friction between senior members of the staff (all of whom lived on the premises) must have been
exacerbated by their constant proximity to each other, and by resentment when one colleague
had a better set of apartments than another.
In 1763 one of the first women readers was admitted. This was Catharine Maccaulay who
published an eight-volume history of England. After her death in 1791, her husband complained
that Isaac D’Israeli (from whom we shall hear in a moment) had circulated a story that she
had been excluded from the Reading Room because she had torn four leaves from one of the
Harleian MSS. The records do not disclose the outcome of this matter. But the Trustees were
curiously indulgent in 1779 to John Brooke who admitted cutting pieces from two Harleian
MSS. He pleaded that he had done this years before when he was a boy, and unaware of the
seriousness of the matter. The Trustees decided to take no action against Brooke, who was
by this date Somerset Herald. (The DNB reports intriguingly that he was crushed to death in
February 1794 when attempting to get out of the pit of the Haymarket Theatre.)
The second Keeper of the Reading Room, Richard Penneck, complained frequently that the
basement was damp and cold. So in 1774 two rooms at the west end of the ground floor were
converted into the Reading Rooms. These were the rooms which Isaac D’Israeli (who was a
reader from 1786 until his death in 1848) used in the 1790s.
I passed two years in agreeable researches at the British Museum, which then (1790) was
so rare a circumstance, that it had been difficult to have made up a jury of all the spirits
of study which haunted the reading-room. I often sate [
sic
] between the Abbé de la Rue
and Pinkerton, between Norman antiquity and Scottish history. There we were, little
attended to, musing in silence and oblivion; for sometimes we had to wait a day or two
till the volumes, so eagerly demanded, slowly appeared.
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