William Mason, July 1759 (vol. ii, p. 629); Letter to James Brown, July 1759 (vol. ii, pp. 632-3).
(London, 1838), p. 5.
3
The Reading Room in Literature
eBLJ 2019, Article 5
The first American reader (a gentleman from Philadelphia) had been admitted in 1765. In
1815 his compatriot Washington Irving described the Reading Room of that date. The following
extract comes from his work entitled
The Sketchbook of Geoffrey Crayon
.
I was one summer’s day loitering through the great saloons of the British Museum, with
that listlessness with which one is apt to saunter about a museum in warm weather;
sometimes lolling over the glass cases of minerals, sometimes studying the hieroglyphics
on an Egyptian mummy, and sometimes trying, with nearly equal success, to comprehend
the allegorical paintings on the lofty ceilings. Whilst I was gazing about in this idle
way, my attention was attracted to a distant door, at the end of a suite of apartments. It
was closed, but every now and then it would open, and some strange-favoured being,
generally clothed in black, would steal forth, and glide through the rooms, without
noticing any of the surrounding objects. There was an air of mystery about this that
piqued my languid curiosity, and I determined to attempt the passage of that strait, and to
explore the unknown regions that lay beyond. The door yielded to my hand, with all that
facility with which the portals of enchanted castles yield to the adventurous knight errant.
I found myself in a spacious chamber, surrounded with great cases of venerable books.
Above the cases, and just under the cornice, were arranged a great number of black
looking portraits of ancient authors. About the room were placed long tables, with stands
for reading and writing, at which sat many pale, studious personages, poring intently
over dusty volumes, rummaging among mouldy manuscripts, and taking copious notes
of their contents. The most hushed stillness reigned through this mysterous apartment,
excepting that you might hear the racing of pens over sheets of paper, or occasionally, the
deep sigh of one of these sages, as he shifted his position to turn over the page of an old
folio; doubtless arising from that hollowness and flatulency incident to learned research.
Now and then one of these personages would write something on a small slip of
paper, and ring a bell, whereupon a familiar would appear, take the paper in profound
silence, glide out of the room, and return shortly loaded with ponderous tomes, upon
which the other would fall tooth and nail with famished voracity. […]
My curiosity being now fully aroused, I whispered to one of the familiars, as he was
about to leave the room, and begged an interpretation of the strange scene before me. A
few words were sufficient for the purpose. I found that these mysterious personages […]
were principally authors, and were in the very act of manufacturing books.
5
In 1827, after the completion of the east wing of the new British Museum building designed
by Robert Smirke to accommodate the library of George III, the Reading Rooms were moved
from the decaying Montagu House to the rooms at the south end of the new wing – now the
Middle and South Rooms of the Department of MSS. They held about 120 readers, but soon
became very crowded and, it is reported, very smelly.
It was these rooms which Dickens used after he obtained a reader’s ticket on 8 February
1830 (the day after his eighteenth birthday). In the following extract from
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