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Chap. V.

FOUNDER

OF THE

LIBRARY.

a surviving link between the feudal England of the Henrys BOOK III, and the Edwards, on the one hand, and the industrial T England of the Georges on the other. Under a king who could govern, as well as reign, the 'Chief-Justiceship in GRENVILLK Eyre' might have shown itself, in one particular, to possess a real and precious vitality still. By possibility, the sports of twelfth-century and chase-loving monarchs might have been made to alleviate the toils, to brighten the leisure, and to lengthen the lives, of nineteenth-century and hard-toiling artisans. For in exerting the still legal powers (long dormant, but not abolished) of the forest justiceship, a potent check might have been provided against the profligate, although now common, abuse of the powers entrusted by Parliament to the Board of Woods and Forests. No new TION. legislation was wanted to save many splendid tracts of forest land (over which the Crown then-and as well in 1845, as in 1800-possessed what might have been indestructible 'forestal rights'), for public enjoyment for ever. Existing laws would have sufficed. But no blame on this score lies

at the charge of the then Chief Justice in Eyre. Had Mr. GRENVILLE, for example, ever conceived the idea of using the Forest Laws to preserve for the English people, we will say, Epping Forest, or any other like sylvan tract on this side of Trent, as a 'People's Park' for ever, he would have been laughed at as a Quixote. If Parliament in 1870 is fast becoming alive to the misconduct of those 'Commissioners' who have dealt with the Forestal rights of the Crown exactly in the spirit of the pettiest of village shopkeepers, rather than in the spirit of Ministers of State, there was in Mr. GRENVILLE'S time scarcely the faintest whisper of any such conviction of public duty in regard to that matter. Not one Member of Parliament, I think, had ever (at that time) pointed out the gross hypocrisy, as well

THE CHIEF

JUSTICESHIP

IN EYRE,

AND WHAT

MIGHT HAVE

COME OF ITS

PERPETUA

BOOK III, Chap. V. THE

FOUNDER

OF THE

GRENVILLE
LIBRARY.

Will of the

Rt. Hon.

T. Grenville;
Oct., 1845.

MR. T.

GRENVILLE'S

INTER

COURSE

WITH, AND

ESTEEM FOR, SIR A. PANIZZI.

as the folly, of selling by the hands of one public board and for a few pounds hundreds of acres of ancient and lovely woodlands, and then presently buying, by the hands of another public board, acres of dreary and almost unimproveable barrenness by the expenditure of several thousands of pounds, in order to provide new recreation grounds for public enjoyment!'

Of that forestal Chief-Justiceship Mr. GRENVILLE Was the last holder. The office had been established by WILLIAM THE CONQUEROR. It was abolished by Queen VICTORIA. One of the chief pursuits of those forty years of retirement which ensued to the founder of the Grenville Library, upon the breaking up of the Grenville Administration of 1806, was book-buying and book-reading. A great part of my Library'-so wrote Mr. GRENVILLE, in 1845-'has been purchased by the profits of a sinecure office given me by the Public.' If that sinecure was not and, under the then circumstances, could not have been by its holder's action or foresight, made the means of preserving for public enjoyment such of the ancient forests as, early in this century, were still intact in beauty, and also lay near to crowded and more or less unhealthy towns, it was at least made the means of giving to the nation a garden for the mind. 'I feel it,' continued Mr. GRENVILLE, in his document of 1845, 'to be a debt and a duty that I should acknowledge my obligation by giving the Library so acquired to the BRITISH MUSEUM for the use of the Public.'

I have had occasion, already, to mention that many years before his death Mr. GRENVILLE formed a very high estimate of the eminent attainments and still more eminent public services of Sir A. PANIZZI. No man had a better opportunity of knowing, intimately, the merits of the then

Chap. V.

FOUNDER

OF THE

LIBRARY.

years, pp.141,

Assistant-Keeper of the printed portion of our National BOOK III, Library. Mr. GRENVILLE showed his estimate in a con- THE clusive and very characteristic way. He had earnestly supported (in the year 1835) the proposal of a Sub-com- GRENVILLE mittee of Trustees that Mr. PANIZZI's early services-more Minutes of especially in relation to the cataloguing of what are known, Inquiry, &c., at the Museum, as 'the French Tracts,' but also as to other subsequent labours should be substantially recognised by an improve- seqq. ment of his salary. At a larger meeting, the recommendation of the smaller sub-committee was cordially adopted in the honorary point of view, but was set virtually aside, in respect to the honorarium.' That latter step Mr. GRENVILLE so resented that he rose from the table, and never sat at a Trustee meeting again. He many times Minutes afterwards visited the Museum; and I well remember the impression made upon my own mind by his noble appearance, at almost ninety years of age, on one of the latest of those visits-not very long before his death. But in the Committee Room he never once sat, during the last eleven years of his life.

of Evidence,

as above.

STANCES

MARKED THR

GIFT TO

THE NATION

OF THE

He, GRENVILI E

LIBRARY.

Ibid.; and

The fact being so, Readers unfamiliar with the 'blue- CIRCUM books' will learn without surprise that a conversation WHICH between Mr. GRENVILLE and Mr. PANIZZI, in Hamilton Place, was the prelude to his noble public gift of 1846. That conversation took place in the autumn of 1845. in the course of it, assured Mr. PANIZZI (by that time at the head of the Printed Book Department) of his settled purpose, and evinced a desire that his Library should be of the preserved apart from the mass of the National Collection. of 1849. He then remarked, 'You will have a great many duplicate books, and you will sell them,' speaking in a tone of inquiry. 'No,' replied PANIZZI, the Trustees will never sell books that are given to them.' Mr. GRENVILLE rejoined with an

comp. p. 780

Minutes

BOOK III,
Chap. V.

THE

FOUNDER

OF THE

evident relief of mind, 'Well, so much the better.' Long afterwards, when visiting Mr. PANIZZI in his private study, he asked the question-Where are you going to put my GRENVILLE books? I see your rooms are already full.' He was taken to the long, capacious, but certainly not very sightly, ‘slip,' contrived by Sir R. SMIRKE on the eastern outskirt of the noble King's Library. Well,' was the Keeper's reply, 'if we can't do better, we will put them here; and, as you see, my room is close by. Here, for a time, they will at

LIBRARY.

See the

Plan, hereafter.

THE RECEP

TION AT THE
MUSEUM

OF THE

GRENVILLE

least be under my own eye.' The good and generous booklover went away with a smile on his genial face, well assured that his books would be gratefully cared for.

Mr. GRENVILLE died on the 17th of December, 1846. On the day of his death it chanced that the present writer was engaged on a review-article about the history of the COLLECTION. Museum Library. Ere many days were past it was his pleasant task to add a paragraph-the first that was written on the subject-respecting the new gift to the Public. But an accident delayed the publication of that article until the following summer.

Meanwhile, the final day of the reception of the booksa dreary, snowy day of the close of February-was, to us of the Museum Library, a sort of holiday within-doors. Very little work was done that day; but many choice rarities in literature, and some in art, were eagerly examined. All who survive will remember it as I do. To lovers of books, such a day was like a glimpse of summer sunshine interposed in the thick of winter.

To tell what little can here be told of the history and character of the Grenville Library in other words than in those well-considered and appropriate words which were

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Chap. V.

FOUNDER

OF THE

LIBRARY.

PANIZZI'S

SOME OF THE
CHOICEST

BOOKS

IN THE

LIBRARY.

employed by the man who had had so much delightful BOOK III, intercourse with the Collector himself, and to whom belongs THE a part of the merit of the gift, would be an impertinence. In his report on the accessions of the year 1847, Mr. GRENVILLE PANIZZI wrote thus:-'It would naturally be expected that one of the editors of the "Adelphi Homer" would lose no ACCOUNT OF opportunity of collecting the best and rarest editions of the Prince of Poets. Æsop, a favourite author of Mr. GRENVILLE, occurs in his Library in its rarest forms; there is no GRENVILLE doubt that the series of editions of this author in that Library is unrivalled. The great admiration which Mr. GRENVILLE felt for Cardinal XIMENES, even more on account of the splendid edition of the Polyglot Bible which that prelate caused to be printed at Alcala, than of his public character, made him look upon the acquisition of the Moschus, a book of extreme rarity, as a piece of good fortune. Among the extremely rare editions of the Latin Classics, in which the Grenville Library abounds, the unique complete copy of AZZOGUIDI's first edition of Ovid is a gem well deserving particular notice, and was considered on the whole, by Mr. GRENVILLE himself, the boast of his collection. The Aldine Virgil of 1505, the rarest of the Aldine editions of this poet, is the more welcome to the Museum as it serves to supply a lacuna; the copy mentioned in the Catalogue of the Royal Collection not having been transferred to the National Library.

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The rarest editions of English Poets claimed and obtained the special attention of Mr. GRENVILLE. Hence we find him possessing not only the first and second edition of CHAUCER'S Canterbury Tales by CAXTON, but the only copy known of an hitherto undiscovered edition of the same work printed in 1498, by WYNKYN DE WOrde. Of SHAKESPEARE'S collected Dramatic Works, the Grenville

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