Folger MS M.b.13

Title Untitled
Archive Folger Shakespeare Library
Call Number Folger MS M.b.13
Complete Yes
Description

Anonymous, ca. 1773-1806.

Crowded, no margins, looks more like a commonplace book than a usual poetry miscellany.

361 poems.

Enormous amount of material compiled over many years roughly chronologically.

Format Folio
Book Size 33cm x 20cm
Filled Page Count 230 pgs.
Item Count
Poem Count 361
Periods
First Line Index No
Digitized No
Region
Additional Genres Prose inscriptions
Print Sources
Major Themes

Major themes prominent among the manuscript contents in alphabetical order.

Minor Themes

Other themes of interest among the manuscript contents in alphabetical order.

Links
Bibliography
Citation

Folger MS M.b.13.” Manuscript Verse Miscellanies, 1700–1820, edited by Betty A. Schellenberg, Simon Fraser University, https://mvm.dhil.lib.sfu.ca/manuscript/254. Accessed .

Created 2019-09-04 1:13:45 PM
Updated 2023-07-25 11:07:56 AM
First Line Context Print Source
Say, Mighty Love, and teach my Song

pp. 62–64.

Local title: Few happy matches.

Attributed author: n/a

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: n/a

Other: n/a

Unknown
Soon as the morn salutes your eyes

p. 108

Local title: Rules for daily practice.

Attributed author: n/a

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: n/a

Other: n/a

Unknown
Sweet instrument of him for whom I mourn

pp. 70–71.

Local title: On Young Linley's Violin.

Attributed author: Mrs. Sheridan.

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: n/a

Other: n/a

Unknown
Where the loveliest expression to features is join'd

pp. 27–28.

Local title: The Honourable Mr C. Fox on Mrs Crewe.

Attributed author: Honourable Mr C Fox.

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: First line: Where the softest expression to feature is joined...

Other: n/a

Unknown
Whoe'er like me, with trembling anguish brings

p. 17.

Local title: Epitaph upon a Lady who died of a consumption at Bristol Hotwells.

Attributed author: n/a

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: n/a

Other: n/a

Unknown
Feature Note
Author attributions

Occasional or rare. 

Binding

Pre-bound paperbook. Spine is labelled “Commonplace Book," suggesting that the manuscript was purchased for this purpose; cut alphabetical tabs.

Very plain binding; marbled paper boards, subsequently rebacked.

Hands

Single, quite scrawling and messy. Another hand wrote out an extempore poem about the previous evening's conversation and a long poem on inoculation (possibly entries added later to the bottom of not completely filled pages). 

Indications of use

Riddles, especially, have notes like “Vid R,” indicating that the answer is in the index under that letter, suggesting the book was to be used by others who would want to guess the answers before being able to see them. 

Evidence the compilation extended over many years.

Small sheet pasted-in in another hand about a large oak cut down in Monmouthshire in 1810, with a letter to the writer's father by a neighbouring gentleman confirming the information. 

Item formatting

Rough dotted lines between entries.

Organization

Earliest pages of the book in general used for longer poems.

Contents generally (though not strictly) chronological.

Original poetry

Very likely, since much of the material is unattributed.

Ownership mark

Letter dated Pishobury Sept. 20th '41 pasted opposite p. 1 addressed to Miss Harriet Alston, signed from her brother, initials something like HJA.

Page layout

Earliest pages of book more spacious; otherwise crowded, no margins, looks more like a commonplace book than a usual poetry miscellany.

Table of Contents

Yes, but incomplete.

Alphabetical tabs at beginning, seemingly used mostly for genre headings such as “Charade,” “Riddles,” though also used for more varied entries, such as under “O” for odes as well as other sorts of titles — seems to be an attempt to organize poetry compilation in a commonplace book format, adapting a blank book for that purpose by cutting alphabetical tabs.