Leeds Brotherton Lt 24

Title Untitled
Archive Brotherton Library
Call Number Leeds Brotherton Lt 24
Complete Yes
Description

Benjamin Coles, ca. 1729–1741.

A more mixed book compared to Lt 53 which is by the same compiler, and entirely devoted to poetry.

108 items, 66 poems.

Many songs, religious poems.

Format
Book Size
Filled Page Count 353 pages
Item Count 108
Poem Count 66
Periods
First Line Index Yes
Digitized Yes
Region
Additional Genres Lists, Prose arguments, Prose history, Prose philosophy
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

Leeds Brotherton Lt 24.” Manuscript Verse Miscellanies, 1700–1820, edited by Betty A. Schellenberg, Simon Fraser University, https://mvm.dhil.lib.sfu.ca/manuscript/295. Accessed .

Created 2019-09-04 1:13:45 PM
Updated 2023-07-25 11:36:10 AM
First Line Context
All in the Downs the fleet was moor'd
ff. 32v, 34v
Local title: Black eyed Susan. A song.
Attributed author: n/a
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: n/a

 

Bright was the Morning, cool was the Air

f. 8r-v from back
Local title: A song.
Attributed author: Richard West
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: n/a

Despairing, beside a clear Stream

ff. 3r–4r from the back

Local title: Collins complaint.

Attributed author: n/a

Adaptation: n/a

Other variants: n/a

Other: n/a

Sweet are the charms of her I love

f. 46v-47r from back
Local title: A song.
Attributed author: Barton Booth
Adaptation: n/a
Other variants: n/a
Other: n/a

Feature Note
Author attributions

Occasional.

Binding

Pre-bound paperbooks, made from at least two separate books. Subsequently rebound together after compilation. Text frequently runs into the gutter, suggesting subsequent binding of at least two paperbooks or perhaps several loose gatherings that were once paginated continuously but are now broken into blocks.

[Lt 53 (by the same compiler) is also made up of at least two pre-bound paperbooks, and was composed around the same time.]

Red morocco gilt, back board and flyleaves nearly detached.

Catchwords

Yes, occasional.

Decorations - printed

Print paste-in figures of machines on flyleafs at the beginning, end, and in the center of the book. 

Hands

Two hands, Coles’ hand is the primary, though they are compiling simultaneously given the dates, and the contributions they make to each other’s items. The second hand copied a lot more prose items compared to Coles’ hand, though they both copied some verse and some prose. 

Indications of use

Apparent creation of the book out of at least two previous books, with segments of each book intermingled, shows a large-scale organizing effort subsequent to compilation.

Same compiler and similar compilation period to Leeds Brotherton Lt 53.

p. 33 large ownership mark dated 1729, and subsequent list of names in fainter ink that are partially covered by a swirl, presumably marking the end of the last item. Given that the previous item follows poems dated 1740, perhaps this ownership mark and list were copied before the manuscript was conceived of as a poetry miscellany.

p. 110–111 (the middle of an item attributed to Coles) sees the second hand take over for a page and a bit, taking up mid-sentence on p. 110. The only possible explanation for this, given that the beginning and the end of the item are in Coles’ hand, is that for whatever reason, he momentarily passed the book to a friend or family member to continue copying for him, and took it back shortly after. On p. 130 Coles also annotates one of the second hand’s items.

Item formatting

Some decorative marks between items (eg pp. 18, 23, 44), though most items have no mark at all between them.

If an item fills more than one page, the title is often written at the top of each page it occupies.

Organization

The second section (after the Table of Contents) is largely prose, and mostly Christian philosophy; it has the appearance of a commonplace book to some degree, with items like “Examples of sudden Death” (p. 8) and “Examples of great Strength” (p. 33). The first section is not so overtly religious.

Quite a difficult to follow manuscript because items aren’t always copied over consecutive pages. Items are frequently completed on pages elsewhere in the book, with notation to see that other page number; it seems that blank pages were left for these items (titles entered and blanks left), but there was a miscalculation of the needed space at times. References to other items in the form of “Look back to p. —” or “Look forward to page —”. In short, this manuscript was compiled out of order.

Original poetry

Yes, p. 109, which is signed and dated both when and where the item was written, and when and where it was copied into this manuscript. Also p. 120, and likely more items.

Ownership mark

Second flyleaf is very neatly laid out, reads: "Benj. Coles At Great Forster’s near Egham In Surry. Owns this Book 24th May MDCCXXXII."

Benjamin Coles' signature frequently beneath items throughout the manuscript.

Front flyleaf says “purchased by R Brown for a valuable Consideration of Benjamin Coles Anno 1754…August 8th.” 

Page layout

Paginated (by Coles: pp. 3–208 + pp. 105–118 + [10 pages] + TofC + [13 pages] + pp. 4–104 + pp. 209–212 + p. 118).

Printed items

p. 45 print paste-in "The Devil of Tinkerton."

Table of Contents

Yes, on pp. 116–­117 of the PDF (unpaginated in the manuscript), after the center flyleaves which introduce the pp. 1-104 section.

The Table of Contents only includes the items in the remainder of the manuscript (primarily prose). These page numbers are not always accurate, especially because items are sometimes copied on non-consecutive pages given the sporadic, disorganized nature of this manuscript’s compilation. The list is not entirely in ascending numerical order.