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Re: Unpublished diaries



I have forgotten in my accumulating years the name of that spectacular
bibliography of biographies and diaries arranged [perhaps] by date in which
biographies and diaries much extraordinary information is buried. Mrs. Thus
& So may well have attended a reception at a court or a presidential house
and gives [as women only can do] a detailed description of the place and of
the goings on. There was in the basement of Argosy Bookshop in NYC a section
of biographies arranged by the name of the subject. It was fabulous just to
browse through that section. As I recall [see first line] the section was a
victim of its success.

Gabriel Austin

-----Original Message-----
From: Rare book and manuscripts [mailto:EXLIBRIS-L@LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU] On
Behalf Of John Barton
Sent: Thursday, January 31, 2008 4:09 PM
To: EXLIBRIS-L@LISTSERV.INDIANA.EDU
Subject: [EXLIBRIS-L] Unpublished diaries

It surprises me somewhat the extent to which diaries are priced according to

the importance or, not necessarily the same thing - famousness of the
writer. They look good in a catalogue, but often are disappointingly dull.
The category of very interesting diaries kept by unknown, or almost so,
writers, can be far cheaper.
 A case in point is a late Hanoverian diary I recently transcribed, that of
Thomas Tancred at Merton College, Oxford, in 1834-5. Not of any great
interest himself (he later emigrated, became a landowner, minor baronet, and

author), and having a better known brother; it is the intimate references to

his lecturers and fellow-students that make it readable.Edward Denison,
William Buckland,William Gladstone, Walter Hamilton, John Keble,  Newman
(later Cardinal), Edward Pusey and the Duke of Wellington. It sheds new
light on the canvassing for Chancellorship, geological thought, and the
emergence of the Oxford Movement.
All this is obvious, perhaps, yet something that future librarians are going

to find it hard to understand - that a minor item from say a presidential
library wasn't seen to be perhaps worth a lot less than some obscure diarist

recording events that no-one else bothered to, because they didn't see the
future potential. In the past, diarists have been evaluated more on their
position in biographies than the contents of their diaries, many of which
have remained unread since they were written.

John Barton


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