Friday, 27 February 2026

A morning of puzzles

 

Today at the Athenaeum was most definitely a day of puzzles.

I’m continuing to work on either those books which were published anonymously, such as by ‘A Lady’ or those where the book has lost its title page and some detective work is required to trace the book.

First up was Mattie: - a stray by Frederick William Robinson, easy enough to track down with the new British Library catalogue, but all three volumes had very damaged labels from a circulating library I did not recognise

If you play about with the image you end up with something like this

And if you squint you can just make out the word Buzzard about two thirds of the way down.

Searching Google for phrases such as Buzzard lending library was frustrating. Put quotes around it and a search produced zero results. With out quotes, Google, in its AI powered clever dick way wanted to tell me about lending libraries, but I eventually tracked down an entry from a Sands and MacDougall directory from the 1860s that listed Buzzards Lending library as having been founded in 1853 and having a collection of over 5000 volumes – obviously Buzzards were a substantial concern in their time before Mullens dominated the Melbourne circulating library scene.

As a bonus, the Sands and Macdougall directory included an advert for Buzzards

Which was most definitely a win.

The other find was an 1841 edition of The heiress and her suitors, first published in 1838 – following the link will take you to a digitised version on Google Books via the National Library of Scotland’s online catalogue.

The identity of the author has remained a mystery since publication.

I don’t have any great insight but when I opened up the book to catalogue it I found this most impressive stamp

Showing that the book had originally come from Joseph King’s circulating library in Norwich, UK. So far, I’ve not been able to trace the library in Bridewell Alley Norwich, but it’s interesting that such an early publication ended up in the Stanley Athenaeum on the other side of the world some twenty or thirty years after it was published…

No comments: