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A Recent Scottish Literary Find

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 February 1975

12

Abstract

A YEAR OR TWO AGO there came into my hands a manuscript book about Edinburgh in the 1790s written in his old age in 1854 by a certain John Howell. This book, which had been sent by a relative, proved to be of great interest both topographically and as a record of social life, and was eventually secured by the National Library of Scotland. A few months later, the Keeper of Manuscripts in the Library wrote to me again saying that he believed there might be further eighteenth‐and nineteenth‐century letters and papers in the possession of the former owner of the Howell manuscript, and asking whether she might be willing to allow these to be seen, and possibly acquired, by the Library. The papers turned out to be predominantly family papers, and the central figure in this context was John Brown, M.D., the Edinburgh essayist (1810–82), the author of three volumes of essays and papers, Horae Subsecivae, the best known of which are perhaps ‘Pet Marjorie’ and ‘Rab and his Friends’.

Citation

Cairns, D. (1975), "A Recent Scottish Literary Find", Library Review, Vol. 25 No. 2, pp. 65-69. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012625

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1975, MCB UP Limited

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