Monday 3 October 2011

A bit of heraldic cant

Today's subject: a set of the works of William Paley, D.D., with armorial bookplates of Samuel Tombs. Whose arms are: on a field sable, three tombs. Not the most inspired or wittiest instance, perhaps, but nevertheless an example of "canting arms", in which the the images used refer, in an allusive or punning way, to the name of the bearer. Who Samuel Tombs was, other than probably the inhabitant of The Hollies, Droitwich, I have failed to establish. Much more fruitful, and even more tangential, is investigation of the etymology and ramificating meanings of the word cant, from French chant to thieves' cant to ski boot canting ...

Wednesday 21 September 2011

From a Cardinal to Quakers (via Uganda and chocolate)

I have progressed to Theology, and works by John Henry Newman, given by some of Somerville's early benefactors -- Mark Pattison, Rector of Lincoln College, Henry Nettleship, a classical scholar and Fellow of Lincoln, and J. (John) Theodore Dodd, a lawyer who was particularly concerned with poor relief -- and from the bequest of Alice Burnet, who read Modern Languages (French) at Somerville 1928-1932 and ended up as Warden of Mary Stuart Hall, Makerere College (now University), in Uganda. Next on the shelf is The Soul, her Sorrows and her Aspirations, by Francis William Newman, John Henry's younger brother; this was given to the College by Margery Fry and bears her bookplate, on which is written "From the library of J. S. Fry, 1913" -- presumably Joseph Storrs Fry (1826-1913), her father's elder brother and head of the family chocolate firm from 1886, who was a devout and active Quaker.

Tuesday 30 August 2011

The perils of a new system

After a hiatus of several months, due to it being too cold in the depths of winter to sit around cataloguing in the stacks and to the arrival of a bequest of a large number of music scores which, for the benefit of our music students, it seemed more urgent to get catalogued and in circulation, I returned to the stacks and to the exactitudes of antiquarian cataloguing. Today's first subject: a 1697 copy of the French translation of Descartes's Principia philosophiae. Since my last visit, Oxford has changed its Library Management System, which is the software running all its cataloguing, circulation and other library services, to Aleph, which means getting to grips with a whole new way of doing things -- took me about half an hour to work out how to get a superscript o (as in 8ยบ for octavo). After two hours of careful cataloguing, I hit Save -- only to be told that I don't have permission to save antiquarian records! (Fortunately, I can save records locally, onto my computer, even when I can't save them on the Oxford system.) So I've sent off a polite request to the powers-that-be for antiquarian permissions, and live in hopes that I shall be deemed worthy!