SPENGLER ON MARGINALIA Público Deposited

Contenido del artículo
  • The E-Sylum: Volume 8, Number 48, November 13, 2005, Article 3

    SPENGLER ON MARGINALIA

    [The following item is reprinted from the May 11, 2003
    issue of The E-Sylum (v6n19). In it, Bill Spengler
    recalls his purchase of a numismatic library. –Editor]

    Gary Dunaier writes: "Regarding handwritten notes in the
    margins of books: I, personally, don't care for them. But
    I don't think it's something that should be rejected on a
    wholesale basis.

    For example, I don't think any self-respecting numismatic
    student would turn down the opportunity to acquire a
    used coin book solely on the basis of writing in the margins
    -- if the notes were written by Q. David Bowers or
    someone of his caliber."

    Bill Spengler of Colorado Springs writes: "While in general
    I abhor the practice of underlining or writing in the margins
    of serious books, especially in irremovable ink, this once
    worked to my considerable advantage. On a visit to my
    favorite Oriental bookseller in England in 1976, I was
    fortunate to acquire a 39-volume numismatic library of
    original editions of most of the museum catalogues and
    other standard references on ancient and medieval coins
    of South Asia -- my specialty -- published between 1866
    and 1941, including all the Numismatic Supplements to the
    "Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal" 1904-1937. They
    were all beautifully bound in tan leather with gold lettering
    and decoration, and were in nice condition.

    Several of the volumes, particularly those covering gold coins
    of the Gupta Dynasty of ancient India, contained "marginalia"
    written in blue pencil -- routinely used by British colonial
    administrators in annotating documents and exchanging notes.
    What a great find, evidently the personal reference library of
    a British collector of Indian coins while stationed in the
    Subcontinent!

    I was eager to know who of the rather small group of such
    British numismatists had owned and used this important library
    long ago. Sadly, however, these volumes did not contain a
    single bookplate, owner's signature or other overt indication
    of ownership, and the bookseller had had them in stock so
    long that he couldn't recall where, how or when he had acquired
    them! I took this as a challenge in detection and eventually
    discovered the solution in the volume on "The Coinage of the
    Early or Imperial Gupta Dynasty of Northern India" by the
    famous British Indian numismatist Vincent A. Smith, bearing
    on its cover a faint inked note presenting the book to one
    H. Rivett-Carnac Esq. "with the author's kind regards". This
    was the only such clue in the entire library.

    Confirmation came in a notation on one of the plates in this
    volume on which someone had written "to BM" in blue pencil
    alongside a gold stater of Kumara Gupta. When I looked up
    this piece in the British Museum I found on the coin's little
    round ticket that it had been donated by none other than
    H. Rivett-Carnac. This established ownership of this volume
    and, by association, all the others.”

URL de origen Fecha de publicación
  • 2005-11-13
Volumen
  • 8

Relaciones

Autor NNP