Country Life

On the shelf

A new account of the country-house library will compel us all to reassess these rooms and their collection­s, says John Goodall

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Architectu­re Mark Purcell The Country House Library (Yale University Press, £45)

The modern visitor to a country house expects to find at least one room furnished with books: the library. however, speaking for myself, whenever I find it, I never expect to take a book off the shelf. that’s partly because I imagine that the book collection—unless loved and updated by the present owner—will necessaril­y be either hopelessly outdated or precious (and probably both). Instead, I usually look at the architectu­re of the space, consider a few of the spines on the shelves (often through a chicken-wire mesh) and move on.

this excellent book is a reminder that these rooms and their collection­s need be taken much more seriously. It is also that rare and wonderful thing: an ambitious volume that’s at once authoritat­ive, engaging and revelatory. there is good reason for these qualities: Mr Purcell, who is now deputy director of Cambridge University Library, worked between 1999 and 2015 as the libraries curator for the National trust. In that role, he had responsibi­lity for the largest and finest collection of libraries in the country. In some ways, this book feels like his attempt to put that collection in perspectiv­e. Its publicatio­n has been supported by the trust.

at the outset, Mr Purcell acknowledg­es the complexity of his chosen subject—nicely distinguis­h- ing, for example, between the library (as a collection of books) and the library (a room)—as well as the connection between archives and the books and between the evolution of the institutio­nal library and the private one.

he also sets out his central conclusion­s: that the overall number of libraries has been underestim­ated, that the story of the country-house library reaches back well before its commonly accepted starting point in the late 17th century, that the importance of books and the degree to which they were read by their owners has been underestim­ated and that libraries were very varied both in architectu­ral form and as collection­s.

the book is handsomely produced in a large format with more than 230 illustrati­ons. It comprises 14 chapters, which present a chronologi­cal account of the country-house library from the Roman period to the present day. Interspers­ed within this chronology are discussion­s of relevant themes, such as short chapters on the librarian and reading and borrowing. One of the author’s achievemen­ts is to balance an interest in books (as creations and objects), with an awareness of architectu­re, social purpose and fashion. Importantl­y, he surveys Ireland, scotland and Wales as well as England and in a way that allows for meaningful comparison­s and contrasts to be drawn between their different experience­s.

a great deal of the narrative is carried forward by the consecutiv­e discussion of individual libraries. Because every great collection has its own story to tell, this creates a remarkably engaging read. It is one, moreover, that Mr Purcell punctuates with fascinatin­g details and insights. It had never occurred to me, for example, that the religious controvers­ialist (or heretic) Pelagius (died ad420) might be the first British author whose writings survive. Nor did I know that the first English bookplate was made in 1574, that the first securely provenance­d English binding with lettering on the spine was produced in 1604 or that the first public auctions of books in Britain followed Dutch example and took place respective­ly in London in 1676, Edinburgh in 1690 and Dublin in 1695.

as a whole, this book is a tremendous achievemen­t. My only substantiv­e criticism is that I wish it could have had discursive captions. With their help, I would have learnt even more from its pages.

‘Every great collection has its own story to tell’

 ??  ?? Robert Adam’s library (the Long Gallery) at Syon Park
Robert Adam’s library (the Long Gallery) at Syon Park

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