Coventry Telegraph

George Eliot treasures to go on display at the Herbert

- By NAOMI DE SOUZA News Reporter

COVENTRY is set to celebrate George Eliot’s 200th birthday with a new display featuring the original manuscript of one of her most famous works, Middlemarc­h.

The manuscript is on loan from the British Library as part of the ‘Treasures on Tour’ programme.

To highlight the famous author’s connection to Coventry, the Herbert Art Gallery and Museum will be exhibiting this work alongside other artefacts in a new display, ‘Exploring Eliot’s Coventry.’

The draft manuscript from the British Library is the only known surviving handwritte­n copy of Middlemarc­h and it is on display at the Herbert from today (November 1) until Sunday, January 5, when it will move to Nuneaton to be displayed for a further eight weeks.

Visitors will also get the chance to see her writing desk, a copy of the original painting of Eliot by Durade, her stationary cabinet and writing board which would have been used in creating her famous works and the statuette which sat on her desk at Bird Grove in Foleshill, Coventry, as she wrote.

Alongside Eliot’s personal items and clothing, there are original copies of local studies on the author and reproducti­ons of the real-life residents who inspired characters in her works.

And for long-term enthusiast­s and those new to her work, there’s also the chance to see beyond her work to the inspiratio­n she took from Coventry and her friends in the city, including Cara and Charles Bray who she visited frequently at Rosehill in the city.

Ali Wells, Curator of Natural Sciences and Human History at the Herbert, said: “This is a fantastic opportunit­y for people from across the region and literature fans everywhere to come and get a better understand­ing of her connection to the area and the impact she had on literature as one of the leading writers of the Victorian era.

“Eliot spent many of her early formative years in Coventry, attending Miss Franklin’s Boarding School in the city – with the original school bell which was used at the time shown in the exhibition - and then later living with her father here until the age of 30, so the city has had a substantia­l impact on her life.”

Eliot’s work is a hugely significan­t part of the region’s history, her work has attracted fans globally and there is an active George Eliot Society based in Bedworth that has worked tirelessly to preserve her legacy.

Ali Wells added: “She took a great deal of inspiratio­n from the people she met during her time in the Midlands including one of her neighbours called Mrs Robinson, who became the inspiratio­n for her character Mrs Pettifer in Scenes of Clerical Life.”

“Eliot’s work is such an important part of our history as a region, so we’re glad to be able to celebrate 200 years of the impact her work has had and we’re looking forward to welcoming visitors from far and wide to help us celebrate!”

Jamie Andrews, head of culture and learning at the British Library, said: “We are delighted to be loaning George Eliot’s Middlemarc­h to our partners in Coventry and Nuneaton.

“This is the first loan the British Library has made as part of its national touring programme ‘Treasures on Tour’ - designed to enable important collection items to be seen in communitie­s across the UK.”

The loan of Middlemarc­h forms part of the British Library’s Treasures on Tour programme, working with partners across the UK to share its collection of over 170 million treasures, inspiring the next great idea or moment of joyful discovery.

The programme is generously supported by the Helen Hamlyn Trust and the British Library will be announcing additional loans as part of this programme in early 2020.

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 ??  ?? A visiting exhibition from the British Library will include the only known surviving handwritte­n copy of George Eliot’s Middlemarc­h
A visiting exhibition from the British Library will include the only known surviving handwritte­n copy of George Eliot’s Middlemarc­h

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