Scottish Daily Mail

CHARLES’ LIBRARY SOS

Race against time to save treasured literary collection for nation

- By Vanessa Allen

PRICELESS manuscript­s from some of Britain’s greatest poets and authors could be lost to the nation without urgent action, Prince Charles warns today.

Writing in the Daily Mail, the heir to the throne said it was ‘too awful to contemplat­e’ the loss of handwritte­n texts by some of the country’s best-known writers – including Sir Walter Scott, Robert Burns and Charlotte Bronte.

And he warned that the UK is facing a race against time to save a collection of literary treasures from being auctioned off and potentiall­y taken abroad.

His heartfelt appeal came amid growing pressure to save the Honresfiel­d Library Collection, which includes notebooks from the Bronte sisters, letters from Jane Austen and Sir Walter Scott’s original manuscript for his novel Rob Roy.

The entire collection had been due to go to auction in July. However, Sotheby’s agreed to halt the sale so that charity

‘Invaluable works of genius’

Friends of the National Libraries (FNL) can try to raise the £15million needed to keep the texts in Britain.

FNL, of which Charles is patron, has so far raised £7.5million towards the ambitious target. However, time is running out to meet the deadline.

The prince has already made a donation to the fund, which has also received more than £116,000 in public donations.

Describing the collection as a treasure trove of ‘jewels’, Charles likened the manuscript­s to the sketches of great artists such as Leonardo da Vinci.

He added: ‘In saving these priceless manuscript­s for the public, we have the opportunit­y to ensure that these invaluable records of works of genius will remain in the land where they were created, and where they belong.’

Praising the appeal as ‘a very important national endeavour’, Charles said that literature was ‘in the DNA’ of British culture. He paid tribute to classic works such as the novels of Charles Dickens and modern writers including Zadie Smith and JK Rowling, describing them as ‘our most influentia­l exports’.

And he added that the nation would benefit if the Honresfiel­d collection was kept in Britain as the manuscript­s would be shared between libraries around the country, ‘north and south’.

Writing in today’s Mail, he also revealed that the appeal was a ‘very personal one’. He recalled how his father, the Duke of Edinburgh, used to read to him as a child and growing up he was ‘surrounded by books’ in the Royal Library at Windsor Castle.

The FNL appeal to save the texts has won other high-profile supporters including Stephen Fry and the estate of the poet TS Eliot.

Actor Ralph Fiennes is also playing his part with a solo performanc­e of Eliot’s Four Quartets in London from next month, which will reportedly benefit the cause through royalties paid to the Eliot charity, Old Possum’s Practical Trust.

The campaign is being supported by a consortium of institutio­ns across the country including the National Library of Scotland in Edinburgh, the Bodleian Libraries in Oxford and the Bronte Parsonage Museum in Haworth, West Yorkshire.

Describing it as a ‘noble campaign’, Charles said the appeal would protect part of Britain’s cultural heritage and keep it in this country, rather than allowing it to fall into the hands of private collectors.

He wrote: ‘For anyone who has ever been moved by the words of these incomparab­le artists, the idea of reading these manuscript­s is thrilling beyond words. For the same reason, the idea of them being lost to this country is too awful to contemplat­e.’ The collection was put together in the 19th century by two Yorkshire industrial­ists. It has been largely inaccessib­le for the last 80 years and access to it has only been granted to academic researcher­s.

For more informatio­n about the Friends of the National Libraries, including how to donate to the Honresfiel­d Appeal, please visit www.fnl.org.uk

BOOSTER jabs provide protection from Covid for vulnerable Scots – but more than 100,000 of them have had to wait longer than they should for their dose.

It’s a source of anxiety for the elderly and those with weakened immune systems as the winter months loom.

The First Minister insists that making sure those in most need get their boosters is her Government’s top priority.

But there are uncomforta­ble echoes of the early phases of mass vaccinatio­n earlier this year, which had a decidedly sluggish start.

No one doubts the logistical demands, with the NHS in turmoil – while third doses are also being administer­ed in parallel with flu vaccines.

It is a complex task after an extremely demanding 18 months, but it is of overriding importance that it is successful­ly accomplish­ed.

As Scottish Tory leader Douglas Ross pointed out, the SNP Government has ‘failed to properly plan ahead and heed the warning signs’.

It’s reassuring that – for now – there are no plans to reimpose Covid restrictio­ns, but ramping up booster jabs is crucial to keeping them at bay.

Ministers need to stop dithering and focus on this vital task to prevent more lives being put needlessly at risk.

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