THE MANUSCRIPTS OF THE CORPORATION OF THE TOWN OF SOUTHAMPTON.
MSS. of the Town of Southampton.
The Southampton muniments were found by the present inspector in
a state of disorder, which caused him (after working for some time upon
them) to represent to the local authorities, that the difficulty of examining so large an assemblage of records would be greatly diminished by
preliminary measures for their needful arrangement. Taking the same
view of the case, and accepting the suggestion in the spirit that animated
them in every stage of a business, which occasioned them no little
inconvenience, the Town Council forthwith invited me to put the writings
in order at the charge of the Corporation, and, assigning to my use the
large committee room, adjoining their Council Chamber, lost no time in
fitting it with an enormous table, made of planks and tressels, strong
enough to bear the weight of a large and heavy pile of books and
unbound documents, whilst it at the same time afforded sufficient space
for sorting the multifarious evidences. Fortunately no large proportion of
the manuscripts had been injured by damp or rodentia; and as most of
the records had been preserved in closely fitting cases, the labour of
reducing them to order was attended with no excessive discomfort from
dust and dirt. Comparatively free from mould and rot, the miscellaneous writings were upon the whole a cleanly and well-kept body of
muniments, but their confusion was so complete that six weeks were
spent in sorting and labelling the books and unbound documents, before
I could dispense for awhile with the services of clerk and porter, and
returning to the ways of ordinary official labour could enter on the
inspection of the—