British Ephemeral Literature - Roger Thompson (essay date 1977)

Roger Thompson (essay date 1977)

SOURCE: Introduction to Samuel Pepys' Penny Merriments, Being a Collection of Chapbooks, full of Histories, Jests, Magic, Amorous Tales of Courtship, Marriage and Infidelity, Accounts of Rogues and Fools, together with Comments on the Times, edited by Roger Thompson, Columbia University Press, 1977, pp. 11-23.

[In the following excerpt, Thompson argues that Samuel Pepys's collection of seventeenth-century ballads and chapbooks are invaluable aids to understanding the lives and tastes of ordinary English people of the period.]

Two months before he died in 1703, Samuel Pepys made his will. Being childless, he left his treasured library of three thousand volumes to his nephew John Jackson, with the stipulation that on Jackson's death the books should go either to his old college, Magdalene, or to Trinity College, Cambridge. In 1724, therefore, the Bibliotheca Pepysiana came to Magdalene, to be housed...

[The entire page is 1900 words long]

Join eNotes

The above is a free excerpt. Get total access to this content with the: