Friday, March 6, 2020

Readers' Marks in Law Books: A Yale Law Library Exhibit

[The Yale Law Library has a new exhibit, Precedents So Scrawl’d and Blurr’d: Readers’ Marks in Law Books.  I’m told that one of the stars of the exhibit is the great Contracts scholar Arthur Corbin.  DRE.]

Books are the lawyer's tools and the law student's laboratory, and nothing brings this home better than the marks that they leave in their books. Over 30 such annotated and inscribed books from the Lillian Goldman Law Library are on display in "Precedents So Scrawl'd and Blurr'd: Readers' Marks in Law Books," the Spring 2020 exhibition from the library's Rare Book Collection.

Exhibition curator Mike Widener, the Law Library's rare book librarian, selected items that offer both research potential and insights into the roles that law books have played in people's lives. The marks left by readers document the lived experience of the law, and remind us that law is above all a human endeavor.

The exhibition's title comes from John Antsey's verse satire of the legal profession, "The Pleader's Guide" (1796): "Precedents so scrawl'd and blurr'd / I scarce could read one single word."

Many of the volumes illustrate the work of lawyers, law students, law professors, and authors throughout the centuries. Doodles suggest the writers taking a break from dreary legal studies. Scraps of poetry can be sources for literary scholars. Readers also used their books to record events, ranging from a drunken outburst in the New Jersey assembly to a famous naval battle of the War of 1812 and the beheading of Henry VIII's fifth queen.

"These books represent a small fraction of the annotated books in the Yale Law Library's rare book collection," said Widener. "They demonstrate the value of collecting these artifacts, and constitute the Law Library’s invitation to explore them further."

"Precedents So Scrawl'd and Blurr'd" is the latest in a series of exhibitions that examine law books as physical artifacts, and the relationships between their forms and content. It is on display March 2 to June 17, 2020, in the Rare Book Exhibition Gallery of the Lillian Goldman Law Library, located on Level L2 of the Yale Law School (127 Wall Street, New Haven CT). The exhibition is open to the general public 10am-6pm daily, and open to Yale affiliates until 10pm.

For more information, contact Mike Widener, Rare Book Librarian, phone (203) 432-4494 and email <mike.widener@yale.edu>.