“1. That
after the death of my said nephew, my said library
be
placed and for ever
settled in one of our universities, and rather
in that of Cambridge
than Oxford.
“2. And
rather in a private college there, than in the public
library.
“3. And
in the colleges of Trinity or Magdalen preferably to
all
others.
“4. And
of these too, ‘caeteris paribus’, rather
in the latter, for
the sake of my own and
my nephew’s education therein.
“5. That
in which soever of the two it is, a fair roome be provided
therein.
“6. And
if in Trinity, that the said roome be contiguous to,
and
have communication with,
the new library there.
“7. And
if in Magdalen, that it be in the new building there,
and
any part thereof at
my nephew’s election.
“8. That
my said library be continued in its present form and
no
other books mixed therein,
save what my nephew may add to theirs of
his own collecting,
in distinct presses.
“9. That
the said room and books so placed and adjusted be called
by the name of ‘Bibliotheca
Pepysiana.’
“10. That this ‘Bibliotheca Pepysiana’ be under the sole power and custody of the master of the college for the time being, who shall neither himself convey, nor suffer to be conveyed by others, any of the said books from thence to any other place, except to his own lodge in the said college, nor there have more than ten of them at a time; and that of those also a strict entry be made and account kept, at the time of their having been taken out and returned, in a book to be provided, and remain in the said library for that purpose only.
“11. That before my said library be put into the possession of either of the said colleges, that college for which it shall be designed, first enter into covenants for performance of the foregoing articles.
“12. And that for a yet further security herein, the said two colleges of Trinity and Magdalen have a reciprocal check upon one another; and that college which shall be in present possession of the said library, be subject to an annual visitation from the other, and to the forfeiture thereof to the life, possession, and use of the other, upon conviction of any breach of their said covenants.
“S. Pepys.”