At the sale of his library (auctioned by R. H. Evans in London on 16 December 1833 and seven following days: a copy of the catalogue is at Cambridge University Library at the shelfmark Munby.c.142(1)) Thorpe, the bookseller, bought for 40
l. a collection of Haslewood's manuscript notes on the proceedings of the Roxburghe Club. This ill-written and insipid record of the club's achievements was titled
Roxburghe Revels; or, An Account of the Annual Display, culinary and festivous, interspersed incidentally with matters of Moment and Merriment. Also, Brief Notices of the Press Proceedings by a few Lions of Literature, combined as the Roxburghe Club, founded 17 June 1812. Falling into unfriendly hands, the manuscript afforded material for a virulent attack on Haslewood's memory in the
Athenæum, January 1834. In 1837,
James Maidment reprinted the
Athenæum articles at Edinburgh, with a memoir of Haslewood, under the title
Roxburghe Revels, and other Relative Papers; including Answers to the attack on the Memory of the late Joseph Haslewood, Esq., F.S.A., with Specimens of his Literary Productions, 4to (fifty copies, privately printed; uniform with the Roxburghe Club publications). A valuable collection of
Proclamations formed by Haslewood is now in the library of the Duke of Buccleuch at Dalkeith; nine volumes of newspaper cuttings, prints, &c., illustrative of stage-history, are preserved in the
British Museum. Haslewood was a keen collector of fugitive tracts. It was his fancy to bind several together in a volume, and affix some absurd title, as
Quaffing Quavers to Quip Queristers, ''Tramper's Twattle, or Treasure and Tinsel, from the Tewkesbury Tank
, Nutmegs for Nightingale'', etc. ==Writings==