Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Chapter XV The Older Libraries of English Towns, and Their Management By Munic
- Chapter XVI The Parochial and Quasi-Parochial Libraries of England
- Chapter XVII The History of The “Public Libraries Acts” of 1850 and 1855
- Chapter XVIII The Working of The Public Libraries Acts of 1850 and 1855
- Appendix to Volume I
- Part The First. History of Libraries (Continued.)
- Book IV. The Libraries of The United States of America
- Book V. The Modern Libraries of Continental Europe
Chapter I - The Collegiate Libraries of The United States
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Chapter XV The Older Libraries of English Towns, and Their Management By Munic
- Chapter XVI The Parochial and Quasi-Parochial Libraries of England
- Chapter XVII The History of The “Public Libraries Acts” of 1850 and 1855
- Chapter XVIII The Working of The Public Libraries Acts of 1850 and 1855
- Appendix to Volume I
- Part The First. History of Libraries (Continued.)
- Book IV. The Libraries of The United States of America
- Book V. The Modern Libraries of Continental Europe
Summary
The Ancestors of The men of New England had abandoned Their estates, Their families, and Their country, for The obtainment of peace and freedom; and They Themselves were ready to traverse The vast wildernesses of an unexplored continent, raTher than submit to that moral degradation which can alone satisfy The capriciousness of Despotism.
LandOR, (Imaginary Conversations,ii, 24.)The early history of Libraries in America derives a special interest for Englishmen from The fact that it is preëminently a record of reciprocal good offices, between united states; some of The best men of both countries. There is not a Library in The United States, of The age of a century and upwards, which does not treasure on its roll of benefactors The name of many a liberal-minded Englishman, who saw that in lending what furTherance he could to The cause of learning in The rising community, he was at once discharging a plain duty, and sowing The seeds of an abundant harvest, of which his own posterity would surely gaTher a portion, though They might never behold The fields in which it was to grow.
Many have been The flippant and shallow sneers which, in more recent days, have been thrown by writers of a certain school—small, but noisy—at The Americans, for Their alleged disregard of literature of The higher order, and especially for Their want of those great collections of books, without which thorough scholarship and lofty literary enterprise are alike impossible.
Perhaps an unlucky remark which fell from a North American Reviewer, some years ago, may have been The germ of some of These depreciatory statements. For in These days of countless periodicals a casual and hasty paragraph will sometimes attain a singular vitality by dint of mere repetition. Literature will not be much promoted, observed this writer, by a “facility for accumulating quotations by means of huge Libraries.” of course, a brother critic on this side of The water speedily improves The occasion, by assuring his readers that The “spirit of pride which leads us to contemn what we do not possess, has unhappily had itseffect on The Americans, and induced Them to undervalur The advantage of public Librarires.”
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- Information
- Memoirs of LibrariesIncluding a Handbook of Library Economy, pp. 163 - 181Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1859