The dust and odour of ancient libraries, the gloom of those crypts of literature, have... all the charm of freshest images and freshest poetry. - Alexandre Vinet (1797–1847)
The library lets you borrow the beauty and keep the knowledge. - Author Unknown
What is more important in a library than anything else - than everything else - is the fact that it exists. - Archibald MacLeish, "The Premise of Meaning," American Scholar, 5 June 1972
When I got my library card, that's when my life began. - Rita Mae Brown
Libraries: The medicine chest of the soul. - Library at Thebes, inscription over the door
In my world there would be as many public libraries as there are Starbucks. - Henry Rollins
A library is thought in cold storage. - Herbert Samuel
The great range of education in fine arts... belongs as properly to a library as to a museum... - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
The best of my education has come from the public library... my tuition fee is a bus fare and once in a while, five cents a day for an overdue book. You don't need to know very much to start with, if you know the way to the public library. - Lesley Conger
Libraries are the one American institution you shouldn't rip off. - Barbara Kingsolver, Animal Dreams
Perhaps no place in any community is so totally democratic as the town library. The only entrance requirement is interest. - Lady Bird Johnson
As a child, my number one best friend was the librarian in my grade school. I actually believed all those books belonged to her. - Erma Bombeck
We may sit in our library and yet be in all quarters of the earth. - John Lubbock
A library is but the soul's burial-ground. It is the land of shadows. - Henry Ward Beecher
To those with ears to hear, libraries are really very noisy places. On their shelves we hear the captured voices of the centuries-old conversation that makes up our civilization. - Timothy Healy
A man's library is a sort of harem. - Ralph Waldo Emerson, The Conduct of Life, 1860
My experience with public libraries is that the first volume of the book I inquire for is out, unless I happen to want the second, when that is out. - Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Poet at the Breakfast Table
If you have a garden and a library, you have everything you need. - Cicero
Libraries are the wardrobes of literature, whence men, properly informed may bring forth something for ornament, much for curiosity, and more for use. - William Dyer
Here is where people,
One frequently finds,
Lower their voices
And raise their minds.
- Richard Armour, "Library"
A great library contains the diary of the human race. - George Mercer Dawson
I love the place; the magnificent books; I require books as I require air. - Sholem Asch
The richest person in the world - in fact all the riches in the world - couldn't provide you with anything like the endless, incredible loot available at your local library. - Malcolm Forbes
Having fun isn't hard
When you've got a library card.
- Marc Brown, "Library Card" (Arthur)
My books are very few, but then the world is before me - a library open to all - from which poverty of purse cannot exclude me - in which the meanest and most paltry volume is sure to furnish something to amuse, if not to instruct and improve. - Joseph Howe, 1824
I always imagined that Paradise would be a kind of library. - Jorge Luis Borges, translated from Spanish
Libraries and books are a big part of my life. Like a lot of inwardly drawn young people, I spent a lot of time in libraries.... There were no parents there, no one I knew, and the solitude was a great relief. - Henry Rollins, "Empowerment Through Libraries," November 2013, LA Weekly [Swoon! —tεᖇᖇ¡·g]
There is not such a cradle of democracy upon the earth as the Free Public Library, this republic of letters, where neither rank, office, nor wealth receives the slightest consideration. - Andrew Carnegie
A good library will never be too neat, or too dusty, because somebody will always be in it, taking books off the shelves and staying up late reading them. - Lemony Snicket
The library child seems unlike the school child.... I wish that I had time to tell you what I can recollect of the happiness that comes to a boy in his reading—that same boy who hated the school barracks with all the hate his little heart could hold. - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
Th' first thing to have in a libry is a shelf. Fr'm time to time this can be decorated with lithrachure. But th' shelf is th' main thing. - Finley Peter Dunne
Beauty, gentleness, kindness, cleanliness, good manners and the sweet amenities of life have proved themselves, over and over, to be better than a police squad or a penal code in conducting a library which shall aspire to any place in a scheme of education. - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
The library is not a shrine for the worship of books. It is not a temple where literary incense must be burned or where one's devotion to the bound book is expressed in ritual. A library, to modify the famous metaphor of Socrates, should be the delivery room for the birth of ideas - a place where history comes to life. - Norman Cousins
A truly great library contains something in it to offend everyone. - Jo Godwin
We have our duty with the scholar and the bibliophile, but I waive the consideration of them here. The educational future of the library and of librarianship lies in the service to the people—all the people. - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
Consider what you have in the smallest chosen library. A company of the wisest and wittiest men that could be picked out of all civil countries, in a thousand years, have set in best order the results of their learning and wisdom. The men themselves were hid and inaccessible, solitary, impatient of interruption, fenced by etiquette; but the thought which they did not uncover to their bosom friend is here written out in transparent words to us, the strangers of another age. - Ralph Waldo Emerson, "Books," Society and Solitude
No place affords a more striking conviction of the vanity of human hopes than a public library. - Samuel Johnson
What a place to be in is an old library! It seems as though all the souls of all the writers that have bequeathed their labours to these Bodleians were reposing here as in some dormitory, or middle state. I do not want to handle, to profane the leaves, their winding-sheets. I could as soon dislodge a shade. I seem to inhale learning, walking amid their foliage; and the odor of their old moth-scented coverings is fragrant as the first bloom of the sciential apples which grew amid the happy orchard. - Charles Lamb, Essays of Elia
To those who visited the old Library of Congress at the Capitol he will always be associated with it — a long, lean figure, in scrupulous frock, erect at a standing desk, and intent upon its littered burden, while the masses of material surged incoherently about him. A figure of absorption and labor; quaint indeed in mode and expression, yet efficient; immersed in the trivial, yet himself by no means trivial, imparting to it the dignity that comes of intense seriousness and complete sincerity. Grave in the task of infinite detail upon a mass of infinite dimension: grave but never dour. Cheerful rather, even buoyant. A lover of Nature, too, as booklovers often are: and pursuing her on occasions with deep breath and long stride. - Herbert Putnam, of librarian Ainsworth Rand Spofford (1825–1908), 1908, wording slightly altered
No possession can surpass, or even equal a good library, to the lover of books. Here are treasured up for his daily use and delectation, riches which increase by being consumed, and pleasures that never cloy. - John Alfred Landford
Libraries will get you through times of no money better than money will get you through times of no libraries. - Quoted in The Whole Earth Catalog, 1980 edition, originally created by Stewart Brand; commonly misattributed to Henry David Thoreau
Librarians are almost always very helpful and often almost absurdly knowledgeable. Their skills are probably very underestimated and largely underemployed. - Charles Medawar
For him that stealeth a Book from this Library, let it change into a serpent in his hand and rend him. Let him be struck with Palsy, and all his Members blasted. Let him languish in Pain crying aloud for Mercy and let there be no sur-cease to his Agony till he sink in Dissolution. Let Bookworms gnaw his Entrails in token of the Worm that dieth not, and when at last he goeth to his final Punishment, let the flames of Hell consume him for ever and aye. - Curse Against Book Stealers, Monastery of San Pedro, Barcelona
A public library is the most enduring of memorials, the trustiest monument for the preservation of an event or a name or an affection; for it, and it only, is respected by wars and revolutions, and survives them. - Mark Twain, 1894
A university is just a group of buildings gathered around a library. - Shelby Foote
Libraries are reservoirs of strength, grace and wit, reminders of order, calm and continuity, lakes of mental energy, neither warm nor cold, light nor dark.... In any library in the world, I am at home, unselfconscious, still and absorbed. - Germaine Greer
Librarians are generals in the war on ignorance. - Author Unknown
There are 70 million books in American libraries, but the one I want to read is always out. - Tom Masson
Librarian is a service occupation. Gas station attendant of the mind. - Richard Powers
The student has his Rome, his Florence, his whole glowing Italy, within the four walls of his library. He has in his books the ruins of an antique world and the glories of a modern one. - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
A word also as to the cost of carriage: This is at present so high, whether the means be mail or express, that we may properly set it down as the chief obstacle to the free development of inter-library loans. - William Warner Bishop, "Inter-Library Loans," 1909
Our whole scheme would be melancholy indeed without a full heart happy with the very life-stuff we store in our libraries and which should, in some way, gladden the worker who sees no beauty in his furrow and who needs our help... - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
Nutrimentum spiritus (food for the soul). - Berlin Royal Library, inscription
Shera's Two Laws of Cataloging: Law #1, No cataloger will accept the work of any other cataloger. Law #2: No cataloger will accept his/her own work six months after the cataloging. - Jesse Shera, c.1976 [I hear ya, Brother! —tεᖇᖇ¡·g]
I think that we need a teachers' librarian as well as a children's librarian, and we shall not stop there. We need a father's librarian and a mother's librarian that we may enter into the complete service of education and, somehow, get this message of enthusiasm to them, that they may feel that this great plan of education is of the heart, from the heart to the heart. There are yet others, each waiting for his librarian. The worker, the daily-bread man and the by-the-sweat-of-his-brow man. - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
I did not come here to tell you how to charge books to a teacher who needs them in her school; that may be done with an empty heart. You have enough of centimeters, date stamps and systems and you have probably solved the routine of library science in your particular library. The thing that I should like to have you think upon is the new call for help from the public institutions in this enthusiastic crusade that would make all knowledge flow from a heart that is full of interest in human welfare and the deeper things of life.... I wonder... if it might be true that the new-fashioned librarian has lost sight of the people as they are.... We of all men and women will reach our journey's end with an enthusiasm which can never in the service the people look for in our establishments, and while our hearts may be full of many things, we shall not fail the people in this new thirst for knowledge which is of the heart and for the community and the state. - Joseph F. Daniels, "The Empty Heart" (A Paper Read on the Educational Future of Libraries before the Library Section of the Colorado Teachers' Association, 1908 December 29th)
The library connects us with the insight and knowledge, painfully extracted from Nature, of the greatest minds that ever were, with the best teachers, drawn from the entire planet and from all our history, to instruct us without tiring, and to inspire us to make our own contribution to the collective knowledge of the human species. I think the health of our civilization, the depth of our awareness about the underpinnings of our culture and our concern for the future can all be tested by how well we support our libraries. - Carl Sagan, Cosmos
Monday, 11 January 2016
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