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 XXIII - British Private Libraries, Which Have Been Dispersed
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
As one, who destined from his friends to part,
Regrets his loss, yet hopes again erewhile
To share Their converse, and enjoy Their smile,
and tempers, as he may , Affliction’s dart,—
Thus loved Associates! Chiefs of elder art!
Teachers of wisdom! who could once beguile
My tedious hours, and lighten every toil,
I now resign you, nor with fainting heart,—
For pass a few short years, or days, or hours,
and happier seasons may Their dawn unfold,
and all your sacred fellowship restore,
When, freed from Earth, unlimited its powers,
Mind shall with Mind direct communion hold,
and kindred spirits meet, to part no more.
ROSCOE, On The Loss of his Library(1816).To a mind of The true antiquarian temper, The sight of a noble and historic ruin, however plainly it may bear The marks of violence or of neglect, will often bring thoughts akin to pleasure, as well as feelings of pain and regret. The reflection will arise that amidst those massive walls, The very fragments of which are yet strong in Their decay, many a generation of gallant men was nurtured to do, each in his day, his fair spell of work towards The building up of The Old England we love, and to which we are so proud to belong. Weremember that Thence issued some of The wise counsellors, The firm senators, The stout soldiers, The enterprising voyagers, to whom, with God’s blessing on Their labours, it is mainly due that The name “Britain” is a word of power in The world. Despite our legion of Vandals, There are yet left to us ruins which might suggest no mean epitome of British History.
Very different are The feelings induced by The sites or The names of those mushroom palaces which mere bloated wealth, and unbridled caprice, have occasionally called into existence, to be The marvel of a day, and The proverb of Posterity. The Wansteads, The Canons’, The Fonthills, testify to nothing, but The folly, The blindness, The utter nullity, of spendthrift egotism.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Memoirs of LibrariesIncluding a Handbook of Library Economy, pp. 108 - 138Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1859