I had a minor problem with the university library’s catalog. When I requested two books stored off-site in the Library Service Center I got this message: “No items can fulfill the submitted request.” That made no sense and I couldn’t figure out a way around the roadblock, so I wrote a librarian I’ve known for years. It was a glitch I didn’t understand, she ordered the books and they will be waiting for me when I visit the library on Saturday. I know my way around libraries and seldom require assistance, but yet again I’m grateful not just for access to millions of books but for librarians – at their best, culture’s caretakers.
Timothy
Steele is a poet and a scholar dependent on libraries. In “The Library” (The Color Wheel, 1994) he asks, “Cultural
oasis? / Few would object to its conserving aims.” In a non-political sense,
a library is conservative. Steele writes of “all the ancient
libraries whose collections / Have vanished in a massive wordless void,” and adds:
“The consolation?
Some things were preserved,
Technology
reduces now what’s lost,
And learning,
as it’s presently deployed,
Is safe from
any partial holocaust.”
Ours is increasingly an alliterate age. Many non-readers no longer respect books, and some are actively
hostile. Books pose an irritating reproach. Have we reached an
Eloi/Morlock moment? Not quite but Wells’ oversimplified future seems at least
possible if not inevitable. Some of us can still take comfort in another Steele
poem, “Homage to a Carnegie Library” (also from The Color Wheel):
“Companionable
room,
In that
early darkness
You stood in
promise
Of a sunnier
time.”
Books remain
a civilizing presence – a “cultural oasis.” In one of his critical books, Missing Measures: Modern Poetry and the
Revolt Against Meter (1990), Steele includes poetry among the prerequisites
of a good, sustainable life:
“What is
most essential to human life and to its continuance remains a love of nature,
an enthusiasm for justice, a readiness of good humor, a spontaneous
susceptibility to beauty and joy, an interest in our past, a hope for our
future, and above all, a desire that others should have the opportunity and
encouragement to share these qualities. An art of measured speech nourishes
these qualities in a way no other pursuit can.”
When I was in my late teens and early 20s, I spent many hours prowling in the Carnegie library in my hometown (Long Beach, CA). It was wonderful: all those obscure nooks and spaces to explore, the beautiful curved mosaic-tile ceiling (if memory serves) in the lobby. And it was one of the few buildings I've been in that had a mezzanine.
ReplyDeleteThe library served the city's readers from its opening in 1909 until it was demolished in the early 1970s, after an arson fire gutted much of it.
I wonder how many of those Carnegies are left?
Aliterate, alliterate, illiterate. The allure of alliteration. A lesson plan for an ESL class that will surely lessen the head count. Incidentally, when I type 'goddamn" in a text message, autocomplete gamely offers up "spellcheck" as the anticipated follow on. It can be likewise taught to sit up, roll over or play dead.
ReplyDeleteNow appearing on a screen near you, artificial intelligence meets genuine stupidity.
This occludes this evening's rant.
Thank you for the Carnegie library poem, the poem new to me but the situation familiar, not so much now, but in memory.
ReplyDeleteDale Nelson