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| 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," |
| Libraries: The medicine chest of the soul. ~ Library at Thebes |
| A library is thought in cold storage. ~ Herbert Samuel |
| 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 |
| 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 |
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| A man’s library is a sort of harem. ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson, |
| 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, |
| 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 |
| 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 |
| 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 |
| I have always imagined that Paradise will be a kind of library. ~ Jorge Luis Borges |
| 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 |
| 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 |
| 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 |
| 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," |
| 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, |
| 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 |
| Librarians are almost always very helpful and often almost absurdly knowledgeable. Their skills are probably very underestimated and largely underemployed. ~ Charles Medawar |