One of my earliest memories is of going to the Library. Librarians then were strict and wouldn’t allow you in until they checked your hands were clean. I didn’t care. I just wanted to get in amongst those books. This Library has now closed and a new one built in its place, also good, and I don’t have to show that my hands are clean!
I especially remember the New York Library because it was so beautiful and because I bought two books in their book sale. ‘Letters of Arnold Bennett, Vol. 2. 1889-1915’ and ‘Letters of Arnold Bennett, Vol. 3. 1916-1931.’ I love these books.
I also love the stamped inscription on the bottom of them. ‘The New York Public Library – The Branch Libraries,’ and inside, ‘Withdrawn, for free use in City Cultural and Welfare Institutions. May be sold for the benefit of the New York Public Library only.’ How great is that.
Then there was the one in the city of Dundee, Scotland. A very small Public Library that hardly took up any room at all but had the same magic inside. That Library has also gone but I still walk into it in my mind.
Libraries then always seemed to require filled in forms and Birth Certificate before they’d let you in. I’d have supplied them with my blood group, shoe size and almost anything else just to get inside and pick up a book.
Which is why, at the time so many Libraries were having to close, I wrote this poem to defend them and remind why they are so crucial, so important to us all.
MY LIBRARY HOME
When they tell me to ‘Attach Birth Certificate here,’
I ask them which one they mean.
The first one that simply affirms I have been born,
Or the real one, where under ‘Place of Birth,’
I have written ‘Library.’
For it was amongst these book-lined shelves
I was born to an awareness and understanding
Of what men and women, girls and boys get up to,
Plus all those other things we’re told that flesh is heir to.
I took down those books, held them, read them
And loved them so much, I hugged them.
I read about everything.
Love and hate, life and death, war and peace,
Joy and sorrow, crime and punishment.
I read about mountains, valleys, deserts, cities and jungles,
And how man was just a pinprick of light
In a vast darkness.
Or, maybe, a pinprick of darkness
In an ocean of light.
I learnt about creatures that walk, talk, crawl, creep, swim and fly
And how a sudden, surprising spark of affection
Can be a connection between them and us,
Us and them.
Which was why, under ‘Nationality’ where it said,
‘Tick any one of the countries that follow from A to Z,’
I ticked them all instead.
For I am every colour and race, creed, dogma and faith.
Is that hard?
Not when you’ve got a Library card.
So that’s my real home, for me and generations before me,
For together we speak for all those yet to come,
Who need us to succour them, love them, encourage them,
build them and fill them, and shine ‘em up,
As they find their place in their Library home.
©2017 GWEN GRANT
There was magic inside my little hometown library, too! Especially in the summer when I was out of school.
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All those hours lying on the grass and reading. It was a bit like getting drunk only with words!
Gwen.
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Hello, I loved reading this, going to the library when I was a little girl maybe saved my life. It was close to my home, it was free, and a place to hide when my father and mother were fighting with each other. I also did a blog/post on Old Library’s.
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I like walking in the ones with character- the older libraries with tall wooden shelves.
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Me, too, but they’re getting few and far between.
Gwen.
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I’m so glad the Library was there for you, Eileen. There’s not much a child can do but escape and a Library is perfect for that.
Gwen.
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Thanks for republishing this Gwen.
I like “I ticked them all instead.”. I’m glad to have this in common with you, But alas, though I share your love of libraries, being a slow reader, and having been an immature child, I’d never have been able to glean anything useful from them. I enjoyed the quiet refuge as a child, and as a traveller in a far off Scottish town, somewhere to rest in the warm, and now to be able to read the few books I do, without cluttering my tiny attic more.
It really feels like all the world had a head start on me. I’m just lucky to be able to absorb your gentle lines.
Best wishes to you both,
Stephen
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In my thoughts at Christmas. So glad you liked the poem.
Gwen.
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