The Library World Volume 17 Issue 10
Abstract
One of the indirect ways in which the condition of the people may be improved lies in the hands of librarians in arrangements that may be made for the use of the buildings at their disposal. If the sale of alcohol is to be prohibited or curtailed, large numbers of our working classes will lose their meeting‐place or club, and while the public libraries, as at present constituted, are not in a position to fill the gap, a good deal might be done by way of providing for the possibility of foregathering, for a “feast of reason and a flow of soul,” without the sense of a stern authority always calling attention to the rules and regulations for silence and strict decorum. Really practical suggestions to this end would be of really valuable service now and indeed for all time.
Citation
(1915), "The Library World Volume 17 Issue 10", New Library World, Vol. 17 No. 10, pp. 288-320. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb008991
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 1915, MCB UP Limited