Table of contents
What Porridge had John Keats?
JAMES BRIDIEWe all seem to be a good deal worried about what to do with our poets. How are they to earn a living? Is poetry a whole‐time job? And, on an all together higher level, what ought…
The Upper Room
WILLIAM LOWNDESThe Public Library was a grim, unattractive‐looking building. Smoke‐blackened and austere, it stood at the junction of two busy thoroughfares, with no outward manifestation of its…
University Librarians and Professional Education
EDITH M. OWEN, P. HAVARD‐WILLIAMSThe purpose of the present article is to ask questions, rather than to answer them. The recent discussions in the University and Research Section of the Library Association have…
The Perennial Problem of Mr. Cox and Mrs. Box
CLIFFORD SNAITH“I don't claim to know anything about art,” said Mr. Cox, putting his tankard down with some asperity and gazing askance at his outspread Lilliput; “but I think these are a bit…
Librarian Poets
A CORRESPONDENTA correspondent writes:—The interesting first stave of the Clyde River Anthology in the Library Review reminds one that there are several librarian bards and, occasionally, the…