... their circumstances ever permit them to visit. If anything is to stay the narrowing and hardening process which specialization of learning, specialization of inquiry and of industry and swift accumulation of wealth are setting up among us, it is a... Library Ideals - Página 19por Henry Eduard Legler - 1918 - 78 páginasVista completa - Acerca de este libro
| Melvil Dewey, Richard Rogers Bowker, Charles Ammi Cutter, Bertine Emma Weston, Karl Brown, Helen E. Wessells - 1907 - 640 páginas
...novel-reading habit. Many good people are inclined to decry the public library because all its patrons do not confine their loans to books dealing with science,...But a race may surely find springing up in itself a frt'sh leve of romance, in the high sense of that word, which can keep it active, hopeful, ardent,... | |
| 1911 - 364 páginas
...upon his shelves. To quote a fellow librarian who expresses admirably the value of such literature, "A good story has created many an oasis in many an...progressive. Perhaps the novel is to be, in the next decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new birth of this love of breadth and happiness." Many... | |
| American Library Association. Annual Conference - 1907 - 670 páginas
...interest makes for good morals, and millions of our fellows step through the pages of a story book Into broader world than their nature and their circumstances...decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new hlrth of this love of breadth and happiness." There is, then, no limitation to the scope of library... | |
| American Library Association. General Meeting - 1907 - 340 páginas
...than their nature and their circumstances ever permit them to visit. If anything is to stay 100 101 the narrowing and hardening process which specialization...may surely find springing up in Itself a fresh love oif romance, in the high sense of that word, which can keep it active, hopeful, ardent, progressive.... | |
| American Library Association. Conference - 1911 - 930 páginas
...poetry, imagination, fancy, and the general culture we are now taught to despise. Of all these th» novel is a part; rather, in the novel are all of these....progressive. Perhaps the novel is to be, in the next decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new birth of this love of breadth and happiness." VI... | |
| American Library Association. General Meeting - 1913 - 356 páginas
...poetry, imagination, fancy, and the general culture we are now taught to despise. Of all these th» novel is a part; rather, in the novel are all of these....progressive. Perhaps the novel is to be, in the next decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new birth of this love of breadth and happiness." VI... | |
| John Cotton Dana - 1921 - 64 páginas
...us, it is a return to romance, poetry, imagination, fancy, and the general culture we are now being taught to despise. Of all these the novel is a part; rather, in the novel are all of these. LXV NOVELS WILL BE USED The public's free public library will recognize at last the public's demand... | |
| American Library Association - 1913 - 524 páginas
...poetry, imagination, fancy, and the general culture we are now taught to despise. Of all these th« novel is a part; rather, in the novel are all of these....progressive. Perhaps the novel Is to be, In the next decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new birth of this love of breadth and happiness." Many... | |
| American Library Association - 1913 - 524 páginas
...poetry, imagination, fancy, and the general culture we are now taught to despise. Of all these tha novel Is a part; rather, in the novel are all of these....progressive. Perhaps the novel Is to be. In the next decades, part of the outward manifestation of a new birth of this love of breadth and happiness." VI... | |
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