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<h2> CHAPTER IV. DUST AND NEGLECT. </h2>
<p>DUST upon Books to any extent points to neglect, and neglect means more or
less slow Decay.</p>
<p>A well-gilt top to a book is a great preventive against damage by dust,
while to leave books with rough tops and unprotected is sure to produce
stains and dirty margins.</p>
<p>In olden times, when few persons had private collections of books, the
collegiate and corporate libraries were of great use to students. The
librarians' duties were then no sinecure, and there was little opportunity
for dust to find a resting-place. The Nineteenth Century and the Steam
Press ushered in a new era. By degrees the libraries which were unendowed
fell behind the age, and were consequently neglected. No new works found
their way in, and the obsolete old books were left uncared for and
unvisited. I have seen many old libraries, the doors of which remained
unopened from week's end to week's end; where you inhaled the dust of
paper-decay with every breath, and could not take up a book without
sneezing; where old boxes, full of older literature, served as preserves
for the bookworm, without even an autumn "battue" to thin the breed.
Occasionally these libraries were (I speak of thirty years ago) put even
to vile uses, such as would have shocked all ideas of propriety could our
ancestors have foreseen their fate.</p>
<p>I recall vividly a bright summer morning many years ago, when, in search
of Caxtons, I entered the inner quadrangle of a certain wealthy College in
one of our learned Universities. The buildings around were charming in
their grey tones and shady nooks. They had a noble history, too, and their
scholarly sons were (and are) not unworthy successors of their ancestral
renown. The sun shone warmly, and most of the casements were open. From
one came curling a whiff of tobacco; from another the hum of conversation;
from a third the tones of a piano. A couple of undergraduates sauntered on
the shady side, arm in arm, with broken caps and torn gowns—proud
insignia of their last term. The grey stone walls were covered with ivy,
except where an old dial with its antiquated Latin inscription kept count
of the sun's ascent. The chapel on one side, only distinguishable from the
"rooms" by the shape of its windows, seemed to keep watch over the
morality of the foundation, just as the dining-hall opposite, from whence
issued a white-aproned cook, did of its worldly prosperity. As you trod
the level pavement, you passed comfortable—nay, dainty—apartments,
where lace curtains at the windows, antimacassars on the chairs, the
silver biscuit-box and the thin-stemmed wine-glass moderated academic
toils. Gilt-backed books on gilded shelf or table caught the eye, and as
you turned your glance from the luxurious interiors to the well-shorn lawn
in the Quad., with its classic fountain also gilded by sunbeams, the
mental vision saw plainly written over the whole "The Union of Luxury and
Learning."</p>
<p>Surely here, thought I, if anywhere, the old world literature will be
valued and nursed with gracious care; so with a pleasing sense of the
general congruity of all around me, I enquired for the rooms of the
librarian. Nobody seemed to be quite sure of his name, or upon whom the
bibliographical mantle had descended. His post, it seemed, was honorary
and a sinecure, being imposed, as a rule, upon the youngest "Fellow." No
one cared for the appointment, and as a matter of course the keys of
office had but distant acquaintance with the lock. At last I was rewarded
with success, and politely, but mutely, conducted by the librarian into
his kingdom of dust and silence. The dark portraits of past benefactors
looked after us from their dusty old frames in dim astonishment as we
passed, evidently wondering whether we meant "work"; book-decay—that
peculiar flavour which haunts certain libraries—was heavy in the
air, the floor was dusty, making the sunbeams as we passed bright with
atoms; the shelves were dusty, the "stands" in the middle were thick with
dust, the old leather table in the bow window, and the chairs on either
side, were very dusty. Replying to a question, my conductor thought there
was a manuscript catalogue of the Library somewhere, but thought, also,
that it was not easy to find any books by it, and he knew not at the
minute where to put his hand upon it. The Library, he said, was of little
use now, as the Fellows had their own books and very seldom required 17th
and 18th century editions, and no new books had been added to the
collection for a long time.</p>
<p>We passed down a few steps into an inner library where piles of early
folios were wasting away on the ground. Beneath an old ebony table were
two long carved oak chests. I lifted the lid of one, and at the top was a
once-white surplice covered with dust, and beneath was a mass of tracts—Commonwealth
quartos, unbound—a prey to worms and decay. All was neglect. The
outer door of this room, which was open, was nearly on a level with the
Quadrangle; some coats, and trousers, and boots were upon the ebony table,
and a "gyp" was brushing away at them just within the door—in wet
weather he performed these functions entirely within the library—as
innocent of the incongruity of his position as my guide himself. Oh!
Richard of Bury, I sighed, for a sharp stone from your sling to pierce
with indignant sarcasm the mental armour of these College dullards.</p>
<p>Happily, things are altered now, and the disgrace of such neglect no
longer hangs on the College. Let us hope, in these days of revived respect
for antiquity, no other College library is in a similar plight.</p>
<p>Not Englishmen alone are guilty, however, of such unloving treatment of
their bibliographical treasures. The following is translated from an
interesting work just published in Paris, (1) and shows how, even at this
very time, and in the centre of the literary activity of France, books
meet their fate.</p>
<p>(1) Le luxe des Livres par L. Derome. 8vo, Paris, 1879.<br/></p>
<p>M. Derome loquitur:—</p>
<p>"Let us now enter the communal library of some large provincial town. The
interior has a lamentable appearance; dust and disorder have made it their
home. It has a librarian, but he has the consideration of a porter only,
and goes but once a week to see the state of the books committed to his
care; they are in a bad state, piled in heaps and perishing in corners for
want of attention and binding. At this present time (1879) more than one
public library in Paris could be mentioned in which thousands of books are
received annually, all of which will have disappeared in the course of 50
years or so for want of binding; there are rare books, impossible to
replace, falling to pieces because no care is given to them, that is to
say, they are left unbound, a prey to dust and the worm, and cannot be
touched without dismemberment."</p>
<p>"All history shows that this neglect belongs not to any particular age or
nation. I extract the following story from Edmond Werdet's Histoire du
Livre." (1)</p>
<p>(1) "Histoire du Livre en France," par E. Werdet. 8vo, Paris, 1851.<br/></p>
<p>"The Poet Boccaccio, when travelling in Apulia, was anxious to visit the
celebrated Convent of Mount Cassin, especially to see its library, of
which he had heard much. He accosted, with great courtesy, one of the
monks whose countenance attracted him, and begged him to have the kindness
to show him the library. 'See for yourself,' said the monk, brusquely,
pointing at the same time to an old stone staircase, broken with age.
Boccaccio hastily mounted in great joy at the prospect of a grand
bibliographical treat. Soon he reached the room, which was without key or
even door as protection to its treasures. What was his astonishment to see
that the grass growing in the window-sills actually darkened the room, and
that all the books and seats were an inch thick in dust. In utter
astonishment he lifted one book after another. All were manuscripts of
extreme antiquity, but all were dreadfully dilapidated. Many had lost
whole sections which had been violently extracted, and in many all the
blank margins of the vellum had been cut away. In fact, the mutilation was
thorough.</p>
<p>"Grieved at seeing the work and the wisdom of so many illustrious men
fallen into the hands of custodians so unworthy, Boccaccio descended with
tears in his eyes. In the cloisters he met another monk, and enquired of
him how the MSS. had become so mutilated. 'Oh!' he replied, 'we are
obliged, you know, to earn a few sous for our needs, so we cut away the
blank margins of the manuscripts for writing upon, and make of them small
books of devotion, which we sell to women and children."</p>
<p>As a postscript to this story, Mr. Timmins, of Birmingham, informs me that
the treasures of the Monte Cassino Library are better cared for now than
in Boccaccio's days, the worthy prior being proud of his valuable MSS. and
very willing to show them. It will interest many readers to know that
there is now a complete printing office, lithographic as well as
typographic, at full work in one large room of the Monastery, where their
wonderful MS. of Dante has been already reprinted, and where other
fac-simile works are now in progress.</p>
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