College and Research Libraries


B y G E O R G L E Y H 

Translated, by Albert C. Gerould 

The Education of the Librarian* 
Dr. Leyh retired as director of the uni-

versity library at Tubingen. 

TH E T H E M E that I have chosen can to a degree serve as the fundamental basis of 
our profession: it is the question of the edu-
cation of the librarian. I refer not solely 
to w h a t he learns in the classroom, the train-
ing in courses and lectures and the taste f o r 
knowledge but also to his education, an 
intellectual attitude, described by Goethe in 
that well known phrase, "Gepragte Form 
die lebend sich entwickelt." ( A f o r m that 
is fixed yet f u l l of living change.) I t is the 
librarian's special problem to find some sort 
of harmonious compromise f o r the conflict-
ing requirements of his personal and profes-
sional life. 

Perhaps there are librarians in charge of 
special collections who have already reached 
a safe harbor. T h e professional workers in 
general libraries are like heavily laden ships 
which toss about in a rough sea and peer 
through the mist for a landmark. T h i s is 
no less the case in America than it is in 
W e s t e r n Europe. Confronted by the tre-
mendous problems of growth and use of our 
collections, we ask ourselves w h a t should 
we as librarians naturally stress? 

N o t a f e w of us chose the library pro-
fession because of the breadth of our inter-
ests, only to find ourselves tied to some 
routine task. Between these two poles of 
ideal and reality the profession has swung 

* T h i s address w a s first delivered in Stockholm on 
M a y 1949. I t first appeared in print in Nordisk Tid-
skrift for Bok och Bibliotheksvasen, X X X V I I ( 1 9 5 0 ) , 
56-70, and w a s reprinted as the title e s s a y of a 
collection by the author published in Copenhagen in 
1 9 5 2 by E j n a r M u n k s g a a r d ( L i b r a r y Research Mono-
graph No. 3 ) . T h e translator is indebted to Pro-
f e s s o r K a r l J . A r n d t of Clark U n i v e r s i t y f o r invaluable 
assistance in making the translation. Permission to 
translate and print has been g r a n t e d . — A l b e r t C. 
Gerould, Free Library of Philadelphia. 

in the last two thousand years, and not 
without reason have men spoken of the 
tragedy of the profession. It is simple 
enough to judge the merits of any other 
profession. Everyone knows what is meant 
by a gallant officer, an inspiring teacher, an 
impartial judge or a learned physician. B u t 
even the scholars, though they have spent 
their days in libraries f o r centuries, do not 
understand the training, the duties, and the 
accomplishments of the librarian. 

T h a t the librarian must merge in himself 
the qualities of the scholar, the organizer 
and the practical man is not perhaps entirely 
unknown. B u t all too often it is chance 
personal interests—not to say bias or mood, 
which affects the librarian's judgment. A n d 
certain objective facts add to his confusion. 
N o w and then in the history of libraries he 
finds a first class scholar like Leopold Delisle 
or Fredrich Ritschl while at other times he 
finds that the librarian is just a bird of 
passage on his w a y to a career or a ship-
wrecked sailor seeking a snug harbor. It 
takes a long time f o r him to f o r m a real 
picture of what the librarian really is. 

T h e same uncertainty underlies any esti-
mate of the value and purpose of libraries. 
T o Leibnitz the library was the bringing 
together of the greatest spirits of all times 
and peoples. T h e poet R i l k e is not the only 
one who speaks of purposeless museums and 
of libraries in which humanism is dried out 
like a mummy. E v e n the scholar complains 
of the dust and mustiness of these same li-
braries where he quarries the very founda-
tion stones of his learning. 

W e should not allow ourselves to be led 
astray by these differing judgments. Sound 
judgment and objectivity have never been 

140 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



the strong suit of the scholar and to no less 
a man than W i l h e l m von Humboldt schol-
ars were, "of all men the most unruly and 
hardest to please with their eternally criss-
crossing interests, their jealousy, their envy, 
their urge to power, their onesided judg-
ments where each claims that his field alone 
deserves to be supported and promoted." 
B u t to be judged by one's peers, that is, by 
experts, is one of the chief rights of man. 
A n d this right w e claim f o r libraries and 
particularly for librarians; let us begin with 
the libraries. 

It was Schopenhauer who made one of 
the most pregnant comments about libraries 
when he called them mankind's only sure 
and living memory. It was they that saved 
ancient literature, and the Swiss zoologist 
Riitimeyer assures us that the whole of 
zoology would be reduced to the natural 
history of Aristotle if libraries and museums 
should suddenly vanish. These two facts 
alone should provide libraries with glory 
enough f o r all time. T h a t we librarians 
even today are threshing no empty straw, 
statistics give daily proof. 

A s f a r as their custodians, the librarians, 
are concerned, they must f o l l o w all the 
movements of far-reaching modern science. 
F o r this purpose an application of intellec-
tual energy and willpower is just as neces-
sary as it would be f o r most other academic 
professions: an encyclopedic learning based 
on a thorough grounding in a special field; 
an unusual measure of the ability to concen-
trate and make decisions, in order to remain 
master of the ever flowing tide of books; 
love of order, without which all else is as 
nothing; and last but not least a f u l l meas-
ure of benign human understanding in 
order to meet the danger, always peculiar 
to librarians, of dabbling in projects, "play-
ing with libraries" like a dilettante. F o r 
qualities of character are perhaps more im-
portant to a librarian than are those of pure 
scholarship. 

T h a t the librarian is a homo sui generis 
had already been manifest f o r centuries be-
fore it was officially recognized in the last 
quarter of the 19th century by the setting up 
for it of admission, training and examination 
regulations as a profession in its own right. 
T h e librarian is an administrator without 
being any the less a scholar. Administrative 
duties and scholarly work are in competition 
f o r his time. T h e fundamental problem of 
the librarian is to give to each of these the 
proper importance and to keep each in a 
proper relation to the other. 

T h i s crisis is an old one. It was Lessing 
who said that he refused to make himself 
a stableboy and keep the horses supplied with 
fodder. T h e classic case was J a k o b G r i m m 
who felt as librarian in Gottingen like a 
harnessed slave. T h e Americans believed 
f o r a long time that they had surpassed the 
European libraries because of their interest 
in purely administrative and technical mat-
ters. Since then they have realized that 
administrative technique must itself be based 
on sound scholarship if it is to serve a useful 
purpose. M a n y library schools even there 
are attempting to bridge the gap between 
the daily task of the librarian and scholarly 
activity. 

T h i n g s came to crisis in G e r m a n y in the 
years 1903-09 when representatives of quite 
a number of libraries issued the complaint 
that professional librarians were being put to 
w o r k at mechanical tasks for which their 
scholarly preparation w a s quite superfluous. 

T h e immediate development of the 
middle ranks of the profession was de-
manded and it was urged that all librarians 
of whatever rank should cooperate in build-
ing up their collections. T h r o u g h carrying 
out these suggestions it w a s hoped to set 
aside all these objections. B u t this hope was 
in v a i n ; a mere change in organization did 
not get at the root of the evil. Resignation 
and discontent remained in our libraries. 

H a l f a century before this, the philo-

APRIL, 1954 141 



logian Fredrich Ritschl had already pene-
trated this problem of the library profession. 
As the real creator of the Bonn University 
library he had a clear insight into what it 
meant to work in a library when he said 
that enthusiasm comes through concentrat-
ing, not through scattering one's learning, 
and only the learning that one has worked 
for is of value. These words may have hit 
the nail on the head but libraries and li-
brarians were not helped by them. 

T h e occupational disease of librarians, 
the tendency toward the encyclopedic, is the 
final reason for personal discontent and 
technical disorder. On the other hand our 
ever increasing educational requirements 
have not even produced a competent techni-
cian, to say nothing of a librarian passion-
ately devoted to his scholarly duties. Our 
catalogs of manuscripts are in disorder. 
With very few exceptions subject catalogs 
in the several libraries of Germany are either 
entirely lacking or are in large part in hope-
less disarray. Even the fame of the Real-
katalog of Goettingen has been for a century 
a thing of the past. 

It is the same with that other field of 
learned activity, the purposeful building up 
of our collections. T h e outstanding jurist, 
Ernst Heymann in 1920 could without 
contradiction criticize the Minister of Edu-
cation C . H . Becker because though the 
great Berlin library was able to purchase 
the most expensive works on ancient ivory 
sculpture, it ignored the field of foreign 
law. 

Actually what was lacking in this richly 
endowed library was not so much the means 
as the people who knew the literature. 
Despite the most explicit regulations, em-
ployment was given to persons who were 
strangers to libraries, birds of passage and 
learned fugitives who looked upon the li-
brary as a way station on the road to an 
academic career. T h e profession was root-
less. 

" T h e whole man must move together"1— 
that is, all of a man's talents must be 
devoted to a single purpose. Even a highly 
developed education is only an introduction 
to knowledge and cannot give a profession 
form and substance that is true learning. A 
work is only fruitful or creative when it 
proceeds steadily from some point of con-
centration. In this sense even a simple peas-
ant or laborer can be said to be educated. 

T h e master is one who can limit his 
field. He is only found in special libraries, 
or in general libraries among the learned 
custodians of manuscripts, incunabula, ori-
entalia, or the music collections. Tension 
remains the lot of the bulk of the profession. 

Attempts of all sorts have been made to 
make library work more satisfying, not the 
least of which was through a sort of sub-
limation. T h e compilation of research 
bibliographies in an objectively limited field 
has often been suggested as a solution, but 
has no connection with the actual practice 
of the profession. Then after 1886 a num-
ber of professorships in library science were 
set up which only for a limited time aided 
posterity by adding to our objective knowl-
edge, but did not affect the question of intel-
lectual development which is central to the 
problem of the education of the librarian. 
Then came Ferdinand Eichler who wanted 
to develop library science into a science of 
values and library policy into world policy, 
a proposal so utterly unreal that Adolph 
von Harnack promptly attacked it in good 
set terms. But Harnack's own proposal for 
a professorship of the political economy of 
the book which would deal with the roles of 
the publishers, the book trade and the needs 
of scholarship showed itself likewise to be 
an unfruitful invention. Ortega y Gasset 
went even further. Already in the 18th 
century the brilliant Lichtenberg was calling 
for a police force to patrol the world of 

1 Lichtenberg, Georg C. Apliorismen. E d . by A . 
Leitzmann. H e f t i , B e r l i n , 1 9 0 2 , page 54. 

142 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



books which w a s swelling beyond all sensi-
ble boundaries. It was the Spanish cultural 
philosopher though who first worked out 
the program in its details. H e said that it 
was the job of the librarian to provide for 
the producing scholar all the necessary 
bibliographical information, that he should 
draw the attention of scholars to gaps in 
the literature that needed to be filled, that 
the librarian should prevent unnecessary 
works f r o m ever being written, and finally 
that he should direct the reader in his read-
ing. A l l these projects evaporated before 
the recognition of the simple fact that only 
in his own narrow field in which he himself 
is active can the librarian move with the 
authority of an expert. 

Nonetheless the G e r m a n journal Zentral-
blatt fur Bibliothekswesen has taken up 
Ortega's plan of 1 9 3 5 and latterly carried 
it even further. It speaks no longer of the 
matter of doing simple bibliographical spade 
work but of the duty to take a stand crea-
tively and on the basis of research on all the 
intellectual, cultural and social questions of 
the day. It goes on to say that the librarian 
can survey as no other the progress of re-
search and scholarship in which he must take 
part not only as a scholarly advisor but as a 
productive critic. It is immediately obvious 
that this overwhelming idealization of the 
librarian's job is not founded on the basis of 
reality. 

T h e important thing is to train librarians 
for libraries, not f o r a romantic cultural 
policy. T h e emphasis is not to be found in 
the realm of imaginary duties but on the 
hard ground of reality and therefore it must 
be fundamental that the day-to-day job, the 
aliis inserviendo consumor, takes precedence 
over all others. B u t only the man with a 
background of successful practice can gain 
credence as a reformer. Whimsical sug-
gestions have little place in cataloging or in 
planning buildings and even less determin-
ing the basic function of libraries. 

Obviously it is likewise quite clear that 
a conscientious administrator alone is not 
qualified to direct a scholarly library, as even 
American experience has shown. Above and 
beyond the practical man we need a learned, 
technically trained librarian w h o first of all 
has mastered the literature of his own par-
ticular specialty but who f r o m his own 
special studies has gone on to an understand-
ing of neighboring fields and their functions 
and possibilities. 

B u t is this not arguing f o r out-and-out 
dilettantism? T h e dilettante has a poor 
reputation among scholars. W e refer the 
critics to the judgement of Goethe, Schopen-
hauer and J a k o b Burckhardt about his real 
worth. T h e specialist who refuses to look 
beyond the bounds of his own specialty into 
the wide landscape of learning around him 
is to them no more than an ignoramus, a 
ruffian and a mill h a n d ; indeed, Schopen-
hauer speaks of scholars who outside their 
own special fields were no better than cattle. 
Stated in terms less f o r c e f u l but more ele-
gant this means: he w h o understands only 
his own field does not even understand that. 
F o r true learning is not a matter of piling 
up facts about some detail but in giving the 
detail meaning and relating it to the whole. 
E v e r y specialty is just a corner of the great 
realm of human knowledge, which admit-
tedly can no longer be compassed by any one 
scholar. So much greater then is the need 
to bridge our w a y to neighboring disciplines. 
E v e r y science needs the guidance and stimu-
lation of its neighbors. 

So it is that the great comprehensive fields 
of comparative philology, comparative re-
ligion and comparative anatomy and physi-
ology, have arisen; and above and beyond 
these there has come into being the need 
ever anew to take a broad view of the 
whole state of the learning of the age. 
E v e r y individual field of learning tends back 
into the unity of knowledge and draws 
from it sustenance. T h e confusion of Babel 

APRIL, 1954 143 



would be the result if every scholar kept to 
his held without reference to neighboring 
disciplines or to knowledge as a whole. 
Every science feels constantly the need to 
bring together its matter in textbooks and 
handbooks and in historical summaries be-
cause only in this abbreviated form can its 
significance be brought out. 

There are indeed scholars who maintain 
that only the specialist is the true scientist, 
who call Ranke a novelist, and say that 
philosophy is the most superfluous of all the 
sciences. In the intellectual world these 
extreme though doubtless highly scholarly 
attitudes have no standing. Every really 
important scientist is to be found on the 
frontier of his specialty. David Hume is 
not only the greatest English philosopher, 
but also a great historian and political econo-
mist; Kant, a philosopher and a scientist; 
indeed all modern physics is pressing toward 
a new philosophical picture of the universe. 
One needs only to think of such names as 
Wilhelm von Humboldt, Franz Bopp, 
Jakob Grimm, and Viktor Hehn to realize 
how particularly in history in all of its 
branches including linguistics the fact of the 
inner coherence of all knowledge lies open 
to the day. And the greatest dilettante of 
all, the poet and government official Goethe, 
has long been accepted as a universal genius 
in whom after a century whole sciences find 
inspiration. 

It is on this very ground of the unity in 
the diversity of the sciences that the librarian 
is most at home. T h i s is his greatest 
strength, but also his weakness. 

For the librarian, his intellectual curiosity 
stimulated on every side, runs the constant 
risk of learned dissipation and scientific busy 
work. Much more than the specialist he 
risks cloying and breaking his spirit through 
much reading until at last he ends in a sort 
of literary nihilism. " T h e librarian who 
reads is lost," is an old library saying. It 
is by no means unheard of for a librarian to 

retire from a career devoted to the narrow 
field of practical matters, and never again 
set foot inside his library, preferring rather 
to hunt and fish. T h e learning that im-
pelled them did not lead to wisdom. 

Memory work and knowledge of book 
titles is at best dead knowledge. A t best it 
may be erudition, but it is never learning. 
T h i s is what Lessing meant when he said, 
" I am not learned, I have never had any 
intention of becoming so—all I have ever 
tried to do is to be able in case of need to 
make use of a learned book." With charac-
teristic acuteness he has described the art 
of reading so essential to a librarian. 

A very gold mine on the art of reading is 
found in the letters and aphorisms of Lich-
tenberg. T o this great psychologist proper 
reading was a problem of the first impor-
tance. He constantly returns to this ques-
tion of the distinction between erudition and 
learning, with which the problem of wrong 
reading and right, of passive reading and 
active is so closely related. 

T h e Gottingen professor Wilhelm Biitt-
ner, who though he was at the same time 
a natural historian and linguist, was Lich-
tenberg's prototype of the fact-crammed 
scholar. Though he was president of the 
Academy of Sciences, Lichtenberg said of 
him that there were few men who had less 
insight than he, and added " T h e man has 
read much but understands nearly every-
thing wrong. He set up endless hypothe-
ses . . . but he is one of those people with 
whom one can talk by the hour without ever 
reaching a meeting of minds. He becomes 
fascinated by some new thing that he has 
read but never completely absorbs it . . . he 
is more like a big dictionary full of errors 
than a philosopher." His library was the 
outward counterpart of himself. Goethe 
has left us a clear picture of it. A f t e r his 
death they found in a large room "laid out 
in groups as they had come all the books he 
had bought at auction. T h e bookcases were 

144 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



bulging and in the whole room one could 
scarcely find space to stand. On his old 
tottering chairs were piled bundles of books 
unopened the w a y they came from the book-
store, while the new flowed out over the old 
in layers and his decrepit furniture caved 
under the w e i g h t . " H i s type in all its 
variants is still f a r from extinct. 

T h e opposite to this urge to collect mere 
facts, the falsely encyclopedic, is real breadth 
of knowledge steeped in philosophy and in-
spired by it. T h e beginning of all knowl-
edge is the recognition that one is ignorant, 
that all learning is but a patchwork, and 
what all the scientists in the world know is 
but a fragment of w h a t is worth knowing, 
but that this fragment gets its great value 
when and only when it has coherence. It 
must be a part of m e ; I must experience it, 
not merely know it. I must absorb it into 
my being, it must be digested. T h e differ-
ence between knowledge and wisdom is like 
the difference between an imagined fire and 
a fire in which one has burned a finger. 

If f o r an original thinker like Lichtenberg 
the art of reading w a s a continuous problem, 
how much greater problem it is f o r the 
librarian who by virtue of his profession 
stands in danger of trying to read at every-
thing. 

Multum legendum, sed non multa. It is 
better to know a little well, than to know 
much superficially. H e who seeks for true 
learning does not read for distraction, to 
pass the time, rather he seeks to gain time 
through conscious selection. 

T h e sources are more important to him 
than the literature derived from them. 
W h o l e epochs of the human mind have been 
from time to time condensed into a f e w 
smallish books, classics of their kind. E v e r y -
one knows their names and general outline, 
but a person deeply versed in them is not 
often met with. Across the centuries this 
literature reads to us at first a little strange-
l y ; only after w e have worked at it f o r 

years does its meaning began to appear in-
exhaustible. T h e classics are f e w enough 
in number. Schopenhauer reckons only one 
out of every hundred thousand books to be 
great literature. K n o w i n g them in the 
original is a tremendous advantage, for 
every language holds within it the whole 
thinking of a people. 

B u t even in what seems at first the stag-
gering immensity of the literature of pure 
science one can keep one's bearings. Here 
too f o r each discipline there are classics 
whose number is likewise not large. I t is 
only the utter specialist who must have the 
latest edition. F o r our seeker a f t e r learning 
it is often the first edition which is important 
f o r it is in that form that the w o r k appears 
in its proper historical context. T h e s e great 
ideas, which science takes and works over 
f o r decades and longer, have a special sig-
nificance as they were first annunciated. 

F o r anyone who advances from a famil-
iarity with titles to a familiarity with ideas 
the picture of the state of human knowledge 
becomes easier to grasp; in the place of 
bewilderment and confusion there appears 
an intelligible system. F o r the librarian 
it is here—by the bye—that the great su-
periority of the classed catalog over the 
dictionary catalog becomes obvious. 

T h i s kind of education is not to be had 
in library courses or in introductions to 
academic studies, or even in the first assault 
on the world of books and learning, but 
comes only as the reward of hard w o r k . It 
is no easily learned memory w o r k but the 
result of experience; though there are some 
clues as to how to attain it. 

Again Goethe, Schopenhauer and J a k o b 
Burckhardt have thought the problem im-
portant enough to give their views on it. 
Goethe, for example, wrote to his son, a 
student at Heidelberg. " I n your studies 
everything depends on whether you can re-
main master of your subject every step of 
the w a y . A s soon as tradition gets beyond 

APRIL, 1954 145 



your control you w i l l grow either dull or 
irritable and it is easy to be tempted to 
throw the whole thing o v e r . " W h a t experi-
ence there is in those f e w w o r d s ! 

T h e w a y to meet the danger of over-
charging the memory and thus losing elastic-
ity is by making it a habit never to read 
except with pen in hand. W h a t e v e r seems 
noteworthy, whatever touches the nerve 
must be noted down. T h a t is the simple 
receipt of as great a scholar as J a k o b Burck-
hardt. One lays up files of notes first f o r 
one's general education and a second more 
detailed series f o r special studies. T h e s e 
files were what Lichtenberg called his 
money boxes. B u t without some sort of a 
subject index these notes would soon fade 
f r o m the memory. 

T h o s e even more intellectually inclined 
should f o l l o w Lichtenberg's practice in read-
ing to set down in a f e w words the author's 
purpose and his chief thoughts. H e said 
that in every book there must be a spiritus 
rector, a guiding theme, or the book is not 
worth a penny, and it is f o r the reader to 
discover w h a t it is. H e who reads thus is 
well employed and gains something. T h e r e 
is a kind of reading, he added, whereby the 
mind does not gain, but rather loses, reading 
that is done uncritically. T h i s is passive 
reading. T h e r e are times when the whole 
contents of a thick book can be compressed 
into two or three words, as in Schopen-
hauer's or D a r w i n ' s chief works. 

H e w h o is in the habit of reading pur-
posefully can look upon "desultory reading" 
to use Lichtenberg's phrase, or "reading by 
the minute" to use Goethe's, as his greatest 
pleasure, though f o r others less well 
equipped, this leads only to emptiness and 
waste. 

A good ear f o r the language and the style 
of a book is an almost infallible compass on 
the sea of literature. Uncertain, vacillating, 
unclear language is evidence of thinking of 
the same sort. W h e t h e r an expression fits 

like a glove or only half applies is immedi-
ately obvious to the careful reader. 

A c a r e f u l l y selected personal library is 
furthermore the essential beginning for the 
education of a librarian. T h e librarian 
must always have his own special literature 
in the best editions at hand. Biographies 
of scholars, histories of the various branches 
of learning, above all philosophy, the litera-
tures f o r example in the great form of H e r -
mann Hettner, introductions to the branches 
of learning such as W i l h e l m W u n d t or 
Friedrich Paulsen for philosophy, or P a u l 
W e r n l e f o r theology, and the classics of 
each great discipline go to make up the 
content of the librarian's library. E v e n in 
cheap second-hand editions they are suffi-
cient to create the proper scientific historical 
atmosphere. A rich source f o r understand-
ing scientific trends and results is found in 
prefaces and even more in the lectures and 
Festreden (learned addresses on special oc-
casions) in the publications of learned so-
cieties, biographical memoirs, in Rektora-
tsreden (scientific presidential addresses) 
without number and in the collections of 
shorter works that give in popular f o r m the 
essence of the w o r k of all the leading 
scholars. N o t to be neglected are the G e r -
man readers by W i l h e l m W a c k e r n a g e l , 
Adalbert S t i f t e r , Hermann Bachtold, H e r -
mann M a s i u s , H u g o von Hofmannsthal, 
and E d u a r d K o r r o d i with their short selec-
tions and glances at the peaks of literature. 
H e r m a n n Hesse and particularly M a r t i n 
Bodmer in their books on w o r l d literature 
open an even wider perspective, which give 
one so much more than mere knowledge 
of book titles. H e r e w e are in the realm 
of the higher development of the mind. In 
the words of Shakespeare's Prospero, " M i n e 
own library with volumes that I prize above 
my dukedom." 2 

In a fundamental study K o n r a d Fiedler 
found the origin of artistic activity not in 

2 The Tempest I: 2. 

146 COLLEGE AND RESEARCH LIBRARIES 



any special manner of viewing things, but 
in the necessity of actively expressing oneself 
about Nature. Only in this way does real 
genius manifest itself. T h e merely passive 
point of view is the clear mark of failing 
talent. It is the same with an author's use 
of language. T h e thought and the language 
cannot be separated. Only when a thought 
has found expression in speech does it be-
come personal and tangible. Knowledge 
must have roots. " W e know a thing only 
insofar as we can express it," as Novalis 
wrote. Good expression is no more than the 
evidence of good thinking. A n unclear 
thought is expressed in unclear speech. 

T h e formulation of a thought belongs just 
as much to man's fundamental need for 
spiritual autonomy as the setting down in 
writing of a word, a word which disappears 
like a breath. Even a shy man can be elo-
quent in his own field. T h e word does not 
follow after the thought as something sec-
ondary, but is related to it in the closest 
way. "Everyone who has ever done any 
writing has found that the very act of writ-
ing awakes in one something that one never 
clearly recognized even though it had lain 
in him all the time." 

T h a t is the explanation of the significance 
of the literary remains of great writers and 
scholars. Even apparently unimportant 
fragments when brought together, can be-
come valuable. For example, among Jakob 
Burckhardt's papers, there were found some 
papers on the history of art which he had 
prepared for publication simply to clarify his 
own thinking on certain matters. Lichten-
berg had the habit for decades of noting 
down without any sort of order the most 
fleeting thoughts in his old copybook, even 
some mere turn of phrase he would preserve 
in this way. But no work of any conse-
quence is ever produced by sleight of hand, 
and even the greatest artist needs a note book. 

N o one who understands the situation 
would demand of a librarian, busy with 

work for others, that he should produce any 
lengthy scientific work. Milkau with one 
stroke gained the reputation of a finished 
author on librarianship by one not very long 
but carefully written essay on the state and 
history of scientific libraries, which appeared 
in a big collection. T h e librarian should 
never withdraw into self-chosen learned 
loneliness, but should expose for public criti-
cism the results of his wide reading. T h a t 
is the keystone of the true librarian. 

By sound tacit agreement there is no rank 
among the sciences. T h e time is past when 
one librarian of long service could dare to 
describe as mere affectation the study of 
incunabula now so important to the cultural 
history of the late Middle Ages. T h e com-
plete devotion of the author to his theme is 
decisive. With every seriously conducted 
work in his own field the librarian can 
achieve self-respect and the general respect 
of others. 

There are certain tasks in the field of 
learning that can be done by no one better 
than the librarian. Their variety is great. 
T h e German and foreign professional jour-
nals, the handbooks founded by Svend Dahl 
and Milkau give an idea of the variety and 
breadth that subjects can cover. Even the 
apparently simplest technical publication es-
pecially in its historical and comparative set-
ting can be fascinating and of critical im-
portance over the decades as faulty catalogs 
and badly planned buildings have shown 
clearly enough. 

Every librarian must know the history of 
his institution and especially the develop-
ment of its collections from the sources— 
that is, from direct observation. T h e his-
tory of an individual library is a part of the 
general history of libraries, which in turn 
is an important part of the history of learn-
ing. T h e history of learning leads into the 
science of the sciences and therewith to the 
summation of the knowledge of which man 
is capable. 

APRIL, 1954 147