Librarians
by
Frank X. Roberts
Librarians should be wading pools,
Wide, extensive, but not ripple free,
Seek all opinions, enter all schools
In the branches of Porphyry’s tree;
Never be narrow by closing their minds
To subjects that don’t fall within
Areas of knowledge each specially finds
Interesting. Oh speciality, the gin
Which powers narrow minds if it can;
A two-fisted engine which closes the door
On Melvil Dewey and Ranganathan.
(I’m not done, I have five stanzas more.)
Don’t avoid Math, though it’s difficult stuff,
Or computers, now liberally installed,
But say, like Huck, “Interesting but tough,”
Instead of getting themselves all walled
Up inside an obtuseness created by fear
Of subjects that don’t easily scan;
Hide behind laughter, or react with a sneer,
When they should be a broadminded clan.
Yes, Renaissance types in a specialized world,
That’s the state they ought to strive for,
Embracing the Trivium and the Quadrivium
While the world queues up at their door.
In Admin., in Reference, they must patiently use
Their wide knowledge and managerial tact,
Serving the public, in spite of abuse,
With Science and Lit. and statistical fact.
And though each may pick some depth of the well
Of knowledge to immerse themselves in,
Librarians each day, come high water or hell,
In a wading pool must sink or swim.
Frank is a semi-regular contributor to BiblioBuffet. His extensive career in teaching and librarianship began when he taught English in the U.S. From 1961 to 1963, as part of a Columbia University program called “Teachers for East Africa,” he taught English and American Literature in East Africa. There he met his wife, Dorothy. They returned to the U.S. where he simultaneously taught and finished two Masters’ degrees, in Education and in Librarianship. In 1968 they returned to England where Frank taught Library Studies, and adopted Hodge, a cat who later traveled around the world with them. In 1972, Frank was “seconded” for two years to teach at Makerere University in Uganda, East Africa, but left reluctantly after one year when the tyranny of Idi Amin became intolerable. From there it was back to England, then Australia and finally to America in 1979, to Buffalo where Frank earned his doctorate. Later they moved to Colorado, where he was Professor of Library Studies at the University of Northern Colorado until retiring in 1997. Frank published James A. Michener: A Checklist of his Work with a Selected Annotated Bibliography (Greenwood Press) in 1995. He has written on bookmarks, specifically on medieval bookmarks, his special area of interest. A poet by avocation, he writes eclectically but traditionally. He can be reached at
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