ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1966, this book studied the background against which libraries in England have developed since classical times and the part they played in the formation of 20th Century bibliographic culture and bibliomania. Part 1 discusses the power of the written book in antiquity and follows the story from Greek and Roman times to Roman Britain and through Saxon and Medieval England to the Reformation. Part 2 traces the history of the Englishman’s study and his domestic library from its beginning to Victorian days and reveals how intimately it is related to our literature and culture. The spread of the art of reading in the 15th Century and its expansion among people of all classes in the 18th and 19th centuries are discussed in detail.

part |160 pages

Part One

chapter Chapter I|11 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter II|18 pages

Callimachus and the Alexandrian Library

chapter Chapter III|22 pages

The Byzantine Age

chapter Chapter IV|16 pages

Seneca

chapter Chapter V|17 pages

In Roman Britain

chapter Chapter VI|16 pages

In Saxon England

chapter Chapter VII|11 pages

Colonnade and Cloister

chapter Chapter VIII|19 pages

The Dispersal

chapter Chapter IX|17 pages

Physical Handicaps

chapter Chapter X|11 pages

Gabriel Naudé and the Problems of Mass Production

part Two|123 pages

The English Domestic Library

chapter Chapter XI|15 pages

The Beginnings

chapter Chapter XII|21 pages

From Sir Thomas More to Samuel Pepys

chapter Chapter XIII|18 pages

From Samuel Pepys to Dr. Johnson

chapter Chapter XIV|31 pages

The Infectious Habit

chapter Chapter XV|36 pages

The Nineteenth Century