Part 6 (1/2)
”Do not expect or demand perfect quiet. Frequent tapping upon the desk excites the children and betrays nervousness on the part of the person in charge. Let the discipline of the room seem to be incidental; let the child feel that it is first and foremost a library where books are to be had for the asking, and that you are there to make it easier to get them.
”Never call children's numbers, but use their names if necessary, though a glance of recognition pleases them better. Do not force acquaintance. Children like it even less than grown people. Be sympathetic and responsive, but beware of mannerism or effusiveness. Remember, too, that questioning is a fine art, and one should take care not to offend.
”Speed is not the first requisite at a children's desk. Children have more patience with necessary formalities than grown people.
”Let some of the children help in the work of the room, but do not urge them to do so.
”Avoid stereotyped forms of expression when reproving a child or conversing with him. Let him feel you are speaking to him personally; he will not feel this if he hears the same words used for 50 other boys.”
For evening work, when there is no circulation of books: ”read to them sometimes; talk to them at others; and sometimes leave them quite alone. They are more appreciative when they find you are leaving work to give them pleasure than they would be if they found you were making their pleasure your work.”
These are a few of the instructions or suggestions consequent upon daily observation and experience. Doubtless every children's librarian could supplement them with many more, but they are enough to show what I mean by ”thoughtful administration.”
Occasionally the librarian who serves children will have to take account of stock, sum up the changes for better or for worse in the use and treatment of the room, in the manners and habits of the children and in their reading. She will have to retire a little from her work, take a bird's-eye view of it, and decide if on the whole progress is making toward her ideal. Without identifying itself with any of the movements such as the kindergarten, child-study, and social settlement, without losing control of itself and resigning itself to any outside guidance, the children's library should still absorb what is to its purpose in the work of all these agencies. ”This one thing I do,” the librarian may have to keep reminding herself, to keep from being drawn off into other issues, but by standing a little apart she may see what is to her advantage without being sucked in by the draft as some enthusiastic movement sweeps by. Must she have no enthusiasm? Yes, indeed; but is not that a better enthusiasm which enables one to work on steadily for years with undiminished courage than the kind that exhausts itself in the great vivacity of its first feeling and effort?
It will not be long after the opening of the children's library before an insight will be gained into domestic interiors and private lives that will make the librarian wish she could follow many a child to his home, in order to secure for him and his something better than the few hours' respite from practical life which they may get from the reading of books. When the boy who steals and the girl who is vicious before they are in their teens, have to be sent away lest other children suffer, it is borne in upon the librarian that a staff of home-missionaries connected with the library to follow up and minister in such cases would not be a bad thing--and she has to remind herself again and again that it is not inc.u.mbent on any one person to attempt everything, and that Providence has other instrumentalities at work besides herself. The humors of the situation, on the other hand, are many. The boys who, being sent home to wash their hands, return in an incredibly short time with purified palms and suppressed giggles, and on persistent inquiry confess, ”We just licked 'em,” present to one who is ”particular”
only a serio-comic aspect; and the little squirrel who wriggles to the top of the librarian's chair until he can reach her ear, and then whispers into it, ”There couldn't be no library here 'thout you, could there?” is not altogether laughable; but incidents of pure comedy are occasionally to be set over against the serious side.
Last spring, with a view to gaining information directly in the answers to our questions and indirectly in the light the answers should throw on the character of the children, we chose 150 boys and girls who were regularly using the library and sent to them a series of questions to be answered in writing. They were apparently greatly pleased to be consulted in this way, and it seemed to us that very few of the replies were insincere in tone, or intended merely to win approbation. From the 100 replies worth any consideration I have drawn these specimen answers:
One of the first questions we asked was, ”How long have you been using the library?” Of 100 who answered, 25 had used the library more than six months, 33 more than a year, 22 more than two years, 11 more than three years, nine more than four years, and one six years, since books were first given out to children. Many children first hear of the library when they are 13 and over, and after 14 they have the use of the main library, so that in their case the time of use is necessarily shorter. However, if a child has not done with the children's library by the time he is 14, we allow him to continue using it until he wishes to be transferred.
Of 100 children, 68 reported that other members of their families used the library, while 32 reported themselves the only borrowers. This is interesting in connection with their answers to the question, ”Does any one at home or at school tell you good books to read?” 71 reported yes and 29 no, about the same proportion. In many families the parents are of a mental calibre or at a stage in education to enjoy books written for children, and we have found that children often drew books with their parents' tastes in view. One little girl whose own tastes led her to select a charming little book on natural history was sent back with it by an aunt who said it was not suitable and requested one of the semi-demi-novels that are provided for quite young girls, as being much more appropriate. The difficulty in keeping ”hands off” in a case where grown people are thus influencing children injuriously can be fully appreciated only by one who knows and cares for the children.
Fifty-seven children reported that they were read to at home or that they read to their younger brothers and sisters, while 43 stated that their reading was a pleasure all to themselves. The large number who shared their reading was a pleasant surprise to us, evincing a companions.h.i.+p at home that we had hardly antic.i.p.ated.
Twenty-eight children stated that they preferred to have help in selecting their books, 63 that they preferred to make their own choice, while nine said it depended. 49 said that they came to the library to get help in writing their compositions or in other school-work, while 51 said they did not, one proudly a.s.serting, ”I am capable of writing all my compositions myself,” and another, seeming to think help a sort of disgrace, ”I do not come to the library for help about anything at all.”
Seventy out of the 100 children answering used no library but ours--the others made use of their Sunday-school libraries also.
An inquiry as to the books read since New Year's, the questions being sent out in May, brought out the fact that an average of six books in the four and a half months had been read--not a bad average, considering that it was during term-time in the schools, when studies take up much of the child's otherwise spare time.
Boys proved to prefer history and books of adventure, travel and biography, to any other cla.s.s of reading; girls, books about boys and girls, fairy stories and poetry. The tastes of the boys on the whole were more wholesome, and the girls need most help here.
It is not at all unlikely that it is chiefly the wars and combats in history which make it interesting to the boys, as they seem to go through a sanguinary phase in their development that nothing else will satisfy; but many of them will get their history in no other way, and since wars have been prominent in the past it is of no use to disguise the fact. Fairness to both sides would seem to be the essential in the writing of these children's histories and historical tales, since the ability to stop and deliberate and to make allowances is rare even in grown people and needs cultivation.
The question as to the best book the child had ever read brought in a bewildering variety of answers, proving beyond a doubt that there had been no copying or using of other children's opinions.
While no list can be given, the reasons they offered in response to a request for them were often interesting. Girls wrote of ”Little women”: ”It is so real, the characters are so real and sweet.” ”I feel as if I could act the whole book.” ”This story has helped me a very great deal in leading a better and a happier life.” ”It shows us how to persevere,” etc. Boys like ”The Swiss family Robinson” ”because it describes accurately the points of a s.h.i.+pwreck and graphically describes how a man with common sense can make the best of everything.” Another, ”because it shows how some people made the most of what they had.” Another, ”It shows how progressive the people were.” One liked ”Uncle Tom's cabin”
”because it describes life among the colored people and shows how they were treated before the war”; another, ”because it is a true story and some parts of it are pitiful and other parts are pleasant.” A boy of 12 says of ”Grimm's fairy tales,” ”They are interesting to read, and I learn there is no one to give you wings and sandals to fly--you have to make your own.” Another likes ”John Halifax” ”because it tells how a boy who had pluck obtained what he wanted and made his mark in the world.” ”Pluck,”
I imagine, in a boy's mind stands for the old virtue of the poets, ”magnanimity,” that included all the rest. Harper's story-books are still read and appreciated ”because they tell me about different kinds of people's ways, about animals, and a little about history.” Another child ”learned games out of them, and how to tell the truth and the use of the truth.”
A child of eight puts in a pathetic plea worth considering for the Prudy books, ”because I understand them better than any books I have read.” An incipient author says that she uses the library because ”I make a good deal of stories and find pretty ideas.”
Perhaps the most enlightening replies came in answer to the question, ”Can you suggest anything which would make the library more interesting that it is now?” One delightfully rea.s.suring boy says, ”I like the children's library to stay just the same, and a boy who never went there would like it. I'll bring more boys.”
”Pictures of art” are requested, and ”a set of curiosities from all parts of the world.” As we regard the children of all nationalities and types crowding about the desk on our busy days we sometimes think we already have this latter item. ”A prize for the best story every month.” ”More histories.” ”Pictures of noted men on the walls.” ”More fairy-tales.” ”More magazines.” ”Books showing how to draw.” ”A pencil fastened to each table.” ”Stories in Scottish history.” ”More books of adventure.” ”More funny books.” ”A chart of real and genuine foreign stamps.” ”Lectures for children between 10 and 14, with experiments accompanying them.” ”A one-hour lecture once a week by noted men on different subjects.” ”A book giving the value of celebrated paintings.”
”More books. The shelves look bare,” as indeed they do after a rush-day. ”Rules to keep the children in order,” from a nine-year-old who has doubtless suffered. ”Not to be disturbed by other boys for unknown crimes,” says one mysterious victim of something or other. ”Historical fiction.” ”Catholic books.”
”Tanks with fishes, in the windows.” ”An aquarium; children would enjoy seeing pollywogs change to frogs every time they came to the library.” This is the comment of a little girl, I am glad to say. ”School-books.” ”More amus.e.m.e.nt for little children.” This was before we bought our linen picture-books. And the ”Elsie books,” and Oliver Optic, and Castlemon are vainly desired by two or three. The general sentiment is pretty well voiced by one child who says, ”The library is just perfect in about every respect.”
We feel that with this enumeration of desiderata, the children's library has its work cut out for it for some time to come, and that these evidences of the children's likings and needs have removed a certain vagueness from our ambitions. With lectures and experiments, reading clubs, and possibly original stories, in contemplation, there is no danger of rust from inaction, especially as to obtain any one of these there are serious obstacles to overcome. But always and everywhere the library should put forward its proper claim of the value and use of the book--though in the word book I by no means include all that goes under the name. If there are lectures with experiments or lantern-slides, they should be attended by information as to the best literature on the subject and the children encouraged to investigate what has been printed, as well as to take in through the ear. There is no ”digging” in lecture-going, and it is ”digging” that leaves a permanent impression on the mind. The lecture should stimulate to personal research. From reading aloud together at the library in the evening, reading clubs may come to be formed, each with a specialty, decided by the tastes of the members. The writing of stories, particularly if the library selected the subject, might be made the occasion of the use of histories, biographies, travels, etc. Quiet games in the evening for the older children, of a nature to require the use of reference-books, would be strictly within the library's province.
Personal talks with the children about their reading, if judiciously conducted, are always in order. With a generation of children influenced in this way to use books as tools and a mental resource as well as for recreation, and to find recreation only in the best-written books, the library const.i.tuency of the future would be worthy of the best library that could be imagined.