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The British Museum: Is It Human?

Library Review

ISSN: 0024-2535

Article publication date: 1 May 1956

57

Abstract

It was idle curiosity which drove me to trouble the staff of the British Museum for the first time. My pretext was the collecting of material for a long undergraduate essay; I could not presume to be “doing research”, and the object of my visit was to see the copy of the 13th century musical round “Sumer is icumen in”. I was shown into an uncomfortable little room near Magna Carta and within a few minutes was being kindly catechized by a scholarly librarian who was aged about forty. After two sentences from me, he realized that I knew nothing about the manuscript but that I was simply curious. With great courtesy he took me into a little manuscript room where the copy was brought to me at my desk and I could inspect it, under glass, for as long as I liked. But it was only when I was a few years older that I grew to understand a little about the life that goes on behind the great colonnade of the British Museum.

Citation

ENGLEFIELD, D.J. (1956), "The British Museum: Is It Human?", Library Review, Vol. 15 No. 5, pp. 311-313. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb012252

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1956, MCB UP Limited

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