Graham, Not an epitaph really, but a lovely letter Twain wrote that speaks to the importance of libraries (and, I suppose, by extension, sites of literary importance). I read this before every Twain talk I give at a library (and many of them are, indeed, facing uncertain times): Letter from Mark Twain to The Millicent Library, Fairhaven, Massachusetts: Feb. 22, 1894 To the Officers of the Millicent Library*:** *I am glad to have seen it. It is the ideal library, I think. Books are the liberated spirits of men, and should be bestowed in a heaven of light and grace and harmonious color and sumptuous comfort, like this, instead of in the customary kind of public library, with its depressing austerities and severities of form and furniture and decoration. A public library is the most enduring of memorials, the trustiest monument for the preservation of events or a name or an affection; for it, and it only, is respected by wars and revolutions, and survives them. Creed and opinion change with time, and their symbols perish; but Literature and its temples are sacred to all creeds, and inviolate. All other things which I have seen today must pass away and be forgotten; but there will still be a Millicent Library when by the mutations of language the books that are in it now will speak in a lost tongue to your posterity. Truly yours, Mark Twain On 1/21/2012 3:55 AM, Graham Durham wrote: > I would like to thank all on the Forum who joined our twenty year fight to = > save Dollis Hill House in NW London.Sadly the House where Mark stayed in 19= > 00 was demolished today - the same local authority(Brent) has also closed= > Kensal Rise library which Twain opened during this stay. > We also note that campaigners in Detroit are battling to save libraroes inc= > luding the Mark Twain library.( see Fox News-Detroit)=20 > Clearly the barbarians are amongst us - can anyone find a suitable epitaph = > from Twain ? > Graham Durham - London=20 > > >> Date: Fri=2C 20 Jan 2012 10:28:51 -0500 >> From: [log in to unmask] >> Subject: Bard College invites teachers of American literature to the 2012= > IWT Curriculum Conversation >> To: [log in to unmask] >> =20 >> N.B.: I am posting this on behalf of Bard College. Please direct queries = > to >> the e-mail address at the end of this message. Kevin B. >> =20 >> ~~~~~ >> =20 >> The Institute for Writing& Thinking at Bard College invites teachers of >> American literature to the 2012 IWT Curriculum Conversation: >> =20 >> Mark Twain=92s Adventures of Huckleberry Finn: Facing the Challenge of >> Teaching an American Classic >> =20 >> Despite the controversy it has provoked since its publication in the Unit= > ed >> States in 1885=2C Huckleberry Finn has nonetheless been a cornerstone in = > the >> secondary and college curriculum for generations. In this=2C the fourth a= > nnual >> IWT Curriculum Conversation=2C writing-to-learn practices are the startin= > g >> points for a rigorous reading of Huckleberry Finn=2C for multiple reading= > s >> through the lens of other texts=97fiction as well as nonfiction=2C litera= > ry as >> well as historical=97and for looking closely at how the text teaches stud= > ents >> about irony=2C history=2C language=2C and thinking. Join us to learn inno= > vative >> approaches to reading and teaching what Toni Morrison calls =93this amazi= > ng=2C >> troubling book.=94 >> =20 >> Friday=2C March 16=2C 2012 >> 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. >> Bard College >> Annandale-on-Hudson=2C New York >> Fee: $140 (includes morning coffee=2C lunch=2C and anthology of >> cross-disciplinary readings) >> =20 >> For online registration and full details about this and other Institute >> programs=2C visit: www.writingandthinking.org or contact Judi Smith at >> [log in to unmask] or 845-758-7484. > = >