From our guest blogger, Dr. David Levy; sorry for the delay in posts on all my blogs. I have been very ill, but am recovering.
Skyward
for April 2021
by
David H. Levy
Shortly
before noon, on our television set a news ticker appeared. It announced that two buildings in Library of
Congress (LC), the James Madison, and quickly afterwards the Adams and
Jefferson buildings, were being evacuated. That news sent a chill through
me. The LC is one of the finest
libraries in the entire world. It contains more than 170 million books, of
which more than thirty are books I wrote entirely or at least a foreword. It also includes all of the more than two
hundred “Star Trails” columns I wrote
for Sky and Telescope magazine between 1988 and 2008, and dozens more I wrote
for other magazines and journals. Only
the British library, with over 200 million books, is larger than the Library of
Congress.
This
event was personal for me. A few minutes
later, when the entire Capitol complex was stormed, it was personal for all of
us. All of us had reactions to this, but
in addition to the feelings I shared with most of you, I had an additional
feeling– specifically about the library.
How
many books does it take to make a library? When I was a child in 1963, a
teacher gave the best answer I’ve ever heard: “two books.” For me, a library–
any library– is every bit as priceless as a dark sky. The wisdom of the ages is contained in each library-
from the LC to a child’s collection. I have never gone into a library without
feeling better when I exited. The idea
that this magnificent collection was threatened that day was terrifying.
I
have read many books over my lifetime, from The
Cat in the Hat to my boxed set of Lord
of the the Rings. One small
treasure, Jene Lyon’s Golden book Our Sun and the Worlds Around It, began
a lifetime of stargazing. That gem, by
the way, also lives in the LC. What is
more, I have never encountered a really bad book. When an author places her or his thoughts on
paper in a book, that book immortalizes those thoughts.
I
hope that Capitol Hill and the Library of Congress are never threatened
again. They belong to we the people, and
stand beautifully in
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