29 SEPTEMBER 1979, Page 9

A hundred years ago

Mr J. T. Kay, Librarian of Owens College, raised, on Wednesday, before the Library Association, now sitting at Manchester, a question which will often be argued, as the free-library system extends. He wished novels to be excluded from libraries supported by rates, arguing that it was unfair to provide out of taxes books which were mere means of amusement, and indeed injurious amusement. The motion was not received with any cordiality, and was defeated by a large majority; but it will be raised again, in individual towns. The true answer to Mr Kay's contention seems to be, not that English novels are harmlessly amusing — the answer accepted at the conference of last year — but that they supply a useful stimulus to dull imaginations. The imagination wants food, as well as the intelligence, and a very poor novel is better food than the kind of reverie. in which a workinglad too frequently indulges.