Excerpt from Hints for Home Reading: A Series of Chapters on Books and Their Use
The home ought no more to be without a library than without a dining room and kitchen. If you have but one room, and it is lighted by the great wood fire in the flaming fireplace, as Abraham Lincoln's was, do as Abraham Lincoln did: pick out one corner of your fireplace for a library, and use it. Every man ought to provide for the brain as well as for the stomach.
This does not require capital; there are now cheap editions of the best books; it only requires time and forecast. We write in a private library, and a fairly good one for working purposes, of three thousand and odd volumes; we began it twenty years ago, on a salary of $1,000 a year, with five books - a commentary in four volumes and a dictionary. The best libraries are not made; they grow.
In forming a library, if your means are small, do not buy what you can beg or borrow.
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