THE 20 CENTURY BARD @ THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY


THE 20 CENTURY BARD @ THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY

Shakespeare's coach and tutor, a fellow named John

Lylie, told the young actor and promising writer that in

order to make a friend be prepared to share a bushel of

salt, not knowing three hundred and seventy years later it

would be a machine instead of salt.

******

Whether that advice would be given to any young man today in the Reference

Library, third floor of the New York Public Library,

depends on whether the young man has a friend like Lylie

and whether he is another Shakespeare.

But, according to our agent who operated the elevator at the library, there

neither has been another Lylie nor a Shakespeare to come

to the third floor since he's been operating the elevator.

"And that goes back to the time when I failed to get my

jet engine mechanic card, figuring like I did that

conventional engines would still be around for a long

time.

How was I to know progress was knocking at the door

faster than I thought I could run this elevator up to the

top floor and through the roof. I had just come out of

the Air Force in Texas and I didn't know nothing about the

life.

"Third floor reference library. All out."

******

A young lady, twenty-four years old with an

all-knowing eye of four years in college and two years

working in the garment district, originally hailing from

Reading, Pennsylvania, the daughter of a dentist and a

school teacher and now living in the East Fifty-Second

Street area of Second Avenue, stepped off the elevator.

"Thank you," she said, walking long leggedly, her full

five feet and ten inches behind her aggressive stride.
She turned to the right and pounded into the reference

room, her breath but only a little wane.

"Micro film 17654321," she murmured, her right hand slyly coming up to

her sensuous lower lip as though she was bent on a mission

as nefarious as the pumpkin papers of the forties when men

were no longer men but agents of Foreign Powers and the

former Vice President of the United States was only a

conscientious Congressman from Whittier, California.

*******

She stood at the counter, the right forefinger of her

hand tapping the scarred wood of the desk as though the

resonance in her fingers sought out a solitary heart beat

in rhythm with her own.

"Here you are, the 1948 December 13th edition. Have

fun," said the librarian, her wispy, graying hair wind

swept and snow flavored, falling over her pince nez

glasses until she took thetime to gracefully take her

left hand to throw back the strands of darkness for some

of the library's incandescent Edison lighting.

And the young damsel with the graceful walk, sped into the

reference room of the library. The heavy-set guard

growled, "No books, lady. I'm sorry," but the tall girl,

her mind bent on the passion of the moment - scrutiny of

the innards within the small boxes under her arm smiled.

And the guard wilted under the glowing rapture of this

most secretive smile. His head, topped by wavy black

hair, slowly turned. He drew in his lower lip, and with

his right hand he opened up his gray uniform jacket

showing his girth at mid season of his age and you knew he

was studiously studying the form of this tall, almost flip

gook of a girl.

"Okay, I didn't know. I thought you were holding

books."

She ran while she walked, her long strides bounding

the wooden floorboards of the 42nd Street Library. Her

eyes flashed a warmth, only a girl in the garment center

of New York could have. Of knowing New York's garment

center bounded on the west by Seventh Avenue and the east

by Broadway, between 28th and 41st, was he own.

She seemed so casual in her belonging and yet so

aggressive, as though she knew audetes fortuna juvat.

******

And at the same time, he came......

Wearing his J.S. Bach sweat shirt, he swept through the revolving door of the Fifth Avenue entrance,

beamed a smile of staggering

proportions upon the library watchdog who made sure the

eleven and half million populace of the city did not

fleece any masterpieces from the stacks of the reference

room.

*****

He strode into the elevator like a Spanish

conquistador of the past, only momentarily himself

returning to the 1960's of the Twentieth Century so he

could find proof of his earlier incarnation.

Again he beamed the big smile toward the elevator operator and the

elevator man's eyes of deadness stared out at the sweat

shirt.

"Man, I thought I saw everything. When did they

get Mozart on sweat shirts?"

"It isn't Mozart. It's Bach. J.S. Bach," said the

young old man completely oblivious of the library's rule

not to talk to the operator while the car is in progress.

He was wearing a J.S. Bach and the hell with rules and

axioms. Here was a greater violation. Of a false

identity and if this wasn't the overriding issue of our

day. The question of identity and who you are. Then

human life was only part and parcel of the animal kingdom

and humans were but two-legged animals in growing up but

became three-legged when they reached old age and had a

cane.

A sorrowful state if you reached the age of the

cane and you still didn't know who you were.

No matter if you had a couple of million or even a couple of thousand

it would make no difference. Your question mark was your

doom.

*****

But the elevator operator and the occupant of J.S.

Bach's sweatshirt didn't think of such a vital question

while riding the air and the rope up to the third floor.

"Third floor, reference library. All out."

*****

J.S. Bach ran down the hall which only a few moments

earlier had seen the heels of our garment district sketch

artist and which since had seen the footprints of hundreds

of other humans bent on the search for knowledge. The man

in the sweatshirt knew what he wanted as he strode down

the hall to the reference room.

*****

"John Lylie''s tutoring of William

Shakespeare?" he asked the librarian, her wispy graying hair wind-swept and snow flavored falling over

her pince nez.

"Young man, you must look in the card catalog under

the author's name... By the way, is that Handel?"

His blue eyes flared dangerously, and thinking he was

still a heroic figure from the past of another time and

another day, he lunged forward and with the cold steel of

his blue eyes he tapped the most vital organs of the

enemy.

*****

"Young man, I believe the card catalogs are behind

you. We can't spend more than a minute a man. And even

less when the customer is occupying a dirty sweatshirt."

"But it isn't like it's any old sweatshirt. This is

the sweatshirt of one of God's chosen ones. This is...."

"Nonsense with all that stuff. You bringing such

garbage into the library. Why, I would call the guard

right now if he wasn't so busy inspecting the bag