Drifting Notes
You can buy a piece of the library for $4. In the gift shop at the State Library of Queensland, Australia, small bundles rest on a low shelf, each one wrapped in black paper. They are old catalogue tags, used in 1988 when the library moved across the river from a smaller building in the city centre to its larger home at South Bank, tied to journals and books so that every bundle could be identified, lifted, transported, and returned to the correct shelf without confusion. The man behind the counter tells me I can untie them, that I am welcome to open each bundle and select the subjects that suit me, but I decide not to, aware that a library is built upon the promise of locating the precise thing one needs and that my refusal to look is a small reversal of that promise. I pay for a sealed bundle and carry it upstairs without knowing what it contains. At a long wooden table, I loosen the ribbon and ease the stack from its black cover, discovering that the paper grips more firmly than expected, as though the tags have settled into their enclosure over time, and I must gently work them free, wiggling the edges until the cards slide into my hand. Tags emerge…. 614.05 — World Health Statistics Report, Vol. 27.610.5 — Public Health, June 1974.620.105 — Engineering Newsletter, 1951. The handwriting shifts from one to another, blue pen, red marker, typewritten letters slightly darker at the beginning of each line where the ink first struck the ribboned card. Each tag bears two punched holes at its top edge, the white ribbon threaded through all of them so that number, title, and date remain bound together. A printed note explains that in 1988 the old library was emptied shelf by shelf, its volumes wrapped in paper, tied with ribbon, labelled, counted, and loaded onto trucks that crossed the river to this building, which now stretches along the riverbank beside the museum and the performing arts centre. It is not difficult to picture the former rooms narrowing as shelves were cleared, journals stacked in careful rows along the floor, decimals read aloud and checked twice, metres of shelving translated into cubic space, trucks booked and positioned, trolleys rolling across concrete with deliberate steadiness. Number, title, date, truck, shelf. The journals themselves carried reports of disease control and bridge construction, mortality tables and concrete ratios, water quality surveys and post-war engineering diagrams, important documents that once moved through ministries and universities before finding their way to reading desks and, eventually, to wrapping paper. Perhaps the urgency lay in the topics, perhaps it lay in the continuity, the steady issue-after-issue insistence that knowledge accumulates and must be kept somewhere stable. Inside the new building, shelves would have waited already measured, the architecture prepared to receive its cargo so that order could be restored with minimal delay, each tag performing its labour of orientation, preventing loss not through grandeur but through accuracy. The card in my hand bends faintly along a shallow crease where the weight of a journal once pressed against it, and the knot in the ribbon is careful enough to suggest that whoever tied it pulled twice before releasing the tension. The tag has the authority of a former instruction, a small paper command that once told heavy things where to belong. Now it sits inside a black paper cover that cost four dollars. This may be the only thing in a library that does not require return. I line the tags on the table and read the decimals again, slower this time, letting their rhythm hold for a moment before rethreading the ribbon through the holes, not as tightly as before, aware that libraries lend and shelves circulate and books leave only to come back altered by other hands. This bundle does not circulate, I get to take a precious archive of the library home with me. Thanks for drifting with me. Note > This season and episode were produced from within the Queensland Writers Centre [https://queenslandwriters.org.au/] at the Queensland State Library [https://www.slq.qld.gov.au/], as part of the Fishbowl Writers Residency. My sincere gratitude. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit driftingnotes.substack.com [https://driftingnotes.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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