Mt. Vernon Public Library & Technology Center

Mt. Vernon Public Library & Technology Center THE MT. VERNON PUBLIC LIBRARY/ TECHNOLOGY CENTER HAS SO MUCH TO OFFER THE MT.VERNON COMMUNITY AND SURROUNDING AREAS!!

STOP BY AND ENJOY ALL THAT THE LIBRARY HAS TO OFFER!!!

05/31/2024

Today's the birthday of the good gray poet, Walt Whitman, born in West Hills, Long Island, New York (1819). Whitman worked as a printing press typesetter, teacher, journalist, and newspaper editor. He was working as a carpenter, his father's trade, and living with his mother in Brooklyn, when he read Ralph Waldo Emerson's essay "The Poet," which claimed the new United States needed a poet to properly capture its spirit. Whitman decided he was that poet. "I was simmering, simmering, simmering," Whitman later said. "Emerson brought me to a boil."

Whitman began work on his collection Leaves of Grass, crafting an American epic that celebrated the common man. He did most of the typesetting for the book himself, and he made sure the edition was small enough to fit in a pocket, later explaining, "I am nearly always successful with the reader in the open air." He was 37 years old when he paid for the publication of 795 copies out of his own pocket.

Many of Whitman's poems were criticized for being openly erotic. One of Whitman's earliest reviews had called the book "a mass of stupid filth," accusing Whitman of "that horrible sin not to be mentioned among Christians." But rather than censoring himself, Whitman added 146 poems to his third edition.

He began to grow a literary reputation that swung from genius to moral reprobate, depending on the reader. Thoreau wrote, "It is as if the beasts spoke." Willa Cather referred to Whitman as "that dirty old man." Emerson praised Whitman's collection as "the most extraordinary piece of wit and wisdom America has yet contributed," and the critic William Michael Rossetti proclaimed that Whitman was a talent on par with Shakespeare.
Whitman left New York when his brother was wounded in the Civil War, traveling to Virginia and then to Washington, D.C., to serve as a volunteer Army hospital nurse. He had a reputation for unconventional clothing and manners. He wrote, "I c**k my hat as I please, indoors and out." With the help of well-placed friends, Whitman eventually found work as a low-level clerk in the Department of the Interior. But when former Iowa Senator James Harlan discovered Whitman worked in his department, he had him dismissed, proclaiming Leaves of Grass was "full of indecent passages," and that Whitman himself was a "very bad man" and a "free lover."

Whitman's friend William Douglas O'Connor immediately came to his defense. He arranged for Whitman to be transferred to the attorney general's office, and he published a pamphlet refuting Harlan's charges. Titled The Good Gray Poet: A Vindication, the small book praised Whitman's "nobleness of character" and went on to quote from positive reviews — and to ridicule Harlan as an under-read philistine.

The pamphlet became more than a vindication: it helped to radically alter the average reader's perception of Whitman as both a writer and as a man: Out with the image of the b***y nonconformist and in with the "good gray poet," the nickname for Whitman that is still popular to this day.

Whitman spent the last 20 years of his life revising and expanding Leaves of Grass, issuing the eighth and final edition in 1891, saying it was "at last complete — after 33 y'rs of hackling at it, all times & moods of my life, fair weather & foul, all parts of the land, and peace & war, young & old."

Today, most scholars agree that Whitman was likely gay. When he was asked directly, toward the end of his life, Whitman declined to answer. But he did say, shortly before he died, that s*x was "the thing in my work which has been most misunderstood — that has excited the roundest opposition, the sharpest venom, the unintermitted slander, of the people who regard themselves as the custodians of the morals of the world."

Source: The Writer's Almanac

06/05/2013

Public Library

"There is no library here."
She said."Maybe you can start one."

"That is what I would have to do. I can't
imagine living in a town without a library."
I said.

But, the second day I was here
there she was, "Public Library"
a beacon waving me home.
Right next to the war memorial
that was now know as Veteran's
Memorial. A bronze soldier
guarding the library
against all enemies,
foreign and domestic,
surrounded by roses
placed there to let
the bronze image
of courage know
that it was alright to go
and never return
and that thanks
to their courage
and sacrifice
we have this library
and these roses
a place to memorialize their
actions; not to glorify war,
but to honor the cost
of freedom.

And for public library
patrons to checkout
the heirloom roses.

WPCannon
04 June 2013
Havana Public Library

12/04/2012

Our Library's Current Hours:
Monday 10:00-5:00
Tuesday !0:00-5:00
Wednesday 10:00-5:00
Thursday 10:00-5:00
Friday Closed: Why? I don't know!
Saturday 10:00-2:00 Why? I don't know?
Sunday Closed Why? I don't know!

09/11/2012

The Mt. Vernon Public Library & Technology has a new Librarian and new hours! Come down and meet David and use the resources we have available! Become a Friend of the Library and volunteer!

New Hours: Monday-Thursday 1000am-5pm
Friday Closed :~(
Saturday 1000am-2pm

Here we go again...the yo-yoing hours at the library! Who knows how long these hours will last!

sometimes, I go out, just to listen for them...
07/16/2012

sometimes, I go out, just to listen for them...

Last night I stood outside in the dark, the garden still hot from another day of drought, softly steaming with the good watering I had given it. It was quiet. Too quiet. Where were the birds? W...

07/14/2012

NEW LIBRARY HOURS
Monday through Thursday
2p.m. - 6p.m.
Friday
CLOSED
Saturday
10a.m. - 6p.m.
Sunday
CLOSED

Any Questions concerning these hours and why the library has gone from being available to the public 52 hours a week to 24 hours a week, should be directed to Mayor Jerry Lundy and the Town Council.

07/07/2012

Today will be the final day of our Summer Reading program. Come and visit us, bring your children and delight in the things this resource has to offer. The times are changing and so will this library's hours. The town has decided to cut this facilities services and close us down. We have no control over this. The Friend's of the Library has lost it's funding from Mobile County and we are having to lay off our employee and the library director, Mr. Darryl Pennywell. The town of Mount Vernon has known about this for more than six months and has chosen to do nothing in response to our repeated request for continued funding. The town government sees no value in libraries or education and they have instead made the choice to close the facility. Mayor Lundy sees no value in the library and technology center and the current town council seems to agree. The management of the town is being held hostage by ignorant people who see no value in an educated or enlightened population. The Mount Vernon Friends of the Library apologize to all of our patrons for our failure in securing the needed funding. We feel like we have let our patrons down and we are sincerely apologetic for our failure. The library and technology center will survive, the hours will be curtailed, but all of the axillary programs: Tutoring, Computer Classes for adults & senior citizens will end. The staff is being eliminated and there will be only one here at any given time and their time will be devoted to assisting patrons with request and there will be no additional staff on hand to tutor or offer classes.

Anyone with any questions about these changes can contact the Mount Vernon Alabama Town Hall Mayor Jerry Lundy's office and request any additional information. Don't expect much of a response, Mayor Lundy may not even be aware of the libraries existence. The Mayor's Office is at 1565 Boyles Avenue and the phone number is: 251 829-6631.

The Library's Board of Trustees has been complacent during the town's ignorance of the library's needs. The Board has known since the first of this year that this time was coming and they have chosen to do noting in response to the library's needs. The have not met any during the current year to address this problem and when we were able to coerce them into meeting on June 15, they had nothing to tell us concerning what the town was planning on doing for the library.

William Cannon
Vice President
Mount Vernon Friend's of the Library

07/03/2012
07/03/2012

Look at the children who attended the Summer Reading Program June 30, 2012

Address

19180 Shepard Lake Road E
Mount Vernon, AL
36560

Opening Hours

Monday 10am - 5pm
Tuesday 10am - 5pm
Wednesday 10am - 5pm
Thursday 10am - 5pm
Saturday 10am - 2pm

Telephone

+12518299497

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Mt. Vernon Public Library & Technology Center posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Mt. Vernon Public Library & Technology Center:

Share

Category