In a development that has sent shivers of delight down the spines of every tweed-clad heritage enthusiast from Surrey to Saskatchewan, the historic Haskell Free Library and Opera House, which straddles the US-Canada border in Vermont and Quebec, has installed a Quebec-only entrance. The move, celebrated by British heritage groups as a 'masterstroke of architectural diplomacy,' effectively means that Americans must now enter via a separate, smaller door marked 'Colonials This Way.'
'It's simply marvellous,' said Sir Reginald Ponsonby-Smythe, chairman of the Society for the Preservation of Empire-Era Quirks. 'Finally, a building that acknowledges the proper order of things: Britons above, Canadians below, and Americans… well, somewhere near the coal scuttle.' The library, built in 1904, has long been a symbol of cross-border amity, but its new entrance policy has redefined the concept of 'friendly neighbour.' Now, Canadian patrons may breeze through a grand oak portal emblazoned with a maple leaf, while Yanks must squeeze through a hobbit-sized hatch cunningly disguised as a fire-safety poster.
The decision has not gone unnoticed in Washington. A State Department spokesman, fighting back tears, described the move as 'a clear violation of the unspoken mutual-respect protocol that has governed library ingress for over a century.' President Braindead, reached for comment, reportedly muttered something about 'bad hombres in book stacks' before being led away by aides.
But the British heritage crowd is having none of it. 'This is exactly the kind of robust architectural statement we need to see more of,' declared Lady Victoria Marmalade, founder of the Keep Calm and Carry a Passport Campaign. 'Why should the Queen's loyal subjects share a door with people who put ice in their tea?' Indeed, local lore suggests the original architect, a transplanted Englishman named Thaddeus Cholmondeley-Featherstonehaugh, had always intended a separate entrance for 'the colonials,' but was overruled by forward-thinking locals in 1904. 'He would be turning in his grave with joy,' added Lady Victoria.
The border library has always occupied a unique niche in international relations. The reading room is bisected by a line of black tape, and patrons are forbidden from crossing it, lest they trigger an international incident over overdue books. Now, with the Quebec-only entrance, the symbolism has deepened. 'It's perfect,' said Professor Alistair McTavish, chair of Border Studies at Oxford. 'The British Empire, through this single gesture, has reasserted its moral authority over the architecture of knowledge. Canada gets the front door; America, the tradesman's entrance. And Britain? We get to feel smug about it.'
Not everyone is charmed. A group of Vermont librarians have announced a boycott, vowing to only enter via the Canadian door, passport be damned. 'We will not be partitioned like some literary Berlin Wall,' said one protester, brandishing a overdue copy of 'The Hockey Sweater.' But for now, the library stands as a monument to what can be achieved when heritage groups and diplomatic muscle combine. As Sir Reginald put it, 'If you can't build a wall, build a better door. And if that door says 'Canadians Only,' so much the better.'
The next phase of the project, whispers from St James's Palace suggest, may involve a separate reading room for Americans, furnished entirely with uncomfortable stools and copies of Ayn Rand. But that, as they say, is a story for another day.
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