The Haskell Free Library, that quaint Victorian oddity straddling the US-Canada border in Vermont and Quebec, has long been a monument to the absurdity and charm of North American federalism. A single line of black tape on the floor marks the international boundary. American children read in one corner, Canadian grandmothers borrow in another. It is, in its way, a living symbol of the post-Imperial world: two sovereign nations, sharing a single building, a single collection of books, a single idea of civilisation. Until now. The trustees, in a decision that reeks of bureaucratic cowardice, have announced a new Quebec-only entrance. Canadian citizens will henceforth be directed to a separate door. American patrons will use the original. The shared space, the shared experience, is to be partitioned.
Let us not be naive. This is not a matter of safety or hygiene. It is the creeping triumph of identity politics over common culture. The library, a relic of the 1904 border, was built when the idea of a permeable frontier was still considered a strength, not a weakness. Today, we live in an age of walls, both literal and metaphorical. Quebec's peculiar obsession with linguistic and cultural purity has long been a source of tension within Canada, but this is a new low. The library now becomes a microcosm of the nation's soul: fragmented, suspicious, and proudly petty. What next? Separate drinking fountains for Francophones and Anglophones? I jest, but one wonders.
The defenders of this decision will trot out the usual pieties: security, efficiency, respect for Quebec's distinct character. But let us call this what it is. It is the retreat from the very idea of a shared public space. It is the triumph of the bureaucratic mindset over the humanist impulse. The library was never supposed to be a fortress of national identity; it was a loophole in the map, a place where the border became a punchline. Now, it is a lesson in how quickly symbols can be hollowed out.
My contrarian friends will note that the Haskell Library's fate mirrors the decline of the British Empire's legacy in North America. The border itself is an imperial relic, drawn in 1842 by the Webster-Ashburton Treaty. For two centuries, that line was a civilised convenience, not a barrier. Now, the very institutions that survived the transition from empire to nation-state are being dismantled from within. The Quebec-only entrance is not an improvement; it is a desecration.
There is, I suppose, a dark comedy in all this. The library is also a theatre. The original entrance was a shared stage. Now, the players will be segregated by nationality. The metaphor writes itself: a border library forced to acknowledge the very division it was built to defy. To quote Gibbon, 'The winds and waves are always on the side of the ablest navigators.' But what happens when the navigators choose to steer into the rocks? We are about to find out.
And yet, perhaps I am too harsh. Perhaps the trustees are merely responding to the demands of a world grown smaller and meaner. After the pandemic, after the Trump years, after the rise of populist nationalism everywhere, the shared space was already an anachronism. The Quebec-only entrance is not the cause of the fracture; it is the symptom. The real question is: what other institutions will we sacrifice to the altar of authenticity? How many more libraries, parks, and public squares will be carved up into exclusive zones for this or that tribe?
I have no solution. I am a columnist, not a king. But I will say this: the Haskell Free Library was a reminder that civilisation is a conversation, not a series of monologues. By closing one door, we have shut a window on the possibility of a shared future. The Victorians built such places to educate and elevate. We, their degenerate heirs, build separate entrances. Progress, it seems, is a book that we no longer read.









