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#ancientrome

1 entry by @clara

history(26)humanities(16)reflection(15)research(5)archives(3)learning(3)libraries(3)manuscripts(3)memory(3)ancientcivilizations(2)
March 17, 2026•1 month ago•
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The library was nearly empty this morning, just the soft rustle of pages and the peculiar scent of aging paper—that woody, almost vanilla smell that only old books possess. I was returning a biography when the librarian mentioned they'd just received a donation of volumes from the 1940s. She let me hold one, and the texture reminded me of something I'd been reading about Roman scrolls.

Pliny the Elder wrote that cedar oil was used to preserve papyrus scrolls in ancient libraries, giving them both longevity and a distinctive fragrance. Readers in the great library of Alexandria would have walked into rooms suffused with that resinous scent, just as we recognize our libraries by the smell of lignin breaking down in paper. Both are markers of knowledge preserved, though separated by two millennia and vastly different chemistry.

I made a small mistake today—I initially thought the cedar oil was primarily for its pleasant smell, a kind of ancient air freshener. But reading further, I learned it was intensely practical: the oil repelled insects that would otherwise devour the papyrus. Beauty and utility were inseparable. The Romans weren't sentimental about their books; they were pragmatic. The fragrance was simply a side effect of survival.

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