Audrey Ruan and I spent two days researching at Yale’s Beinecke Rare Books and Manuscripts Library. Here are some of our epiphanies. I begin with a picture of the six-story, glass-enclosed center structure with more than 180,000 rare books:
![](https://bpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/sites.gatech.edu/dist/c/359/files/2020/03/Beinecke.jpeg)
![](https://bpb-us-w2.wpmucdn.com/sites.gatech.edu/dist/c/359/files/2020/03/20200309_125755-300x225.jpg)
We studied the Taussig Collection for my research on early modern legal violence, marveled at a worm-eaten book, then I tried to work independently on my own project while Audrey turned to research on the intersections of medicine, pediatrics, and poetry. But I was so fascinated by what she was finding that I kept wandering over to her desk. By the time she was working on the William Carlos Williams papers, I abandoned all pretense of reading sixteenth-century secretary hand and reveled in her discoveries — especially one of Williams’ original prescription pads, on which he outlined a theory of poetry.