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the poet at the breakfast table-第40部分

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He took down a Greek Lexicon finely bound in calf; and spread it
open。

Do you see that Hedericus ?  I had Greek dictionaries enough and to
spare; but I saw that noble quarto lying in the midst of an ignoble
crowd of cheap books; and marked with a price which I felt to be an
insult to scholarship; to the memory of Homer; sir; and the awful
shade of AEschylus。  I paid the mean price asked for it; and I wanted
to double it; but I suppose it would have been a foolish sacrifice of
coin to sentiment: I love that book for its looks and behavior。  None
of your 〃half…calf 〃 economies in that volume; sir!  And see how it
lies open anywhere!  There is n't a book in my library that has such
a generous way of laying its treasures before you。  From Alpha to
Omega; calm; assured rest at any page that your choice or accident
may light on。  No lifting of a rebellious leaf like an upstart
servant that does not know his place and can never be taught manners;
but tranquil; well…bred repose。  A book may be a perfect gentleman in
its aspect and demeanor; and this book would be good company for
personages like Roger Ascham and his pupils the Lady Elizabeth and
the Lady Jane Grey。

The Master was evidently riding a hobby; and what I wanted to know
was the plan on which he had formed his library。  So I brought him
back to the point by asking him the question in so many words。

Yes;he said;I have a kind of notion of the way in which a library
ought to be put togetherno; I don't mean that; I mean ought to
grow。  I don't pretend to say that mine is a model; but it serves my
turn well enough; and it represents me pretty accurately。  A scholar
must shape his own shell; secrete it one might almost say; for
secretion is only separation; you know; of certain elements derived
from the materials of the world about us。  And a scholar's study;
with the books lining its walls; is his shell。  It is n't a mollusk's
shell; either; it 's a caddice…worm's shell。  You know about the
caddice…worm?

More or less; less rather than more;was my humble reply。

Well; sir; the caddice…worm is the larva of a fly; and he makes a
case for himself out of all sorts of bits of everything that happen
to suit his particular fancy; dead or alive; sticks and stones and
small shells with their owners in 'em; living as comfortable as ever。
Every one of these caddice…worms has his special fancy as to what he
will pick up and glue together; with a kind of natural cement he
provides himself; to make his case out of。  In it he lives; sticking
his head and shoulders out once in a while; that is all。  Don't you
see that a student in his library is a caddice…worm in his case?
I've told you that I take an interest in pretty much everything; and
don't mean to fence out any human interests from the private grounds
of my intelligence。  Then; again; there is a subject; perhaps I may
say there is more than one; that I want to exhaust; to know to the
very bottom。  And besides; of course I must have my literary harem;
my pare aux cerfs; where my favorites await my moments of leisure and
pleasure;my scarce and precious editions; my luxurious
typographical masterpieces; my Delilahs; that take my head in their
lap: the pleasant story…tellers and the like; the books I love
because they are fair to look upon; prized by collectors; endeared by
old associations; secret treasures that nobody else knows anything
about; books; in short; that I like for insufficient reasons it may
be; but peremptorily; and mean to like and to love and to cherish
till death us do part。

Don't you see I have given you a key to the way my library is made
up; so that you can apriorize the plan according to which I have
filled my bookcases?  I will tell you how it is carried out。

In the first place; you see; I have four extensive cyclopaedias。  Out
of these I can get information enough to serve my immediate purpose
on almost any subject。  These; of course; are supplemented by
geographical; biographical; bibliographical; and other dictionaries;
including of course lexicons to all the languages I ever meddle with。
Next to these come the works relating to my one or two specialties;
and these collections I make as perfect as I can。  Every library
should try to be complete on something; if it were only on the
history of pin…heads。  I don't mean that I buy all the trashy
compilations on my special subjects; but I try to have all the works
of any real importance relating to them; old as well as new。  In the
following compartment you will find the great authors in all the
languages I have mastered; from Homer and Hesiod downward to the last
great English name。

This division; you see; you can make almost as extensive or as
limited as you choose。  You can crowd the great representative
writers into a small compass; or you can make a library consisting
only of the different editions of Horace; if you have space and money
enough。  Then comes the Harem; the shelf or the bookcase of Delilahs;
that you have paid wicked prices for; that you love without
pretending to be reasonable about it; and would bag in case of fire
before all the rest; just as Mr。  Townley took the Clytie to his
carriage when the anti…Catholic mob threatened his house in 1780。  As
for the foundlings like my Hedericus; they go among their peers; it
is a pleasure to take them; from the dusty stall where they were
elbowed by plebeian school…books and battered odd volumes; and give
them Alduses and Elzevirs for companions。

Nothing remains but the Infirmary。  The most painful subjects are the
unfortunates that have lost a cover。  Bound a hundred years ago;
perhaps; and one of the rich old browned covers gonewhat a pity!
Do you know what to do about it?  I 'll tell you;no; I 'll show
you。  Look at this volume。  M。 T。  Ciceronis Opera;a dozen of 'em;
one of 'em minus half his cover; a poor one…legged cripple; six
months ago;now see him。

He looked very respectably indeed; both covers dark; ancient; very
decently matched; one would hardly notice the fact that they were not
twins。

…I 'll tell you what I did。  You poor devil; said I; you are a
disgrace to your family。  We must send you to a surgeon and have some
kind of a Taliacotian operation performed on you。  (You remember the
operation as described in Hudibras; of course。) The first thing was
to find a subject of similar age and aspect ready to part with one of
his members。  So I went to Quidlibet's;you know Quidlibet and that
hieroglyphic sign of his with the omniscient…looking eye as its most
prominent feature;and laid my case before him。  I want you; said I;
to look up an old book of mighty little value;one of your ten…cent
vagabonds would be the sort of thing;but an old beggar; with a
cover like this; and lay it by for me。

And Quidlibet; who is a pleasant body to deal with;only he has
insulted one or two gentlemanly books by selling them to me at very
low…bred and shamefully insufficient prices;Quidlibet; I say; laid
by three old books for me to help myself from; and did n't take the
trouble even to make me pay the thirty cents for 'em。  Well; said I
to myself; let us look at our three books that have undergone the
last insult short of the trunkmaker's or the paper…mills; and see
what they are。  There may be something worth looking at in one or the
other of 'em。

Now do you know it was with a kind of a tremor that I untied the
package and looked at these three unfortunates; too humble for the
companionable dime to recognize as its equal in value。  The same sort
of feeling you know if you ever tried the Bible…and…key; or the
Sortes Virgiliance。  I think you will like to know what the three
books were which had been bestowed upon me gratis; that I might tear
away one of the covers of the one that best matched my Cicero; and
give it to the binder to cobble my crippled volume with。

The Master took the three books from a cupboard and continued。

No。 I。  An odd volume of The Adventurer。  It has many interesting
things enough; but is made precious by containing Simon Browne's
famous Dedication to the Queen of his Answer to Tindal's
〃Christianity as old as the Creation。〃 Simon Browne was the Man
without a Soul。  An excellent person; a most worthy dissenting
minister; but lying under a strange delusion。

Here is a paragraph from his Dedication:

〃He was once a man; and of some little name; but of no worth; as his
present unparalleled case makes but too manifest; for by the
immediate hand of an avenging GOD; his very thinking substance has;
for more than seven years; been continually wasting away; till it is
wholly perished out of him; if it be not utterly come to nothing。
None; no; not the least remembrance of its very ruins; remains; not
the shadow of an idea is left; nor any sense that so much as one
single one; perfect or imperfect; whole or diminished; ever did
appear to a mind within him; or was perceived by it。〃

Think of this as the Dedication of a book 〃universally allowed to be
the best which that controversy produced;〃 and what a flood of light
it pours on the insanities of those self…analyzing diarists whose
morbid reveries have been so often mistaken for piety!  No。 I。 had
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