“A
dear friend, Allen Estrin, realized one day that his longstanding plans to read
through the Hebrew Bible in its entirety would never happen. And so, one
morning, he read the first two chapters of the Torah’s first book, Genesis. And
then the next morning, he read the next two chapters. And the following
morning, another two. The exercise occupied about fifteen minutes a day. Even
when he had extra time, he didn’t read additional chapters (in such instances,
he would study the two chapters in greater depth), and even when he had little
time he forced himself not to read less. He simply made a firm determination
never to miss the reading of the two chapters. He continued on his program for
approximately 460 days, until he completed the Hebrew Bible in its entirety,
from Genesis through the second book of Chronicles.”
Since
starting the blog, I’ve undertaken only two acts of bookish discipline
comparable to the one described by the rabbi: I reread Shakespeare’s plays in order
and the King James Bible. The rest of my reading, except for a few books endured
for review, has been driven by unsystematic appetite for pleasure. I’m selfish about books
and the way I read them. They lead, I follow. Somewhere recently I encountered
a critic who mocked Charles Lamb for acknowledging that “Books think for me,” but
let’s extend Lamb’s logic for a moment. Think of all the books you’ve ever read, many now forgotten
but at the time each connecting in some subterranean fashion with the one preceding
it and the one that followed. Imagine the books as neurons linked by synapses across
space and time, a model that permits a book last read forty years ago to spark a
thought today. In the aggregate they constitute the Borgesian conceit of a
single vast volume. The English neurophysiologist Sir Charles Scott Sherrington
coined synapse from the Greek for “to
clasp together,” as in hands or the pages of a book.
Just
the other day Bill Vallicella wrote: “Old books are sovereign antidotes to the
idiocies of the age, both the idiocies of style and those of content.” My
thinking precisely, though the sentiment customarily is dismissed as nostalgia
or kneejerk antiquarianism. Not so. I’ve never read a book solely because it
was old – or new. I’ve read it because it looked interesting, regardless of
publication date, or because someone whose judgment I trust recommended it. Let’s
face it: Today is a small place and the past is enormous. They wrote a lot more
good books then than now.
Over
the weekend I reread an old book, Richard
III, never a favorite. I returned to the play because a skeleton unearthed
in Leicester, near the site of the Battle of Bosworth, was thought to be the
crippled monarch’s. Now DNA testing has confirmed the remains, showing evidence
of scoliosis and at least ten blunt-force injuries, were Richard’s. Naturally, English journalists contacted a “literary expert” and asked for his reaction. Philip Schwyzer, a professor of renaissance
literature at the University of Exeter, announced: “I think Shakespeare was
telling us that we are never going to get all the answers.”
Well,
that’s a relief. Happy anniversary to all readers of Anecdotal Evidence.
12 comments:
Congratulations to you on 7 years of great discipline and to all your readers for the many wordfeasts we've enjoyed, the many ideas for additions to our personal commonplace books and the many leads to the best of poetry and prose -- in the best Matthew Arnold tradition of wanting to know the best literary art.
Thanks. Seven years goes quickly with a great teacher!
MMc
I've been following a program similar to Allen Estrin's only I'm reading the King James Bible (a few months to go!)and...I read Anecdotal Evidence every day- thank you for seven years!
Your most impressively disciplined act here these past seven years is giving us something really worth reading almost every single day.
Congratulations, and thank you, and keep 'em coming!
Seven years! I salute you, Patrick - here's to the next seven...
Congratulations on seven years!
I've always been mystified by the ways books have chosen me, sometimes with a curiously irrational but anything but capricious insistence.
> a skeleton unearthed in Leicester, near the site of the Battle of Bosworth, was thought to be the crippled monarch’s
"Who knows the fate of his bones, or how often he is to be buried?"
Happy anniversary, Patrick. The solace and enjoyment this blog has given me far surpasses whatever reading pleasure I find elsewhere on the Net. Here's to another seven.
Easily my favorite place to stop by every day. Thank you for being the best English teacher I never had.
I owe you my thanks for your daily good words here.
TJG
Patrick,
Good health, good reading, and good writing on your 7th anniversary of "Anecdotal Evidence."
Helen
Congratulations for sticking with this (or anything!) for seven consecutive years - definitely an inspiration for this would-be biblioblogger. I think I've managed to read almost all your posts for the past three years, and plan to continue forward as long as you're willing to put fingers to keyboard. I find citations here to things I never see otherwise, so I value your off-beat reading interests, and I suspect many of your reading credos (such as the one in this post) will end up in my blog's "Bookish Quotations," along with those of Samuel Johnson and others in your pantheon. Many thanks.
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