To another
acquaintance around the same time I loaned The
Collected Poems of William Butler Yeats, the old Macmillan edition with the
blue and white cover. It came back dust jacket-less, with the graphically
precise imprint of a dog’s teeth on the front and back covers. I ended up
throwing it away and buying a later edition with the soft-focus mugshot of Yeats
on the cover.
In the early
nineties, a Louisiana-born reporter at the newspaper where I worked asked to
borrow Liebling at Home, published by
the Playboy Press. He had heard me talk up The
Earl of Louisiana, one of the five Liebling volumes included in the omnibus
edition. When he returned the oversized
paperback, the spine was split down the middle and most of the pages were
loose. It was – and is – a pile of loose papers in roughly numerical order. I
kept it out of loyalty to Liebling.
I report
these things without bitterness and draw from them no universal moral, except
that it’s probably wise simply to give books to deserving readers rather than
loan them and expect they will be returned intact. In “Captain Craig,” Edwin
Arlington Robinson’s title character permits his “grave friends” to “borrow my
books and set wet glasses on them,” and seems resigned to their destruction.
Dr. Johnson was known to treat books roughly. Coleridge borrowed Charles Lamb's copy of John Donne’s poems and wrote on the back fly leaf: “I shall die soon,
my dear Charles Lamb! and then you--will not be vexed that I had bescribbled
your Books.” He even dated his desecration: May 2, 1811. Coleridge lived
another twenty-three years and went on vandalizing Lamb’s books. In “The Two Races of Men,” Lamb forgives his friend:
“Reader, if
haply thou art blessed with a moderate collection, be shy of showing it; or if
thy heart overfloweth to lend them, lend thy books; but let it be to such a one
as S. T. C. —he will return them (generally anticipating the time appointed)
with usury: enriched with annotations, tripling their value. I have had
experience. Many are these precious MSS. of his—(in matter oftentimes, and
almost in quantity not unfrequently, vying with the originals)—in no very
clerkly hand—legible in my Daniel; in old Burton; in Sir Thomas Browne; and those
abstruser cogitations of the Greville, now, alas! wandering in Pagan lands.—I
counsel thee, shut not thy heart, nor thy library, against S. T. C.”
1 comment:
This post should generate a Decameron of books-borrowed-books-trashed -when returned war stories. Here’s mine: a fellow lawyer returned my hardback copy of James McPherson’s “ Battle Cry of Freedom” in that dried out condition ( cover curled, pages stiffened) that made it appear it was left out in the rain. With a slight laugh and smile he admitted “ I dropped it in the toilet.” I appreciated his frankness.
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