“I like a
library where you can waste your time . . . You can only know after the event
whether the time was wasted or gained. Without wasted time, what would there
be? Newton’s apple is the fruit of wasted time. It is wasted time which
invents, creates. And there are two kinds of literature: the literature of
wasted time, which gives us Don Quixote, and that of time put to use,
which gives us Ponson du Terrail. The literature produced by wasted time is the
good kind.”
Pierre
Alexis, Viscount of Ponson du Terrail (1829-1871) was the Joyce Carol Oates of
nineteenth-century France. In twenty years he wrote some seventy-three books.
He was a factory. His readerly counterpart consumes Harlequin romances by the board
foot. Leys was fond of quoting Schopenhauer: “A precondition for reading good
books is not reading bad ones: for life is short.” Paquet paraphrases Leys: “So,
if we can’t know whether a book is good or not before we’ve read it, we may as
well also realise that we read for ourselves first.”
An obvious
point but one seldom acknowledged. Guilt- or duress-driven reading (as in
schools and book clubs) turns the consumption of books into onerous labor. Leys described himself as “more of a gluttonous omnivore like a dog,”
whereas his wife was “more of a reflective gourmet like a cat.” Paquet quotes
him again:
“The study
of literature is of no practical use whatsoever – unless one would wish to
become, of all things, a professor of literature.”
Asked at the
turn of the century to name a twentieth-century book deserving of salvage, Leys
selected three vastly different gems: Chesterton’s The Man Who Was Thursday,
Natsume SÅseki’s Kokoro and Frank Worsely’s Shackleton’s Boat Journey.
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