In The Anatomy of Bibliomania (1930), Holbrook Jackson introduced me to a writer whose name I had never encountered: Mark Rutherford, one of several pseudonyms adopted by the English journalist and translator of Spinoza's Ethics, William Hale White (1831-1913). Here’s the passage that held my attention:
“None among great readers
has enjoyed more deliberately the linked sweetness long drawn out of our
more spacious writers, those long, leisurely books which rove and meander,
saunter, and lounge through their lives
in an eternity of their own, than Mark Rutherford.”
Jackson is describing a form of literary pleasure taken for
granted by earlier generations. Our forebears made a best-seller of Tristram
Shandy and a celebrity of its author. Everyone read Dickens (or saw his
movies), even into my lifetime. The attention span of the Twitter generation
isn’t equipped for such indulgence, though old-fashioned readers will recall
the luxury of three-deckers, deep, long narratives, autonomous universes that
could be inhabited for days or weeks.
Quoting Letters to Three Friends, published posthumously in 1924, Jackson tells us Rutherford “loved
the slow pages of the Spectators of Addison and Steele,” and “the slow
walking pace of Clarissa.” He goes on:
“He read through the Bible
once in every two or three years, an hour daily before breakfast [italics
indicate quotes from Rutherford’s text], and found it profitable beyond
almost any other book [that almost seems significant].”
Rutherford read more than
once such substantial volumes as Carlyle’s Frederick the Great (“the great
modern epic”), John Wesley’s Journal, Spenser’s Faerie Queene,
Doughty’s Arabia Deserta and The Dawn in Britain. Boswell’s Life
of Johnson and Tour in the Hebrides, Jackson tells us, “made him wonder why he should ever read a new book; such
works have the peculiar power of being inexhaustible.” Obviously, Rutherford
dates from the heroic age of reading. One feels inadequate. Jackson finishes his
paean to Rutherford with this:
“[T]o conclude this matter Mark Rutherford, letting us into his secret of slow reading and long-drawn familiarity, confesses that he goes over the old books, Bacon, Shakespeare, Milton, and those others, again and again, because he is gotten into their ways, become tuned to them, responding to them as to the known, tried, approved; the new is foreign; it has no roots and may be forgotten to-morrow: in the reading of it, therefore, there is no profit.”
2 comments:
I always loved imagining how people could just spend that time reading/studying and writing in that era. Great post.
Mark Rutherford's house in Carshalton still stands, just a short walk from mine. I tried to read his once famous Autobiography once but couldn't get on with it. On top of all that heroic reading, he also found time to translate Spinoza's Ethics – no mean feat.
Post a Comment