“These favourite volumes cannot be called peculiar glories of literature; but out of the world of books have I singled them, as I have singled my intimates out of the world of men.”
Like Alexander Smith (1829-1867),
the Scottish poet and essayist, and I hope without too much whimsy, I have
always personified certain books as friends. As a kid that meant Edgar Rice
Burroughs, John Bunyan and Daniel Defoe – books whose presence was reassuring.
Non-readers or readers who are strictly utilitarian will find it ridiculous, bordering
on fetishism. Smith continues in “A Shelf in My Bookcase”: “With the volumes on
the special shelf I have spoken of, I am quite at home, and I feel somehow as
if they were at home with me.”
Like Smith, I don’t rank
most special-shelf writers with Shakespeare and Milton, but only snobs claim to
read undisputed masterpieces exclusively. I actually have several such shelves,
all within easy reach of my desk. Here is part of the Yvor Winters & Co. shelf:
Next shelf down: Larkin, Bunting,
Dick Davis, Henri Coulette, Turner Cassity, Charles Gullans, Eric Ormsby, L.E.
Sissman. By pleasing serendipity, Sissman wrote an essay similar to Smith’s a
century later. In “The Constant Rereader’s Five-Foot Shelf,” collected in Innocent
Bystander: The Scene from the 70’s (1975), he writes:
“A list of books that you
reread is like a clearing in the forest: a level, clean, well-lighted place
where you set down your burdens and set up your home, your identity, your
concerns, your continuity in a world that is at best indifferent, at worst
malign. Since you, the reader, are that hero of modern literature, the
existential loner, the smallest denominator of moral force, it behooves you to
take counsel, sustenance, and solace from the writers who have been writing
about you these hundred or five hundred years, to sequester yourself with their
books and read and reread them to get a fix on yourself and a purchase on the
world that will, with luck, like the house in the clearing, last you for life.”
[To Thomas Parker: Definitely John Clayton, Viscount Greystoke.]
No Burroughs reader holds John Carter and Lord Gerystoke in exactly equal esteem; they all lean a little more towards one or the other. Were you a Barsoom or Africa man?
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