On my return to the university library for the first time in three weeks, I saw two librarians, a guard and three students, all on the first floor, all wearing masks. There was no one on the second and fourth floors, and I felt that customary lift of anticipation I’ve always known when entering a library or bookshop, this time boosted by the sense of COVID-19-induced exclusivity. I came, as usual, with a list, found the books I wanted, browsed a bit, trusting in serendipity, and picked up the three volumes already on hold at the circulation desk.
The Everyman’s Library
series called Pocket Poets is a mixed bag. It’s good to have small clothbound
volumes of Yeats and Dickinson, especially for young readers. But Beat Poets?
Killer Verse: Poems of Murder and Mayhem? Poems Dead and Undead? Ralph Waldo Emerson?
That’s pandering, not publishing. But on Friday I found the newest volume in
the series, Books and Libraries: Poems (2021), edited by Andrew D. Scrimgeour.
At home I learned he is dean of libraries emeritus at Drew University, archivist
emeritus of the Society of Biblical Literature, and the founding archivist of
the American Academy of Religion. Clearly, a learned, book-loving man. The junk
quotient in his little anthology is minimal. Here’s a find from Mel Pryor, a
Scottish poet new to me, titled “In a Secondhand Bookshop”:
“Here’s his signature,
W.S. Graham,
in tidy pencil inside a
first edition
of Alanna Autumnal
by George Barker.
And he’s written the date,
August
1944. And the place,
Cornwall.
Back then he was
twenty-five, at war
with the war, living in a
caravan
near Sydney Cove. Picture
him there,
sprawled on a cramped
bench bed,
feet up against the
caravan window
as he pulls this book back
on its hinges
and reads, lifting his
eyes only occasionally
to the scraps of cloud
above Pengersick Lane,
until the clouds become
stars,
until he moves into that
next world,
beyond Cornwall and beyond
books,
of dreams. Did it have,
the caravan,
man-made light? Don’t tell
me
it wasn’t the sun and then
the moon
that lit his way from word
to word
down Barker’s trail of
young sentences.
Maybe I buy the book in
the brief belief
that thoughts can be
reciprocal
and travel back and forth
through time.
Maybe I want to feel his
hand under
my own hand as I turn the
old pages and read
We have nothing left for
us to do but sicken
at the magnificence of our
predecessors.”
Alanna Autumnal (1933) was Barker’s first
novel, published the year he turned twenty. The poem’s final two lines, quoted
by Pryor presumably from Barker’s novel, express a sentiment I’ve often experienced.
There’s a thrill in discovering an association copy, or even a volume signed by the author or previous owner -- a rush of connection. In
this case, a three-way linkage: Barker to Graham to Pryor.
A friend in Washington,
D.C., during a recent visit to a bookshop there, discovered a book by
the Beats-associated journalist Seymour Krim. It was inscribed by Krim to the
odious William Burroughs. My friend put it back on the shelf. He did buy a copy
of Sentences (1980) signed by the author, Howard Nemerov. He writes:
“Thus for the second time
in a matter of days, I’d randomly caught a bookseller--a different one each
time--carelessly cheating himself. What
are the odds?”
3 comments:
Speaking of writers, just a note: Joseph Epstein will turn 85 on Sunday, January 9th.
I have 20 of the Everyman Pocket Poets. One of the things I like about them is how well done they are, simply as physical books, no slight accomplishment these days. As for content, some are certainly stronger than others. Solitude, Mourning, War are strong volumes. Dead and Undead, not so much. But in every one I've found something rewarding that I was unfamiliar with, and the price is certainly right. Just a few weeks ago I finished The Four Seasons, and discovered this, by old Henry Wadsworth Longfellow:
Snow-Flakes
Out of the bosom of the Air,
Out of the cloud-folds of her garments shaken,
Over the woodlands brown and bare,
Over the harvest-fields forsaken,
Silent, and soft, and slow
Descends the snow.
Even as our cloudy fancies take
Suddenly shape in some divine expression,
Even as the troubled heart doth make
In the white countenance confession,
The troubled sky reveals
The grief it feels.
This is the poem of the air,
Slowly in silent syllables recorded;
This is the secret of despair,
Long in its cloudy bosom hoarded,
Now whispered and revealed
To wood and field.
Few poets are more unfashionable these days than Longfellow, but one service that reading old things can do for you is to demonstrate how utterly worthless fashions are.
Also, I'm no fan of Ralph Waldo's poetry, but I do wonder what Twitter-active Emerson lobby you think is being pandered to...
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