This I find in The Lone Heretic: A Biography of Miguel de Unamuno y Jugo (1963) by Margaret Thomas Rudd, who quotes her subject: “Each man can be judged by his favorite books.” She adds of the great Spanish thinker and novelist:
“Throughout
his long life Unamuno returned to reread those authors whom he had discovered
as a boy in his father’s modest library. They were his oldest friends and he
would turn again and again to the same passages in those books. This repetition
was, he felt, a form of immortality.”
Unamuno’s “oldest
friends,” Rudd tells us, are Donoso Cortés, Jaime Balmes and Étienne-Jean-Baptiste-Pierre-Ignace
Pivert de Senancour – all unknown to me, which
seems appropriate. After all, if we are to be judged by our “favorite” books,
they may not be the “greatest” or most fashionable in the canon. Their
inclusion may even be embarrassing but they reflect our true sensibilities.
Rudd translates a poem Unamuno wrote and framed on the wall in his library:
“By the fire
my son
was reading Quentin Durward;
I too read
it thus in years gone by
and thus my
grandchildren
will have
occasion to read it some day.
And thus
Quentin lives even as we
His readers
live to day.”
Walter Scott’s
novel I have never read. Some of my counterparts to its eponymous hero for Unamuno include
Starbuck, the widow Wadman and Natasha Rostov. Here’s W. Jackson Bate in his
biography of Dr. Johnson:
“The three
books of which he never tired, said Mrs. Thrale, were Robinson Crusoe, Pilgrim’s
Progress, and Don Quixote. ‘Alas,’
he would say, ‘how few books there are of which one can ever possibly arrive at
the last page’; and ‘Was there ever yet anything written by mere man’ that one
could wish longer than these three books? He would have gone on reading them,
he would never exhaust them, because here—as in no other works—his identification
was almost complete. These three wanderers—one a castaway, one a pilgrim, and
one on an impossible quest—were prototypes of what he felt to be his own life.”
Among
my favorite, most-often-reread books is
Unamuno’s The Tragic Sense of Life in Men
and Nations (1912; trans. Anthony Kerrigan, 1972).
And, of course, for Johnson the book above all books was Robert Burton's "The Anatomy of Melancholy," the only book, says Boswell, that he would get up two hours early to read.
ReplyDeleteDonoso Cortés is a very good thinker and rhetorician,who has de great disadvantage of being spanish and so unknown. Carl Schmitt wrote a book about him and, in his Glossarium, writes that Donoso's speech about Dictature (january 4th 1849) is above Thucydides' Pericles, and any of Cicero, Demostenes or Burke.
ReplyDeleteBalmes, also spanish, is a very solid and, until recently, missunderstood conservative thinker. A friend of mine has just published a book about him, for the moment, alas, only in spanish. Very worth of a reading with plenty of quotes. A defender of the common sense.
https://www.amazon.com/-/es/Jaume-Balmes-ebook/dp/B0CG5V6MLR/ref=sr_1_1?__mk_es_US=%C3%85M%C3%85%C5%BD%C3%95%C3%91&crid=11BE0WUMFKS3L&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.xgxzZtYAEUmMTGE0EaNXCw.ssObcUwGMTccOUCffrvmDclpk3fIM0Wk2NGXHDGN1bw&dib_tag=se&keywords=gregorio+luri+Los+muchos+callan+y+los+pocos+gritan&qid=1717928570&s=books&sprefix=gregorio+luri+los+muchos+callan+y+los+pocos+gritan%2Cstripbooks-intl-ship%2C228&sr=1-1