“New books can have few associations. They may reach us on the best deckle-edged Whatman paper, in the newest types of famous presses, with backs of embossed vellum, with tasteful tasselled strings,--and yet be no more to us than the constrained and uneasy acquaintances of yesterday.”
By “new books”
I take Austin Dobson (1840-1921) to mean previously unread volumes, not newly
published. The Tale of Genji, written
by Lady Murasaki more than a millennium ago, is a new book for me because I
still haven’t read it. In his essay “On Some Books and Their Associations” (De Libris: Prose and Verse, 1908).
Dobson extends the metaphor of books as friends or at least companions:
“Friends
they may become to-morrow, the day after, --perhaps ‘hunc in annum et plures’ [this year and more]. But for the time
being they have neither part nor lot in our past of retrospect and suggestion.
Of what we were, of what we like or liked, they know nothing; and we--if that
be possible--know even less of them.”
A reader
added a passage from Dobson’s commonplace book, A Bookman’s Budget (1917), as a comment on Saturday’s post. Poet, essayist
and biographer, Dobson is largely forgotten, as is the niche he once filled:
man of letters. There was a gentlemanly allure about this non-academic designation.
Reading good books – important books – was assumed to have a civilizing effect
on readers. One had read most everything, in several languages, and could recommend
favorite titles and be trusted. Of reading previously unread books, old or new,
Dobson writes:
“Whether
familiarity will breed contempt, or whether they will come home to our business
and bosom,--these are things that lie on the lap of the Fates. But it is to be
observed that the associations of old books, as of new books, are not always
exclusively connected with their text or format,--are sometimes, as a matter of
fact, independent of both. Often they are memorable to us by length of tenure,
by propinquity,--even by their patience under neglect. We may never read them;
and yet by reason of some wholly external and accidental characteristic, it
would be a wrench to part with them if the moment of separation--the inevitable
hour--should arrive at last.”
Every serious reader is a fetishist. We like owning multiple copies of our favorites. I can’t say with Dobson that “we may never read them.” I own plenty of volumes I have read once (The Anatomy of Melancholy), or even twice (Proust), but I’m unlikely to read them again. I cherish their companionship but they’re like friends living in Australia, never to be visited.
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