<SPAN name="chap09"></SPAN>
<h3> Chapter IX </h3>
<h3> Again the Narrative is Retarded </h3>
<p>Roger had spent a quiet evening in the bookshop. Sitting at his desk
under a fog of tobacco, he had honestly intended to do some writing on
the twelfth chapter of his great work on bookselling. This chapter was
to be an (alas, entirely conjectural) "Address Delivered by a
Bookseller on Being Conferred the Honorary Degree of Doctor of Letters
by a Leading University," and it presented so many alluring
possibilities that Roger's mind always wandered from the paper into
entranced visions of his imagined scene. He loved to build up in fancy
the flattering details of that fine ceremony when bookselling would at
last be properly recognized as one of the learned professions. He
could see the great auditorium, filled with cultivated people: men
with Emersonian profiles, ladies whispering behind their fluttering
programmes. He could see the academic beadle, proctor, dean (or
whatever he is, Roger was a little doubtful) pronouncing the august
words of presentation—</p>
<br/>
<p>A man who, in season and out of season, forgetting private gain for
public weal, has laboured with Promethean and sacrificial ardour to
instil the love of reasonable letters into countless thousands; to
whom, and to whose colleagues, amid the perishable caducity of human
affairs, is largely due the pullulation of literary taste; in honouring
whom we seek to honour the noble and self-effacing profession of which
he is so representative a member——</p>
<br/>
<p>Then he could see the modest bookseller, somewhat clammy in his
extremities and lost within his academic robe and hood, nervously
fidgeting his mortar-board, haled forward by ushers, and tottering
rubescent before the chancellor, provost, president (or whoever it
might be) who hands out the diploma. Then (in Roger's vision) he could
see the garlanded bibliopole turning to the expectant audience, giving
his trailing gown a deft rearward kick as the ladies do on the stage,
and uttering, without hesitation or embarrassment, with due
interpolation of graceful pleasantry, that learned and unlaboured
discourse on the delights of bookishness that he had often dreamed of.
Then he could see the ensuing reception: the distinguished savants
crowding round; the plates of macaroons, the cups of untasted tea; the
ladies twittering, "Now there's something I want to ask you—why are
there so many statues to generals, admirals, parsons, doctors,
statesmen, scientists, artists, and authors, but no statues to
booksellers?"</p>
<p>Contemplation of this glittering scene always lured Roger into
fantastic dreams. Ever since he had travelled country roads, some
years before, selling books from a van drawn by a fat white horse, he
had nourished a secret hope of some day founding a Parnassus on Wheels
Corporation which would own a fleet of these vans and send them out
into the rural byways where bookstores are unknown. He loved to
imagine a great map of New York State, with the daily location of each
travelling Parnassus marked by a coloured pin. He dreamed of himself,
sitting in some vast central warehouse of second-hand books, poring
over his map like a military chief of staff and forwarding cases of
literary ammunition to various bases where his vans would re-stock.
His idea was that his travelling salesmen could be recruited largely
from college professors, parsons, and newspaper men, who were weary of
their thankless tasks, and would welcome an opportunity to get out on
the road. One of his hopes was that he might interest Mr. Chapman in
this superb scheme, and he had a vision of the day when the shares of
the Parnassus on Wheels Corporation would pay a handsome dividend and
be much sought after by serious investors.</p>
<p>These thoughts turned his mind toward his brother-in-law Andrew McGill,
the author of several engaging books on the joys of country living, who
dwells at the Sabine Farm in the green elbow of a Connecticut valley.
The original Parnassus, a quaint old blue wagon in which Roger had
lived and journeyed and sold books over several thousand miles of
country roads in the days before his marriage, was now housed in
Andrew's barn. Peg, his fat white horse, had lodging there also. It
occurred to Roger that he owed Andrew a letter, and putting aside his
notes for the bookseller's collegiate oration, he began to write:</p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="salutation">
THE HAUNTED BOOKSHOP<br/>
163 Gissing Street, Brooklyn,<br/>
November 30, 1918.<br/></p>
<P CLASS="salutation">
MY DEAR ANDREW:</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
It is scandalous not to have thanked you sooner for the annual cask of
cider, which has given us even more than the customary pleasure. This
has been an autumn when I have been hard put to it to keep up with my
own thoughts, and I've written no letters at all. Like everyone else I
am thinking constantly of this new peace that has marvellously come
upon us. I trust we may have statesmen who will be able to turn it to
the benefit of humanity. I wish there could be an international peace
conference of booksellers, for (you will smile at this) my own
conviction is that the future happiness of the world depends in no
small measure on them and on the librarians. I wonder what a German
bookseller is like?</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
I've been reading The Education of Henry Adams and wish he might have
lived long enough to give us his thoughts on the War. I fear it would
have bowled him over. He thought that this is not a world "that
sensitive and timid natures can regard without a shudder." What would
he have said of the four-year shambles we have watched with sickened
hearts?</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
You remember my favourite poem—old George Herbert's Church
Porch—where he says—</p>
<br/>
<p class="poem">
By all means use sometimes to be alone;<br/>
Salute thyself; see what thy soul doth wear;<br/>
Dare to look in thy chest, for 'tis thine own,<br/>
And tumble up and down what thou find'st there—<br/></p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
Well, I've been tumbling my thoughts up and down a good deal.
Melancholy, I suppose, is the curse of the thinking classes; but I
confess my soul wears a great uneasiness these days! The sudden and
amazing turnover in human affairs, dramatic beyond anything in history,
already seems to be taken as a matter of course. My great fear is that
humanity will forget the atrocious sufferings of the war, which have
never been told. I am hoping and praying that men like Philip Gibbs
may tell us what they really saw.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
You will not agree with me on what I am about to say, for I know you as
a stubborn Republican; but I thank fortune that Wilson is going to the
Peace Conference. I've been mulling over one of my favourite books—it
lies beside me as I write—Cromwell's Letters and Speeches, edited by
Carlyle, with what Carlyle amusingly calls "Elucidations." (Carlyle is
not very good at "elucidating" anything!) I have heard somewhere or
other that this is one of Wilson's favourite books, and indeed, there
is much of the Cromwell in him. With what a grim, covenanting zeal he
took up the sword when at last it was forced into his hand! And I have
been thinking that what he will say to the Peace Conference will smack
strongly of what old Oliver used to say to Parliament in 1657 and
1658—"If we will have Peace without a worm in it, lay we foundations
of Justice and Righteousness." What makes Wilson so irritating to the
unthoughtful is that he operates exclusively upon reason, not upon
passion. He contradicts Kipling's famous lines, which apply to most
men—</p>
<br/>
<p class="poem">
Very rarely will he squarely push the logic of a fact<br/>
To its ultimate conclusion in unmitigated act.<br/></p>
<P CLASS="letter">
In this instance, I think, Reason is going to win. I feel the whole
current of the world setting in that direction.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
It's quaint to think of old Woodrow, a kind of Cromwell-Wordsworth,
going over to do his bit among the diplomatic shell-craters. What I'm
waiting for is the day when he'll get back into private life and write
a book about it. There's a job, if you like, for a man who might
reasonably be supposed to be pretty tired in body and soul! When that
book comes out I'll spend the rest of my life in selling it. I ask
nothing better! Speaking of Wordsworth, I've often wondered whether
Woodrow hasn't got some poems concealed somewhere among his papers!
I've always imagined that he may have written poems on the sly. And by
the way, you needn't make fun of me for being so devoted to George
Herbert. Do you realize that two of the most familiar quotations in
our language come from his pen, viz.:</p>
<p class="poem">
Wouldst thou both eat thy cake, and have it?<br/></p>
<P CLASS="letter">
and</p>
<p class="poem">
Dare to be true: nothing can need a ly;<br/>
A fault, which needs it most, grows two thereby.<br/></p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
Forgive this tedious sermon! My mind has been so tumbled up and down
this autumn that I am in a queer state of mingled melancholy and
exaltation. You know how much I live in and for books. Well, I have a
curious feeling, a kind of premonition that there are great books
coming out of this welter of human hopes and anguishes, perhaps A book
in which the tempest-shaken soul of the race will speak out as it never
has before. The Bible, you know, is rather a disappointment: it has
never done for humanity what it should have done. I wonder why? Walt
Whitman is going to do a great deal, but he is not quite what I mean.
There is something coming—I don't know just what! I thank God I am a
bookseller, trafficking in the dreams and beauties and curiosities of
humanity rather than some mere huckster of merchandise. But how
helpless we all are when we try to tell what goes on within us! I
found this in one of Lafcadio Hearn's letters the other day—I marked
the passage for you</p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
Baudelaire has a touching poem about an albatross, which you would
like—describing the poet's soul superb in its own free azure—but
helpless, insulted, ugly, clumsy when striving to walk on common
earth—or rather, on a deck, where sailors torment it with tobacco
pipes, etc.</p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
You can imagine what evenings I have here among my shelves, now the
long dark nights are come! Of course until ten o'clock, when I shut up
shop, I am constantly interrupted—as I have been during this letter,
once to sell a copy of Helen's Babies and once to sell The Ballad of
Reading Gaol, so you can see how varied are my clients' tastes! But
later on, after we have had our evening cocoa and Helen has gone to
bed, I prowl about the place, dipping into this and that, fuddling
myself with speculation. How clear and bright the stream of the mind
flows in those late hours, after all the sediment and floating trash of
the day has drained off! Sometimes I seem to coast the very shore of
Beauty or Truth, and hear the surf breaking on those shining sands.
Then some offshore wind of weariness or prejudice bears me away again.
Have you ever come across Andreyev's Confessions of a Little Man During
Great Days? One of the honest books of the War. The Little Man ends
his confession thus—</p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
My anger has left me, my sadness returned, and once more the tears
flow. Whom can I curse, whom can I judge, when we are all alike
unfortunate? Suffering is universal; hands are outstretched to each
other, and when they touch … the great solution will come. My
heart is aglow, and I stretch out my hand and cry, "Come, let us join
hands! I love you, I love you!"</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
And of course, as soon as one puts one's self in that frame of mind
someone comes along and picks your pocket.… I suppose we must
teach ourselves to be too proud to mind having our pockets picked!</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Did it ever occur to you that the world is really governed by BOOKS?
The course of this country in the War, for instance, has been largely
determined by the books Wilson has read since he first began to think!
If we could have a list of the principal books he has read since the
War began, how interesting it would be.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Here's something I'm just copying out to put up on my bulletin board
for my customers to ponder. It was written by Charles Sorley, a young
Englishman who was killed in France in 1915. He was only twenty years
old—</p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
TO GERMANY<br/></p>
<br/>
<p class="poem">
You are blind like us. Your hurt no man designed,<br/>
And no man claimed the conquest of your land.<br/>
But gropers both through fields of thought confined<br/>
We stumble and we do not understand.<br/>
You only saw your future bigly planned,<br/>
And we, the tapering paths of our own mind,<br/>
And in each other's dearest ways we stand,<br/>
And hiss and hate. And the blind fight the blind.<br/></p>
<p class="poem">
When it is peace, then we may view again<br/>
With new-won eyes each other's truer form<br/>
And wonder. Grown more loving-kind and warm<br/>
We'll grasp firm hands and laugh at the old pain,<br/>
When it is peace. But until peace, the storm<br/>
The darkness and the thunder and the rain.<br/></p>
<br/>
<P CLASS="letter">
Isn't that noble? You see what I am dumbly groping for—some way of
thinking about the War that will make it seem (to future ages) a
purification for humanity rather than a mere blackness of stinking
cinders and tortured flesh and men shot to ribbons in marshes of blood
and sewage. Out of such unspeakable desolation men MUST rise to some
new conception of national neighbourhood. I hear so much apprehension
that Germany won't be punished sufficiently for her crime. But how can
any punishment be devised or imposed for such a huge panorama of
sorrow? I think she has already punished herself horribly, and will
continue to do so. My prayer is that what we have gone through will
startle the world into some new realization of the sanctity of
life—all life, animal as well as human. Don't you find that a visit
to a zoo can humble and astound you with all that amazing and grotesque
variety of living energy?</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
What is it that we find in every form of life? Desire of some
sort—some unexplained motive power that impels even the smallest
insect on its queer travels. You must have watched some infinitesimal
red spider on a fence rail, bustling along—why and whither? Who
knows? And when you come to man, what a chaos of hungers and impulses
keep thrusting him through his cycle of quaint tasks! And in every
human heart you find some sorrow, some frustration, some lurking pang.
I often think of Lafcadio Hearn's story of his Japanese cook. Hearn
was talking of the Japanese habit of not showing their emotions on
their faces. His cook was a smiling, healthy, agreeable-looking young
fellow whose face was always cheerful. Then one day, by chance, Hearn
happened to look through a hole in the wall and saw his cook alone.
His face was not the same face. It was thin and drawn and showed
strange lines worn by old hardships or sufferings. Hearn thought to
himself, "He will look just like that when he is dead." He went into
the kitchen to see him, and instantly the cook was all changed, young
and happy again. Never again did Hearn see that face of trouble; but
he knew the man wore it when he was alone.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Don't you think there is a kind of parable there for the race as a
whole? Have you ever met a man without wondering what shining sorrows
he hides from the world, what contrast between vision and
accomplishment torments him? Behind every smiling mask is there not
some cryptic grimace of pain? Henry Adams puts it tersely. He says
the human mind appears suddenly and inexplicably out of some unknown
and unimaginable void. It passes half its known life in the mental
chaos of sleep. Even when awake it is a victim of its own
ill-adjustment, of disease, of age, of external suggestion, of nature's
compulsions; it doubts its own sensations and trusts only in
instruments and averages. After sixty years or so of growing
astonishment the mind wakes to find itself looking blankly into the
void of death. And, as Adams says, that it should profess itself
pleased by this performance is all that the highest rules of good
breeding can ask. That the mind should actually be satisfied would
prove that it exists only as idiocy!</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
I hope that you will write to tell me along what curves your mind is
moving. For my own part I feel that we are on the verge of amazing
things. Long ago I fell back on books as the only permanent consolers.
They are the one stainless and unimpeachable achievement of the human
race. It saddens me to think that I shall have to die with thousands
of books unread that would have given me noble and unblemished
happiness. I will tell you a secret. I have never read King Lear, and
have purposely refrained from doing so. If I were ever very ill I
would only need to say to myself "You can't die yet, you haven't read
Lear." That would bring me round, I know it would.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
You see, books are the answer to all our perplexities! Henry Adams
grinds his teeth at his inability to understand the universe. The best
he can do is to suggest a "law of acceleration," which seems to mean
that Nature is hustling man along at an ever-increasing rate so that he
will either solve all her problems or else die of fever in the effort.
But Adams' candid portrait of a mind grappling helplessly with its
riddles is so triumphantly delightful that one forgets the futility of
the struggle in the accuracy of the picture. Man is unconquerable
because he can make even his helplessness so entertaining. His motto
seems to be "Even though He slay me, yet will I make fun of Him!"</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Yes, books are man's supreme triumph, for they gather up and transmit
all other triumphs. As Walter de la Mare writes, "How
uncomprehendingly must an angel from heaven smile on a poor human
sitting engrossed in a romance: angled upon his hams, motionless in his
chair, spectacles on nose, his two feet as close together as the flukes
of a merman's tail, only his strange eyes stirring in his time-worn
face."</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Well, I've been scribbling away all this time and haven't given you any
news whatever. Helen came back the other day from a visit to Boston
where she enjoyed herself greatly. To-night she has gone out to the
movies with a young protegee of ours, Miss Titania Chapman, an engaging
damsel whom we have taken in as an apprentice bookseller. It's a
quaint idea, done at the request of her father, Mr. Chapman, the
proprietor of Chapman's Daintybits which you see advertised everywhere.
He is a great booklover, and is very eager to have the zeal transmitted
to his daughter. So you can imagine my glee to have a neophyte of my
own to preach books at! Also it will enable me to get away from the
shop a little more. I had a telephone call from Philadelphia this
afternoon asking me to go over there on Monday evening to make an
estimate of the value of a private collection that is to be sold. I
was rather flattered because I can't imagine how they got hold of my
name.</p>
<P CLASS="letter">
Forgive this long, incoherent scrawl. How did you like Erewhon? It's
pretty near closing time and I must say grace over the day's accounts.
<br/><br/>
Yours ever,<br/>
ROGER MIFFLIN.<br/></p>
<br/><br/><br/>
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