[Note: This is Chapter One of Christopher Morley's The Haunted Bookshop.]
If you are ever in Brooklyn, that borough of superb sunsets and
magnificent vistas of husband-propelled baby-carriages, it is to be
hoped you may chance upon a quiet by-street where there is a very
remarkable bookshop.
This bookshop, which does business under the unusual name "Parnassus
at Home," is housed in one of the comfortable old brown-stone
dwellings which have been the joy of several generations of plumbers
and cockroaches. The owner of the business has been at pains to
remodel the house to make it a more suitable shrine for his trade,
which deals entirely in second-hand volumes. There is no second-hand
bookshop in the world more worthy of respect.
It was about six o'clock of a cold November evening, with gusts of
rain splattering upon the pavement, when a young man proceeded
uncertainly along Gissing Street, stopping now and then to look at
shop windows as though doubtful of his way. At the warm and shining
face of a French rotisserie he halted to compare the number
enamelled on the transom with a memorandum in his hand. Then he
pushed on for a few minutes, at last reaching the address he sought.
Over the entrance his eye was caught by the sign:
PARNASSUS AT HOME
R. AND H. MIFFLIN
BOOKLOVERS WELCOME!
THIS SHOP IS HAUNTED
He stumbled down the three steps that led into the dwelling of the
muses, lowered his overcoat collar, and looked about.
It was very different from such bookstores as he had been accustomed
to patronize. Two stories of the old house had been thrown into one:
the lower space was divided into little alcoves; above, a gallery
ran round the wall, which carried books to the ceiling. The air was
heavy with the delightful fragrance of mellowed paper and leather
surcharged with a strong bouquet of tobacco. In front of him he
found a large placard in a frame:
THIS
SHOP IS HAUNTED by the ghosts
Of
all great literature, in hosts;
We
sell no fakes or trashes.
Lovers of books are welcome here,
No
clerks will babble in your ear,
Please smoke--but don't drop ashes!
----
Browse as long as you like.
Prices of all books plainly marked.
If
you want to ask questions, you'll find the proprietor
where the tobacco smoke is thickest.
We
pay cash for books.
We
have what you want, though you may not know you want it.
Malnutrition of the reading faculty is a serious thing.
Let
us prescribe for you.
By
R. & H. MIFFLIN,
Proprs.
The shop had a warm and comfortable obscurity, a kind of drowsy
dusk, stabbed here and there by bright cones of yellow light from
green-shaded electrics. There was an all-pervasive drift of tobacco
smoke, which eddied and fumed under the glass lamp shades. Passing
down a narrow aisle between the alcoves the visitor noticed that
some of the compartments were wholly in darkness; in others where
lamps were glowing he could see a table and chairs. In one corner,
under a sign lettered ESSAYS, an elderly gentleman was reading, with
a face of fanatical ecstasy illumined by the sharp glare of
electricity; but there was no wreath of smoke about him so the
newcomer concluded he was not the proprietor.
As the young man approached the back of the shop the general effect
became more and more fantastic. On some skylight far overhead he
could hear the rain drumming; but otherwise the place was completely
silent, peopled only (so it seemed) by the gurgitating whorls of
smoke and the bright profile of the essay reader. It seemed like a
secret fane, some shrine of curious rites, and the young man's
throat was tightened by a stricture which was half agitation and
half tobacco. Towering above him into the gloom were shelves and
shelves of books, darkling toward the roof. He saw a table with a
cylinder of brown paper and twine, evidently where purchases might
be wrapped; but there was no sign of an attendant.
"This place may indeed be haunted," he thought, "perhaps by the
delighted soul of Sir Walter Raleigh, patron of the weed, but
seemingly not by the proprietors."
His eyes, searching the blue and vaporous vistas of the shop, were
caught by a circle of brightness that shone with a curious egg-like
lustre. It was round and white, gleaming in the sheen of a hanging
light, a bright island in a surf of tobacco smoke. He came more
close, and found it was a bald head.
This head (he then saw) surmounted a small, sharp-eyed man who sat
tilted back in a swivel chair, in a corner which seemed the nerve
centre of the establishment. The large pigeon-holed desk in front of
him was piled high with volumes of all sorts, with tins of tobacco
and newspaper clippings and letters. An antiquated typewriter,
looking something like a harpsichord, was half-buried in sheets of
manuscript. The little bald-headed man was smoking a corn-cob pipe
and reading a cook-book.
"I beg your pardon," said the caller, pleasantly; "is this the
proprietor?"
Mr. Roger Mifflin, the proprietor of "Parnassus at Home," looked up,
and the visitor saw that he had keen blue eyes, a short red beard,
and a convincing air of competent originality.
"It is," said Mr. Mifflin. "Anything I can do for you?"
"My name is Aubrey Gilbert," said the young man. "I am representing
the Grey-Matter Advertising Agency. I want to discuss with you the
advisability of your letting us handle your advertising account,
prepare snappy copy for you, and place it in large circulation
mediums. Now the war's over, you ought to prepare some constructive
campaign for bigger business."
The bookseller's face beamed. He put down his cook-book, blew an
expanding gust of smoke, and looked up brightly.
"My dear chap," he said, "I don't do any advertising."
"Impossible!" cried the other, aghast as at some gratuitous
indecency.
"Not in the sense you mean. Such advertising as benefits me most is
done for me by the snappiest copywriters in the business."
"I suppose you refer to Whitewash and Gilt?" said Mr. Gilbert
wistfully.
"Not at all. The people who are doing my advertising are Stevenson,
Browning, Conrad and Company."
"Dear me," said the Grey-Matter solicitor. "I don't know that agency
at all. Still, I doubt if their copy has more pep than ours."
"I don't think you get me. I mean that my advertising is done by the
books I sell. If I sell a man a book by Stevenson or Conrad, a book
that delights or terrifies him, that man and that book become my
living advertisements."
"But that word-of-mouth advertising is exploded," said Gilbert. "You
can't get Distribution that way. You've got to keep your trademark
before the public."
"By the bones of Tauchnitz!" cried Mifflin. "Look here, you wouldn't
go to a doctor, a medical specialist, and tell him he ought to
advertise in papers and magazines? A doctor is advertised by the
bodies he cures. My business is advertised by the minds I stimulate.
And let me tell you that the book business is different from other
trades. People don't know they want books. I can see just by looking
at you that your mind is ill for lack of books but you are
blissfully unaware of it! People don't go to a bookseller until some
serious mental accident or disease makes them aware of their danger.
Then they come here. For me to advertise would be about as useful as
telling people who feel perfectly well that they ought to go to the
doctor. Do you know why people are reading more books now than ever
before? Because the terrific catastrophe of the war has made them
realize that their minds are ill. The world was suffering from all
sorts of mental fevers and aches and disorders, and never knew it.
Now our mental pangs are only too manifest. We are all reading,
hungrily, hastily, trying to find out—after the trouble is over—what
was the matter with our minds."
The little bookseller was standing up now, and his visitor watched
him with mingled amusement and alarm.
"You know," said Mifflin, "I am interested that you should have
thought it worth while to come in here. It reinforces my conviction
of the amazing future ahead of the book business. But I tell you
that future lies not merely in systematizing it as a trade. It lies
in dignifying it as a profession. It is small use to jeer at the
public for craving shoddy books, quack books, untrue books.
Physician, cure thyself! Let the bookseller learn to know and revere
good books, he will teach the customer. The hunger for good books is
more general and more insistent than you would dream. But it is
still in a way subconscious. People need books, but they don't know
they need them. Generally they are not aware that the books they
need are in existence."
"Why wouldn't advertising be the way to let them know?" asked the
young man, rather acutely.
"My dear chap, I understand the value of advertising. But in my own
case it would be futile. I am not a dealer in merchandise but a
specialist in adjusting the book to the human need. Between
ourselves, there is no such thing, abstractly, as a 'good' book. A
book is 'good' only when it meets some human hunger or refutes some
human error. A book that is good for me would very likely be punk
for you. My pleasure is to prescribe books for such patients as drop
in here and are willing to tell me their symptoms. Some people have
let their reading faculties decay so that all I can do is hold a
post mortem on them. But most are still open to treatment. There is
no one so grateful as the man to whom you have given just the book
his soul needed and he never knew it. No advertisement on earth is
as potent as a grateful customer.
"I will tell you another reason why I don't advertise," he
continued. "In these days when everyone keeps his trademark before
the public, as you call it, not to advertise is the most original
and startling thing one can do to attract attention. It was the fact
that I do NOT advertise that drew you here. And everyone who comes
here thinks he has discovered the place himself. He goes and tells
his friends about the book asylum run by a crank and a lunatic, and
they come here in turn to see what it is like."
"I should like to come here again myself and browse about," said the
advertising agent. "I should like to have you prescribe for me."
"The first thing needed is to acquire a sense of pity. The world has
been printing books for 450 years, and yet gunpowder still has a
wider circulation. Never mind! Printer's ink is the greater
explosive: it will win. Yes, I have a few of the good books here.
There are only about 30,000 really important books in the world. I
suppose about 5,000 of them were written in the English language,
and 5,000 more have been translated."
"You are open in the evenings?"
"Until ten o'clock. A great many of my best customers are those who
are at work all day and can only visit bookshops at night. The real
book-lovers, you know, are generally among the humbler classes. A
man who is impassioned with books has little time or patience to
grow rich by concocting schemes for cozening his fellows."
The little bookseller's bald pate shone in the light of the bulb
hanging over the wrapping table. His eyes were bright and earnest,
his short red beard bristled like wire. He wore a ragged brown
Norfolk jacket from which two buttons were missing.
A bit of a fanatic himself, thought the customer, but a very
entertaining one. "Well, sir," he said, "I am ever so grateful to
you. I'll come again. Good-night." And he started down the aisle for
the door.
As he neared the front of the shop, Mr. Mifflin switched on a
cluster of lights that hung high up, and the young man found himself
beside a large bulletin board covered with clippings, announcements,
circulars, and little notices written on cards in a small neat
script. The following caught his eye:
RX
If your mind needs phosphorus, try "Trivia," by Logan Pearsall
Smith.
If your mind needs a whiff of strong air, blue and cleansing, from
hilltops and primrose valleys, try "The Story of My Heart," by
Richard Jefferies.
If your mind needs a tonic of iron and wine, and a thorough
rough-and-tumbling, try Samuel Butler's "Notebooks" or "The Man Who
Was Thursday," by Chesterton.
If you need "all manner of Irish," and a relapse into irresponsible
freakishness, try "The Demi-Gods," by James Stephens. It is a better
book than one deserves or expects.
It's a good thing to turn your mind upside down now and then, like
an hour-glass, to let the particles run the other way.
One who loves the English tongue can have a lot of fun with a Latin
dictionary.
ROGER MIFFLIN.
Human beings pay very little attention to what is told them unless
they know something about it already. The young man had heard of
none of these books prescribed by the practitioner of bibliotherapy.
He was about to open the door when Mifflin appeared at his side.
"Look here," he said, with a quaint touch of embarrassment. "I was
very much interested by our talk. I'm all alone this evening—my wife
is away on a holiday. Won't you stay and have supper with me? I was
just looking up some new recipes when you came in."
The other was equally surprised and pleased by this unusual
invitation.
"Why—that's very good of you," he said. "Are you sure I won't be
intruding?"
"Not at all!" cried the bookseller. "I detest eating alone: I was
hoping someone would drop in. I always try to have a guest for
supper when my wife is away. I have to stay at home, you see, to
keep an eye on the shop. We have no servant, and I do the cooking
myself. It's great fun. Now you light your pipe and make yourself
comfortable for a few minutes while I get things ready. Suppose you
come back to my den."
On a table of books at the front of the shop Mifflin laid a large
card lettered:
PROPRIETOR AT SUPPER
IF YOU WANT ANYTHING
RING THIS BELL
Beside the card he placed a large old-fashioned dinner bell, and
then led the way to the rear of the shop.
Behind the little office in which this unusual merchant had been
studying his cook-book a narrow stairway rose on each side, running
up to the gallery. Behind these stairs a short flight of steps led
to the domestic recesses. The visitor found himself ushered into a
small room on the left, where a grate of coals glowed under a dingy
mantelpiece of yellowish marble. On the mantel stood a row of
blackened corn-cob pipes and a canister of tobacco. Above was a
startling canvas in emphatic oils, representing a large blue wagon
drawn by a stout white animal—evidently a horse. A background of
lush scenery enhanced the forceful technique of the limner. The
walls were stuffed with books. Two shabby, comfortable chairs were
drawn up to the iron fender, and a mustard-coloured terrier was
lying so close to the glow that a smell of singed hair was sensible.
"There," said the host; "this is my cabinet, my chapel of ease. Take
off your coat and sit down."
"Really," began Gilbert, "I'm afraid this is——"
"Nonsense! Now you sit down and commend your soul to Providence and
the kitchen stove. I'll bustle round and get supper." Gilbert pulled
out his pipe, and with a sense of elation prepared to enjoy an
unusual evening. He was a young man of agreeable parts, amiable and
sensitive. He knew his disadvantages in literary conversation, for
he had gone to an excellent college where glee clubs and theatricals
had left him little time for reading. But still he was a lover of
good books, though he knew them chiefly by hearsay. He was
twenty-five years old, employed as a copywriter by the Grey-Matter
Advertising Agency.
The little room in which he found himself was plainly the
bookseller's sanctum, and contained his own private library. Gilbert
browsed along the shelves curiously. The volumes were mostly shabby
and bruised; they had evidently been picked up one by one in the
humble mangers of the second-hand vendor. They all showed marks of
use and meditation.
Mr. Gilbert had the earnest mania for self-improvement which has
blighted the lives of so many young men—a passion which, however, is
commendable in those who feel themselves handicapped by a college
career and a jewelled fraternity emblem. It suddenly struck him that
it would be valuable to make a list of some of the titles in
Mifflin's collection, as a suggestion for his own reading. He took
out a memorandum book and began jotting down the books that
intrigued him:
The
Works of Francis Thompson (3 vols.)
Social History of Smoking: Apperson
The
Path to Rome: Hilaire
Belloc
The
Book of Tea: Kakuzo
Happy Thoughts: F. C.
Burnand
Dr.
Johnson's Prayers and Meditations
Margaret Ogilvy: J. M.
Barrie
Confessions of a Thug: Taylor
General Catalogue of the Oxford University Press
The
Morning's War: C. E.
Montague
The
Spirit of Man: edited
by Robert Bridges
The
Romany Rye: Borrow
Poems: Emily Dickinson
Poems: George Herbert
The
House of Cobwebs: George Gissing
So far had he got, and was beginning to say to himself that in the
interests of Advertising (who is a jealous mistress) he had best
call a halt, when his host entered the room, his small face eager,
his eyes blue points of light.
"Come, Mr. Aubrey Gilbert!" he cried. "The meal is set. You want to
wash your hands? Make haste then, this way: the eggs are hot and
waiting."
The dining-room into which the guest was conducted betrayed a
feminine touch not visible in the smoke-dimmed quarters of shop and
cabinet. At the windows were curtains of laughing chintz and pots of
pink geranium. The table, under a drop-light in a flame-coloured
silk screen, was brightly set with silver and blue china. In a
cut-glass decanter sparkled a ruddy brown wine. The edged tool of
Advertising felt his spirits undergo an unmistakable upward
pressure.
"Sit down, sir," said Mifflin, lifting the roof of a platter. "These
are eggs Samuel Butler, an invention of my own, the apotheosis of
hen fruit."
Gilbert greeted the invention with applause. An Egg Samuel Butler,
for the notebook of housewives, may be summarized as a pyramid,
based upon toast, whereof the chief masonries are a flake of bacon,
an egg poached to firmness, a wreath of mushrooms, a cap-sheaf of
red peppers; the whole dribbled with a warm pink sauce of which the
inventor retains the secret. To this the bookseller chef added fried
potatoes from another dish, and poured for his guest a glass of
wine.
"This is California catawba," said Mifflin, "in which the grape and
the sunshine very pleasantly (and cheaply) fulfil their allotted
destiny. I pledge you prosperity to the black art of Advertising!"
The psychology of the art and mystery of Advertising rests upon
tact, an instinctive perception of the tone and accent which will be
en rapport with the mood of the hearer. Mr. Gilbert was aware of
this, and felt that quite possibly his host was prouder of his
whimsical avocation as gourmet than of his sacred profession as a
bookman.
"Is it possible, sir," he began, in lucid Johnsonian, "that you can
concoct so delicious an entree in so few minutes? You are not
hoaxing me? There is no secret passage between Gissing Street and
the laboratories of the Ritz?"
"Ah, you should taste Mrs. Mifflin's cooking!" said the bookseller.
"I am only an amateur, who dabbles in the craft during her absence.
She is on a visit to her cousin in Boston. She becomes, quite
justifiably, weary of the tobacco of this establishment, and once or
twice a year it does her good to breathe the pure serene of Beacon
Hill. During her absence it is my privilege to inquire into the
ritual of housekeeping. I find it very sedative after the incessant
excitement and speculation of the shop."
"I should have thought," said Gilbert, "that life in a bookshop
would be delightfully tranquil."
"Far from it. Living in a bookshop is like living in a warehouse of
explosives. Those shelves are ranked with the most furious
combustibles in the world—the brains of men. I can spend a rainy
afternoon reading, and my mind works itself up to such a passion and
anxiety over mortal problems as almost unmans me. It is terribly
nerve-racking. Surround a man with Carlyle, Emerson, Thoreau,
Chesterton, Shaw, Nietzsche, and George Ade—would you wonder at his
getting excited? What would happen to a cat if she had to live in a
room tapestried with catnip? She would go crazy!"
"Truly, I had never thought of that phase of bookselling," said the
young man. "How is it, though, that libraries are shrines of such
austere calm? If books are as provocative as you suggest, one would
expect every librarian to utter the shrill screams of a hierophant,
to clash ecstatic castanets in his silent alcoves!"
"Ah, my boy, you forget the card index! Librarians invented that
soothing device for the febrifuge of their souls, just as I fall
back upon the rites of the kitchen. Librarians would all go mad,
those capable of concentrated thought, if they did not have the cool
and healing card index as medicament! Some more of the eggs?"
"Thank you," said Gilbert. "Who was the butler whose name was
associated with the dish?"
"What?" cried Mifflin, in agitation, "you have not heard of Samuel
Butler, the author of The Way of All Flesh? My dear young man,
whoever permits himself to die before he has read that book, and
also Erewhon, has deliberately forfeited his chances of paradise.
For paradise in the world to come is uncertain, but there is indeed
a heaven on this earth, a heaven which we inhabit when we read a
good book. Pour yourself another glass of wine, and permit me——"
(Here followed an enthusiastic development of the perverse
philosophy of Samuel Butler, which, in deference to my readers, I
omit. Mr. Gilbert took notes of the conversation in his pocketbook,
and I am pleased to say that his heart was moved to a realization of
his iniquity, for he was observed at the Public Library a few days
later asking for a copy of The Way of All Flesh. After inquiring at
four libraries, and finding all copies of the book in circulation,
he was compelled to buy one. He never regretted doing so.)
"But I am forgetting my duties as host," said Mifflin. "Our dessert
consists of apple sauce, gingerbread, and coffee." He rapidly
cleared the empty dishes from the table and brought on the second
course.
"I have been noticing the warning over the sideboard," said Gilbert.
"I hope you will let me help you this evening?" He pointed to a card
hanging near the kitchen door. It read:
IMMEDIATELY AFTER MEALS
IT SAVES TROUBLE
"I used to regard dish-washing merely as an ignoble chore, a kind of
hateful discipline which had to be undergone with knitted brow and
brazen fortitude. When my wife went away the first time, I erected a
reading stand and an electric light over the sink, and used to read
while my hands went automatically through base gestures of
purification. I made the great spirits of literature partners of my
sorrow, and learned by heart a good deal of Paradise Lost and of
Walt Mason, while I soused and wallowed among pots and pans. I used
to comfort myself with two lines of Keats:
Of pure ablution round earth's human shores——'
"I broke a good many plates while I was pondering over the matter.
Then it occurred to me that here was just the relaxation I needed. I
had been worrying over the mental strain of being surrounded all day
long by vociferous books, crying out at me their conflicting views
as to the glories and agonies of life. Why not make dish-washing my
balm and poultice?
"When one views a stubborn fact from a new angle, it is amazing how
all its contours and edges change shape! Immediately my dishpan
began to glow with a kind of philosophic halo! The warm, soapy water
became a sovereign medicine to retract hot blood from the head; the
homely act of washing and drying cups and saucers became a symbol of
the order and cleanliness that man imposes on the unruly world about
him. I tore down my book rack and reading lamp from over the sink.
"Mr. Gilbert," he went on, "do not laugh at me when I tell you that
I have evolved a whole kitchen philosophy of my own. I find the
kitchen the shrine of our civilization, the focus of all that is
comely in life. The ruddy shine of the stove is as beautiful as any
sunset. A well-polished jug or spoon is as fair, as complete and
beautiful, as any sonnet. The dish mop, properly rinsed and wrung
and hung outside the back door to dry, is a whole sermon in itself.
The stars never look so bright as they do from the kitchen door
after the ice-box pan is emptied and the whole place is 'redd up,'
as the Scotch say."
"A very delightful philosophy indeed," said Gilbert. "And now that
we have finished our meal, I insist upon your letting me give you a
hand with the washing up. I am eager to test this dish-pantheism of
yours!"
"My dear fellow," said Mifflin, laying a restraining hand on his
impetuous guest, "it is a poor philosophy that will not abide denial
now and then. No, no—I did not ask you to spend the evening with me
to wash dishes." And he led the way back to his sitting room.
"When I saw you come in," said Mifflin, "I was afraid you might be a
newspaper man, looking for an interview. A young journalist came to
see us once, with very unhappy results. He wheedled himself into
Mrs. Mifflin's good graces, and ended by putting us both into a
book, called Parnassus on Wheels, which has been rather a trial to
me. In that book he attributes to me a number of shallow and sugary
observations upon bookselling that have been an annoyance to the
trade. I am happy to say, though, that his book had only a trifling
sale."
"I have never heard of it," said Gilbert.
"If you are really interested in bookselling you should come here
some evening to a meeting of the Corn Cob Club. Once a month a
number of booksellers gather here and we discuss matters of bookish
concern over corn-cobs and cider. We have all sorts and conditions
of booksellers: one is a fanatic on the subject of libraries. He
thinks that every public library should be dynamited. Another thinks
that moving pictures will destroy the book trade. What rot! Surely
everything that arouses people's minds, that makes them alert and
questioning, increases their appetite for books."
"The life of a bookseller is very demoralizing to the intellect," he
went on after a pause. "He is surrounded by innumerable books; he
cannot possibly read them all; he dips into one and picks up a scrap
from another. His mind gradually fills itself with miscellaneous
flotsam, with superficial opinions, with a thousand half-knowledges.
Almost unconsciously he begins to rate literature according to what
people ask for. He begins to wonder whether Ralph Waldo Trine isn't
really greater than Ralph Waldo Emerson, whether J. M. Chapple isn't
as big a man as J. M. Barrie. That way lies intellectual suicide.
"One thing, however, you must grant the good bookseller. He is
tolerant. He is patient of all ideas and theories. Surrounded,
engulfed by the torrent of men's words, he is willing to listen to
them all. Even to the publisher's salesman he turns an indulgent
ear. He is willing to be humbugged for the weal of humanity. He
hopes unceasingly for good books to be born.
"My business, you see, is different from most. I only deal in
second-hand books; I only buy books that I consider have some honest
reason for existence. In so far as human judgment can discern, I try
to keep trash out of my shelves. A doctor doesn't traffic in quack
remedies. I don't traffic in bogus books.
"A comical thing happened the other day. There is a certain wealthy
man, a Mr. Chapman, who has long frequented this shop——"
"I wonder if that could be Mr. Chapman of the Chapman Daintybits
Company?" said Gilbert, feeling his feet touch familiar soil.
"The same, I believe," said Mifflin. "Do you know him?"
"Ah," cried the young man with reverence. "There is a man who can
tell you the virtues of advertising. If he is interested in books,
it is advertising that made it possible. We handle all his copy—I've
written a lot of it myself. We have made the Chapman prunes a staple
of civilization and culture. I myself devised that slogan 'We preen
ourselves on our prunes' which you see in every big magazine.
Chapman prunes are known the world over. The Mikado eats them once a
week. The Pope eats them. Why, we have just heard that thirteen
cases of them are to be put on board the George Washington for the
President's voyage to the peace Conference. The Czecho-Slovak armies
were fed largely on prunes. It is our conviction in the office that
our campaign for the Chapman prunes did much to win the war."
"I read in an ad the other day—perhaps you wrote that, too?" said
the bookseller, "that the Elgin watch had won the war. However, Mr.
Chapman has long been one of my best customers. He heard about the
Corn Cob Club, and though of course he is not a bookseller he begged
to come to our meetings. We were glad to have him do so, and he has
entered into our discussions with great zeal. Often he has offered
many a shrewd comment. He has grown so enthusiastic about the
bookseller's way of life that the other day he wrote to me about his
daughter (he is a widower). She has been attending a fashionable
girls' school where, he says, they have filled her head with absurd,
wasteful, snobbish notions. He says she has no more idea of the
usefulness and beauty of life than a Pomeranian dog. Instead of
sending her to college, he has asked me if Mrs. Mifflin and I will
take her in here to learn to sell books. He wants her to think she
is earning her keep, and is going to pay me privately for the
privilege of having her live here. He thinks that being surrounded
by books will put some sense in her head. I am rather nervous about
the experiment, but it is a compliment to the shop, isn't it?"
"Ye gods," cried Gilbert, "what advertising copy that would make!"
At this point the bell in the shop rang, and Mifflin jumped up.
"This part of the evening is often rather busy," he said. "I'm
afraid I'll have to go down on the floor. Some of my habitues rather
expect me to be on hand to gossip about books."
"I can't tell you how much I've enjoyed myself," said Gilbert. "I'm
going to come again and study your shelves."
"Well, keep it dark about the young lady," said the bookseller. "I
don't want all you young blades dropping in here to unsettle her
mind. If she falls in love with anybody in this shop, it'll have to
be Joseph Conrad or John Keats!"
As he passed out, Gilbert saw Roger Mifflin engaged in argument with
a bearded man who looked like a college professor. "Carlyle's Oliver
Cromwell?" he was saying. "Yes, indeed! Right over here! Hullo,
that's odd! It WAS here."
Disclosure: We are independently owned and the opinions expressed here are our own. We do have advertisements with links to other sites on our pages, and may receive compensation when you click on one of those links and/or purchase something from one of those sites.
Copyright © D. J. McAdam· All Rights Reserved