| | I'm at home for a few days, and in sitting up late with my parents around our table, the subject of Phrenology came up. If you don't know what that is, it's a rather interesting thing to study up on. It's based in Eugenics, and if you've taken Foundations of Science, you'll know what that is. :D
Anyway...I was explaining Phrenology to my mom, and I pulled out this old book we own in order to illustrate my point. The book is called Hill's Album of Biography and Art. Copyright 1881 at the earliest and the latest printing at the time 1888. Within we've discovered a newspaper clipping bearing the story of "Jack" Cooke, the Famous boy preacher. I looked him up tonight and the very few things I could find were NY Times articles mentioning him as being 15 in 1901, the clipping I have says he's 13, thus, I have in my possession a piece of newspaper from 1899. That makes me feel rather special. The book's title page reads thus,
"Hill's Album of Biography and Art: containing Portraits and Pen-Sketches of Many Persons who have been and are prominent ad Religionists, Military Heroes, Inventors, Financiers, Scientists, Explorers, Writers, Physicians, Actors, Lawyers, Musicians, Artists, Poets, Sovereigns, Humorists, Orators, and Statesmen: Together with chapters relating to History, Science, and Important Work in which prominent people have been engaged at various periods of time."
In the book I have found many fascinating things in addition to the above, there are also descriptions of many various domestic creatures, such as pigeons, chickens, and rabbits.
This book for me is a link to some many people in History, my predecessors, and when I open it and begin to read I am transported to far gone days of an excitement at new discoveries, I feel like Vesper Holly coming upon an ancient Aztec Treasure, or a miner, as Eureka I shout on turning a page and discovering a new variety of pigeon.
I love old books and remember with fond memories my large collection of Henty books from when I was young, many of which were first edition printings inscribed with declarations of ownership such as this "Steal not this book for fear of strife, the owner carries a big jack-knife." That one always makes me laugh, I believe it was a gift to a Jack in the early 1990's. I wonder who he was, I'm sure he was an interesting boy, to be reading Henty and carrying a Jack-knife. I wonder if he was a typical Henty boy, running off to the Pampas or the battlefields in India for do or die adventures, in which he rescued the captain's daughter, fell in love, found Christ, inherited a fortune, and was married on the last page of the book, before living happily ever after. Perchance he backpacked around "the continent" on a grand tour after leaving University and starting a career. Perchance he had a beautiful young sweetheart who waited for him, but in her innocence and saintliness died of consumption or brain fever. He kept a lock of her hair close to his heart, never to let it part from him. And he planted red roses on her grave and they climbed a trellis he mounted there. And her headstone bore a line from a Byron poem, "a mind at peace with all below, a heart whose love was innocent." I'd like to find her grave someday.
I was reading Dickinson today and found that she wrote a poem that sums up much of what I feel on the topic...
A precious, mouldering pleasure 't is To meet an antique book, In just the dress his century wore; A privilege, I think,
His venerable hand to take, And warming in our own, A passage back, or two, to make To times when he was young.
His quaint opinions to inspect, His knowledge to unfold On what concerns our mutual mind, The literature of old;
What interested scholars most, What competitions ran When Plato was a certainty. And Sophocles a man;
When Sappho was a living girl, And Beatrice wore The gown that Dante deified. Facts, centuries before,
He traverses familiar, As one should come to town And tell you all your dreams were true; He lived where dreams were sown.
His presence is enchantment, You beg him not to go; Old volumes shake their vellum heads And tantalize, just so. |
| | Posted 11/23/2007 4:43 AM - 27 Views - 0 eProps - 0 comments
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