Saturday, March 07, 2009

Browsing through the magical net

Arthur Conan Doyle, in one of his non-Holmes books, “Through the magic door” (actually a series of essays on the books he had read) begins his first chapter thus:

I care not how humble your bookshelf may be, nor how lowly the room which it adorns. Close the door of that room behind you, shut off with it all the cares of the outer world, plunge back into the soothing company of the great dead, and then you are through the magic portal into that fair land whither worry and vexation can follow you no more. You have left all that is vulgar and all that is sordid behind you. There stand your noble, silent comrades, waiting in their ranks. Pass your eye down their files. Choose your man. And then you have but to hold up your hand to him and away you go together into dreamland. Surely there would be something eerie about a line of books were it not that familiarity has deadened our sense of it. Each is a mummified soul embalmed in cere-cloth and natron of leather and printer's ink. Each cover of a true book enfolds the concentrated essence of a man. The personalities of the writers have faded into the thinnest shadows, as their bodies into impalpable dust, yet here are their very spirits at your command.

The only eerie thought that crossed my mind when I read those lines was that I was not doing so out of a book. I was reading it online here.

As if he had anticipated this treacherous act of mine, Conan Doyle writes a little later in the same chapter:

Reading is made too easy nowadays, with cheap paper editions and free libraries. A man does not appreciate at its full worth the thing that comes to him without effort. Who now ever gets the thrill which Carlyle felt when he hurried home with the six volumes of Gibbon's "History" under his arm, his mind just starving for want of food, to devour them at the rate of one a day? A book should be your very own before you can really get the taste of it, and unless you have worked for it, you will never have the true inward pride of possession.

I wonder what the atonement for my sin of easy browsing is. I did not even have to walk to a free library….

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Hello all
http://www.horsemanssource.com/ - clomid price
Of course, there are certain side effects arriving with the preference of Clomid as other drugs out there.
[url=http://www.horsemanssource.com/]buy clomid online[/url]

If you unfortunately have any of these conditions mentioned above, you may need undergoing a special monitoring or lowering the dose.
clomid infertility
Generally, Clomid is taken in five days cycle.