If you don’t see an ad. for Boswell’s Decline and Fall you are pretty sure to see one for The Mill on the Floss by T. S. Eliot.) Also it is a humane trade which is not capable of being vulgarized beyond a certain point. The combines
can never squeeze the small independent bookseller out of existence as they have squeezed the grocer and the milkman. But
the hours of work are very long – I was only a part-time employee, but my employer put in a seventy-hour week, apart from
constant expeditions out of hours to buy books – and it is an unhealthy life. As a rule a bookshop is horribly cold in winter,
because if it is too warm the windows get misted over, and a bookseller lives on his windows. And books give off more and
nastier dust than any other class of objects yet invented, and the top of a book is the place where every bluebottle prefers
to die.
But the real reason why I should not like to be in the book trade for life is that while I was in it I lost my love of books.
A bookseller has to tell lies about books, and that gives him a distaste for them; still worse is the fact that he is constantly
dusting them and hauling them to and fro.
There was a time when I really did love books – loved the sight and smell and feel of them, I mean, at least if they were
fifty or more years old. Nothing pleased me quite so much as to buy a job lot of them for a shilling at a country auction.
There is a peculiar flavour about the battered unexpected books you pick up in that kind of collection: minor eighteenth-century poets, out-of-date gazetteers, odd volumes of forgotten novels,
bound numbers of ladies’ magazines of the sixties. For casual reading – in your bath, for instance, or late at night when
you are too tired to go to bed, or in the odd quarter of an hour before lunch – there is nothing to touch a back number of
the Girl’s Own Paper. But as soon as I went to work in the bookshop I stopped buying books. Seen in the mass, five or ten thousand at a time,
books were boring and even slightly sickening. Nowadays I do buy one occasionally, but only if it is a book that I want to
read and can’t borrow, and I never buy junk. The sweet smell of decaying paper appeals to me no longer. It is too closely
associated in my mind with paranoiac customers and dead bluebottles.
1936
Charles Dickens
I
Dickens is one of those writers who are well worth stealing. Even the burial of his body in Westminster Abbey was a species
of theft, if you come to think of it.
When Chesterton wrote his Introductions to the Everyman Edition of Dickens’s works, it seemed quite natural to him to credit
Dickens with his own highly individual brand of medievalism, and more recently a Marxist writer, Mr T. A. Jackson,1 has made spirited efforts to turn Dickens into a bloodthirsty revolutionary. The Marxist claims him as ‘almost’ a Marxist,
the Catholic claims him as ‘almost’ a Catholic, and both claim him as a champion of the proletariat (or ‘the poor’, as Chesterton
would have put it). On the other hand, Nadezhda Krupskaya, in her little book on Lenin, relates that towards the end of his
life Lenin went to see a dramatized version of The Cricket on the Hearth, and found Dickens’s ‘middle-class sentimentality’ so intolerable that he walked out in the middle of a scene.
Taking ‘middle-class’ to mean what Krupskaya might be expected to mean by it, this was probably a truer judgement than those of Chesterton and Jackson. But it is worth noticing
that the dislike of Dickens implied in this remark is something unusual. Plenty of people have found him unreadable, but very
few seem to have felt any hostility towards the general spirit of his work. Some years ago Mr Bechhofer Roberts published
a full-length attack on Dickens in the form of a novel (This Side Idolatry), but it was a merely personal attack, concerned for the most part with Dickens’s treatment of his wife. It dealt with incidents
which not one in a thousand of Dickens’s readers would ever hear about, and which no more invalidate his work than the second-best
bed invalidates Hamlet. All that the book really demonstrated was that a writer’s literary personality has little or nothing to do with his private
character. It is quite possible that in private life Dickens was just the kind of insensitive egoist that Mr Bechhofer Roberts
makes him appear. But in his published work there is implied a personality quite different from this, a personality which
has won him far more friends than enemies. It might well have been otherwise, for even if Dickens was a bourgeois, he was
certainly a subversive writer, a radical, one might truthfully say a rebel. Everyone who has read widely in his work has felt
this. Gissing, for instance, the best of the writers on Dickens, was anything but a radical himself, and he disapproved of
this strain in Dickens and wished it were not there, but it never occurred to him to deny it.
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