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mercredi 31 décembre 2014
mardi 30 décembre 2014
Field and Hedgerow, 1888
Richard JEFFERIES (1848-1887)
A July fly went sideways over the long grass. His
wings made a burr about him like a net, beating so fast they wrapped him round
with a cloud. Every now and then, as he flew over the trees of grass, a taller
one than common stopped him, and there he clung, and then the eye had time to
see the scarlet spots—the loveliest colour—on his wings. The wind swung the
bennet and loosened his hold, and away he went again over the grasses, and not
one jot did he care if they were Poa or Festuca, or Bromus
or Hordeum, or any other name. Names were nothing to him; all he had to
do was to whirl his scarlet spots about in the brilliant sun, rest when he
liked, and go on again. I wonder whether it is a joy to have bright scarlet
spots, and to be clad in the purple and gold of life; is the colour felt by the
creature that wears it? The rose, restful of a dewy morn before the sunbeams
have topped the garden wall, must feel a joy in its own fragrance, and know the
exquisite hue of its stained petals. The rose sleeps in its beauty.
The fly whirls his scarlet-spotted wings about and
splashes himself with sunlight, like the children on the sands. He thinks not
of the grass and sun; he does not heed them at all—and that is why he is so
happy— any more than the barefoot children ask why the sea is there, or why it
does not quite dry up when it ebbs. He is unconscious; he lives without
thinking about living; and if the sunshine were a hundred hours long, still it
would not be long enough. No, never enough of sun and sliding shadows that come
like a hand over the table to lovingly reach our shoulder, never enough of the
grass that smells sweet as a flower, not if we could live years and years equal
in number to the tides that have ebbed and flowed counting backwards four years
to every day and night, backward still till we found out which came first, the
night or the day. The scarlet-dotted fly knows nothing of the names of the
grasses that grow here where the sward nears the sea, and thinking of him I
have decided not to wilfully seek to learn any more of their names either. My
big grass book I have left at home, and the dust is settling on the gold of the
binding. I have picked a handful this morning of which I know nothing. I will
sit here on the turf and the scarlet-dotted flies shall pass over me, as if I
too were but a grass. I will not think, I will be unconscious, I will live.
Listen! that was the low sound of a summer wavelet
striking the uncovered rock over there beneath in the green sea. All things
that are beautiful are found by chance, like everything that is good. Here by
me is a praying-rug, just wide enough to kneel on, of the richest gold inwoven
with crimson. All the Sultans of the East never had such beauty as that to
kneel on. It is, indeed, too beautiful to kneel on, for the life in these
golden flowers must not be broken down even for that purpose. They must not be
defaced, not a stem bent; it is more reverent not to kneel on them, for this
carpet prays itself I will sit by it and let it pray for me. It is so common,
the bird's-foot lotus, it grows everywhere; yet if I purposely searched for
days I should not have found a plot like this, so rich, so golden, so glowing
with sunshine. You might pass by it in one stride, yet it is worthy to be
thought of for a week and remembered for a year. Slender grasses, branched
round about with slenderer boughs, each tipped with pollen and rising in tiers
cone-shaped—too delicate to grow tall—cluster at the base of the mound. They
dare not grow tall or the wind would snap them. A great grass, stout and thick,
rises three feet by the hedge, with a head another foot nearly, very green and
strong and bold, lifting itself right up to you; you must say, 'What a fine
grass!' Grasses whose awns succeed each other alternately; grasses whose tops
seem flattened; others drooping over the shorter blades beneath; some that you
can only find by parting the heavier growth around them; hundreds and hundreds,
thousands and thousands. The kingly poppies on the dry summit of the mound take
no heed of these, the populace, their subjects so numerous they cannot be
numbered. A barren race they are, the proud poppies, lords of the July field,
taking no deep root, but raising up a brilliant blazon of scarlet heraldry out
of nothing. They are useless, they are bitter, they are allied to sleep and
poison and everlasting night; yet they are forgiven because they are not
commonplace. Nothing, no abundance of them, can ever make the poppies
commonplace. There is genius in them, the genius of colour, and they are saved.
Even when they take the room of the corn we must admire them. The mighty
multitude of nations, the millions and millions of the grass stretching away in
intertangled ranks, through pasture and mead from shore to shore, have no
kinship with these their lords. The ruler is always a foreigner. From England
to China the native born is no king; the poppies are the Normans of the field.
One of these on the mound is very beautiful, a width of petal, a clear
silkiness of colour three shades higher than the rest—it is almost dark with
scarlet. I wish I could do something more than gaze at all this scarlet and
gold and crimson and green, something more than see it, not exactly to drink it
or inhale it, but in some way to make it part of me that I might live it.
The July grasses must be looked for in corners and
out-of-the-way places, and not in the broad acres—the scythe has taken them
there. By the wayside on the banks of the lane, near the gateway—look, too, in
uninteresting places behind incomplete buildings on the mounds cast up from
abandoned foundations where speculation has been and gone. There weeds that
would not have found resting-place elsewhere grow unchecked, and uncommon
species and unusually large growths appear. Like everything else that is looked
for, they are found under unlikely conditions. At the back of ponds, just
inside the enclosure of woods, angles of corn-fields, old quarries, that is
where to find grasses, or by the sea in the brackish marsh. Some of the finest
of them grow by the mere road-side; you may look for others up the lanes in the
deep ruts, look too inside the hollow trees by the stream. In a morning you may
easily garner together a great sheaf of this harvest. Cut the larger stems
aslant, like the reeds imitated deep in old green glass. You must consider as
you gather them the height and slenderness of the stems, the droop and degree
of curve, the shape and colour of the panicle, the dusting of the pollen, the
motion and sway in the wind. The sheaf you may take home with you, but the wind
that was among it stays without.
Book-Buying
by Augustine Birrell (1850-1933)
The most distinguished of living Englishmen, who,
great as he is in many directions, is perhaps inherently more a man of letters
than anything else, has been overheard mournfully to declare that there were
more booksellers' shops in his native town sixty years ago, when he was a boy
in it, than are to-day to be found within its boundaries. And yet the place
"all unabashed" now boasts its bookless self a city!
Mr. Gladstone was, of course, referring to second-hand
bookshops. Neither he nor any other sensible man puts himself out about new
books. When a new book is published, read an old one, was the advice of a
sound though surly critic. It is one of the boasts of letters to have glorified
the term "second-hand," which other crafts have "soiled to all
ignoble use." But why it has been able to do this is obvious. All the
best books are necessarily second-hand. The writers of to-day need not
grumble. Let them "bide a wee." If their books are worth anything,
they too one day will be second-hand. If their books are not worth anything,
there are ancient trades still in full operation amongst us--the pastry cooks
and the trunk makers--who must have paper.
But is there any substance in the plaint that nobody
now buys books, meaning thereby second-hand books? The late Mark Pattison,
who had sixteen thousand volumes, and whose lightest word has therefore weight,
once stated that he had been informed, and verily believed, that there were men
of his own University of Oxford who, being in uncontrolled possession of annual
incomes of not less than £500, thought they were doing the thing handsomely if
they expended £50 a year upon their libraries. But we are not bound to believe
this unless we like. There was a touch of morosity about the late Rector of
Lincoln which led him to take gloomy views of men, particularly Oxford men.
No doubt arguments a priori may readily
be found to support the contention that the habit of book-buying is on the
decline. I confess to knowing one or two men, not Oxford men either, but
Cambridge men (and the passion of Cambridge for literature is a byword), who,
on the plea of being pressed with business, or because they were going to a
funeral, have passed a bookshop in a strange town without so much as stepping
inside "just to see whether the fellow had anything." But painful as facts
of this sort necessarily are, any damaging inference we might
feel disposed to draw from them is dispelled by a comparison of price lists.
Compare a bookseller's catalogue of 1862 with one of the present year, and your
pessimism is washed away by the tears which unrestrainedly flow as you see what
good fortune you have lost. A young book-buyer might well turn out upon
Primrose Hill and bemoan his youth, after comparing old catalogues with new.
Nothing but American competition, grumble some old
stagers.
Well! why not? This new battle for the books is a free
fight, not a private one, and Columbia has "joined in." Lower prices
are not to be looked for. The book-buyer of 1900 will be glad to buy at to-day's
prices. I take pleasure in thinking he will not be able to do so. Good
finds grow scarcer and scarcer. True it is that but a few short weeks ago I
picked up (such is the happy phrase, most apt to describe what was indeed a
"street casualty") a copy of the original edition of
"Endymion" (Keats's poem--O subscriber to Mudie's--not Lord
Beaconsfield's novel) for the easy equivalent of half a crown--but then that
was one of my lucky days. The enormous increase of booksellers' catalogues
and their wide circulation amongst the trade has already produced a hateful
uniformity of prices. Go where you will, it is all the same to the odd
sixpence. Time was when you could map out the country for yourself with some
hopefulness of plunder. There were districts where the Elizabethan dramatists
were but slenderly protected. A raid into the "bonnie North Countrie"
sent you home again cheered with chapbooks and weighted with old pamphlets of
curious interest; whilst the west of England seldom failed to yield a crop of
novels. I remember getting a complete set of the Brontë books in the original
issues at Torquay, I may say, for nothing. Those days are over. Your country
bookseller is, in fact, more likely, such tales does he hear of London
auctions, and such catalogues does he receive by every post, to exaggerate the
value of his wares than to part with them pleasantly, and as a country
bookseller should, "just to clear my shelves, you know, and give me a bit
of room." The only compensation for this is the catalogues themselves. You
get them, at least, for nothing, and it cannot be denied that they make mighty
pretty reading. These high prices tell their own tale, and force upon us the
conviction that there never were so many private libraries in course of growth
as there are to-day.
Libraries are not made; they grow.
Your first two thousand volumes present no difficulty, and cost astonishingly
little money. Given £400 and five years, and an ordinary man can in the
ordinary course, without any undue haste or putting any pressure upon his
taste, surround himself with this number of books, all in his own language, and
thenceforward have at least one place in the world in which it is possible to
be happy. But pride is still out of the question. To be proud of having two
thousand books would be absurd. You might as well be proud of having two
topcoats. After your first two thousand difficulty begins, but until you have
ten thousand volumes the less you say about your library the better. Then you
may begin to speak.
It is no doubt a pleasant thing to have a library left
you. The present writer will disclaim no such legacy, but hereby undertakes to
accept it, however dusty. But, good as it is to inherit a library, it is better
to collect one. Each volume then, however lightly a stranger's eye may roam
from shelf to shelf, has its own individuality, a history of its own. You
remember where you got it, and how much you gave for it; and your word may
safely be taken for the first of these facts, but not for the second.
The man who has a library of his own collection
is able to contemplate himself objectively, and is justified in believing in
his own existence. No other man but he would have made precisely such a
combination as his. Had he been in any single respect different from what he
is, his library, as it exists, never would have existed. Therefore, surely he
may exclaim, as in the gloaming he contemplates the backs of his loved ones,
"They are mine, and I am theirs."
But the eternal note of sadness will find its way even
through the keyhole of a library. You turn some familiar page, of Shakespeare
it may be, and his "infinite variety," his "multitudinous
mind," suggests some new thought, and as you are wondering over it, you
think of Lycidas, your friend, and promise yourself the pleasure of having his
opinion of your discovery the very next time when by the fire you two
"help waste a sullen day." Or it is, perhaps, some quainter, tenderer
fancy that engages your solitary attention, something in Sir Philip Sidney or
Henry Vaughan, and then you turn to look for Phyllis, ever the best interpreter
of love, human or divine. Alas! the printed page grows hazy beneath a filmy eye
as you suddenly remember that Lycidas is dead--"dead ere his
prime"--and that the pale cheek of Phyllis will never again be relumined
by the white light of her pure enthusiasm. And then you fall to thinking of the
inevitable, and perhaps, in your present mood, not unwelcome hour, when the
"ancient peace" of your old friends will be disturbed, when rude
hands will dislodge them from their accustomed nooks and break up their goodly
company.
Death bursts amongst them like a shell,
And strews them over half the town.
And strews them over half the town.
They will form new combinations, lighten other
men's toil, and soothe another's sorrow. Fool that I was to call anything mine!
samedi 27 décembre 2014
vendredi 26 décembre 2014
Aria "Selve amiche, ombrose piante" by Antonio Caldara
Selve amiche, ombrose piante,
Fido albergo del mio core,
Chiede a voi
quest'alma amante
Qualche pace
al suo dolore.
Bienveillante
forêt, doux ombrage des arbres,
Paisible refuge
de mon cœur,
Mon âme
amoureuse t’en supplie
Soulage un peu ma douleurmercredi 17 décembre 2014
lundi 15 décembre 2014
Ciceron, Secondes Académiques
VT
MOS AMICORVM EST.
Conformément
aux usages de l’amitié.
***
OMITTE
ISTA QVAE NEC PERCVNCTARI NEC AVDIRE SINE MOLESTIA POSSVMVS QUAESO.
Evitons,
je vous en prie, un sujet que nous ne saurions ni aborder ni laisser aborder sans
être mis à la torture.
***
Itaqve
ea nolvi scribere qvae nec indocti intellegere possent nec docti legere
curarent.
C’est
pourquoi je ne me suis point soucié d’écrire ce que les imbéciles ne sauraient
comprendre et que les esprits cultivés se
garderaient de lire.
***
AD
DELECTATIONEM ANIMI.
Pour
le plaisir de l’esprit.
***
DOLORIS
MEDICINAM A PHILOSOPHIA PETO ET OTII OBLECTATIONEM HANC HONESTISSIMAM IUDICO.
Je
demande à la philosophie de calmer mes malheurs, et la tiens pour le plus
agréable et le plus honorable de mes loisirs.
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