as they are, are read with delight to-day. The
viands are celestial if set forth on a dingy table-cloth.
The gaps and chasms which occur in pathetic or perilous
chapters are felt to be personal calamities.
It is with a certain feeling of tenderness that I
look upon these books; I think of the dead fingers
that have turned over the leaves, of the dead eyes
that have travelled along the lines. An old novel
has a history of its own. When fresh and new,
and before it had breathed its secret, it lay on my
lady’s table. She killed the weary day
with it, and when night came it was placed beneath
her pillow. At the seaside a couple of foolish
heads have bent over it, hands have touched and tingled,
and it has heard vows and protestations as passionate
as any its pages contained. Coming down in the
world, Cinderella in the kitchen has blubbered over
it by the light of a surreptitious candle, conceiving
herself the while the magnificent Georgiana, and Lord
Mordaunt, Georgiana’s lover, the pot-boy round
the corner. Tied up with many a dingy brother,
the auctioneer knocks the bundle down to the bidder
of a few pence, and it finds its way to the quiet
cove of some village library, where with some difficulty—as
if from want of teeth—and with numerous
interruptions—as if from lack of memory—it
tells its old stories, and wakes tears, and blushes,
and laughter as of yore. Thus it spends its
age, and in a few years it will become unintelligible,
and then, in the dust-bin, like poor human mortals
in the grave, it will rest from all its labours.
It is impossible to estimate the benefit which such
books have conferred. How often have they loosed
the chain of circumstance! What unfamiliar tears—what
unfamiliar laughter they have caused! What chivalry
and tenderness they have infused into rustic loves!
Of what weary hours they have cheated and beguiled
their readers! The big, solemn history-books
are in excellent preservation; the story-books are
defaced and frayed, and their out-of-elbows, condition
is their pride, and the best justification of their
existence. They are tashed, as roses are, by
being eagerly handled and smelt. I observe, too,
that the most ancient romances are not in every case
the most severely worn. It is the pace that tells
in horses, men, and books. There are Nestors
wonderfully hale; there are juveniles in a state of
dilapidation. One of the youngest books, “The
Old Curiosity Shop,” is absolutely falling to
pieces. That book, like Italy, is possessor of
the fatal gift; but happily, in its case, every thing
can be rectified ay a new edition. We have buried
warriors and poets, princes and queens, but no one
of these was followed to the grave by sincerer mourners
than was Little Nell.