Chris
McDonnell, UK
chris@mcdonnell83.freeserve.co.uk
Previous articles by Chris Comments
welcome here
Read
any good books recently?
The
value we place on books says a lot about us. This year, the day after Ash
Wednesday happened to be World Book Day. There is a story of a boy who
found a book in good condition in a yellow skip down the street. His
excitement, when he brought it home and showed his Dad, was somewhat
deflated when he was told ‘What do
we need a book for, we’ve got one already’. Apocryphal I am sure
but there is a hint of truth underlying the story.
At one time, a ride on the
London
tube was to share the company of other passengers with
their nose in a book. Now it is more than likely to be a Kindle. Yes, they
are reading books but the experience is different.
There is something special about a ‘real’ book if we might use
the term. Handling a new book, opening its pages for the first time and
exploring the contents is not replaceable by a screen and a swipe to turn
the page. Later, when the book has been read, it finds its place on a
bookshelf or in a pile on the floor, to be retrieved when a favoured
passage is remembered.
We
give books to friends as presents, often writing a greeting of
appreciation, thanks or encouragement on the fly leaf. It is something
that has value and meaning beyond its words, it is meant to be kept.
Recently I attempted some pruning of
my bookshelves. I opened one with the inscription ‘Thanks
for being there’. It was given to me by a pupil about to leave
Primary School, a young girl from a single parent family, her Mum had
struggled to give her a good life. That was returned to the shelf and
there it remains. It is valued.
It is because books have this personal narrative that they are
passed on as gifts, often after a person has died. There is a simple story
recounted by Newman in the Apologia following
the death of his friend Hurrell Froude in 1836. Newman wrote “I
was asked to select one of his books as a keepsake …when an intimate
friend at my elbow said, “Take that”. It was the Breviary which
Hurrell had with him at
Barbados
. Accordingly, I
took it, studied it, wrote my tract from it and have it on my table in
constant use till this day.”
I remembered that story when my own parish
priest died some 25 years ago and we were sorting out his books. I was
asked what I wanted. It was a volume of his Breviary that I took and still
use. May he rest in peace.
The
historical perspective of the last two thousand years, moving from the
handwritten manuscripts through to the illuminated bibles such as the Book
of Kells and the Lindisfarne Gospels has led us, through the invention of
the printing press, to the explosive spread of the written word through
Western Europe and beyond, a truly global effect.
The books of the New Testament give us the story of the life and
mission of Jesus of Nazareth. The Acts of the Apostles and letters of Paul
give us the measure of his work in those early days of the Christian
Mission. In fact, the very phrase ‘the Good Book’ is a well-known
description of the Bible, with a current estimation of some six billion in
circulation.
How sad it is that so often books are the target of those who seek
violent overthrow of a state or a community. Treasures are lost that
cannot be replaced, something is taken from the community that is part of
its very life, where it came from and how it might go forward. The burning
of books has so often been the mark of a totalitarian regime.
It was a prelude to the full impact of the Nazism. In the Bebelplatz,
in
Berlin
, there is a sunken glass plate offering visual access
to a room of empty bookshelves that could hold up to 20,000 books. That
was the approximate number of books burnt on that open ground in May,
1933, books, ideas, philosophies that threatened the emerging
dictatorship.
As we are now in the season of Lent, it has often been the practice
to read a book or two that makes us pause and reflect a while. One such
book which I have just finished is by Michael Ford, at one time a producer
for BBC Religious programmes, now a sought-after retreat-giver. His recent
book, ’Becoming the Presence of
God – Contemplative Ministry for Everybody’, is indeed an
inspiring read and well worth taking time to explore, keeping on the shelf
for a later return visit. So is Michael Ford’s website http://hermitagewithin.co.uk/.
END
-------------------------