Tuesday, August 23, 2005

Splurge

On Sunday, as fate would have it, I found myself in the possesion of gift vouchers worth, atleast by my frugal standards, an obscene amount of money at a prominent bookstore in the city, one that makes up for its overbearing pretentiousness with a decidedly above average collection of classic literature. Any bookshop that houses multiple copies of "Raise high the roof beam, carpenters " and "The Bell Jar" wins my immediate seal of approval, let it be known.

So off I went, two other similarly fortunate souls in tow, to the heart of the city, finding myself in the decidedly unique situation of having money to splurge. I have always found looking at price tags of books a little humiliating, and though it is a habit far too deeply entrenched in my psyche for me to lose it overnight, it always stings less when the pockets are bulging.

This is what, after three hours of frenetic price-totalling and much soul-searching, i finally bought -

The Selected Poems of Emily Dickinson
The Complete Works of Oscar Wilde (in a dead cheap edition that made me wonder if they forgot to print another digit on the price tag)
Selected Works of Kahlil Gibran (as Kristian will testify, I have been after this for a while)
The Plays of Anton Chekov(including 'The Cherry Orchard", the play everyone has been plaguing me to read)
The Poetry of Pablo Neruda (massive 1000 page tome, this one, including the original Spanish verse)

I was also sorely tempted to buy a translation of Vatsyayana's Kamasutra, but decided against it in the end, the reasons for which i am not entirely certain myself. Perhaps it was a sub-conscious thing. You never know when that book might come in useful, though.

As I opened the Dickinson collection, the lines on the very first page struck me, Emily's genius already established with the potency of these startling verses :

This is my letter to the world
That never wrote to me
The simple news that Nature told
With tender majesty

Her message is committed
To hands i cannot see
For love of her, sweet countrymen,
Judge tenderly of me!

Very appropriate for this, or indeed any blog, don't you think?

12 comments:

Anonymous said...

i was big on emily dickinson when i was a little younger.

there's a page i made like 4 yrs ago with the poems of hers i really love.

http://www.geocities.com/baba_page/EmilyDickinson.html

enjoy.

S. said...

The Poetry of Pablo Neruda (massive 1000 page tome, this one, including the original Spanish verse) ----> I'M SO JEALOUS I"M GONNA CRY!! OKAY!!!!!???!

last time i was at my regular bookstore, i was there for an hour and only left with an Alexander Dumas and Huckleberry Fin.

I feel so used, Lahori bookshops.

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S. said...

er... is that spam? :S

Anonymous said...

You got spammed alot.

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keed said...

these i am too broke to buy so the library suffices. maybe if i sold another poetry book then i could change.

JL said...

fabulous. i love chekhov.

Unknown said...

Raise High the Roof Beam, caprenters and Symour An Introduction, a Perfectday for Bananafish and The Laughing Man are one of the best I've read...of course after Cathcher In The Rye.

The Dandy One? Yeah! He is gooooood!!

The Prophet is a good book by Kahlil.

Unknown said...

oh look it's spam comment! YAAAAYYY!!

melon collie said...

natalie, yes, i loove emily

sangee, its a nice site! Especially Nature, with the lovely background.

sid, :) , 1000 pages of pabloooooooooo

billy, i am too broke generally myself to buy books. a good library sure helps.

jasi, ive read a few of chekov's short stories, and they are beautiful.

the taorist, yup, old J.D is a god.

spammers, stay away you filthy animals

Anonymous said...

Hey, that's quite a catch. :)

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a recluse waiting for salvation