| The Rag & Bone Shop of
the Heart
When Frances Steloff was president of the American
Booksellers Association she told me that my bookstore had
drifted into being the sort of place that might have been
designed by the world's greatest architects. I have let my
imagination run wild with the result that a stranger walking
the streets of Paris can believe he is entering just another
of the bookstores along the left bank of the Seine but if he
finds his way through a labyrinth of alcoves and cubbyholes
and climbs a stairway leading to my private residence then he
can linger there and enjoy reading the books in my library and
looking at the pictures on the walls of my bedroom.
Over the years I have combined three stores and three
apartments into a bookstore on three floors that Henry Miller
called 'a wonderland of books'.
When I opened my bookstore in 1951 this area in the heart
of Paris was crammed with street theatre, mountebanks,
junkyards, dingy hotels, wine shops, little laundries, tiny
thread and needle shops and grocers. Back in 1600 in the
middle of this slum our building was a monastery with a frère
lampier who would light the lamps at sunset. I seem to have
inherited his role because for fifty years now I have been
your frère lampier.
Looking back at half a century as a bookseller in Paris it
all seems like a never ending play by William Shakespeare
where the Romeos and Juliets are forever young while I have
become an octogenarian who like King Lear is slowly losing his
wits. Now that I am coming into my second childhood I wonder
if all along I have just been playing store on one of the back
alleys of history, putting obsolete books on dusty shelves
while people are riding the information superhighway from one
end to another of the global village.
However I can think of a few modest achievements typical of
the idiosyncratic way this bookshop is managed. When a French
explorer named Michel Peissel visited the bookshop I told him
I had read his book of travels in Quintana Roo and hoped
someday to meet him. He told me we had already met because as
a student he frequented the bookstore and the books he read
here inspired him to become an explorer. In fact, he said, now
that I have published eighteen books I am back where it all
started in the little library above the bookstore.
I like to think there is a trace of genius in all of us and
in my case there might be a vague resemblance to Walt Whitman
who also ran a bookstore and printing press in Brooklyn over a
century ago. I feel a kinship with Walt Whitman and believe
the bookstore has the faults and virtues it might have if he
were the proprietor. It has been said that perhaps no man
liked so many things and disliked so few as Walt Whitman and I
at least aspire to the same modest attainment.
I once expected to spend seven years walking around the
world on foot. I walked from Mexico to Panama where the road
ended before an almost uninhabited swamp called the Choco
Colombiano. Even today there is no road. Perhaps it is time
for me to resume my wanderings where I left off as a tropical
tramp in the slums of Panama. Perhaps like Ambrose Bierce who
disappeared in the desert of Sonora I may also disappear. But
after being in all mankind it is hard to come to terms with
oblivion - not to see hundreds of millions of Chinese with
college diplomas come aboard the locomotive of history - not
to know if someone has solved the riddle of the universe that
baffled Einstein in his futile efforts to make space, time,
gravitation and electromagnetism fall into place in a unified
field theory - never to experience democracy replacing
plutocracy in the military-industrial complex that rules
America - never to witness the day foreseen by Tennyson " when
the war-drums no longer and the battle-flags are furled, in
the parliament of man, the federation of the world ".
I may disappear leaving behind me no worldly possessions -
just a few old socks and love letters, and my windows
overlooking Notre-Dame for all of you to enjoy, and my little
rag and bone shop of the heart whose motto is "Be not
inhospitable to strangers lest they be angels in disguise". I
may disappear leaving no forwarding address, but for all you
know I may still be walking among you on my vagabond journey
around the world.
- George Whitman
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