The determination to found a story
or a series of sketches on the delights, adventures,
and misadventures connected with bibliomania did not
come impulsively to my brother. For many years,
in short during the greater part of nearly a quarter
of a century of journalistic work, he had celebrated
in prose and verse, and always in his happiest and
most delightful vein, the pleasures of book-hunting.
Himself an indefatigable collector of books, the
possessor of a library as valuable as it was interesting,
a library containing volumes obtained only at the
cost of great personal sacrifice, he was in the most
active sympathy with the disease called bibliomania,
and knew, as few comparatively poor men have known,
the half-pathetic, half-humorous side of that incurable
mental infirmity.
The newspaper column, to which he
contributed almost daily for twelve years, comprehended
many sly digs and gentle scoffings at those of his
unhappy fellow citizens who became notorious, through
his instrumentality, in their devotion to old book-shelves
and auction sales. And all the time none was
more assiduous than this same good-natured cynic in
running down a musty prize, no matter what its cost
or what the attending difficulties. “I
save others, myself I cannot save,” was his
humorous cry.
In his published writings are many
evidences of my brother’s appreciation of what
he has somewhere characterized the “soothing
affliction of bibliomania.” Nothing of
book-hunting love has been more happily expressed
than “The Bibliomaniac’s Prayer,”
in which the troubled petitioner fervently asserts:
“But if, O Lord, it
pleaseth Thee
To keep me in temptation’s
way,
I humbly ask that I may be
Most notably beset to-day;
Let my temptation be a book,
Which I shall purchase, hold
and keep,
Whereon, when other men shall
look,
They’ll wail to know
I got it cheap.”
And again, in “The Bibliomaniac’s
Bride,” nothing breathes better the spirit of
the incurable patient than this:
“Prose for me when I
wished for prose,
Verse when to verse inclined,
Forever bringing sweet repose
To body, heart and mind.
Oh, I should bind this priceless
prize
In bindings full and fine,
And keep her where no human
eyes
Should see her charms, but
mine!”
In “Dear Old London” the
poet wailed that “a splendid Horace cheap for
cash” laughed at his poverty, and in “Dibdin’s
Ghost” he revelled in the delights that await
the bibliomaniac in the future state, where there
is no admission to the women folk who, “wanting
victuals, make a fuss if we buy books instead”;
while in “Flail, Trask and Bisland” is
the very essence of bibliomania, the unquenchable thirst
for possession. And yet, despite these self-accusations,
bibliophily rather than bibliomania would be the word
to characterize his conscientious purpose. If
he purchased quaint and rare books it was to own them
to the full extent, inwardly as well as outwardly.
The mania for books kept him continually buying;
the love of books supervened to make them a part of
himself and his life.
Toward the close of August of the
present year my brother wrote the first chapter of
“The Love Affairs of a Bibliomaniac.”
At that time he was in an exhausted physical condition
and apparently unfit for any protracted literary labor.
But the prospect of gratifying a long-cherished ambition,
the delight of beginning the story he had planned
so hopefully, seemed to give him new strength, and
he threw himself into the work with an enthusiasm
that was, alas, misleading to those who had noted
fearfully his declining vigor of body. For years
no literary occupation had seemed to give him equal
pleasure, and in the discussion of the progress of
his writing from day to day his eye would brighten,
all of his old animation would return, and everything
would betray the lively interest he felt in the creature
of his imagination in whom he was living over the
delights of the book-hunter’s chase. It
was his ardent wish that this work, for the fulfilment
of which he had been so long preparing, should be,
as he playfully expressed it, a monument of apologetic
compensation to a class of people he had so humorously
maligned, and those who knew him intimately will recognize
in the shortcomings of the bibliomaniac the humble
confession of his own weaknesses.
It is easy to understand from the
very nature of the undertaking that it was practically
limitless; that a bibliomaniac of so many years’
experience could prattle on indefinitely concerning
his “love affairs,” and at the same time
be in no danger of repetition. Indeed my brother’s
plans at the outset were not definitely formed.
He would say, when questioned or joked about these
amours, that he was in the easy position of Sam Weller
when he indited his famous valentine, and could “pull
up” at any moment. One week he would contend
that a book-hunter ought to be good for a year at
least, and the next week he would argue as strongly
that it was time to send the old man into winter quarters
and go to press. But though the approach of cold
weather increased his physical indisposition, he was
not the less interested in his prescribed hours of
labor, howbeit his weakness warned him that he should
say to his book, as his much-loved Horace had written:
“Fuge
quo descendere gestis:
Non erit emisso reditis tibi.”
Was it strange that his heart should
relent, and that he should write on, unwilling to
give the word of dismissal to the book whose preparation
had been a work of such love and solace?
During the afternoon of Saturday,
November 2, the nineteenth instalment of “The
Love Affairs” was written. It was the conclusion
of his literary life. The verses supposably
contributed by Judge Methuen’s friend, with
which the chapter ends, were the last words written
by Eugene Field. He was at that time apparently
quite as well as on any day during the fall months,
and neither he nor any member of his family had the
slightest premonition that death was hovering about
the household. The next day, though still feeling
indisposed, he was at times up and about, always cheerful
and full of that sweetness and sunshine which, in
his last years, seem now to have been the preparation
for the life beyond. He spoke of the chapter
he had written the day before, and it was then that
he outlined his plan of completing the work.
One chapter only remained to be written, and it was
to chronicle the death of the old bibliomaniac, but
not until he had unexpectedly fallen heir to a very
rare and almost priceless copy of Horace, which acquisition
marked the pinnacle of the book-hunter’s conquest.
True to his love for the Sabine singer, the western
poet characterized the immortal odes of twenty centuries
gone the greatest happiness of bibliomania.
In the early morning of November 4
the soul of Eugene Field passed upward. On the
table, folded and sealed, were the memoirs of the old
man upon whom the sentence of death had been pronounced.
On the bed in the corner of the room, with one arm
thrown over his breast, and the smile of peace and
rest on his tranquil face, the poet lay. All
around him, on the shelves and in the cases, were
the books he loved so well. Ah, who shall say
that on that morning his fancy was not verified, and
that as the gray light came reverently through the
window, those cherished volumes did not bestir themselves,
awaiting the cheery voice: “Good day to
you, my sweet friends. How lovingly they beam
upon me, and how glad they are that my rest has been
unbroken.”
Could they beam upon you less lovingly,
great heart, in the chamber warmed by your affection
and now sanctified by death? Were they less glad
to know that the repose would be unbroken forevermore,
since it came the glorious reward, my brother, of
the friend who went gladly to it through his faith,
having striven for it through his works?
ROSWELL MARTIN FIELD
Buena Park, December, 1895.