Part 7 (1/2)

Dandolo, G. La Caduta della Republica di Venezia (The Fall of the Republic of Venice).

Ridolfi, C., Lives of the Venetian Painters.

Monagas, J. T., Late Events in Venice.

Delavigne, Marino Faliero, a Historical Drama.

Lord Byron, The same.

Smedley's Sketches from Venetian History.

Daru, Hist. de la Republique de Venise.

So much for the way in which to choose your books. As to the choice, you will make it, not I. If you are a goose, cackling a great deal, silly at heart and wholly indifferent about to-morrow, you will choose just what you call the interesting t.i.tles. If you are a girl of sense, or a boy of sense, you will choose, when you have made your list, at least two books, determined to master them. You will choose one on the side of information, and one for the purpose of amus.e.m.e.nt, on the side of fancy. If you choose in ”_Venice_” the ”Merchant of Venice,” you will not add to it ”Venice Preserved,” but you will add to it, say the Venetian chapters of ”Sismondi's Italy.” You will read every day; and you will divide your reading time into the two departments,--you will read for fact and you will read for fancy. Roots must have leaves, you know, and leaves must have roots. Bodies must have spirits, and, for this world at least, spirits must have bodies. Fact must be lighted by fancy, and fancy must be balanced by fact. Making this the principle of your selection, you may, nay, you must, select for yourselves your books. And in my next chapter I will do my best to teach you

HOW TO READ THEM.

Chapter VI.

How To Read. II.

Liston tells a story of a nice old lady--I think the foster-sister of the G.o.dmother of his brother-in-law's aunt--who came to make them a visit in the country. The first day after she arrived proved to be much such a day as this is,--much such a day as the first of a visit in the country is apt to be,--a heavy pelting north-easter, when it is impossible to go out, and every one is thrown on his own resources in-doors. The different ladies under Mrs. Liston's hospitable roof gathered themselves to their various occupations, and some one asked old Mrs. Dubbadoe if she would not like to read.

She said she should.

”What shall I bring you from the library?” said Miss Ellen. ”Do not trouble yourself to go up stairs.”

”My dear Ellen, I should like the same book I had last year when I was here, it was a very nice book, and I was very much interested in it.”

”Certainly,” said Miss Ellen; ”what was it? I will bring it at once.”

”I do not remember its name, my dear; your mother brought it to me; I think she would know.”

But, unfortunately, Mrs. Liston, when applied to, had forgotten.

”Was it a novel, Mrs. Dubbadoe?”

”I can't remember that,--my memory is not as good as it was, my dear,--but it was a very interesting book.”

”Do you remember whether it had plates? Was it one of the books of birds, or of natural history?”

”No, dear, I can't tell you about that. But, Ellen, you will find it, I know. The color of the cover was the color of the top of the bal.u.s.ter!”

So Ellen went. She has a good eye for color, and as she ran up stairs she took the shade of the bal.u.s.ter in her eye, matched it perfectly as she ran along the books in the library with the Russia half-binding of the coveted volume, and brought that in triumph to Mrs. Dubbadoe. It proved to be the right book. Mrs. Dubbadoe found in it the piece of corn-colored worsted she had left for a mark the year before, so she was able to go on where she had stopped then.

Liston tells this story to trump one of mine about a schoolmate of ours, who was explaining to me about his theological studies. I asked him what he had been reading.

”O, a capital book; King lent it to me; I will ask him to lend it to you.”

I said I would ask King for the book, if he would tell me who was the author.

”I do not remember his name. I had not known his name before. But that made no difference. It is a capital book. King told me I should find it so, and I did; I made a real study of it; copied a good deal from it before I returned it.”