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"Old Things" |
A room lined with bookshelves weighted down with all the books I've ever read, with a large comfortable chair and a warm throw on my lap. Maybe a cup of tea on the stand next to me. This is one of my dream rooms, a quiet place to shut out our turbulent times. I thought of such a room as I sifted through boxes of books I packed to take to our new home two years ago, not expecting that our choice would not have a book/studio room. Instead, we chose a small condo in San Francisco with lots of light and not much wall space that allows us to take advantage of all the city has to offer, but not much room for our prized books and hobbies.
Like many items I gave away this year, I took a photo of the books I had read while I attended Scripps College and experienced their rigorous 3-year Humanities program.
Yes, I still have most of those books.
I can give away other things pretty easily, but books give me the ability to capture the thoughts of other people, to understand other cultures and languages, and to consider the wider experiences of people I haven't met.
I admire the idea of the Renaissance Person, exemplified by Leonardo da Vinci who pursued knowledge in all its forms from art to engineering to anatomy to science and philosophy. (Did you watch the recent PBS series?) The Renaissance was another turbulent time when thinkers, leaders, and creatives imagined different ways to govern and live more freely.
From my stack, I picked up The Book of the Courtier by Baldassare Castiglione, which I hadn't read since college. It was part of a series of books written about politics and power at the end of the Middle Ages and the beginning of the Renaissance. It is now an obscure book but was widely read when it was published. The book was a prominent source for the definition of an ideal courtier or court lady, who could offer advice to a political leader. Leafing through the pages quickly, I realized the book, written in 1515, is surprisingly current in its thinking. It is a companion and counterpoint to Machiavelli's The Prince, written in 1532.
Castiglione envisions a courtier as someone who is an eloquent speaker, well-rounded in both the arts and physical endeavors, and who refrains from following a leader's order if that order is evil. The Book of the Courtier provides a different point of view from Machiavelli's The Prince, which focuses on obtaining power at any cost and does not consider honor to be a virtue.
As I look at these old books, I am grateful I had a chance when I was young to learn critical thinking skills, understand different points of view, and not be taken in easily by charlatans or by the rabid approval of a crowd. As Winston Churchill said in 1948, "Those that fail to learn from history are doomed to repeat it." Other people, including Karl Marx, George Bernard Shaw, and George Santayana made similar statements. Religious texts offer identical ideas. From these old books, I learned that people in different cultures often came to the same conclusions about values and principles to live by.
A footnote: I long ago stopped keeping every book I read. We would never have found a house big enough to hold all the books the two of us read. Looking through the art books that I've accumulated, I didn't really need 15 books about learning how to hand-letter or four or five books about book arts when one or two would do. Now these books are going to the library, the White Elephant Sale for the Oakland Museum, or to Scrap, a local reuse warehouse for teachers. What better places for these books so they will reach the hands of others.
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Thanks to Wikipedia and Brainly for helpful reviews of the two books, The Book of the Courtier and The Prince.
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