I was in an antique shop, called Dappled Gray Antiques, in the downtown section of my suburb in St. Louis.
The “dappled gray” came from a carousel horse in the window, and the shop was
filled with both antiques and stuff that was old if not valuable. I ignored the
stuff, antique or not, and found my way to the back, where the bookcases were
filled with old books.
Edna St. Vincent Millay |
The books were
generally of two kinds. Most obvious and most beautiful were sets from the 19th
century, like Ulysses Grant’s Autobiography
(published by Mark Twain), William Prescott’s three-volume Ferdinand and Isabella (eighth edition published in 1841), and
Theodore Mommsen’s four-volume History of
Rome (1868). The second category of books were fiction and poetry from the
late 19th and early 20th century.
None of the
books were outrageously expensive, as most were not first or even second
editions. The Ferdinand and Isabella
set was $75 and the Grant Autobiography
was $35. The individual novels and poetry books, priced considerably less than
the sets, were all hardbacks; the shop didn’t handle paperbacks.
Looking through
the shelves, I saw a small, slim little volume entitled The
Buck in the Snow and Other Poems. The poet was Edna
St. Vincent Millay (1892-1950), and this volume was the sixth edition
published in 1928.
To continue
reading, please see my post today at TweetspeakPoetry.
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