4. Shakespeare and Company

A Moveable Feast / 流动的盛宴

1In those days there was no money to buy books. I borrowed books from the rental library of Shakespeare and Company, which was the library and bookstore of Sylvia Beach at 12 rue de lOdéon. On a cold windswept street, this was a warm, cheerful place with a big stove in winter, tables and shelves of books, new books in the window, and photographs on the wall of famous writers both dead and living. The photographs all looked like snapshots and even the dead writers looked as though they had really been alive. Sylvia had a lively, sharply sculptured face, brown eyes that were as alive as a small animals and as gay as a young girls, and wavy brown hair that was brushed back from her fine forehead and cut thick below her ears and at the line of the collar of the brown velvet jacket she wore. She had pretty legs and she was kind, cheerful and interested, and loved to make jokes and gossip. No one that I ever knew was nicer to me.

2I was very shy when I first went into the bookshop and I did not have enough money on me to join the rental library. She told me I could pay the deposit any time I had the money and made me out a card and said I could take as many books as I wished.

3There was no reason for her to trust me. She did not know me and the address I had given her, 74 rue Cardinal Lemoine, could not have been a poorer one. But she was delightful and charming and welcoming and behind her, as high as the wall and stretching out into the back room which gave onto the inner court of the building, were shelves and shelves of the wealth of the library.

4I started with Turgenev and took the two volumes of A Sportsmans Sketches and an early book of D. H. Lawrence, I think it was Sons and Lovers, and Sylvia told me to take more books if I wanted. I chose the Constance Garnett edition of War and Peace, and The Gambler and Other Stories by Dostoyevsky.

5You wont be back very soon if you read all that,” Sylvia said.

6Ill be back to pay,” I said. I have some money in the flat.”

7I didn’t mean that,” she said. You pay whenever its convenient.”

8When does Joyce come in?” I asked.

9If he comes in, its usually very late in the afternoon,” she said. Havent you ever seen him?”

10Weve seen him at Michaud’s eating with his family,” I said. But its not polite to look at people when they are eating, and Michaud’s is expensive.”

11Do you eat at home?”

12Mostly now,” I said. We have a good cook.”

13There aren’t any restaurants in your immediate quarter, are there?”

14No. How did you know?”

15“Larbaud lived there,” she said. He liked it very much except for that.”

16The nearest good cheap place to eat is over by the Panthéon.”

17I dont know that quarter. We eat at home. You and your wife must come sometime.”

18Wait until you see if I pay you,” I said. But thank you very much.”

19Dont read too fast,” she said.

20Home in the rue Cardinal Lemoine was a two-room flat that had no hot water and no inside toilet facilities except an antiseptic container, not uncomfortable to anyone who was used to a Michigan outhouse. With a fine view and a good mattress and springs for a comfortable bed on the floor, and pictures we liked on the walls, it was a cheerful, gay flat. When I got there with the books I told my wife about the wonderful place I had found.

21But Tatie, you must go by this afternoon and pay,” she said.

22Sure I will,” I said. Well both go. And then well walk down by the river and along the quais.”

23Lets walk down the rue de Seine and look in all the galleries and in the windows of the shops.”

24Sure. We can walk anywhere and we can stop at some new café where we dont know anyone and nobody knows us and have a drink.”

25We can have two drinks.”

26Then we can eat somewhere.”

27No. Dont forget we have to pay the library.”

28Well come home and eat here and well have a lovely meal and drink Beaune from the co-operative you can see right out of the window there with the price of the Beaune on the window. And afterwards well read and then go to bed and make love.”

29And well never love anyone else but each other.”

30No. Never.”

31What a lovely afternoon and evening. Now wed better have lunch.”

32Im very hungry,” I said. I worked at the café on a café crème.”

33How did it go, Tatie?”

34I think all right. I hope so. What do we have for lunch?”

35Little radishes, and good foie de veau with mashed potatoes and an endive salad. Apple tart.”

36And were going to have all the books in the world to read and when we go on trips we can take them.”

37Would that be honest?”

38Sure.”

39Does she have Henry James too?”

40Sure.”

41My,” she said. Were lucky that you found the place.”

42Were always lucky,” I said and like a fool I did not knock on wood. There was wood everywhere in that apartment to knock on too.