large room, but the bookcases that lined the walls, and a large
writing-table heaped up with books, much diminished its size.
There were books everywhere. They were stacked on the floor and
piled on every chair. There was hardly space to move. Susie gave a
cry of delight.
'Now you mustn't talk to me. I want to look at all your books.'
'You could not please me more,' said Dr Porhoët, 'but
I am afraid
they will disappoint you. They are of many sorts, but I fear there are
few that will interest an English young lady.'
He looked about his writing-table till he found a packet of cigarettes.
He gravely offered one to each of his guests. Susie was enchanted
with the strange musty smell of the old books, and she took a first
glance at them in general. For the most part they were in paper
bindings, some of them neat enough, but more with broken backs
and
dingy edges; they were set along the shelves in serried rows,
untidily, without method or plan. There were many older ones also
in bindings of calf and pigskin, treasure from half the bookshops in
Europe; and there were huge folios like Prussian grenadiers; and
tiny Elzevirs, which had been read by patrician ladies in Venice. Just
as Arthur was a different man in the operating theatre, Dr Porhoët
was changed among his books. Though he preserved the amiable
serenity which made him always so attractive, he had there a
diverting brusqueness of demeanour
which contrasted quaintly
with his usual calm.
'I was telling these young people, when you came in, of an ancient
Korân which I was given in Alexandria by a learned man whom I
operated upon for cataract.' He showed her a beautifully-written
Arabic work, with wonderful capitals and headlines in gold. 'You
know that it is almost impossible for an infidel to acquire the holy
book, and this is a particularly rare copy, for it was written by Kaït
Bey, the greatest of the Mameluke Sultans.'
He handled the delicate pages as a lover of flowers would handle
rose-leaves.
'And have you much literature on the occult sciences?' asked Susie.
Dr Porhoët smiled.
'I venture to think that no private library contains so complete a
collection, but I dare not show it to you in the presence of our friend
Arthur. He is too polite to accuse me of foolishness, but his sarcastic
smile would betray him.'
Susie went to the shelves to which he vaguely waved, and
looked
with a peculiar excitement at the mysterious array. She ran her eyes
along the names. It seemed to her that she was entering upon an
unknown region of romance. She felt like an adventurous princess
who rode on her palfrey into a forest of great bare trees and mystic
silences, where wan, unearthly shapes pressed upon her way.
'I thought once of writing a life of that fantastic and grandiloquent
creature, Philippus Aureolus Theophrastus Paracelsus Bombast von
Hohenheim,' said Dr Porhoët, 'and I have collected many of his
books.'
He took down a slim volume in duodecimo, printed in the
seventeenth century, with queer plates, on which were all
manner of
cabbalistic signs. The pages had a peculiar, musty odour. They were
stained with iron-mould.
'Here is one of the most interesting works concerning the black art.
It is the
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