It started with this - plonking the books from the shelves on to the floor .....
....... of course I had some help from Comot, my 4-legged helper.
Between the two of us, we managed to empty some of the bookworm's shelves.
After nearly two weeks of slogging, this was the result.
There's method in the madness seen above. Top of the bill were the old geography, history, and language school textbooks - in both Malay and English - a fascinating insight into how we were taught or brainwashed (?) from the 1930s to the 1960s. Next come the Annual Reports and Yearbooks.
However I am most pleased with this little collection. It's not much to holler about but I didn't realise I had more than one book on Hang Tuah.
However I have to be be put against the wall for overlooking this particular book version of Hang Tuah.
I have looked after this book ever since we left our kampung house in 1967 and I didn't know until just a few years back - until after I turned over the front cover - that this was Abah's book. It was published by MPH in 1938 when he was still a bachelor of 28! Shame on AnaksiHamid for her carelessness.
My best and quite precious books are these two JMBRAS publications - which I pinched from the spouse's bookshelf. When he complained about this and other pilferings from his library, I claimed that this was part of the dowry he had to pay when he married me!
But a magpie like me, especially a geriatric one cannot resist looking out for books that bring back the flavour of happy childhood days. Children today have their electronic toys to occupy them. My generation used our fingers and thumbs to leaf through books and to turn the pages - and of course we saved our parents a hefty electricity bill. Comics and story books were our daily diet and even today, I get no end of joy in touching and reading some remnants from days gone by.
But my interests are not totally prehistoric. I do enjoy some of the modern Children's Books, especially the pop-up books .....
I must stop here and end in a sonnet. In 1977 at Jurong Secondary School, I wrote this sonnet by Elizabeth Barrett Browning on the blackboard for my Sec. 4F English language students to read and analyze. Most language and literature teachers would think I was off my rocker to present them with this beautiful sonnet - the kids from this industrial estate will just get bored and vexatious, I was told.
However these teenagers from Jurong and Boon Lay enjoyed it tremendously - the look in their eyes when they read it told me so.
Hence with this sonnet I express my love for Books. Just change the word 'thee' to 'my books'. For this, I thank my father and my teachers.
2 comments:
salam auntie
alamak, have a cat named comot with the same features, belang2 oren.
what a coincidence!
Salam and thank you firdaus 9898,
Glad to see you "got into" my comment page.
As for our Comots - how wonderful! They say 'great minds think alike'!
Our Comot is a very demanding and cantankerous mog. Hope yours is nicer.
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