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Re-discovering Lin Yutang

It was a perfectly useless afternoon – like the one that Lin Yutang urges you to spend in a ‘perfectly useless’ manner. The chilly winter breeze of Northern India and its accomplice the dense soupy fog had made commutation redundant and I was confined to stay at home.

It was then that I turned to my old bookshelf, rummaged some of the lesser accessed shelves and blew away dust from atop some of the volumes and made a nice pile on the center table. I had read some of these works partly earlier a long time ago, and the others I had kept for leisure reading. It was like meeting a handful of school friends once again after years – not at the planned alumni meeting, but while you are out shopping your week’s supplies – by sheer chance.

I pulled out a mid-sized volume with a yellow cover that shows a man playing flute by the river and a few others listening to him, leisurely resting on the nearby rocks and trees. It was ‘The Importance of Living’ by Lin Yutang – a work I had discovered in a guest house during my travels in the Champavat region. It was a really old one. It said that it was published in 1938, and reprinted in India in 1966. I kept looking at the printed price – 5 rupees!

Lin Yutang may have other works like ‘My Country and My People’ to his credit and those that could be considered his claim to fame, but the one I was holding in my hand is an immortal gem nonetheless. Equipped with a kettle-full of supply of warm tea to go with the reading, I spread leisurely to commune once again with this great thinker and writer – and completely lost the track of time.

Time and again I felt like getting up and dancing around the room. Now and then I was laughing loudly. If one of the principle purposes of a book is to make you feel happy about life – this work stands the test truly, and over and over again. Just take a look at some of the titles of the essays – ‘On having a stomach’, ‘The importance of loafing’, ‘On tea and friendship’, ‘On rocks and trees’, ‘The art of reading’, ‘The problem of happiness’, ‘On having a mind’ – you can just read the titles of the essays and feel good.

I am not going to write any critical review of the book - at least not just yet- nor am I going to quote from the work. It is a breath of fresh and fragrant air, and it must be enjoyed first hand. It is not a bedside book, as one of the reviewers have mentioned on the first page. It is something that you grow old with.

I am glad I have found an old and wise, yet very charming and slightly mischievous, friend in Dr. Lin.


Best
- Shreekant
5th January 2011

Comments

  1. Interesting. I check the hardcover imported edition here. INR 2500+ !! Sad...

    ReplyDelete
  2. Started reading this. Indeed good.. Thanks. :-)

    ReplyDelete
  3. @Kayn, nice pseudo name! ... Cybernetics huh? How you doing post Sitel?

    ReplyDelete
  4. Hi Shreekant, just saw your comment. blogspot doesn't email you when you are pinged.. shud learn from Facebook ;-)

    About the pseudoname.. nah. It's only Kay (K as in pay, day, etc.) and N for my last name. :-)

    I am doing fine, very interesting experiences.. So far so good.

    ReplyDelete

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