Few things delight me so
much as my exquisite Japanese maple, and this is her finest hour. She is a
stately old thing, lately attended to by the tree surgeon: the soil around her
skirts has been aerated, and certain nutrients administered. She withstood with
superb nonchalance the recent hurricane and the snowstorm that followed, which is more than I can claim. The colors only reach this point of high-keyed
magnificence for a few weeks in November, barely even a fortnight, and, at
this, the moment of climax, a few impertinent leaves have begun to fall, which
means that the rest will follow, all at once, in the next few days, depositing
within twenty-four to forty-eight hours outside my front door a thick red
carpet. And then it will be over. Drew Kenny, who knows these things, tells me
that the brightest and most dazzling colors are produced by a wet August,
followed by good, thick frosts through September and October, thus producing the
best and most vivid chemical reaction. Still, the present show has not
disappointed me in any way. Until she disrobes, my Japanese
maple will continue to filter the bright light of early afternoon, and give to
the rooms on that side of the house a winning blush—a gesture, surely, of
apology for the onset of hideous arctic cold that cannot now be far off.
Friday, November 23, 2012
Thursday, November 22, 2012
The index
For the past few weeks I have been
compiling the index to our next book, Edwardian
Opulence: British Art at the Dawn of the Twentieth Century. Hence the radio
silence in the early hours, when, at times, I am active. My apologies to
concerned readers. The first index I created was for my first book, and, to my
astonishment, that was almost twenty years ago. It earned me a certificate of
accreditation to the Australian Society of Indexers in Melbourne, which I still
cherish. Indexing a book is a wonderfully absorbing task, and nowadays
under-appreciated. Not that serious bibliophiles do not appreciate a good
index. Rather, it is becoming a widespread misconception, even among some
editors and publishers, that somehow keyword searching and computers or even,
God forbid, book indexing software,
can somehow take the place of an indexer with a brain, a measure of judgment,
and a beating heart. This is simply not the case. Many concepts, ideas, and
themes that recur in a book do so rather subtly, and lurk beneath sentences and
in chapters that require deft herding, and much discrimination—in the best
sense. Indeed they may only swim into particular focus when the indexer has had
the good sense to identify and collate them under clear and simple headings:
food; Jewry and Jewishness; florists, court; Fashoda Incident (1898); or servants,
ubiquity of, see also butlers,
chauffeurs, valets, and maids,
house-, ladies’, scullery, still-room, etc.;
whatever. At times the author is only partly aware of their very existence.
This is especially true when the volume contains the work of many hands, as in
this case. The indexer’s art is therefore to join many, sometimes hundreds of
dots, mindful that the resulting reference tool may open for potential readers
a rewarding vista of possibility. You can never know what people will try to
find in an index, but obviously the more and better points of access you
create, the wider the vista that will open before them, like a glorious Persian
carpet: Tabriz, Kashan, Herat, see also
Kerman. I suppose the word create is
key here. Book indexing is a deeply creative process, and can even embrace
humor. Admittedly, these days indexes are inclined to be starchy. I have
noticed lately that many indexers loftily declare their firm intention to
disregard titles and honorifics when listing names. How foolish! In the present
context, such an approach would be almost insulting because it flies in the
face of Edwardian social usage, whose nuances can be extremely revealing, for naturally
“Vincent, Lady Helen (later Viscountess D’Abernon)” floated effortlessly
several social notches above “Clarke, Marguerite, Lady,” but not nearly so high
as the stratospheric “Gower, Millicent Sutherland-Leveson-, Duchess of
Sutherland.” This is not to exclude the special claims of “Wettach, Charles Adrien, called ‘Grock,’
clown,” or even “‘Toby,’ performing dog,” far from it, but the indexer has a palette and brushes, and would be ill-advised not to resort to them liberally. Such an approach admittedly requires a good number of wordy cross-references such as “Cranborne,
Viscountess, see Cecil, Marjorie
Olein Gascoyne-, Marchioness of Salisbury,” or “Minto, fourth Earl of, see Kynynmound, Gilbert John Elliot-Murray-, fourth Earl of Minto.” Never mind. It’s worth it. In the end, when the
almost defining issue of space raises its ugly head, as it surely must, these
things can afford to bite the dust. But, with luck, there will be enough space,
so they can stay for the edification of future inquirers into the vanished universe of Edwardian pecking order.
What do you need to be a good
indexer? You need time and patience. You need to switch off the media, ignore e-mail, and
concentrate for long periods, because you are, in a sense, reading and
re-reading the book in question more closely even than the authors. You need a
sense of proportion, such that a single passing reference to this or that does not cut
the mustard as regards the special form of acknowledgment that is a discrete entry in the index. You need an excellent library of
reference books (above), trustworthy ones—none of this wiki nonsense. You need a good
chair, a strong bottom, broad shoulders, and a wide desk. You need to care enough about consistency to be able to
render at times vital, last-minute assistance to overworked copyeditors and typesetters, but
also to be flexible enough to allow for subtly revealing forms of creative
inconsistency within the parameters of the index itself. You need to be a good
note-taker, and to have an eye for detail, as microscopic as possible, whilst keeping hold of the larger vista. These are not insignificant skills, and it is a tragedy for this little profession, this calling, that publishers are no longer in a position to pay fair market rates for the invaluable service an indexer provides.
In the end, a further factor may
strengthen the usefulness of an index: luck. After the job is done, and the
index itself is read for the usual editorial double-checking, one suddenly
becomes aware of arbitrary but stimulating adjacencies, a simple consequence of alphabetical order. Thus:
Morgan, John Pierpont (1837–1913)Morgan, William de (1839–1917)Morland, George (1763–1804)Morrell, Lady Ottoline (1873–1938)Morris, William (1834–1896)Morris and CompanyMorris dancingmotor tourism, see also chauffeurs, problems of etiquette
That’s just a random sampling, and
I’m only up to page 360.
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