The British Library has just been presented with a legendary book, regarded by many bookbinders as one of the greatest modern bindings in the world - but haunted by tragedy and disaster.The gold leaf blazing and the light flashing from hundreds of gemstones studding the tails of the peacocks on the cover defy the extraordinary history of the Sangorski special edition of the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam, Edward Fitzgerald's translation of the great Persian poem of love, life and loss.The original copy, often referred to as The Book Wonderful, or The Great Omar, took two years to make,and sank with the Titanic in 1912.
Its creator, Francis Sangorski, drowned in a bathing accident off
Selsey Bill six weeks later.
The second copy took Stanley Bray six
years to recreate from Sangorski's original drawings, and was destroyed
in the London Blitz.
The third copy took Mr Bray more than 40 years, on and off, to make and
when he completed it in 1989 he estimated it had taken about 4,000
hours. He loaned it to the British Library before his death in 1995,
and after the death last year of his widow, Irene, his family decided
to present it to the library along with the original drawings and his
bookbinding tools.
Sangorski determined to make a book "to astonish the world" and spent
months on the designs, which required 5,000 pieces of inlaidleather,
ivory, silver and ebony, 600 sheets of 22-carat gold leaf, and 1,052
garnets, turquoises, topazes, olivines and an emerald. The book was a
legend in bookbinding circles long before he finished it.
When asked about the book's tragic history shortly before his death,
Bray said: "I am not in the least bit superstitious - even though they
do say that the peacock is a symbol of disaster."
"It is an absolutely astonishing thing, and we are thrilled to have
it," said Philippa Marks, the library's curator of bookbinding. "Some
of our wonderful books need an academic understanding, but you can't
look at this and not go 'wow!'"Article Source
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Clifford Pickover
What is time? Is time travel
possible? For centuries, these questions have intrigued mystics, philosophers,
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the world's religions and cultures. Can the flow of time be stopped? Certainly
some mystics thought so. Angelus Silesius, a sixth-century philosopher and poet,
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Copyright
2007 Crystalinks
Friday the thirteenth is
considered the unluckiest of days in many superstitions, unless you were born on
Friday the thirteenth in which case it is your lucky day. The fear of Friday the
13th is called paraskavedekatriaphobia or paraskevidekatriaphobia, a specialized
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to make of instances where someone writes a work of obvious fiction only to
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For example, in 1898 Morgan Robertson published a novel called "The Wreck of the
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