不期而遇的珍貴紀念

人生百味

The opera was over, and the 1)loiterers on the steps of the 2)Palais Garnier 3)peeled off into the night. Something 4)glinted on the dark side-walk. I bent down. It was the face of 5)Marianne, symbol of the French Republic, on a copper 2-cent euro coin. I slipped it into the pocket of my 6)trench coat, just as I had tucked stones from the Irish Sea into my jeans in Northern Ireland the previous year, and dropped a fragrant wine cork from a bar in 7)La Boqueria into my bag in Barcelona a few years before that.

There are orphaned things in this world—coins, books, fallen leaves—that when you chance upon them feel like winks from the universe. They are at once the most ubiquitous and intimate souvenirs. I’ve returned from Europe with superb bags and scarves, yet my prized 8)mementos are the things I didn’t buy. They’re the things I found. Or maybe they found me.

Sprigs of lavender, maps, matchbooks: They’re ordinary. Yet acquiring them in faraway places seems to infuse them with mystery.

We typically think of objects as “useful or aesthetic,” “necessities or vain indulgences,” as Sherry Turkle of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology puts it in Things We Think With. Yet through essays by humanists, artists and scientists she shows how objects are of central importance to thought and emotion. An object, she writes, is “a companion in life experience.”

Sometimes it takes years for such companions to materialize. In April, I found a mystery novel hidden-in-plain-sight in the Medieval-inspired gardens of the Musée de Cluny. The sky was white and there was a damp chill in the air, the kind that feels like it’s seeping into your spine. Having failed to find some Parisian address, I retreated to the Cluny where I began reading a series of posters about the landscaping. It was at the last one that I spotted a paperback abandoned in a corner: L’affaire est close by 9)Patricia Wentworth, about one of the earliest female 10)sleuths. That tickled me.

But what really turned the afternoon around was a sticker on the cover that said 11)Bookcrossing.com. For the 12)uninitiated, Bookcrossing encourages people to read and hide books in the world for others to find. I was 13)buoyant. I had been wanting to discover a novel in the wild for years, and at long last there it was, 3,600 miles from home. L’affaire est close is a keepsake of that trip and of the generosity of an anonymous stranger. It’s also a reminder that not getting what you want can sometimes lead to something even better.

Unlike clothes or jewelry, the value of such souvenirs cannot be understood unless their owner shares their 14)provenance and significance. A book or coin from your travels is a secret object; only you know its meaning. There’s something nice about that. It can be kept on a shelf or a coffee table; a trinket or 15)objet d’art to anyone who doesn’t know better. This is as true today as it was hundreds of years ago when people filled curiosity cabinets with tokens from their adventures.