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The Enchanted Hour

Page 15

by Meghan Cox Gurdon


  It is pretty good. Knowing what I do now, I wouldn’t hesitate to read a school assignment out loud if one of my children were having trouble with it. I wish we could go back in time and recoup the miserable hours that Phoebe spent wrestling with Johnny Tremain in the summer before fifth grade. It seems obvious to me now that the language and ideas were pitched a bit too far ahead of her. She couldn’t read the novel with ease, so she couldn’t read it with enjoyment. If I had brought it to life for her by reading it aloud, she might have relished spending time in revolutionary Boston with poor mangled Johnny and the rebellious Sons of Liberty. Rather than grinding through an ordeal that left her hating the author, Esther Forbes, she might have been able to appreciate the book’s force and sentiment and beauty.

  And isn’t that the point? I mean, what else is the purpose of reading literature? Novels aren’t supposed to be siege machines, or thumbscrews. In the long history of the humanities, there have no doubt been writers who set out to daunt the people reading their books, but most, surely, have had happier and higher ambitions.

  * * *

  SHORTLY BEFORE ROALD DAHL came into the world in the autumn of 1916, he was subjected to an eccentric prenatal educational scheme devised by his father.

  “Every time my mother became pregnant,” Dahl recounts in his memoir, Boy, “he would wait until the last three months of her pregnancy, and then he would announce to her that ‘the glorious walks’ must begin. These glorious walks consisted of him taking her to places of great beauty in the countryside and walking with her for about an hour each day so that she could absorb the splendor of the surroundings. His theory was that if the eye of a pregnant woman was constantly observing the beauty of nature, this beauty would somehow become transmitted to the mind of the unborn baby within her womb and that baby would grow up to be a lover of beautiful things.”

  The technique seems to have worked with Dahl, for he delighted in beautiful people, things, and ideas, even if, in his writing, he seems to honor beauty more in the breach than in the observance. Dahl’s books are full of grotesques, monsters of appetite and vanity in the shape of greedy eaters, selfish parents, tyrannical headmistresses, and hideous, wig-wearing witches. In Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, The BFG, and Fantastic Mr. Fox—and in Tales of the Unexpected, a collection of stories for adults—his writing is full of pepper and zip. It never meanders, but gallops. Big things happen in his stories, and they happen with terrific force. Dahl’s heroes and heroines are kind and imaginative. In the end, wickedness always goes down in defeat, and the shy and honorable prevail and flourish.

  In reading Dahl’s books out loud—and it’s enormous fun to do so—we ourselves are, in a curious way, pointing our listeners toward beauty. This beauty is not the ethereal, sublime majesty of countryside you might traverse on a glorious walk. It is beauty of a puckish, radiant, comical, humane kind: the beauty of good winning out over evil, and the beautiful satisfaction of villains getting a thumping, rendered in writing so crisp and clean it seems to crackle as you read it. Consider the delicious moment in James and the Giant Peach when the colossal fruit detaches itself from its tree. The great sphere rolls toward James’s two greedy aunts, Spiker and Sponge, who have expected to become millionaires from exhibiting the peach to the paying public.

  To get the full flavor, try reading this aloud:

  They gaped. They screamed. They started to run. They panicked. They both got in each other’s way. They began pushing and jostling, and each one of them was thinking only about saving herself. Aunt Sponge, the fat one, tripped over a box that she’d brought along to keep the money in, and fell flat on her face. Aunt Spiker immediately tripped over Aunt Sponge and came down on top of her. They both lay on the ground, fighting and clawing and yelling and struggling frantically to get up again, but before they could do this, the mighty peach was upon them.

  There was a crunch.

  And then there was silence.

  The peach rolled on. And behind it, Aunt Sponge and Aunt Spiker lay ironed out upon the grass as flat and thin and lifeless as a couple of paper dolls cut out of a picture book.

  Notice how the scene thrums with action and sensation from the onomatopoeia of jostling, clawing, crunch, and silence. The giant peach is smooth and beautiful and as big as a house, its skin, Dahl writes, “a rich buttery yellow with patches of brilliant pink and red.” How satisfying that an object so lush and gorgeous should be the means of obliterating a small boy’s persecutors.

  “Literature for children enthralls and entrances in large part through the shock effects of beauty and horror,” Maria Tatar writes in her book Enchanted Hunters. When we spoke, she expanded on the idea. “We all like to be shocked and startled,” she told me, “and there’s something about amplification and exaggeration that you always get in these stories, and then you also get riddles and enigmas. You’re shocked and startled, and curious—how did this thing happen? What if something like this happened? So immediately all your senses are engaged.”

  Beauty and horror work, in stories, to expose the many dualities of human nature: truthfulness and deceit, tenderness and hostility, loyalty and betrayal, generosity and greed. In Roald Dahl’s work, the gruesome and freakish provide the reader with giddy delight even as their example illuminates the true and the good. In the Harry Potter books, J. K. Rowling explicitly links love and courage to sacrifice and loss; death hovers over the series like the Dark Mark writhing in the night sky.

  Fairy tales, too, abound with monstrousness that has the effect of pointing to nobility and loveliness. Think of the jealous queen who sends a huntsman to cut out the heart of Snow White. Think, too, of his yielding in the face of the girl’s beauty and guiltlessness, how he lets her slip away and returns to his mistress with the warm heart of a fresh-killed deer. As Vigen Guroian writes in Tending the Heart of Virtue, “By portraying wonderful and frightening worlds in which ugly beasts are transformed into princes and evil persons are turned to stones and good persons back to flesh, fairy tales remind us of moral truths whose ultimate claims to normativity and permanence we would not think of questioning. Love freely given is better than obedience that is coerced. Courage that rescues the innocent is noble, whereas cowardice that betrays others for self-gain or self-preservation is worthy only of disdain. Fairy tales say plainly that virtue and vice are opposites and not just a matter of degree. They show us that the virtues fit into character and complete our world in the same way that goodness naturally fills all things.”

  In the most powerful works of children’s literature, danger and death are seldom far from loveliness, whether we’ve gone to Narnia or Oz or Terabithia. As novelist Jacqueline Woodson remarked when, in 2018, she became the US children’s laureate, “When we come out of a book, we’re different.”

  * * *

  THE ENCHANTMENT OF a piece of writing delivered by the human voice may come on little cat feet, so to speak, slipping in so softly that we hardly notice its arrival. It can also dash forward and strike with a blow, as it did one night in 1917 to the future novelist and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston. Hurston had enrolled in a night high-school English class taught by a man named Dwight O. W. Holmes.

  In her memoir, Dust Tracks on a Road, Hurston wrote, “There is no more dynamic teacher anywhere under any skin. . . . He is not a pretty man, but he has the face of a scholar, not dry and set like, but fire flashes from his deep-set eyes. His high-bridged, but sort of bent nose over his thin-lipped mouth—well, the whole thing reminds you of some Roman like Cicero, Caesar or Virgil in tan skin.”

  One fateful evening, this teacher opened a volume of English poetry and began to read to the class:

  In Xanadu did Kubla Khan

  A stately pleasure-dome decree:

  Where Alph, the sacred river, ran

  Through caverns measureless to man

  Down to a sunless sea.

  So twice five miles of fertile ground

  With walls and towers were girdled round;

 
; And there were gardens bright with sinuous rills,

  Where blossomed many an incense-bearing tree;

  And here were forests ancient as the hills,

  Enfolding sunny spots of greenery . . .

  Hurston was transfixed. “Listening to Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Kubla Khan for the first time, I saw all that the poet had meant for me to see with him, and infinite cosmic things besides. I was not of the work-a-day world for days after Mr. Holmes’s voice had ceased. This was my world, I said to myself, and I shall be in it, and surrounded by it, if it is the last thing I do on God’s green dirt-ball.”

  What happened to Hurston that night was a kind of intellectual and aesthetic liberation: the sound of her teacher reading Coleridge was so thrilling, so arresting, that it cut her loose from the life she might have had and freed her to find her destiny as a writer.

  At other times in history, and in other places, reading aloud has been the means of more literal liberation. The human voice is just a sound in the air, and yet it has built bridges from ignorance to knowledge, and from bondage to freedom. In the American South before the Civil War, for instance, it was illegal in some states to teach enslaved people to read and write. There were no laws against listening, though, which is how the future abolitionist and writer Frederick Douglass got his first taste of what words could do. He was about twelve at the time, and as he later wrote, “the frequent hearing of my mistress reading the Bible aloud awakened my curiosity in respect to this mystery of reading, and roused in me the desire to learn.”

  The woman began to teach Douglass the letters of the alphabet, but her husband soon put a stop to it. After that, Douglass recalled, her attitude toward him changed. “Slavery proved as injurious to her as it did to me,” he wrote. “Under its influence, the tender heart became stone, and the lamb-like disposition gave way to one of tiger-like fierceness.”

  At one point, Douglass’s mistress became so enraged at the sight of him holding a newspaper that she yanked it from his hand. “She was an apt woman,” Douglass observed dryly, “and a little experience soon demonstrated, to her satisfaction, that education and slavery were incompatible with each other.”

  Like Douglass, the future missionary and preacher Thomas Johnson paid close attention to readings of the New Testament at night. Johnson would ask to hear certain passages repeated, so that he could fix the words in his mind, and then he would compare what he’d heard with what he saw printed in a stolen Bible that he kept hidden away. Reading aloud became, for these determined men, a secret staircase that led to the open air of intellectual escape.

  When a cell door slammed on Yevgenia Ginzburg, a Communist Party official caught in the purges of Stalin’s Great Terror, she was left with one source of consolation: “Poetry, at least, they could not take away from me!” she declares in her memoir, Journey into the Whirlwind. The prisoner prowled her cell, racking her memory to recite aloud the literature she’d read. “They had taken my dress, my shoes, my stockings, and my comb . . . but this was not in their power to take away, it was and remained mine.”

  A few years later, eight hundred miles to the west, retelling literature from memory came to the rescue for Helen Fagin, a young prisoner of the Warsaw ghetto. “Being caught reading anything forbidden by the Nazis meant, at best, hard labor; at worst, death,” she writes in an essay for the collection A Velocity of Being.

  I conducted a clandestine school offering Jewish children a chance at the essential education denied them by their captors. But I soon came to feel that teaching these young sensitive souls Latin and mathematics was cheating them of something far more essential—what they needed wasn’t dry information but hope, the kind that comes from being transported into a dream-world of possibility.

  One day, as if guessing my thoughts, one girl beseeched me: “Could you tell us a book, please?”

  Fagin had spent the previous night devouring a contraband copy of Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind, so her own dream-world was still “illuminated” by the story.

  As I “told” them the book, they shared the loves and trials of Rhett Butler and Scarlett O’Hara, of Ashley and Melanie Wilkes. For that magical hour, we had escaped into a world not of murder but of manners and hospitality. All the children’s faces had grown animated with new vitality.

  A knock on the door shattered our shared dream-world. As the class silently exited, a pale green-eyed girl turned to me with a tearful smile: “Thank you so very much for this journey into another world. Could we please do it again, soon?” I promised we would, although I doubted we would have many more chances.

  Only a few of the children in the secret school survived the Holocaust. The green-eyed girl was one of them. “There are times when dreams sustain us more than facts,” Fagin concludes. “To read a book and surrender to a story is to keep our very humanity alive.”

  * * *

  IT IS NO accident that repressive governments often limit people’s access to books and information. That was true in Spanish Cuba, when the authorities put a stop to the public readings in the cigar factories. That was true in the Warsaw ghetto for Helen Fagin. Books consumed in private cultivate independence of mind, a thing unwelcome and even dangerous when the culture outside is in the grip of orthodoxy.

  The experience of Chen Guangcheng, the blind human rights activist who made a dramatic escape from house arrest in China to the American embassy in 2012, speaks to the power of reading out loud as a means not only of liberating the listener’s imagination but also of engaging his critical faculties. If those faculties happen to be subversive, well, the responsibility for that doesn’t lie with the thinker but with those who would stop him from thinking.

  Chen was born in 1971, and in rural China the blindness that took his sight after a fever meant that he could not get a formal education. As a result, he spent his days isolated from other children. While the rest of the kids in his village attended the Communist Party–run local school, Chen spent his time trapping frogs, devising gimcrack homemade guns, and building kites that he couldn’t see, but whose airborne vibrations he could feel through the string in his hand. His mother was illiterate, but his father had picked up the rudiments of reading and writing just before the Cultural Revolution shuttered the schools in 1966. In the horror and tumult of the next decade, young Red Guards plundered libraries and ransacked temples, smashing and burning books and antiquities. They brutalized and rusticated the educated, the once-prosperous, and the insufficiently zealous in a state-sanctioned campaign to extirpate the “four olds”: old ideas, old customs, old habits, and old culture.

  The fever would pass, but even as Chinese society was shuddering in the aftermath of the revolution, Chen Guangcheng’s father was doing something extraordinary. Quietly, every night, he read to his blind son. In doing so, he imparted old ideas, old customs, old habits, and old culture.

  “My father and I would sit under the kerosene lamp as he read aloud, making out the words in a halting rhythm, his voice rough and low,” Chen recalls in his memoir, The Barefoot Lawyer. Their books ran from folktales to history to Chinese classics. Father and son read the sixteenth-century novel Investiture of the Gods. They read the sprawling, tragic eighteenth-century love story Dream of the Red Chamber (banned during the Cultural Revolution). They read the fourteenth-century epic Romance of the Three Kingdoms, also banned, on the grounds that it encouraged mythology.

  Hour after hour, sometimes sitting up, sometimes lying by his father’s side on a narrow bed, the boy listened. “The stories my father read to me served as a counterpoint to the official party line and the usual propaganda,” Chen writes.

  Just as important was that my father’s stories and our discussions about them gave me an organic education in ethics, providing a framework with which to understand my experience as a disabled child. The stories I heard when I was young allowed me to imagine myself in the position of the characters, to consider how I would react if faced with similar challenges, to devise my own resp
onses and then to compare them with what actually took place.

  Chinese history is full of examples of the disempowered overcoming the odds through wit and daring. Though I lacked the conventional education of my peers, I also avoided the propaganda that was part and parcel of the party’s educational system. Instead, my father’s tales became my foundational texts in everything from morality to history and literature and provided me with a road map for everyday life.

  It is a brilliant testament to the dedication of a loving father, and to the excellence of five olds: old ideas, old customs, old habits, old culture, and the old practice of reading aloud.

  Wherever young people are growing up, they deserve to know what went into the making of their world. They have a right to be free to enjoy the richness that history and culture have bequeathed them.

  By reading aloud, we can help make that happen.

  Chapter 7

  Reading Aloud Furnishes the Mind

  Young children, as we clearly see,

  Pretty girls, especially,

  Innocent of all life’s dangers,

  Shouldn’t stop and chat with strangers.

  If this simple advice beats them,

  It’s no surprise if a wolf eats them.

  —Charles Perrault, Tales of Mother Goose

  We almost never take this out because it is really fragile,” said Christine Nelson, a curator at the Morgan Library in New York. I was sitting across from her, in her office. She drew out a small navy-blue case and opened the lid. Inside, its glossy red leather binding embossed with gold, was the earliest surviving volume of the fairy tales of Charles Perrault. This beautiful object had been created in 1695 as a gift for the teenage niece of Louis the Fourteenth, a girl known as “Mademoiselle.”

  Nelson opened to the frontispiece, revealing a charming little painting. A plain-faced woman in a linen coif and rustic dress sits before a fire, holding a spindle of wool. She seems to be telling a story to three young people in elegant clothes, one of whom leans forward, touching the storyteller’s knees in her eagerness. Curled up by the fire, a plump little cat listens, too. On the wooden door behind the spindle holder, a sign reads: “Contes de Ma Mere l’Oye.”

 

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