posted by: Dunia Andromeda
A Story of Over 50,000 Words Without Using the Letter “E”
by Ernest Vincent Wright
by Ernest Vincent Wright
If
youth, throughout all history, had had a champion to stand up for it;
to show a doubting world that a child can think; and, possibly, do it
practically; you wouldn’t constantly run across folks today who claim
that “a child don’t know anything.”A child’s brain starts functioning at
birth; and has, amongst its many infant convolutions, thousands of
dormant atoms, into which God has put a mystic possibility for noticing
an adult’s act, and figuring out its purport.
Up
to about its primary school days a child thinks, naturally, only of
play. But many a form of play contains disciplinary factors. “You can’t
do this,” or “that puts you out,” shows a child that it must think,
practically or fail. Now, if, throughout childhood, a brain has no
opposition, it is plain that it will attain a position of “status quo,”
as with our ordinary animals. Man knows not why a cow, dog or lion was
not born with a brain on a par with ours; why such animals cannot add,
subtract, or obtain from books and schooling, that paramount position
which Man holds today.
But
a human brain is not in that class. Constantly throbbing and pulsating,
it rapidly forms opinions; attaining an ability of its own; a fact
which is startlingly shown by an occasional child “prodigy” in music or
school work. And as, with our dumb animals, a child’s inability
convincingly to impart its thoughts to us, should not class it as
ignorant.
Upon
this basis I am going to show you how a bunch of bright young folks did
find a champion; a man with boys and girls of his own; a man of so
dominating and happy individuality that Youth is drawn to him as is a
fly to a sugar bowl. It is a story about a small town. It is not a
gossipy yarn; nor is it a dry, monotonous account, full of such
customary “fill-ins” as “romantic moonlight casting murky shadows down a
long, winding country road.” Nor will it say anything about tinklings
lulling distant folds; robins carolling at twilight, nor any “warm glow
of lamplight” from a cabin window. No. It is an account of up-and-doing
activity; a vivid portrayal of Youth as it is today; and a practical
discarding of that worn-out notion that “a child don’t know anything.”
Now,
any author, from history’s dawn, always had that most important aid to
writing: an ability to call upon any word in his dictionary in building
up his story. That is, our strict laws as to word construction did not
block his path. But in my story that mighty obstruction will constantly
stand in my path; for many an important, common word I cannot adopt,
owing to its orthography.
I
shall act as a sort of historian for this small town; associating with
its inhabitants, and striving to acquaint you with its youths, in such a
way that you can look, knowingly, upon any child, rich or poor; forward
or “backward;” your own, or John Smith’s, in your community. You will
find many young minds aspiring to know how, and why such a thing is so.
And, if a child shows curiosity in that way, how ridiculous it is for
you to snap out:— “Oh! Don’t ask about things too old for you!”
Such
a jolt to a young child’s mind, craving instruction, is apt so to dull
its avidity, as to hold it back in its school work. Try to look upon a
child as a small, soft young body and a rapidly growing, constantly
inquiring brain. It must grow to maturity slowly. Forcing a child
through school by constant night study during hours in which it should
run and play, can bring on insomnia; handicapping both brain and body.
Now
this small town in our story had grown in just that way:— slowly; in
fact, much too slowly to stand on a par with many a thousand of its kind
in this big, vigorous nation of ours. It was simply stagnating; just as
a small mountain brook, coming to a hollow, might stop, and sink from
sight, through not having a will to find a way through that obstruction;
or around it. You will run across such a dormant town, occasionally;
possibly so dormant that only outright isolation by a fast-moving world,
will show it its folly. If you will tour Asia, Yucatan, or parts of
Africa and Italy, you will find many sad ruins of past kingdoms. Go to
Indo-China and visit its gigantic Ankhor Vat; call at Damascus, Baghdad
and Samarkand. What sorrowful lack of ambition many such a community
shows in thus discarding such high-class construction! And I say, again,
that so will Youth grow dormant, and hold this big, throbbing world
back, if no champion backs it up; thus providing it with an opportunity
to show its ability for looking forward, and improving unsatisfactory
conditions.
So
this small town of Branton Hills was lazily snoozing amidst
up-and-doing towns, as Youth’s Champion, John Gadsby, took hold of it;
and shook its dawdling, flabby body until its inhabitants thought a
tornado had struck it. Call it tornado, volcano, military onslaught, or
what you will, this town found that it had a bunch of kids who had wills
that would admit of no snoozing; for that is Youth, on its forward
march of inquiry, thought and action.
If
you stop to think of it, you will find that it is customary for our
“grown-up” brain to cast off many of its functions of its youth; and to
think only of what it calls “topics of maturity.” Amongst such discards
is many a form of happy play; many a muscular activity such as walking,
running, climbing; thus totally missing that alluring “joy of living” of
childhood. If you wish a vacation from financial affairs, just go out
and play with Youth. Play “blind-man’s buff,’’ “hop-scotch,” “ring
toss,” and football. Go out to a charming woodland spot on a picnic with
a bright, happy, vivacious group. Sit down at a corn roast; a
marshmallow toast; join in singing popular songs; drink a quart of good,
rich milk; burrow into that big lunch box; and all such things as
banks, stocks, and family bills, will vanish on fairy wings, into
oblivion.
But
this is not a claim that Man should stay always youthful. Supposing
that that famous Spaniard, landing upon Florida’s coral strands, had
found that mythical Fountain of Youth; what a calamity for mankind! A
world without maturity of thought; without man’s full-grown muscular
ability to construct mighty buildings, railroads and ships; a world
without authors, doctors, savants, musicians; nothing but Youth! I can
think of but a solitary approval of such a condition; for such a horror
as war would not, —could not occur; for a child is, naturally, a small
bunch of sympathy. I know that boys will “scrap ;” also that “spats”
will occur amongst girls; but, at such a monstrosity as killings by
bombing towns, sinking ships, or mass annihilation of marching troops,
childhood would stand aghast. Not a tiny bird would fall; nor would any
form of gun nor facility for manufacturing it, insult that almost Holy
purity of youthful thought. Anybody who knows that wracking sorrow
brought upon a child by a dying puppy or cat, knows that childhood can show us that our fighting, our policy of “a tooth for a tooth,” is abominably wrong.
Tidak ada kan ?? cuma ada di cover nya aja ..hehehe
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar