I’m
an exception to my own method, of course. Mine was not a reading family but
neither did it actively discourage the consumption of books. Operating on the
principle of contrariety, I did the opposite of my parents’ example and read
like a fiend. Another Ohio native also started young. William Dean Howells (1837-1920)
was born in Martins Ferry, across the Ohio River from Wheeling, W.V. The future
novelist and friend to Henry James and Mark Twain was the son of a newspaper
editor and printer. In one of his volumes of autobiography, Years of My Youth (1916), Howells
writes:
“[My
father] was, as I have divined more and more, my guide in that early reading
which widened with the years, though it kept itself preferably for a long time
to history and real narratives. He was of such a liberal mind that he scarcely
restricted my own forays into literature, and I think that sometimes he erred
on that side; he may have thought no harm could come to me from the literary
filth which I sometimes took into my mind [not pornography; more likely the
nineteenth-century equivalent of so-called graphic novels], since it was in the
nature of sewage to purify itself.”
Among
the books he read as a boy, Howells remembers Don Quixote, Robinson Crusoe,
Gulliver’s Travels and Poe’s Tales of the Grotesque and Arabesque –
all of which I read as a boy. In an earlier memoir, My Year in a Log Cabin (1893), Howells describes a boyhood epiphany
I envy because I remember nothing comparable:
“Our
barrels of paper-covered books were stowed away in that loft, and overhauling
them one day I found a paper copy of the poems of a certain Henry W.
Longfellow, then wholly unknown to me; and while the old grist-mill, whistling
a wheezing to itself, made a vague music in my ears, my soul was filled with
this new, strange sweetness. I read the `Spanish Student’ there, and the
`Coplas de Manrique,’ and the solemn and ever-beautiful `Voices of the Night.’”
So
much for the backwardness of rural Ohio some 170 years ago. Howells continues his
account of self-education:
“There
were other books in those barrels which I must have read also, but I remember
only these, that spirited me again to Spain, where I had already been with
[Washington] Irving, and led me to attack seriously the old Spanish grammar
which had been knocking about our house ever since my father bought it from a
soldier of the Mexican War.”
Boys
(and probably girls) aren’t natural-born scholars or artists. They’re more like
freelance explorers, and books and bicycles have equal claims on their
attention. Howells continues:
“But
neither these nor any other books made me discontented with the small-boy’s
world about me. They made it a little more populous with visionary shapes, but
that was well, and there was room for them all. It was not darkened with cares,
and the duties in it were not many.”
[Think
of the other worthy writers born in Ohio: Sherwood Anderson, Thomas Berger,
Ambrose Bierce, Hart Crane, Ulysses S. Grant and Dawn Powell.]
2 comments:
How could you have forgotten that Toni Morrison was born in Lorain, Ohio? Or, for that matter, that Fredric Jameson was born in Cleveland? The state where I now live can claim modish overrated writers as well as the great and good.
Ohio can boast at least one worthy blogger.
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