“I seem too deaf to see what I read.”
Removed from its original comic
context, the observation says something important about reading. Just as I read
aloud as I’m writing – yes, under my breath – so too do I read aloud anything worth
reading, whether Keats or Joseph Epstein. A good writer works hard on the sound of
his words; a polite reader listens carefully.
Charles Lamb is writing on
this date, May 16, in 1826, in a letter to his Quaker friend Bernard Barton.
After getting his customary Friends jokes out of the way, Lamb moves on –
jokingly – to his growing deafness: “In the street, with the blended noises of
life about me, I hear, and my head is lightened, but in a room the hubbub comes
back, and I am deaf as a Sinner.” Anyone with incremental hearing loss will
sympathize. The good thing about losing your hearing (I’ve had two surgeries on
my left ear, to no avail) is that it renders so much boring conversation
nonsensically surreal. You guess, usually incorrectly, at what the others are
trying to say, substituting other words: “Weenie big blasts? Coats.” I still
don’t know what that was all about. Lamb goes on:
“Did I tell you of a pleasant sketch [Thomas] Hood has done, which he calls Very Deaf Indeed? It is of a good naturd [sic] stupid looking old gentleman, whom a footpad has stopt, but for his extreme deafness cannot make him understand what he wants; the unconscious old gentleman is extending his ear-trumpet very complacently, and the fellow is firing a pistol into it to make him hear, but the ball will pierce his skull sooner than the report reach his sensorium.”
No comments:
Post a Comment