“. . . to say a word or two about the improvable reader. The gift of reading, as I have called it, is not very common, nor very generally understood. It consists, first of all, in a vast intellectual endowment—a free grace, I find I must call it—by which a man rises to understand that he is not punctually right, nor those from whom he differs absolutely wrong.”
Deciphering
signs on a page or screen is not reading. So reductive a definition demeans us
and literature. In his essay “Books Which Have Influenced Me” (1887), Robert
Louis Stevenson interprets true reading as a challenge, a cleansing effort, a
flushing away of dead wood. It is as potent as life itself and fosters a comparable
openness to experience. Stevenson continues:
“He may hold
dogmas; he may hold them passionately; and he may know that others hold them
but coldly, or hold them differently, or hold them not at all. Well, if he has
the gift of reading, these others will be full of meat for him. They will see
the other side of propositions and the other side of virtues. He need not
change his dogma for that, but he may change his reading of that dogma, and he
must supplement and correct his deductions from it. A human truth, which is
always very much a lie, hides as much of life as it displays.”
Stevenson’s
essays are dense with thought – a conclusion I arrived at only in recent years.
I read the obvious stuff as a kid – Treasure
Island, Kidnapped, Dr. Jekyll and Mr.
Hyde – and pigeonholed him as a
writer of adventure stories for children, easily translated into movies. But even so tough
and high-minded a critic as Henry James befriended Stevenson, praised his work, corresponded with
him and called him “an indispensable light.” In an 1886 letter,
Stevenson tells John Aldington Symonds he has just read Crime and Punishment and calls it “the greatest book I have read in
ten years,” and goes on:
“Many find
it dull: Henry James could not finish it: all I can say is, it nearly finished
me. It was like having an illness. James did not care for it because the
character of Raskolnikoff was not objective; and at that I divined a great gulf
between us, and, on further reflection, the existence of a certain impotence in
many minds of to-day which prevents them from living in a book or a character, and keeps them standing afar off,
spectators of a puppet show.”
In seventh
or eighth grade I was seated outside the office of a guidance counselor,
reading Crime and Punishment for the
first time, the passage in which Raskolnikov dreams of the peasant beating his
horse. It was like having an illness. I had never read anything like that
before. I was appalled and transfixed, and resented the counselor when he
interrupted my reading and told me to enter his office. That was sixty years
ago and I can effortlessly relive it. That's how important books can be. Stevenson continues in his essay:
“It is men
who hold another truth, or, as it seems to us, perhaps, a dangerous lie, who
can extend our restricted field of knowledge, and rouse our drowsy
consciences. Something that seems quite
new, or that seems insolently false or very dangerous, is the test of a reader.
If he tries to see what it means, what truth excuses it, he has the gift, and
let him read. If he is merely hurt, or
offended, or exclaims upon his author’s folly, he had better take to the daily
papers; he will never be a reader.”
I can no
longer read Dostoevsky. I love Henry James. I have no desire to read Stevenson’s
fiction. “The test of a reader.”
2 comments:
I've read Jekyll, Treasure Island, and Kidnapped, though I read them as an adult and not as a child or adolescent. They're so perfectly structured and written with so much joy, energy and exuberance (to say nothing of their complete absence of any intention to preach or socially improve, thank God) that I would gladly reread them. In fact, I'm on my summer break right now and plowing through all the books I can, and I think I'll reread Treasure Island before I go back to school. It will be time well spent.
Another Stevenson fan here. He does vary. I didn't persist with his early travelogue An Inland Voyage, which probably many people enjoyed in its day, but which seems dated now. RLS certainly developed as an author. I love Treasure Island, Kidnapped, Jekyll, but recommend too some late works like "The Beach of Falesa" and "The Ebb-Tide" and (the unfinished) Weir of Hermiston. If one likes literate creepiness, "Olalla" is rather good.
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