“Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the
earth.”
The 5th Beatitude from the Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 5-7 Bible (ESV)
The 5th Beatitude from the Sermon on the Mount
Matthew 5-7 Bible (ESV)
Starting nursery school is probably
the most radical intrusion into the early, relatively uncluttered life of every
child. Time does not impose its unreality upon us until we start running out of
it. By then, we are far away from the timeless, childlike world of spirits and
spirituality. When we are small, we can magic away the here-and-now and thrive
in never-never-land, where everyone stays the same age and even inanimate
objects have minds of their own. In our early innocence, we are skilled at
stretching and shrinking the hours. There is no past and no future. Our present
day ticks until bedtime puts an end to our consciousness. Our chronological
barriers are restricted to sleeping-time and waking-time, and even they are
often blurred.
The most timeless and spacious thing
on earth is at the same time the most rational and spatial, abstract and intangible: Music.
“If music be the food of life, play on”
William Shakespeare Twelfth Night Act 1, scene 1, 1–3
William Shakespeare Twelfth Night Act 1, scene 1, 1–3
The new-born child sings before it
becomes conscious of its surroundings. A mother intones melodies evolved in the
eons before her own birth and passed down from generation to generation. But if
we are all born to sing, civilization has seen to it that most of us surrender
this birth-right almost immediately.
Only the congenitally deaf can truly
say that they do not experience music in its recognisable form, and that said,
how do we know that they really hear nothing at all? Are there not sounds
within the inner ear that are sometimes like music? And do not even the
profoundly deaf sense rhythm and vibration in everything they touch?
The most famous example of being led
by inner voices is probably Joan of Arc, who felt impelled to save France. She
listened to her voices. Do evil people ignore voices
commanding rational thought, justice and mercy? What makes someone commit evil
deeds? What kind of compulsion is responsible?
If we talk to
ourselves when we feel unobserved, do we not also have the facility to make
music in the same way? Do we not hum to ourselves when we are walking along,
break into snippets of our favourite songs or musical themes, even inventing
tunes as we go?
Who can honestly say ‘nonsense’ to
all of this?
Almost no form of entertainment can
manage without music. If you turned the music off, some people might not know
what was missing, but they would know that something was not there. Music can
stimulate, soothe and appease in a way no words are able to. Every culture,
every tradition, every religion, has its music. From birth to death, we human
beings are serenaded, whether we are listening or not.
There is no intentional music in the
animal world. The definition ‘bird-song’ is technically inaccurate, since birds
whistle, rather than sing. But then, life and death in the animal world do not
have the same time dimensions as in ours, either.
Homo sapiens is the only species to
have invented a time-piece in order to be able to measure what must happen
when, to say how young or old a person is, to judge his capabilities, even to
appraise his worthiness on the grounds that he is too young or too old.
The world is an eternal and timeless
mystery to a child; it is only the imposition of the adult interpretation of
time that has the capacity to destroy this secret relationship between the
child and his universe.
Starting school involves the
imposition of time upon the loose structure of a child’s life that was
previously governed by the demands of food, play and sleep. Piecemeal, the
biological chronology is from now on eaten into until little of it remains.
When we reach that point, we are likely to think that we
are free of the bondage of childhood.
I like going to nursery school,
because there is non-stop entertainment of some sort or other. The only really
boring part is having to lie down after the midday meal, which usually consists
of some kind gruel eaten out of a deep bowl with a spoon, not just because most
of us can only handle a spoon, but also because knives and forks could be used
in combat. The gruel is usually sweet, so it is quite palatable. I’m not really
interested in food, except on Pancake Day.
Another reason I have decided life is
fairly tolerable beyond the garden gate is that I have the good fortune not to
be in Auntie Ada’s class, as she doesn’t teach infant infants like me.
Sometimes I hear her yelling and screaming at her class of second year infants
for doing something she doesn’t want them to do and rejoice that I am spared
her wrath. I endure the gruel and midday naps with fairly good grace and am in
no hurry to be considered ready for the stricter regime across the corridor, so
I take great trouble not to appear precocious and know-all, which is what
Auntie Ada says I am on Sundays when we go to tea and I tell her rice is not a
vegetable. Mama has told me that on many an occasion. She doesn’t approve
of rice and potatoes on the same plate and neither do I. Rice is for puddings.
My starting school is a blessing for
Mama, whose favourite holiday saying is ‘teacher’s rest, mother’s pest’, though that does not apply to me, since I am obedient,
if only to avoid her wrath and afford myself a peaceful life. It’s easier not
to argue with Mama. Nobody in his right mind does.
I now have a baby
brother, my sister having once again disappointed me bitterly. School gets me
out of the house from under Mama’s feet for a few hours every day on a regular
basis, which is different from the come-as-you-please attitude taken in the ad
hoc play group I attended now and again when someone had time to take me there.
Anyway, the play group was stupid.
I do not yet know what jealousy is,
but I am learning fast, and it isn’t long before Mama engenders in me the
darkest feelings I am ever to experience, feelings of being unwanted because
now there is my brother to fill in the emotional gaps I seem to be more
talented at creating than filling.
Auntie Ada is Dada’s youngest sister.
He often denies any fraternal responsibility for her. I think that is because
she has had a frivolous youth (about which I overheard things) and refuses to
wear stockings even when temperatures drop below freezing point. Her realm is
the second year pre-school class, over which she reigns with an iron fist and a
sarcasm that is incomprehensible to her charges, though her jarring voice and
smoke-filled breath makes them wince. Though she is tiny as grownups go, she
behaves in what I understand to be a grownup fashion. I can’t remember ever
seeing her relaxing without a filter-free cigarette hanging from the corner of
her mouth so that her eyes are permanently screwed up. She towers above me and
I am irrationally fearful of her, though Dada assures me that her bark is worse
than her bite.
She and her rusty bicycle, which is
often loaded with farm produce that she supplies to other teachers, now collect
me for school every morning, since our house is between the farm and the infant
school. Along the way, I listen to the same sermon every morning about behaving
myself so as not to inconvenience anyone or annoy her personally and put her to
shame, the former of which would seem to be the lesser of the two evils.
Though her teaching methods are
antiquated by modern standards, she is thorough and impartial. Herself a
spinster, she is contemptuous of the opposite sex, of whom she can tolerate
only one individual, as I understand it, apart from family, who cannot be
avoided. The man’s name is George and he is very gay, Dada told Mama, so I
expect Auntie Ada enjoys going to his parties. Auntie Ada is independent. She
thrives on the financial rewards of her job and the respect it brings her in
the community, though, like so many others in her profession, she overtly
dislikes children.
This I already knew, of course,
because I have had dealings with her more or less from the word go, when she
used my cradle as an ash-tray and thought nothing of tramping around while I
was asleep, coughing from the base of her lungs and muttering mild to middling
obscenities under her breath.
Unfortunately, despite all my efforts
to be inconspicuous, I am not allowed to stay in the baby class for long. I am
giving too many clever answers and am able to do all the things you are
supposed to learn there, so to my disgust I am moved up a class, which entails
losing Mrs Humphries, a nice lady who really cares about us and smiles all day,
and gaining grumpy, unsmiling, tobacco-perfumed Auntie Ada - all day long from
now on, not just on the walk to school.
Setting myself behavioural patterns
that are to last me a lifetime, many of which are based on a fear of making
mistakes for which I could be punished; I appear to listen to everything she
says as though she were an oracle. In fact, I am developing an irrational
subservience to people in positions of authority as well as to anyone with any
kind of self-imposed authority. I tend to believe every word that is said to
me, obey every command and, most vital of all in Auntie Ada’s eyes, I learn not
to speak out of turn. My instinct for self-preservation is already
well-developed.
‘Blessed are the meek’ is part of our
daily prayers in the smelly old building on the main road leading east from
Wales into England. Blessed am I, with my apparent meekness, kept in place by
that Darwinian feature that has stood its stead through the ages: the survival
of the fittest.
I take part in her regimented
classroom activities while privately deciding that they are remarkably
childish, and wondering why Miss Jones, as Auntie Ada insists I call her for
fear of being accused of favouring me (as if she would), seems to enjoy them
more than we children do. It is as if playing silly games transports her back
into her own childhood, though we are not fooled, because every now and again
she calls someone to order. Cheating is strictly forbidden.
In the rest periods, which are mainly
designed to allow Miss Jones to sneak out into the corridor for a drag or two
on an unfiltered cigarette, I obediently turn the pages of the well-thumbed
picture books, though they are dreadful compared with Mama’s glossy
encyclopaedias that occupy me for long, silent, contemplative hours at home.
In fact I don’t think much of
anything on offer in that drab, dark classroom, not least because I am
constantly reminded of my peculiar position in the class as a relative of the
teacher. Even if there were a reason to, enjoying being there would be out of
the question in this rarefied atmosphere somewhere between privilege and
deprivation. Admittedly, I am disdainful about the nature of the diversions.
On the other hand, I have already
deduced from Mama’s frequent rebukes that enjoyment is sinful if it attracts
disapproval and I, with my sacred name, would not want to be a sinner, now
would I?
Not surprisingly, I also learn the
value of being able to put on a convincing theatre act at a very early age, and
it is not long before I even start performing to audiences who have gathered
for the express purpose of watching me. That is when I realise that I have a
certain mystical power of my own and must learn to use it to the best effect.
I cannot say I am exactly stage-struck at the tender age of 4, but I am drawn
to performing as an insect is drawn to light.
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