It would be interesting could
we discover what forms or fragments of literature have found readiest
lodgment or made most lasting impression upon the imagination of children at
different ages. They would certainly prove to be very various, depending not
merely on their intrinsic merit or on the temperament of the child, but also
on the accidents of their presentation and on the atmosphere of the period.
Modern provision for juvenile tastes in respect of outward form is far in
advance of sixty years ago. Whether the inward content is as incisive may
perhaps be questioned. Increased quantity or variety of food does not
necessarily make for fuller nutrition or greater relish. In any case it is a
legitimate pleasure to recall some of the far away factors which have gone
to store one's own memory or shape ideas which have endured through life.
In our home the Bible was
given, as by right, the first place. It was ours by inheritance and other
learning followed in its wake. At family worship we read verse about, father
following us with the Hebrew or Greek Testament in his hand. Its lessons
commended themselves through the tones of our mother's voice, and its
stories were re-echoed in the simple pages of "The Peep of Day." A more
advanced book presented to me as far back as 1853, established itself as a
favourite. It is most beautifully printed by Winks of Leicester, and is
entitled "The Boys of the Bible." Opening with a somewhat grandiose
Dedication to the Royal Brothers of our realm, the following sentences are
not without retrospective interest:—
Albert Edward, Prince of
Wales, and heir to England's crown—when the time shall come— distant may the
day be!—when you shall be called to sit on the throne of your fathers,
safely and happily will you sit there, if surrounded by a Bible- reading
people; if your counsellors gather wisdom from its pages; and if you
yourself regard its solemn admonitions. Then will your throne be established
in righteousness, and distant ages will honour the first-born son of the
most justly-beloved of England's Queens.
Alfred Ernest Albert.—Your
first name revives in English hearts the recollection of the only monarch to
whom Englishmen have attached the epithet " Great," and well did he deserve
it. . . . May you, Illustrious Prince, emulate the wisdom and virtue of the
patriotic monarch whose name you bear!
The boys selected for
historical treatment were Abel, Isaac, Joseph, Moses, Samuel and David, and
this was admirably given in terse, scriptural language, interspersed with
lively dialogue in blank verse, closely preserving the spirit of the
narrative. The weakest part of the book was its pictures. Goliath strode
forward with a flowing robe encircling his coat of mail, and a dwarf sphinx
with normal nose squatted close to the bulrushes keeping an eye over
Pharaoh's daughter, while Miriam furtively peered round a palm tree.
Next to the Bible my earliest
recollection is of a poem entitled "The Infant's Dream," the authorship of
which I have never discovered, It was printed on faded paper, and hung in a
frame on our nursery wall; nor have I come across it elsewhere. It was
crooned to us almost from the cradle, and a repetition was always demanded.
We never tired even of its refrain, and a new voice only imported an added
meaning. As soon as we could read for ourselves, it became a recognised
reward for unwonted virtue to have it taken down and placed in our hands for
half an hour. I still preserve a copy, beautifully transcribed by Mother in
the midst of multifarious duties.
It opens with a whispered
invocation :—
Oh! cradle mc on your knee,
mamma,
And sing me the holy strain
That soothed me last as you fondly pressed
My glowing cheek to your soft white breast,
For I saw a scene when I slumbered last
That I fain would see again, mamma,
That I fain would see again.
and then proceeds to lisp in
childlike fashion a description of the transit to Heaven and the welcome
accorded to an earth-born child; of the sunny robes and joyous songs, of the
fair throng and meeting with sister Jane adorned like a bride. For us the
climax was reached when the dreamer recalls the old tattered beggar who,
with rain dripping from his thin grey hair, had, on a dark tempestuous
night, knocked late at their door, having been gruffly refused shelter
elsewhere. "His heart was meek, but his soul was proud." He had been taken
in and tenderly cared for, but died ere morning broke. The narrative then
proceeds—
Well, he was in glory, too,
mamma,
As happy as the blest can be;
He needed no alms in the mansions of light
For he mixed with the patriarchs clothed in white,
And there was not a seraph had crown more bright,
Or a costlier robe than he, mamma,
Or a costlier robe than he.
Certain choice hymns and
sacred songs, a few of which happily survive in The Hymnary, supplemented
gradually by such pieces as Moore's "Sound the Loud Timbrel," Mrs.
Alexander's "Burial of Moses," Mrs. Cousin's "Sands of Time," and other
poems as they appeared, held us in their grip and were regularly recited on
Sabbath evenings.
Our repertoire of books was
limited, but "Evenings at Home" and "Sandford and Merton" had much to say
for themselves. Mr. Barlow may have seemed a trifle prosy, but the story of
Androcles and the Lion was good for a life-time. Others of the same date
were "The Excitement" (published 1841), "a book to induce young people to
read," edited by the Rev. Robert Jamieson, Minister of Currie, and "The
Wonders of the World," the editors claiming to have "produced a work
commensurate with its soul-expanding importance, embellished with spirited
engravings derived from authentic sources which, if regarded as
highly-finished specimens of art or vivid pictorial illustrations of the
subjects, will be found superior to most contemporary productions." The
selection of topics was extremely attractive, but the pictures fell woefully
short of announcement. There was also a "Boy's Own Book" (published 1839),
being "a complete encyclopaedia of all the diversions athletic, scientific,
and recreative of boy hood and youth." Mrs. Holland's and Peter Parley's
"Tales," "AEsop's Fables," "The Arabian Nights," Dickens' "Christmas Carol,"
"The Memorials of Captain Hedley Vicars," "The Way Home" and the "Lamp of
Love," in turn and together held the field with such dainty story books as
"Jack and the Beanstalk," "Cinderella," "Beauty and the Beast," the first of
these being exquisitely illustrated by George Cruickshank.
But the one book that had no
rival in our admiration and affection was "The Pilgrim's Progress." Our good
old nurse, who retained the place of a trusted friend till her death at the
age of 86, possessed a fine copy bound in half-calf, her greatest treasure.
This was carefully hidden away in the recesses of her trunk folded in a
pocket handkerchief, but was producible on special occasions when favourite
passages would be read aloud. Its distinguishing feature was a coloured
chart, showing at a glance the entire pathway of Christian as he journeyed
through the wilderness of this world from the City of Destruction, and this
was a study by itself. My own seventh birthday money was devoted to the
purchase of a copy which I still turn to with delight. It is an edition by
Bagster, dated 1845, anc* contains "two hundred and seventy
engravings from entirely new designs." Every line of every picture has been
scanned again and again, and many of them are as inimitably quaint as the
letterpress itself. Those depicting the Interpreter's House and Vanity Fair,
Apollyon and Giant Despair perfectly visualize the narrative, while that
portraying the entrance into the Celestial City worthily apprehends the
raptured aspiration of the Dreamer—"which, when I had seen, I wished myself
among them." These thumb nail etchings have since been reproduced in a cheap
pocket edition, and have been warmly commended by such discerning critics as
Robert Louis Stevenson and Dr. Alexander Whyte. But it would be a mistake to
imagine that any illustrations were the main attraction of this wonderful
book. The entire allegory spoke straight to our youthful understandings with
picturesque freshness, and the rugged versification which ever and anon
crops up always appealed to us.
One cannot linger over
everything, yet must on no account omit reference to Macaulay's "Lays of
Ancient Rome," which caught on powerfully about the age of seven or eight.
We knew them almost by heart, and would go about declaiming favourite cantos
with or without an audience. Nor were such passages by any means confined to
the exciting descriptions of gathering hosts and clash of arms. We sought
explanation of the classical allusions and simply revelled in such pastoral
soliloquies as the following :—
But now no stroke of woodman
Is heard by Auser's rill;
No hunter tracks the stag's green path
Up the Ciminian hill;
Unwatched along Clitumnus
Grazes the milk-white steer,
Unharmed the water fowl may dip
In the Volsinian mere.
The harvest of Arretium
This year old men shall reap
This year, young boys in Umbro
Shall plunge the struggling sheep;
And in the vats of Luna
This year the must shall foam
Round the white feet of laughing girls
Whose sires have marched to Rome.
One curious outcome may be
noted in closing. Whether it obtains generally I do not know. Even such a
slender intercourse with books aroused a desire to produce them. Liliputian
efforts began to appear from time to time in variegated paper covers, fully
illustrated by the authors—price sixpence each. One at least, entitled "How
Much to Trust a Stranger," was anything but a pot-boiler, being born in the
throes of a bitter personal experience. By and by there was a metrical
version of the Book of Esther in seventy stanzas, and so on, until a kindly
note from an Edinburgh editor brought the pleasing intimation that a
humorous sketch, entitled "The Highlanders Bargain," had been accepted for
his columns. Then there was silence for half an hour!