Discussion about this post

User's avatar
William Hunter Duncan's avatar

Didn't de Tocqueville say most homes in rural America had a copy of the Bible and the collected works of Shakespeare, that they read and could speak of them?

Expand full comment
The Brothers Krynn's avatar

I must admit this one strikes home; I'm poor (always have been), and I love reading Japanese & French classics, along with Greek/Roman ones and of course am reading through Geste de Roland in my native tongue and loving every syllable, and every sentence. My peers think it's funny and of course I'm back to teaching ESL (to my horror) and have plans next year to switch to custodianship so I have more time to study.

Reading classics, reading fairy-tales, and old stories and Cicero and also history is so much more fun and enlightening than anything else. I take what I read though, the whole body of it and try more and more to transmigrate it into my own books and literature. Ironically the school-principal I work for found out I write, and was enthusiastic and has suggested I hurry to finish the year's lessons' plans and marking so that I can in her words; 'do more important things, such as getting those books out especially those pesky English ones so you can focus on your more important French ones so we can host them in our library'. I'm deeply grateful to her for her geniality and enthusiasm.

Most of the library is also interestingly full of old fantasy, old lit and she remains a Tolkien enthusiast so I quite like her.

My last boss resented my writing and disliked it, as did the one before him, and now I've a boss who loves having a writer aboard. So that I'm very much blessed. Now off to finish one more page, and to then read a little and then do some school-planning. Haha.

But for us poverty stricken folks, the notion that we should avoid the classics fills me with horror as I don't know how I could endure poverty without Homer, Virgil, Shakespeare and Roland.

Expand full comment
91 more comments...

No posts