“A rock pile ceases to be a rock pile
the moment a single man contemplates it, bearing within it the image
of a cathedral.”
Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
When DS was
in fourth grade, we were warned about his teacher from parents of a student who
had had her the year before. She had castigated the student for relaying an
experience he imagined as real, when the homework assignment clearly said, “tell
of something that really happened to you last summer.”
The parents
of the other boy, both literary and well educated, felt journeys of the
imagination were “something that really happened.” Possibly, they also felt the
insult of embarrassing their child in front of the class. But their son was not
embarrassed. Instead, he reasoned his case well, though the teacher would not
relent.
“She is small minded,” they told me. “That is the worst kind of teacher for young people.”
“She is small minded,” they told me. “That is the worst kind of teacher for young people.”
Some years
later, when concerns of respect for authority, teaching youngsters to follow
directions, and the matter of how public a correction should be, were behind
me, I could think of the issue itself.
I've come to
think as that boy’s parents did. Experiences of the mind are real experiences,
and they really happen to us. Anyone who likes to read knows what I mean.
I think Saint-Exupéry said it well, though today he might have replaced the word “man” with “person.”