still col ege-aged, Elvis won me with “Heartbreak Hotel. ”

Even now I can’t hear it without the winds from the Aegean

blowing right by me. But when it comes to conveying ideas

without words, jazz triumphs. A U. S. writer without jazz and

blues in her veins must have ice water instead.

11

The Pedophilic

Teacher

I was lucky enough to have three brilliant teachers in junior

high and high school. The first, in junior high, was Mr. Smith,

who was a political conservative at a time when the word was

not in common usage and not many people, including me,

knew what it meant. He taught English, especially how to

parse and diagram sentences, over and over, so that the structure of the language became embedded in one’s brain and was like gravity - no personal concern yet omnipresent. You could

run your fingers through English the way God could run his

fingers through your hair. He was the Czerny of grammar.

The second was Mr. Belfield, who taught honors American

history. I had him for two years, the eleventh and twelfth

grades. Very lit le at Bennington later was as interesting or as

demanding. He had unspeakably high standards, as befitted

someone who had wanted to be secretary of state. It was wonderful not to be condescended to; not to be simply passing time; not to waste the hours waiting for some minor diversion to make one alert; to have one’s own intellect stretched

12

The Pedophilic Teacher

until it was about ready to break. He too was a political

conservative and seemed to live a solitary, affectionless life.

But then, I wouldn’t know, would I? And that is exactly right.

There is no reason for any student to know. The line separating student and teacher needs to be drawn, and it’s up to the teacher to do it. The combination of Mr. Belfield’s own

intel ectual rigor and his substantive demands were a total

blessing: he taught me how to write a book. I worked hard in

his class, and I cannot think of any other teacher who was so

authentic and commit ed, whose pedagogy was disinterested

in the best sense, not a toying with the minds of students nor

fucking with their aspirations for bet er or worse: he wanted

heroic work - he demanded it. You might say that he was the

Wagner of American history without the loathsome anti-

Semitism and misshapen ego. Other people accused him of

ar ogance, but I thought he was humble - he was modest to

use his gifts to teach us. Neither Mr. Smith nor Mr. Belfield

ever al owed the deep sleep of mediocrity; neither wanted

narcoleptic students; you couldn’t play either of them for favors,

and they didn’t play you.

The third great teacher was dif erent in substance and in

kind. He liked little girls, especially little Jewish girls. I don’t

mean five-year-olds, although maybe he liked them too. But

Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату
×