There's a funny bit in Biggles Fails To Return in which Ginger, impersonating a Spanish onion-seller in Monaco, shares some bread and an onion with a local. The local nearly spits out the onion, appalled at its sharpness, and asks Ginger where the heck they came from. Ginger is forced to quickly come up with an explanation of why he has English onions rather than the presumably sweeter Spanish ones.

I've been reading books for more than forty years, and this is the first time I realized that when characters take nothing but a loaf of bread and a raw onion as journey provisions, or eat bread and a raw onion for lunch, they're eating something like a sweet Vidalia onion, not the onions that make your eyes water and would be torture to eat whole and raw. I did vaguely wonder why they were always eating raw onions rather than, say, a raw turnip that at least wouldn't be actively painful to eat, but I supposed, without really pausing to interrogate it, that people in times past were so horrendously deprived that eating a raw onion for lunch barely registered!

This made me think about other bits in books that make more sense with context, whether that context is new information, other books, or just more life experience.

In The Once and Future King, the boy Wart, who will become King Arthur, is going on and on about the glory of fighting. Merlyn argues with him, then "seems to change the subject" and asks Wart which he had liked better, the ants or the wild geese. The chapter ends there. When I read the book as a child, I took that literally: Merlyn was frustrated with the Wart and changed the subject.

When I re-read the book as an adult, I realized that the geese were peaceful and didn't believe in national boundaries, and the ants were totalitarian and had the motto "Everything not forbidden is compulsory." Merlyn wasn't changing the subject, he was winning the argument... but the Wart, like me, missed the point.

More recently, I listened to Watership Down on audio, read by Peter Capaldi. I had mixed feelings about his performance, but while listening I suddenly understood something that I never had before, and I must have read that book twenty times.

In the warren of the shining wires, Silverweed recites a poem. It's quite beautiful and initially seems fantastical, with a rabbit asking to accompany the stream and become rabbit-of-the-water, accompany the falling leaves and become rabbit-of-the-earth, accompany the wind and become rabbit-of-the-wind. Finally, he openly asks to join Frith and die. Fiver is horrified at the poem (the others don't understand it) and says it's taking something true (all rabbits must die) and making it into something twisted and perverse (making the pursuit of death seem beautiful).

I always wondered about that poem. The final verse is straightforwardly what Fiver says the whole poem is about, but the earlier verses aren't clearly about death - they seem much more in the vein of other rabbit legends where magical things happen. I had puzzled over it, and finally decided that they're in the real world, so asking to be a magical being like a rabbit of the water or a rabbit of the earth was asking to go to the magical realm after death. But that never felt quite satisfactory to me.

Then, listening to Capaldi read the poem, I suddenly understood. Silverweed is talking very poetically about something that isn't a fantasy or metaphor at all. When he says he wants to go down with the leaves and be rabbit of the earth, he means that he wants to die and have his body decay and literally become part of the earth, and eventually, as it breaks down more and more, the water and the air. No wonder Fiver was horrified!

Have you ever understood things in books long after you first read them?
Tags:
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


Oh yeah, I definitely had no clue about the Christian allegory elements of Narnia either! As well as missing Aslan's significance totally, I was also confused and annoyed by the series-ending apocalypse, and only ever read that book once.

they would have told me in Sunday School if Jesus was a big fuckoff lion

I didn't have a Christian upbringing as such, but I feel as if this would have likely improved the experience.
darchildre: a candle in the dark.  text:  "a light in dark places". (Default)

From: [personal profile] darchildre


I've never cared for The Last Battle much either but it also didn't help with the incipient paganism, with its discussion of "if you do good stuff in the name of Tash, you're actually doing it for Aslan". Which mostly led to tiny!me interpreting Tash as an aspect of Aslan and thereby reinventing soft polytheism.
sholio: Chess queen looking horrified (Chess piece oh noes)

From: [personal profile] sholio


"CS Lewis introduced me to paganism" - not the legacy he would have wanted, but the legacy he deserves. XD
sovay: (Haruspex: Autumn War)

From: [personal profile] sovay


"CS Lewis introduced me to paganism" - not the legacy he would have wanted, but the legacy he deserves.

+1.

(At the time when I first read the Chronicles of Narnia, I knew far more about numerous other mythologies than I did about Christianity, so the concept of Aslan as Christ analogue did not occur to me when the sacrifice and return of Aslan as solstitial ritual—it happens at midwinter! in the darkest part of the night! he comes back with the sun!—was right there.)
cofax7: climbing on an abbey wall  (Default)

From: [personal profile] cofax7


That was exactly my experience as well. I'd read so much mythology by the time I read Narnia, that it just read like, "Oh, this is another one of those sacrificial themes that show up in Sutcliff and Renault, cool!" I was 15 or so before I realized it was all explicitly, overtly, Christian. So disappointing.
adrian_turtle: (Default)

From: [personal profile] adrian_turtle


The series-ending apocalypse made me think it was an allegory based on Norse mythology. Which I knew more about than Christianity. It seemed obvious, "Aslan" being the lion of "Asgard."
sholio: sun on winter trees (Default)

From: [personal profile] sholio


I feel as if this subthread handily points out the problem with pinning the theme of the book on allegorical allusions.
.

Most Popular Tags

Page Summary

Powered by Dreamwidth Studios

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags