|MercatorNet|December 8, 2017|MercatorNet|
Challenging classic is a worthwhile read
A boating accident forces Harvey to grow-up.
Captains Courageousby Rudyard Kipling
written for ages 13-16 | recommended
published in 2017 (1897) | CreateSpace | 144 pages
written for ages 13-16 | recommended
published in 2017 (1897) | CreateSpace | 144 pages
Kipling’s classic long, short story about turning a boy into a man will not be an easy read for either boys or men. The slow action and the awkward language may dismay the former, and the shadow of many wasted father-son moments could prove unnerving in the mind of the latter. Nevertheless, what a great read it is!
The story traces the five-month-long redemption of 15-year-old Harvey Cheyne Jr., a spoilt, rich boy who is swept overboard from a luxury cruiser, and who is rescued by Disko Troop, a salt-wizened, nineteenth-century cod-fishing captain, one thousand miles off the North American Atlantic coast.
Harvey is by no means a bad boy, but he is immature and impertinent because he has never learnt how to work or think of others. Only when a knock from the captain’s ’11-inch-hand’ presses his life’s ‘reset button’ does he humbly acknowledge his ingratitude and allow his companions to begin to help him. The steadying friendship of the captain’s son, Dan, and the willing cooperation of the crew -under the rough but fatherly care of the captain- all contribute to draw the ‘heap of good’ out of Harvey that was made dormant by idleness. By watching how the others ply their trades, Harvey begins to learn the way that most boys learn: by imitating someone they respect. Soon, cleaning, learning his ropes -literally! – learning how to row and the ‘mysteries of baiting, how to keep-watch without falling asleep, and witnessing death in its unadorned rawness all contribute to educate Harvey into the fisherman’s ways. His new life quickly teaches him to work, to suffer, to succeed, and ultimately, for the first time in his life, to live happily.
When reunited with his parents at the end of the catch, his reflective father realises that the harsh realities of sea life and the hard-earned respect and friendship that accrued from learning how to pull one’s weight, combined to give his son’s life the foundation of service, duty and fortitude that the unremitting focus of forging his own industrial empire couldn’t do. And more than gaining the services of a worthy heir and future business partner, he realised that he now had the son that he had never really known before.
This is an enchanting tale. But not unlike Harvey, one must be prepared to make the effort needed to navigate some of the built-in obstacles that Kipling’s phonetic spelling is sure to produce. Perhaps an audiobook from Audible will be a better substitute for less confident readers.
David Breen is a primary school teacher working in New Zealand.
December 8, 2017
In New Zealand right now it's unusually hot and dry for this early part of the summer. But the temperatures will be much higher across the Tasman in Australia. We are the ones who, in our native setting, can only dream of a white Christmas while sweltering through a warm Midnight Mass. Northern Hemisphere Christians enjoy in a sensory way the religious symbolism of celebrating Christmas at the winter solstice -- the birth of Christ bringing light into a dark world. Can celebrating the Feast in summer Down Under mean anything? Zac Alstin has been thinking about this question and has come up with what seems to me an original and profound answer.
Early Christians, according to a new book, put out the lights by destroying the classical world. David Daintree reviews this work, very charitably, in my opinion, while exposing out its major faults. Among other articles today, Michael Cook issues a challenge to those who claim that Australia with same-sex marriage (the bill sailed thorugh parliament today) will see more commitment; and Jennifer Minicus reviews an excellent children's novel based on the juvenile writings of the Bronte siblings.
Happy reading!
Early Christians, according to a new book, put out the lights by destroying the classical world. David Daintree reviews this work, very charitably, in my opinion, while exposing out its major faults. Among other articles today, Michael Cook issues a challenge to those who claim that Australia with same-sex marriage (the bill sailed thorugh parliament today) will see more commitment; and Jennifer Minicus reviews an excellent children's novel based on the juvenile writings of the Bronte siblings.
Happy reading!
Carolyn Moynihan
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