I'm
all in favour of reading decent literature and the best novelists, but I've
never understood how reading is necessarily a "passport to a better future."
I've
been an avid reader all my life and I have read extensively, the works of
American, English, French and Russian authors. I do this, because I enjoy it
and feel that I learn something from the experience. But if reading equates
with success in life and a better future, then it certainly passed me by. If reading
put money in your pockets, then I should be as a rich as Croesus, the King of
Lydia.
The
English novelist, George Orwell, seem to think that in England, the educated
and qualified man, was always regarded with a certain amount of suspicion. In
the British army, he might be regarded as what was called a barrack-room
lawyer. But I also think that Orwell regards the English as generally being
obscurantists, i.e. the enemies of intellectual enlightenment and the liberal
diffusion of knowledge.
The
writer Anthony Burgess, in his memoirs, described an encounter he had as a
private soldier with a General during WWII. He was stationed at Newbattle
Abbey, in Scotland. One day he was cleaning the toilets out when an elderly
General with his entourage, stopped and spoke to him. He asked Burgess what
he'd done in private life before he'd joined the army. Burgess told him that
he'd just graduated with a Degree in English Literature from the University of
Manchester. The General said to him, "Well
private, it's nice to see you doing something useful for once in your life."
Burgess says that there were private soldiers in the British Army who had
PhD's. Most of them including Burgess, were put in the Education Corps, which
entailed writing letters for illiterate British soldiers and reading letters to
them from their wives. He recalled one wife telling her husband Bert, that
since he'd been away, his stick of shaving soap which he'd left behind in the
house had been more of a husband to her, than he'd ever been.
A
senior nursing officer, who worked in an NHS hospital, once told me that the
management were wary of recruiting educated people into certain posts, because
they found them to be far too assertive and self-confident. When I asked her
what she meant, she told me that they presented a challenge because they were
always demanding their rights.
In
a country like Britain, some of the top TV shows are the Great British Bake
Off, Strictly Come Dancing and I'm a Celebrity Get Me Out of Here. That tells
you all you need to know about the homme moyen sensuel and cultural taste in
Britain.