Date: Fri 19-Jun-1998
Date: Fri 19-Jun-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: SUZANN
Quick Words:
reading-fairy-tales
Full Text:
Fairy Tales For Summer Reading
(with illustrations)
BY SUZANNA NYBERG
The subject is fairy tales, but the characters of the fairy tales in the C.H.
Booth Library's collection are not the sole protagonists; there are also the
men and women of legend, myth, and saga in a collection that numbers more than
300. Before the summer ends one can read Homer, Robin Hood, and Arthurian
legends as a participant in the library's summer reading program. To this list
one may add Hoffman's Nutcracker, William Tell, and Joel Chandler Harris's
Uncle Remus tales. Greece, India, and Scandanavia all give us stories that are
in this collection.
It has become commonplace to label many of these stories offensively
patriarchal, and it is dogmatic to commiserate with sleeping women waiting for
a prince to awaken them. Supine women discomfit the modern sensibility, and so
they should. But for every supine woman there is a demon that accompanies her,
and if we look at three or four of the best-known characters in these fairy
tales we will find awesome powers imagined for women.
A creature of transformations, able to live 300 years but not to die, the
little mermaid of Hans Christian Andersen's tale can exist forever as foam on
the wave. Her undeniable grace hides tremendous powers. Hardly passive, she is
a siren as well as an angel. "She was the greatest beauty," Andersen writes,
"and she danced as none of the others danced."
When the mermaid opens her eyes upon the human world it makes the ocean below
seem dreary, and so she breaks through her watery boundaries and leaves the
family that lovingly restricts her. Allowing a witch to cut out her tongue and
surrendering her tail to dance on two painful legs, she forfeits her
entrancing song to love a shallow prince.
In such a woman there is nothing new for at least nine out of ten of us would
do the same thing to get the man we want. Unfortunately, the man the mermaid
loves is not worthy of her; the prince's stupidity is decided, his body
feeble, and his mind empty. He doesn't even recognize the woman who saved his
life. It's hard to understand why the little mermaid doesn't put the knife her
sisters gave her into his heart, but then it's impossible to comprehend good
deeds and why someone performs them.
We cannot all lead as virtuous a life as the little mermaid. In Arabian
Nights, Shah Ryar glares savagely when he finds his wife in bed with a slave.
Then, he cuts off her head. No one can fairly blame a shah for being upset at
being cuckolded by a wife, but Shah Ryar's delusion that all beautiful women
are faithless lovers and must be executed, when worked to its logical
conclusion, leaves a land bereft of pretty girls.
The Shah becomes a scourge and a curse to the women he marries until
Sheherazade boldly volunteers to become his wife. Nothing in life could be
nobler for who would not contract and freeze at the idea that the Shah wanted
one's hand in marriage?
Shut up together in the vaulted chamber, no woman could be more helpless, no
man more powerful. Yet Sheherazade takes all power away from Shah Ryar.
Weaving stories of supreme sensuous appeal, what she does is simple, yet of
sheer genius. Every night she mesmerizes the Shah, captivates him with another
tale, Ali Babba and the Forty Thieves, Aladdin and the Lamp, Judar and His
Brothers, and every night Sheherazade's head is spared the executioner's
sword. For one thousand and one nights Sheherazade is the instigator of the
evening's activity, and Shah Ryar is spellbound, monopolized, and yes, ruled.
Sheherazade's talent as a story teller effects miracles and saves lives, and
the awesome, mysterious power of storytelling starts to dawn on one, the power
to choose the right phrases and pick the right words.
In the Nibelungen, a medieval gem, Brunhilde, a virtual giantess, ruling the
Last Land, Iceland, occupies herself as she likes. Affection is an effort for
her. She has little patience with men and their opinions, regarding them all
with extreme antipathy. To face a man on her wedding night is more trying than
going to battle so she clobbers King Gunther: "She turned on him in her fury
like a lioness. Summoning all her strength, she wrestled the startled King to
the floor, and before Gunther knew what was happening she had tied him up with
a belt and, carrying him in her strong arms, hung him on a nail." Brunhilde
lacks tenderness, and it is the absence of tenderness that is the wonderful
thing about her. It takes an invisible Siegfried to subdue her, and even then
she is merely chastened.
A feeling of nightmare comes over one at the prospect of marrying either
princes or shahs, and so we turn to the fantasies of an Oxford mathematician.
Little Alice in Lewis Carroll's Through the Looking Glass towers over
everyone, becomes queen and empress, and overthrows her tormenters. Although
she begins life as a helpless pawn, moving slowly across the chess board,
talking to animals and dancing with Tweedledum and Tweedledee, she grows into
a mighty queen by the eighth square.
As in any game, chess or otherwise, queens wield the most power, kings have
only a token presence. The Red King sleeps and the White King has long ago
given up while the Red and White Queens sweep from one end of the board to the
other, zig-zagging here and there, even getting to castle. They also get to
use language in a delightful way, and we, whether we be children or grown-ups,
can take pleasure in their conversations:
"In our country," said Alice, "you'd generally get to somewhere else-if you
ran very fast for a long time as we've been doing."
"A slow sort of country!" said the Red Queen. "Now, here, you see, it takes
all the running you can do, to keep in the same place. If you want to get
somewhere else, you must run at least twice as fast as that!"
For every Beauty asleep there is a fearsome one wide-awake. Perhaps these
stories can provide new icons for the little girls-and boys-who read them.
The summer reading program at C.H. Booth Library begins Thursday, June 25, at
10:30 am, when animal trainer and educator, Lesa Scheifeld, brings her
endangered species program to the library.
