Showing posts with label several nice little histories. Show all posts
Showing posts with label several nice little histories. Show all posts

Sunday, 20 October 2019

Several Nice Little Histories: Victorian chapbooks The Old Man's Story and the Pink Slippers



NOTE: The author of this review is an agnostic and from an agnostic environment. I know very little of religion or faiths, so I might get some things wrong here. 

Victorian chapbooks were distributed by places of Christian theological worship (churches, Sunday schools...) to a young audience. 

The typical Christian chapbook features vices which are considered condemn-able in some capacity in Christian faith, and also feature behaviour for the Victorian child reader to "aspire" to (there is typically a pious foil to the protagonist and their flaws) 

Because of the removal of the supernatural element at the end of these tales, protagonists tend to reform. As these were learning tools, there is little in the way of fun here. 

This week I'm looking at The Old Man's Story and The Pink Slippers. Both were distributed by Sunday schools in the mid 1900s. I found both texts via archive.org, which is a great resource for old children's literature such as this. 

After reading both the Old Man's Story and The Pink Slippers I have to agree with Lewis Carroll's early work which mocked these pieces. They really are terrible and are of the worst conservatism around in the 1900s. If you are of faith this will most likely embarrass, and if you aren't it won't encourage you to convert. 

The only uses I could imagine for these stories now would be for this kind of project on cautionary tales, or by religious scholars looking at 1900s beliefs.





The Old Man's Story

A simple enough tale, and humourless. An old man "John" relates to the children of a village a story about an unfortunate incident he learnt from as a boy. This involved him, his friend, and a pennyworth of fireworks... This goes about as well as you can expect.

There are Christian Chapbook tropes thrown in here, but they are subtle and might not crop up on first read. Early in the story, John is stopped by a visitor to the village who asks him if he has ever read what the visitor calls an important book. John having not, the visitor gives him money to buy this book. It is this money that John buys the fireworks with and later shares with his friend.

It was not until my second read did I notice this important book would have most likely been the Christian bible. As this little chapbook is written by a Sunday school it is easy to see why the author would refer to it and frame it as important. 

There is also the christian teaching of piousness  at the end as to repent (as such) John must now care for Lucy, his friend's sister, and take the place of his friend in her family. 



The Pink Slippers 

A young girl, Betsy, has a pious and ill mother but her parents are not particularly theistic. Her father prefers the finer things in life to the point the family are obsessed with material wealth. Betsy is friends with a local girl whom she envies because she can have dance classes. One day after been given new pink slippers, Betsy sneaks out to show her friend despite her mother's illness. Disaster follows. 

Honestly I found this to be just awful. Sometimes a protagonist's fate in a cautionary tale can seem unnecessarily cruel and its very much the case here. Not only is Betsy humiliated at her friend's dance class, her ill mother also dies, Betsy then falls ill and only gets to hear of her mother's death days afterwards. Betsy becomes a true believer at the end, although the reader is never given an explanation why she does this. As a reader, we only presume this is because she has to be. Otherwise someone else close to her could die. 

References:

Dean & Son, 11, Ludgate Hill. (1857). The old mans story. London.

The Pink slippers, or, Cure of vanity. (2019, February 9). Retrieved from https://www.worldcat.org/title/pink-slippers-or-cure-of-vanity/oclc/1050792284.

Tuesday, 8 October 2019

Several Nice Little Histories: Vice in Its Proper Shape by Anonymous





A collection of tales about children transforming into animals that fit their misdeeds, Vice in its Proper shape provides the blueprint for much of the cautionary tales genre we know through to today. Anthony Greedyguts turns into a pig, Jack Idle into a donkey, and Dorothy Chatterfast into a magpie! 

All of these tales, as you might expect are grimly funny. Because this was written in the 1700s, there is no proper supernatural intervention in the children's fates. Instead they die of circumstances of their own making and the supernatural only intervenes afterwards to direct their souls into animal bodies.

Curiously despite the presence of souls or human-turned-animal souls, there is very little spirituality here. This is surprising as the 17th century world was deeply entrenched in several religions (for example Catholicism) and it is strange this book's subject matter did not jar with its era. 

Despite being written by an unknown writer, Vice.... features some exquisite and funny turns of phrase and story. There are a lot of quirks, such as a sharp tongued liar of a girl being in snake form. This inventiveness makes up for the extremely "of the time" frame story (Family in India visits menagerie of animals. Has a lot of this trope sadly in it. Ugh.) 

Overall, a good start to this genre, and essential for anyone interested in how certain tropes for these kinds of stories were made. Recommended for anyone looking for a more quirkier book of this type or with an interest in 1700s literature. 

NOTES:


  • The Librivox recording is probably the best way to read this (unless you regularly read obscure 1700s texts) as the wording of phrases can sometimes be slightly difficult.

Refrences:

Issiah Thomas. (1789). Vice in its proper shape. Worcester, MA.

The Little Beasts (What happens to Naughty Children). (n.d.). Price Studios. Retrieved from https://soundcloud.com/bateman-and-conley/sets/the-little-beasts-what-happens

Tuesday, 1 October 2019

Several Nice Little Histories: A Short History of the Cautionary Tale


Due to the advent of the printing press (invented some time in the 14th century), a large section of the 17th century population began to learn to read. Despite there being not a set genre of children's literature, moral instructions via cautionary tales were among some of the first books to directly appeal or be read to children. 

"Vice in Its Proper Shape", published around 1789, in reflected this growing market. A simple set of stories about naughty children being turned into animals that reflect their misdeeds, Vice... codifies several tropes seen in this genre:

  • A protagonist or protagonists which are deliberately vile in character (so the audience cheers when they are given their comeuppance) or protagonists whose behaviour is over exaggerated for black, comic humour.

  • Long suffering parental/family figures or parental figures who deliberately ignore the protagonist's behaviour or actively encourage.

  • Supernatural intervention or metamorphosis by entity or person symbolising morality. This is when the protagonist gets their "comeuppance"
In the Victorian era when middle class families could read, small chapbooks were often given at Sunday School as a narrative to encourage conduct which conformed to Christian theology. 

As chapbooks are extremely religious, the supernatural intervention at the end of the cautionary tale is changed to a tragic event or loss which makes the protagonist reform. Also notable is a lack of dark humour. In "the Old Man's Story", John narrates a tragic story of messing around with fireworks, which leads him to become more pious towards his family and adopts a surrogate brother position to his dead friend's sister.

Many works for children at this time were pious and cloying, or overly harsh. A landscape of reading for fun or pleasure was not well established.

It is these chapbooks which are the "nice little histories" Carroll's Alice recalls reading in Alice's adventures in Wonderland. Both Alice tales as well as George Macdonald's fairy tales helped change this landscape.

As a result Hilaire Belloc's early Edwardian verses "Cautionary Tales for Children" are cautionary yet darkly humorous.
Now just imagine how it feels
When first your toes and then your heels,
And then by gradual degrees,
Your shins and ankles, calves and knees,
Are slowly eaten, bit by bit.
No wonder Jim detested it!
 Mocking its genre as well as being a strangely robust entry in it.

Even "Slovenly Peter", an infamous collection of German Victorian cautionary tales, has a extremely dark humorous side. This was brought out further in a 1998 musical adaptation which overemphasised the ridiculousness of Peter's tales as well as adding on a chilling framework story about parenthood gone wrong.

Cautionary tales have not died out even today, as Jamie Rix's thoroughly British 1990s published collections of "Grizzly Tales..." can show us. Rix takes the supernatural endings of the traditional cautionary tale and makes this a overall threat to his protagonists whilst utilising Slovenly peter style humour for a modern audience (I myself grew up on Rix's tales)

This being the month of October I will be celebrating cautionary tales with an essay every week. I do hope you'll enjoy.

References:

Dean & Son, 11, Ludgate Hill. (1857). The old mans story. London.

Graham, R. (2011, October 28). "Master Anthony Greedyguts" Becomes a Pig: A Slide Show of Cautionary Tales for Children. Retrieved October 1, 2019, from http://www.slate.com/articles/double_x/doublex/2011/10/halloween_slide_show_a_short_history_of_cautionary_tales_for_chi.html?via=gdpr-consent.

Hoffmann, H., Vendetta, S., Zipes, J., & Spence, R. (1999). Struwwelpeter: fearful stories and vile pictures to instruct good little folks. Venice, CA: Feral House.

Issiah Thomas. (1789). Vice in its proper shape. Worcester, MA.

Rix, J. Grizzly Tales for Guesome Kids, 1st ed. Vol. 1. London, 1990: Andre Deutsche Limited, n.d.

Tomkins, C. (2019, May 13). The Inexplicably Enduring Appeal of Hilaire Belloc's "Cautionary Tales". Retrieved from https://www.newyorker.com/books/page-turner/the-inexplicably-enduring-appeal-of-hilaire-bellocs-cautionary-tales. 

Monday, 26 August 2019

New essay series on this blog coming in October...


for she had read several nice little histories about children who had got burnt, and eaten up by wild beasts and other unpleasant things, all because they WOULD not remember the simple rules their friends had taught them.

I know it isn't anywhere near October yet but in October a new essay series will crop up occasionally on this blog.

"Several nice little histories: Cautionary tales" will look at the most popular genre of children's literature in Dodgson's lifetime: the cautionary tale. 

This will tie in with another essay series which I hope to do early next year, which will look at children's literature before Carroll's Alice.

"several nice little histories..." will look at tales ranging from the 17th century, through the Victorian era and to the present day (well, the 1990s) 

I've had a longstanding love of this genre so its great to finally share it with you all! 

For bilingual readers, only Slovenly Peter by Heinrich Hoffmann has been translated into other languages. hopefully I can do my best to convey what the others are like! 

The books I'll be looking at are Vice in Its Proper Shape by Anonymous, Chapbooks the Pink Slippers and The Old Man's Story, Slovenly Peter by Heinrich Hoffmann and Jamie Rix's Grizzly Tales for gruesome Kids


This will start on October 1st with an essay each week until Halloween!