“Oh, this
overbred passion for quiet! Totally unnatural. We are usually begotten with a
certain amount of noise. and For our first nine months we are carried in the
womb in a positive hubbub—the loud tom-tom of the heart, the croaking and
gurgling of the guts, which must sound like the noise of the rigging on a
sailing ship, and the mother’s loud laughter—can you imagine what that must be
like to Little Nemo, lurching and heaving in his watery bottle while the diaphragm
hops up and down? Why are children noisy? Because, literally, they’re bred to
it. People find fault with their kids when they say they can do their homework
better while the radio is playing, but the kids are simply trying to recover
the primal racket in which they learned to be everything from a blob, to a
fish, to a human creature. Silence is entirely a sophisticated, acquired taste.
Silence is anti-human.”
2 comments:
He presents a unique perspective on the child in the womb!
Robertson Davies. Why am I not surprised you are a fan of his writing? My own favourite remains the Deptford Trilogy, although it's been so many years since I read it that I can scarce recall any details.
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