in which a walk
in the woods leads to a fishing expedition
The Secret Life
of Teaching, #7
By Horace Dewey
"OK kids, listen up!" Denise Richardson bellows to the crowd of students on
the edge of Walden Pond. "I'm going to go over the assignment one more
time. You must follow the directions ...."
I’m
stunned by how beautiful the pond is on this autumnal morning. The foliage
shimmers on the still water and bursts against the crystalline sky. Dubious
about this part of the overnight field trip—instructing students to go into the
woods and have a Transcendental moment strikes me as a contradiction in terms—I’m
nevertheless delighted to be here. In the afternoon, I’ll be one of a set of
teachers leading classes along the Freedom Trail. I’m looking forward to
indulging with a cannoli at Quincy Market.
I’m
jostled back into attentiveness by an unexpected moment of silence that is apparently
the result of Denise looking at her watch. "You will have fifty
minutes," she tells the students. "That's enough time to walk around
the whole perimeter if you want to, but you'll have to keep a good pace. She
turns and points to her left. "If you simply want to see the site where
Thoreau had his cabin, walk straight this way. It will take you about ten
minutes. Whatever you decide, you have to be back
on the bus at 11 sharp. Hey! Alan!" Denise claps twice and points at a
sleepy student I don’t know (which is most of this batch). "To be awake is
to be alive!" Some chuckles; I wonder if they get the allusion or are
simply amused by the contrast between Denise’s no-nonsense energy and Alan's
torpor. "All right then," she concludes. "Go!"
The
students stand around dumbly for a moment, but begin to disperse with growing momentum.
"I'm going over to the gift shop," Denise tells me. "I have to
make some phone calls. I'll be over in a little while to help round up this
herd of cats." I nod and begin walking around the pond, beginning at the
far side from the cabin site.
I
have ambivalent feelings about Thoreau. I’ve no patience for the cranky misfit
of "Civil Disobedience," who thought he could simply opt out of
paying taxes he didn't like. And no man who has his mother and sister do his
laundry can call himself self-reliant. But for all his prickliness, I sense an
inner struggle to live the words, and know that dismissing him as a phony is a
little like complaining that sinning churchgoers are hypocrites: it's missing
the point. I’m intrigued that Walden Pond is
not—was not—the wilderness, in fact within easy walking distance from the village of Concord. I read
that a railroad ran near the actual site of the celebrated cabin in Thoreau’s
time, and apparently still does. Looking ahead I see a cluster of students, and
evidence of a rail bed off to the left. I veer away from it so I can continue
to savor my solitude.
I
haven’t gone far off the main trail when I see two still figures lying side by
side in a bed of pine about 100 feet away. They are not engaged in an overt sex
act, but the sense of intimacy is unmistakable. From the angle of my approach I
can only see sneaker bottoms clearly; the rest is partially hidden in
evergreens. One kid apparently has his hands behind his head; the other appears
nestled beside him. I don't recognize them, but either or both could be my
students. Though I feel obligated to break up this idyll, I’m charmed by it.
Years from now, long after Denise Richardson’s (undone?) assignment is
forgotten, this will be what these two remember
from this trip. Surely even a loner like Thoreau would, or should, approve.
I hear a voice shouting off far to her right. "Horace? Is that you?" It's Denise, motioning a cluster of students to keep moving toward the group's starting point. "Yes!" I respond forcefully. As I do, the two students scramble to their feet and begin running away, presumably to circle behind the cabin site and rejoin the group there. As they do, I see that they're both boys.
I hear a voice shouting off far to her right. "Horace? Is that you?" It's Denise, motioning a cluster of students to keep moving toward the group's starting point. "Yes!" I respond forcefully. As I do, the two students scramble to their feet and begin running away, presumably to circle behind the cabin site and rejoin the group there. As they do, I see that they're both boys.
"Will
you backtrack a bit and round up any slackers?" Denise asks.
"Sure,” I say, turning around and walking in the opposite direction. While I scrunch my eyes, trying to determine if I recognize either boy, I’m approached by my favorite student, Wilhelmina Sperry, notebook in hand, clearly running to make up lost time and ground.
"It's OK, Willie," I say reassuringly. "Is there anybody else back there?"
"No. I’m the last one," she says as she slows to a walk and adjusts her glasses, clearly out of breath. "I wanted to take a few more minutes to make some notes about a spider web I found. I guess I lost track of time."
"Sure,” I say, turning around and walking in the opposite direction. While I scrunch my eyes, trying to determine if I recognize either boy, I’m approached by my favorite student, Wilhelmina Sperry, notebook in hand, clearly running to make up lost time and ground.
"It's OK, Willie," I say reassuringly. "Is there anybody else back there?"
"No. I’m the last one," she says as she slows to a walk and adjusts her glasses, clearly out of breath. "I wanted to take a few more minutes to make some notes about a spider web I found. I guess I lost track of time."
"Good
for you." Willie and I are now walking toward the bus at exactly the same
pace.
"I love it here," she says. "That was a good assignment. Now that I've actually seen the pond, I need to re-read the parts of Walden we discussed in class."
"I love it here," she says. "That was a good assignment. Now that I've actually seen the pond, I need to re-read the parts of Walden we discussed in class."
"Sounds
like a good idea."
A pause. And then: "Mr. Dewey, would you call Thoreau a Romantic writer?"
"Well, not exactly. Not in what I think of in the classic sense of the term, like Wordsworth or Emerson. But I'm sure a lot of people would."
"I just love him."
A pause. And then: "Mr. Dewey, would you call Thoreau a Romantic writer?"
"Well, not exactly. Not in what I think of in the classic sense of the term, like Wordsworth or Emerson. But I'm sure a lot of people would."
"I just love him."
"Fair
enough. But remember, Willie: it's a big world out there. There are lots of
fish in the pond."
Willie
turns her head at me, smiling. "You're not talking about how they restock
the pond with fish."
"No, Willie, I am not."
Willie’s smile breaks into a chuckle. "OK, Mr. Dewey. I'll keep my standards up.”
"No, Willie, I am not."
Willie’s smile breaks into a chuckle. "OK, Mr. Dewey. I'll keep my standards up.”
"Thatta
girl, Willie. Any writer would be lucky to catch you. Any non-writer,
too."