Feeding the Mind - by Lewis Carroll
Lewis Carroll is blogging here now. This post is all his. (Archive.org has multiple formats of this short essay, including Kindle, PDF etc.)
BREAKFAST, dinner, tea; in extreme cases, breakfast,
luncheon, dinner, tea, supper, and a glass of something hot at bedtime. What
care we take about feeding the lucky body! Which of us does as much for his mind?
And what causes the difference? Is the body so much the more important of the
two?
By no means: but life depends on the body being fed, whereas
we can continue to exist as animals (scarcely as men) though the mind be
utterly starved and neglected. Therefore Nature provides that, in case of serious
neglect of the body, such terrible consequences of discomfort and pain shall
ensue, as will soon bring us back to a sense of our duty: and some of the
functions necessary to life she does for us altogether, leaving us no choice in
the matter. It would fare but ill with many of us if we were left to
superintend our own digestion and circulation. ‘Bless me!' one would cry, ' I
forgot to wind up my heart this morning! To think that it has been standing
still for the last three hours!' ‘I can't walk with you this afternoon,' a
friend would say, ' as I have no less than eleven dinners to digest. I had to
let them stand over from last week, being so busy, and my doctor says he will
not answer for the consequences if I wait any longer!'
Well, it is, I say, for us that the consequences of
neglecting the body can be clearly seen and felt ; and it might be well for
some if the mind were equally visible and tangible if we could take it, say, to
the doctor, and have its pulse felt.
"Why, what have you been doing with this mind lately? How
have you fed it? It looks pale, and the pulse is very slow."
"Well, doctor, it has not had much regular food lately. I
gave it a lot of sugar-plums yesterday."
"Sugar-plums! What kind?"
"Well, they were a parcel of conundrums, sir."
"Ah, I thought so. Now just mind this: if you go on playing
tricks like that, you'll spoil all its teeth, and get laid up with mental
indigestion. You must have nothing but the plainest reading for the next few
days. Take care now! No novels on any account!"
Considering the amount of painful experience many of us have
had in feeding and dosing the body, it would, I think, be quite worth our while
to try and translate some of the rules into corresponding ones for the mind.
First, then, we should set ourselves to provide for our mind
its proper kind of food. We very soon learn what will, and what will not, agree
with the body, and find little difficulty in refusing a piece of the tempting
pudding or pie which is associated in our memory with that terrible attack of
indigestion, and whose very name irresistibly recalls rhubarb and magnesia;
but it takes a great many lessons to convince us how indigestible some of our
favourite lines of reading are, and again and again we make a meal of the
unwholesome novel, sure to be followed by its usual train of low spirits,
unwillingness to work, weariness of existence in fact, by mental nightmare.
Then we should be careful to provide this wholesome food in
proper amount. Mental gluttony, or over-reading, is a dangerous propensity,
tending to weakness of digestive power, and in some cases to loss of appetite:
we know that bread is a good and wholesome food, but who would like to try the
experiment of eating two or three loaves at a sitting?
I have heard a physician telling his patient whose complaint
was merely gluttony and want of exercise - that ' the earliest symptom of hyper-nutrition is a deposition of adipose tissue,' and no doubt the fine long
words greatly consoled the poor man under his increasing load of fat.
I wonder if there is such a thing in nature as a FAT MIND? I
really think I have met with one or two: minds which could not keep up with the
slowest trot in conversation; could not jump over a logical fence, to save
their lives; always got stuck fast in a narrow argument; and, in short, were
fit for nothing but to waddle helplessly through the world.
Then, again, though the food be wholesome and in proper
amount, we know that we must not consume too many kinds at once. Take the
thirsty a quart of beer, or a quart of cider, or even a quart of cold tea, and
he will probably thank you (though not so heartily in the last case!). But what
think you his feelings would be if you offered him a tray containing a little
mug of beer, a little mug of cider, another of cold tea, one of hot tea, one of
coffee, one of cocoa, and corresponding vessels of milk, water,
brandy-and-water, and butter-milk ? The sum total might be a quart, but would
it be the same thing to the haymaker?
Having settled the proper kind, amount, and variety of our
mental food, it remains that we should be careful to allow proper intervals
between meal and meal, and not swallow the food hastily without mastication, so
that it may be thoroughly digested; both which rules, for the body, are also
applicable at once to the mind.
First, as to the intervals : these are as really necessary
as they are for the body, with this difference only, that while the body
requires three or four hours' rest before it is ready for another meal, the
mind will in many cases do with three or four minutes. I believe that the
interval required is much shorter than is generally supposed, and from personal
experience, I would recommend anyone, who has to devote several hours together
to one subject of thought, to try the effect of such a break, say once an hour,
leaving off for five minutes only each time, but taking care to throw the mind
absolutely ' out of gear ' for those five minutes, and to turn it entirely to
other subjects. It is astonishing what an amount of impetus and elasticity the
mind recovers during those short periods of rest.
And then, as to the mastication of the food, the mental
process answering to this is simply thinking over what we read. This is a very
much greater exertion of mind than the mere passive taking in the contents of
our Author. So much greater an exertion is it, that, as Coleridge says, the
mind often ' angrily refuses ' to put itself to such trouble so much greater,
that we are far too apt to neglect it altogether, and go on pouring in fresh
food on the top of the undigested masses already lying there, till the
unfortunate mind is fairly swamped under the flood. But the greater the
exertion the more valuable, we may be sure, is the effect. One hour of steady
thinking over a subject (a solitary walk is as good an opportunity for the
process as any other) is worth two or three of reading only. And just consider
another effect of this thorough digestion of the books we read ; I mean the
arranging and 'ticketing,' so to speak, of the subjects in our minds, so that
we can readily refer to them when we want them. Sam Slick tells us that he has
learnt several languages in his life, but somehow “couldn’t keep the parcels
sorted ' in his mind. And many a mind that hurries through book after book,
without waiting to digest or arrange anything, gets into that sort of
condition, and the unfortunate owner finds himself far from fit really to
support the character all his friends give him.
A thoroughly well-read man. Just you try him in any subject, now. You
can't puzzle him.'
You turn to the thoroughly well-read man. You ask him a
question, say, in English history (he is understood to have just finished
reading Macaulay). He smiles good-naturedly, tries to look as if he knew all
about it, and proceeds to dive into his mind for the answer. Up comes a handful
of very promising facts, but on examination they turn out to belong to the
wrong century, and are pitched in again. A second haul brings up a fact much
more like the real thing, but, unfortunately, along with it comes a tangle of
other things a fact in political economy, a rule in arithmetic, the ages of his
brother's children, and a stanza of Gray's 6 Elegy,' and among all these, the
fact he wants has got hopelessly twisted up and entangled. Meanwhile, everyone
is waiting for his reply, and, as the silence is getting more and more awkward,
our well-read friend has to stammer out some half- answer at last, not nearly
so clear or so satisfactory as an ordinary schoolboy would have given. And all
this for want of making up his knowledge into proper bundles and ticketing
them.
Do you know the unfortunate victim of ill-judged mental
feeding when you see him? Can you doubt him? Look at him drearily wandering
round a reading-room, tasting dish after dish we beg his pardon, book after
book keeping to none. First a mouthful of novel; but no, faugh! he has had
nothing but that to eat for the last week, and is quite tired of the taste.
Then a slice of science; but you know at once what the result of that will be
ah, of course, much too tough for his teeth. And so on through the whole weary
round, which he tried (and failed in) yesterday, and will probably try and fail
in to-morrow.
Mr. Oliver Wendell Holmes, in his very amusing book, "The Professor at the Breakfast Table", gives the following rule for knowing whether
a human being is young or old : ' The crucial experiment is this offer a bulky
bun to the suspected individual just ten minutes before dinner. If this is
easily accepted and devoured, the fact of youth is established.' He tells us
that a human being, ' if young, will eat anything at any hour of the day or
night.'
To ascertain the healthiness of the mental appetite of a
human animal, place in its hands a short, well-written, but not exciting
treatise on some popular subject a mental bun, in fact. If it is read with
eager interest and perfect attention, and if the reader can answer questions on
the subject afterwards, the mind is in first-rate working order. If it be
politely laid down again, or perhaps lounged over for a few minutes, and then,
' I can't read this stupid book! Would you hand me the second volume of “The
Mysterious Murder “?' you may be equally sure that there is something wrong in
the mental digestion.
If this paper has given you any useful hints on the
important subject of reading, and made you see that it is one's duty no less
than one's interest to 'read, mark, learn, and inwardly digest' the good books
that fall in your, way, its purpose will be fulfilled.
Comments
Post a Comment