The Art of Eating Spaghetti

The Art of Eating Spaghetti

An excerpt from Growing Up by Russell Baker


The only thing that truly interested me was writing, and I knew that sixteen-year olds did not come out of high school and become writers. I thought of writing as something to be done only by the rich. It was so obviously not real work, not a job at which you could earn a living. Still, I had begun to think of myself as a writer. It was the only thing for which I seemed to have the smallest talent, and, silly though it sounded whin I told people I’d like to be a writer, it gave me a way of thinking about myself which satisfied my need to have an identity.
The notion of becoming a writer had flickered off and on in my head since the Belleville days, but it wasn't until my third year in high school that the possibility took hold. Until then I'd been bored by everything associated with English courses. I found English grammar dull and baffling. I hated the assignments to turn out “compositions,” and went at them like heavy labor, turning out leaden, lackluster paragraphs that were agonies for teachers to read and for me to write. The classics thrust on me to read seemed deadening as chloroform.
When our class was assigned to Mr. Fleagle for third-year English I anticipated another grim year in that dreariest of subjects. Mr. Fleagle was notorious among City students for dullness and inability to inspire. He was said to be stuffy, dull, and hopelessly out of date. To me he looked to be sixty or seventy and prim to a fault. He wore primly severe eyeglasses, his wavy hair was primly cut and primly combed. He wore prim vested suits with neckties blocked primly against the collar buttons of his primly starched white shirts. He had a primly pointed jaw, a primly straight nose, and a prim manner of speaking that was so correct, so gentlemanly, that he seemed a comic antique.
I anticipated a listless, unfruitful year with Mr. Fleagle and for a long time was not disappointed. We read Macbeth, Mr. Fleagle loved Macbeth and wanted us to love it too, but he lacked the gift of infecting others with his own passion. He tried to convey the murderous ferocity of Lady Macbeth one day by reading aloud the passage that concludes:
. . . I have given suck, and know How tender 'tis to love the babe that milks me. I would, while it was smiling in my face, Have plucked my nipple from his boneless gums . . . .
The idea of prim Mr. Fleagle plucking his nipple from boneless gums was too much for the class. We burst into gasps of irrepressible snickering. Mr. Fleagle stopped.
“There is nothing funny, boys, about giving suck to a babe. It is the — the very essence of motherhood, don't you see.”
He constantly sprinkled his sentences with “don't you see.” It wasn't a question but an exclamation of mild surprise at our ignorance. “Your pronoun needs an antecedent, do you see,” he would say, very primly. “The purpose of the Porter's sccene, boys, is to provide comic relief from the horror, don't you see.”
Late in the year we tackled the informal essay. "The essay, don't you see, is the ..." My mind went numb. Of all forms of writing, none seemed so boring as the essay. Naturally we would have to write informal essays. Mr. Fleagle distributed a homework sheet offering us a choice of topics. None was quite so simpleminded as "What I Did on My Summer Vacation," but most seemed to be almost as dull. I took the list home and dawdled until the night before the essay was due. Sprawled on the sofa, I finally faced up to the grim task, took the list out of my notebook, and scanned it. The topic on which my eye stopped was "The Art of Eating Spaghetti."
This title produced an extraordinary sequence of mental images. Surging up out of the depths of memory came a vivid recollection of a night in Belleville when all of us were seated around the supper table -- Uncle Allen, my mother, Uncle Charlie, Doris, Uncle Hal — and Aunt Pat served spaghetti for supper. Spaghetti was an exotic treat in those days. Neither Doris nor I had ever eaten spaghetti, and none of the adults had enough experience to be good at it. All the good humor of Uncle Allen's house reawoke in my mind as I recalled the laughing arguments we had that night about the socially respectable method for moving spaghetti from plate to mouth.
Suddenly I wanted to write about that, about the warmth and good feeling of it, but I wanted to put it down simply for my own joy, not for Mr. Fleagle. It was a moment I wanted to recapture and hold for myself. I wanted to relive the pleasure of an evening at New Street. To write it as I wanted, however, would violate all the rules of formal composition I'd learned in school, and Mr. Fleagle would surely give it a failing grade. Never mind. I would write something else for Mr. Fleagle after I had written this thing for myself.
When I finished it the night was half gone and there was no time left to compose a proper, respectable essay for Mr. Fleagle. There was no choice next morning but to turn in my private reminiscence of Belleville. Two days passed before Mr. Fleagle returned the graded papers, and he returned everyone's but mine. I was bracing myself for a command to report to Mr. Fleagle immediately after school for discipline when I saw him lift up my paper from his desk and rap for the class's attention.
“Now, boys," he said, "I want to read you an essay. This is titled ‘The Art of Eating Spaghetti.’”
And he started to read. My words! He was reading MY WORDS out loud to the entire class. What's more, the entire class was listening. Listening attentively. Then somebody laughed, then the entire class was laughing, and not in contempt and ridicule, but with openhearted enjoyment. Even Mr. Fleagle stopped two or three times to repress a small prim smile.
I did my best to avoid showing pleasure, but what I was feeling was pure ecstasy at this startling demonstration that my words had the power to make people laugh. In the eleventh grade, at the eleventh hour as it were, I had discovered a calling. It was the happiest moment of my entire school career. When Mr. Fleagle finished he put the final seal on my happiness by saying, “Now that, boys, is an essay, don't you see. It's — don't you see — it's of the very essence of the essay, don't you see. Congratulations, Mr. Baker.”
For the first time, light shone on a possibility. It wasn't a very heartening possibility, to be sure. Writing couldn't lead to a job after high school, and it was hardly honest work, but Mr. Fleagle had opened a door for me. After that I ranked Mr. Fleagle among the finest teachers in the school.

47 comments:

  1. who else here for english

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  2. This is by far my favorite article that I have ever read

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  3. Sometimes you just need to remember you matter, You may think what you are doing isn't exciting but for some it just may be the words to make the day better.

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  4. Beautifully written

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  5. vivid details, it flows. A good story

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  6. I love how the author, Russell Baker, includes various literary devices to tell his story. It keeps the reader engaged and allows for a more enjoyable read.

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  7. woo!! This is amazing story. I love how the author kept the reader engaged.

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  8. Valid ( only saying cause my professor wants us to read it)

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  9. Don’t focus on the future focus on the present for the future you want, don’t you see.

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  10. PERIOD KING SLAY POP OFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFFF

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  11. Feagle sound like fecal which means poo hahhahahahahahhahahahahha

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  12. I love how they communicated such a simple art as eating spaghetti, into a funny heartwarming story.

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  13. this is great. a good lesson to learn

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  14. Why does this essay feel like a circlejerk but only one person showed up and everyone else tried to say they went.

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  15. Wow what a plot twist

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  16. i dont understand can someone please translate in skibidi brainrot?

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    Replies
    1. basically Diddy on talk tuah

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    2. Skibidi says "nah ima do ma own thing" and thinks Mr. Feagle finna say ts pmo icl and that Skibidi is nt Shkspr, but Mr. Feagle and the function rejoice at Skibidi's glamorous paper podcast, and there, opens a toilet for Skibidi, a toilet of opportunities.

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  17. free Diddy on skibidi and hawk tuah

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  18. what did i just find bro 😭💔

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  19. ketchup or MUSTAAAAAAAAARD 🤣✌️

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