In July, 1888, as the thirteen year old Winston Churchill was ending his first term at Harrow, his housemaster, H. O. D. Davidson, wrote a report letter to Winston’s mother. Davidson said Winston was not :
in any way willfully troublesome; but his forgetfulness, carelessness, unpunctuality, and irregularity in every way, have really been so serious, that I write to ask you, when he is at home, to speak very gravely to him on the subject.Well, we know how it all turned out, don’t we?
When a boy first comes to a public school, one always expects a certain amount of helplessness, owing to being left to himself so much more in regard to preparation of work &c. But a week or two is generally enough for a boy to get used to the ways of the place.
Winston, I am sorry to say, has, if anything, got worse as the term passed. Constantly late for school, losing his books and papers and various other things into which I need not enter – he is so regular in his irregularity that I really don’t know what to do; and sometimes think he cannot help it.
But if he is unable to conquer this slovenliness (for I think all the complaints I have to make of him can be grouped under this head, though it takes various forms), he will never make a success of a public school. …
As far as ability goes he ought to be at the top of his form, whereas he is at the bottom. …
I have written very plainly to you, as I do think it very serious that he should have acquired such phenomenal slovenliness. …
Two items:
A hat tip to Housemaster Davidson for seeing past the problematic behavior and recognizing Churchill’s inherent ability: “he ought to be at the top of his form.” During Churchill’s childhood and youth, many people wrote him off as a dullard, the most important of them being his father, Lord Randolph.
Were you thinking as you read the letter: “Today, a teacher would be telling Jennie Churchill, ‘I think Winston may be LD. You ought to have him evaluated. We’re probably expecting too much of him?’”
__________________________________________________
Ted Morgan, Churchill: Young Man in a Hurry, 1874-1915. (p.45)
No comments:
Post a Comment