I’m sorry to have to admit that my dad’s dark brown bookcase
of around a hundred books, his set of Dickens in their separate bespoke
bookcase, and my two grandfathers’ similar sized libraries, could not match the
temptations of brightly coloured comics. One pair of my grandparents had a
small shop where they sold a few newspapers, and so I had regular access to Dandy,
Beano, Knockout, Film Fun, Radio Fun, The Eagle, Swift and Topper, and the black and
white British versions of the American DC comics Batman, Superman, Flash and
Green Lantern. Instead of growing up with great writers such as Charles Dickens,
Robert Louis Stevenson, Kenneth Grahame and C. S. Lewis, as we are told every aspiring
author should, my earliest literary models were the likes of Desperate Dan,
Korky the Cat, Dan Dare, Beryl the Peril and Deed a Day Danny. The comic-strip
personas of Laurel and Hardy, Terry Thomas, Arthur Askey, Charlie Drake and
Benny Hill were familiar figures long before I saw them on film or television. Wow!
Hmph! Yikes! Blam! - it never affected my language development.
But in time there were books I came to treasure.
The beautifully-bound Children’s Encyclopedia was one
– or strictly speaking ten. This was the brainchild of Arthur Mee (1875-1943)
who originally published it in fifty fortnightly parts at 7d (seven pence)
each, beginning in 1908. It was subsequently expanded and published as a whole, translated
into most of the world’s leading languages, and sold in the United States as
‘The Book of Knowledge’. Our ten-volume set had been bought for my dad and
his sister in 1927.
The encyclopedia made Mee’s name and fortune. He had started
out as a journalist at fourteen and risen to editor of the Nottingham Evening
News by the age of twenty. He then moved to London to work on various national
newspapers and periodicals, but from 1905 he turned from daily journalism to
the editing of educational and reference works, particularly popular educative
literature for children. When he died in 1943 he was worth £43,500, equivalent in
purchasing power to around £1.75 million today.
Mee’s introduction to Volume 1 imagines a small child
(actually based on his daughter) forever asking questions - What does the
world mean? Why am I here? Where are all the people who have been and gone?
Where does the rose come from? Who holds the stars up there? What is it that
seems to talk to me when the world is dark and still? – until her mother,
unable to bear any more cries out “Oh for a book that will answer all the
questions!”
“And this is the book she cried for,” writes Mee.
The encyclopedia is arranged into fifty-seven chapters of
nineteen divisions each (although some chapters omit some divisions in later
volumes, and the terms ‘chapter’, ‘division’, ‘group’, and ‘section’ are used
inconsistently). Again, though, I wish I had paid more attention to the whole.
I mostly ignored the literary and arts sections, little more than glanced at
the geographical bits, and spent only slightly more time on the science and
industry divisions. The most-thumbed pages reveal I spent most of my time in division
18, ‘Things to Make and Do’.
I taught myself to tie knots, made model gliders (the heading implies only boys can make them), tried to
learn morse code and semaphore, and experimented with invisible ink and
pin-hole cameras. This stuff is timeless as demonstrated more recently by Conn and Hal
Iggulden’s best selling book ‘The Dangerous Book for Boys’ (2006) which
recycled the same kind of material (as did the follow-on cashing-in-on-a-good-idea daring book for girls,
and the dad’s and mum’s books for the dads and mums who are best at
everything).
I’m not convinced though that the dangerous and daring books
were quite as dangerous and daring as Arthur Mee’s encyclopedia. If the instructions
on how to make an assagai spear* don’t win it the crown – it was basically a metal-tipped, flighted
cane released sling-like from a length of knotted string with such lethal force
that mine pierced a solid wooden fence forty-five feet away – then the drawing with
the caption ‘Mohammed Dictating The Koran’ definitely settles the matter. It would be much too dangerous to post it here. It
led to the encyclopedia being proscribed in the Kashmir in 1973 following riots
in protest against its sale. Two Western hippies with the misfortune to be in
the wrong place at the wrong time were only just saved from being murdered by the mob by the
arrival of the police.
A second treasured book, which came from my
grandfather’s
bookshelf in the room next to his shop, is a real gem, ‘The Universal
Book of Hobbies and Handicrafts’ (Odhams,
1935), edited by the prolific Sid G. Hedges. The chapter on Bathing and
Swimming seems likely to have been the work of Sid himself. Like other
books of its time, it is
undated, but I knew it must be from the 1930s before I googled it
because it
contains a chapter on television. This tells us:
Any amateur with access to a supply of wireless parts and some mechanical skill can make a simple “televisor” which will give moderately good reception.
Really! But yes, more careful reading reveals that this is mechanical television based on spinning perforated discs synchronised
between camera and receiver, i.e. the Baird system used in early B.B.C.
transmissions between 1929 and 1937. The chapter challenges us:
Any amateur mechanic can make the
discs, the chief skill needed being accuracy and patience in marking out and
cutting the holes.
I’m afraid I was unable to rise to the test, lacking access to a supply of wireless parts you understand, but I probably spent as many hours poring over the hundred chapters of hobbies and handicrafts as over the whole ten volumes of ‘The Children’s Encyclopedia’.
The book reminds us of a pre-television time when the maxim “every member of the family should have a hobby” went uncontested. Its content, from Appliqué Work to Wood Carving, deserves much lengthier attention, if only for its quirks – self-defence tips on how to tie someone up and how an elbow can be used to knock an assailant from a motor car running board; photographs of bad mouth opening and good mouth opening when singing; advice about what girls should wear when hiking; and instructions on how to drown or chloroform unwanted kittens in the chapter on pet keeping. The chapter on poultry keeping is much more tactful. Its standard treatment for poorly chickens is to kill them, but it doesn’t tell you how. Perhaps a few cross references to kitten drowning were unintentionally omitted. A series of posts on Estelle Hargraves wonderful blog ‘The Skittish Library’ eulogizes Sid G. Hedges book in much more detail – possibly her choice of book for that fictional radio desert island.
By the time I was ten, both the Universal Book and The
Children’s Encyclopedia seemed squarely old fashioned (even though revised editions of Mee's encyclopedia remained on sale until 1964). My edition of Arthur Mee did not
even know about the existence of the planet Pluto (although as the guy was so clever I would not be surprised to find that he did in fact know about it, even before it had been discovered, and had decided not to include it in anticipation of later opinion that it is not a true planet). I was released from their
antediluvian clutches by the appearance, in January 1961, of Purnell’s new magazine ‘Knowledge - the new colour magazine which grows into an
encyclopædia’ (despite its modernity, Knowledge used the digraph spelling
which had been dropped by Arthur Mee after the very earliest editions).
An issue of Knowledge Magazine and the cover of one of its volume binders |
‘Knowledge’ was a British version of an attractive Italian
educational magazine called Conoscere. Every page, especially the cover, was adorned by sumptous illustrations, the most prominent signed by Alessandro Fedini. The editor, John
Chancellor (1927-2014), was incidentally
the father of actress Anna. The idea of a British edition had first
been pitched to Fleetway publications who were the successors to Mee’s publisher the
Amalgamated Press, but they turned it down fearing it would damage their sales
of The Children’s Encylopedia and the related Children’s Newspaper. Purnell’s tremendous
success with ‘Knowledge’ forced Fleetway into a change of mind a year later when
they hurriedly brought out ‘Look and Learn’.
As with Arthur Mee’s 1908 magazine, the weekly instalments
of ‘Knowledge’ were collected and bound into volumes, twelve in each. At 2/- (two shillings, the pre-decimal equivalent of 10p; a later re-issued run was 2/6 or 12½p) it wasn't cheap (Knockout was then 4d or four old pence, equivalent to 1.67p). Initially
sixteen volumes were planned but two extra volumes were added at the end (thinking about the price further, it might have seemed expensive for a weekly, but a complete collection at a total cost of £21.60 excluding binders was very good value for an eighteen volume encyclopedia). Surprisingly,
considering its circulation of 400,000, there is currently little online information
about it apart from old copies for sale – a stark contrast to the numerous
repositories devoted to children’s comics. I am clearly not alone in choosing easy infantile humour over learnèd
virtue.**
We collected the full eighteen volumes – over four years’ worth – and although my dad was the only one to read it assiduously, some of it must have it rubbed off on me because I’m still a whizz at answering questions on University Challenge. Not so long ago there was one about the Phoenicians, the ancient Lebanese civilisation, which I distinctly recall from one of the articles in an early issue, but sadly my answer didn’t come out quickly enough to beat the student on the programme.
We collected the full eighteen volumes – over four years’ worth – and although my dad was the only one to read it assiduously, some of it must have it rubbed off on me because I’m still a whizz at answering questions on University Challenge. Not so long ago there was one about the Phoenicians, the ancient Lebanese civilisation, which I distinctly recall from one of the articles in an early issue, but sadly my answer didn’t come out quickly enough to beat the student on the programme.
I lugged the volumes of Knowledge around with me from one
house move to another for twenty years (as well as the eighteen main
volumes there was also an alphabetical guide which filled four additional slightly smaller yellow binders), but finally
in a moment of rash stupidity decided they were too heavy, bulky and juvenile, and left them in a loft in
Hull. They might still be there. Fortunately, thanks to my dad and his dark brown bookcase I still have ‘The
Children’s Encyclopedia’ and ‘The Universal Book of Hobbies and Handicrafts’ (and the bookcase).
* I was certain the assagai spear was in the encyclopedia, but having searched through again I can’t find it, so perhaps it was somewhere else.
POSTSCRIPT: I've now found it in Eagle Annual 8
** I have now sought redemption by creating a Wikipedia page for Knowledge encyclopaedia.
The images reproduced in this post are believed either to be out of copyright or cover images permitted as fair use under copyright law.
POSTSCRIPT: I've now found it in Eagle Annual 8
** I have now sought redemption by creating a Wikipedia page for Knowledge encyclopaedia.
The images reproduced in this post are believed either to be out of copyright or cover images permitted as fair use under copyright law.