| A Review of: when I heard the learnĘd astronomer by Olga SteinWhen I Heard the learn'd astronomer contains text based on a poem
by Walt Whitman. There are only eleven lines, but each is meaningful
and elegant. A young boy is made to put on a jacket and tie before
attending, along with his parents, a lecture to be given at a
university. Inside the neo-classic building a gathering of people
awaits the lecture, and the boy, meanwhile, explores on his own,
looking at scientific miscellanea. Loren Long's illustrations are
haunting in their depiction of a child temporarily disconnected
from the world of adults. Long captures the boy's solitariness even
in the midst of a crowd but also his unwillingness to affect an
interest in the science simply for the sake of fitting in. During
the lecture, the boy grows tired and abandons his parents to wander
about the surrounding gardens "In the mystical moist night-air
/ and from time to time, /Look'd up in perfect silence at the
stars." Alone in the garden and gazing at the starry sky, he
experiences that sense of wonder that eluded him earlier. The poem
itself is a reminder that one doesn't need a trained eye and intellect
to be moved and awed by the splendours of our world.
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