For Americans of my generation the Walt Disney film Bambi (1942!) was a significant life
experience. It was one of the earliest
of the fabulously successful artificial animation films (following Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, 1937, and Pinocchio, 1940) of the genre that made Disney famous and that has
continued to go from strength to strength for the better part of a century into
the age of Pixar. A pictorially
magnificent tear-jerker, Bildungsroman,
and an early tract of eco-propaganda, Bambi
made a huge impression on my young mind in, probably, 1944. At that time I was entirely unaware that the
movie was based on a book published by the Austrian writer Felix Salten in
1923.
Salten
entered my consciousness, via a circuitous route, about sixty years later, when
I was writing a book on anti-Communist literature. I discovered that Whittaker Chambers—the
antagonist of Alger Hiss and super-patriot or super-snitch depending upon your
political metabolism—had for a certain period in the Twenties supplemented a
meager income by translating German language books. His one huge success was Bambi (1928), which became a Book-of-the-Month selection. Until very late in the twentieth century few
American academics and intellectuals could face up to the reality that Hiss had
indeed been--as Chambers alleged--a secret Communist, a low-level Soviet agent,
a traitor, and a world-class liar. Their reluctance required of them more or less
inventive theories of why and how Chambers had been able to frame Hiss with flamboyant
untruths and a specially manufactured typewriter. One theory was that his deranged mind had
projected upon his friend Hiss bizarre plot elements of a fiction by another
Austrian writer, Franz Werfel, (Der Abituriententag, 1928) translated by Chambers as
“Class Reunion”. A scholar must consider
all evidence. Having read “Class
Reunion,” I thought I’d better read Bambi
as well. I found no political clues in
either, but I did end up among what must surely be but a happy few who saw the
film Bambi at age eight and read the
novel Bambi at age sixty-eight, with
pleasure and admiration in both instances.
One
interesting aspect of Bambi (the
book) is its lore concerning the methods used by mother deer in raising their
offspring. That sentence, which in terms
of the techniques of prose composition could be called a “transition,” requires
some spatial movement as well—away from my library and in the direction of our large
back yard and toward the several seriously forested acres of common ground lying
between it and Lake Carnegie about a quarter of a mile to the south. Today these grounds are home to a numerous
and increasing herd of whitetail deer—in addition to several other species of
wildlife. These deer are not quite tame,
but they show less and less fear of human habitations and the activities surrounding
them. The deer mate mainly in November
and, after a gestation period of about 200 days, the does drop their fawns
mainly in late spring or early summer.
Our
suburban deer face no predators, though the automotive slaughter on major roads
is dramatic. This year has witnessed a
particularly large crop of deer babies—portending problems ahead for gardeners
and possible short rations for the deer themselves. A couple of weeks ago I was out combating the
sprouting bamboo—the gestation schedule of the bamboo being roughly that of the
deer themselves—when I practically fell over a curled up fawn along the edge of
my back lawn not fifty feet from the house.
The newborns, though not entirely immobile, are barely ambulatory. The mothers park them in some supposedly safe
place, then leave from for hours on end, returning to nourish them and, as soon
as they get control of their thin, wobbly legs, lead them off to the woods in
the gloaming of dusk or the dawn’s faint light.
When I looked again after a couple of hours, the cradle was bare.
New Jersey suburbanites
Periodically
throughout the day we tiptoed around to the front of the house to take a peek
or a photo. The fawn sat there on the
welcome mat hour after hour--serenely, patiently, with touching infantile
dignity. Our daughter drove back to New
York. As night fell the animal was still
there. But in the dawn of Sunday, made
confident by the expertise of the South Carolinians, I boldly opened the front
door and looked down to see what I expected, a slab of bluestone and a welcome
mat.
A note to our esteemed
readers. I believe that 460 of the 462
posts of on this blog met a rigorous once-a-week schedule. But I now find that fanaticism is among the
characteristics that are waning with age.
It is my hope that I shall be leaving tomorrow on a tour of great libraries in Britain, followed by some serious down time in the Provençal
countryside and the fleshpots of Paris.
The hope is that blog and blogger will reappear in about a month.
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