Editorial
“To Save Time”
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I write this 1956 is just ending. There is much on the radio about
the Hungarian refugees who have come and are coming to this country,
and I am wondering what 1957, their first year in America, will
mean, particularly to the children among them. What do we want it
to mean?
I am reminded of something that happened in a children’s
room where I had a reading club of little girls who lived in a poor
tenement district. We met one evening a week to read aloud books
that were worth sharing. One evening Olga said to me, “My
mother says to tell you she thinks it is so nice for us to have
this club because we not only have fun but we also learn interesting
things.” “That’s right,” said Julia, “and
besides, it helps us to save time.”
The other children were ready to correct her at
once. “You don’t mean save time,” they
said. “You mean pass time.” “No,”
Julia insisted, “I mean save time.” “You
can’t mean that,” said Hazel, “it doesn’t
make sense” “It does too,” said Julia, and when
I asked her to explain, she began slowly,
“Well, you know there are some times in every
day when you are doing things you don’t care if you ever think
of again or not. But there is some time when you are doing things
you love so much that you want to save that time in your mind and
think of it over and over. And this time when we read good books
together I like to save so I can think of it for always.”
It was to me a new interpretation of the phrase
“save time” and it seems a very good one to think about
now not only with our own children but also with the little ones
who must make a new home here. Along with food, clothing and shelter,
they will unavoidably get a great deal in the way of shoddy entertainment
— mediocre books, comics, poor programs on radio and television
and in the movies. Yet, we do not want all this to be their only
impression of America.
We have so much that is better to offer them. Any
adult who will take time to share lovingly and joyfully our good
stories and pictures, the best recordings of music and the fun of
nature and the out-of-doors, will be giving these boys and girls
something that will mean quite as much to them as material things,
something that can help to make 1957 for them a rich year with time
in it “to save for always.”
— Jennie
D. Lindquist
| From
the February 1957 issue of The Horn Book Magazine
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