Reading to the dormitory

Anything that doesn't fit anywhere else, but that's still CH related.

Moderator: Moderators

Chris T
3rd Former
Posts: 36
Joined: Sat Oct 12, 2013 7:42 pm
Real Name: Chris Tanner

Reading to the house

Post by Chris T »

When in a junior dorm, with 24 others on the top floor of the house, one of the regular delights of weekend bedtime, after lights out, was about 30 min of reading aloud by a dormitory monitor. The choice of literature was usually his, but the housemasters also took an interest in the choice, possibly as censors. Juniors sometime also sometimes suggested reading material. After so long I remember very few of the works read; only Edgar Rice Burrough’s stories of Tarzan and life on Mars, Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Pit and the Pendulum”, also other of his works, and A.G Street’s short stories. Recent Blues probably don’t know any of these authors. (Poe is maybe an exception.) But with individual cubicles in today’s dormitories, is there any such reading now? What was read to the girls?
User avatar
LongGone
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 383
Joined: Mon Jul 28, 2008 4:17 pm
Real Name: Mike Adams
Location: New England

Re: Reading to the house

Post by LongGone »

My most memorable reading was 'Dracula'. For some reason, at exactly the right moment, the dormitory door would open with appropriate creaking.
If a stone falls on an egg: alas for the egg
If an egg falls on a stone: alas for the egg
alterblau
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 60
Joined: Thu Sep 05, 2013 8:58 pm
Real Name: A Smith

Re: Reading to the house

Post by alterblau »

In a sense, “Reading to the House”, included House “Duty”. This was the evening spiritual readings in the dayroom on the 6 days without Evening Chapel, after first prep and just before juniors went to bed. In my house only the house captain read and one of the two housemasters always attended. The “Duty” consisted of a lesson, usually taken from a folder of typed extracts provided by the management, and then prayers from a similar list, always including the Lord’s Prayer. Like gym (as recently described in another thread) it was considered a boring necessity. The reader could make any selection from the Holy Scriptures. Rarely was there any excitement with “Duty”. But, although I wasn’t in Maine A, I heard that on the eve of a particularly tense House Rugby Cup Final the lesson was the book of Daniel about the writing on the wall at Belshazzar’s Feast, which comprised the mysterious words, “Mene, mene, tekel, upharsin”. Or if you prefer, “Maine A, Maine A, tackle and pass it”.
Kit Bartlett
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 333
Joined: Sat Apr 30, 2011 11:58 am
Real Name: Christopher Bartlett

Re: Reading to the house

Post by Kit Bartlett »

Some Monitors were I remember not particularly good readers. I also recall Rev. Cecil Cochrane, Junior Housemaster,
reading to the senior Dormitory "Nine Taylors" by Dorothy L. Sayers, quite a lengthy book which must have taken a considerable
number of nights.
michael scuffil
Button Grecian
Posts: 1612
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
Real Name: michael scuffil
Location: germany

Re: Reading to the house

Post by michael scuffil »

Our junior dorm readings were done by one of us. The reader's bed would be wheeled to beneath the central light, which could be pulled down (for matron's inspection). I remember some distinctly 'unsuitable' reading matter, for example the non-cadet edition of The Cruel Sea, and the memoirs of investigative reporter Duncan Webb, who specialized in vice rings. The only other book I remember offhand was The Lord of the Rings, which we started almost as soon as it was first published, but soon discontinued, as not many people liked it.

I do remember our housemaster John Page reading from 'Ghost Stories of the Norfolk Broads'. He was a Norfolk man himself, of course.
Th.B. 27 1955-63
eucsgmrc
GE (Great Erasmus)
Posts: 184
Joined: Thu Mar 10, 2011 12:38 pm
Real Name: John Wexler
Location: Edinburgh

Re: Reading to the house

Post by eucsgmrc »

alterblau wrote:... House “Duty”. This was the evening spiritual readings in the dayroom on the 6 days without Evening Chapel, after first prep and just before juniors went to bed. In my house only the house captain read and one of the two housemasters always attended.
In ColA (late 50s-early 60s) the monitors took it in turns to read, but otherwise the ritual was just as you describe. The reader was free to choose what he would read, and nobody asked or checked beforehand. Very occasionally somebody would introduce a reading from outside Christian scripture, and Kit seemed to tolerate that without comment.

However, about once a year some daring spirit would take on the challenge of reading the valley of dry bones from Ezekiel 37. Although that's not intrinsically a particularly droll passage, the entire house believed it to be hysterically funny, and also knew the consequences of laughing. If anybody tittered, or if the reader corpsed, then Kit would be beside himself with fury and would cane titterer, reader or both. If, on the other hand, the reading passed off in safe solemnity, the reader would acquire great kudos with Kit as much as with the house.

I don't recall anybody ever reading about Oholibah (Ezekiel 23). I cannot imagine how that would have been received.
John Wexler
Col A 1954-62
Martin
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 67
Joined: Wed Nov 14, 2012 6:11 am
Real Name: Bill Hurst

Re: Reading to the house

Post by Martin »

In our house the monitors took the mini-service of House Prayers in turn. One monitor never read from the New Testament, always using the OT. I finally deduced he was Jewish, but this was not otherwise obvious, for he attended Chapel and Divinity lessons.
Fitzsadou
LE (Little Erasmus)
Posts: 60
Joined: Wed Oct 31, 2012 8:06 pm
Real Name: Tom Barnes

Re: Reading to the house

Post by Fitzsadou »

Concerning evening Duty,CME Seaman (headmaster & OB) once told me that when he was a house captain, in the 1920s, he had requested permission from his housemaster to read a passage from the Koran at Duty. Permission was granted. (But whether for more than one occasion, or whether the housemaster insisted on seeing the passage before the reading, I do not know. CMES was doubtlessly then a very pious person, as he was as HM, so probably there was no censoring for him.) He told me this with some smugness implying, it seemed, that he would welcome someone else doing the same thing. I did not do so and have no idea if anyone else ever did during CMES’s regime. But it must be emphasised that in the 20s, 50s and 60s attitudes to Islam in Britain were totally different to those of today. In Britain then there were very few Muslims and they were virtually invisible. Islam in those days was considered a very foreign and exotic religion, with no cultural relevance to the Western World. Effectively it was unknown, except for those who had lived and worked in Muslim lands, or who were interested in comparative religion. Yet the political and economic importance (oil) of some Islamic countries was acknowledged after the second world war. At Housey today, with its few Muslim pupils, is the Koran ever read at Duty, as CMES did?
Kit Bartlett
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 333
Joined: Sat Apr 30, 2011 11:58 am
Real Name: Christopher Bartlett

Reading to the dormitory

Post by Kit Bartlett »

Do people recall he type of book read to both senior and junior dormitories ?. They were read by both masters and monitors. We had one monitor in Colerfidtge A who was such a poor reader out loud that it was painful to listen. Dorothy Sayers' "Nine Tailors" was a popular one as was "Moonfleet"
User avatar
J.R.
Forum Moderator
Posts: 15835
Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 4:53 pm
Real Name: John Rutley
Location: Dorking, Surrey

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by J.R. »

I have vague recollections of being read too in Col B. "Rally Round The Flag Boys" rings a very distant bell.
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
sejintenej
Button Grecian
Posts: 4092
Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2005 12:19 pm
Real Name: David Brown ColA '52-'61
Location: Essex

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by sejintenej »

Kit Bartlett wrote:Do people recall he type of book read to both senior and junior dormitories ?. They were read by both masters and monitors. We had one monitor in Colerfidtge A who was such a poor reader out loud that it was painful to listen. Dorothy Sayers' "Nine Tailors" was a popular one as was "Moonfleet"
Thank goodness it was abolished when you left! As for STC; he would not be happy at seeing his name written like that :wink:
DavidRawlins
Button Grecian
Posts: 1034
Joined: Sat Feb 27, 2010 5:50 pm
Real Name: David Charles Rawlins
Location: Somerset

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by DavidRawlins »

I remember Kit starting to read a number of books, and only reading a chapter or two, before he decided that they were unsuitable for us. I think that he used to read on Sundays. Icannot remember Corks ever reading to us.
I did read some of A A Milne's works when I was a monitor.
Col A 1946-1953
michael scuffil
Button Grecian
Posts: 1612
Joined: Tue Oct 30, 2007 12:53 pm
Real Name: michael scuffil
Location: germany

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by michael scuffil »

I remember The Cruel Sea, which John Page approved of because it was the 'Cadet' edition. As soon as he had gone, the non-cadet edition was substituted, which contained some pretty juicy passages.

On another occasion, we chose Duncan Webb's memoirs. Duncan Webb was a crime reporter on the 'People' newspaper, and specialized in 'vice'. He was said to have originated the phrase 'I made an excuse and left the room.' It was from this book that I learnt about the Messina brothers, who ran a vice ring in London in the 1940s and early 50s. I mentioned this to my mother, and she said, 'Yes, one of them lived in Kings Court (the rather classy block of flats in Hammersmith where I lived till I was 2) and he used to tickle you under the chin.'

John Page himself would occasionally read 'Ghost Stories of the Norfolk Broads'. Not exactly bedtime reading, if you ask me.
Th.B. 27 1955-63
User avatar
Mid A 15
Button Grecian
Posts: 3172
Joined: Thu May 19, 2005 1:38 pm
Real Name: Claude Rains
Location: The Patio Of England (Kent)

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by Mid A 15 »

John Wyndham's Midwich Cuckoos and George Orwell's Animal Farm are two books which spring to mind from Maine A junior dormitory 65/66 courtesy, mainly, of Geoff Fordham and John Lloyd the two monitors most involved with us squits.
Ma A, Mid A 65 -72
User avatar
postwarblue
Deputy Grecian
Posts: 409
Joined: Mon May 21, 2007 12:12 pm
Real Name: Robert Griffiths
Location: Havant

Re: Reading to the dormitory

Post by postwarblue »

I'm pretty sure that it was monitors reading to the dormitory that introduced me to Thurber and Saki and Dornford Yates.
'Oh blest retirement, friend to life's decline'
Post Reply