Previous by DateNext by Date Date Index
Previous by ThreadNext by Thread Thread Index
LM_NET Archive



 
 
Richie's Picks: RALEIGH'S PAGE by Alan Armstrong, Random  House, September 
2007, ISBN: 978-0-375-83319-9; Libr.ISBN:  978-0-375-93319-6
 
" 'With Mr. Raleigh and his people you'll learn mathematics  and geography, 
even some of the new medicine.  If you're lucky you'll get  your wish to 
travel.'
"It was early afternoon when they approached the London  wall.  Andrew 
smelled the ditch outside before he saw it -- a dump for  rubbish and dead dogs.  
Going through the gate, they passed into a noisy  warren of close-packed houses 
built out over narrow twisting lanes.  They  approached a square where there 
was a crowd.  At its center a slight figure  floated in a space apart, white 
and sparkling in an apple-green gown.  She  had red hair.
" 'The Queen!' Andrew's father called.  'Touching folks  for the King's Evil.'
" 'What's that?' the boy asked.
" 'Scrofula it's called, an awful hardening and lumping in the  neck that 
pains and scars.  It's thought to be cured by the touch of  royalty.' "
 
It is the spring of 1584, and whilst tuberculosis runs  rampant in London, it 
is also nearing the end of a century of  European exploration plaguing the 
New World.  
 
Into London comes eleven year-old Andrew Saintleger  (Salinger), the youngest 
son of a Devon farmer.  Andrew's father  spent his own childhood living near 
young Walter  Raleigh and  events that transpired back then permit the  
father's delivering Andrew to Raleigh -- now the Queen's confidant  -- for training 
and with hopes that the young man  might find a favorable future -- possibly 
even in the New  World.  
 
Throughout RALEIGH'S PAGE, there are periods  of time when Andrew is 
acquiring skills and confidence from  Raleigh while staying at the London residence 
and other long  stretches when Andrew is off on the dangerous  undertakings that 
the brilliant and forceful  Raleigh conjures up and directs from his base of  
operations:
 
" 'You see,' the doctor continued, 'the Queen feeds and houses  Mr. Raleigh, 
but his leash is too short for him to sail to America.  If his  exploring 
captains give a good report and the expedition goes, he won't be  along.  The Quee
n keeps him tied to Court.'
" 'Why?' Andrew asked.
" 'She cannot risk his loss.  He is one of the few she  can tell her mind to.'
"Doctor Dee grew silent.  He looked at Andrew and  nodded."
 
The original working title of what is now RALEIGH'S  PAGE had been ANDREW: 
BEING THE BRIEF AND TRUE REPORT OF A PAGE TO SIR  WALTER RALEIGH WHO ASSISTED 
HIS STUDYING OF THE NEW WORLD, WENT AS A SPY TO  FRANCE AND TRAVELED AS ONE OF 
HIS ADVENTURERS TO VIRGINIA.  
 
It is an apt description for  the exciting series of adventures in which 
Andrew, the former Devon farm  boy finds himself.  These exploits lead up to the 
young  man's inevitable participation in the second expedition that, in the  
Spring of 1585, Sir Walter Raleigh organized in hopes of establishing a  claim, 
finding riches, and learning more about the New World.
 
An obvious nonfiction companion  to this fictional tale about Andrew is Marc 
Aronson's Sibert  Medal-winning SIR WALTER RALEGH AND THE QUEST FOR EL DORADO. 
 To quote  Aronson's discussion of the second expedition that Raleigh/Ralegh  
organizes:
 
"Seven boats sailed from Plymouth harbor in Devon on April 9,  1585.  The 
fleet was under the command of Ralegh's cousin Sir Richard  Grenville in the 
Tiger, a ship lent by the queen... Scattered on the  other boats were four men 
who, with Grenville, determined the fate of the  settlement.  There was the 
familiar pilot Simon Fernandez; Ralph Lane, a  soldier who became governor of the 
colony; Thomas Hariot; and an artist named  John White, who had first sailed 
across the Atlantic and sketched the people he  saw in 1578.  If you group 
Grenville with Fernandez (though they did not  like each other at all), set Lane by 
himself, and link Hariot and White, you  have a portrait of what America 
meant to England.  Though the first two  were eager to go to sea, they always saw 
the main action in taking prizes from  the Spanish.  Lane viewed the trip as a 
military challenge.  Hariot  and White were fascinated with the new land and 
new people."
 
In RALEIGH'S PAGE, the fictional character Andrew Saintleger  fits into this 
mix as Hariot/Harriot's secretary during the course of the  expedition to 
America.  As a bright  and hard-working young man who seems to have been  raised 
with kindness and virtue, Andrew comes to serve as the conscience  and reality 
check on the arrogant and horrific treatment of the indigenous  people who are 
encountered in Virginia.   
 
Actually, Andrew is faced with depictions  of brutality and intolerance in 
Sixteenth century Europe long  before he sees it in the New World:  One of his 
young, fellow pages at  Raleigh's residence brags without remorse of having 
stabbed a man to  death.  Rebecca, the young girl he fancies at home, is in 
danger for  being raised in the Catholic religion which is now outlawed in  
England.  Raleigh's gardener in London, who becomes one of Andrew's  teachers, is a 
Protestant who has escaped France where the Huguenots are being  prosecuted.  
And on one of his adventures, Andrew must travel in disguise  to Amsterdam and 
seek out a Jewish jeweler, a friend of Harriot's, who  knows how to shape 
lenses to the specifications calculated in the astronomy  book that the generally 
despised Arabs are responsible for writing, a  book Harriot has purchased from 
a Turk trader out of  Constantinople.  (The Jews have all had to  abandon 
England.)
 
But, of course, the most barbaric behavior is visited upon the  Indians of 
Roanoke Island, who are initially so willing to share and  trade in the wake of 
a maritime mishap that leaves the adventurers short of  provisions.  
Heightened conflict becomes inevitable when  the coercive English -- led by Lane -- 
effectively eat the  Indians out of house and home and still demand more.
 
"Sir Walter would have begun friendlier, Andrew  thought to himself.  Captain 
Lane makes us sound like  Spaniards."
 
When first in Roanoke, Andrew meets and become close friends  with a young 
Indian character named Sky.  It will be through the eyes  of this pair that the 
strengths and knowledge of each other's cultures are  examined and the 
atrocities of the English viewed.   


This is one of those infrequent occasions where an author of  children's 
fiction provides detailed source notes.  In doing so  here, we learn that 
Armstrong has utilized significant primary  source materials, including Harriot's 
own 
reports, in accurately  depicting the events into which Andrew is immersed.  
Based  upon the author's scholarship, I feel comfortable and  confident 
enjoying and recommending Andrew's engaging story  without fear of perpetuating 
stereotypes and myths.
 
Richie  Partington, MLIS
Richie's Picks http://richiespicks.com
Moderator,  http://groups.yahoo.com/group/middle_school_lit/
BudNotBuddy@aol.com
http://www.myspace.com/richiespicks





************************************** See what's free at http://www.aol.com.

--------------------------------------------------------------------
Please note: All LM_NET postings are protected by copyright law.
  You can prevent most e-mail filters from deleting LM_NET postings
  by adding LM_NET@LISTSERV.SYR.EDU to your e-mail address book.
To change your LM_NET status, e-mail to: listserv@listserv.syr.edu
In the message write EITHER: 1) SIGNOFF LM_NET  2) SET LM_NET NOMAIL
3) SET LM_NET MAIL  4) SET LM_NET DIGEST  * Allow for confirmation.
 * LM_NET Help & Information: http://www.eduref.org/lm_net/
 * LM_NET Archive: http://www.eduref.org/lm_net/archive/
 * EL-Announce with LM_NET Select: http://elann.biglist.com/sub/
 * LM_NET Supporters: http://www.eduref.org/lm_net/ven.html
 * LM_NET Wiki: http://lmnet.wikispaces.com/
--------------------------------------------------------------------

LM_NET Mailing List Home