The School
The School
by Donald Barthelme
Well, we had all these children out planting trees, see,
because we figured that . . . that was part of their education, to see how, you
know, the root systems . . . and also the sense of responsibility, taking care
of things, being individually responsible. You know what I mean. And the trees
all died. They were orange trees. I don’t know why they died, they just died.
Something wrong with the soil possibly or maybe the stuff we got from the
nursery . . . wasn’t the best. We complained about it. So we’ve got thirty kids
there, each kid has his or her own little tree to plant, and we’ve got these
thirty dead trees. All these kids looking at these little brown sticks, it was
depressing.
It wouldn’t have been so bad except that . . . Before that,
just a couple of weeks before the thing with the trees, the snakes all died.
But I think that the snakes—well, the reason that the snakes kicked off was
that . . . you remember, the boiler was shut off for four days because of the
strike, and that was explicable. It was something you could explain to the kids
because of the strike. I mean, none of their parents would let them cross the
picket line and they knew there was a strike going on and what it meant. So
when things got started up again and we found the snakes they weren’t too
disturbed.
With the herb gardens it was probably a case of
overwatering, and at least now they know not to overwater. The children were
very conscientious with the herb gardens and some of them probably . . . you
know, slipped them a little extra water when we weren’t looking. Or maybe . . .
Well, I don’t like to think about sabotage, although it did occur to us. I
mean, it was something that crossed our minds. We were thinking that way
probably because before that the gerbils had died, and the white mice had died,
and the salamander . . . Well, now they know not to carry them around in
plastic bags.
Of course we expected the tropical fish to
die, that was no surprise. Those numbers, you look at them crooked and they’re
belly-up on the surface. But the lesson plan called for a tropical-fish input
at that point, there was nothing we could do, it happens every year, you just
have to hurry past it.
We weren’t even supposed to have a puppy.
We weren’t even supposed to have one, it was just a puppy
the Murdoch girl found under a Gristede’s truck one day and she was afraid the
truck would run over it when the driver had finished making his delivery, so
she stuck it in her knapsack and brought it to school with her. So we had this
puppy. As soon as I saw the puppy I thought, Oh Christ, I bet it will live for
about two weeks and then . . . And that’s what it did. It wasn’t supposed to be
in the classroom at all, there’s some kind of regulation about it, but you
can’t tell them they can’t have a puppy when the puppy is already there, right
in front of them, running around on the floor and yap yap yapping. They named
it Edgar—that is, they named it after me. They had a lot of fun running after
it and yelling, “Here, Edgar! Nice Edgar!” Then they’d laugh like hell. They
enjoyed the ambiguity. I enjoyed it myself. I don’t mind being kidded. They
made a little house for it in the supply closet and all that. I don’t know what
it died of. Distemper, I guess. It probably hadn’t had any shots. I got it out
of there before the kids got to school. I checked the supply closet each
morning, routinely, because I knew what was going to happen. I gave it to the
custodian.
And then there was this Korean orphan that the class adopted
through the Help the Children program, all the kids brought in a quarter a
month, that was the idea. It was an unfortunate thing, the kid’s name was Kim
and maybe we adopted him too late or something. The cause of death was not
stated in the letter we got, they suggested we adopt another child instead and
sent us some interesting case histories, but we didn’t have the heart. The
class took it pretty hard, they began (I think; nobody ever said anything to me
directly) to feel that maybe there was something wrong with the school. But I
don’t think there’s anything wrong with the school, particularly, I’ve seen
better and I’ve seen worse. It was just a run of bad luck. We had an
extraordinary number of parents passing away, for instance. There were I think
two heart attacks and two suicides, one drowning, and four killed together in a
car accident. One stroke. And we had the usual heavy mortality rate among the
grandparents, or maybe it was heavier this year, it seemed so. And finally the
tragedy.
The tragedy occurred when Matthew Wein and Tony Mavrogordo
were playing over where they’re excavating for the new federal office building.
There were all these big wooden beams stacked, you know, at the edge of the
excavation. There’s a court case coming out of that, the parents are claiming
that the beams were poorly stacked. I don’t know what’s true and what’s not.
It’s been a strange year.
I forgot to mention Billy Brandt’s father, who was knifed
fatally when he grappled with a masked intruder in his home.
One day, we had a discussion in class. They asked me, where
did they go? The trees, the salamander, the tropical fish, Edgar, the poppas
and mommas, Matthew and Tony, where did they go? And I said, I don’t know, I
don’t know. And they said, who knows? and I said, nobody knows. And they said,
is death that which gives meaning to life? and I said, no, life is that which
gives meaning to life. Then they said, but isn’t death, considered as a
fundamental datum, the means by which the taken-for-granted mundanity of the
everyday may be transcended in the direction of—
I said, yes, maybe.
They said, we don’t like it.
I said, that’s sound.
They said, it’s a bloody shame!
I said, it is.
They said, will you make love now with Helen (our teaching
assistant) so that we can see how it is done? We know you like Helen.
I do like Helen but I said that I would not.
We’ve heard so much about it, they said, but we’ve never
seen it.
I said I would be fired and that it was never, or almost
never, done as a demonstration. Helen looked out of the window.
They said, please, please make love with Helen, we require
an assertion of value, we are frightened.
I said that they shouldn’t be frightened (although I am
often frightened) and that there was value everywhere. Helen came and embraced
me. I kissed her a few times on the brow. We held each other. The children were
excited. Then there was a knock on the door, I opened the door, and the new
gerbil walked in. The children cheered wildly. ♦
Published in the print edition of the June 17, 1974, issue, of The New Yorker with the headline “The School.”
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