When Albert Camus won the Nobel Prize, he wrote a letÂter to one of his old schoolÂteachÂers. “I let the comÂmoÂtion around me these days subÂside a bit before speakÂing to you from the botÂtom of my heart,” the letÂter begins. “I have just been givÂen far too great an honÂor, one I neiÂther sought nor solicitÂed. But when I heard the news, my first thought, after my mothÂer, was of you.” For it was from this teacher, a cerÂtain Louis GerÂmain, that the young, fatherÂless Camus received the guidÂance he needÂed. “WithÂout you, withÂout the affecÂtionÂate hand you extendÂed to the small poor child that I was, withÂout your teachÂing and examÂple, none of all this would have hapÂpened.”
Camus ends the letÂter by assurÂing MonÂsieur GerÂmain that “your efforts, your work, and the genÂerÂous heart you put into it still live in one of your litÂtle schoolÂboys who, despite the years, has nevÂer stopped being your grateÂful pupil.”
In response, GerÂmain recalls his memÂoÂries of Camus as an unafÂfectÂed, optiÂmistic pupil. “I think I well know the nice litÂtle felÂlow you were, and very often the child conÂtains the seed of the man he will become,” he writes. WhatÂevÂer the process of intelÂlecÂtuÂal and artisÂtic evoÂluÂtion over the 30 years or so between leavÂing the classÂroom and winÂning the Nobel, “it gives me very great satÂisÂfacÂtion to see that your fame has not gone to your head. You have remained Camus: braÂvo.”
It isn’t hard to underÂstand why Camus’ letÂter to his teacher would resÂonate with the footÂballer Ian Wright, who reads it aloud in the LetÂters Live video at the top of the post. A 2005 docÂuÂmenÂtary on his life and career proÂduced the earÂly viral video above, a clip capÂturÂing the moment of Wright’s unexÂpectÂed reunion with his own acaÂdÂeÂmÂic father figÂure, SydÂney PigÂden. ComÂing face to face with his old menÂtor, who he’d assumed had died, Wright instincÂtiveÂly removes his cap and addressÂes him as “Mr. PigÂden.” In that moment, the stuÂdent-teacher relaÂtionÂship resumes: “I’m so glad you’ve done so well with yourÂself,” says PigÂden, a senÂtiÂment not disÂsimÂiÂlar to the one MonÂsieur GerÂmain expressed to Camus. Most of us, no matÂter how long we’ve been out of school, have a teacher we hope to do proud; some of us, whether we know it or not, have been that teacher.
RelatÂed ConÂtent:
Hear Albert Camus DelivÂer His Nobel Prize AccepÂtance Speech (1957)
LudÂwig Wittgenstein’s Short, Strange & BruÂtal Stint as an EleÂmenÂtary School Teacher
Based in Seoul, ColÂin Marshall writes and broadÂcasts on cities, lanÂguage, and culÂture. His projects include the SubÂstack newsletÂter Books on Cities and the book The StateÂless City: a Walk through 21st-CenÂtuÂry Los AngeÂles. FolÂlow him on the social netÂwork forÂmerÂly known as TwitÂter at @colinmarshall.
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