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Katie O'Neal

A Splendid Introduction to a Southern Gentleman: Havilah Babcock

2/4/2024

8 Comments

 
Picture

Dr. Jim Kibler’s new book, ‘Faulkner the Southerner & the Continuity of Southern Letters,’ has taken me by storm and is teaching me much about Faulkner, but also about dozens of other Southern writers.  Some are familiar, a few are not.

If I’d ever heard the name Havilah Babcock, 1898-1964, I sure don’t recall, but now two of his books have been ordered, read, and grace my shelves with the hope that some of my posterity or friends or strangers will one day read and enjoy them as much as I. He was a writer and poet as well as a sportsman whose main interests were quail-hunting and fishing, and who was born in Virginia, keeping house and property there throughout his life, while living in South Carolina for the years of his career.

The first book of Babcock's that Dr. Kibler mentioned and that I have now read was 'The Education of Pretty Boy,' first published in 1960, with his dedication reading, "This book is dedicated to the Bureau of Internal Revenue, with the hope that it will be of interest to them." Now Babcock was not only a humourous, quail-hunting, fishing man, but he supported his wife and his sporting habits by teaching English courses for almost 40 years at the University of South Carolina, and a doggone great teacher he evidently was from what I've read online. 

'The Education of Pretty Boy' has a bit of a sad beginning..."
Day's end was hard for young Bo.  It was then that incoming hunters gathered in the yard of the lodge, traded tales of the hunt, and fussed over their dogs. Peering from under the guest house, Bo watched the scene hungrily. ... It was a jocund company, with much laughter and good-humored badinage. Here and there men sat on their heels and fondled a dog's ear, deftly disentangled a cocklebur, or examined a dog's feet for half-buried sandspurs. ..Now a longing lay in him to join the other dogs and become a part of their brave company.  But harsh experience had taught him circumspection. From his shadowy sanctuary Bo dared not venture.  ...  Yes, Bo was an outcast, an Ishmael with every man's hand against him.  Ever since the taint in his character had revealed itself, he had lived outside the pale of respectability, sulking in shadows by day and scavenging for food by night.  His had become the lonely existence of a pariah, a dog nobody respected, nobody wanted. ... At midnight, when the lodge's guests finally slept and tired dogs lay unheeding in their kennels, young Bo limped from his sanctuary and slipped away into the moon-drenched night. Nor did he look back even once."  
But it just gets better and better in the short 160 pages, with the heart-warming story taking place in a small town in the 1930s, interesting main characters, touches of whimsy, tales of outdoors Virginia, and a great little book for anybody who quail hunts, hunts fowl of any kind with dogs, grew up in a hunting family, likes to roam fields and woods with their dogs of any breed including mutts, makes their land desirable and inviting for quail and who loves hearing that bob white call in season, ever loved a dog, or just likes to read...this is your book!

I'm not sure whether this book is still in print.  My copy of 'Pretty Boy'  from Abebooks was a 1985 reprint, and I easily obtained 'The Best of Babcock,’ but I can't recall the source. At any rate, 'The Education of Pretty Boy' has my high recommendation.
8 Comments
Clyde N Wilson
2/5/2024 06:05:19 am

Babcock also did great hunting stories. Imagine when it was once possible to have a professor like that!

Reply
Katie O’Neal
2/5/2024 10:54:44 am

Hunting stories: Yes! His hunting and fishing stories alternated in ‘The Best of Babcock’ and he was a master story-teller.
Did perhaps your tenure at USC overlap with Professor Babcock’s last years there?
Your students have some good stories to tell about you I’m sure!

Reply
James kibler
2/5/2024 02:46:39 pm

Thanks for the post. You may like my essay on Babcock online at Columbia Metro magazine entitled GENTLEMEN AND BOBWHITES. He was department chair when I was an English major at USC.

Reply
Katie O’Neal
2/5/2024 03:38:44 pm

You are most welcome Dr. Kibler! I’ll check out your essay at Columbia Metro asap.
And interesting to know that you were at USC when Professor Babcock was, and also interesting how lives are intertwined.

Clyde N Wilson
2/5/2024 10:57:35 am

Alas, I did not know him, but knew a few people who did.

Reply
Katie O’Neal
2/5/2024 12:48:27 pm

👍🏻

Reply
Perrin Lovett
2/5/2024 06:03:33 pm

I come to praise that other excellent Southern writer, Katie O'Neal. Excellent as always, my dear! YBB, PL

Reply
Katie O’Neal
2/5/2024 06:09:04 pm

Thank you kindly lad.

Reply



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    Author

    Katie O'Neal is a Georgia native living in the Heart of Dixie. She is a Christian, a widow, a mother, and a grandmother. She was a homeschool mama in the 80s and 90s, and is currently a homeschool grandma. She is rabidly in love with her immediate family, her blood kin, and her Southern folk and their history, culture, and future. She has been a reader from childhood. She is an agrarian-minded homemaker, and more…but this’ll do for now. 

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