Silence is Golden. One of those perfectly formed sixties pure pop songs. It was written and first performed by the Four Seasons, but found its lasting
fame in the UK with this recording by the Tremeloes from 1967. The title is a ready-made
cliché which sounds like something out of a Victorian schoolroom, but it’s a
cliché which has great appeal to me.
Why
is the world so noisy? And why are we so uncomfortable with silence? These
linked questions quite often occupy my mind amidst the hubbub of life. I enjoy
silence, or at least quietness, and within reason I enjoy being on my own.
I
did think that intolerance of noise was a growing older thing, but a recent
incident reassured me and made me think:
After
the wonderful #TADtalk, a conference for people with diabetes in London on April
22nd this year, we all adjourned to a hotel bar for drinks and chat among delegates and
speakers. Drinks and conversation were flowing, with much excited chatter about
the day’s content as acquaintances were made or renewed. It was a pleasure to
be there, except for one thing: as in so many bars, there was loud music. I was
trying to engage in conversation with interesting people, many of whom I was
meeting for the first time, with little prospect of seeing them again within a
year or more. All had interesting things to say and stories to tell, and the
sense of camaraderie and enjoyment was palpable. Except that I couldn’t
properly hear what they were saying against the music. Not nightclub volume,
but loud enough to make meaningful conversation a challenge. I stuck with it,
reading lips, smiling and nodding in the right places (I hoped). It’s a
familiar experience.
But
as time went on I found it increasingly tiresome. Then I became aware that among
the crowd of my friends, two in particular were anxious to get away for the
meal that we had tentatively agreed to share later in the evening. They were,
like me, fed up with the noise and difficulty of making conversation. I took my
cue and decided to join them in politely taking my leave and finding somewhere
quiet where we could sit down, relax, eat and....talk, not shout. Given that I
was one of the oldest people in a group of around a hundred, there was nothing
remarkable about that, except that those
two others seeking peace and quiet were two nineteen year old young women. Not some
of the other fifty or sixty-somethings, but two of the youngest in the group.
So
the three of us took our leave and quickly found a restaurant, chose a quiet
table, ordered some food and drink and started to enjoy a proper conversation,
able properly to catch the subtleties and nuances which to me are part of the
joy of human interaction. You can only fully sense what someone means, how they
are feeling, how they are reacting, when you can hear them and they hear you. What
delighted me was that these two younger people felt this just as strongly as me,
and we enjoyed a leisurely meal talking about all sorts of stuff of mutual
interest. All at a civilised volume, and it confirmed my view that far more
people - of all ages - might actually prefer a rather quieter world.
Why
do we put up with noise we don’t want? It happens so often at social events -
weddings for example. How many times have I found myself shouting in the ear of
someone I really want to talk to, having maybe not seen them for years?
Don’t
get me wrong. I LOVE music, including loud music. I even have a Spotify playlist of
Angry Songs that I play at top volume (with windows closed) when I’m on my own
in the house and annoyed. I enjoy - very occasionally - discos and dancing, but
only if there’s somewhere quiet where I can chill out, give my ears a rest and
chat quietly to someone. In the right circumstances, I love being in a noisy
crowd: just over a week ago, I was one of 20000 excited Bolton Wanderers
fans chanting WE-ARE-GOING-UP as our team celebrated promotion back to the
Championship with a perfect 3-0 win in the last game of a successful season.
I
suppose what I object to is unnecessary, intrusive noise in inappropriate
places, from which there is no escape. I don’t mind lawnmowers and hedge
trimmers from neighbouring gardens, but object to having to hear someone else’s
music from next door.
And
it’s not just music: I hate unnecessary chatter in places where peace and quiet
are what I seek. Most obviously in church, where I increasingly find that
people who are old enough to know better feel compelled to engage in inane
small talk and banter in a place where I seek contemplation, thought and
silence.
Of
course silence can be uncomfortable, especially in the company of others, and there
are times when a bit of background noise is welcome. There’s something very
creepy about being in a pub or restaurant as the sole diner, or with just one
other person and no background noise at all. On such occasions, a bit of music
is welcome, but only as background.
But
we shouldn’t be afraid of solitude, silence, or at least quietness: I am a
habitual early riser, largely because of diabetes, and instead of moaning or
worrying about it, I have grown to enjoy early mornings on my own, especially
in summer when the dawn chorus gives a beautiful soundtrack to my
contemplations. I’m not antisocial either: conversation is one of life’s great
pleasures, but I prefer to be in a small group where there’s a chance to listen,
think and respond, rather than clamouring for attention.
Perhaps
my thoughts are best summed up by one of my favourite hymns, the much-loved Dear Lord and Father of Mankind. It’s no coincidence that the words were written
by a Quaker, the American J G Whittier. Silence and
contemplation are central to the practice and beliefs of Quakers, but hymns are
not. Whittier wrote the words - as a poem - and they were set to music by Hubert Parry, writer of the very different but equally treasured tune to
Jerusalem.
The
last two stanzas say it all, and could have been written in the noise-infested modern world, not nineteenth century America, as they seem to me to express what we all need to do
from time to time: slow down, be quiet and listen:
Drop thy still dews of quietness,
till all our strivings cease;
take from our souls the strain and stress,
and let our ordered lives confess
the beauty of thy peace;
the beauty of thy peace.
Breathe through the heats of our desire
thy coolness and thy balm;
let sense be dumb, let flesh retire;
speak through the earthquake, wind, and fire,
O still, small voice of calm;
O still, small voice of calm.
Peace
and quiet - even silence - is a fundamental human need, recognised I think in
the current fad for mindfulness, but really just obvious common sense. We are
by nature a contemplative species - it’s what makes us human - but if we allow
our lives to be overwhelmed by noise, we undermine our very humanity.
I
conclude with another quotation, from the opening of a piece of writing, Desiderata,
which in the seventies was a best-selling poster, and which I have long
regarded as a pretty good manual for life. In case you don't know it, the full text is here, but the opening line is as good as any:
Go placidly amidst the
noise and the haste and remember what peace there may be in silence
Silence
is Golden. We need a bit more of it.