…..Where’s the teleprompter, Wally?
I thought there would be a teleprompter for a 45 minute speech. Well I suppose I have to use old fashioned
paper…so this address will take no longer than 12-15 minutes. Less if I speak fast.
….. Well boys and girls Welcome to Homeroom…You’re 30 years late…you
should Get to bed a bit earlier…I’m sure most of you have not met my wife,
Rhoda. (She gets up). We married a year
after I retired in 1982 & moved to Florida . She is an amazing woman. So here we all are…far from Sea Cliff and Glen
Head and NSHS, a school for the ages…no, Wally, not for the aged…I said for the
ages…. Speaking of ages, I’ll be 88 in a couple of weeks. People have told me I look young for 88…. In these days I’d rather be 40 and look old. What
I would be interested in learning from you this evening is in what ways did your
education at North
Shore impact and shape
your lives…If it did.
…..When I received Ned’s email with an invitation to be a guest at your
reunion I was delighted… and honored.
Amazed that finally there would be a reunion of NSHS grads
that would meet in Florida, and… delighted that I would get to meet once
again all grown up students from North Shore whom I recognized immediately tonite…
by reading your name tags But you
had no name tags! So, I didn’t know who was who. I was also invited by Wally
Kaufman to come loaded with words of profound wisdom. Indeed he suggested that
I be “wise, profound, and funny…”a daunting challenge. I don’t know how wise I am at this point in my
life. I’ve forgotten 3/4s of it…—
Although, fortunately, I did recall enough to publish an autobiography…”Memoirs
of a Tailgunner” which you can buy on Amazon. I can use the royalties. …Now I
think I have started trying to be funny, and I will evaluate my success if I
heard a few giggles; so wisdom will have had to wait.
….Well enough of that. Now comes the wisdom part and you can be the judge
of its profundity. .….. I was 33 years old when I met your shining morning
faces in class, in the hallways, or in the smoke filled bathrooms. And as the
years changed… the aroma of the smoke also changed. As you are, no doubt well aware. Of course, for some of you I did not enjoy the
pleasure of having been your teacher. No
matter, I miss teaching & I miss all of you. High school has to be one of the most exciting
and happiest time of your life…and also, perhaps, the most frustrating…and
boring. I don’t know how you could sit
for 45 minutes hearing Mr. Matthews spouting Latin, or Dr. Hartman teaching
something called Social Studies which probably presaged Facebook. In high school the priority is that you get
an education. And learning is something
you should be doing all your life. The
more you learn the greater the quality
of richness and joy of living .
…..Now, I suppose that when you first spied me wandering the hallways
in bewilderment, trying to find my classroom in a new building, you wondered
what species I claimed to belong to and what planet did I drop from. I could
read the curiosity in your eyes. Who was
this guy, anyway?
…..Well when my students were well seated in class, I told them who I
was, and that I was a warrior, and I made it quite clear early on that you were
there for an education & that I would accept nothing less from you in that
regard than ruthless personal standards of excellence, and for the most
part that’s what you gave me. And I learned that precept in order to survive
combat in WWII; in war, neglect
excellence at your peril; It was
Aristotle who said, We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is
not an act but a habit." When we returned from a combat mission, we had an
immediate debriefing, and each member of the crew had to stand up and tell what
mistakes he had made. The goal of any
mission was flawless execution.
So if you had to write a paper, that should have been your goal as
well. I stayed the course and made my
classes understand that.
”
…..At one time some student who no doubt heard me read excerpts from Dante's "Divine Comedy" placed a sign
above my doorway reading, “Abandon all hope, ye who enter here”. (There was
some truth in that.)I demanded excellence and challenged you to provide it. Four years passed quickly & some of you
went off to college and some of you simply joined the work force or went to Viet Nam . And
you raised families and had your careers.
And here you are. As for myself, I
committed myself to inspire you and mesmerize you with Chaucer, Byron, Shelley,
Keats, and Shakespeare. But some of my students weren’t so much mesmerized as
they were sleepy in class.
…..Now that you’re in Florida—perhaps you’re even retired; still you
play golf, you play tennis, and you have card games, you go to the movies, you
go to the casinos, & the theater; you hang out at the pool. This is all good and natural and another
stage in your life. Mine too. I’m a
teacher and I will never stop teaching. You can do more to enrich your life;
take a hiatus from the tv and the pc—if excellence is a habit, so is learning
and only the things above you can lift you up.
Florida
has some excellent museums & theaters…you can learn something from
them. You can read books about
historical events and about ancient pagan eras.
You can read about WW1, WWII, the
Civil and Revolutionary wars, and biographies of great men and women such as
Ben Franklin, Jefferson, Alexander Hamilton our first treasurer and Helen
Keller and Eleanor Roosevelt and Anne Frank. You can read about Einstein and how he has
affected science and the world. Here in Florida as you get
older, you are doing things that entertain you, but what are you doing to
exercise your brain? If Aristotle says
that excellence is a habit, I say so is learning. I have written and published several books, I have
taught Shakespeare classes to seniors. I have performed in several musicals from Gilbert &
Sullivan to Broadway classics, like Fiddler on the Roof, and My Fair Lady in
our 600 seat theatre. I am not
sitting around degenerating by the pool talking about restaurants, doctors, and
maladies.
…..But.....Make
no mistake--I am no Don Quixote tilting at windmills, nor Gulliver confronting
the Yahoos; nor Sir Gawain seeking the Green Knight, nor David confronting
Goliath. But what I am, I am--like Ulysses, who facing old age, yearned
once more to explore worlds he'd never seen, and do things he had never
done…this despite his reunion with his wife, Penelope, after 20 years. (Poor
Penelope, I don’t think they had divorce lawyers in those days). But as I have said, learning is a habit. It should be for you to seek; after all you
are North Shore graduates=and I consider you still
in my class.
…..Ulyssey’s goal was “To follow knowledge”…wherever
it could be found. And that’s what education and life is all about. Striving,
seeking, finding and never yielding to its pain and disappointments, and as
Hamlet calls them-- the “slings and arrows of outrageous fortune” which surely
will come in every human life. Learning
helps to survive anything.….. The Pierian Spring in pagan times was known as
the source of knowledge, and Alexander Pope said “…a little learning is a
dangerous thing; drink deep,
or taste not the Pierian spring.” My friends it is an honor to be here and I am
grateful for the opportunity to see you
once again. Stay well. And God
bless you.
.....So, there you are...my speech; I worked very hard at it; I have not had many requests to make a speech so I was a wanderer in pastures new. I hope it even inspires some of you. And I wish to apologize to Peter Kehrig for not adding his name to the list of those who also comment on my blog occasionally.
Great stuff, Baron!! I would only add that a good education enables one to continue educating oneself over a lifetime. Btw, I thought it was Dante who said that there was a notice over the gate of Hell that said "Abandon all hope, ye who enter here!" Only he said it in Italian: "Lasciate omne speranza, voi ch'entrate."
ReplyDeleteBravo my friend. I am continually amazed at your wit and just plain down to earth intelligence. Consequently, I vow never again to question your strategy or play of the game when we and our spouses get together for our weekly canasta game.
ReplyDeleteThe original Luigi