Bay City Junior College - Crucible Yearbook (Bay City, MI)

 - Class of 1931

Page 27 of 28

 

Bay City Junior College - Crucible Yearbook (Bay City, MI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 27 of 28
Page 27 of 28



Bay City Junior College - Crucible Yearbook (Bay City, MI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 26
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Bay City Junior College - Crucible Yearbook (Bay City, MI) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 28
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Page 26 text:

The Cr uci! TD TF ° Day City JUN (all (5@ a D. [43] , The Spring Delusion T SEEMS that Lord Alfred Tennyson, poet laureate of England in his day, started some- thing when in an emotional moment he composed Lockley Hall, which has in its body the immortal couplet: “In the Spring a livelier iris changes on the burnish’d dove; In the Spring a young man's fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.” Since the day this blithe and flowery quotation was foisted upon an unsuspecting public, it has been employed by hundreds of writers in their description of that pleasant season in the year. From the time in the year when the first robin dares to life a peep, budding authors and seasoned scribblers, who should know better, all over the land resurrect this saying, enlarge upon it, bring about new variations, steal upon it from some new angle, and chen pass it off to their readers as an original thought. Far be it from me co cast reflections on the intelligence and good intentions of that honored gentleman, who was the originator of chat statement, but were Lord Tennyson’s corpse able to see what he started, it would turn over in its grave in horror—Yes, I believe it would do a double flip. The saying has been passed on from generation to generation until today it is practically accepted as a proved axiom. It may have had its place in the romance loving age when it was first originated, but it hardly seems to fit in this hectic day and age of speed and hurry. Did Mr. Tennyson in propogating his theory—for that is all ic may be classed until it is proved—get the opinions of the young men of his country on the subject? No straw vote was taken as I recall. So it seems that the English bard has rashly taken it for granted that he knew the sentiments of the male youth. Ic is a pity that he were not able to seek the council of such an authority as Dorothy Dix. He was not a young man any longer at the time chat he coined the expression, so he would not have any grounds,for an argument encrey- rec is very apt to discount the period of youth and look back on it as a period of frivolty. Being a young man myself, I believe that | am able to look at the subject from an ideal viewpoint. And J think chat I have the backing of many other young men who have been maligned by the statement. Is the spring—as Lord ‘Tennyson would have it—any more Conductive to love chanthe summer. autumn) or winter’? I dowbr ic. The springtseason is a period of turbulent change. It opens with che blustering month of March when the raw winds sweep down from che North and effectually discourage any love making on the part of the said young man. Ic, in turn, is followed by the damp, foggy, rainy, and unhealth- ful month of April. A wet skin is far from being an inspirer of romance. And wading in mud does not help ic much either. Next comes the month of May with its tropical rain- falls and more discomfort merging into June, which just as ic becomes enjoyable and con- genial becomes the summer season. No sane young man is going to think of anything, let alone love, when he is baked on one day and frozen to death on another. Weather conditions are ideal in the spring, continues the song of the poets and sooth- sayets. Have they overlooked the fact that for every fair day in the spring, there are three on the summer? And in the autumn there are as many balmy days as spring ever had. May 1 go on? Has Lord Tennyson ever attended a sleighride party in the crisp outdoor air of winter? Or has he ever sat before an open fireplace and listened to the roar of the elements on the outside? It appears that he has not. | am not condemning spring as a total killer of romance, True, there are very many spring evenings that are cut out for love-making. But ‘t seems ludicruous to set one season aside and label it as the one in which Cupid makes his biggest killings. This is not a mere treatise to show that spring is a disagreeable season. Merely do | wish to get justice for the other seasons. It is time that Lord Tennyson's false maxim should be revised. Here is the way it should read: When in the mood in the Spring, Summer, Autumn, or Winter, a young man’s fancy lightly turns to thoughts of love.

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