Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute - Acta Nostra Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1948

Page 108 of 168

 

Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute - Acta Nostra Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 108 of 168
Page 108 of 168



Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute - Acta Nostra Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 107
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Guelph Collegiate Vocational Institute - Acta Nostra Yearbook (Guelph, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1948 Edition, Page 109
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Page 108 text:

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Page 107 text:

, ff ff sf 'wr3',a, Ulteiqlailgehral B31 To111HI-I111'f11111'1, XIII.1l The rich ztutuinnal sunlight blazed in the high stained glass windows and poured out on the floor in soft catar- acts of light. In that golden twilight the slender Gothic Columns rose up through thc shadows, into the light to disappear once more in the darkness of the vaul- ted ceiling. High up on the walis. saints and cherubs were resurrected briefly from the shadows as the sunlight touched. for a niotnent, fading mural and gilded arch. Suddenly the silence was broken by the sound of inusic, thin and fragile, yet supple as the flight of a bat. The ntusie rose in spirals of sound from 21 vague beginning to a mighty crescendo that lost itaelf in the darkness of the yast naye. Then once niore, the niusic sounded, sharp and penetrating-music as intricate as the lacy SU7llCYX'0l'li43S soft as the inuted inurals-as mighty as the spirit of the church itself. V ,171 .la T11 T1 To -11111 ll .SONG OI THE Plinlllilli 1 1111111 1111' .Y01111l I of 11111'.v1',s f1'1'1, is 11l!'X' 11'11,yx 11117 1111111111 11111'11'. 11 1111' 511111111 111111:1'.s III3' 1111111 116 110111. 1 1111111 1111'111, 1111 1111' 111111115 I 11111 ey 1l1Z1'l1l',S .s111'111 111 115' 111 1111'- C111111' 1111111. 111111111 511111 1'1'1111j,' 111'111 1 1111' I1'I-111. 1111111111f111 j11'1111'11'. Y1I1'1'1' 1111' ZUI-1111 .YI-1Ig.S ll 1ll1If'1Y A11 , 1111' j11'1111'11's 1111111 1.5 1111 121111, XVIII' 111111111111111,s 111 1lIlI1' 1111' 1111111111 s1g111, Xvlil' 117111 111' 1111113 111' llllj' 111'1111, B111 11It'1i1' 1111' .31lI1',5, 111 111'1Ag11I1'11 1111 Il1g'111. O111 11111111 V111 . 111111111 , 1il'11j'.S 111111111 1111 1111111 1111' 11112 s111j1 11111 111111e1' 1111 ll 1111 11111111111.s 11111111 1111' 11'1'11'111'.s1 1' 1'11111 IL'111I 111111 l'1I '11111yg, 1111'y 11111 5:11111 I 11e111' 1111' 1111111111 111 11111'.t11'.y' v11'1'1, .lt 1111'y 1174188 1111' j11'1111'11' IU1-119. A1111 1111' ,t11111111 11111k1'.l 111t1 1111111 1161 111f11I. 1 .45 IU1-111 1111'111. 1111 11111 1111111111 I 11116. gV111l1Q16' T1111l.S, C Tl-tEY't,L.D0 IT Evgrrey Tuma -Hugovd . U 2 DAY l X X KJ1-txrpgvdg FILLDGUT f 7 To S1-GRM I 1 You GuesSEDlT ef VM 5 A f om' i I Q MEN AT 1 ,f 5 gli 1,4 1 I., .154 ,- 5 .115 E - if-'1' X x V 4213 Ol 0 15. s 'g -4. WIQS' ulom-C ff . S U N 'ix ON nBQ1cft+T,5U14N'1K 1 tar tv srnrzw flx -.f 1 '11, V I - I 11 1 111' cv' 1 111'1 1 In 4 1 tj .L an-4, L 5 if ' 'I 1 Hifi gf, 0. I 1 4' V' M4 1 11 114 h' H I I lf. ly, t I I



Page 109 text:

.- g.f,xs3lsg ,R ' wg ls.: 41- 39 about their lives. Not mitch is written abottt them except the years of their lives and the places where they lived. One of the best of them all was Norman Guthrie who wrote under the pen-name 'john Crichton'. He was at great-uncle of Hugh Guthrie of our school. Norman Guthrie was born in Guelph and attended the Collegiate Institute after which he went to Osgoode Hall and became a lawyer in 1902. He worked for a short while with his father on Douglas Street bitt soon found an opening in Ottawa and became a very successful figure in the capital. By 1928 he had published no less than three volumes of poetry all of which received praise front the public and from literary critics. His poetry had a new and intimate quality somewhat different to the usual forest-stream and mountain verses common to other writers of the beginning of the century. He let nature speak and thus did not describe beauty from the outside. He experimented with unusual metrical arrangements and made his litres hit the mind with vigorous feeling. His lyric poem, RED TRILLIUBIH illustrates this direct. musical simplicity. Blood red Trillium in a pocket Of pine needles crisp and dead II'hat a pity that she crushed you With the pressure of her head. She is kind: she would have spared you Had she known that you were there. But, you perished like a lover II'ilh your red lips i ll her hair! In the early days of person on the streets was in the city and in Paisley tending for several miles Guelph every other a Scotchman. Both Block, a district ex- to the west of the town. families from many paI'lS of Scotland kept alive the memories of the old land and added new songs to the circle of their friends and acquaintances. One of these pioneers was Robert Boyd. Boyd catne to Canada from Ayrshire in 1830 and died in Guelph fifty years later. He was known in every house inutlie Paisley Block and his verses. written in Scotch dialect, were often read at the fireside socials in the wintet evenings in the country. All his poems have a certain sadness or homesickness about them. ln some ways he resembles Bttrns as, for ex- ample. in his THE BACHELOR IN HIS SHANTYH: 'Tis something strange a chiel like me Should frae his native country flee, And leave his freen 0' social 'glee- .-lnd loves sae dear, :Ind cross the braid Atlantic sea In quest o' gear. He had the reputation of being a local scholar and wrote with superb diction. Re- membering his voyage to the new land he wrote a tribute to the St. Lawrence River which came from his heart and shows his powers of expression. l. St. Lawrence! greatest chief of slrean1s.' Long is thy course, thy channel wide. Surpassilig far the poet's dreams, ll'here countless ships in triumph ride. 9. .intl still incessant thou shall run. Till time itself shall tease to lie, To where thy' waters all have gone- Thy rest suhlime-the witle saul sea. Another ol the Scottish bartls. George ie, cznne from Aberdeen early in the eigh- teenth century. He was a journalist and pub- lisher in the early days of Guelph, having op erated the Guelph Herald for ovct twenty years. Wm. Lyon hl2lClxCllllC, a fellow-Scot although opposed to him in politics, said oi hilu that there was no abler writer in Canada, A staunch lllf2,'lll2lIlClC1'. he was secretary of the local St. Andrevy's Society for twenty-one years and loved to write on the beauty ol' Scotland. Although many of his poems are rather heavy in rhyme. he occasionally' becomes quite iav be seen in one of his later THE FORGET-NIE-NO'l ' written be- poetu is one of Scottish dialect. l'it sprightlv as n poems fore his the few death in 1870. This written outside his THE FORCiliT-.UI-I-N0 T This little flower with azure eye, You love it, lady. tell nie why: It seems to me nor rich nor rare, It hreathes no fragrance on the air, or splendid form nor colors hright, A7 illav' give it value in your sight. If not for perfume nor for show, Pray tell tilt' why you love it so. It is not rich, it is not rare, This little flower-yet. ah, how fair. Though it no merit else :nay rlrtirn Iiut this, 'the magic of a narne'. liarh tiny leaf into my ear Is hreathing nantes to rnernory clear: The cleacl. the ahsent, the forgot. .lie whispering here. lftJ7'g't'f-II1t 'I1tIf.,' Few Guelph men have done more to en- courage everything Scottish than Thomas Laid- law. Another member of the Paisley Block cultural group, he came to this vicinity when the community was but four years old. He and Guelph grew up together. He was named the hard of St. Andrew's Society and was later its President. Although he fottnd his pen flowed more easily in prose, he liked to dwell in poetry upon the smell of the heather far. far away. 'sind out from the stream and lreyonfl the thatched roofs The kirk of our fathers appears, 'Tis the auld parish kirk, looking grey through the mirk 'Ind embalnzed with the nzernories of years.

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