Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada)

 - Class of 1930

Page 29 of 152

 

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 29 of 152
Page 29 of 152



Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1930 Edition, Page 28
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Page 29 text:

Yowthis Heritage . Therefore, I summon age to grant youtlzls' lzeritage.H N the history of the world there has probably never yet been a. generation of time-worn elders that did not look upon the youth of its day as stubborn, wilful and foolishly impervious to the wisdom of experienced age, there was certainly never yet a generation of impetuous youth that did not look upon its seniors as hidebound, obstructive and effetef'-from an editorial in The Times, London. The above quotation is a statement of an ever-present fact, a recognition of the gulf that remains as a yawning abyss between the complacency of the adult, anaesthetized to change and immune from doubt and fearfulness, and the impetuousness of the youth, ever-ready for new experiences and with a frolic welcome for adventure no matter in what sphere it may lie or whither it may lead. In previous generations the rebellion of youth was Csometimesj more veiled and indirect. But to-day youth is frankly sceptical of the wisdom of ex- perience and asks boldly for the right to steer its own course and the privilege of making its own mistakes. At any rate, they will be their own. In asking this, they ask no more than is their rightful heritage. No doubt, it is wholly natural that age, looking back over its own tem- pestuous passage should seek to sparc youth as many as possible of the trials and the difficulties that have beset its own path, to do so, however, is to rob youth of the very conditions of its growth. Struggle and pain are not all loss but are the necessary opportunity for the testing of the soul and the develop- ment of all permanent strength of character. Each successive generation must, prove for itself every dogma, every precept which it will accept. We do not hold any brief for those of the present younger generation who rudely and unnecessarily offend the prejudices and susceptibilities of the older generation, nor do we claim forbearance for those who use this argument as a cloak for their own selfish indulgence without regard for the feelings and rights of others: but we do bespeak for the thoughtful and sincere who are earnestly seeking to find their way in the complex maze of present-day life, not only the tolerance and sympathy, but also the encouragement of those who have trod the path before them. That there are some who appreciate the problem we may well be thankful. Barrie, in his classic address to the students of St. Andrew 's Iiniversity, spoke as follows: 'fMy own theme is Courage, as you should use it in the great fight that seems to me to be coming between youth and their betters. I want you to take up this position: that youth have for too long left exclusively in our hands the decisions in national matters that are more vital to them than to us. Things about the next war, for instance, and why the last one ever had a beginning .... So forward, brave hearts. To what adventures I cannot tell but I know that your God is watching to see whether you are adventurous. . . . We are already seeking cushions for our old bones rather than attempt- ing to build up a, fairer future .... You have more in common with the youth of other lands than youth and age can ever have with each other. For such genuine understanding youth is most appreciative and it only asks that this sa.me spirit should become more prevalent at a time when it is en-. -. 'N25'

Page 28 text:

of his time in a social service mission making pleasure for others. He intended to spend his Whole life serving the World, in a scientific Way, Without sentiment. It seems hard that when life was blossoming out for Baynefthat just prior to the announcement of the scholarship results, when he was looking forward to University and the scientific work that he loved, that he should leave it all. But still his life, seventeen summers long, seems on consideration to have been a completed Whole and the bronze tablet which commemorates his name in our building will decay before his life ceases to serve as an inspiration and stimulus to those of us who knew him. -D.C. -..44'..? N24' v



Page 30 text:

deavouring to express its ideas in partnership with all those, of any age, who are endeavouring to build the fairer future. To the graduating class of Pickering College, 1930, we wish f'God-speed. Claim for yourselves your heritage, demand the partnership that is rightfully yours, but do so with intelligence and above all, with tolerance. You will make mistakes but you will profit by your experience. Shun, above all things, a commonplace acceptance of things as they are and go forward, determined to do your share in building the new Jerusalem. Though the way may be difficult, accept it as your lot and as one, husbanding the spirit of eternal youth, be ready to cry, even with failing breath,- 'Learn, nor account the pang, dare, never grudge the three. J. M. C. The New Poet Laureate UST as we go to press the appointment is announced of Mr. John Mase- iield to the position of poet laureate, vacated by the recent death of Robert Bridges. Although we do not pose as a journal of literary criticism, this appointment seems to us to be of such significance that we cannot help but allow ourselves the privilege of saying a few words concerning it, even at the risk of being considered Hhigh-brow or trespassing in fields not properly our own. In the days of the court singers, from which position that of poet laureate is undoubtedly descended, it was both seemly and advisable that the triumphs of the 'Nation 's heroes, should be sung in verse, that might, or might not, last, but which would serve the purpose of keeping green the memory of national exploits in the minds of an almost wholly illiterate populace. With the spread of literacy this justification for the appointment of an official national bard has disappeared and unless the poet laureate is going to do more than, in the words of Gibbon 'ffurnish twice a year a measure of praise and verse such as may be sung in the presence of the sovereign there can be no further real reason for continuing a tradition that has lasted since the reign of Henry VII, twho appointed the first official laureate.j Certain it is that the new poet laureate is no singer of an outworn im- perialism, he sings of his own background and the people whom he knows- of Hall sorts and conditions of men -of the masses who have seldom had any lyrical voice to give articulation to their hopes and aspirations, their illusions and their disappointments. He has been described as 'a poet of the soil and the sea and of the men who dig and heave.' Although a Labour government can hardly expect re-election on the grounds of any such com- paratively minor appointment, it is almost dramatically appropriate that as the oiiicial singer of the nation, Ramsay Macdonald should have recommended to the King a truly great poet, whose career had its humble beginnings on the sea, as a saloon porter and a hand at a dollar a day in a carpet factory. The English language may have sweeter singers but certainly, in England, there is none who speaks more competently for the masses who are the nation than does Masefield. Listen to his 'fConsecration',:- Net of the princes and prelates with periwifgged eharioteers Ifzdzng trinmplzantly laurelled to lap the fat of the years-- Rather the scorned-the rejected-the men hemmed in with the spears. -. N26 .f

Suggestions in the Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) collection:

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1928 Edition, Page 1

1928

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1929 Edition, Page 1

1929

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1931 Edition, Page 1

1931

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1932 Edition, Page 1

1932

Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1933 Edition, Page 1

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Pickering College - Voyageur Yearbook (Newmarket, Ontario Canada) online collection, 1934 Edition, Page 1

1934

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