High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 12 text:
“
I have never believed that genius could be fostered on banana splits, chocolate sundaes, and soda pop. Neither could I believe any form of intoxication as revolting as that displayed by groups of over-fed, self- indulgent bodies and faces that I can witness any day in the vicinity of the innocent soda water fountain. But my subject is Inns Taverns and Llterature I intend to halt here and there down the long centuries at some contemporary tavern I shall dwell at each stopping place long enough to comment on the humaneness yes and the humanities contributed to literature by these places of public fore gatherlng l1'1St1tL1t6d as they were for rest for nur ture and for rich human intercourse It IS April toward the mid month and well on into the afternoon of the year 1375 All day long strangers were arriving at a tavern in Southwark at the end of the London br1dOe By sundown there had assembled one of the most famous companies ever gathered at a public hostelry Among theme was the reatest reporter of all time by name Geoffrey Chaucer And what a remarkable group and on what unfor gettable mounts they entered the immortal inn yard later to be seated at a feast both for body and for soul There was no such group of formally aristocratic lords and ladies as Boccaccio selected for his famous ten days 1I1 the palace at Fiesole Chaucer in his fine human reach far surpassed h1s model Here at the Tabard was an intensely human and racy representative of every class of society save alone the highest and the lowest the king and the serf And they meet as was hinted not at a castle or a palace but at a house of public call kept by the unmatched host and showman the immortal Harry Bally We can imagine the reception of each pilgrim by that portly and enoaging landlord We can falrly taste the wine and the ale and the viands that revaled the mner man and woman When the human draught relieved what rnaonihcent human talk followed For the Olym frail: -Ji-j fq 3-E'-!lI'E Xx Q W ,L BQ Z 449 Ill ll' IE Z fimlulll lil! ' U? A I .nl 1 f I 't L , 1 LV 1 my F f il 'x ir.. -2- r-ina' 'Qcqg 'U-F Ties OLDTABARD INN 1 A D 1585 10 - - ss - n - 9 l . . . . - - I, Y - , . 5 - , ' O' . l. ' o 7 . . - .1 v x A ' Q T' - n tg ' - n g . . ' S 0 H N r x f ,.-' I ,-'12 - Q '5 A . f .j ' - f uf' .I A ' -t I FH--no-' 'R I - .J -Q up l ,,::1a:: A 'Will' X 4 I -1. , , 1 - Zn 7 , uh .- a 1.. I I V .,,. Y 1 V 'Af I Il ' nr: 111' 'L' 'lg' - . X1 ' 55:3 1 , 'f'f'If. ' ' QT. S ll Vllil. . 'L ' l V UM' ' 'ul' ' ' 'Q .m. ,V l ' ..t':::: '- ' T U . if ' - 44 L N '- A- ' f:,1::aa1' 'l I' l 'i .1 t 1 1 - LJ ' N , Iniuzzxzzis:ic:g.:.:azgiQ-ag::::,i::1 HX- .Ml ...tv -l I 2 -lar, is 'fi if film I: l l!: ' -:N -Q lggig,-'A ,, .ll -.- 'A .- 1 . 1 Q: M' J- I i f -A., new sf I-4 '11, I V5 .A I - 5 - vrg :xiii '- ' vpfzff- ' ' ' Wie' ' f - ? T' 1. I :I '-W. C. ' va' I
”
Page 11 text:
“
f We Saqeigsmnpanw iffgig Inns Taverns and Llterature ERHAPS lt IS best to be01n our talk on Inns Taverns and Llterature w1th a few brlef quotatxons umversally known passaoes uses the exact term Shall I not take mme ease wj at myne Inn, Yet we know Henry IV CIII Zj from whrch th1s brlef reference xs taken abounds ln the rlchest tavern scenes offered 1n lxterature Then ln Macbeth Now spurs the lated traveler apace to Dam the tlmely mn CIII 33 When we realxze these words are from the mouth of a murderer we come to know that 1nns and taverns were places of refuge and safety as well as of hospltallty In the early elohteenth century W1ll1am Shenstone wrote on a tavern wlndow these lmes Who er has traveled Irfe s dull round Where er hrs stages may have been May s1gh to th1nk he strll has found Hrs warmest Welcome at an Inn But the Oreat Dr Samuel johnson toward the close of the same century gave to 1nn or tavern llfe 1ts hmohest clalm to honor To gxve myself a footmo I have chosen from among the apprecratxons of xnns and taverns by great men of letters one by Dr Samuel Johnson There IS nothlno whlch has yet been contrlved by man by wh1ch so much happlness 15 produced as by a Good 1nn or tavern The last lmes I shall take from Omar Khayyam Surely It carrxes wlth xt a deep splrltual meamno And th1S I know Whether the one True Light Kzndle to Love or Wrath consume me qu1te One Hash of It w1th1n the Tavern caught Better than 1n the Temple lost' outrlght Now to blow to you some foam from off some rare old flaoons of ale Nay do not be alarmed Good Volsteadxans the foam IS lxterary and the Hagons are the covers of some rare old books manuscrlpts then' margms covered wlth lovely 111um1nat1ons O many are the wand bear ers but few the true worshlppers of Bacchus So sald our anclent Greek, and I have ever been a worshxpper of Bacchus I have reallzed that out of thls worshxp of the glver of the most dazzlmg g1ft of the year came the works of Aeschylus, of Sophocles, of Eurlpldes It gave us the mlghty theatre of the Greeks, lt gave us Oedepus Rex Ant1gone, Electra Now, mn the fulness of tlme, when the worshlp of Demeter, the glver of bread, merged wlth that of the ALWIDC God there came the symbols of the bread and wme the holy of hol1es ln your hearts and m mme -'S - fx ff HK- lf- nf- f 1,7 . Av ,'xf,:f,' V 51 2' ' - -' ' in i I K Y:f f1,,,-- . ..-f - , 'QQ rf-J , ul 1,fu f I I, ,ilzfai fluff 91- J V I ruff ' ' n Nw ' . - 1 Q ' , and llfted from em1nent authors. Shakespeare IH two brxef K it o S U .. - . . . ,, ., .. as ' ' 5 V In ! ' ' 5 . . v A 3, ' I 5 I b . U U gg: ln' ' , ' Y g . . . 5 1 ' I . k. . . . . ,, -
”
Page 13 text:
“
p1an showman welded together thxs Group of some thirty odd human bemgs as m1ght a skllled stage manager and Chaucer knowmg well hrs part passed from each to each lrstened to the out pourmgs whlch he dlgested and set down And the next mornmg they rlde r1de forever down those s1xty mlles of road and we rlde wlth them hstemng to thelr 1mmortal tales They never reach the shrlne so there are no return storles And the There IS the group of Chlvalry the Knlght the Squlre and the Yeoman We mxght mclude the Franklm for he represented the free dom from feudal laws Then there are the eccleslastxcs from the revoltmg Summoner h1s mottled red face made more loathsome by h1s Wreath of sores We see the monk the fashlonable preacher of hrs day costly fur trlmmmg the habxt of hrs order hrs mount a splendld charger Jmollng bells that he hears more often than those of the chapel We see the school mlstress of the fashlonable semlnary of the day the Lady Prloress We hear her unorthodox French wltness her pseudo courtly manners for She leet no morsel from h1r llppes falle Then her p1ty for the trapped mouse and her lnhuman tenderness for her lrttle dog as agalnst chlldren leaves her forever Fames rlpe cherry Ireserved m syrup We can almost see the fond and anx1ous mothers rushmg to her convent wxth thelr tender daughters We can only touch here and there on thls 1mmortal company There IS the lawyer We have an ugly name for hrs type today but as old Don Chaucer says No where so blsy a man as he there was And yet he seemed b1s1e1' than he was But here IS the madmficently vul0ar wlfe of Bath the Hauntmgly r1ch woman her clothes the exaggeratlon of everythmff that marks good taste from her hat the slze of a sh1eld to the ten pounds of coverchlefs under lt Indeed all her clothes 1n quallty and 1n quantlty falrly screamed the1r prlces as d1d her vo1ce roar forth her story on the way so perfectly was each ln character But how maonlficently has Chaucer done her portra1t It was the gCI'11llS of Chaucer who devlsed the meetlnv place at the wavslde mn the Oemus who made the landlord the soclal h1 h arblter lt was he who paved the way for modern HCt1OI'l Then even more splen drd than the storles each sulted as It IS to the character that relates It are the lmks that hold the storles together Here are Harry Balley s most splendld accompllshments, here IS that framework that holds the talks together and bmds thls human company mto an mdlssoluble umt Flfty or seventy five years earller, no woman would have appeared ln thls processlon The places of refreshment would have been a refec tory of a monastery and both the lmks and the stones would have been ll ..g -- Y , Q- g i!-fl-Lg:-:L,,,,f-Y '-gl? ff:.t-f if-, 'J - ,fl gf - r - ff f H JC- bg: 1. f---1 '-1-', v , ,yr f ,T ,ig-gr,,Y if i W g if A Y . , D - T' V supper to the winner of the contest is never given. P . U - V - H . A 1 . . N , ,, . ff ' ' ' H za ' S ' 1 ' 5 5 . - 5 S - . . . ,
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.