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Page 30 text:
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physics, the disappearance of the idea that there is any ultimate material foundation for matter, space and time. These discoveries have changed the whole complexion of modern thought and education. We must now call on the imagination as well as on our power of measurement. The demands on faith are increased as scepticism assumes its proper healthy place. A new syn¬ thesis of knowledge is in the making and here as I see it lies the duty and the opportunities of all schools of learning and all followers of the liberal arts within our contemporary civiliza¬ tion. It is our task to place in the arena once again the great established truths, and to cherish the gracious things of life, especially in a time when the world preserves so little of those things which we love and venerate. We must insist upon a demanding curriculum and not water down the standards under mis¬ guided pressure from authorities and depart¬ ments. We must enlarge and re-vitalize the area of values. We must see to it that science is not debased to technology but that taught within the proper disciplines it has its own great values, stimulating the imagination, cultivating objec¬ tivity and respect for truth, and developing a sense of reverence. In working for this new synthesis we shall assert the moral and intel¬ lectual values on which we rest the cause of education, we shall re-create our traditions, we shall dissolve the deep pessimism that comes from a purely material view of life, and we shall help to restore the sick mind and soul of modern man. Canada in this new Elizabethan era is rapidly moving into maturity. In our relations with the high-tension world we must throw our weight on the side of sanity and preserve a “temper of peace” which calls for a high degree of self- discipline. Within our borders more than any¬ thing else we as Canadians need to develop roots. For a country to be great this is the prime necessity. Each citizen must be rooted in one solid piece of earth, a corner which has nour¬ ished ih mand given him his being, and he in turn must lend it glory and do it service. In this ritual of being there is no place for looking over the border and aping the ideas and ways of another people. It is high time that we in Canada got rid of the idea that infests this continent—the idea that culture in some way suggests effeminacy. This habit of denying interests other than business or sport or the trivial sensationof the moment and professing to see in art or writing or music or the other creations of the spirit of man pur¬ suits not worthy of man’s virility is a pitiable and tragic evidence of protracted adolescence and has rightly earned for us the scorn of Euro¬ peans. It has resulted in a blighting materialism and has driven us to a cheap and sterilizing standardisation which denies excellence in the creative sphere which alone makes a people great. It lies with you as young Canadians to combat this tendency and to welcome a wide diversity in which men and women without fear of ridicule may express their faith and their dreams. The time is ripe for such a change of heart. The success of the Stratford Shakespeare festi¬ val this summer, the growing achievements in art, the wide interest in music, the recent writ¬ ings in Canadian biography and history indicate that. It seems to me that if we as Canadians can canalize some of our physical zest into pur¬ suits of the mind and spirit, great things can be accomplished and we can attain to a real maturity and gain the attention and respect of the world. Paul Verlaine once said that the way to make art was to take “literature” and wring its neck. There is a certain healthy and riotous quality in us as Canadians which should make it possible for us to do just that. In you young people moves such a spirit of Canada, not the Canada of picture postcards and cheap colored romance, but the real Canada of the proud Maritimes, the factories and broad rivers and elms and farmsteads of the East,- the sweeping prairies and gray mountains of the West, the inlets and bold contours of the Pacific coast—all implying challenge and courage, high honour and poetry. This is the Canada that is at unity with itself. This is the Canada which is waiting to be discovered and expressed in action, in word and in art. In that task wherever duty or responsibility may take you or your adventuring spirit may drive you, live by the pure flame of imagination, the “invisible sun” that is within you. Let nothing choke your receptiveness, blunt your eagerness, weight you down with doubts or cal¬ culation. In these days of frantic money-grab¬ bing and material standards, associate with those 28
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sophy, that brute instinct was crushing reason and evil fanaticism replacing belief. Wherefore: “Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold”. These things have already come about in full and terrifying measure. And thinkers like Schweitzer of the West and Radhakrishnan of the East are in agreement on the symptoms and causes of our present state—industrialization and urbanization, the over-organization of life, the debasement of nationalism, and obsession with material achievements. “The words written large over the present age are insecurity, guilt and helplessness”. If this is another Dark Age (which I still beg leave to doubt), at least there is a certain important difference between it and what we term the Dark Ages in our history. Then men did not indulge in communal despair. They were bound by a common humanity rooted in religious faith. That religious tradition, the essential core of our civilization, has gradually receded with resulting confusion in the moral and spiritual order. And we are now called upon to build our spiritual defences against the new paganism, a corroding materialism and the atom- bomb mentality of fear and impious pride. For this state of affairs science is not to blame —it is so easy to make science the scapegoat. The threat is not from science but from the fears, prejudices, ignorances, loose thinking and weaknesses of human nature. It is not my purpose in this recital of our present woes to add to the chorus of opinion that we are nearly at the end of an era which is disintegrating through its own moral inade¬ quacy. I am setting down these things rather to suggest that education has a supreme task in which it should be joined by all men of good¬ will—the task of once more creating compelling values and asserting the conception of a moral universe and a significant way of life. Self- examination is the first step to salvation and I suggest further that we should be busy finding out where we have gone wrong. That is surely a task for the graduates of our arts colleges. They will find among other things that, lulled by the ease of riding in motor vehicles and by the sirens of advertising, we have surrendered our belief in the absolutes in our journey to reality, that we have lost our conviction that the spiritual values are supreme and supremely re¬ warding, and that there can be no such thing as a sacrifice for truth. They will find, too, that we have increasingly substituted for the freedom of the individual soul the security and welfare of the collective man and have been hypnotized by that bleak abstraction, “the common man”, with its corollary, the pitiful cage of conformity. Seeking our salvation in material means and technology, we have reduced man to the propor¬ tions and character of an engine. In this order of things it is time for every student and univer¬ sity graduate to assert once more the essential value of the individual man and to insist, with Sir Francis Walshe, that no one will “interpret for you in terms of microvolts and feed-back mechanisms in the brain, the sonnets of Shake¬ speare, the paintings of Botticelli, or the going out to death of Captain Oates in the dark wastes of the Antarctic. There are more things in heaven and earth than are revealed by an ampli¬ fying valve”. In the end we may realize once again that there is only one rule of conduct which can re¬ solve our discontents—a rule known in various forms for at least two thousand years. That rule is: “Love thy neighbor as theyself”! Again poets point the way and echo the old commandment. The theme of contemporary poetry, if one may speak of such, is in Mr. W. H. Auden’s phrase: “We must love one another or die” —we are all responsible for one another. As John Donne said long ago: “Any man’s death diminishes me, because I am involved in man¬ kind”. May I be permitted to say a few words about Education in this context. I am not going to invoke any of the educational ghosts that squak and gibber in the press and at countless confer¬ ences. The cry has been: “What shall we do to be saved educationally”? And a healthy answer is beginning to emerge from the result¬ ing debate. There must be a closer relation and interpenetration of the two orders of thought: science which proceeds by observed fast and concept, and the other, the humanities which follow the route of myth and symbol and image. It is not the subject but the spirit and approach of the teacher that counts. Two things have changed our prevailing attitude to man and the universe—the recognition from the work of Sherrington and others that the mind cannot be explained in terms of a physiological machine, but requires higher and other perceptions for its understanding; and the second, the result of relativity, the quantum theory and nuclear 27
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Page 31 text:
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agencies and groups that are poor enough to afford integrity. I am convinced of the supreme importance of the xisions o f youth. In that re¬ gard may I commend to you two poems. The first entitled Germinal is by that grand Irish writer and prophet, George William Russell (“AE”), which is a plea for the opportunity for the young person to acquire the vision that shall sustain him through life: “Let thy young wanderer dream on! Call him not home”. And the second, a sonnet of Elinor Wylie, is a passionate appeal to protect the integrity of that vision and to keep it free from the “contagion of the world’s slow stin”: “Protect the sacred from the secular danger; Instruct her strictly to preserve Thy gift And alter not its grain in atom sort”. Under such a talisman you will scorn the pre¬ vailing idea of getting on, the curse of our time, which means more money, a better social posi¬ tion, expensive cars and deadening respecta¬ bility. Closely related to this is the false and glittering slogan of “education for leisure”. Un¬ less we revise our current notions of leisure, .AFTER CLASSES .SPARE PERIODS .EVENINGS THE HE-MEN OF THE COLLEGE GATHER AT THE Y.M.C.A. ULTRA-MODERN FACILITIES EXPERT INSTRUCTION FREE • WRESTLING • BASKETBALL • BODY BUILDING • SWIMMING • LIFESAVING, ETC. SPECIAL STUDENT RATES 301 Vaughan Phone 92-3157 which are in terms of golf clubs, dance halls and watching other people engage in what is known as sport, this cry is a hollow mockery. Educa¬ tion is good for its own sake—it is its own reward. I have gone on much too long with these ex¬ hortations. One must not stand forever on tip¬ toe. Before a subside into the dignified silence in which a Chancellor should dwell, there is one thing that should be said. It desperately needs to be said at this time. And that is that now and in the immediate future the continuity of culture and the future of Western civilisation may have to be maintained by a very small num¬ ber of people. We are the heirs of a great tradi¬ tion and way of life. That ancestral wisdom is rooted in a moral attitude from which we secede at peril to the human race. It is our duty and particularly the task of institutions of learning and their graduates to keep that heritage alive so that it may sustain the present and illuminate the future. In this mission—to paraphrase Micah—you will try to do justly; you will love mercy; and you will walk humble with your God. You may lose interest in what you buy but not in what you bank. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA 29
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