WHY GO TO COLLEGE? an Address
By
ALICE FREEMAN PALMER
Formerly President of Wellesley College
To a largely increasing number of
young girls college doors are opening every year.
Every year adds to the number of men who feel as a
friend of mine, a successful lawyer in a great city,
felt when in talking of the future of his four little
children he said, “For the two boys it is not
so serious, but I lie down at night afraid to die and
leave my daughters only a bank account.”
Year by year, too, the experiences of life are teaching
mothers that happiness does not necessarily come to
their daughters when accounts are large and banks are
sound, but that on the contrary they take grave risks
when they trust everything to accumulated wealth and
the chance of a happy marriage. Our American
girls themselves are becoming aware that they need
the stimulus, the discipline, the knowledge, the interests
of the college in addition to the school, if they
are to prepare themselves for the most serviceable
lives.
But there are still parents who say,
“There is no need that my daughter should teach;
then why should she go to college?” I will not
reply that college training is a life insurance for
a girl, a pledge that she possesses the disciplined
ability to earn a living for herself and others in
case of need, for I prefer to insist on the importance
of giving every girl, no matter what her present circumstances,
a special training in some one thing by which she
can render society service, not amateur but of an
expert sort, and service too for which it will be
willing to pay a price. The number of families
will surely increase who will follow the example of
an eminent banker whose daughters have been given
each her specialty. One has chosen music, and
has gone far with the best masters in this country
and in Europe, so far that she now holds a high rank
among musicians at home and abroad. Another has
taken art, and has not been content to paint pretty
gifts for her friends, but in the studios of New York,
Munich, and Paris, she has won the right to be called
an artist, and in her studio at home to paint portraits
which have a market value. A third has proved
that she can earn her living, if need be, by her exquisite
jellies, preserves, and sweetmeats. Yet the
house in the mountains, the house by the sea, and
the friends in the city are not neglected, nor are
these young women found less attractive because of
their special accomplishments.
While it is not true that all girls
should go to college any more than that all boys should
go, it is nevertheless true that they should go in
greater numbers than at present. They fail to
go because they, their parents and their teachers,
do not see clearly the personal benefits distinct
from the commercial value of a college training.
I wish here to discuss these benefits, these larger
gifts of the college life, what they may
be, and for whom they are waiting.
It is undoubtedly true that many girls
are totally unfitted by home and school life for a
valuable college course. These joys and successes,
these high interests and friendships, are not for the
self-conscious and nervous invalid, nor for her who
in the exuberance of youth recklessly ignores the
laws of a healthy life. The good society of scholars
and of libraries and laboratories has no place and
no attraction for her who finds no message in Plato,
no beauty in mathematical order, and who never longs
to know the meaning of the stars over her head or
the flowers under her feet. Neither will the
finer opportunities of college life appeal to one who,
until she is eighteen (is there such a girl in this
country?), has felt no passion for the service of
others, no desire to know if through history or philosophy,
or any study of the laws of society, she can learn
why the world is so sad, so hard, so selfish as she
finds it, even when she looks upon it from the most
sheltered life. No, the college cannot be, should
not try to be, a substitute for the hospital, reformatory
or kindergarten. To do its best work it should
be organized for the strong, not for the weak; for
the high-minded, self-controlled, generous, and courageous
spirits, not for the indifferent, the dull, the idle,
or those who are already forming their characters on
the amusement theory of life. All these perverted
young people may, and often do, get large benefit
and invigoration, new ideals, and unselfish purposes
from their four years’ companionship with teachers
and comrades of a higher physical, mental, and moral
stature than their own. I have seen girls change
so much in college that I have wondered if their friends
at home would know them, the voice, the
carriage, the unconscious manner, all telling a story
of new tastes and habits and loves and interests,
that had wrought out in very truth a new creature.
Yet in spite of this I have sometimes thought that
in college more than elsewhere the old law holds,
“To him that hath shall be given and he shall
have abundance, but from him who hath not shall be
taken away even that which he seemeth to have.”
For it is the young life which is open and prepared
to receive which obtains the gracious and uplifting
influences of college days. What, then, for such
persons are the rich and abiding rewards of study
in college or university?
Pre-eminently the college is a place
of education. That is the ground of its being.
We go to college to know, assured that knowledge is
sweet and powerful, that a good education emancipates
the mind and makes us citizens of the world.
No college which does not thoroughly educate can
be called good, no matter what else it does.
No student who fails to get a little knowledge on
many subjects, and much knowledge on some, can be
said to have succeeded, whatever other advantages
she may have found by the way. It is a beautiful
and significant fact that in all times the years of
learning have been also the years of romance.
Those who love girls and boys pray that our colleges
may be homes of sound learning, for knowledge is the
condition of every college blessing. “Let
no man incapable of mathematics enter here,”
Plato is reported to have inscribed over his Academy
door. “Let no one to whom hard study is
repulsive hope for anything from us,” American
colleges might paraphrase. Accordingly in my
talk today I shall say little of the direct benefits
of knowledge which the college affords. These
may be assumed. It is on their account that one
knocks at the college door. But seeking this
first, a good many other things are added. I
want to point out some of these collateral advantages
of going to college, or rather to draw attention to
some of the many forms in which the winning of knowledge
presents itself.
The first of these is happiness.
Everybody wants “a good time,” especially
every girl in her teens. A good time, it is true,
does not always in these years mean what it will mean
by and by, any more than the girl of eighteen plays
with the doll which entranced the child of eight.
It takes some time to discover that work is the best
sort of play, and some people never discover it at
all. But when mothers ask such questions as these:
“How can I make my daughter happy?” “How
can I give her the best society?” “How
can she have a good time?” the answer in most
cases is simple. Send her to college, to
almost any college. Send her because there is
no other place where between eighteen and twenty-two
she is so likely to have a genuinely good time.
Merely for good times, for romance, for society, college
life offers unequalled opportunities. Of course
no idle person can possibly be happy, even for a day,
nor she who makes a business of trying to amuse herself.
For full happiness, though its springs are within,
we want health and friends and work and objects of
aspiration. “We live by admiration, hope,
and love,” says Wordsworth. The college
abounds in all three. In the college time new
powers are sprouting, and intelligence, merriment,
truthfulness and generosity are more natural than
the opposite qualities often become in later years.
An exhilarating atmosphere pervades the place.
We who are in it all the time feel that we live at
the fountain of perpetual youth, and those who take
but a four years’ bath in it become more cheerful,
strong, and full of promise than they are ever likely
to find themselves again; for a college is a kind
of compendium of the things that most men long for.
It is usually planted in a beautiful spot, the charm
of trees and water being added to stately buildings
and stimulating works of art. Venerable associations
of the past hallow its halls. Leaders in the
stirring world of to-day return at each commencement
to share the fresh life of the new class. Books,
pictures, music, collections, appliances in every
field, learned teachers, mirthful friends, athletics
for holidays, the best words of the best men for holy
days, all are here. No wonder that
men look back upon their college life as upon halcyon
days, the romantic period of youth. No wonder
that Dr. Holmes’s poems to his Harvard classmates
find an echo in college reunions everywhere; and gray-haired
men, who outside the narrowing circle of home have
not heard their first names for years, remain Bill
and Joe and John and George to college comrades, even
if unseen for more than a generation.
Yet a girl should go to college not
merely to obtain four happy years but to make a second
gain, which is often overlooked, and is little understood
even when perceived; I mean a gain in health.
The old notion that low vitality is a matter of course
with women; that to be delicate is a mark of superior
refinement, especially in well-to-do families; that
sickness is a dispensation of Providence, these
notions meet with no acceptance in college. Years
ago I saw in the mirror frame of a college freshman’s
room this little formula: “Sickness is
carelessness, carelessness is selfishness, and selfishness
is sin.” And I have often noticed among
college girls an air of humiliation and shame when
obliged to confess a lack of physical vigor, as if
they were convicted of managing life with bad judgment,
or of some moral delinquency. With the spreading
scientific conviction that health is a matter largely
under each person’s control, that even inherited
tendencies to disease need not be allowed to run their
riotous course unchecked, there comes an earnest purpose
to be strong and free. Fascinating fields of
knowledge are waiting to be explored; possibilities
of doing, as well as of knowing, are on every side;
new and dear friendships enlarge and sweeten dreams
of future study and work, and the young student cannot
afford quivering nerves or small lungs or an aching
head any more than bad taste, rough manners, or a
weak will. Handicapped by inheritance or bad
training, she finds the plan of college life itself
her supporter and friend. The steady, long-continued
routine of mental work, physical exercise, recreation,
and sleep, the simple and wholesome food, in place
of irregular and unstudied diet, work out salvation
for her. Instead of being left to go out-of-doors
when she feels like it, the regular training of the
gymnasium, the boats on lake and river, the tennis
court, the golf links, the basket ball, the bicycle,
the long walk among the woods in search of botanical
or geological specimens, all these and many
more call to the busy student, until she realizes
that they have their rightful place in every well-ordered
day of every month. So she learns, little by
little, that buoyant health is a precious possession
to be won and kept.
It is significant that already statistical
investigation in this country and in England shows
that the standard of health is higher among the women
who hold college degrees than among any other equal
number of the same age and class. And it is interesting
also to observe to what sort of questions our recent
girl graduates have been inclined to devote attention.
They have been largely the neglected problems of
little children and their health, of home sanitation,
of food and its choice and preparation, of domestic
service, of the cleanliness of schools and public
buildings. Colleges for girls are pledged by
their very constitution to make persistent war on the
water cure, the nervine retreat, the insane asylum,
the hospital, those bitter fruits of the
emotional lives of thousands of women. “I
can never afford a sick headache again, life is so
interesting and there is so much to do,” a delicate
girl said to me at the end of her first college year.
And while her mother was in a far-off invalid retreat,
she undertook the battle against fate with the same
intelligence and courage which she put into her calculus
problems and her translations of Sophocles. Her
beautiful home and her rosy and happy children prove
the measure of her hard-won success. Formerly
the majority of physicians had but one question for
the mother of the nervous and delicate girl, “Does
she go to school?” And only one prescription,
“Take her out of school.” Never a
suggestion as to suppers of pickles and pound-cake,
never a hint about midnight dancing and hurried day-time
ways. But now the sensible doctor asks, “What
are her interests? What are her tastes?
What are her habits?” And he finds new interests
for her, and urges the formation of out-of-door tastes
and steady occupation for the mind, in order to draw
the morbid girl from herself into the invigorating
world outside. This the college does largely
through its third gift of friendship.
Until a girl goes away from home to
school or college, her friends are chiefly chosen
for her by circumstances. Her young relatives,
her neighbors in the same street, those who happen
to go to the same school or church, these
she makes her girlish intimates. She goes to college
with the entire conviction, half unknown to herself,
that her father’s political party contains all
the honest men, her mother’s social circle all
the true ladies, her church all the real saints of
the community. And the smaller the town, the
more absolute is her belief. But in college
she finds that the girl who earned her scholarship
in the village school sits beside the banker’s
daughter; the New England farmer’s child rooms
next the heiress of a Hawaiian sugar plantation; the
daughters of the opposing candidates in a sharply fought
election have grown great friends in college boats
and laboratories; and before her diploma is won she
realizes how much richer a world she lives in than
she ever dreamed of at home. The wealth that
lies in differences has dawned upon her vision.
It is only when the rich and poor sit down together
that either can understand how the Lord is the Maker
of them all.
To-day above all things we need the
influence of men and women of friendliness, of generous
nature, of hospitality to new ideas, in short, of
social imagination. But instead, we find each
political party bitterly calling the other dishonest,
each class suspicious of the intentions of the other,
and in social life the pettiest standards of conduct.
Is it not well for us that the colleges all over the
country still offer to their fortunate students a society
of the most democratic sort, one in which
a father’s money, a mother’s social position,
can assure no distinction and make no close friends?
Here capacity of every kind counts for its full value.
Here enthusiasm waits to make heroes of those who
can lead. Here charming manners, noble character,
amiable temper, scholarly power, find their full opportunity
and inspire such friendships as are seldom made afterward.
I have forgotten my chemistry, and my classical philology
cannot bear examination; but all round the world there
are men and women at work, my intimates of college
days, who have made the wide earth a friendly place
to me. Of every creed, of every party, in far-away
places and in near, the thought of them makes me more
courageous in duty and more faithful to opportunity,
though for many years we may not have had time to
write each other a letter. The basis of all valuable
and enduring friendships is not accident or juxtaposition,
but tastes, interests, habits, work, ambitions.
It is for this reason that to college friendship
clings a romance entirely its own. One of the
friends may spend her days in the laboratory, eagerly
chasing the shy facts that hide beyond the microscope’s
fine vision, and the other may fill her hours and
her heart with the poets and the philosophers; one
may steadfastly pursue her way toward the command
of a hospital, and the other towards the world of
letters and of art; these divergences constitute no
barrier, but rather an aid to the fulness of friendship.
And the fact that one goes in a simple gown which she
has earned and made herself, and the other lives when
at home in a merchant’s modern palace what
has that to do with the things the girls care about
and the dreams they talk over in the walk by the river
or the bicycle ride through country roads? If
any young man to-day goes through Harvard lonely,
neglected, unfriended, if any girl lives solitary and
wretched in her life at Wellesley, it is their own
fault. It must be because they are suspicious,
unfriendly or disagreeable themselves. Certainly
it is true that in the associations of college life,
more than in any other that the country can show,
what is extraneous, artificial, and temporary falls
away, and the every-day relations of life and work
take on a character that is simple, natural, genuine.
And so it comes about that the fourth gift of college
life is ideals of personal character.
To some people the shaping ideals
of what character should be, often held unconsciously,
come from the books they are given by the persons
whom they most admire before they are twenty years
old. The greatest thing any friend or teacher,
either in school or college, can do for a student
is to furnish him with a personal ideal. The
college professors who transformed me through my acquaintance
with them ah, they were few, and I am sure
I did not have a dozen conversations with them outside
their class rooms gave me, each in his different
way, an ideal of character, of conduct, of the scholar,
the leader, of which they and I were totally unconscious
at the time. For many years I have known that
my study with them, no matter whether of philosophy
or of Greek, of mathematics or history or English,
enlarged my notions of life, uplifted my standards
of culture, and so inspired me with new possibilities
of usefulness and of happiness. Not the facts
and theories that I learned so much as the men who
taught me, gave this inspiration. The community
at large is right in saying that it wants the personal
influence of professors on students, but it is wholly
wrong in assuming that this precious influence comes
from frequent meetings or talks on miscellaneous subjects.
There is quite as likely to be a quickening force
in the somewhat remote and mysterious power of the
teacher who devotes himself to amassing treasures of
scholarship, or to patiently working out the best
methods of teaching; who standing somewhat apart,
still remains an ideal of the Christian scholar, the
just, the courteous man or woman. To come under
the influence of one such teacher is enough to make
college life worthwhile. A young man who came
to Harvard with eighty cents in his pocket, and worked
his way through, never a high scholar, and now in
a business which looks very commonplace, told me the
other day that he would not care to be alive if he
had not gone to college. His face flushed as
he explained how different his days would have been
if he had not known two of his professors. “Do
you use your college studies in your business?”
I asked. “Oh, no!” he answered.
“But I am another man in doing the business;
and when the day’s work is done I live another
life because of my college experiences. The
business and I are both the better for it every day.”
How many a young girl has had her whole horizon extended
by the changed ideals she gained in college! Yet
this is largely because the associations and studies
there are likely to give her permanent interests the
fifth and perhaps the greatest gift of college life
of which I shall speak.
The old fairy story which charmed
us in childhood ended with “And they
were married and lived happy ever after.”
It conducted to the altar, having brought the happy
pair through innumerable difficulties, and left us
with the contented sense that all the mistakes and
problems would now vanish and life be one long day
of unclouded bliss. I have seen devoted and
intelligent mothers arrange their young daughters’
education and companionships precisely on this basis.
They planned as if these pretty and charming girls
were going to live only twenty or twenty-five years
at the utmost, and had consequently no need of the
wealthy interests that should round out the full-grown
woman’s stature, making her younger in feeling
at forty than at twenty, and more lovely and admired
at eighty than at either.
Emerson in writing of beauty declares
that “the secret of ugliness consists not in
irregular outline, but in being uninteresting.
We love any forms, however ugly, from which great
qualities shine. If command, eloquence, art,
or invention exists in the most deformed person, all
the accidents that usually displease, please, and raise
esteem and wonder higher. Beauty without grace
is the head without the body. Beauty without
expression tires.” Of course such considerations
can hardly come with full force to the young girl
herself, who feels aged at eighteen, and imagines
that the troubles and problems of life and thought
are hers already. “Oh, tell me to-night,”
cried a college freshman once to her President, “which
is the right side and which is the wrong side of this
Andover question about eschatology?” The young
girl is impatient of open questions, and irritated
at her inability to answer them. Neither can
she believe that the first headlong zest with which
she throws herself into society, athletics, into everything
which comes in her way, can ever fail. But her
elders know, looking on, that our American girl, the
comrade of her parents and of her brothers and their
friends, brought up from babyhood in the eager talk
of politics and society, of religious belief, of public
action, of social responsibility that this
typical girl, with her quick sympathies, her clear
head, her warm heart, her outreaching hands, will not
permanently be satisfied or self-respecting, though
she have the prettiest dresses and hats in town, or
the most charming of dinners, dances, and teas.
Unless there comes to her, and comes early, the one
chief happiness of life, a marriage of
comradeship, she must face for herself the
question, “What shall I do with my life?”
I recall a superb girl of twenty as
I overtook her one winter morning hurrying along Commonwealth
Avenue. She spoke of a brilliant party at a
friend’s the previous evening. “But,
oh!” she cried, throwing up her hands in a kind
of hopeless impatience, “tell me what to do.
My dancing days are over!” I laughed at her,
“Have you sprained your ankle?” But I
saw I had made a mistake when she added, “It
is no laughing matter. I have been out three
years. I have not done what they expected of
me,” with a flush and a shrug, “and there
is a crowd of nice girls coming on this winter; and
anyway, I am so tired of going to teas and ball-games
and assemblies! I don’t care the least
in the world for foreign missions, and,” with
a stamp, “I am not going slumming among the
Italians. I have too much respect for the Italians.
And what shall I do with the rest of my life?”
That was a frank statement of what any girl of brains
or conscience feels, with more or less bitter distinctness,
unless she marries early, or has some pressing work
for which she is well trained.
Yet even if that which is the profession
of woman par excellence be hers, how can she be perennially
so interesting a companion to her husband and children
as if she had keen personal tastes, long her own,
and growing with her growth? Indeed, in that
respect the condition of men is almost the same as
that of women. It would be quite the same were
it not for the fact that a man’s business or
profession is generally in itself a means of growth,
of education, of dignity. He leans his life
against it. He builds his home in the shadow
of it. It binds his days together in a kind
of natural piety and makes him advance in strength
and nobility as he “fulfils the common round,
the daily task.” And that is the reason
why men in the past, if they have been honorable men,
have grown old better than women. Men usually
retain their ability longer, their mental alertness
and hospitality. They add fine quality to fine
quality, passing from strength to strength and preserving
in old age whatever has been best in youth. It
was a sudden recognition of this fact which made a
young friend of mine say last winter, “I am
not going to parties any more; the men best worth
talking with are too old to dance.”
Even with the help of a permanent
business or profession, however, the most interesting
men I know are those who have an avocation as well
as a vocation. I mean a taste or work quite
apart from the business of life. This revives,
inspires, and cultivates them perpetually. It
matters little what it is, if only it is real and personal,
is large enough to last, and possesses the power of
growth. A young sea-captain from a New England
village on a long and lonely voyage falls upon a copy
of Shelley. Appeal is made to his fine but untrained
mind, and the book of the boy poet becomes the seaman’s
university. The wide world of poetry and of
the other fine arts is opened, and the Shelleyian
specialist becomes a cultivated, original, and charming
man. A busy merchant loves flowers, and in all
his free hours studies them. Each new spring
adds knowledge to his knowledge, and his friends continually
bring him their strange discoveries. With growing
wealth he cultivates rare and beautiful plants, and
shares them with his fortunate acquaintances.
Happy the companion invited to a walk or a drive
with such observant eyes, such vivid talk! Because
of this cheerful interest in flowers, and this ingenious
skill in dealing with them, the man himself is interesting.
All his powers are alert, and his judgment is valued
in public life and in private business. Or is
it more exact to say that because he is the kind of
man who would insist upon having such interests outside
his daily work, he is still fresh and young and capable
of growth at an age when many other men are dull and
old and certain that the time of decay is at hand?
There are two reasons why women need
to cultivate these large and abiding interests even
more persistently than men. In the first place,
they have more leisure. They are indeed the only
leisure class in the country, the only large body
of persons who are not called upon to win their daily
bread in direct wage-earning ways. As yet, fortunately,
few men among us have so little self-respect as to
idle about our streets and drawing-rooms because their
fathers are rich enough to support them. We
are not without our unemployed poor; but roving tramps
and idle clubmen are after all not of large consequence.
Our serious, non-producing classes are chiefly women.
It is the regular ambition of the chivalrous American
to make all the women who depend on him so comfortable
that they need do nothing for themselves. Machinery
has taken nearly all the former occupations of women
out of the home into the shop and factory. Widespread
wealth and comfort, and the inherited theory that
it is not well for the woman to earn money so long
as father or brothers can support her, have brought
about a condition of things in which there is social
danger, unless with the larger leisure are given high
and enduring interests. To health especially
there is great danger, for nothing breaks down a woman’s
health like idleness and its resulting ennui.
More people, I am sure, are broken down nervously
because they are bored, than because they are overworked;
and more still go to pieces through fussiness, unwholesome
living, worry over petty details, and the daily disappointments
which result from small and superficial training.
And then, besides the danger to health, there is
the danger to character. I need not dwell on
the undermining influence which men also feel when
occupation is taken away and no absorbing private
interest fills the vacancy. The vices of luxurious
city life are perhaps hardly more destructive to character
than is the slow deterioration of barren country life.
Though the conditions in the two cases are exactly
opposite, the trouble is often the same, absence
of noble interests. In the city restless idleness
organizes amusement; in the country deadly dulness
succeeds daily toil.
But there is a second reason why a
girl should acquire for herself strong and worthy
interests. The regular occupations of women in
their homes are generally disconnected and of little
educational value, at least as those homes are at
present conducted. Given the best will in the
world, the daily doing of household details becomes
a wearisome monotony if the mere performance of them
is all. To make drudgery divine a woman must
have a brain to plan and eyes to see how to “sweep
a room as to God’s laws.” Imagination
and knowledge should be the hourly companions of her
who would make a fine art of each detail in kitchen
and nursery. Too long has the pin been the appropriate
symbol of the average woman’s life the
pin, which only temporarily holds together things
which may or may not have any organic connection with
one another. While undoubtedly most women must
spend the larger part of life in this modest pin-work,
holding together the little things of home and school
and society and church, it is also true, that cohesive
work itself cannot be done well, even in humble circumstances,
except by the refined, the trained, the growing woman.
The smallest village, the plainest home, give ample
space for the resources of the trained college woman.
And the reason why such homes and such villages are
so often barren of grace and variety is just because
these fine qualities have not ruled them. The
higher graces of civilization halt among us; dainty
and finished ways of living give place to common ways,
while vulgar tastes, slatternly habits, clouds and
despondency reign in the house. Little children
under five years of age die in needless thousands
because of the dull, unimaginative women on whom they
depend. Such women have been satisfied with just
getting along, instead of packing everything they
do with brains, instead of studying the best possible
way of doing everything small or large; for there is
always a best way, whether of setting a table, of
trimming a hat, or teaching a child to read.
And this taste for perfection can be cultivated;
indeed, it must be cultivated, if our standards of
living are to be raised. There is now scientific
knowledge enough, there is money enough, to prevent
the vast majority of the evils which afflict our social
organism, if mere knowledge or wealth could avail;
but the greater difficulty is to make intelligence,
character, good taste, unselfishness prevail.
What, then, are the interests which
powerfully appeal to mind and heart, and so are fitted
to become the strengthening companions of a woman’s
life? I shall mention only three, all of them
such as are elaborately fostered by college life.
The first is the love of great literature.
I do not mean that use of books by which a man may
get what is called a good education and so be better
qualified for the battle of life, nor do I mention
books in their character as reservoirs of knowledge,
books which we need for special purposes, and which
are no longer of consequence when our purpose with
them is served. I have in mind the great books,
especially the great poets, books to be adopted as
a resource and a solace. The chief reason why
so many people do not know how to make comrades of
such books is because they have come to them too late.
We have in this country enormous numbers of readers,
probably a larger number who read, and who read many
hours in the week, than has ever been known elsewhere
in the world. But what do these millions read
besides the newspapers? Possibly a denominational
religious weekly and another journal of fashion or
business. Then come the thousands who read the
best magazines, and whatever else is for the moment
popular in novels and poetry the last dialect
story, the fashionable poem, the questionable but talked-of
novel. Let a violent attack be made on the decency
of a new story and instantly, if only it is clever,
its author becomes famous.
But the fashions in reading of a restless
race the women too idle, the men too heavily
worked I will not discuss here. Let
light literature be devourered by our populace as
his drug is taken by the opium-eater, and with a similar
narcotic effect. We can only seek out the children,
and hope by giving them from babyhood bits of the noblest
literature, to prepare them for the great opportunities
of mature life. I urge, therefore, reading as
a mental stimulus, as a solace in trouble, a perpetual
source of delight; and I would point out that we must
not delay to make the great friendships that await
us on the library shelves until sickness shuts the
door on the outer world, or death enters the home
and silences the voices that once helped to make these
friendships sweet. If Homer and Shakespeare and
Wordsworth and Browning are to have meaning for us
when we need them most, it will be because they come
to us as old familiar friends whose influences have
permeated the glad and busy days before. The
last time I heard James Russell Lowell talk to college
girls, he said, for he was too ill to say
many words “I have only this one message
to leave with you. In all your work in college
never lose sight of the reason why you have come here.
It is not that you may get something by which to earn
your bread, but that every mouthful of bread may be
the sweeter to your taste.”
And this is the power possessed by
the mighty dead, men of every time and
nation, whose voices death cannot silence, who are
waiting even at the poor man’s elbow, whose
illuminating words may be had for the price of a day’s
work in the kitchen or the street, for lack of love
of whom many a luxurious home is a dull and solitary
spot, breeding misery and vice. Now the modern
college is especially equipped to introduce its students
to such literature. The library is at last understood
to be the heart of the college. The modern librarian
is not the keeper of books, as was his predecessor,
but the distributer of them, and the guide to their
resources, proud when he increases the use of his
treasures. Every language, ancient or modern,
which contains a literature is now taught in college.
Its history is examined, its philology, its masterpieces,
and more than ever is English literature studied and
loved. There is now every opportunity for the
college student to become an expert in the use of
his own tongue and pen. What other men painfully
strive for he can enjoy to the full with comparatively
little effort.
But there is a second invigorating
interest to which college training introduces its
student. I mean the study of nature, intimacy
with the strange and beautiful world in which we live.
“Nature never did betray the heart that loved
her,” sang her poet high priest. When the
world has been too much with us, nothing else is so
refreshing to tired eyes and mind as woods and water,
and an intelligent knowledge of the life within them.
For a generation past there has been a well-nigh universal
turning of the population toward the cities.
In 1840 only nine per cent of our people lived in
cities of 8,000 inhabitants or more. Now more
than a third of us are found in cities. But the
electric-car, the telephone, the bicycle, still keep
avenues to the country open. Certain it is that
city people feel a growing hunger for the country,
particularly when grass begins to grow. This
is a healthy taste, and must increase the general
knowledge and love of nature. Fortunate are the
little children in those schools whose teachers know
and love the world in which they live. Their
young eyes are early opened to the beauty of birds
and trees and plants. Not only should we expect
our girls to have a feeling for the fine sunset or
the wide-reaching panorama of field and water, but
to know something also about the less obvious aspects
of nature, its structure, its methods of work, and
the endless diversity of its parts. No one can
have read Matthew Arnold’s letters to his wife,
his mother, and his sister, without being struck by
the immense enjoyment he took throughout his singularly
simple and hard-working life in flowers and trees
and rivers. The English lake country had given
him this happy inheritance, with everywhere its sound
of running water and its wealth of greenery.
There is a close connection between the marvellous
unbroken line of English song, and the passionate
love of the Englishman for a home in the midst of birds,
trees, and green fields.
“The world is so full of a number
of things,
That I think we should all be as happy
as kings,”
is the opinion of everybody who knows
nature as did Robert Louis Stevenson. And so
our college student may begin to know it. Let
her enter the laboratories and investigate for herself.
Let her make her delicate experiments with the blowpipe
or the balance; let her track mysterious life from
one hiding-place to another; let her “name all
the birds without a gun,” and make intimates
of flower and fish and butterfly and she
is dull indeed if breezy tastes do not follow her
through life, and forbid any of her days to be empty
of intelligent enjoyment. “Keep your years
beautiful; make your own atmosphere,” was the
parting advice of my college president, himself a living
illustration of what he said.
But it is a short step from the love
of the complex and engaging world in which we live
to the love of our comrades in it. Accordingly
the third precious interest to be cultivated by the
college student is an interest in people. The
scholar today is not a being who dwells apart in his
cloister, the monk’s successor; he is a leader
of the thoughts and conduct of men. So the new
subjects which stand beside the classics and mathematics
of medieval culture are history, economics, ethics,
and sociology. Although these subjects are as
yet merely in the making, thousands of students are
flocking to their investigation, and are going out
to try their tentative knowledge in College Settlements
and City Missions and Children’s Aid Societies.
The best instincts of generous youth are becoming
enlisted in these living themes. And why should
our daughters remain aloof from the most absorbing
work of modern city life, work quite as fascinating
to young women as to young men? During many
years of listening to college sermons and public lectures
in Wellesley, I always noticed a quickened attention
in the audience whenever the discussion touched politics
or theology. These are, after all, the permanent
and peremptory interests, and they should be given
their full place in a healthy and vigorous life.
But if that life includes a love of
books, of nature, of people, it will naturally turn
to enlarged conceptions of religion my sixth and last gift of college life.
In his first sermon as Master of Balliol College, Dr. Jowett spoke of the
college, First as a place of education, secondly as a place of society, thirdly
as a place of religion. He observed that men of very great ability often
fail in life because they are unable to play their part with effect. They
are shy, awkward, self-conscious, deficient in manners, faults which are as
ruinous as vices. The supreme end of college training, he said, is
usefulness in after life. Similarly, when the city of Cambridge
celebrated in Harvards Memorial Hall the life and death of the gallant young
ex-governor of Massachusetts, William E. Russell, men did well to hang above his
portrait some wise words he has lately said, Never forget the everlasting
difference between making a living and making a life. That he himself
never forgot; and it was well to remind citizens and students of it, as they
stood there facing too the ancient words all Harvard men face when they take
their college degrees and go out into the world, They that be wise shall shine
as the brightness of the firmament, and they that turn many to righteousness as
the stars for ever and ever. Good words these to go out from college
with. The girls of Wellesley gather every morning at chapel to bow their
heads together for a moment before they scatter among the libraries and
lecture-rooms and begin the experiments of the new day. And always their
college motto meets the eyes that are raised to its penetrating message, Not to
be ministered unto, but to minister. How many a young heart has loyally
responded, And to give life a ransom for many. That is the Wellesley
spirit; and the same sweet spirit of devout service has gone forth from all our
college halls. In any of them one may catch the echo of Whittiers noble
psalm,
“O Lord and Master of us all
Whate’er our name or sign,
We own Thy sway, we hear Thy call,
We test our lives by Thine.”
That is the supreme test of life, its
consecrated serviceableness. The Master of Balliol
was right; the brave men and women who founded our
schools and colleges were not wrong. “For
Christ and the Church” universities were set
up in the wilderness of New England; for the large
service of the State they have been founded and maintained
at public cost in every section of the country where
men have settled, from the Alleghanies across the
prairies and Rocky Mountains down to the Golden Gate.
Founded primarily as seats of learning, their teachers
have been not only scientists and linguists, philosophers
and historians, but men and women of holy purposes,
sound patriotism, courageous convictions, refined
and noble tastes. Set as these teachers have
been upon a hill, their light has at no period of our
country’s history been hid. They have formed
a large factor in our civilization, and in their own
beautiful characters have continually shown us how
to combine religion and life, the ideal and practical,
the human and the divine.
Such are some of the larger influences
to be had from college life. It is true all the
good gifts I have named may be secured without the
aid of the college. We all know young men and
women who have had no college training, who are as
cultivated, rational, resourceful, and happy as any
people we know, who excel in every one of these particulars
the college graduates about them. I believe they
often bitterly regret the lack of a college education.
And we see young men and women going through college
deaf and blind to their great chances there, and afterwards
curiously careless and wasteful of the best things
in life. While all this is true, it is true too
that to the open-minded and ambitious boy or girl
of moderate health, ability, self-control, and studiousness,
a college course offers the most attractive, easy,
and probable way of securing happiness and health,
good friends and high ideals, permanent interests of
a noble kind, and large capacity for usefulness in
the world. It has been well said that the ability
to see great things large and little things small is
the final test of education. The foes of life,
especially of women’s lives, are caprice, wearisome
incapacity and petty judgments. From these oppressive
foes we long to escape to the rule of right reason,
where all things are possible, and life becomes a glory
instead of a grind. No college, with the best
teachers and collections in the world, can by its
own power impart all this to any woman. But if
one has set her face in that direction, where else
can she find so many hands reached out to help, so
many encouraging voices in the air, so many favoring
influences filling the days and nights?