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my discovery of england-第13部分
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If he writes enough he will get a reputation as an 〃executive;〃 and big things may happen to him。 He may even be asked to step out of the college and take a post as an 〃executive〃 in a soap company or an advertising firm。 The man; in short; is a 〃hustler;〃 an 〃advertiser〃 whose highest aim is to be a 〃live…wire。〃 If he is not; he will presently be dismissed; or; to use the business term; be 〃let go;〃 by a board of trustees who are themselves hustlers and live…wires。 As to the professor's soul; he no longer needs to think of it as it has been handed over along with all the others to a Board of Censors。
The American professor deals with his students according to his lights。 It is his business to chase them along over a prescribed ground at a prescribed pace like a flock of sheep。 They all go humping together over the hurdles with the professor chasing them with a set of 〃tests〃 and 〃recitations;〃 〃marks〃 and 〃attendances;〃 the whole apparatus obviously copied from the time…clock of the business man's factory。 This process is what is called 〃showing results。〃 The pace set is necessarily that of the slowest; and thus results in what I have heard Mr。 Edward Beatty describe as the 〃convoy system of education。〃
In my own opinion; reached after fifty…two years of profound reflection; this system contains in itself the seeds of destruction。 It puts a premium on dulness and a penalty on genius。 It circumscribes that latitude of mind which is the real spirit of learning。 If we persist in it we shall presently find that true learning will fly away from our universities and will take rest wherever some individual and enquiring mind can mark out its path for itself。
Now the principal reason why I am led to admire Oxford is that the place is little touched as yet by the measuring of 〃results;〃 and by this passion for visible and provable 〃efficiency。〃 The whole system at Oxford is such as to put a premium on genius and to let mediocrity and dulness go their way。 On the dull student Oxford; after a proper lapse of time; confers a degree which means nothing more than that he lived and breathed at Oxford and kept out of jail。 This for many students is as much as society can expect。 But for the gifted students Oxford offers great opportunities。 There is no question of his hanging back till the last sheep has jumped over the fence。 He need wait for no one。 He may move forward as fast as he likes; following the bent of his genius。 If he has in him any ability beyond that of the common herd; his tutor; interested in his studies; will smoke at him until he kindles him into a flame。 For the tutor's soul is not harassed by herding dull students; with dismissal hanging by a thread over his head in the class room。 The American professor has no time to be interested in a clever student。 He has time to be interested in his 〃deportment;〃 his letter…writing; his executive work; and his organising ability and his hope of promotion to a soap factory。 But with that his mind is exhausted。 The student of genius merely means to him a student who gives no trouble; who passes all his 〃tests;〃 and is present at all his 〃recitations。〃 Such a student also; if he can be trained to be a hustler and an advertiser; will undoubtedly 〃make good。〃 But beyond that the professor does not think of him。 The everlasting principle of equality has inserted itself in a place where it has no right to be; and where inequality is the breath of life。
American or Canadian college trustees would be horrified at the notion of professors who apparently do no work; give few or no lectures and draw their pay merely for existing。 Yet these are really the only kind of professors worth having;I mean; men who can be trusted with a vague general mission in life; with a salary guaranteed at least till their death; and a sphere of duties entrusted solely to their own consciences and the promptings of their own desires。 Such men are rare; but a single one of them; when found; is worth ten 〃executives〃 and a dozen 〃organisers。〃
The excellence of Oxford; then; as I see it; lies in the peculiar vagueness of the organisation of its work。 It starts from the assumption that the professor is a really learned man whose sole interest lies in his own sphere: and that a student; or at least the only student with whom the university cares to reckon seriously; is a young man who desires to know。 This is an ancient mediaeval attitude long since buried in more up…to…date places under successive strata of compulsory education; state teaching; the democratisation of knowledge and the substitution of the shadow for the substance; and the casket for the gem。 No doubt; in newer places the thing has got to be so。 Higher education in America flourishes chiefly as a qualification for entrance into a money…making profession; and not as a thing in itself。 But in Oxford one can still see the surviving outline of a nobler type of structure and a higher inspiration。
I do not mean to say; however; that my judgment of Oxford is one undiluted stream of praise。 In one respect at least I think that Oxford has fallen away from the high ideals of the Middle Ages。 I refer to the fact that it admits women students to its studies。 In the Middle Ages women were regarded with a peculiar chivalry long since lost。 It was taken for granted that their brains were too delicately poised to allow them to learn anything。 It was presumed that their minds were so exquisitely hung that intellectual effort might disturb them。 The present age has gone to the other extreme: and this is seen nowhere more than in the crowding of women into colleges originally designed for men。 Oxford; I regret to find; has not stood out against this change。
To a profound scholar like myself; the presence of these young women; many of them most attractive; flittering up and down the streets of Oxford in their caps and gowns; is very distressing。
Who is to blame for this and how they first got in I do not know。 But I understand that they first of all built a private college of their own close to Oxford; and then edged themselves in foot by foot。 If this is so they only followed up the precedent of the recognised method in use in America。 When an American college is established; the women go and build a college of their own overlooking the grounds。 Then they put on becoming caps and gowns and stand and look over the fence at the college athletics。 The male undergraduates; who were originally and by nature a hardy lot; were not easily disturbed。 But inevitably some of the senior trustees fell in love with the first year girls and became convinced that coeducation was a noble cause。 American statistics show that between 1880 and 1900 the number of trustees and senior professors who married girl undergraduates or who wanted to do so reached a percentage of;I forget the exact percentage; it was either a hundred or a little over。
I don't know just what happened at Oxford but presumably something of the sort took place。 In any case the women are now all over the place。 They attend the college lectures; they row in a boat; and they perambulate the High Street。 They are even offering a serious competition against the men。 Last year they carried off the ping…p
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