Wednesday, January 15, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Pun F:il ... . L age r Wednsda, Jnuay 15 198 T E M CHIG N D iLY MAG ZIN ve IOne of his students Pays the good model' tribute (Continued from Page 4) sources are always in evidence in his teaching. W He has constantly sought to help his students discover the hu- mane way of going to college. Fre- quently when announcing that he would give an examination to the class, he would counsel against the frantic, neurotic attempt to mem- orize every detail in the book. He encourages a working for con- trol, for intelligibility. "Don't open the work to the first word and try to review hurriedly everything you have read. Be calm. Reflect. Keep your book closed for a while, and try to summon up what you know from your previous reading of the work. Try to remember im- portant matters first. Open your book when you need to fill in your whole work. Grasp the work as a intelligible construction of the whole and memorize details that will contribute to an orderly ex- planation. Many students come to college and ruin their minds by an obsession with unintelligible separate parts, unrelated details. Study sensibly. Organize and in- tegrate your knowledge. Don't ruin your mind." NEVER had a conference with Bredvold when we talked about immediate course matters only. He radiated a mellow, leisurely feeling in the comfortable way he sat in his chair and methodical- ly lit and puffed on his pipe as he talked. He was never a harried academician, mechanically per- forming chores with students. In his office he was an 18th century conversationalist. He had time to tell me the long, heroic saga of his former colleague, Hereward T. Price, slowly and painfully making his way back to England after World War I, 'ia Asia and Can- ada. Or he would tell of his own experiences as a World War I Army captain whose greatest tri- als came after the war when he had to combat the 'discharge fever' of his men and preserve their sanity by keeping them oc- cupied with pretended war ma- neuvers. "We captured one hill about a thousand times." Or he would share his latest evidence of human endurance, courage, and balance: a Polish refugee of World War II he knew, who had borne years of horror in Nazi con- centration camps and emerged without a trace of distortion and self-pity. Or he would punch away at the current behavioristic cant, the Kinsey Report, and quickly name the best humanistic cri- tiques of it. His robust belief in the power of human beings to live sanely and courageously is like that of Rob- ert Frost, whom he has admired in this century. And Bredvold tells of the time when somebody work- ing at the Michigan Union called him to say that Frost had regis- tered there for the night. 'I rounded up all the graduate stu- dents I could, and we went to the Union and found Frost and sat there and listened to that wise old man for many hours." (Bredvold is forthright about the modern poets he does not like. "I have never been able to read Wallace Stevens. What doyou have to do to read that, man? Jump out of your skin?") The kinship of spirit between a great 20th century scholar and a great 20th century1 poet is evident in the statement that Bredvold remembers from, Frost's talk that night: "You young people are indefensible; you are at an indefensible age. You must believe in something and believe something in." LIKE FROST, Bredvold has faith in the potential spirituality of the people he teaches, and he treats morally and intellectually lazy people with kindness and un- derstanding even while arguing for moral strenuousness as the distinctive mark of man. "Nobody has convictions about religion and salvation of the soul today. That's why we have tolerance. In the 17th century there were no psy- chiatrists who could make big money saving souls. Society pro- vides a way for you to make a jouriney to Detroit. Nobody pro- vides for your way through life, though. Every man can go to hell in his own way. We have rules to help people get to Detroit, rules that are enforced by authority that we recognize and accept for our own good. But in education we let children experiment. We don't permit children to experiment in crossing the street, to touch pass- ing wheels as dogs do. But we al- low them to touch the wheels of evil principles in their schooling. The principle of authority is as vital and necessary as that of liberty. The two must be har- monized. Tradition and the church give you ideas, and ideas are indispensable to the humaniz- ing process. Milton said that where there is much thinking there are many opinions, and where you have opinions you have truth in the making. But he was talking about good men." Humanists have seen education fall on evil days, enormous growth to serve superficial ends. "Ameri- can people believe with a super- stitious fervor in going to school, not in education; the only place in modern education where fun- damentals are stressed and where we are successful is athletics." Bredvold makes this uncomprom- ising attack, yet his remarkable faith and patience in his own teaching are revealed in the story he tells of the woman who as- serted in class at the beginning of his 18th century course, "The 18th century is artificial." Bred- vold asked what had led her to this conclusion. "The people wore wigs," she announced tartly. "This lady," Bredvold adds, "had her own hair arranged in the shape of cherries hanging along her forehead." BOWLERS Let's Go Bowling... OPEN BOWLING HOURS: Weekdays .... I 1 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Saturday.... 11 A.M. to 12 midnight Sunday ...... 1 P.M. to 12 midnight "It's great for a Date" 20th CENTURY RECREATION * Automatic Pinsetters S Air-conditioned 0 Free instructions 214 West Huron, 1I Block West of Bus Station Phone NO 8-7470 J lege who had written an article' thirty years ago, he said, "My memory is leaving me." To grad- uatestudents whose questions about his own writings would have afforded him a good chance to display his learning in class, he would say, "Read my books and articles. That's where I have said what I know as carefully and as well as I could." Leo Rockas will testify to Bredvold's radiant ad- miration during Austin Warren's versatile performance for the English Department readings. But probably the story that best sums up the humble perspective of this humanist in a technician's era is this: As a young instructor at Michigan he went to the dental clinic to have a tooth filled. A student dentist labored all after- noon with that filling. At last it seemed to be finished, but as Bredvold started to get up. the student asked him to wait anoth- er moment until he summoned his instructor. The instructor re- turned with the boy, peered into Bredvold's mouth, and said, "D." [ CHECKED throughout a long period of lectures before I an- nounced my theory that there is a correlation between Bredvold's hunching of his right shoulder and his ability to find the precise word he has paused for. Some lec- turers fill these hiatuses with voiced sounds. But not Bredvold. He pauses, hunches his shoulder, and at the end of the hunch the right word comes out. We who have loved and revered this great teacher and wise man will not speak of Michigan's re- placing him on the English fac- ulty. Somebody else will be teach- ing the 18th century, merely. All people, but teachers especially, re- quire good models to keep them doing their best. One of mine will always be Louis Bredvold. F O D FOR YOUR DR ESS SH IR TS LAUNDERED FOR YOUR COMFORT AND PLEASURE KYER MODEL LAUNDRY & CLEANER 815 South State NO 3-4185 1021 East Ann 601 East Williams 627 South Main BREDVOLD found much to ap- prove of in Montaigne, but when the master slipped on an import- ant issue, Bredvold knew it. In his essay on education Montaigne says, "Let the students alone; they'll be all right." Bredvold says, "This is a good essaw.for a teach- er to read on Friday when he is tired. Boileau and J o h n s o n, though, have moral muscle and intellectual msuccle. Read them during the week." Education for Bredvold means, ultimately, learning how to live well according to human stand- ards. And even though, like Jere- my Taylor, Swift, and Johnson, he knows that without moral working man can be "a vessel of dung," he does notbmake exorbi- tant demands. He disapproves of a morbid self-reproach for sins of the flesh. "The unforgivable sin," says Hredvold, "is hardness of heart. Don't lacerateyourself for physical sins, but spiritual ones." Anyone who sets up as a moral- tst courts the sin of pride. The dilemma of human life is that we have to seek knowledge and wis- dom to live by. but when we think we have some we are in danger of complacency. All his life Bredvold has continued to improve his own understanding. It was a humble high school teacher who bought some works of Kierkegaard with his first pay check. I have always marveled at Bredvold's amazing bibliographical knowledge, auth- ors and titles of countless books and articles that he can summon up instantaneously; yet one day when he could not remember the' name of a man at Wooster Col- Prof. Bredvold, a reknon'ned scholar and teacher, retired last June fron the English faculty, after receiving the University's highest honor-the Henry Rus- sell lectureship. He will return periodically to give guest lec- tures Thornton Parsons is working on his Ph. 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