登陆注册
15292600000016

第16章 Impressions of London(10)

It has, or had till yesterday, fewer students than the University of Toronto. To mention Oxford beside the 26,000 students of Columbia University sounds ridiculous. In point of money, the 39,000,000

dollar endowment of the University of Chicago, and the $35,000,000

one of Columbia, and the $43,000,000 of Harvard seem to leave Oxford nowhere. Yet the peculiar thing is that it is not nowhere. By some queer process of its own it seems to get there every time. It was therefore of the very greatest interest to me, as a profound scholar, to try to investigate just how this peculiar excellence of Oxford arises.

It can hardly be due to anything in the curriculum or programme of studies. Indeed, to any one accustomed to the best models of a university curriculum as it flourishes in the United States and Canada, the programme of studies is frankly quite laughable. There is less Applied Science in the place than would be found with us in a theological college. Hardly a single professor at Oxford would recognise a dynamo if he met it in broad daylight. The Oxford student learns nothing of chemistry, physics, heat, plumbing, electric wiring, gas-fitting or the use of a blow-torch. Any American college student can run a motor car, take a gasoline engine to pieces, fix a washer on a kitchen tap, mend a broken electric bell, and give an expert opinion on what has gone wrong with the furnace.

It is these things indeed which stamp him as a college man, and occasion a very pardonable pride in the minds of his parents.

But in all these things the Oxford student is the merest amateur.

This is bad enough. But after all one might say this is only the mechanical side of education. True: but one searches in vain in the Oxford curriculum for any adequate recognition of the higher and more cultured studies. Strange though it seems to us on this side of the Atlantic, there are no courses at Oxford in Housekeeping, or in Salesmanship, or in Advertising, or on Comparative Religion, or on the influence of the Press. There are no lectures whatever on Human Behaviour, on Altruism, on Egotism, or on the Play of Wild Animals. Apparently, the Oxford student does not learn these things.

This cuts him off from a great deal of the larger culture of our side of the Atlantic. "What are you studying this year?" I once asked a fourth year student at one of our great colleges. "I am electing Salesmanship and Religion," he answered. Here was a young man whose training was destined inevitably to turn him into a moral business man: either that or nothing. At Oxford Salesmanship is not taught and Religion takes the feeble form of the New Testament.

The more one looks at these things the more amazing it becomes that Oxford can produce any results at all.

The effect of the comparison is heightened by the peculiar position occupied at Oxford by the professors' lectures. In the colleges of Canada and the United States the lectures are supposed to be a really necessary and useful part of the student's training. Again and again I have heard the graduates of my own college assert that they had got as much, or nearly as much, out of the lectures at college as out of athletics or the Greek letter society or the Banjo and Mandolin Club.

In short, with us the lectures form a real part of the college life.

At Oxford it is not so. The lectures, I understand, are given and may even be taken. But they are quite worthless and are not supposed to have anything much to do with the development of the, student's mind.

"The lectures here," said a Canadian student to me, "are punk." I

appealed to another student to know if this was so. "I don't know whether I'd call them exactly punk," he answered, "but they're certainly rotten." Other judgments were that the lectures were of no importance: that nobody took them: that they don't matter: that you can take them if you like: that they do you no harm.

It appears further that the professors themselves are not keen on their lectures. If the lectures are called for they give them; if not, the professor's feelings are not hurt. He merely waits and rests his brain until in some later year the students call for his lectures. There are men at Oxford who have rested their brains this way for over thirty years: the accumulated brain power thus dammed up is said to be colossal.

I understand that the key to this mystery is found in the operations of the person called the tutor. It is from him, or rather with him, that the students learn all that they know: one and all are agreed on that. Yet it is a little odd to know just how he does it. "We go over to his rooms," said one student, "and he just lights a pipe and talks to us." "We sit round with him," said another, "and he simply smokes and goes over our exercises with us." From this and other evidence I

gather that what an Oxford tutor does is to get a little group of students together and smoke at them. Men who have been systematically smoked at for four years turn into ripe scholars. If anybody doubts this, let him go to Oxford and he can see the thing actually in operation. A well-smoked man speaks, and writes English with a grace that can be acquired in no other way.

In what was said above, I seem to have been directing criticism against the Oxford professors as such: but I have no intention of doing so. For the Oxford professor and his whole manner of being I

have nothing but a profound respect. There is indeed the greatest difference between the modern up-to-date American idea of a professor and the English type. But even with us in older days, in the bygone time when such people as Henry Wadsworth Longfellow were professors, one found the English idea; a professor was supposed to be a venerable kind of person, with snow-white whiskers reaching to his stomach. He was expected to moon around the campus oblivious of the world around him. If you nodded to him he failed to see you. Of money he knew nothing; of business, far less. He was, as his trustees were proud to say of him, "a child."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 拓展工作

    拓展工作

    在人生追求成功的过程中不可能没有障碍,但只要有智慧相伴,我们就可以从人生的谷地走出,攀援到人生的峰顶。我们等待成功的到来,这种成功是伴随智慧的人生记录,而每个人的智慧汇成了成功追求过程中最精彩的篇章和最动人的驿站。
  • 神棍下山

    神棍下山

    他叫沈棍儿,他的身世是谜,他被世人误解是神棍,他却一笑了之。他叫沈棍儿,他也是神棍,他走下了灵华山,踏入了凡尘俗世。
  • 剑尊无双

    剑尊无双

    异世大陆,强者林立。奇门遁术,万千宗派。一名现代的大学生因旅途跌入山崖而灵魂附身到了一名大家族的子弟身上。灵魂力的强大使他在领悟方面极其突出,从资质平平的普通人一夜之间变为一代天才。激烈的顶级碰撞,天才之间摩擦的火花。翻江倒海,上天入地,翻手为云,覆手为雨。一切尽在剑尊无双!
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 神陆世界

    神陆世界

    宇宙神陆,悄然再现。渺小无知的地球,却走出一个万古前本该被湮灭的人族遗种。
  • 成功必须要克服的人性弱点

    成功必须要克服的人性弱点

    成功首先是克服自身人性的弱点的过程,人性弱点是成功真正的障碍,只有认清和克服人性的弱点,才能走向卓越。本书介绍了人性中种种妨碍人们走向成功的弱点和缺陷,同时阐述了克服这些弱点的方法和途径,帮助人们认清自己人性的弱点,剔除自己迈向成功的最大阻碍,从而顺利抵达成功的彼岸。
  • 杀手穿越本为魔

    杀手穿越本为魔

    简介上一世她叫梦妍,她是现代异能世家五类异能全修,毒医双绝,被称为天才的人物!亦是杀手组织里的金牌杀手,她要当上家族的掌权人,她要有实力!因为她要保护自己的弟弟,和自己在乎的姐妹,爱人,不能让他像爸爸妈妈一样离自己而去,!可是当她登上掌门之位的那一刻,暗算她的,是她最好的姐妹,是说要带给她阳光的男人,看着自己的弟弟死在血泊中,她平静的说,别让我活着,不然我会把一切还给你们的!!时光大门开启,这一世,一样的灵魂,不一样的身体,面对的却是同样的阴谋!既然你们找死,那就都来吧。异世之中,她遇到他,“吃了它,我就让你跟着我!”!毫不犹豫吃下她给的毒药!“你敢让他碰你!”他的狂怒要毁灭整个世界!“他碰我我可以杀了他,要是你我该拿你怎么办!”乱世中是她溺在他的银色世界,还是他在她的紫色海洋中挣不脱,逃不开!原来整个世界都是他们的配角,所有事情都落幕,是他们生生世世的相随!
  • 三界鬼警

    三界鬼警

    三界动乱,地府之门大开,万鬼出逃,三界联手打造三界鬼警,意欲重兴地府!警校出生的林木风在故意的安排下成功的进入鬼警所,猎鬼世家林木风,三界鬼警林木风。
  • 一本没有书名的书

    一本没有书名的书

    当一本书充满故事的时候,你是不需要给它取书名的。这是一本没有书名的书,也是一本不试图给任何人打鸡血的书,28篇文章,30个人,30个故事,30个人的喜怒哀乐。
  • 迷雾笼罩的科学(学生最想知道的未解之谜)

    迷雾笼罩的科学(学生最想知道的未解之谜)

    《学生最想知道的未解之谜:迷雾笼罩的科学》去粗取精,择取人们关注的科学未解之谜汇编而成,从宇宙、大自然、生物医学、数理化等多个方面诠释了科学领域的种种神秘现象,引导读者进入精彩玄妙的未知世界,使读者更加立体、更加真实地感受奇妙的科学世界。客观地说,经过多方面资料的填充和精心编撰,《学生最想知道的未解之谜:迷雾笼罩的科学》是一部以满足读者对科学世界的求知与探索为宗旨的,融知识性、趣味性于一体的科普性读物。