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Library
Dedication: “The Sudden Rose”

Your
Excellency, Bishop Maher, Father Provincial, Chairman
of the Board of Supervisors, Ladies and Gentlemen:
There
is no more exhilarating duty of humanity than the obligation
of knowing and
expressing gratitude. Over and over, St. Paul
admonishes the faithful "Grati estotebe ye thankful."
I know no better starting point for my remarks today
than to follow the Pauline injunction. First, I owe
the Board of Trustees and the Principal of St. Augustine
High School more than casual acknowledgment for the
delicacy of their tribute – the library having stood
at the peak of my pre-occupation for almost twenty years
here. After fifteen years, I was able to house the book
collection in a respectable wing of the main building.
The gem-like new facility is a resplendent achievement.
Let me here express a personal sense of gratitude to
the many who by their contributions make us their debtors.
On
this afternoon heavy with reminiscence, my mind roves
over the personnel, past and present, who made the several
libraries living institutions. I begin with Patrick
Wolff and the devoted hours he gave for many years.
In time I was able to bring in the first professional
librarian, June Grande. As a library aid, Marilyn Irving
made her special contribution. For – years –gave her
devoted service. The present librarian, Ursula Sasso
brings to her task the demands of professional librarianship.
For many years Jackie Carter has combined deft management
of students and cooperation with Ursula. Lest anyone
think that Father Wasko was content to supply funds
to the library, it should be noted that among other
things this new facility is a monument to his unfailing
good taste.
It
is good to be in a place of friends, those known and
loved for many years, those of the more recent past.
In all of you who are here as friends of the library,
there is the tangible presence. But for me there is
a teeming invisible presence, moments, characters, the
crowded galaxy of those who await discovery or renewal
of discovery on the bookshelves. To come into a rich
library at night, one can fantasize, is to renew acquaintances
with countless men and women we once met there. The
shrewd little vintner with his gentle mocking of fellow
pilgrims to Canterbury gathering then in a glorious
medieval tapestry. The incredible outpouring of poetic
and dramatic character which makes Shaespeare the world’s
undisputed creative master. Dr. Johnson, the pathetic,
the bellowing, the caustic, the compassionate, steps
out of Boswell to converse with us. John Keats dying
shout of the beauty he wanted to express in faultless
lines. The great organ voices of the major poets and
the plaintive flute of the minor poet.
Perhaps
the most varied of all the voices is the chorus that rises
from the long panorama of the novel – that faithful illumination
of the human condition. Tom Jones of the comic epic, Scott’s
crowded world, Jane Austin people of sense, and best of all
the microcosm of Dickens. All our sorrows, dashed hopes, moments
of glory, the heroism of our race, the sudden shattering intrusion
of God into human affairs – all that we identify as our life
is illuminated in a unique fashion by these creatures of the
pages who rest on the shelves so quietly until a mind enmeshes
with them and they assume renewed life.
Yes,
we find on library shelves a goodly company of friends,
gained once and never lost. A library is a kind of university
as Cardinal Newman envisioned the university: a place
which professes all knowledge – sacred and secular.
Perhaps we should call it the poor man’s university.
Here you have your departments of biological sciences,
physical sciences, mathematics; alongside literature,
history, political theory. And always a section of divinity.
The same theoretical premises holds for both library
and university: it must comprise to whatever depth is
appropriate, the full range of knowledge without regard
to the fashions of the moment. In the library, unlike
in certain university departments it would be rare for
Descartes to elbow off the shelves a treatise on new
mathematics…The library is a little university without
hubbub.
If
I enter at this point upon a new spirit of commentary
which seems highly personal, you must realize that my
relationship to the growing book collection in the late
1940’s and the 1950's was that of parent to child. Every
volume was my choice. And in those sixteen years, I
chose over 7000 volumes. The loss of this unique collection
is a personal tragedy.
How
remote the middle 1940’s when I was the English department
at Saints! I was also by accident the architect of the
slowly emerging book collection. Every library grows
out of a philosophy of book selection. This one grew
out of my conviction that a true English education began
in the classroom but was augmented by outside reading.
Of the two paths of instruction, I regard the latter
as the more effective. That conviction made the gathering
of a considerable body of books suitable for all classes
in their reading program imperative.
Had
you passed by my classroom in early September of those
years in the 1940’s you might have heard sounds that
ran from low moans to cries of outrage as I announced
the reading requirements: eight books a year and a substantial
written report on each. (For extra credit an additional
four books.) There was some rebellion, some stupefaction.
For some, the program would not succeed. They were hardened
non-readers. For most, however, it was not an impossible
ideal and they read and read. For the very bright it
was a time of joyous discovery. Long after I had left
Saints, and to this day, I have testimony of the profound
effect which has carried a mentality into their lifetime.
The
immediate necessity to provide in their own high school
environment a collection to feed this substantial consumer
group shaped the early library at Saints. In time other
components would be added: reference, history, biography,
literary criticism, science, mathematics, music, the
arts. I saw early that the library had to provide resources
for teachers as well as students and the selection of
more mature studies answered that need.
I
was one of those teachers and was under pressure to
know all the books I was assigning to students. For
I did make the assignments – individual by individual
– each month, knowing both the book and the student.
To this library then I owe much of my own development
as a reader. It would be tedious to go into great detail
of how the growing collection opened continuing vistas
for me. I recall some highlights.
There
was foremost Kristin Lavransdatter, the long saga set
in Christian Norway of the Middle Ages. All the passion,
the anguish, the slow wisdom of human experience is
there and the reader is drawn into it. At the end of
the book one feels he has lived the full seventy five
years of Kristin’s life and gained a measure of her
wisdom.
Anna
Karenina by Tolstoi has similar impact. Beautiful, willful,
loving Anna defies moral order and the social structures
of Czarist St. Petersburg only to invite the slow deterioration
and tragic end which Tolstoi demonstrates as God’s avenging
evil. Among moderns, Graham Greene writes somber reflections
in the form of the novel, a world in which conscience
is the ruthless pursuer of men and women. Perhaps The
Heart of the Matter best illustrates the world of Greene
more full of shadow than light, of evil than good, but
always under the dominance of pity.
The
library provided volumes by which I expanded my reading
of G.K. Chesterton, begun long before. This rollicking
giant of a man, wit and laughing philosopher, champion
of Catholicism in England, wrote in a style flashing
with lightning. It appeared to be a series of roman
candles in the night but in fact was a steady stream
of rockets aimed at the forces of evil.
No
one group did more to shape my mind than the poets,
great and small. Here I found the most penetrating commentary
on human experience. Three who influenced me profoundly
I cite here. Emily Dickinson, the shrewd little recluse
of Amherst, Massachusetts, stitched into packets of
verse life, death and immortality in breathless outburst.
And no one knew the magic wrought in her lonely room.
At the other end of the world, philosophically as well
as geographically, Alice Meynell, the elegant presided
over a literary salon, composed with classic restraint
her lament over the passing of mortal things. In both
her measures and mood she was of the Greeks. With this
notable exception: she saw the world bathed in the sun
of Christ.
As
did another poet of the time, whose hoarse poetry did
not belong to his age: Gerard Manley Hopkins. The English
Jesuit created a new (or at least revived) idiom. And
in his poetry he was often Job speaking with God in
images that were peacock eyes bursting into flame.
These
then are some, a small part only, of the voices which
spoke to me and for me in the Saints Library.
As
I conclude this address, I quote Robert Browning’s attempt
to describe the moment of creative discovery. He called
it “the sudden rose”.
It is not different from the moment as it occurred
to Bach, Beethoven, Mozart and Berlioz in music. Galileo,
Newton, Pasteur, Einstein knew it in science. The poets
experienced it over and over. Even we lesser creatures
may find it on occasion. It is my hope that generations
of readers in this new facility from time to time encounter
within its walls the blossoming of the sudden rose.
John
R. Aherne, O.S.A.
May 18, 1980
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