|
There
are three things that I very much want to say to
the Class of 1994 in this brief hail and farewell. They
are things which havent been said enough to you
freshly minted graduates nor to your parents or guardians,
nor to me, nor to your teachers. I will say these in
the body of my speech, Im just setting you up
for this.
First,
I will say thank you. Second, I will say I am truly
sorry - now that is the striking novelty among the three.
We live in a time when nobody ever seems to apologize
for anything; they just weep and raise hell on the Oprah
Winfrey Show. The third thing I want to say to you at
some point - probably close to the end - is, ''We love
you.'' Now if I fail to say any of those three things
in the body of this great speech, hold up your hands,
and I will remedy the deficiency.
And
I'm going to ask you to hold up your hands this early
in the proceedings for another reason. I first declare
to you that the most wonderful thing, the most valuable
thing you can get from an education is this - the memory
of one person who could really teach, whose lessons
made life and yourselves much more interesting and full
of possibilities than you had previously supposed possible.
I ask this of everyone here, including all of us up
here on the platform - How many of us, how many of you,
had such a teacher? Kindergarten counts. Please hold
up your hands. Hurry. You may want to remember the name
of that great teacher.
I
thank you for being educated. There, I've thanked you
now; that way I dont have to speak to a bunch
of nincompoops. For you freshly minted college graduates,
this is a puberty ceremony long overdue. We, whose principal
achievement is that we are older than you, have to acknowledge
at last that you are grown-ups, too. there are old poops
possibly among us on this very day who will say that
you are not grown-ups until you have somehow survived,
as they have, some famous calamity - The Great Depression,
World War II, Vietnam, whatever. Storytellers are responsible
for this destructive, not to say suicidal, myth. Again
and again in stories, after some terrible mess, the
character is able to say at last, ''Today, I am a woman;
today I am a man. The end.''
When
I got home from World War II, my Uncle Dan clapped me
on the back, and he said, ''Youre a man now.''
So I killed him. Not really, but I certainly felt like
doing it.
Now
you young twerps want a new name for your generation?
Probably not, you just want jobs, right? Well, the media
do us all such tremendous favors when they call you
Generation X, right? Two clicks from the very end of
the alphabet. I hereby declare you Generation A, as
much at the beginning of a series of astonishing triumphs
and failures as Adam and Eve were so long ago.
I
apologize. I said I would apologize; I apologize now.
I apologize because of the terrible mess the planet
is in. But it has always been a mess. There have never
been any ''Good Old Days,'' there have just been days.
And as I say to my grandchildren, ''Dont look
at me. I just got here myself.''
So
you know what Im going to do? I declare everybody
here a member of Generation A. Tomorrow is another day
for all of us.
Having
said that, I have made us, for a few hours at least,
what most of us do not have and what we need so desperately
- I have made us an extended family, one for all and
all for one. A husband, a wife and some kids is not
a family; its a terribly vulnerable survival unit.
Now those of you who get married or are married, when
you fight with your spouse, what each of you will be
saying to the other one actually is, ''Youre not
enough people. You're only one person. I should have
hundreds of people around.''
I
met a man and a wife in Nigeria - Ibos. They just had
a new baby. They had a thousand relatives there in southern
Nigeria, and they were going to take that baby around
and visit all the other relatives. We should all have
families like that.
Now,
you take Dan and Marilyn Quayle, who imagine themselves
as a brave, clean-cut little couple. They are surrounded
by an enormous extended family, what we should all have
- I mean judges, senators, newspaper editors, lawyers,
bankers. They are not alone. And one reason they are
so comfortable is that they are members of extended
families, and I would really, over the long run, hope
America would find some way to provide all of our citizens
with extended families - a large group of people they
could call on for help.
Now,
Ive made us an extended family. Does our family
have a flag? Well, you bet. Its a big orange rectangle.
Orange is a very good color and maybe the best one.
Its full of vitamin C and cheerful associations,
if one could forget the troubles in Ireland.
Now
this gathering is a work of art. The teacher whose name
I mentioned when we all remembered good teachers asked
me one time, ''What is it artists do?'' And I mumbled
something. ''They do two things,'' he said. ''First,
they admit they can't straighten out the whole universe.
And then second, they make at least one little part
of it exactly as it should be. A blob of clay, a square
of canvas, a piece of paper, or whatever.'' We have
all worked so hard and well to make these moments and
this place exactly what it should be.
As
I have told you, I had a bad uncle named Dan, who said
a male cant be a man unless hed gone to
war. But I had a good uncle named Alex, who said, when
life was most agreeable - and it could be just a pitcher
of lemonade in the shade - he would say, ''If this isn't
nice, what is?'' So I say that about what we have achieved
here right now. If he hadnt said that so regularly,
maybe five or six times a month, we might not have paused
to notice how rewarding life can be sometimes. Perhaps
my good uncle Alex will live on in some of you members
of the Syracuse Class of 1994 if, in the future, you
will pause to say out loud every so often, ''If this
isnt nice, what is?''
Now,
my time is up and I havent even inspired you with
heroic tales of the past - Teddy Roosevelts cavalry
charge up San Juan Hill, Desert Storm - nor given you
visions of a glorious future - computer programs, interactive
TV, the information superhighway, speed the day. I spent
too much time celebrating this very moment and place
- once the future we dreamed of so long ago. This is
it. Were here. How the heck did we do it?
A
neighbor of mine, I hired him - he was a handyman -
to build and ''L'' on my house where I could write.
He did the whole damn thing - he built the foundation,
and then the side walls and the roof. He did it all
by himself. And when it was all done, he stood back
and he aid, "How the hell did I ever do that?"
How the hell did we ever do this? We did it! And if
this isnt nice, what is?
I
got a letter from a sappy woman a while back - she knew
I was sappy too, which is to say a lifelong Democrat.
She was pregnant, and she wanted to know if I thought
it was a mistake to bring a little baby into a world
as troubled as this one is. And I replied, what made
being alive almost worthwhile for me was the saints
I met. They could be almost anywhere. By saints I meant
people who behaved decently and honorably in societies
which were so often obscene. Perhaps many of us here,
regardless of our ages or power or wealth, can be saints
for her child to meet.
There
was one thing I forgot to say, and I promised I would
say, and that is, ''We love you. We really do.''
|
 |