Graduation Speech, 1890
Willa Cather graduated from Red Cloud High School. She
was one three class members, all of whom gave orations at graduation.
The local newspaper, The Red Cloud Chief, printed her address on
13 June 1890.
SUPERSTITION VS. INVESTIGATION
All human history is a record of emigration, an exodus from barbarism to
civilization; from the very outset of this pilgrimage of humanity,
superstition and investigation have been contending for mastery. Since
investigation first led man forth on that great search for truth which
has prompted all his progress, superstition, the stern Pharoah of his
former bondage, has followed him retarding every step of advancement.
Then began a conquest which will end only with time, for it is only the
warfare between radicalism and conservatism, truth and error, which
underlies every man's life and happiness. The Ancient orientals were
highly civilized people but were dreamers and theorists who delved into
the mystical and metaphysical, leaving the more practical questions
remain unanswered, and were subjected to the evils of tyranny and
priestcraft. Those sacred books of the east we today regard as half
divine. We are not apt to think as we read those magnificent flights of
metaphor that the masses of people who read and believed them knew
nothing of figures. It is the confounding of the ltieral and the
figurative that has made atheists and fanatics throughout the ages.
All races have worshipped nature, the ruder as the cause, the more
enlightened as the effect of one grand cause. Worship as defined by
Carlyle is unmeasured wonder, but there are two kinds of wonder, that
born of fear and that of admiration; slafvish fear is never reverence.
The Greeks, lacking the intense religious fervor of the Orient,
entertained broader views. Their standard of manhood was one of
practical worth. They allowed no superstition, religious, political, or
social, to stand between them and the truth and suffered exile,
imprisonment, and death for the right of opinion and investigation.
Perhaps the strongest conflict ever known between the superstitious and
investigative forces of the world raged in the dark ages. Earth seem to
return to its original chaotic state, and there was no one to cry,
"Fiat lux." The old classic creed fell crashing into the
boundless path, and the new church was a scene of discord. All the great
minds were crushed, for men were still ruled by the iron scepter of fear,
and it was essential that they should remain ignorant. Superstition has
ever been the curse of the church, and until she can acknowledge that
since her principles are true, no scientific truth can contradict them,
she will never realize her full strength. There is another book of God
than that of the scriptural revelation, a book written in chapters of
creation upon the pages of the universe bound by mystery. When we are
morbid enough to say that the world degenerates with its age we forget
that the heroes and sages of history were the exceptions and not the
rule; what age since the world's foundation can leave such a record upon
the pages of time as the nineteenth century? What is it that
characterizes our age and gives the present its supremacy? Not skill in
hadcraft, for the great masses of art lie sleeping among the tombs of
Hellas and Italy; not in clearness or depth of though, for our literary
and philosophical lights are gleams from the fires of the past. In the
Elizabethan age, a book was written asserting that nature is the only
teacher, that no man's mind is broad enough to invent a theory to hold
nature, for she is the universe. With the publication of the Novum
Organum came a revolution in thought; scientists ceased theorizing
and began experimenting. Thus we went painfully back to nature, weary
and disgusted with our artificial knowledge, hungering for that which is
meat, thirsting for that which is drink, longing for the things that
are. She has given us the universe in answer.
It is the most sacred right of man to investigate; we paid dearly for it
in Eden; we have been shedding our heart's blood for it ever since. It
is ours; we have bought it with a price.
Scientific investigation is the hope of our age, as it must precede all
progress; and yet upon every hand we hear the objections to its pursuit.
The boy who spends his time among the stones and flowers is a trifler,
and if he tries with bungling attempt to pierce the mystery of animal
life he is cruel. Of course if he becomes a great anatomist or a
brilliant naturalist, his cruelties are forgotten or forgiven him; the
world is very cautious, but it is generally safe to admire a man who has
succeeded. We do not with-hold from a few great scientists the right of
the hospital, the post-mortem, or experimenting with animal life, but we
are prone to think the right of experimenting with life too sacred a
thing to be placed in the hands of inexperienced persons. Nevertheless,
if we bar our novices from advancement, whence shall come our experts?
But to test the question by comparison, would all the life destroyed in
experimenting from the beginning of the world until today be as an atom
to the life saved by that one grand discovery for which Harvey sacrificed
his practice and his reputation, the circulation of the blood? There is
no selfishness in this. It came from a higher motive than the desire for
personal gain, for it too often brings destitution instead. Of this we
have the grand example in the broken-down care-worn old man who has just
returned from the heart of the Dark Continent. But perhaps you still say
that I evade the question, has any one a right to destroy life for
scientific purposes? Ah, why does life live upon death throughout the
universe?
Investigators have styled fanatics those who seek to probe into the
mysteries of the unknowable. This is unreasonable. The most aspiring
philosopher never hoped to do more than state the proble; he never
dreamed of solving it. Newton did not say how or why every particle of
matter in the universe attracted every other particle of matter in the
universe. He simply said it was so. We can only judge these abstract
forces by their effect. Our intellectual swords may cut away a thousand
petty spiderwebs woven by superstition across the mind of man, but before
the veil of the "Sanctum Sanctorum" we stand confounded, our
blades glance and turn and shatter upon the eternal adamant. Microscopic
eyes have followed matter to the molecule and fallen blinded.
Imagination has gone a step farther and grasped the atom. There, with a
towering height above and yawning death below even this grows sick at
soul. For over six thousand years we have shaken fact and fancy in the
dice box together and breathlessly awaited the result. But the dice of
God are always loaded, and there are two sides which never fall upward,
the alpha and the omega. Perhaps when we make our final cast with dark
old death we may shape them better.