Robert Pinsky

’s 1999 Commencement Speech At Stanford University Essay, Research Paper


June 13, 1999


I’ll start in the formal


traditional way by addressing President Casper and Provost Rice, the trustees and faculty,


the honored guests, the graduates and their families and their guests. Thanks a lot for


inviting me to come here. I really appreciate it. I call attention to the formality of the


traditional beginning of this kind of speech, because one of the things I want to talk to


you about today is the question: What are we doing here?


Graduation exercises, like this one, embody one of the


great secular rituals in our culture, unique and strange occasions involving funny hats


which some here have made funnier and more light-hearted and more individual and more


festive with pineapples and inflatable surgical gloves and trees and things I don’t know


what they are. But you have not succeeded in the making the hats any more strange than


they already are. Many of us have traveled great distances to wear these special get-ups,


to witness a procession of individuals in these unusual garments whose colors are part of


the symbolic code elaborately explained in your program and remembered by almost nobody.


We have come to take part in the handing over of special emblematic objects, diplomas,


which bear language dimly understood or downright incomprehensible inscribed on unfamiliar


materials signed and stamped with seals so formal they’re nearly mystical with symbols and


mottoes. The hats are like a ritual symbolic surrealist mystery, a symbol flamboyantly


representing mystery itself.


By comparison, other secular rituals, like the inauguration


of an American president, for example, or the ceremonies of becoming an American citizen,


get accomplished with a kind of quick, understated simplicity, more like getting a


driver’s license than our ceremonies today.


Why do we mark these occasions with such intense degrees


of, as the song title is, "Pomp and Circumstance"?


My question is only put the more by the Stanford tradition


of doing something a little silly or weird to go along with it. It’s another way of


putting the same question: What is this?


There are two usual explanations for this remarkable


intensity of ceremoniousness. One is that the graduates have worked very hard for their


education. Possibly so. Another is that the parents and family have made material


sacrifices, sometimes mortgaging homes or taking second jobs in order to pay for the


education. There’s something in that notion, too. But neither one seems an adequate


explanation of these rituals.


On some deeper level, I think that what we see today is the


celebration here of the two great obligations or standards, the two great tests that apply


to every tribe and culture on earth, the two values by which any human society must be


judged. These two measures of any people, of any nation, challenge us Americans at the end


of what has been called "the American century" in special ways. These secular


rituals and extraordinary gowns and processions invoke those two monumental standards and


propose that on this splendid campus in the midst of a prosperous, technologically


sophisticated society, which this is in some ways the center, in a richly burgeoning mass


culture, we do continue, so these exercises are meant to assert, to fulfill the ancient


fundamental purposes of community.


I mean the two great requirements of the human animal,


without which human community is corrupt or useless, namely, caring for the young ones and


honoring the wisdom of the old ones, including the ways and wisdom of the dead. The tribe


or community or nation that fails at either of these missions brings woe and destruction


on itself. Today the graduates pass symbolically from being the objects of the first


concern, young ones who have been nurtured, to bearing the responsibilities of the second,


those who are supposed to care for the young and who will preserve and extend the wisdom


of the dead.


Colleges and universities are places where those


fundamental activities — taking care of the offspring, revering the ancestors — come


together in a single effort. Commencement exercises are a sort of transition or meeting


place between those two broad purposes. If you come on a tribe that neglects its children


or ignores its old ones, you know that some tremendous woe is about to extinguish that


people’s spirit.


I think that the special outfits and music and titles and


diplomas are a kind of prayer that our spirit be healthy, that those missions are still


sacred one way or another. And clowning is part of the sacred; clowning is a way of


pointing toward the sacred.


I’m going to try to comment on those missions in a specific


way that apply to Americans today, and to these graduates, but first let me elaborate the


general idea a little bit. Most mammals have to care for their young, but in the famous


classical tag, the human animal is an especially puny creature. Its claws are almost


useless as weapons. So are its feeble little teeth. Its hide offers only flimsy


protection. The pathetic animal can’t swim very well. It can’t fly at all. It can’t jump


very high. Its climbing is mediocre and even its most athletic specimens are not very


fast, compared to other animals. But we’re a clever, observant, busy little monkey. And


for survival, we have developed means of communication — communicating not only


horizontally, so the animal can cooperate with its peers in gaining food or shelter, but


also vertically with its predecessors and successors so that the experiences of past


lifetimes can be applied to make up for our physical weakness.


For this purpose of memory and transmission the animal has


devised the binary code of the computer, and before that, printed marks, and before


printed marks, incised or written marks, and before the incised or written marks, the


creature made a technology out of its own body, notably with the highly refined system of


grunts emitted through its feeding orifice. Like the griots in Alex Haley’s Roots


who could call up across centuries information about dynasties, family relations, property


rights, the human animal through this amazing grunt code of speech can retain subtle


shades of information — which food is available at what time of year, what customs for


mating or burial best serve a community, information as precise or as subtle as "Get


me a pound of galvanized ten-penny nails" or "I love you but not that way."


Mostly we take this process for granted, but not always. I


remember when I was in grade school they used to show us movies provided by industrial


groups — "The Story of Glassmaking" or "The Amazing Truth About


Paper" — and these movies had these informative graphic diagrams and vivid scenes


showing very complicated machinery pulping paper or making bottles or fiberglass curtains,


and also shots of technicians in lab coats working the machinery or developing the


processes, making notes on clipboards. And in grade school I used to watch those machines


in assembly lines in the movies, those elaborate diagrams of chemical processes, and I


used to think to myself: "There’s no way kids are going to learn to do this


stuff." I felt that when the grownups who worked in those factories and laboratories


died, it was all going to fall apart. There would be no more Coke bottles or paper or


whatever. "I know these kids," I said to myself. "When it’s our turn


to manage all this stuff, they’re not going to work those machines, where the caps come


down on the bottles ten times a second!" I knew in my bones that maybe one or two


kids in a hundred had absorbed the diagrams, and none of us could work the machines! It


was all going to collapse.


In a way, it is amazing that of course the people in my


generation and later did learn to work the machines, and the machines that make the


machines, and we not only mastered the process, but extended and improved and supplanted


and developed and exceeded what had come before. It still surprises me. Most or all of the


people who made those movies about glass or paper or whatever are dead now. Most of those


people in those obsolete factories are dead, and those who practice their crafts and


professions today honor them in their work, without necessarily thinking about them. Or


maybe once in a while they do think about those old ones of glass or paper. I hope they


do. In the interest of the community, the community instructs the young in the ways of the


past; and if I have one superstition, my superstition is that we had better honor those


before us as we hope to be honored by those to whom we pass on our treasures of knowledge


and skill.


Maybe the most powerful, even disturbing, statement I know


concerning that process of receiving from the old ones to give to the young is the


legendary half-mythical speech given by Chief Seattle, the Suquamash Indian leader. In the


most authentic of the many versions of Seattle’s speech, he recognizes that the white


invaders have displaced and conquered his people, reduced now to a remnant who have to


rely on the goodwill of the white leaders. His people are a faded, hopeless community now,


says Seattle to the conquerors, and soon there may be none left of a people who once were


more numerous and hopeful than yours. He muses that the white men have said that their god


is the god of the Indians as well, but Seattle says he has to doubt that. Why, if the two


peoples have this one father, does he treat the one so much better than the other? And how


can we be brothers, he says to the triumphant newcomers, when we’re so different.


As his great central example of that difference, Seattle


points to how differently the two peoples behave in relation to their dead. He says:


To us the ashes of our ancestors are sacred and their


resting place is hallowed ground.


You wander far from the graves of your ancestors and


seemingly without regret.


Your dead cease to love you and the land of their


nativity as soon as they pass the portals of the tomb and wander away beyond the stars.


They are soon forgotten and never return.


"Our dead never forget this beautiful world that gave


them being," he says, and he explains that they often return to advise and comfort


the living.


This is very smart, cunning rhetoric on Seattle’s part,


seeming to concede and submit while it defiantly chastises. Then his speech takes a


different, rather surprisingly rhetorical turn, musing that despite these differences, on


the other hand, he says, all peoples eventually wither and die away; nothing lasts


forever. "We may be brothers after all," he says.


"We may be brothers after all" — brothers in


mortality, brothers in the fact that all nations wither. Nothing lasts forever. And then


Chief Seattle makes a remarkable statement, a sentence that has rung in my mind since I


first read it: "They are not powerless, the dead."


"They are not powerless, the dead." I believe


that these famous remarks of Chief Seattle speak to something deep in the nature of the


United States of America, as though Seattle intuited something profound about our


possibilities and our risks. I associate his saying that the dead are not powerless with


the nature of American memory — our particular national ways of honoring the old ones.


It’s been said that while the United States is beyond doubt


a great nation, it remains to be seen if we are a great people, or whether we are perhaps


still engaged in the undertaking of becoming a great people. I propose to you that a


people is defined and unified not by blood, but by shared memory — a people is held


together and identified by what successfully gets passed on from the old ones to be


remembered by the young. A people is its memory, its ancestral treasures.


The greatness of our military and political and economic


power, the greatness of our technology, are beyond question. And beyond that power and


abundance there are our great national documents — the Constitution with the Bill of


Rights, the Declaration of Independence. And beyond those, some of our cultural


accomplishments seem unarguably great — our jazz certainly, our feature films maybe, the


poetry of Emily Dickinson and Walt Whitman, writing by Cather and Ellison and Faulkner.


But the crucial question is: Who are the people who


remember those documents, who are the people who remember the music of Ellington or


Parker, the films of Buster Keaton, the poems of Dickinson or Whitman? Am I right in


supposing that these are am

ong our sacred shared treasures? Or is the list more uncertain


than that, or different from that? Do we or do we not recall our treasures? Do we know


what they are, and do we remember them, whatever they may be?


In this country, it’s especially evident that a people is


defined by memory, not by blood — more evident than in a country where more of the


citizens resemble one another physically. In our country, where we don’t all resemble one


another quite so much physically, the conscious process of memory, the deciding who we are


by what we remember, is more overt and visible because also, relatively speaking, we do


without the two great supports of memory in many other cultures. Even our racial division,


with its history of injustice, in this context is perhaps only the greatest and most


painful example of our still ongoing quest to be a great people. What are the two things


that we do without?


On one side, we do not have a single unifying folk culture


in which the grandparents all tell the same stories and sing the same songs to the


children. The Italian American grandma and the Eastern European grandma and the African


American grandma and the Lebanese and Chinese and Southeast Asian grandmas in America all


tell somewhat different jokes and tales and sing somewhat different songs. Secondly, on


the other extreme, we are relatively without a social class that considers itself the


hereditary curators of art. That is, possibly in that imaginary village of President


Casper’s, that one person with a college degree who says, "I’m well born. My


ancestors and I take care of this memory, these things. Somebody else does the folk


memory, I do the aristocratic memory." But here, there’s relatively little snob value


to art. There are countries in the world where politicians must pretend to love the great


national poet. In those countries, if a driver is angry at another driver, he yells at


him, "You have no culture!"


I submit to you that this is not an American insult.


In the absence of a single folk culture, in the relative


absence of the aristocratic notion, where do we Americans get the memory that holds us


together as a people? How do we stave off the withering away that’s implicit in Chief


Seattle’s observation that we don’t keep our dead with us? How is it that we have managed


to hold together as a people? How can we expect to?


One answer is that we’re still working on it — that we


have developed a national genius for making it up as we go along. Improvisation


characterizes our music, our clothes, our blue jeans, the get-ups that you have on today,


the headlong invention and energy of our businesses, our mass entertainment. But the


spirit of improvisation alone, though we may be proud of it, it alone cannot sustain the


process that transmits the ways of glassmaking and papermaking, or the ways of


understanding ourselves across the generations.


A second, perhaps terribly anticlimactic answer to how do


we get along without a single folk root, and without a dominant aristocratic ideal, answer


can be expressed in one disappointing yet hopeful word: school. In America’s public


schools and in our colleges and universities — this particular university improvised by a


couple not far out of living memory — we have improvised some notion of who we are. Or,


to be precise, who our old ones are. Who are the dead we keep with us?


My personal favorite example of that process of choosing


our old ones is in the writing of the great American essayist W. E. B. DuBois. In a


memorable paragraph, where DuBois associates the great works of the past with the spirit


of freedom, DuBois writes — you can tell a good 19th-century prose style by the way he


writes, almost in blank verse — he writes:


I sit with Shakespeare and he winces not. Across the


color line I move arm in arm with Balzac and Dumas, where smiling men and welcoming women


glide in gilded halls. From out the caves of evening that swing between the strong-limbed


earth and the tracery of the stars, I summon Aristotle and Aurelius and what soul I will,


and they come all graciously with no scorn nor condescension. So, wed with Truth, I dwell


above the Veil.


You may not have his examples, but you better have


examples. Here in his rich 19th-century cadences, DuBois affirms that the care of the old


ones and care for their works is a matter of choice and love, not blood. He indicates that


culture through its greatest works is a means to individual freedom. In Chief Seattle’s


terms, DuBois walks with his dead.


To this lofty idea of his, we can add another element of


national memory, our popular culture, a realm where the inventions and improvisations of


immigrants, a mixing of African and Latin and European and Asian elements have created a


fabric of tremendous richness. But it’s a peculiarity of this fluid, dynamic popular


culture that memory can be very short. Ellington and Keaton, Billie Holiday and Preston


Sturges were popular, even mass art not long ago, but within a generation or two, they,


too, are taught in school and remembered largely through the work of school. Given this


importance of school as curator of American culture, in the absence of those two other


repositories, it’s no wonder that these commencement exercises are so elaborate, and so


overtly laden with symbols and mysteries.


The work of those artists in movies and jazz comes into


school, as the best sitcoms and cop shows are coming into school, partly because of the


accelerating pace and increasing scale of mass art — mass art, which perhaps should be


distinguished from popular art. Mass art, which can be wonderful and glorious — I don’t


mean to disparage it — is by nature designed and produced by experts, distributed by


experts, marketed by experts who hope to make it popular in one specific sense. Popular


art, true popular art in a larger sense is produced by a people, distributed by means more


like gossip than like marketing campaigns. The mass product of the steel oil drum, the


ugly and unpromising object, was made a musical instrument of popular art by people who


used it to invent a new music. Then steel drum music was marketed by the organs of mass


art, and perhaps some of that product was sampled into a rap tune before rap, in its turn,


was transformed from popular art into mass art, perhaps to be made popular art again in a


complex American circulation.


I promise to apply my thoughts about honoring our


predecessors and caring for our young to this moment, to these particular graduates.


Your generation has experienced mass culture with a special


intensity. By the time you were 12 or 13, you had consumed many, many different


mass-marketed products, some of them brilliant and wonderful, some less so. As small


children you saw the movie and had the illustrated book, and you pleaded for the spin-off


products and you got the action figure and the little figures at the fast-food place, and


you saw the cartoon version on television on the weekend. By the time you were 14,


manipulated so many times, so effectively, you were more than a little jaded or ironic


about mass art, sometimes while being nostalgic about it, at the same time. The normal


response to these manipulated cultural waves is to sort of lump them and to feel a little


disgust with them.


Many of the styles of your generation, in music and dress,


as I perceive them, are as if designed to come up with something that resists the mass


scale, a kind of grooming or music that won’t easily be sold by Sears & Roebuck to


10-year-olds within a few weeks. In this sense, it has occurred to me that the body-pierce


shares some roots and motives with the current American resurgence of my own art of


poetry, poetry which has become increasingly, well, increasingly popular in recent


years. Like certain fashions, like having a piece of steel go through the bridge of your


nose or something, poetry seeks to live on an individual human scale. The medium for a


poem is one person’s voice. So by the nature of the medium, it is a counterweight to mass


art.


One of your hallmarks as a generation from my point of view


may be an admirable, droll skepticism. You do not want to be too easily sold or too easily


sold to, and your presence here today as individuals indicates that you have held out for


quality goods and excellent pursuits. The hijinks with the academic garments are in that


category. I don’t want to overpraise them. I’m aware they can slide off into a kind of


languid privileged class arrogance, you know, like kids at community colleges have to take


this seriously, we can crap around. I’m aware that there’s a balance there. I understand


that, and you don’t want to become like the upper classes in the Evelyn Waugh novels,


where they trash stuff, and he writes, "It was the sound of the English upper classes


howling for broken glass." But you can handle that one.


In a way, as a generation, you have reversed the lines I


recall from my beloved great teacher here at Stanford, Yvor Winters.


Winters wrote this quatrain in a poem called "On


Teaching the Young":


The young are quick of speech.


Grown middle-aged, I teach


Corrosion and distrust


Exacting what I must.


I hope your corrosion and distrust carry you far, and that


your resistance and skepticism not prevent you from picking and choosing and walking among


the great dead, as W. E. B. DuBois describes.


In relation to the ideas of honoring the old ones and


caring for the young, I pray that my own generation has not let you down. I pray that we


have not been as Chief Seattle wondered if we are. The language in which I’ve been


addressing you, the machines that are amplifying my voice, the dyestuffs in our garments,


the subjects you’ve studied, none of this was invented by anybody here. We got this


language and the garments and the mathematics and the music and the ceramic engineering,


all the rest of it, from our elders who got those goods from people who are now dead, in a


chain going back farther than anybody can trace.


Woe be to us if we have in any way broken that chain that


goes so far back. Curses on us if we’ve held treasures that have crossed thousands of


years through successive generations, from the dead to the not yet born. Think of your


ancestors: Among them, for everybody here, among your ancestors have been princes and


slaves. Everybody here in this stadium, if we seek among your tens of thousands of


ancestors, will find not only slaves and royal personages, but the products of love


matches and rapes, people who died of starvation, people who thrived, and across all those


adventures and misadventures, somehow the treasures have been passed on.


Therefore, though some of you who graduate today will found


mighty businesses, and some of you will make spectacular works of art and some of you will


be effective healers and scientists and thinkers and politicians, I ask you to remember


that in a certain sense, the most important thing about you will not be the prizes you win


or your accomplishments.


Though you win a Nobel Prize in physics and literature, in


a sense it is more important that you keep physics and literature alive, to be passed on


to the generations that follow you, as treasures that you got from the generations that


preceded you. Your success in business or law may be laudable, and may enrich you and your


families and communities, but that is less important in the largest way than the fact that


by practicing your skills and exercising your knowledge, you are also preserving them and


perfecting them, and you thank those predecessors who preserved and perfected those skills


for you by maintaining them for those to follow you.


I charge you not to break the chain that goes back to the


primates that evolved what we now separate into bands and music and poetry and speech as a


means of extending memory in an individual lifetime and beyond it. I charge you in


whatever way you choose to honor the past and to convey its treasures to the young.


They asked me to read something of my own, and I’ll close


by reading a poem of mine that maybe will be a good addendum to what I’ve said to you,


because it presents a notion of the past as not necessarily, or history as not


necessarily, the doings of big shots. The history in here is in many, many places, and


you’re sitting on it and wearing it and thinking it, and it’s in your grooming and the


shape of your nose and the garments on your back. The poem is called "Shirt."


[Pinsky reads the poem]


Good luck and congratulations to you, Class of ‘99.


Online Source


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