I.
Named for a Scottish castle at two streams where trout and salmon
flicker and gleam and splash,
and named for George Ramsay, whose prowess at Waterlooâ
cannonading and negating Napoleon,
got him dubbed Lord,
âHÂț»â originates as a trophyâa profitâof War,
as actual bootyâ
the 12,000 Halifax-ÂŁ boodle
snatched from Brit-conquered Castine in Maine
and eyeballed in the Nova Scotia colonyâ
for paving stones, a garrison library, et cetera;
except that Lord HÂț»â
now His Majestyâs Lieutenant-Governor of Nova Scotia
(due to his sorties and flourishes contra âBŽÇČÔ±đČââ)â
noticed the New Scottish colony lacked a college
capable of sprouting its own Christian ministers
whoâd spoutâhe prayedâopen-door-fresh-air,
open-minded, but godly preceptsâ
inspired by the porridge, salmon, and whiskey of Edinburghâ
the Scottish Enlightenment, Rabbie Burns ecumenicalism
and Adam Smith firm-hand and clear-eye of Edinburghâ
and the brogue and Gaelic of grey-beige but bagpiped Edinburghâ
and the chill fog, dour granite, and indomitable thistle of Edinburghâ
and tolerate no spite, but be suave, urbane:
Was that the meaning of the corn, oil, and wine,
Lawd HÂț» spilled on the cornerstone of his Haligonian university,
two years after the Prince Regentâd bleated âOui,â bureaucratically,
assenting to the eccentric notion of an ocean-side,
Scotian, non-sectarian collegeâ
as of February 6, 1818?
II.
Just ten days after cannonsâ kabamming gunpowder
saluted resonantly the collegeâs (universityâs) debut,
Lawd Dalâd slooped off to Ville de QuĂ©bec,
to govern every Britannic inch of Amérique du Nord
(and latterly India),
if yet right oblivious to the politic primacy
of so-called East Indians, West Indians, and American IndiansâŠ.
In any event, the founder exited,
and his Halifax, namesake collegeâ
rampant on the cityâs Grand Paradeâ
was just gonna have to duke it outâ
go head-to-head, toe-to-toe, face-to-faceâ
with double-talking preachers and two-fisted priestsâ
all hotly redneck under their white collarsâ
agitated by a ânon-denominationalâ school
that might siphon off sect-anointed moolahâ
whether taxpayer or top-hatted, public or plutocraticâ
so that Anglican, Baptist, Catholic, Methodist, and Presbyterian
township-and-county edifices of Edification,
would go begging for cash, begging for students,
begging for profs,
and end up bagging only drafty piles, half-scaffolding,
bleak in perspective and empty of prospects,
but resounding with ill winds blaring legislative nyet, nyet, nyetâ
that nixing, niggardly fiatâ
over foundation cracks bristling
theological nettlesâŠ.
âBesides,â fretted tonsured, whiskered ecclesiasts,
âHÂț» ainât split off ex the Kirk:
Itâs a conspiracy of cloak-and-dagger Presbyterians!â
III.
Kingâs College spurned entanglement with Dal;
born skeptical, infant Acadiaâaskanceâglanced at Dal;
newborn St. Maryâs could only eye Dal as suspect:
âOne united College for Nova Scotia was dangerous
[circa 1843],
for how could clergy doctrinally discriminate
a Catholic microscope from a Baptist telescope,
a Methodist microbe from an Anglican asteroid?â
Surely, colleges conniving to be classed as universities
needed congregations for Conscience and cash-flow!
Joe Howe fulminated Reaction: âNova Scotiaâs plagued
by black-hatted, black-coated, black-horse-riding,
black bible-brandishing blackguardsâ
a retrograde, degenerate, backward avant-gardeâ
pinch-faced, âpresbyopicâ profsâ
who can debate Satan in Latin,
and who wager New Glasgow
and New Minas
all suitable for resuscitated, old-stock Feudalism:
âBetter to be rebarbative, provincial,â they allege,
than rambunctious, experimental, secular,
or else Halifax annexes Hell.ââ
IV.
By 1847, HÂț» was classless, penniless, friendless,
studentless, professorless, and so less and less a college,
it did seem, said some, well-nigh, worthlessâŠ.
Except, it could be a High Schoolâ
circa 1856â
and languish in such louche, secondary status,
serving up fish-n-chips rather than physicsâŠ.
Unless the Presbyterians could comport and sport
as the Trojan Horses of Liberal Education
±čŸ±Čő-Ă -±čŸ±Čő the ABCsâ
ŽĄČÔČ”±ôŸ±łŠČčČÔČő/”țČč±èłÙŸ±ČőłÙČő/°äČčłÙłóŽÇ±ôŸ±łŠČőâ
and the mathematical (atom-and-hair-splitting),
anti-human-anatomical Methodistsâ
by letting HÂț» docs teach Everyman,
while church-connected campuses corral their clergy
on keeps agog at Haligonian grog shopsâ
on redoubts spurning petticoats and rumâ
the temptations of molasses
and Mephistophelian tobacco,
where Virtue is apprehended by declining always
that Euro-trash, exploitative spectacleâthe WaltzâŠ.
V.
1863 marks the reset, the resurrection,
when what was HÂț» College
is once more HÂț» College,
but now cheek-by-jowl with a breweryâ
proffering ale for every ailmentâ
and profs on tap
to discourse on trout fishing at Salmon River (Dartmouth)
or to wield Euclidean equations like sledgehammers
(that best beer bottles at bustinâ open a skull).
The Dal rhetoricians be eristic and exigent chaps,
step-dancing among âCrimean heroesâ
dead-drunk in downtown gutters or in backyard mud,
while their couple-dozen students fortify their bellies
(from which all soliloquies surface)
with oatmeal gruel, salt cod, corned beef, bread, apples,
molasses, potatoesâ
a âquantum of solaceââof rumâŠ.
VI.
Science evolves outta sickness and the Genesis damnation,
declaring Birth ushers Sin-struck mortals
soon-or-late to an earthen berthâ
a point as true for Dal Natural Philosophers
lisping the 1870 motto,
âOra et laboraâ
(âPray and workâ)
as it be for any lad (and lady).
So, despite the Anatomy Act gravely allowing docs
to carve up any indigent (poorhouse) cadaver,
there befell a shortage of corpses
to analyzeâcannibalizeâ
so as to advance, convincingly,
life-saving Medicine.
The fix demands a Medical Facultyâ
a separate body bestowing Dal degreesâ
in spluttering fits and seizure startsâ
in the 1870s,
until, by degrees,
the Halifax School of Medicine becomes separateâ
but mediocreâ
by 1885,
shrouding the parturating in prudish, Victorian cloaks,
applying Jack-the-Ripper willy-nilly to callously plucky cadavers,
that is, until Greco-Latinate Flexner came calling
to castigate the med-school as âgrossly appalling,â
thus triggering its upbraiding âupgradeââabsorptionâby Dal,
circa 1911,
and later, nigh 1920,
access to a tram-line, Public Health clinic
(where students could describe and doctors prescribe),
sponsored by Mr. Rockefeller and Mr. Carnegieâ
pleased to prop up latter-dayâif rusticâ
salt-spray, hayseed Scots.
VII.
Pace the messy stillbirth of the University of Halifax
(deceased 1881)â
that effort to mollify church-campus envy of Dal
and to unify Babel-Pentecostal, Christian syllabi
(conflicting dogmas barked in passionate tongues)â
by asking a single Congress of Examiners to test
would-be clerics and should-be clerks;
anent that good-intentioned, but goddamned gaffe;
HÂț» was set to vauntâflauntâitselfâ
but only if private coin could coddle its Liberalism,
preserving it from whimsical chastisement
by skinflint and/or shrewish public finance.
Thus commences the dedicated schmoozing of donors,
benefactors, citizens whoâll morph from Midas to Apolloâ
those enlightened, eleemosynary few
whose munificence is gold showering down like sunlight.
Soon, George Munro professorships, George Munro bursaries,
free Dal to headhunt scholars and body-snatch students,
to internationalize the regional reach,
to pick-off Cambridge, Edinburgh, Harvard, Oxford alumni-luminaries
and transplant em as elect, Acadiensis profs,
sure to entranceâintrigueâundergradsâŠ.
Hereâs how the bar-and-brothel-adjacent collegeâ
(1880Čő)â
commences a romance with worldly, surplus Capital,
to wine-and-dine well-endowed, well-read widows
and moneybags pining to be labelled âDr.â
(but skipping the bothersome dissertation);
and whose deliberated, fiscal Realism
(not really Cynicism),
means the college can afford to front as airily sophisticatedâ
float a cosmopolitan, espresso-and-Spinoza auraâ
chic as Harvard Square, Broadway, Piccadilly, Old Town, the Quartier Latin,
if never so posh (quite)âŠ.
VIII.
The other mind-expanding, mood-altering revolutionâ
besides the fluxing influx
of boffo, ego-stroking, self-aggrandizing,
adventurist donationsâ
is the entrance of women, politic arrivistes opposing
(unmanly, inhumanly practiced) man-only EmpowermentâŠ.
Register here that Dal never opposed
registering women,
though the upstart distaff only alighted in the 1880sâ
idealistic, church ministersâ daughters
(or lasses consigned purses by deceased papas)â
spurred on by Munroâs gilded disbursements,
and not keen on expected subservience to hubbies,
but pooh-poohing patriarchal folderol
(that mantra that âMale Ruleâ is an Adamic mandate),
and preferring Economics to that desperately poor sisterâ
âHome Ecââ
and meditating on Madame Curie rather than mastering cookery.
Tis necessary to place women up-front in the classroom:
Let fellas stand when the ladies enter;
remain seated as the feminists exit.
IX.
Ask not about âColouredâ pupils!
Local ex-slavesâ
and/or descendants of Loyalists, Maroons, Refugees, Fugitivesâ
attaining Grade Threeâ
maybeâmiraculouslyâGrade Sixâ
in Negro-only, one-room shacksâ
have a difficult-to-impossible time
to sidle into Dal (de facto, white, aristocratic) classes.
Yet, a few West Indians and Bermudans can/do.
Check Sylvester Williams, ex-Trinidad/Tobago,
who took up Dal Law by 1893,
and departed minus the degree,
but still rallied the Pan-African Movement
to espouseâEmpire-wideâ
African and Black and Caribbean independence,
Ìęthat is, escape from European/Caucasian âupliftâ
(or DownpressioČÔ)âŠ.
But let us not forget Halifaxâs James R. Johnston,
who became Dalâs first black Bachelor of Lettersâ1896,
next a Law gradâ1898,
and whose moniker now graces Dalâs Chair in Black Studies.
(And mark the residency of Africadian contralto,
Portia White, at Shirreff Hall, ca. 1929.)
X.
1887:Ìę Dal transits off the Grand Paradeâ
takes to heights above Halifaxâs Northwest Armâ
and shows aspects tricked-out in brick, not stone;
that same year, Law łŸČčłÙ±đ°ùŸ±Čč±ôŸ±łú±đČőâcŽÇČÔłŠ°ù±đłÙŸ±łú±đČőâ
with a Constitutional-Law-magisterial dean
whoâs a Member of Parliamentâ
and a decade later,
with a Contracts prof whoâsâdittoâ
a Member of Parliamentâ
while Engineering barged into the calendarâ
thanks to coal mining for engines, steamships furnaces;
next, all the emitted soot and grit and dirt and cinders
encouraged Civil Engineeringâ
roads, bridges, tunnelsâ
the cornerstones and buttresses of Industry,
but also the Marxmenâs forte.
(Yet, conscription Communism entails Construction
as shoddy as Capitalismâs manufactured ephemeraâŠ.
Seldom does the cement set strong and smooth;
rather, it cracks:
Compare the Great Wall of China and the Berlin Wall.)
XI.
1911-12, antebellum,
the Dal Forward Movement figures to finagle $300,000
to field triple schematicsâ
a library, Science laboratories,
and, at Studley, space for Medicine and Dentistry,
featuring Georgian conjurations of local ironstone,
plus quarters to round up students and round em offâŠ.
Shouldnât undergrads canoodle in their own courtly alcoves?
Thus, circulated blueprints on June 29, 1914,
the day after Arch Duke Ferdinand and his missus
became the bullâs-eyes for bullets booming, âWar!â
XII.
Is a scholar as manly as a soldier?
Decidedly positive were the Dal recruits
who lined up for Lord Kitchener,
thoughâsoonâKrupp guns chopped down scoresâŠ.
Assuredly, Krauts were keener in their aim
than were Brit generals in their tactics,
stupidly self-assured that World War One
was just a blow-up of Waterloo,
that guys affixing bayonetsâ
could charge suddenly, frontally, franticly at machine-gunsâ
or get splattered by shells
and/or scattered by caustic, lacerating, and/or choking gasâ
and still stand triumphant, rosy-cheeked, laurelled,
to warble âCheerioâ to the Kaiser.
No matter:Ìę The Albion Canucksâ
sporting maple-leaf badges on khaki lapelsâ
enlisted holus-bolus the HÂț» men,
so that females numbered 2/3 in Arts classes,
and then the Canadian Corps were âover the topâ
on the Western Front,
hammering dead the łÒöłÙłÙ±đ°ù»ćĂ€łŸłŸ±đ°ùłÜČÔČ” âHunsâ so damn much,
the âJerriesâ slammed em as âShock Troops.â
XIII.
While the Great War waxed, waned, Dal erected
the Macdonald Memorial Library
which inauguratedâfor the entire Dominionâ
the Library of Congress cataloguing system;
while the Law School now accented lucrative practicalitiesâ
not supposed eccentricities like the Constitution
or various forms of execution.
(Whatâs the ideal form of State murder?
The noose, the guillotine, or the electric chair?
Would you rather snap your neck, lose your head, or fry?)
Still, despite its distance, the War wracked Dal:
The double-vessel collision in Halifax Harbourâ
December 6, 1917â
discharged battering and bashing power equivalent
to 3000 kilotons of TNT detonating instantlyâ
and North End Halifax got obliterated,
vanishing under an unprecedented,
dented-bent-stovepipe-shaped, fuming cloud
(an augury of A-bomb and H-bomb
Doomsday Meteorology)â
and a blast that turned windows into daggers
and metal into a shower of molten slag.
The gargoyle-faced, monstrously punctured survivors
of the 2000 slain pretty much outright,
got bandaged angelically by Dal med apprentices
and by Jane Austen essayists instantly deputized as nurses;
and the Carnegie Foundation okayed snappily
bankrolling the dispatch of glaziers and masons
to patch Dalâs fracturesâplus those windows now wounds.
XIV.
Postbellum, Jennie Shirreff Eddy found herself wooed
by Dal grad and future Prime Minister of Canada,
(Rt. Hon.) R.B. Bennett,
to pay out a tad of her matchstick-
and-toilet-paper-fortune
(racked up by E.B. Eddy)
to deck out a womenâs residenceâ
Shirreff Hallâ
in pink quartzite ex-New Minas.
Next the menâs residenceâ
Pine Hillâ
got promulgated in 1919,
thanks to the purchase of a Northwest Arm hotel
for $160,000
outta the Million Dollar (cash-scoop-up) Campaign.
XV.
Flames dissecting Kingâs College in 1920 resurrected
the spectre of Amalgamation,
not just of Dal and Kingâs,
but of all the church-linked, Atlantic collegesâ
if all could be egged on to accept $3-million
in Carnegie Foundation âbreadâ (i.e., Bribery).
By the finish of the 1920s, the federation idea
was finished,
its very inception seemingly meretricious,
and the Carnegie bucks flocked back
to plump up in stony banks and nest in lambskin briefcases,
and Dal was left to worry
whether it would decline into an ivied, vocational school,
graduating lawyers as practical as carpenters;
doctors less dexterousâ
but more lethally arrogantâ
than butchers;
engineers talented at concocting white elephants;
and Humanities students
whose Latin announced casus belli
and/or pronounced caveat emptor.
Was it feasible for twentieth-century,
North American, industrial/commercial societyâ
so cavalierly results-oriented
(always dreaming up a better machine-gun)â
to value a brine-washed, Canuck brain trust
capitalizing on buttoned-down scholars?
XVI.
Modernity whelps talkies and speakeasies,
Prohibition (of alcohol) and Revolution (by Leninâs Reds,
chased by Mussoliniâs Black Shirts),
The Waste Land in poetry
and The Great Dictator in film,
Duke Ellington veering Dixieland to bebop
and the Gershwin Bros working Dixieland into DebussyâŠ.
Unable to stomach the hunger of Soviet Five Year Plans,
and refusing to eat the lead of Fascist coup and Nazi Putsch,
suddenly cometh the (White) Russiansâ
landing right after Trotsky the Wobbly
(latterly toppled by a Mexican icepick)
was sprung from his cell in Halifaxâs Citadel
to vamoose to St. Petersburg
to bully on the Bolshevik bouleversement of the boulevardier Czar;
Fleeing now also were Europeâs Jewsâ
antennaeâd witnesses of Gulag
and prophets of Darwinian Death Campsâ
voyaging to Pier 21 (Halifax),
finding entrĂ©e at HÂț» (finally)â
reinforcing the possibility of string quartets serenading
otherwise jitterbugging sailors and their Lindy-Hopping molls,
and stressing Old World savoir-faire, savvy,
in a city quite comfy with grungy Vice,
where Adult Education got started
primarily as a way to tamp down
the wartime spike in Venereal DiseaseâŠ.
XVII.
World War I gone, but World War II not yet,
Dal enrollments doubledâtripledâin between,
and then profound, radio oratorâHerbert Leslie Stewartâ
»ć°ù±đČčłŸłÙ-łÜ±èâd°ùČčŽÚłÙ±đ»ćâThe HÂț» Review,
a âLittle Magazineâ to rival McGillâs Fortnightly Review
and maybe Chicagoâs Poetry,
which readers could sink their teeth into
while experiencingâwith prayer and dreadâ
the operative know-how of the newfangled School of Dentistry.
Suddenly, Dal students staff a union
and Dalâs president wins a house (of his own),
and the Dal co-eds need shortened skirts
to suit Jazz Age, upsy-daisy, dipsy-doodle cavorting,
regardless of the acidic chagrinâ
tut-tutting male killjoys, spoil-sports,
dudes (duds), Dudley-do-wrongs exudeâ
those who should beg a Billy Butler Yeats-style
monkey-gland surgeryâ
that precursor to sildenafil citrateâŠ.
XVIII.
Sayeth Wall Street and bayeth Bay Street,
and screecheth the City and the Bourse (until hoarse):
âSire no more M.A.âs, but only M.B.A.âs:
We want âRelevance,â not âElevationâ!â
Theyâre right?Ìę Or just brain-dead rightists?
Yet, how does acquaintance with Aristotle
elucidate investment portfolio profitability, really,
and how does memorization of Milton
aid the race to be the first to weaponize atomsâ
the very guts of sunlight,
to incinerate a hundred thousand infants
in a thousandth of a second?
Eventually, Dalâs George P. Grant, philosophe,
is gonna scorn the utility of the âmultiversity,â
accusing it of most foul Vainglory,
in defining Progress as shifting from enumerating angels
prancing on a pinhead
to counting up the number of rat droppings one encounters
in a typical, polio-, TB-, VD-ridden slum.
Thatâs the age-old problem of this New Age:
When is knowledge Wisdom?
If ever, even?
XIX.
Plotsâpoliciesâquicken when Angus L. invades the N.S.
Legislative Assembly, 1935,
unassailable at Reform, the local F.D.R.
(Fiercely Devoted Renovator),
votes in a refurbished HÂț» Act,
though if he had his druthers,
heâd design one universal, Maritime university
rather than deign to tolerate
thirteen old-dog, old-boy, persnickety, church-college-bastions
âworse than high schoolsââŠ.
Then, out of Europeâs swirling, Machiavellian-malevolent maelstrom,
whirls into town Lothar Richter, a fugitive intelligence,
to plant Dalâs Institute of Public Affairs
and its eponymous, academic organ,
after first introducing himself (âGuten Tagâ) as a lecturer in German.
Currently, Dalâs Chairman of the Boardâs a suave, Frank Sinatra-type,
liking menthol cigarettesâthree packs daily,
liking Scotchâthree pungent tumblers daily,
while mover-and-shaker Prezâdent Stanley spoils to spiff up
Dalâs Medical et Dental schools,
but Depression-depressed governors retortâ
âThe blind and deafâpoor and helplessâneed aid, yep,
but not medico-dento apprentices,
bound to join the gold-plated, silver-spoon upper-crustâŠ.â
XX.
1939 detonates World-Wide War reduxâ
as Darwinâs devils haste to gobble up territories
and gut, gas, and torchââscientificallyââmillions
asserting mere âvermin exterminationââ
thereby expanding to Europe and Asia
past, imperial EuropeanâimperiousâEvil
in Africa, the Americas, and Asia,
but now all mechanicalâas well as mechanizedâ
industrialized, efficient, mass-produced massacres.
Makes sense to open, in 1941,
Dalâs Department of Psychiatryâ
a testament to Reason, Rationality, Mindfulnessâ
even though the septic bias
of war-dirtied Halifaxâs white-coated, downtown doctors
prevents three Austrian, refugee Jews
(escapees from Hitlerâs Semitic-genocidal regime)
from being able to Canadianize their med training
(August 1942) at DalâŠ.
Too, while white students, white profs, and white troops
had green lightsâcarte blancheâto enjoy the Green Lanternâs fare,
Coloured People (Negroes) had to forego taking meals there.
They could aim guns at Hitlerian White Supremacy,
but they couldnât stick a fork in it in the Halifax eatery.
Might as well ride the ferry footing Oakland Road
cross the Northwest Arm to the Dingle,
then back again, price just 10Âą,
while debating Poli Sci with Prez Stanleyâ
who deplored Dalâs existence as a jewel
begrimed by a city slimy with slumsâŠ.
XXI.
Mussolini got bulleted, then strung-up by the heels;
Hitler gnawed a gat and then blazed to char;
Tojo dangled his avoirdupois from a strangling noose;
âhard and bitterâ was the on-again Peaceâ
Pax Americana nipping at the Iron Curtainâ
as Winnie (Pooh-Bah, Pooh-Bear) Churchill opinedâŠ.
Thus, now Canuck vets gangwayed into Dalâ
gleeful to exchange uniforms and sun-dazzling boots
for jackets, ties, and sun-dazzling shoesâ
and deem textbooks now as precious as aleâ
if not as alluring as the silk-stockingâd âsweater girls,â
still segregated sweetly in classroom front rows,
giving gents their backs,
their pony tails and bouncing curls;
so that forthright fellas had to face fantasies
by ogling Esquireâs nylonâd pin-ups.
The student army milling and marching,
taking one subject by storm
then overtaking others,
wresting and wrestling degrees from Dal,
necessitated instituting a Department of Graduate Studies,
as of 1948-49,
when bombastic Soviets set off an A-bomb at lastâ
and Mao unfurled a gold-star-spangled Red Flag over Chinaâ
and mandatory Latin sang its swansong,
croaking out in Oktoberfest beer fiestas at the Lord Nelson TavernâŠ.
(Hear ye, hear ye:
Lusty, Bluenose, Ecum Secum yinkyank drowned out, ipso facto,
the fusty and musty, gusty and dusty,
dictation of literally gutturalâand/or lyricalâgrammariansâŠ.)
XXII.
Recognizing that Dal Law was in a parlous state
due to formerly stingy, belly-tightening finance,
Premier Macdonald remedied the starvation,
tossing scrawny lawyers chunks of red-meat
from the provincial budget (sausage-making) table.
Dentistryâs decaying facilities also needed straighteningâ
and the filling in of architectural cavities with gold.
However, half the Atlantic governments,
all four of which ought toâve backed the mouthy school,
gave nada, precisely zilch, just hot air,
leaving N.S. and N.B. to inject 25% of the filling
and/or pain-relief,
so HÂț» had to repair the maw
Ÿ solo,
digesting the corrosive, capital debt.
Meanwhile, the Medical Faculty were jaundicedâ
distempered toâreflexârevoltâ
no matter expertise in jigsawing through cadavers
or in rigging the jigging of an âEye-Openerâ
(gin, lemon, and Enoâs Fruit Salts),
due to the irksome âbusybody,â Prez Kerrâ
intruding picayune pencil-counting,
while yielding insultingly insufficient funds
to let anyone win at research-grant roulette.
Well, everywhere, Deterioration is cured
by spreading the guilt around,
to petition plutocrats to forego gilt and give goldâŠ.
Enter Sir James Dunn and his widow Lady Dunn,
whose largesse cranes up a new Science ČúłÜŸ±±ô»ćŸ±ČÔČ”â
despite blandishments and overtures and marriage proposal
(accepted) from U. New Brunswickâs Lord Beaverbrook
(once upon a time sympathetic, appeasingly, to Hitler)â
and despite the dullard and dulling rejection
of celebratory liquor by Dalâs teetotally sobre Prez Kerrâ
Dunnâs millions soon mint law scholarships;
and later bequeath Sir Jamesâs name to marquee a theatre;
all this construction adding to the not incorrect perception
that HÂț» was the most dynamic concentration
of intellectsâ
and intellectuals
(thereâs a distinction)â
on the NorâEast North Atlanticâ
even if Beaverbrook hooded glamour-puss J.F.K. himself,
the latter granted a U.N.B.-brand LL.D.
(1957).
XXIII.
Just as J.F.K.âs New Frontiersmen
sent Ike and Tricky Dick packing,
so did testy profs like Geo Grantâ
or Futurist librarian-poets like Doug Lochheadâ
and others doubtful about Prez Kerrâs prudenceâ
(if not prudery)â
get packing,
trekking down the road to Hogtown,
to address âNew Lectures to a New Generation,â
now that the 60s were twisting and hula-hooping in,
with Capitalist napalm for âCommiesââ
colour TV for âconsumersââ
copsâ batons for the noggins of Civil Rights protestors
(daring to dream of eating, living, learning, sleeping,
wherever they could afford,
without regard to colour, creed, or committed Faith)âŠ.
And never ought a prude object
to comic pleasures, bawdy laughter,
lest his/her constituency disintegrate,
doubled up, howling;
yet, such a »ćĂ©Č”°ùŸ±ČÔČ”ŽÇ±ôČč»ć±đ degraded Kerrâs standingâ
so he was no longer pivotal,
but teetering,
ČčČÔ»ćâe°ùČ”ŽÇâuČԷɱđ±ôłŠŽÇłŸ±đ
(as of 1957).
XXIV.
The 1960s summoned forth innovative policies,
avant-garde ideas,
but brandished inventive calamities
arising from old bigotries.
Thus, just 2 years after Prof. Guy Henson documented
The Condition of the Negroes of Halifax City (1962),
the sesquicentennial-old hamlet of Africville
began to be bulldozed into rubble,
a devastation imped by Dal Social Work theory,
Dal Urban Planning models,
although Dal scholars also totted up the faults
and tabulated the grim incivility
of âThe Africville Relocationâ
(that euphemism for South-African-apartheid-style,
âTownship Clearanceâ)âŠ..
While Africville was being reclaimed by city planners
and civil engineers
(and rampaging rats and squabbling seagulls),
Dorothy Killam returned to Dalâ
a widow also with a memory to further,
and whose treasure chest would nurture a library
and a childrenâs hospital
(the latter separate from Dal)â
plus-plus-plus,
essentially 30-million bucksâ
Dalâs biggest bequest everâ
to magnet meritorious scientists,
buck up the Graduate School,
lavish scholarships whose gilt-edges
could attract incandescent, foreign students.
Moreover, once New Brunswick aye-ayed funding
the nursing of New Brunswick interns
greenhoused in Dalâs Medical School,
now feasible was the Sir Charles Tupper Medical Building.
Concurrently cemented was the Weldon Law Building,
and Lady Dunn reemerged as Lady Beaverbrook
(doubly widowed now),
to christen the Sir James Dunn Law Library,
prefacing 67âs âSummer of Love.â
And Dal learners put up their own Student Union Building:
Finally, Rebecca Cohnâs estate issues Dal $400,000
to complement all the newfangled, professional ziggurats
with a reminder of the spiritually minded Artsâ
an auditorium sounding her nameâŠ.
XXV.
Apart from the spreeâthe spateâ
breaking ground at breakneck speedâ
of Dal structures of concrete-and-glassâ
disdainful of old-school architectureâ
students also are impatient with old structures,
for L.S.D.
(Liberty! Sex! Drugs!)
seem to highlight the HypocrisyâIllegitimacyâ
of the chilling, blood-curdling, Cold War propositions,
such as âMutual Assured Destructionâ in a thermonuclear exchange
is permissible,
and preferable to compromiseâ»ćĂ©łÙ±đČÔłÙ±đâwith âCommies,â
and is defensible,
but not profanity and graffiti
(both corrosive of civil society),
and neither short skirts nor long hair.
Rightly, leftists forthrightly ridiculed such idiocy.
Yet, the sophomoric occupation of Prez Hicksâ office
in September 1970â
a month before the dead-aim Terrorism
of QuĂ©bĂ©cois kidnappers and assassinsâ
was only a namby-pamby, playacting gesture,
cos everybody vacated the quarters
before cops could gun-point squatters out
and before Dalâs Hicks returned from a non-eventful trip
to an uneventful non-eventâŠ.
Arguably, anyway, the most rad uptakes at Dal
were the Transition Year Program
and the later Indigenous Black and Miâkmaq Law Initiative,
both urged on by Burnley âRockyâ Jonesâs analysisâ
to whit, that one way that the poor and Indigenous,
the criminalized and âColoured,â
remain perpetual paupers, social outsiders,
is via their supposed inadmissibility to university
and law-school palaverâ
those organs and engines of bourgeois hegemony.
Add to these programs the Maritime School of Social Work
and Dal Legal Aid,
and Dal evolves into a nexus, a matrix,
of potential change-agents (i.e., Saul Alinsky acolytes)âŠ.
Thus, Halifax social-worker Alexa McDonough,
straight outta Dal,
emerges to helm the New Democratic Party in N.S.
and then head the federal N.D.P.â
those sock-and-sandal, tie-dyed and tea-tippling socialists,
âonly in Canada, eh?Ìę Pity!â
XXVI.
HÂț» Universityâs history is now 200 yearsâand counting,
existing before I (and you),
and likely persisting eternally after us.
I dread to intersect my mortal bio with what isâ
in comparisonâdeathless,
but Iâm twice a Dal alumnus
(M.A.â1989, LL.D.â1999),
and long before either passage,
I was a Black Haligonianâ
an Africadianâ
inspired by an institution that is,
that excellent deviseâa schooled insurgencyâ
summoning, perennially, âYoung Turksâ
to âMake It Newâ (pace Chu Tsi)â
make everything newâ
by turning sailors into seismologists,
fishers into philosophers.
The HÂț» difference was in making
all Halifax an extension campusâ
a de facto university of the Commons
and the Public Gardens
and the waterfront-harboured, Palladian legislature,
even metaphysically unkillable AfricvilleâŠ.
Thus, as a boy, my teeth got filled and fixed
and drilled and extracted
at the Dal clinic;
At 15, to design a Grade-9-junior-high-school, A-bomb,
I biked down to the Killam Library,
and wantonly photocopied so many volumes,
I was practically kayoed by the acrid, ammonia fumes;
Aged 17-19, I fellow-travelled with Rocky Jonesâs
T.Y.P. crew, debating âBlack Liberationâ:
Was it possible?Ìę In Nova Scotia?
(Well, turntable Malcolmâs agit-prop; turn up for talks on Mao.)
At age 21, visiting the Killam at Christmas,
trying to anatomize âRabbi(e)â Dylanâs âLike a Rolling Stone,â
I was so engrossed in my amateur Musicology
that I was padlocked therein the library.
Then, age 26, I arrived elect at Dal, selecting,
preternaturally, the John Fraserâs
âTradition and Experimentation in Modern Poetry,
1880-1920,â
a graduated (in terms of increasing insight) grad course,
that the Calendar certified as âideal for poets.â
Nicely, Doc Fraser (ex-Cambridge U.)
was easygoing, but no nice-and-easy prof.
His 3-hr, Monday night, living room-staged class
was an arena amid a library amid an art gallery,
with a tabby cat prowling round the coffee
or tea cups
and the cookie trayâ
before the vivid, florid oils of Carol Hoorn Fraserâ
and ten wise-guys and bluestockings
tussling over Gothicism in Baudelaire,
surrealism in Hopkins,
Uncle Tom Eliotâs Olâ Possum affecting of gloom-infected Laforgue,
and imagism conjuring sadism in Hugh Selwyn Mauberley.
Sure:Ìę I was a poet before I ambled into Fraserâs chivalric ring
of knightly, smart-aleck, gladiatorial combat;
but I knew Iâd earned the sobriquet, the designation, the lordship,
if one likesâ
by fighting off the naysayers.
And this anecdote showcases, I pray,
HÂț»âs daunting history:
Hauntingly dauntless.