<p>I do not mean to say, however, that my judgment of Oxford is one undiluted
stream of praise. In one respect at least I think that Oxford has fallen
away from the high ideals of the Middle Ages. I refer to the fact that it
admits women students to its studies. In the Middle Ages women were
regarded with a peculiar chivalry long since lost. It was taken for
granted that their brains were too delicately poised to allow them to
learn anything. It was presumed that their minds were so exquisitely hung
that intellectual effort might disturb them. The present age has gone to
the other extreme: and this is seen nowhere more than in the crowding of
women into colleges originally designed for men. Oxford, I regret to find,
has not stood out against this change.</p>
<p>To a profound scholar like myself, the presence of these young women, many
of them most attractive, flittering up and down the streets of Oxford in
their caps and gowns, is very distressing.</p>
<p>Who is to blame for this and how they first got in I do not know. But I
understand that they first of all built a private college of their own
close to Oxford, and then edged themselves in foot by foot. If this is so
they only followed up the precedent of the recognised method in use in
America. When an American college is established, the women go and build a
college of their own overlooking the grounds. Then they put on becoming
caps and gowns and stand and look over the fence at the college athletics.
The male undergraduates, who were originally and by nature a hardy lot,
were not easily disturbed. But inevitably some of the senior trustees fell
in love with the first year girls and became convinced that coeducation
was a noble cause. American statistics show that between 1880 and 1900 the
number of trustees and senior professors who married girl undergraduates
or who wanted to do so reached a percentage of,—I forget the exact
percentage; it was either a hundred or a little over.</p>
<p>I don't know just what happened at Oxford but presumably something of the
sort took place. In any case the women are now all over the place. They
attend the college lectures, they row in a boat, and they perambulate the
High Street. They are even offering a serious competition against the men.
Last year they carried off the ping-pong championship and took the
chancellor's prize for needlework, while in music, cooking and millinery
the men are said to be nowhere.</p>
<p>There is no doubt that unless Oxford puts the women out while there is yet
time, they will overrun the whole university. What this means to the
progress of learning few can tell and those who know are afraid to say.</p>
<p>Cambridge University, I am glad to see, still sets its face sternly
against this innovation. I am reluctant to count any superiority in the
University of Cambridge. Having twice visited Oxford, having made the
place a subject of profound study for many hours at a time, having twice
addressed its undergraduates, and having stayed at the Mitre Hotel, I
consider myself an Oxford man. But I must admit that Cambridge has chosen
the wiser part.</p>
<p>Last autumn, while I was in London on my voyage of discovery, a vote was
taken at Cambridge to see if the women who have already a private college
nearby, should be admitted to the university. They were triumphantly shut
out; and as a fit and proper sign of enthusiasm the undergraduates went
over in a body and knocked down the gates of the women's college. I know
that it is a terrible thing to say that any one approved of this. All the
London papers came out with headings that read,—ARE OUR
UNDERGRADUATES TURNING INTO BABOONS? and so on. The Manchester Guardian
draped its pages in black and even the London Morning Post was afraid to
take bold ground in the matter. But I do know also that there was a great
deal of secret chuckling and jubilation in the London clubs. Nothing was
expressed openly. The men of England have been too terrorised by the women
for that.</p>
<p>But in safe corners of the club, out of earshot of the waiters and away
from casual strangers, little groups of elderly men chuckled quietly
together. "Knocked down their gates, eh?" said the wicked old men to one
another, and then whispered guiltily behind an uplifted hand, "Serve 'em
right." Nobody dared to say anything outside. If they had some one would
have got up and asked a question in the House of Commons. When this is
done all England falls flat upon its face.</p>
<p>But for my part when I heard of the Cambridge vote, I felt as Lord Chatham
did when he said in parliament, "Sir, I rejoice that America has
resisted." For I have long harboured views of my own upon the higher
education of women. In these days, however, it requires no little
hardihood to utter a single word of criticism against it. It is like
throwing half a brick through the glass roof of a conservatory. It is
bound to make trouble. Let me hasten, therefore, to say that I believe
most heartily in the higher education of women; in fact, the higher the
better. The only question to my mind is: What is "higher education" and
how do you get it? With which goes the secondary enquiry, What is a woman
and is she just the same as a man? I know that it sounds a terrible thing
to say in these days, but I don't believe she is.</p>
<p>Let me say also that when I speak of coeducation I speak of what I know. I
was coeducated myself some thirty-five years ago, at the very beginning of
the thing. I learned my Greek alongside of a bevy of beauty on the
opposite benches that mashed up the irregular verbs for us very badly.
Incidentally, those girls are all married long since, and all the Greek
they know now you could put under a thimble. But of that presently.</p>
<p>I have had further experience as well. I spent three years in the graduate
school of Chicago, where coeducational girls were as thick as autumn
leaves, and some thicker. And as a college professor at McGill University
in Montreal, I have taught mingled classes of men and women for twenty
years.</p>
<p>On the basis of which experience I say with assurance that the thing is a
mistake and has nothing to recommend it but its relative cheapness. Let me
emphasise this last point and have done with it. Coeducation is of course
a great economy. To teach ten men and ten women in a single class of
twenty costs only half as much as to teach two classes. Where economy must
rule, then, the thing has got to be. But where the discussion turns not on
what is cheapest, but on what is best, then the case is entirely
different.</p>
<p>The fundamental trouble is that men and women are different creatures,
with different minds and different aptitudes and different paths in life.
There is no need to raise here the question of which is superior and which
is inferior (though I think, the Lord help me, I know the answer to that
too). The point lies in the fact that they are different.</p>
<p>But the mad passion for equality has masked this obvious fact. When women
began to demand, quite rightly, a share in higher education, they took for
granted that they wanted the same curriculum as the men. They never
stopped to ask whether their aptitudes were not in various directions
higher and better than those of the men, and whether it might not be
better for their sex to cultivate the things which were best suited to
their minds. Let me be more explicit. In all that goes with physical and
mathematical science, women, on the average, are far below the standard of
men. There are, of course, exceptions. But they prove nothing. It is no
use to quote to me the case of some brilliant girl who stood first in
physics at Cornell. That's nothing. There is an elephant in the zoo that
can count up to ten, yet I refuse to reckon myself his inferior.</p>
<p>Tabulated results spread over years, and the actual experience of those
who teach show that in the whole domain of mathematics and physics women
are outclassed. At McGill the girls of our first year have wept over their
failures in elementary physics these twenty-five years. It is time that
some one dried their tears and took away the subject.</p>
<p>But, in any case, examination tests are never the whole story. To those
who know, a written examination is far from being a true criterion of
capacity. It demands too much of mere memory, imitativeness, and the
insidious willingness to absorb other people's ideas. Parrots and crows
would do admirably in examinations. Indeed, the colleges are full of them.</p>
<p>But take, on the other hand, all that goes with the aesthetic side of
education, with imaginative literature and the cult of beauty. Here women
are, or at least ought to be, the superiors of men. Women were in
primitive times the first story-tellers. They are still so at the cradle
side. The original college woman was the witch, with her incantations and
her prophecies and the glow of her bright imagination, and if brutal men
of duller brains had not burned it out of her, she would be incanting
still. To my thinking, we need more witches in the colleges and less
physics.</p>
<p>I have seen such young witches myself,—if I may keep the word: I
like it,—in colleges such as Wellesley in Massachusetts and Bryn
Mawr in Pennsylvania, where there isn't a man allowed within the three
mile limit. To my mind, they do infinitely better thus by themselves. They
are freer, less restrained. They discuss things openly in their classes;
they lift up their voices, and they speak, whereas a girl in such a place
as McGill, with men all about her, sits for four years as silent as a frog
full of shot.</p>
<p>But there is a deeper trouble still. The careers of the men and women who
go to college together are necessarily different, and the preparation is
all aimed at the man's career. The men are going to be lawyers, doctors,
engineers, business men, and politicians. And the women are not.</p>
<p>There is no use pretending about it. It may sound an awful thing to say,
but the women are going to be married. That is, and always has been, their
career; and, what is more, they know it; and even at college, while they
are studying algebra and political economy, they have their eye on it
sideways all the time. The plain fact is that, after a girl has spent four
years of her time and a great deal of her parents' money in equipping
herself for a career that she is never going to have, the wretched
creature goes and gets married, and in a few years she has forgotten which
is the hypotenuse of a right-angled triangle, and she doesn't care. She
has much better things to think of.</p>
<p>At this point some one will shriek: "But surely, even for marriage, isn't
it right that a girl should have a college education?" To which I hasten
to answer: most assuredly. I freely admit that a girl who knows algebra,
or once knew it, is a far more charming companion and a nobler wife and
mother than a girl who doesn't know x from y. But the point is this: Does
the higher education that fits a man to be a lawyer also fit a person to
be a wife and mother? Or, in other words, is a lawyer a wife and mother? I
say he is not. Granted that a girl is to spend four years in time and four
thousand dollars in money in going to college, why train her for a career
that she is never going to adopt? Why not give her an education that will
have a meaning and a harmony with the real life that she is to follow?</p>
<p>For example, suppose that during her four years every girl lucky enough to
get a higher education spent at least six months of it in the training and
discipline of a hospital as a nurse. There is more education and character
making in that than in a whole bucketful of algebra.</p>
<p>But no, the woman insists on snatching her share of an education designed
by Erasmus or William of Wykeham or William of Occam for the creation of
scholars and lawyers; and when later on in her home there is a sudden
sickness or accident, and the life or death of those nearest to her hangs
upon skill and knowledge and a trained fortitude in emergency, she must
needs send in all haste for a hired woman to fill the place that she
herself has never learned to occupy.</p>
<p>But I am not here trying to elaborate a whole curriculum. I am only trying
to indicate that higher education for the man is one thing, for the woman
another. Nor do I deny the fact that women have got to earn their living.
Their higher education must enable them to do that. They cannot all marry
on their graduation day. But that is no great matter. No scheme of
education that any one is likely to devise will fail in this respect.</p>
<p>The positions that they hold as teachers or civil servants they would fill
all the better if their education were fitted to their wants.</p>
<p>Some few, a small minority, really and truly "have a career,"—husbandless
and childless,—in which the sacrifice is great and the honour to
them, perhaps, all the higher. And others no doubt dream of a career in
which a husband and a group of blossoming children are carried as an
appendage to a busy life at the bar or on the platform. But all such are
the mere minority, so small as to make no difference to the general
argument.</p>
<p>But there—I have written quite enough to make plenty of trouble
except perhaps at Cambridge University. So I return with relief to my
general study of Oxford. Viewing the situation as a whole, I am led then
to the conclusion that there must be something in the life of Oxford
itself that makes for higher learning. Smoked at by his tutor, fed in
Henry VIII's kitchen, and sleeping in a tangle of ivy, the student
evidently gets something not easily obtained in America. And the more I
reflect on the matter the more I am convinced that it is the sleeping in
the ivy that does it. How different it is from student life as I remember
it!</p>
<p>When I was a student at the University of Toronto thirty years ago, I
lived,—from start to finish,—in seventeen different boarding
houses. As far as I am aware these houses have not, or not yet, been
marked with tablets. But they are still to be found in the vicinity of
McCaul and Darcy, and St. Patrick Streets. Any one who doubts the truth of
what I have to say may go and look at them.</p>
<p>I was not alone in the nomadic life that I led. There were hundreds of us
drifting about in this fashion from one melancholy habitation to another.
We lived as a rule two or three in a house, sometimes alone. We dined in
the basement. We always had beef, done up in some way after it was dead,
and there were always soda biscuits on the table. They used to have a
brand of soda biscuits in those days in the Toronto boarding houses that I
have not seen since. They were better than dog biscuits but with not so
much snap. My contemporaries will all remember them. A great many of the
leading barristers and professional men of Toronto were fed on them.</p>
<p>In the life we led we had practically no opportunities for association on
a large scale, no common rooms, no reading rooms, nothing. We never saw
the magazines,—personally I didn't even know the names of them. The
only interchange of ideas we ever got was by going over to the Caer Howell
Hotel on University Avenue and interchanging them there.</p>
<p>I mention these melancholy details not for their own sake but merely to
emphasise the point that when I speak of students' dormitories, and the
larger life which they offer, I speak of what I know.</p>
<p>If we had had at Toronto, when I was a student, the kind of dormitories
and dormitory life that they have at Oxford, I don't think I would ever
have graduated. I'd have been there still. The trouble is that the
universities on our Continent are only just waking up to the idea of what
a university should mean. They were, very largely, instituted and
organised with the idea that a university was a place where young men were
sent to absorb the contents of books and to listen to lectures in the
class rooms. The student was pictured as a pallid creature, burning what
was called the "midnight oil," his wan face bent over his desk. If you
wanted to do something for him you gave him a book: if you wanted to do
something really large on his behalf you gave him a whole basketful of
them. If you wanted to go still further and be a benefactor to the college
at large, you endowed a competitive scholarship and set two or more pallid
students working themselves to death to get it.</p>
<p>The real thing for the student is the life and environment that surrounds
him. All that he really learns he learns, in a sense, by the active
operation of his own intellect and not as the passive recipient of
lectures. And for this active operation what he really needs most is the
continued and intimate contact with his fellows. Students must live
together and eat together, talk and smoke together. Experience shows that
that is how their minds really grow. And they must live together in a
rational and comfortable way. They must eat in a big dining room or hall,
with oak beams across the ceiling, and the stained glass in the windows,
and with a shield or tablet here or there upon the wall, to remind them
between times of the men who went before them and left a name worthy of
the memory of the college. If a student is to get from his college what it
ought to give him, a college dormitory, with the life in common that it
brings, is his absolute right. A university that fails to give it to him
is cheating him.</p>
<p>If I were founding a university—and I say it with all the
seriousness of which I am capable—I would found first a smoking
room; then when I had a little more money in hand I would found a
dormitory; then after that, or more probably with it, a decent reading
room and a library. After that, if I still had money over that I couldn't
use, I would hire a professor and get some text books.</p>
<p>This chapter has sounded in the most part like a continuous eulogy of
Oxford with but little in favour of our American colleges. I turn
therefore with pleasure to the more congenial task of showing what is
wrong with Oxford and with the English university system generally, and
the aspect in which our American universities far excell the British.</p>
<p>The point is that Henry VIII is dead. The English are so proud of what
Henry VIII and the benefactors of earlier centuries did for the
universities that they forget the present. There is little or nothing in
England to compare with the magnificent generosity of individuals,
provinces and states, which is building up the colleges of the United
States and Canada. There used to be. But by some strange confusion of
thought the English people admire the noble gifts of Cardinal Wolsey and
Henry VIII and Queen Margaret, and do not realise that the Carnegies and
Rockefellers and the William Macdonalds are the Cardinal Wolseys of
to-day. The University of Chicago was founded upon oil. McGill University
rests largely on a basis of tobacco. In America the world of commerce and
business levies on itself a noble tribute in favour of the higher
learning. In England, with a few conspicuous exceptions, such as that at
Bristol, there is little of the sort. The feudal families are content with
what their remote ancestors have done: they do not try to emulate it in
any great degree.</p>
<p>In the long run this must count. Of all the various reforms that are
talked of at Oxford, and of all the imitations of American methods that
are suggested, the only one worth while, to my thinking, is to capture a
few millionaires, give them honorary degrees at a million pounds sterling
apiece, and tell them to imagine that they are Henry the Eighth. I give
Oxford warning that if this is not done the place will not last another
two centuries.</p>
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