It’s graduation season, the time when hundreds of thousands of young people will be leaving the family nest bound for college, the military, or independent grownup life.
They’re empty or near-empty vessels who will be filled with life experiences that might make them entirely different people in thirty years than they are now. When they return for class reunions they will find with the passing years that are less a class and more a diverse community.
Kelly Pool, the former Centralia newspaper publisher who was the Secretary for the Capitol Commission Board that oversaw construction of the capitol lived to be ninety years old. Eventually he was editor emeritus of the Jefferson City Post-Tribune and wrote an entire newspaper page of reflections and inspirational thoughts each week for many years. In late 1943, he looked at the way people respond to the “youth will be served” slogan and found many people didn’t agree with it—although thousands of “youngsters” were fighting World War II. But Pool argued the old saying is true and “more and more the world is coming to recognize the power and grandeur of youth.”
The world is young—always will be,” he wrote. “Youth will has always been in the vanguard,” he said as he put together a list to prove his point:
Alexander conquered the world at 26.
Napoleon made all Europe tremble at 25.
Cortez conquered Mexico at 26.
Alexander Hamilton led Congress at 36.
Clay and Calhoun led Congress at 29.
Henry Clay became speaker at 34.
Calhoun was secretary of war at 35.
Daniel Webster was without peer at 30.
Judge Story was on the supreme court at 32.
Goethe was a literary giant at 24.
Schiller was in the forefront of literature at 22.
Burns wrote his best poetry at 24.
Byron’s first work appeared at 19.
Dickens brought out “Pickwick Papers” at 24.
Schubert and Mozart died at less than 35.
Raphael ravished the world at 20.
Michelangelo made stone to live at 24.
Galileo’s great discovery was at 19.
Newton was at his zenith when only 25.
Edison harnessed lightning when only 23.
Martin Luther shook the Vatican at 20.
Calvin wrote his “Institute” at 21.
(“Judge Story” was a reference to Justice Joseph Story, 1779-1845, who is best known as the Justice who read the decision in the Amistad case. John Calvin as a post-Luther Reformation thinker and pastor whose writings led to the formation of Presbyterianism.)
All of which, wrote Pool, is that “our boys and girls should not let the precious hours of their youth be wasted. Begin early to make your mark in the world, and drive hard to become one of the youths who ‘will be served.”
J. Kelly Pool continued to write his “Kellygrams” pages each week for the newspaper until shortly before his death at the age of 90 in 1951.
I didn’t even graduate from college until I was 31.