This week I will interview a professor of chemical engineering who is retiring after forty-four years on the faculty. He came to the university straight from earning his Ph.D. He’s neither flashy nor hungry for publicity, and I was surprised he agreed to speak with me. He has a reputation for hard work and dependability – not qualities valued as highly as you might think. He seems to ignore academic politics and is widely if quietly respected, even by his colleagues and the administration. Selfless dedication to the job often goes ignored, as Louis MacNeice suggests in “Hidden Ice” (The Earth Compels, 1938), which begins:
“There are
few songs for domesticity
For routine
work, money-making or scholarship
Though these
are apt for eulogy or tragedy.
“And I would
praise our adaptability
Who can
spend years and years in offices and beds
Every
morning twirling the napkin ring,
A twitter of
inconsequent vitality.”
The theme of
unrecognized service, of blindly coming to expect gifts, must have been on
MacNeice’s mind at the time. The next poem in The Earth Compels is “Taken for Granted.” The opening stanza:
“Taken for
granted
The household orbit in childhood
The punctual
sound of the gong
The round of domestic service.”
Your piece on the unflashiness of the ordinary reminds me of the saying (author unknown): "Everyone wants to save the world but no one wants to help mom with the dishes."
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