"My function as a teacher is
Three Essays on Don Baker "The Tang of the Apple on the Tongue"
A Selection of
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"To
Live Humanely in a Difficult World" It was November 1972 and the College was struggling for words. President Thad Seymour and the faculty needed to capture in a single statement the ways a Wabash education changes the lives of its students. A committee's first stab at the missive was technically correct, but uninspiring. Then the College's poet-in-residence spoke up. The statement, he said, needs to exemplify "man talking to man." "If we are to re-emphasize communication we must, in our own writings, set the example." So he offered his alternativewords that have guided the College for the past 30 years. A Wabash education, he wrote, prepares students "to judge thoughtfully, act effectively, and live humanely in a difficult world." When Professor of English Emeritus Donald W. Baker H'57 penned that coda
to the College's curriculum preamble, he could have been describing his
own life as a teacher, poet, and father. Praised in literary circles,
Baker won the Pushcart Prize and the Borestone Mountain Prize, and was
nominated for a Pulitzer. After reading Baker's work in Formal Application,
the distinguished American poet William Stafford said: "[Baker] digests
experience... like a bear. This book made me come to with surprise as
I read page after page, section after section, saying, 'yes, that's right!'"
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