It's taken me a long time to speak of my father. Oh, I know he has
appeared briefly in one sketch or another--in this description of
his lab, in that story of a church, in a piece about a wildflower
field, and in still another scene as Santa Claus. He's been there,
but I have not really told of him. I'm not sure I can now. I can't
seem to fit him on my page. There is that limitation when we try
to define our heroes; no single word suits, no page holds heroic
dimensions.
If I were allowed only one chance to use only one word to describe
him and get it right, I would have to choose "teacher." Most who
read this will remember him within that definition--teacher, professor,
mentor--standing at the front of the classroom, darkly handsome,
describing with words and cigarette-stained hands such scientific
phenomena as oogenesis, epiboly, the particular alignment of the
dogfish's vertebrae, the cat's comparative anatomy, the pulsing
swim of coelenterates, the chambers of the ancient nautilus, and
the perdurable twisting ladder of the code-bearing helix that ultimately
defines us all.
Some will see him yet at the sea's edge in swim trunks and battered
tennis shoes, holding a precious Upogebia delicately in his thick
hands, describing to a spellbound group of sunburned, briny students
the little burrowing crab's unique contribution to the world of
marine invertebrates. Or maybe the memory comes of him standing
midstream on the rocky bottom of Mary's Creek, leading his disciples
in a search for the myriad forms of insect larvae to which that
Trinity tributary played host, or pulling a plankton net through
the still pond waters of Fort Worth's Botanical Gardens, seeking
unseen hydra, amoebas, and other minute forms to be discovered only
with a microscope's enhanced eye.
His classrooms were many, his subject vast--life in all its forms,
its habitats, and its manifestations. Although his primary responsibility
at TCU was preparing young people to enter the healing professions,
marine invertebrate biology was his particular love, and he headed
for a coastline at every opportunity, usually with an entourage
of family, a few students, or sometimes whole classes. Like the
Pied Piper of Hamelin Town, the tune he played gathered followers,
and he led them along the beach, into mud flats, aboard shrimping
boats, and onto the channel jetties, where he climbed among the
riprap, revealing the secret places where chitons cling and sea
urchins dwell, and where the sea anemone waves its soft tentacle-arms.
He could and would hold court anywhere--even a handball court where,
with a characteristic grin, he taught much younger, more athletic
challengers that youth and arrogance were no substitutes for experience
and proficiency.
He was not an "easy" teacher, nor was he an inflexible perfectionist,
but when you left his tutelage, if nothing else, you had learned
to at least strive toward precision. And if the class were Comparative
Anatomy and you passed, you might have a reasonable chance of getting
through Mr. Hogan's Organic Chemistry, too. It was a catch-phrase
of the time that pre-meds making it to their senior year had passed
through "Hogan, Hewatt, and Hell." He was a strict disciplinarian
in the home and the classroom, firm but never harsh. He was always
encouraging, but not falsely so, and the hopes of many pre-med aspirants
were dashed, no doubt, when he told them that they would be wise
to choose another profession, that his recommendation was required
to advance further and, based on their performance, he could not
give it.
Although his was an unmistakably scientific mind, requiring analysis
and proof--he called it the "corpus delicti"--from his own children
as well as his students before making positive observations or categorical
statements, there was also a sensibility that put some things beyond
explanation, and often he would simply say, again with that grin,
"That's the nature of the beast" and let it go at that.
It wasn't so much what he taught, as how he taught.
Through his own enthusiasm to know, he made others want to know.
Through his own wondering, we were taught to wonder. By his own
example, he led others to inquire, to examine, and to sense.
As a little girl sitting in his lap, I learned the sounds of our
language and the rhythms and visions poets could make with them,
as he read "Annabel Lee," "The Raven," "The Highwayman," "Gunga
Din," and the English-authored Texas poem, his favorite, "Lasca."
He often used poetry in his classes to illustrate his teachings.
Who among his former students of Invertebrate Zoology has forgotten
his reading of Oliver Wendell Holmes' ode to the ship of pearl,
"The Chambered Nautilus"? With the aid of a wonderful brass telescope,
he could pluck magic out of a still summer night and hand it in
the form of the moon, the planets, and the stars, to a group of
rapt neighborhood children, who thought, like I, that my daddy knew
a lot about most things, and just about all there was to know on
the subject of worlds beyond the one on which we stood.
Sometimes as I walk on the campus, I am aware of how much I miss
his presence here; sometimes someone else's gait or particular manner
will throw me out of the present back into the past of that same
place, and I all but speak before I realize it's now, not then,
it's you, not him. Sometimes when I enter the Winton-Scott science
building where he had an office, the familiar smells that permeate
the walls of science buildings everywhere prompt a momentary anticipation
of seeing him still there, adjusting the air pressure in a saline
tank, laying out a round-robin test on the black-topped laboratory
tables, or moving among his proteges in an anatomy class, patiently
telling, showing, instructing, often cajoling, often laughing. And
sometimes as the memories return, I smile and laugh at the good
that was mine, and then I cry, because I want it back. He was one
of those individuals, rare now it seems, whose clear vision focuses
ours, whose wisdom we want to tap, and who ought to be allowed to
stay around longer to help us think.
Had I been lover, wife, colleague, friend, I might have been more
critical of the flaws (they were only eccentricities) that he had,
given that he was, after all, one of us. But there is an insurmountable
distance, when the relationship is right, between father and daughter,
made of hero-worship, respect, awe, a tentative idolatry on the
daughter's part, and a desire, the obligation to be the hero on
the father's part that precludes a peer-like regard. The daughter
is forever in the posture of looking up and the father of looking
down, seldom across. The father teaches, the daughter learns, and
if the daughter is lucky, she has a hero to look up to and such
a teacher as mine.
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