Great teachers had great personalities and that the greatest
teachers had outrageous personalities. I did not like decorum or
rectitude in a classroom; I preferred a highly oxygenated atmosphere, a
climate of intemperance, rhetoric, and feverish melodrama. And I wanted
my teachers to make me smart. A great teacher is my adversary, my
conqueror, commissioned to chastise me. He leaves me tame and grateful
for the new language he has purloined from other kings whose granaries
are filled and whose libraries are famous. He tells me that teaching is
the art of theft: of knowing what to steal and from whom. Bad teachers
do not touch me; the great ones never leave me. They ride with me during
all my days, and I pass on to others what they have imparted to me. I
exchange their handy gifts with strangers on trains, and I pretend the
gifts are mine. I steal from the great teachers. And the truly wonderful
thing about them is they would applaud my theft, laugh at the thought
of it, realizing they had taught me their larcenous skills well.
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