[Milton-L] Al Labriola's memorial service
Greg Lowe
irnbrigade at hotmail.com
Sun Mar 22 11:33:57 EDT 2009
I, too, wish to reply to Rich Durocher's eloquent report on Dr. Labriola's memorial service and let him know how much I was touched by it and how much I appreciated his effort to present it to those of us who had either strong ties or only brief ones (as is my own case) to Dr. Labriola. I also enjoyed Greg Machacek's beautifully crafted sonnet which so appropriately captured Al's place in the Milton community (and also reminds us of the many and various "shoes" which must now be filled by others).
And now I will offer a report on the Paradise Lost reading marathon that we at Collins Hill High School here in metro Atlanta hosted on March 7. I came home on the Friday after the marathon intending to make this posting. When I opened my personal email, I made the sad discovery regarding Dr. Labriola. Needless to say, my purpose was thwarted. Now, as I think Dr. Labriola would desire, it is time to get on with our business however relatively mundane.
This year (marathon #5 - March 2009), we had 5 adults who spent a total of 53 hours, 3 former students who spent a total of 2.5 hours and 40 current students who spent a total of 173.1 hours which adds up to a total of 228.6 man hours reading the poem. We started reading at 9:00 am and finished at 7:45 pm( 48 total participants).
Greg Lowe
Collins Hill High School
Suwanee, Georgia
Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 12:43:53 -0500
From: durocher at stolaf.edu
To: milton-l at lists.richmond.edu; wadsworth at duq.edu
CC:
Subject: [Milton-L] Al Labriola's memorial service
On Sunday I arrived in Pittsburgh for the Viewing, or Visitation, for Albert C. Labriola with other friends, students, colleagues, and of course Al's family, including his widow Regina, his son Michael, his sister in law, Kathy, and Al's grandchildren. On Monday, in a pew with Susan Wadsworth-Booth of Duquesne University Press and other colleagues and friends, I attended Al's Mass of Christian burial in the Duquesne Chapel. Thinking that many on this list would welcome news of these events, particularly the memorial service, I offer the following account. For those who want the short version, it is this: Many testified to the conviction that our beloved Al was surely at peace with his God, and that he had lived a life distinguished by worth and service.
At the viewing I met not only many members of Al's family but also his colleagues at Duquesne, several of whom were visibly shaken by their loss. While the bitter irony was sometimes mentioned that Al had defeated cancer only to succumb to his bout with pneumonia while on break in Florida, I heard no murmuring of complaint. Al had trained us too well for that. All I met were full of stories about Al's wit, tenacity, and intelligence. From Al's friend and pall bearer, Fred, I was surprised to learn what Al only rarely shared, that he was a decorated officer who had served in the Vietnam war, and that he and his unit had only recently reestablished contact. I also met an impressive group of young scholars and teachers who had studed with Al, including some, such as Matt Vickless, who were looking forward to continuing advances degrees under Al's direction. Again, these students had cause for self-pity, but they asked instead for my memories of happy moments that I recalled with Al.
The funeral program includes a lovely picture of Al, smiling knowingly and wearing an Italian silk ties and pocket scarf. Under that picture is the full text of Milton's "On Time." Aptly, one of Al's three eulogists referred to the poem's vision of an end to Time's race, "when once our heav'nly-guided soul shall clime," as befitting Al's spiritual ascent. Al's colleague of over 30 years at Duquesne, George Worgul, eloquently read Donne's sonnet, "At the round Earth's imagined corners blow," as the opening of his insightful, piercing eulogy, celebrating Al's sometimes angelic, sometimes Puckish demeanor. Sam Hazo spoke of the morning in the Duquesne chapel as comparable to two other tragic times: the subdued assembly for the death of President Kennedy; and the elaborate service for Princess Grace of Monaco, a Duquesne alumna. I thought Al would appreciate the humor of the analogy drawn between himself and the princess. Yet I also heard him, repeatedly over the weekend, described as a prince among men. A phrase I cherish from the service is Samuel Hazo's simple, fitting tribute to Al as "a citizen-scholar like no other."
During my time in Pittsburgh, I heard many thanks on the part of the Labriola family for the many testimonials and kind words said about Al over the Milton list. His son, Michael, perhaps with Susan's thoughtfulness, has been reading and at times quoting from our comments and memories, and he specifically asked me to convey my thanks to contributors from the list. The outpouring of heartfelt appreciation for Al Labriola, whom I was honored to have as a mentor and later, my editor, and above all my friend for over twenty years, certainly is appreciated. It is also fitting. Perhaps the only unfitness here is my own role as messenger here. I know many others who knew Al better than I, some of whom, including his long time friends and collaborators like John Mulryan has already responded, while others including my teacher, Mary Ann Radzinowicz, who once told me she loved Al Labriola like a brother, have not yet. As others have said, I hope Al's dear friend, Michael Lieb, whom illness and distance prevented from attending these ceremonies, will be able to offer the centerpiece of many words, to be artfully arranged at a fit occasion, in praise and memory of Dr. Albert C. Labiola, our secretary, our colleague, our editor, our mentor, our brother, our friend.
Rich DuRocher
St. Olaf College
Northfield, Minnesota
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