Thank you, thank you very much. What an honor. Maureen, I want to take this opportunity, as you being the chairman of the board, to tell you that my oldest daughter, who is now a senior at Sacred Heart Academy in New Orleans, will be coming up here and attending Williams next fall. Iâm sorry, Iâm sorry; I still canât get this rightâmy daughter, who is now a senior at Sacred Heart Academy in New Orleans, will be coming up here to attend Smith in the fall. I still canât get itâmy daughter, who is a senior at the Academy of Sacred Heart, will be coming up here to attend Hobart this fall.
All right, thank you, thank you for that correction. What a great day. I just love this. I thought about my graduation day, and I met a young man last night, Steven Miguel. Steven where are you? Stand up. It may not look like we have anything in common, but we do, because on my graduation and on his graduation we both had a 3.95. Thatâs his grade point average, and that was my blood alcohol level. You historians here know I finished college in four terms: Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford.
Well I come from New Orleans where we like to say half of our city is under water and the other half is under indictment. You notice my cap. And itâs a fleur-de-lis, which is the symbol of our city, and a tassel from Hobart and a tassel from William Smith. I wear this cap in appreciation of the bonds between the Colleges and the city of New Orleans. Hobart and William Smith students took eight trips, totaling 20 hours one wayâthatâs 320 hours of drivingâto volunteer to help rebuild our beloved city. So, I wear this cap at your commencement in appreciation of the work and the bond between our two cities. And every time that I think that my child will be up here, I know that part of New Orleans will be with her and for that, I am grateful.
You know, as wonderful as these Colleges are, and the wonderful history of Hobart in 1822 and William Smith in 1901, and being one of the colleges that are rising the fastest, and the 11:1 student-to-faculty ratio, along with all the overseas work, this is really not a speech about the Colleges. This here is a wonderful president, and all the things that heâs doneâand weâve been dear friends for a long, long timeâitâs not about that. Itâs not about anything. Itâs about you.
And because itâs your day, Iâm going to level with you; itâs rough out there. Itâs really rough. Youâre leaving here, and I can sit here and tell you all the vapid bull that comes out of the spring air in Upstate New York about being un-tethered, and drifting out on the sea of life, and plan your work and work your plan and all of that SPAT! Youâre getting ready to go get knocked down. Thatâs whatâs going to happen. Everybody wants to be a success but no one wants to stop and understand what it takes to succeed. What it takes to succeed is to understand that failure is part of the process. There is no success without failure. There is no success without multiple failures, I promise you that. Itâs not easy. Youâre not just competing with people from other colleges like this, or Ivy League colleges, or big state universities or anything else, youâre competing with people from China and Japan and Thailand and India and Brazil and Mexico and Africa and all over the world. And youâre not going to get everything you want, and itâs not going to happen on the first time.
Iâll tell you a story. Do you know who the greatest failure in American history wasâbar none?
Right there, on the fiveâLincoln.
First off, he failed as a businesspersonâhe was a shopkeeper and that went down. He failed as a farmer. He ran for state legislatureâlost. His sweetheart died, and he had a nervous breakdown. When he finally got to the state legislature he ran for speaker and lost. He ran for Congress and lost. He was rejected for a job as a land officer. He ran for United States Senateâhe lost. God needs a new political consultant, Iâll tell you that. He ran for vice president and lost. He ran for senate again and lost. Then, when he finally got elected as president, the country he was elected to lead fell apart. Then he went out and lost the First Battle of Manassas, the Battle of Big Bethel, Kesslerâs Cross Lanes, Blackmon Fort, McDowell, Winchester, Port Republic, Drewryâs Bluff, Gaines Mill, Cedar Mountain, Bristoe Stationâhe didnât care he kept going. He lost Harperâs Ferry and Shepherdstown. He fired generals. By the way, Mary Todd Lincoln wasnât exactly Mary Herlihy, she was, like, prone to depression and a spendthrift and God knows what not. Then after he wins the war and passes the 13th amendment, he gets shot. But my point is this: DUCK! My point is this: itâs hard. And I wish I could tell my daughter, and I wish I could tell all of yaâll how itâs all just going to be wonderful. It is, in the end, because you know that.
Thomas Edison, who wasnât exactly a piker himself, said the following: âOur greatest weakness is giving up. The most certain way to success is to try one more time.â
So if youâve done 12 job interviews and you still donât have the job you want, then go do 13. And then 14. Give it a try and keep going. You talk about the great scientists of the world, how many times do experiments fail? Does a thesis not work out? For every brilliant discovery there is, thereâs a gazillion failures behind it. So, understand that. Thatâs what you deserve.
One day, some time ago, when my soon-to-be William Smith freshman was a little girlâand these things are hard, these speeches, you put a lot of thought into themâI was giving a speech to some young people and I wanted to give them some inspiration. I was lying in bed and you think a lot, and kids, they listen to ya know, Winnie the PoohâTigger and Piglet and that whole operation out there. The 100 Acre Wood or whatever it was. So Iâm sitting there thinking what am I going to tell these young people? And I heard, whatâs his name? Charles Robert or something, Christopher Robâwhatever, the human figureâand Winnie was afraid about something he had to do and he looked at him and said, âYa know, youâre stronger than you seem, youâre braver than you believe, and youâre smarter than you think.â
In your life there are going to be times when youâre walking into a job interview, in your life there are going to be times when youâre arguing a case, in your life there are going to be times when you are taking oral exams, youâre going to be doing things and you are going to be scared. Itâs natural. Everybody is. And when that happens, and itâs going to happen more than once, do me a favor: go back to the days of your childhood, go in the 100 Acre Wood, take a deep breath and just say, âIâm stronger than I seem, Iâm braver than I believe, and Iâm smarter than I think.â And then go do it, thatâs what it is.
Now, Iâve given you my honest appraisal of what I think this is about and Iâm going to close with a story because thatâs what we do down south, we tell a lot of stories. Iâve got more stories on this kind of stuff than Obama has on Benghazi. This is a true story, unlike most of my stories.
About six months ago, I have a friend of mine. A legendary â Iâll say his name, Mike Hurley â heâs a legendary CIA; heâs retired now, he was a legendary CIA agent, and we were doing some work together in Columbia, in Bogota. He looks at me and says, âJames, do you like President Bush Sr.?â And I said, âYeah I like him, everybody kinda likes President Bush Sr.â And he says, âSo you really like him?â And I said, âYeah, I really like him. Iâve met him a number of times and Iâve actually gone to Texas A&M, Iâve spoken at his library, I actually did a commencement speech at Texas A&M that he asked me to doâheâs a cool guy.â He says, âYeah, I like him too.â He said, âYa know, in the CIA youâre attached to the Embassy.â I said, âYeah, I knew that.â He said, âIn 1989, I was at the French Embassy and it was the 200th anniversary of the French Revolution. And President Bush was there, and so they got the Embassy personnel up and he gave a little talk and he said, ya know, itâs really nice that the Ambassador of France has a house that the Rothschilds had given to the U.S. governmentâ itâs gorgeous; itâs nicer than the White House â and he cracked some jokes about it. And he said when he left, he was going to Holland, to the Netherlands. So everybodyâs sitting there thinking here you are, itâs the 200th anniversary of France and youâre leaving to go to Holland? To the Netherlands? Everybody was saying what is that about? So actually somebody asked him: âMr. President, president of the United States, why are you going to Holland?â He said, âYa know thatâs a good question; Iâll tell you why Iâm going. The first country to ever recognize the government of the United States was Holland. The house of John Adams, who was our first ambassador we ever appointed anywhere, still exists in Amsterdam. You know, no president has ever been there and I thought just because I was in the neighborhood I would go by and thank him.ââ
You are going to do remarkable things in your life. You have an unbelievable education, you donât fear failure, youâre not intimidated, youâre going to have great self-confidence, youâre going to rise up and youâre going to do wonderful things. And ya know, when you do them, this is what I want you to do for me: I want you to remember the Holland in your life. It might be a teacher, a coach, a neighbor, a clericâI donât care. And when youâve ascended these great heights and done these great things, I want you to go back, they might even be in a nursing home by thenâyou donât know. But I want you to think about them and I want you to go see them. I want you to drop by and say, âYa know, Iâve come a long way in life and I just wanted to tell you that you had something to do with that.â And then, when you achieve that, I want you to find your own young version of the United States and help them, and mentor them, and bring them along and show them recognition so they can grow too. Thatâs what this is about. Youâre going to do it, youâre going to do the great stuffâtotal confidence in that. Youâre going to get beat up along the wayâtotal confidence in that. But always remember, there is only one definition of a champion, only one, and the true champion is the one who gets up one more time than theyâre knocked down.
Thank yaâll.