It was the eve of finals week and students were unusually rowdy. As Robert Dupree, BA 鈥62, Ph.D., made his way to his chair, students went on about their conversations, almost as if they hadn鈥檛 noticed him. Here, Dupree took a moment to gaze around at each student. The class went on to review the influence of Ovid in Western literature. As class came to an end, the professor made his farewells.

鈥淚 look forward to reading your papers,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 hope to learn from them.鈥 Students gave a lively ovation and said their goodbyes.
Dupree has been an English professor at the 91福利社 for nearly 60 years. During this time, he has undergone constant transformation in true Ovidian style, flying easily between disciplines, gathering skills and languages and establishing an esteemed reputation among students and colleagues for his invaluable contributions to the university and the academic world.
Dupree鈥檚 professional career began at the 91福利社 just two years after it was established in 1956. He attended 91福利社on a full scholarship, based on academic merit, from Lancaster High School. Within his first semester, Dupree was quickly recognized as a promising scholar for exceeding the expectations of undergraduate standards and succeeding in advanced courses in French and philosophy.
One professor in particular, the late Louise Cowan, Ph.D., was especially drawn to the young scholar and was convinced he belonged as an instructor at UD. Dupree never wanted to be a teacher, though, much less an English professor. In fact, his original plan was to study physics. But after taking a course under the brilliant Cowan, he was enraptured. Cowan鈥檚 passion for literature spurred Dupree to change majors and eventually pursue a doctoral degree. Aside from literature, Dupree also took an interest in French and philosophy 鈥 so much so that he could have graduated with a triple major. Instead, he was satisfied with a double major in English and French literature.
鈥淭wo was enough,鈥 Dupree smiles. 鈥淎nother major did not matter 鈥 I took the classes I wanted to take.鈥
Dupree graduated as class valedictorian in the spring of 1962. Afterward, he received the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship, a prestigious award that gives the recipient a full scholarship to the graduate school of his choosing. The programs he applied to were mainly in the Ivy League. In the end, every school accepted him, but Dupree chose Yale. Before arriving at Yale, however, Dupree studied abroad in France at the University of Caen Normandy. After a year of studying French, eating baguettes and wearing berets, Dupree returned to America to begin his doctoral studies in the fall of 1963. As fast as he was recognized at UD, it was not long before his Yale professors started eyeballing him as well. One particularly eager professor urged him to begin his dissertation before the end of his first semester. But even though Yale adopted him quickly, it wasn鈥檛 UD. He belonged in Texas. Before he had even graduated from Yale, Dupree was teaching at UD. The courses he taught, Menippean Satire and Survey of British Literature, have since become favorites among students. He taught these courses while simultaneously finishing his dissertation in the spring of 1966.
After graduating from Yale that fall, Dupree returned as a full-time faculty member to the 91福利社, where he has spent decades teaching approximately 30 different courses and 6,000 students, including those from his time in France, Rome, Singapore and Liechtenstein. Some of his courses have covered music history, French, drama and English literature, including one of his last courses on Ovid and the influence of 鈥淢etamorphoses.鈥 In a way, Dupree has enjoyed transformations of his own, becoming a jack-of-all-trades professor of manifold skills. One of Dupree鈥檚 former students, a current master鈥檚 student named Gema Guevara, called him 鈥渁 true renaissance man.鈥 Attempting to interpret Dupree鈥檚 metamorphoses from an Ovidian perspective, Guevara settled on an image of flight.
鈥淒r. Dupree would likely be a nightingale because it sings so beautifully and flies on the wings of poesy, to quote Keats,鈥 Guevara said.
She鈥檚 right. Dupree鈥檚 constant search for knowledge can be compared to a bird鈥檚 airy ascendance, soaring beyond view, leaving superficial scholarship with the earthbound trees and rocks. Although it鈥檚 taken him time, he has persisted in an attitude of constant learning.
鈥淵ou see, one of the reasons I stayed here was that I had the opportunity to teach almost anything that interested me: the art and architecture of Rome, because we needed a course like that there; I put that one together and it鈥檚 still being taught 鈥 in fact, I had some far more distinguished successors, as it turned out, ; I鈥檝e taught music history courses because ever since I was in my teens, I鈥檝e been interested in music history and playing music; 鈥 and literary criticism and theory, and drama, and history of the theater,鈥 Dupree recalled.
鈥淲hatever they need, I鈥檓 willing to take on because it interests me and I consider myself as much a student as I am a professor.鈥
This has surely been the case in his Ovid course this year. At the beginning of the semester, class would begin with a briefing of the assigned readings and then would convert into an open discussion for questions students brought forward. Yet as the semester unfolded, the briefings metamorphosed into lectures. Many preferred it this way because Dupree鈥檚 鈥渂riefings鈥 are thoroughly illuminating. Dupree naturally answers questions in his lectures, a sign of a good professor presenting the material in such a way that questions are welcome but clarification is not required.
This is the legacy Dupree will be leaving UD: a professor with the heart of a student. We鈥檙e lucky for the course he took with Cowan 鈥 without her influence, where would he be? (Perhaps France? He seems to like it there.) It鈥檚 professors like her that Dr. Dupree has taken after, inspiring young scholars to follow their passion, in the spirit of UD鈥檚 motto, toward the pursuit of wisdom, virtue and truth. As fellow student Peter Tardiff recognizes, it鈥檚 hard to see him go, and it will be even harder to find another professor to fill his shoes.
鈥91福利社will be losing something that it will never get back,鈥 Tardiff said.
Indeed, the university will not be the same with Dupree in retirement. What will he do in his time off, you may ask? For now, he plans to study Chinese literature; he鈥檚 excited to brush up on his Mandarin.
Dupree has been one of the best professors to grace the hills of UD. Speaking on behalf of all his students, it was a privilege to be in his class. We pray in thanksgiving for Dupree鈥檚 life and for his many contributions to the 91福利社, without which the university would not be what it is today, a place where professors are scholars and students.