The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3, September, 1862. Various

The Continental Monthly, Vol. 2, No 3,  September, 1862 - Various


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of official notice, battles manfully for the right.

      Hopeful Tackett, humble yet illustrious, a hero for all time, we salute you.

      JOHN BULL TO JONATHAN

      You grow too fast, my child! Your stalwart limbs,

      Herculean in might, now rival mine;

      The starry light upon your forehead dims

      The lustre of my crown—distasteful sign.

      Contract thy wishes, boy! Do not insist

      Too much on what's thine own—thou art too new!

      Bend and curtail thy stature! As I list,

      It is my glorious privilege to do.

      Take my advice—I freely give it thee—

      Nay, would enforce it. I am ripe in years—

      Let thy young vigor minister to me!

      Restrain thy freedom when it interferes!

      No rival must among the nations be

      To jeopardize my own supremacy!

      JONATHAN TO JOHN BULL

      Thanks for your kind advice, my worthy sire!

      Though thrust upon me, and but little prized.

      The offices you modestly require,

      I reckon, will be scarcely realized.

      My service to you! but not quite so far

      That I will lop a limb, or force my lips

      To gratify your longing. Not a star

      Of my escutcheon shall your fogs eclipse!

      Let noble deeds evince my parentage.

      No rival I; my aim is not so low:

      In nature's course, youth soon outstrippeth age,

      And is survivor at its overthrow.

      Freedom is Heaven's best gift. Thanks! I am free,

      Nor will acknowledge your supremacy!

      AMERICAN STUDENT LIFE

      SOME MEMORIES OF YALE

      'Through many an hour of summer suns,

      By many pleasant ways,

      Like Hezekiah's, backward runs

      The shadow of my days.

      I kiss the lips I once have kissed;

      The gas-light wavers dimmer;

      And softly through a vinous mist,

      My college friendships glimmer.'

—Will Waterproof's Lyrical Monologue.

      It is now I dare not say how many years since the night that chum and I, emerging from No. 24, South College, descended the well-worn staircase, and took our last stroll beneath the heavy shadows that darkly hung from the old elms of our Alma Mater. Commencement, with its dazzling excitement, its galleries of fair faces to smile and approve, its gathered wisdom to listen and adjudge, was no longer the goal of our student-hopes; and the terrible realization that our joyous college-days were over, now pressed hard upon us as we paced slowly along, listening to the low night wind among the summer leaves overhead, or looking up at the darkened windows whence the laugh and song of class-mates had so oft resounded to vex with mirth the drowsy ear of night—and tutors. I thought then, as I have often thought since, that our student-life must be 'the golden prime' compared with which all coming time would be as silver, brass, or iron. Here youth with its keenness of enjoyment and generous heartiness; freedom from care, smooth-browed and mirthful; liberal studies refining and elevating withal; the Numbers, whose ready sympathy had divided sorrow and multiplied joy, were associated as they never could be again; and so I doubt not many a one has felt as he stood at the door of academic life and looked away over its sunny meadows to the dark woodlands and rugged hillsides of world-life. How throbbed in old days the wandering student's heart as on the distant hill-top he turned to take a last look at disappearing Bologna and remembered the fair curtain-lecturing Novella de Andrea1—fair prototype of modern Mrs. Caudle; how his spirits rose when, like Lucentio, he came to 'fair Padua, nursery of arts;' or how he mused for the last time wandering beside the turbid Arno, in

'Pisa, renowned for grave citizens,'

      we wot not. Little do we know either of the ancient 'larks' of the Sorbonne, of Leyden, Utrecht, and Amsterdam; somewhat less, in spite of gifted imagining, of The Student of Salamanca. But Howitt's Student Life in Germany, setting forth in all its noisy, smoking, beer-drinking conviviality the significance of the Burschenleben,

'I am an unmarried scholar and a free man;'

      Bristed's Five Years in an English University, congenial in its setting forth of the Cantab's carnal delights and intellectual jockeyism; The Adventures of Mr. Verdant Green, an Oxford Freshman, wherein one 'Cuthbert Bede, B.A.' has by 'numerous illustrations' of numerous dissipations, given as good an idea as is desirable of the 'rowing men' in that very antediluvian receptacle of elegant scholarship; are all present evidences of the affectionate interest with which the graduate reverts to his college days. In like manner Student Life in Scotland has engaged the late attention of venerable Blackwood, while the pages of Putnam, in Life in a Canadian College,2 and Fireside Travels,3 have given some idea of things nearer home, some little time ago. But while numerous pamphlets and essays have been written on our collegiate systems of education, the general development and present doings of Young America in the universities remain untouched.

      The academic influences exerted over American students are, it must be premised, vastly different from those of the old world. Imprimis, our colleges are just well into being. Reaching back into no dim antiquity, their rise and progress are traceable from their beginnings—beginnings not always the greatest. Thus saith the poet doctor of his Alma Mater:

      'Pray, who was on the Catalogue

      When college was begun?

      Two nephews of the President,

      And the Professor's son,

      (They turned a little Indian by,

      As brown as any bun;)

      Lord! how the Seniors knocked about

      That Freshman class of one!'

      From small beginnings and short lives our colleges have gathered neither that momentum of years heavy with mighty names and weighty memories, nor of wealth heaping massive piles and drawing within their cloistered walls the learning of successive centuries which carries the European universities crashing down the ages, though often heavy laden with the dead forms of mediæval preciseness. No established church makes with them common cause, no favoring and influential aristocracy gives them the careless security of a complete protection. Their development thus far has been under very different influences. Founded in the wilderness by our English ancestors, they were, at first, it is true, in their course of study and in foolish formula of ceremony an imperfect copy of trans-Atlantic originals. Starting from this point, their course has been shaped according to the peculiar genius of our institutions and people. Republican feeling has dispensed with the monastic dress, the servile demeanor toward superiors, and the ceremonious forms which had lost their significance. The peculiar wants of a new country have required not high scholarship, but more practical learning to meet pressing physical wants. Again, our numerous religious sects requiring each a nursery of its own children, and the great extent of our country, have called, or seemed to call (in spite of continually increasing facility of intercourse) for some one hundred and twenty colleges within our borders. Add to this a demand not peculiar but general—the increased claim of the sciences and of modern languages upon our regard—and the accompanying fallacy of supposing Latin and Greek heathenish and useless, and we have a summary view of the influences bearing upon our literary institutions.


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<p>1</p>

'In the fourteenth century, Novella de Andrea, daughter of the celebrated canonist, frequently occupied her father's chair; and her beauty was so striking, that a curtain was drawn before her in order not to distract the attention of the students.'

<p>2</p>

Vol. i. p. 392.

<p>3</p>

Vol. iii. pp. 379 and 473.