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

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


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grotesqueness of each uncouth disguised wight, and the dark background of the encircling forest, make the wild mirth almost solemn.

      So ends the fun of the closing year; and with the exception of the various excitements of burlesque debate on Thanksgiving eve, when the smallest Freshman in either Society is elected President pro tempore; of the noctes ambrosianæ of the secret societies; of appointments, prize essays, and the periodical issue of the Yale Literary, now a venerable periodical of twenty years' standing; the severe drill of college study finds little relaxation during the winter months. Three recitations or lectures each day, a review each day of the last lesson, review of and examination on each term's study, with two biennial examinations during the four years' course, require great diligence to excel, and considerable industry to keep above water. But with the returning spring the unused walks again are paced, and the dry keels launched into the vernal waters. Again, in the warm twilight of evening, you hear the laugh and song go up under the wide-spreading elms. Now, too, comes the Exhibition of the Wooden Spoon, where the low-appointment men burlesque the staid performances of college, and present the lowest scholar on the appointment-list with an immense spoon, handsomely carved from rosewood, and engraved with the convivial motto: 'Dum vivimus vivamus.'

      Then, too, come those summer days upon the harbor, when the fleet club-boats, and their stalwart crews, like those of Alcinous,

      'κοὑροι ἁναρρἱπτειν αλα πηδὡ,'

      in their showy uniforms, push out from Ryker's; some bound upward past the oyster-beds of Fair Haven, away up among the salt-marsh meadows, where the Quinnipiac wanders under quaint old bridges among fair, green hills; some for the Light, shooting out into the broad waters of the open bay, their feathered oars flashing in the sunlight; some for Savin's Rock, where among the cool cedars that overshadow the steep rock, they sing uproarious student-songs until the dreamy beauty of ocean, with its laughing sunlight, its white sails, and green, quiet shores, like visible music, shall steal in and fill the soul until the noisy hilarity becomes eloquent silence. And now, as in the twilight-hour they are again afloat, you may hear the song again:

      'Many the mile we row, boys,

      Merry, merry the song;

      The joys of long ago, boys,

      Shall be remembered long.

      Then as we rest upon the oar,

      We raise the cheerful strain,

      Which we have often sung before,

      And gladly sing again.'

      But perhaps the most interesting day of college-life is 'Presentation-Day,' when the Seniors, having passed the various ordeals of viva voce and written examinations, are presented by the senior tutor to the President, as worthy of their degrees. This ceremony is succeeded by a farewell poem and oration by two of the class chosen for the purpose, after which they partake of a collation with the college faculty, and then gather under the elms in front of the colleges. They seat themselves on a ring of benches, inside of which are placed huge tubs of lemonade, (the strongest drink provided for public occasions,) long clay pipes, and great store of mildest Turkey tobacco. Here, led on by an amateur band of fiddlers, flutists, etc., through the long afternoon of 'the leafy month of June,' surrounded by the other classes who crowd about in cordial sympathy, they smoke manfully, harangue enthusiastically, laugh uproariously, and sing lustily, beginning always with the glorious old Burschen song of 'Gaudeamus':

      'Gaudeamus igitur

      Juvenes dum sumus:

      Post jucundam juventutem,

      Post molestam senectutem,

      Nos habebit humus.'

      'Pereat tristitia,

      Pereant osores,

      Pereat diabolus,

      Quivis antiburschius

      Atque irrisores.'

      Then as the shadows grow long, perhaps they sing again those stirring words which one returning to the third semi-centennial of his Alma Mater, wrote with all the warmth and power of manly affection:

      'Count not the tears of the long-gone years,

      With their moments of pain and sorrow;

      But laugh in the light of their memories bright,

      And treasure them all for the morrow.

      Then roll the song in waves along,

      While the hours are bright before us,

      And grand and hale are the towers of Yale,

      Like guardians towering o'er us.

      'Clasp ye the hand 'neath the arches grand

      That with garlands span our greeting.

      With a silent prayer that an hour as fair

      May smile on each after meeting:

      And long may the song, the joyous song,

      Roll on in the hours before us,

      And grand and hale may the elms of Yale

      For many a year bend o'er us.'

      Then standing in closer circle, they pass around to give, each to each, a farewell grasp of the hand; and amid that extravagant merriment the lips begin to quiver, and eyes grow dim. Then, two by two, preceded by the miscellaneous band, playing 'The Road to Boston,' and headed by a huge base-viol, borne by two stout fellows, and played by a third, they pass through each hall of the long line of buildings, giving farewell cheers, and at the foot of one of the tall towers, each throws his handful of earth on the roots of an ivy, which, clinging about those brown masses of stone, in days to come, he trusts will be typical of their mutual, remembrance as he breathes the silent prayer: 'Lord, keep our memories green!'

      So end the college-days of these most uproarious of mirth-makers and hardest of American students; and the hundred whose joys and sorrows have been identified through four happy years, are dispersed over the land. They are partially gathered again at Commencement, but the broken band is never completely united. On the third anniversary of their graduation, the first class-meeting takes place; and the first happy father is presented with a silver cup, suitably inscribed. On the tenth, twentieth, and other decennial years, the gradually diminishing band, in smaller and smaller numbers, meet about the beloved shrine, until only two or three gray-haired men clasp the once stout hand and renew the remembrance of 'the days that are gone.'

      'They come ere life departs,

      Ere winged death appears.

      To throng their joyous hearts

      With dreams of sunnier years:

      To meet once more

      Where pleasures sprang,

      And arches rang

      With songs of yore.'

      GO IN AND WIN

      Will nothing rouse the Northmen

      To see what they can do?

      When in one day of our war-growth

      The South are growing two?

      When they win a victory it always counts a pair,

      One at home in Dixie, and another over there!

      North, you have spent your millions!

      North, you have sent your men!

      But if the war ask billions,

      You must give it all again.

      Don't stop to think of what you've done—it's very fine and true—

      But in fighting for our life, the thing is, what we've yet to do.

      Who dares to talk of party,

      And the coming President,

      When the rebels threaten 'bolder raids,'

      And


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