Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- First Impressions of Cambridge
- Some Particulars, rather Egotistical, but very Necessary
- Introduction to College Life
- The Cantab Language
- An American Student's First Impressions at Cambridge and on Cambridge
- Freshman Temptations and Experiences—Toryism of the Young Men, and Ideas Suggested by it
- The Boat Race
- A Trinity Supper Party
- The May Examination
- The First Long Vacation
- The Second Year
- Third Year
- Private Tuition
- Long Vacation Amusements
- A Second Edition of Third Year
- The Scholarship Examination
- The Reading Party
- Sawdust Pudding with Ballad Sauce
- 'Ev Ξvpoũ 'Akμή
- How I came to Take a Degree
- The πoλλoí and the Civil Law Classes
- The Classical Tripos
- A Visit to Eton
- Being Extinguished
- Reading for a Trinity Fellowship
- The Study of Theology at Cambridge
- Recent Changes at Cambridge
An American Student's First Impressions at Cambridge and on Cambridge
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 April 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- First Impressions of Cambridge
- Some Particulars, rather Egotistical, but very Necessary
- Introduction to College Life
- The Cantab Language
- An American Student's First Impressions at Cambridge and on Cambridge
- Freshman Temptations and Experiences—Toryism of the Young Men, and Ideas Suggested by it
- The Boat Race
- A Trinity Supper Party
- The May Examination
- The First Long Vacation
- The Second Year
- Third Year
- Private Tuition
- Long Vacation Amusements
- A Second Edition of Third Year
- The Scholarship Examination
- The Reading Party
- Sawdust Pudding with Ballad Sauce
- 'Ev Ξvpoũ 'Akμή
- How I came to Take a Degree
- The πoλλoí and the Civil Law Classes
- The Classical Tripos
- A Visit to Eton
- Being Extinguished
- Reading for a Trinity Fellowship
- The Study of Theology at Cambridge
- Recent Changes at Cambridge
Summary
Ήν δὲ οὐδὲ αδύνατος, ὡς Λακεδαιμύνιος, εἰπεῖν.
—Thucydides, Book iv.There are not a few persons in this community of ours, some of them not deficient in intelligence nor entirely destitute of the spirit of benevolence, who think it a most desirable and praiseworthy thing to stir up all the mischief they can between England and America. These well-disposed individuals doubtless have their reward, which I never felt inclined to envy them, my own ideas always urging me to a directly opposite course, either from some mental blindness which kept me behind the progressive democracy of this advancing age, or because I never intended to put myself in a position which would oblige me to propitiate or toady Irishmen or slaveholders. Ever since my early boyhood it had been a leading idea with me that the great branches of the Anglo-Saxon family, distinguished by their language, by their ethical principles, by their judiciously liberal political institutions, from the rest of the world, ought to work harmoniously together; that a great deal of the bad feeling between them arose from ignorance, and was therefore removable by mere contact and information; and that a citizen of either country who had the opportunity was doing his duty much better by endeavoring to promote a mutual knowledge of each other between the two peoples, and thus dispel many antipathies having more a hypothetical than a real foundation, than by laboring to revive and foster old germs of animosity which time and the natural course of events were already doing so much to kill.
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- Information
- Five Years in an English University , pp. 36 - 51Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1852