Book contents
- Frontmatter
- DIRECTIONS FOR PLACING THE PLATES
- DESCRIPTION OF THE WOODCUTS
- LIST OF SIGNATURES
- ERRATA
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTORY
- THE FIRST MILESTONE FROM CAMBRIDGE
- THE APPROACH AND PRINCIPAL AVENUE
- THE WALKS
- THE INSTALLATION IN 1835
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. I
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. II; COLLEGE HISTORIES
- A DREAM OF THE POETS
- MEMORIAL OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE
- FOVNDERS. I
- THE BOTANICAL GARDEN
- THE GOGMAGOGS
- TRINITY COLLEGE CHAPEL
- ON THE ANCIENT AMUSEMENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
- A LEGEND OF THE HILLS
- SIGHED ON KING'S BRIDGE. OCT. 1838
- THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
- MUSEUM OF THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
- NOTICE OF WILLUGHBY
- THE BOAT-RACE
- NEVILLE'S COURT
- CRITIQUE ON GRAY
- AN INDEPENDENT TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF THE RIGHT HON WILLIAM PITT
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. III: PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
- FOVNDERS. II
- PORTRAITURE OF DR. CAIUS
- THE UNION DEBATING SOCIETY
- ALABASTER
- CLARE HALL
- ORGANS
- POSTSCRIPT TO THE LEGEND OF THE HILLS
- ANECDOTES
- MILTON'S MULBERRY TREE
- BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES
- The Cambridge Portfolio pp. 216-236
- VOCABULARY. I
- DR. LEGGE
- READING PARTIES
- THE CAM
- ANCIENT BRICK
- THE WOODWARDIAN MUSEUM
- THE COLLEGE COURSE
- THE CLUBS OF CAMBRIDGE
- OLD PLATE
- THE GARDEN AND COURTS OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE
- Plate section
THE FIRST MILESTONE FROM CAMBRIDGE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 10 November 2010
- Frontmatter
- DIRECTIONS FOR PLACING THE PLATES
- DESCRIPTION OF THE WOODCUTS
- LIST OF SIGNATURES
- ERRATA
- PREFACE
- INTRODUCTORY
- THE FIRST MILESTONE FROM CAMBRIDGE
- THE APPROACH AND PRINCIPAL AVENUE
- THE WALKS
- THE INSTALLATION IN 1835
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. I
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. II; COLLEGE HISTORIES
- A DREAM OF THE POETS
- MEMORIAL OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE
- FOVNDERS. I
- THE BOTANICAL GARDEN
- THE GOGMAGOGS
- TRINITY COLLEGE CHAPEL
- ON THE ANCIENT AMUSEMENTS OF THE UNIVERSITY
- A LEGEND OF THE HILLS
- SIGHED ON KING'S BRIDGE. OCT. 1838
- THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
- MUSEUM OF THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL SOCIETY
- NOTICE OF WILLUGHBY
- THE BOAT-RACE
- NEVILLE'S COURT
- CRITIQUE ON GRAY
- AN INDEPENDENT TRIBUTE TO THE MEMORY OF THE RIGHT HON WILLIAM PITT
- SOURCES OF HISTORY. III: PRIVATE COLLECTIONS
- FOVNDERS. II
- PORTRAITURE OF DR. CAIUS
- THE UNION DEBATING SOCIETY
- ALABASTER
- CLARE HALL
- ORGANS
- POSTSCRIPT TO THE LEGEND OF THE HILLS
- ANECDOTES
- MILTON'S MULBERRY TREE
- BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICES
- The Cambridge Portfolio pp. 216-236
- VOCABULARY. I
- DR. LEGGE
- READING PARTIES
- THE CAM
- ANCIENT BRICK
- THE WOODWARDIAN MUSEUM
- THE COLLEGE COURSE
- THE CLUBS OF CAMBRIDGE
- OLD PLATE
- THE GARDEN AND COURTS OF GONVILLE AND CAIUS COLLEGE
- Plate section
Summary
It cannot fail to have been often remarked, that our two Universities, the only two strictly classic towns of our most unclassic land, are rarely if ever contemplated in that spirit of enthusiasm and poetic admiration, which is naturally due to the nursing mothers of so many of our saints and sages, our philosophers and bards divine,
The few whom genius gave to shine
Through every unborn age and undiscovered clime.
The feelings, on the contrary, with which our Alma Mater is generally approached, are either, on the part of her existing sons, those of careless indifference to the past, while all their thoughts are centred in their own immediate engagements or troubles, trials of strength physical or intellectual, the feats of the quill or the rifle, the whip or the oar: or, on the part of the strangers, who resort occasionally to the sequestered retreats of our academic bowers, the ideas, we apprehend, if closely analysed, would be found too often to flow in a far more confined and unintellectual channel; being limited for the most part to the probable amount of tradesmen's bills, the expense of furnishing apartments, the relative cost of lodgings in town or rooms in college, with all the other paraphernalia and wretched solicitudes of a mind,
de lodice paranda
Attonitæ.
Certainly, such are not the sentiments which are most genial to the place, if estimated according to its just pretensions; and it would have been not more difficult for the distracted poet of the Roman satirist's imagination to conceive
The steeds, the chariots, and the forms of gods;
And the fierce Fury, as her snakes she shook,
And withered the Rutulian with a look,
than for one occupied with thoughts like these to imbibe the inspiration which impregnates the atmosphere breathed once by a Bacon and a Newton, a Milton, and a Gray.
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- The Cambridge Portfolio , pp. 9 - 11Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1840