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
- 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
λεύσων δ’ ἔι που γνοίη στατὸν εἰς ὕδωρ.
Sophocles' Philoctetes.Seeing if by any possibility he knew his Hydrostatics.
Very Free Translation.A busy time indeed is the term before going out to the “Questionists Candidates for Honors.” Ants, bees, boatcrews spirting at the Willows, jockeys nearing the post and getting the last half inch out of their nags (though this last simile is perhaps more appropriate to the private tutors than to their pupils), are but faint types of their activity. They even break in upon their cherished hours of exercise. Lucky is the man who lives a mile off from his private tutor, or has rooms ten minutes' walk from chapel; he is sure of that much constitutional daily. They have little appetites for their not very tempting dinners, and grudge themselves their usual hours of sleep. The Classical men are rather the busiest; they have a double burden to undergo, and a most critical achievement before them—to get up Mathematics enough to pass, without sacrificing the time necessary to keep up their Classics to the proper point—the minimum of knowledge in the one case, the maximum of acquisition in the other. Of those rarce aves who are aiming, and with a fair prospect, at success in both Triposes, one hardly knows what to think.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Five Years in an English University , pp. 306 - 327Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1852