University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN)

 - Class of 1891

Page 31 of 142

 

University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 31 of 142
Page 31 of 142



University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 30
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University of the South - Cap and Gown Yearbook (Sewanee, TN) online collection, 1891 Edition, Page 32
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Page 31 text:

©he ©ap anb ( oxxm. 23 equally well known as being able to point a snail, an orchid, or a partridge with perfect impartiality. Mathematics really did look venerable, for his long silver beard parted to right and left as he rode, but even he needed no propping, for he sat his horse like a boy of sixteen. It surprised me just at first to see how deeply interested these gentle- men were in the game, how their spirits rose and fell as one side or the other got ahead. But presently I became interested myself, and forgot to watch them, and when, after some close playing, my side won I was as wildly excited as any one. And at supper I discussed errors as hotly as possible. After supper Miss Angelica pinned a red ribbon on my coat, and told me that I was to belong to the Sigma Epsilon Literary Society. That, as it was an open night when the two societies would meet together we would go. I had a little faint turn remembering the model youth of my dreams, but I thought that perhaps the Sewanee student was not one of those dreadful things, and, thank God ! he was not. The young men spoke well, and all the literary celebrities of the University Magazine were pointed out to me. There was nothing stereotyped in either manner or speech, and mixed with much youthful dignity there was a good deal of fun and humor. Before the evening was done 1 was thoroughly interested. I could easily understand how it was that the professors were so fond of these young fel- lows. How it was that they played tennis with them, belonged to their fra- ternities, cheered their base-ball, and took a vital interest in their Magazine and athletics, at the same time requiring good work and putting up some of the hardest examinations I have ever seen. It is the proper feeling to exist between students and professors, but I had never seen it anywhere else. Miss Angelica took me to church the next day, and seated me on the end of a bench in the middle aisle. If you want to see, she said, step out in the aisle ; everybody does it. Soon the lower half of the building was filled with ladies and children, and some gentlemen. The upper half was filled with students. The pro- fessors and older gownsmen coming in a side door to seats on a platform known as the Synagogue. On a lower level was the Squab ' s Nest, where the young gownsmen sat. It was all very orderly, and presently the organ sounded, the last bell rang, and in the choir-room I heard the singing begin, led by a cornet. It was very sweet, and I felt myself thrill- ing in sympathy with the clear young voices.

Page 30 text:

22 @The ®ap anif (ffiotxttx. lie is coming here now. Of course I rose too, and, Miss Angelica saying, Mr. Initoo, I felt my hand grasped as if by a long-lost brother. Very glad to see you, the theologue said; Jack Mayo wrote me about you. Jack is an old boy, you know ; we try to keep the run of all our old students. Hope you have come for the summer? Oh, yes! earnestly. He is hunting for the University, Miss Angelica put in. A shadow swept over the theologue ' s bright face ; it seemed a shame that it should be there even for a moment. We have not much to show, he said rather sadly; all our work goes away in the students, you know, and, indeed, Sewanee is rather a feeling than a seeing. But T shall be glad to show you what there is. Thank you; you are very kind, I answered, and please excuse me, but I did not catch your name. I do no not think Miss Angelica men- tioned it. She did not. Miss Angelica is not to be trusted. My name is Gailor. I have asthma, do n ' t you hear ? And am one of the professors who have to be propped up — ha! ha! Amid all the laughter that shook me as well as the rest, a gentleman with a blonde mustache, a blue-ribboned dandy straw hat, and clothed in a Avay that left nothing to be desired, joined the group. ' Mr. Gailor put his hand on his shoulder. Another of the fossils, he said, Modern Languages— ha! ha! Then all Miss Angelica ' s chaff was repeated. And now if Miss Angelica will excuse you, Mr. Gailor went on, I will take you across the grounds to where the rest of the faculty are laid out on logs, and if you will join me in a cigar we will fumigate the old fellows. So we went, he and I and Modern Languages, to where on a log a num- ber of gentlemen were seated. I found Greek with a tender mustache and a cutaway coat. History in tennis flannels. Metaphysics and the Proctor, one a West Pointer and the other from Annapolis, two of the best set up men I had ever seen; and if there were some silver threads in their beards that had come to be a hopeful sign, seeing the rest were so young. I did not see all the faculty that afternoon, but presently General Math- ematics came game galloping upon old George, a thoroughly well known character at Sewanee, followed by two setters, Dick and Ned,



Page 32 text:

24 ®ite ( ap txnit (f oxvtx. The church was a temporary structure that had been patched and added to until in was a most conglomerate piece of architecture. It was churchly, however, and after the first moment I never again remembered that the benches were not painted, and that only the main aisle and the chancel had any carpets. The altar was ablaze with flowers, but no candles, and the light thrown on them from a corona of lamps was beautiful. The organ and the cornet were played by students, and the choir-master was also a student. I had thought the music sweet as it came, but once in the side door the volume of sound was remarkable. Everybody sang. I saw two, and sometimes three, students leaning over one hymnal, and found myself imitating a rain-crow most successfully. It was a lovely service. The responses sounding like a roar to one who had come from a whispering city church ; and I wondered, Have I ever prayed and praised before ? And the sermon ? Well, I felt turned upside down morally, and decided that I had not been converted, and was not half the good fellow I had thought myself. On Monday I went into a number of the class rooms, and was delighted with the course of study ; but this investigation had the same effect on me mentally that the sermon had had morally ; and I found out that I was not quite as learned as I had thought. On Thursday evening I was taken to the E. Q. B. Club. The lead, the discussion, the supper, were all good, but the stories that came after, the mossy jokes of Miss Angelica ' s description, were more jolly than words can say. Everything was very simple, but framed in the truest good fel- lowship, and the most whole-souled hospitality. On Friday some one remarked, You have been here a week. I looked up in astonishment. Only that? I said, slowly; if you had asked me I should have- answered, ' I have been here all my life. ' How extraordinary ! And you have not seen a newspaper, Miss Angelica went on. I made sure you would grumble about that. A paper! I repeated. A paper! Does the world wag still? Are they still murdering, and lynching, and embezzling, and lying, out in the fury-haunted world? I am sorry you reminded me of it. It was really remarkable how time had flown, how busy and interested I had been, and yet how I had accomplished nothing except contentment ; J

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