Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- I A COLLEGE BIOGRAPHER'S NIGHTMARE
- II ‘THE MEMORY OF OUR BENEFACTORS’
- III MOTIVES AND IDEALS OF THE EARLY FOUNDER
- IV THE COLLEGE BENEFACTOR
- V PRE-REFORMATION COLLEGE LIFE
- VI MONKS IN COLLEGE
- VII AN ELIZABETHAN EPISODE IN ENGLISH HISTORY
- VIII DR. CAIUS: AN APPRECIATION
- IX THE EARLY UNDERGRADUATE
- X ACADEMIC “SPORTS”
- XI UNDERGRADUATE LETTERS OF THE 17TH CENTURY
- XII LETTERS OF AN 18TH CENTURY STUDENT
- COLLEGE LIFE AND WAYS SIXTY YEARS
- INDEX
I - A COLLEGE BIOGRAPHER'S NIGHTMARE
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- Preface
- Contents
- I A COLLEGE BIOGRAPHER'S NIGHTMARE
- II ‘THE MEMORY OF OUR BENEFACTORS’
- III MOTIVES AND IDEALS OF THE EARLY FOUNDER
- IV THE COLLEGE BENEFACTOR
- V PRE-REFORMATION COLLEGE LIFE
- VI MONKS IN COLLEGE
- VII AN ELIZABETHAN EPISODE IN ENGLISH HISTORY
- VIII DR. CAIUS: AN APPRECIATION
- IX THE EARLY UNDERGRADUATE
- X ACADEMIC “SPORTS”
- XI UNDERGRADUATE LETTERS OF THE 17TH CENTURY
- XII LETTERS OF AN 18TH CENTURY STUDENT
- COLLEGE LIFE AND WAYS SIXTY YEARS
- INDEX
Summary
… It was a strange encounter altogether, as such experiences are apt to be; but I think there was a certain moral in it. What I had been doing or reading, to prompt such fancies, I will not undertake to say; but the scene took the form of a sort of Vision of Judgment. The locality in which I found myself was rather puzzling to me. It was not this Hall, nor was it our Chapel, though there were features in it which resembled them both; but enlarged beyond all recognition. It was filled from end to end with a vast crowd, which seemed to stretch out interminably in rank beyond rank.
The occupants evidently came from many, and some from remote districts of the country; and by their dress and deportment seemed to extend from very early times down to our own day. There were medieval prelates amongst them: some of these of saintly aspect: men—as I felt sure—, of State, and learning and piety. Others of them, however, were clad in warlike garb:—I noticed one stalwart Irish archbishop, beneath whose priestly garments, as those about made hasty way for him, I caught the glint of a coat of mail. And there was much blood on the sword of a certain lordly bishop of a neighbouring diocese. There were many monks, too, in the throng; mostly Benedictines, in their black garb, from the once famous Houses of Norwich and Bury; mingled with Cluniacs from Lewes, and a group of Augustinian canons in their sober garments.
- Type
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- Information
- Early Collegiate Life , pp. 1 - 4Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1913