. The life and letters of Edward Everett Hale . Idid not go home for an hour or two, besides theregular Saturday holiday. We were also allowedtwo Sundays in each term to spend at home andwe always claimed them. It is true that his college journal records manya walk in town, and doubtless true also that he en-joyed the family life more than his life in it should also be said that the journal recordsvery little in the way of dissatisfaction with mo-notony, and on the other hand puts down a greatmany things that were undoubtedly keenly interest-ing to him. A year or so after graduatio


. The life and letters of Edward Everett Hale . Idid not go home for an hour or two, besides theregular Saturday holiday. We were also allowedtwo Sundays in each term to spend at home andwe always claimed them. It is true that his college journal records manya walk in town, and doubtless true also that he en-joyed the family life more than his life in it should also be said that the journal recordsvery little in the way of dissatisfaction with mo-notony, and on the other hand puts down a greatmany things that were undoubtedly keenly interest-ing to him. A year or so after graduation he hadstill left a pleasing impression, at least of his lateryears. He wrote to Samuel Longfellow, who wasabout to move into his old room in Massachusetts,that it was the place in which he had passed thehappiest times of his life. Probably both impres-sions are well founded. In Freshman year thingswould naturally have come hard on a boy so youngand so accustomed to a gay and lively family cir-cle. But as he became used to college life, more. o O r*-^ -*-. CO ^ ^ H J^ D ^ 3 C) 23 ^^ c-i < •*^ -»^ #v %i o 2i ?sJ •*~ -Q M -^ <o _J t/3 Q ^ ^ «n ^^ o «-» ^ 5 ^ ^^ • ^ ^ \j ^ <3 5 2^ ?^?^ -^ _< O 5vC COLLEGE LIFE 19 familiar with his opportunities, and more able tooccupy himself with things that really interestedhim, he could not but have found life agreeableand happy. His later recollections of college studies were notmore favorable than those of college life. Othershave criticized the college system at about thesame time. There appears to have been littledone by the tutors and professors except settinglessons and exercises and hearing or receivingthem. Still it is not clear ,in my fathers case thatthe system was not pretty good. We cannot sayhow he might have done under one which we shouldcall better. To a boy of such wide-ranging inter-ests, the larger scope of the elective system wouldof course have been a great privilege. Still hemade good use of the limit


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Keywords: ., bookauthorhaleedwa, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, bookyear1917