A Collection of College Words and Customs ...

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J. Bartlett, 1851 - 319 sivua
 

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Sivu 274 - LET children hear the mighty deeds Which God performed of old ; Which in our younger years we saw, And which our fathers told. 2 He bids us make his glories known, His works of power and grace ; And we'll convey his wonders down Through every rising race. 3 Our lips shall tell them to our sons, And they again to theirs, That generations yet unborn May teach them to their heirs. 4...
Sivu 277 - He bids us make his glories known, His works of power and grace; And we'll convey his wonders down Through every rising race. 3 Our lips shall tell them to our sons, And they again to theirs, That generations yet unborn May teach them to their heirs. 4 Thus shall they learn in God alone Their hope securely stands, That they may ne'er forget his works, But practise his commands.
Sivu 219 - An Act for the further security of His Majesty's Person and Government and the succession of the Crown in the Heirs of the late Princess Sophia being Protestants and for extinguishing the hopes of the late pretended Prince of Wales and his open and secret Abettors...
Sivu 4 - Latin in verse and prose, suo ut aiunt marte ["to stand, as they say, on his own feet"], and decline perfectly the paradigms of nouns and verbs in the Greek tongue, let him then, and not before, be capable of admission into the College.
Sivu 275 - Let the instructions of my mouth Deep in your hearts descend. 2 My tongue, by inspiration taught, Shall parables unfold, Dark oracles, but understood, And owned for truths of old ; 3 Which we from sacred registers Of ancient times have known, And our forefathers' pious care To us has handed down.
Sivu 276 - And our forefathers' pious care To us has handed down. Let children learn * the mighty deeds Which God performed of old ; Which, in our younger years, we saw, And which our fathers told. Our lips shall tell them to our sons, And they again to theirs; That generations yet unborn May teach them to their heirs.
Sivu 178 - The scholars shall never use their mother tongue, except that in public exercises of oratory, or such like, they be called to make them in English.
Sivu 3 - The general court had settled a government or superintendency over the college, viz. all the magistrates and elders over the ||six|| nearest churches and the president, or the greatest part of these. Most of them were now present...
Sivu 82 - ... of those who were the subjects of it. In one instance it even occasioned the prosecution of a Tutor ; but this was as late as 1733, when old rudeness had lost much of the people's reverence. The law, however, was suffered, with some modification, to continue more than a century. In the re'vised body of Laws made in the year 1734, we find this article : ' Notwithstanding the preceding pecuniary mulcts, it shall be lawful for the President, Tutors, and Professors, to punish Undergraduates by Boxing,...
Sivu 168 - ... resident or not, and generally keep their names on the boards, either to shew their desire to offer themselves candidates for Fellowships, or to become members of the Senate. If they erase their names, they save the...

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