The Bay State Monthly — Volume 1, No. 3, March, 1884 by Various
page 44 of 100 (44%)
page 44 of 100 (44%)
![]() | ![]() |
|
England, have erected this stone, that one who deserves the highest
honors from our literary men may be no longer without a monument, however humble." Edward Everett delivered the address at the dedication of the monument. The closing passage of his oration is as follows:-- "While the College which he founded shall continue to the latest posterity, a monument not unworthy of the most honored name, we trust that this plain memorial also will endure; and, while it guides the dutiful votary to the spot where his ashes are deposited, will teach to those who survey it the supremacy of intellectual and 'moral desert, and encourage them, too, by a like munificence, to aspire to a name as bright as that which stands engraven on its shaft,-- 'Clarum et venerabile nomen Gentibus, et multum nostrae quod proderat urbi.'" The citizens of New England entered most heartily into the idea of establishing this college and contributed whatever they could; utensils from their homes, stock from their farms, their goods, merchandise, anything, in fine, which they had to give, so anxious were they to educate their youth, and especially to provide for an educated ministry. Peirce, in his History of the college, says:-- "When we read of a number of sheep bequeathed by one man, of a quantity of cotton cloth worth nine shillings presented by another, of a pewter flagon worth ten shillings by a third, of a fruit-dish, a sugar-spoon, a silver-tipped jug, one great salt, and one small trencher salt, |
|