[32]
The reason for his economy did not become apparent until after his death.
When he first came to the university he made friends with a gentleman in Cambridge to whom he was much attached, but who, at the time we write of, had long since been dead.
It was to support the daughters of his friend, who would have otherwise been obliged to earn their own living, that he saved his money; and in his will he left them a competency of fifty thousand dollars or more.
On one occasion a Freshman was sent to him to receive a private admonition for writing profane language on a settee; but the Freshman denied the accusation.
Sophocles's eyes twinkled.
“Did you not,” said he, “write the letters d-a-m-n?”
“No,” said the boy, laughing; “it must have been somebody else.”
Sophocles laughed and said he would report the case back to the college faculty.
A few days later he stopped the youth in the college yard and, merely saying “I have had your private admonition revoked,” passed on. Professor Sophocles was right.
If the Freshman had tried to deceive him he would not have laughed but looked grave.
The morning in April, 1861, after President Lincoln had issued his call for 75,000 troops, a Harvard Senior mentioned it to Sophocles, who said to him: “What can the government accomplish with 75,000 soldiers?
It is going to take ”
This work is licensed under a
Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 United States License.
An XML version of this text is available for download, with the additional restriction that you offer Perseus any modifications you make. Perseus provides credit for all accepted changes, storing new additions in a versioning system.