“
[47]
did before they went into the Green Vaults.
You will see a jewelled fireplace there which is worth more than all I own in the world.”
The young lady looked, however, as if it would take more than the Green Vaults to cure her love for jewelry.
Professor Child's second important interest was politics, and as a rule he much preferred talking on this to literary subjects.
Josiah Quincy was the most distinguished president that Harvard College has had, unless we except President Eliot; and his admirers have been accustomed to refer to his administration as “Consule Planco.”
His politics did not differ widely from those of John Quincy Adams, who was the earliest statesman of the anti-slavery struggle, and a true hero in his way. After Quincy, the presidents of the university became more and more conservative, until Felton, who was a pronounced pro-slavery Whig, and even attempted to defend the invasion of Kansas in a public meeting.
The professors and tutors naturally followed in the train of the president, while a majority of the sons of wealthy men among the undergraduates always took the southern side.
The son of an abolitionist who wished to go through Harvard in those days found it a penitential pilgrimage.
He was certain to suffer an extra amount of
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