登陆注册
26270900000008

第8章 CHAPTER I(7)

"The great object we both have in view is the appropriation and consecration of our country place and other property to the service of the Lord Jesus Christ, by erecting a seminary on the plan (modified by circumstances) of South Hadley, and by having an Orphan Asylum, not only for orphans, but for those who are more forlorn than orphans in having wicked parents. Did our property suffice I would prefer both, as the care (Christian and charitable) of the children would be blessed work for the pupils of the seminary." The orphanage was, indeed, their first idea, and was, obviously, the more natural and conventional memorial for a little eight-year-old lad, but the idea of the seminary gradually superseded it as Mr. and Mrs. Durant came to take a greater and greater interest in educational problems as distinguished from mere philanthropy. Miss Conant wisely reminds us that, "Just at this time new conditions confronted the common schools of the country. The effects of the Civil War were felt in education as in everything else. During the war the business of teaching had fallen into women's hands, and the close of the war found a great multitude of new and often very incompetent women teachers filling positions previously held by men. The opportunities for the higher education of women were entirely inadequate. Mt. Holyoke was turning away hundreds of girls every year, and there were few or no other advanced schools for girls of limited means."

In 1867 Mr. Durant was elected a trustee of Mt. Holyoke. In 1868

Mrs. Durant gave to Mt. Holyoke ten thousand dollars, which enabled the seminary to build its first library building. We are told that Mr. and Mrs. Durant used to say that there could not be too many Mt. Holyokes. And in 1870, on March 17, the charter of Wellesley Female Seminary was signed by Governor William Claflin.

On April 16, 1870, the first meeting of the Board of Trustees was held, at Mr. Durant's Marlborough Street house in Boston, and the Reverend Edward N. Kirk, pastor of the Mt. Vernon Church in Boston, was elected president of the board. Mr. Durant arranged that both men and women should constitute the Board of Trustees, but that women should constitute the faculty; and by his choice the first and second presidents of the college were women. The continuance of this tradition by the trustees has in every respect justified the ideal and the vision of the founder. The trustees were to be members of Evangelical churches, but no denomination was to have a majority upon the board. On March 7, 1873, the name of the institution was changed by legislative act to Wellesley College.

Possibly visits to Vassar had had something to do with the change, for Mr. and Mrs. Durant studied Vassar when they were ****** their own plans.

And meanwhile, since the summer of 1871, the great house on the hill above Lake Waban had been rising, story on story.

Miss Martha Hale Shackford, Wellesley, 1896, in her valuable little pamphlet, "College Hall", written immediately after the fire, to preserve for future generations of Wellesley women the traditions of the vanished building, tells us with what intentness Mr. Durant studied other colleges, and how, working with the architect, Mr. Hammatt Billings of Boston, "details of line and contour were determined before ground was broken, and the symmetry of the huge building was assured from the beginning."

"Reminiscences of those days are given by residents of Wellesley, who recall the intense interest of the whole countryside in this experiment. From Natick came many high-school girls, on Saturday afternoons, to watch the work and to make plans for attending the college. As the brick-work advanced and the scaffolding rose higher and higher, the building assumed gigantic proportions, impressive in the extreme. The bricks were brought from Cambridge in small cars, which ran as far as the north lodge and were then drawn, on a roughly laid switch track, to the side of the building by a team of eight mules. Other building materials were unloaded in the meadow and then transferred by cars. As eighteen loads of bricks arrived daily the pre-academic aspect of the campus was one of noise and excitement. At certain periods during the finishing of the interior, there were almost three hundred workmen."

A pretty story has come down to us of one of these workmen who fell ill, and when he found that he could not complete his work, begged that he might lay one more brick before he was taken away, and was lifted up by his comrades that he might set the brick in its place.

Mr. Durant's eye was upon every detail. He was at hand every day and sometimes all day, for he often took his lunch up to the campus with him, and ate it with the workmen in their noon hour. In 1874 he writes: "The work is very hard and I get very tired. I do feel thankful for the privilege of trying to do something in the cause of Christ. I feel daily that I am not worthy of such a privilege, and I do wish to be a faithful servant to my Master.

Yet this does not prevent me from being very weary and sorely discouraged at times. To-night I am so tired I can hardly sit up to write."

And from one who, as a young girl, was visiting at his country house when the house was building, we have this vivid reminiscence:

"My first impression of Mr. Durant was, 'Here is the quickest thinker'--my next--'and the keenest wit I have ever met.' Then came the day when under the long walls that stood roofed but bare in the solitude above Lake Waban, I sat upon a pile of plank, now the flooring of Wellesley College, and listened to Mr. Durant.

同类推荐
  • 洪恩灵济真君礼愿文

    洪恩灵济真君礼愿文

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 古文关键

    古文关键

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 谪星说诗

    谪星说诗

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 升庵诗话

    升庵诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 鲊话

    鲊话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 有没有一种爱叫人不流泪

    有没有一种爱叫人不流泪

    在人生的舞台上,肖萌萌注定是一个悲剧中的角色,母亲跳楼自杀,满地红色的花蕾吹落萌萌最后一份开心,从此不再开口说话。在精神病院萌萌遇到了戴兰,一个同样残落的灵魂,戴兰的继父竟然就是萌萌的亲生父亲,几经挣扎与波澜,最终父亲竟然也选择同样的方式离开了世界,萌萌从此迷失在黑暗的漩涡里,直到遇到林宇。萌萌爱上林宇,为他笑,为他哭,为他堕胎,在经历艳照与情感的折磨下,萌萌终逃到李凯的保护下。萌萌走了,林宇才知道自己在不知不觉中已经爱上了她,可惜一切无力挽回,萌萌得了血癌,终要被命运的洪流所吞噬——
  • 不打不骂穷养男孩

    不打不骂穷养男孩

    “穷养”的男孩,从小就能养成吃苦耐劳的作风,从容面对各种困境。“穷养”的男孩,不会轻易被生活中的挫折打倒,始终斗志昂扬。“穷养”的男孩,懂得自我约束,不易被外界的诱惑所引诱。“穷养”的男孩,更懂得责任的内涵,敢于担当。本书的最大特色,就是针对穷养男孩问题,提出了更具实用性、科学性的教育方法,如个性、能力、习惯等多方面。
  • 逆星劫

    逆星劫

    月满中天,五星袭月,天将星劫。拉风少年小叶子,一个平凡的小混混,偶然的机会进入了修行的世界,从此一步步走上武学巅峰,逆转星劫,消除世间仇恨。其间,爱情、友情接踵而至,演绎了一场荡气回肠的人生大戏。求点击,收藏,推荐啦,谢谢。。。QQ交流群224307327欢迎交流
  • 第六代界王

    第六代界王

    少年王浩然是家族内所有人都羡慕的天之骄子,一次外出,彻底改变了他的人生,修为被废,兄弟惨死,就连和她都是有了无法言说的隔阂。一次同族引诱,为了查清兄弟惨死的真相,他不惜冒着生命危险......
  • 重回九六之连接时空的电脑

    重回九六之连接时空的电脑

    2012年陈天穿越了来到一个与地球基本一样的平行空间这里才1996年拥有16年领先知识的已经足够他在新的世界里功成名就了,老天还送了一他一个能与原来时空联网的虚拟笔记本,那么世界也将因他而变后来又发现笔记本还可以升级,升级后的电脑连接上了一个新的时空,让陈天拥有自由穿越两个时空的能力------希望大家能多评论多推荐本书已经签约放心收藏,只要在旁边加入书架上轻轻一点就完成烟枪在这里先谢了本书交流群(154481065)推荐一本书《洪荒大熊》
  • 枪火灼心

    枪火灼心

    枪口喷出的火焰是何等的瑰丽绚烂,让人忘却死亡的痛苦。
  • 少年将军:清清碧海心

    少年将军:清清碧海心

    少年才俊,官拜将军,天下第一;山野丫头,风华绝代,天下无双。树下的相遇,他接住了她也接住了自己的一生,于她则是顺手医治了一位孱弱少年,却也从此在心里藏下了一个人。他是将军,注定要征战疆场,一个情字终难全。“清清,我是大隋的将军,战死沙场才是我最终的归宿。”“你是天下第一的天宝将军,你不会的,你的命是我救的,我不允许你死!”她本是无牵无挂妙手回春的医者,但独独没有医者仁心的悲悯,只会救一个人,只听一个人的话,“都哥,你记住,这天下人的生死都与我无关,只要你活着,我只要你活着。”尘埃落定后她终于明白医者不能自医,更医不了宿命。青梅竹马,师出同门,本是两小无猜,却因乱世天下,注定是一场无法言说的殇。
  • 傲娇世子妃

    傲娇世子妃

    她,是从现世穿越来的第一女特工。他,是神秘莫测的懿王世子。当聪慧俏皮的四小姐杠上睿智似妖的陆世子,又是一段怎样的缘分?本文一对一绝宠无虐!
  • 影空游弋

    影空游弋

    浩瀚宇宙中,有着那么一个叫做掌星者的种族它们,只有魂体,却不停穿梭在不同的时空中守护着时空的安定
  • 舞女倾城,赖上腹黑谋士

    舞女倾城,赖上腹黑谋士

    闯祸似乎是她的天性,但身处深宫之中便成为了致命伤。救国救民必定是他的志向,他经历太多,侠风义胆,却独过不了情这一关。犹记初遇时,众里只见他。若水尴尬的呆在原地,是他——荆轲帮忙解围。惊鸿一瞥,若水已将荆轲暗自铭记。未料再遇,他竟然说要护自己周全。若水肆无忌惮的相信依赖着他。未曾奢望,亦不敢奢望的眷恋。唯有夜深人静之时独自幻想。当她终于打开心扉,一生只为他一人舞,惊现,他对她的好只是源于一场华丽的误会。知晓真相的若水会何去何从?刺秦在即,他会平安归来,履行对她的承诺吗?最后一朵桂花落下,她许愿:“但愿明年桂花开,花在人在,看花人不变。”