Random Quote
"There are only two kinds of scholars; those who love ideas and those who hate them."
More: Ideas quotes
Follow us on Twitter
Never miss a good book again! Follow Read Print on Twitter
Preface
-
-
Rate it:
Our memories of Oxford, if we have long made her a Castle of Indolence, vary no less than do the shifting aspects of her scenery. Days of spring and of mere pleasure in existence have alternated with days of gloom and loneliness, of melancholy, of resignation. Our mental pictures of the place are tinged by many moods, as the landscape is beheld in shower and sunshine, in frost, and in the colourless drizzling weather. Oxford, that once seemed a pleasant porch and entrance into life, may become a dingy ante-room, where we kick our heels with other weary, waiting people. At last, if men linger there too late, Oxford grows a prison, and it is the final condition of the loiterer to take "this for a hermitage." It is well to leave the enchantress betimes, and to carry away few but kind recollections. If there be any who think and speak ungently of their Alma Mater, it is because they have outstayed their natural "welcome while," or because they have resisted her genial influence in youth.
Do you like this chapter?
If you're writing a Andrew Lang essay and need some advice,
post your Andrew Lang essay question on our
Facebook page where fellow bookworms are always glad to help!

Recommend to friends






