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An American at Oxford

An American at Oxford

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Chapter 1 THE OXFORD FRESHMAN

Word Count: 1567    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

is presently shown to his cloistral chambers by a friendly and urbane butler or steward. To accommodate the newcomers in the more populous colleges, a measure is resorted t

"-that is, in some townsman's house-hard by the college gate. This arrangement makes possible closer and more intimate relationship among them than would otherwise be likely; and after three years of the very free life within those sharded walls, a cloist

ects to bring them, as I confess I did through ignorance, the deficiency is supplied by the scout, a dignitary in the employ of the college, who stands in somewhat more than the place of a servant and less than that of a parent to half a dozen fellows whose rooms are adjacent. The scout levies on the man above for sheets, on the man below for knives and forks, and on the man across the staircase for table

air amount of tea, coffee, and sugar. Out of all this he makes a sumptuous living. I knew only one exception, and that was when four out of six men on a certain scout's staircase happened to be vegetarians, and five teetotalers. The poor fellow was in extremities for meat and in desperation for drink. There was only one more pitiable sight in college, and that was the sole student on the staircase who ate meat and drank wine; the scout bagged food and drink from him ceaselessly. At the end of one term the student left a half dozen bottles of sherry, which he had merely tasted, in his sideboard; and when he came back it was gone. "Where's my sherry, Betts?" he asked. "Sherry, sir? you ain't got no sherry." "But I left six bottles; you had no right to more than the one that was broken." "Yes, sir; but when I had taken that, sir, the 'arf dozen was broke." According to Oxford traditions the student had no recourse; and be it set down to his praise, he never blamed the scout. He bemoaned the f

ising him as to trying for the athletic teams, joining the college clubs and societies, and in a word as to all the concerns of undergraduate life except his studies-these come later. If a man has any particular gift, athletic or otherwise, the tutor introduces him to the me

s expected to return these calls at once, and is debarred by a happy custom from leaving his card if he does not find his man. He goes again and again until he does find him. By direct int

f you can to breakfast with Br

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obin

er freshmen whose interests are

is given newcomers in those American colleges where fraternity life is strong, and might even be regarded as a more civilized form of the rushes and cane sprees and even hazings that used to serve with us to introduce newcomers to their seniors. Many second-year breakfasts are perfunctory enough; the host has a truly British air of saying that since for better or for worse he is destined to look upon your face and abide by your deeds, he is willing to make the best of it. If you prove a "bounder," you are soo

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An American at Oxford
An American at Oxford
“An American at Oxford by John Corbin”
1 Chapter 1 THE OXFORD FRESHMAN2 Chapter 2 EVENING3 Chapter 3 THE MIND OF THE COLLEGE4 Chapter 4 CLUB LIFE IN THE COLLEGE5 Chapter 5 SOCIAL LIFE IN THE UNIVERSITY6 Chapter 6 SLACKING ON THE ISIS AND THE CHERWELL7 Chapter 7 AS SEEN FROM AN OXFORD TUB8 Chapter 8 A LITTLE SCRIMMAGE WITH ENGLISH RUGBY9 Chapter 9 TRACK AND FIELD ATHLETICS10 Chapter 10 ENGLISH AND AMERICAN SPORTSMANSHIP11 Chapter 11 THE PASSMAN12 Chapter 12 THE HONOR SCHOOLS13 Chapter 13 THE TUTOR14 Chapter 14 READING FOR EXAMINATIONS15 Chapter 15 THE EXAMINATION16 Chapter 16 OXFORD QUALITIES AND THEIR DEFECTS17 Chapter 17 THE UNIVERSITY AND REFORM18 Chapter 18 THE UNIVERSITY AND THE PEOPLE19 Chapter 19 THE UNIVERSITY BEFORE THE COLLEGE20 Chapter 20 THE MEDI VAL HALL21 Chapter 21 THE COLLEGE SYSTEM22 Chapter 22 THE GOLDEN AGE OF THE MEDI VAL HALL23 Chapter 23 THE ORIGIN OF THE MODERN UNDERGRADUATE24 Chapter 24 THE INSIGNIFICANCE OF THE MODERN UNIVERSITY25 Chapter 25 THE COLLEGE IN AMERICA26 Chapter 26 THE SOCIAL AND ATHLETIC PROBLEM27 Chapter 27 THE ADMINISTRATIVE PROBLEM28 Chapter 28 THE EDUCATIONAL PROBLEM29 Chapter 29 ATHLETIC TRAINING IN ENGLAND30 Chapter 30 CLIMATE AND INTERNATIONAL ATHLETICS31 Chapter 31 Portions of English Authors.32 Chapter 32 The History of the English Language.33 Chapter 33 The History of English Literature.34 Chapter 34 English Authors.35 Chapter 35 History of the English Language.36 Chapter 36 History of English Literature.37 Chapter 37 Special Subjects.