登陆注册
5437700000102

第102章

He listened attentively, but said little. The matter seemed to end there; but not long afterward he came to me and said: ``I agree with you that the land-grant fund ought to be kept together, and that there should be a new institution fitted to the present needs of the State and the country. I am ready to pledge to such an institution a site and five hundred thousand dollars as an addition to the land-grant endowment, instead of three hundred thousand, as I proposed at Rochester.''

As may well be imagined, I hailed this proposal joyfully, and soon sketched out a bill embodying his purpose so far as education was concerned. But here I wish to say that, while Mr. Cornell urged Ithaca as the site of the proposed institution, he never showed any wish to give his own name to it. The suggestion to that effect was mine.

He at first doubted the policy of it; but, on my insisting that it was in accordance with time-honored American usage, as shown by the names of Harvard, Yale, Dartmouth, Amherst, Bowdoin, Brown, Williams, and the like, he yielded.

We now held frequent conferences as to the leading features of the institution to be created. In these I was more and more impressed by his sagacity and largeness of view; and, when the sketch of the bill was fully developed,--its financial features by him, and its educational features by me,--it was put into shape by Charles J. Folger of Geneva, then chairman of the judiciary committee of the Senate, afterward chief judge of the Court of Appeals, and finally Secretary of the Treasury of the United States.

The provision forbidding any sectarian or partizan predominance in the board of trustees or faculty was proposed by me, heartily acquiesced in by Mr. Cornell, and put into shape by Judge Folger. The State-scholarship feature and the system of alumni representation on the board of trustees were also accepted by Mr. Cornell at my suggestion.

I refer to these things especially because they show one striking characteristic of the man--namely, his readiness to be advised largely by others in matters which he felt to be outside his own province, and his willingness to give the largest measure of confidence when he gave any confidence at all.

On the other hand, the whole provision for the endowment, the part relating to the land grant, and, above all, the supplementary legislation allowing him to make a contract with the State for ``locating'' the lands, were thought out entirely by himself; and in all these matters he showed, not only a public spirit far beyond that displayed by any other benefactor of education in his time, but a foresight which seemed to me then, and seems to me now, almost miraculous. He alone, of all men in the United States, was able to foresee what might be done by an individual to develop the land-grant fund, and he alone was willing to make the great personal sacrifice thereby required.

But, while he thus left the general educational features to me, he uttered, during one of our conversations, words which showed that he had arrived at the true conception of a university. He expressed the hope that in the proposed institution every student might find instruction in whatever study interested him. Hence came the legend now surrounding his medallion portrait upon the university seal: ``I would found an institution where any person can find instruction in any study.''

The introduction of this new bill into the legislature was a signal for war. Nearly all the denominational colleges girded themselves for the fray, and sent their agents to fight us at Albany; they also stirred up the secular press, without distinction of party, in the regions where they were situated, and the religious organs of their various sects in the great cities.

At the center of the movement against us was the People's College; it had rallied in force and won over the chairman of the educational committee in the Assembly, so that under various pretexts he delayed considering the bill. Worst of all, there appeared against us, late in the session, a professor from the Genesee College--a man of high character and great ability; and he did his work most vigorously. He brought the whole force of his sect to bear upon the legislature, and insisted that every other college in the State had received something from the public funds, while his had received none.

As a first result came a proposal from some of his associates that twenty-five thousand dollars of the land-grant fund be paid to Genesee College; but this the friends of the Cornell bill resisted, on the ground that, if the fund were broken into in one case, it would be in others.

It was next proposed that Mr. Cornell should agree to give twenty-five thousand dollars to Genesee College on the passage of the bill. This Mr. Cornell utterly refused, saying that not for the passage of any bill would he make any private offer or have any private understanding; that every condition must be put into the bill, where all men could see it; and that he would then accept or reject it as he might think best. The result was that our opponents forced into the bill a clause requiring him to give twenty-five thousand dollars to Genesee College, before he could be allowed to give five hundred thousand dollars to the proposed university; and the friends of the bill, not feeling strong enough to resist this clause, and not being willing to see the enterprise wrecked for the want of it, allowed it to go unopposed. The whole matter was vexatious to the last degree. A man of less firmness and earnestness, thus treated, would have thrown up his munificent purpose in disgust; but Mr. Cornell quietly persevered.

同类推荐
  • Uncle Vanya

    Uncle Vanya

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 棋经十三篇

    棋经十三篇

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 黄帝问玄女兵法

    黄帝问玄女兵法

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 程门雪遗稿

    程门雪遗稿

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 观自在菩萨阿么齿来法

    观自在菩萨阿么齿来法

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 海拔八百米

    海拔八百米

    一碟子花生米,一条黄花鱼,一个冷馒头,一盅子高粱白。安平是一个人吃午饭的时候接到黄再枫电话的。黄再枫在电话里说,安平你又喝酒了吧!就没见过你这么没出息的人,一个月三千块钱就把你给满足了?就好意思天天喝酒了?什么话!安平想,我都一个月三千了,我还有什么不满足的?有多少人是连三千都挣不到的,黄再枫你知道吗?就你那兄弟,苦挣苦巴一路念到大学毕业,照样给人打临工,一个月有个千八百就不错了。
  • 人人都要懂点经济学:这个时代不懂点经济学要吃亏

    人人都要懂点经济学:这个时代不懂点经济学要吃亏

    本书在写作过程中,尽力还原经济学的本来面貌,剔除了经济学中那些枯燥、抽象的数学函数和定理法则,通过生动、有趣的故事来揭示其中的经济学原理,让您在轻松的阅读中,真正掌握这门会使您的人生更加幸福的学问。全书共分12篇,以经济学的理论体系为骨架,以古今中外的经济学现象为血肉,几乎涵盖了经济学的各个专业和领域,囊括了国内最新、最经典的经济学概念,生动而又严谨地阐述了社会生活中的各类经济学热门话题,可以说是一部经济学知识的百科全书。
  • 女人,非婚不可

    女人,非婚不可

    一组照片流传,宣声哗然,年纪轻轻的女市长竟是地产商的入幕之宾!她的这个市长之位当的风雨飘摇,水深火热,受尽讥嘲和讽刺!他慵懒的坐在她的办公桌前,淡淡说道:“那晚为什么没来?”“我们早就没有关系了,你让我来,我就来?你当我程书敏是应召女吗?”她拍着桌子,火大的对他怒吼!“没关系,我能扶你起来,也能踩你下去,照片看了吗?我是不是该来几个特写?让人瞧瞧我们的女市长最神密的地方?”他无耻的笑起来,冷峻的脸上夹着冰冷的威胁。“你、敢!”她咬紧牙关,才能不拿椅子拍死这货。“怎么就不敢?”他探身过来,附在她的耳边暧昧的笑问。“如果你敢,我也让人瞧瞧博宛地产凌总的命根长什么样子!”她狞声笑着,毫不示弱。冷俊的脸瞬间阴沉,单手狠掐着她细小的脖子,怒色道:“程书敏,别逼我毁了你!”“是吗?要毁我,就不该来招惹我!”她无惧无畏,仰声笑着,她的人性,早就被他毁的一干二净了,别TM的跟她谈条件,你不配!
  • 洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    洞玄灵宝自然九天生神章经解义

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 晚安列国

    晚安列国

    繁华的大都市,平凡的小青年。像许多人一样,他也在努力追求自己的面包和爱情,偶然间认识了几位志同道合的朋友,世界如水平静,生活融融惬意。而他并不知道,某种力量于无声处悄然苏醒,命运的洪流引他们相聚,翻涌间正酝酿起一场颠覆世界的阴谋...
  • 施法诸天

    施法诸天

    一次醉宿,曾经熟悉的地球变成了魔法世界,张诚在破旧羊皮纸的引导下,穿梭于不同的奇幻世界,开启了一场不可思议旅行,在一个个世界中获取知识、技能、力量,一点一点揭开隐藏在背后的巨大秘密……
  • 混沌游猎

    混沌游猎

    大道五十,天衍四九,遁去其一。这是一部属于不朽者的传说。
  • 石评梅大全集(超值金版)

    石评梅大全集(超值金版)

    本书本着优中选精的原则,斟酌再三,将石评梅最脍炙人口的散文、诗歌、小说、游记、戏剧、书信等作品精选出来,集结成书。鉴于石评梅的散文和诗歌的成就最大,因此本书内容的重点侧重于对其散文、诗歌作品的遴选上。
  • 魅系列:赤幽乱

    魅系列:赤幽乱

    不管你是权倾天下的王者,还是默默无闻的隐士。一旦喜欢上一个人,便真的真的是没有办法的事。.自古以来,人、妖、仙三界鼎立。上古存四样神器——含光剑、漓水镜、伏羲琴和赤幽花。
  • 逆生三重奏

    逆生三重奏

    逆生三重奏明指,在校友联谊会上,大提琴手:唐小棠,小提琴手:徐子墨,钢琴手:沐秋水三人的合奏。暗指,三人分别在真灵界,地狱岚,人间界遭受磨难,最终斩断荆棘,挣脱桎梏的故事。每个世界的设定都非常巧妙,毫无违和,突兀之感。三条主线,三个世界,三个故事,相互穿插。猪脚三人相互追寻对方的脚步,最终等待是花开还是花败?第一卷灵界篇只写其中一个主角唐小棠。无论结局如何,当初的目标还在吗?走的太远,成长了太多。想要的,想追寻的,早以不是当初真相。不管行多少万里路,我们的友谊永远都在我心尖上的那方寸之地,从来不曾为,什么理想抱负挪动分毫。