The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson).

The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 380 pages of information about The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson).

Mr. Dodgson sent a letter to The Observer on this subject:—­

Sir,—­Your paper of May 29th contains a leading article on Christ Church, resting on so many mis-statements of fact that I venture to appeal to your sense of justice to allow me, if no abler writer has addressed you on the subject, an opportunity of correcting them.  It will, I think, be found that in so doing I shall have removed the whole foundation on which the writer has based his attack on the House, after which I may contentedly leave the superstructure to take care of itself.  “Christ Church is always provoking the adverse criticism of the outer world.”  The writer justifies this rather broad generalisation by quoting three instances of such provocation, which I will take one by one.
At one time we are told that “The Dean ... neglects his functions, and spends the bulk of his time in Madeira.”  The fact is that the Dean’s absence from England more than twenty years ago during two successive winters was a sad necessity, caused by the appearance of symptoms of grave disease, from which he has now, under God’s blessing, perfectly recovered.
The second instance occurred eleven years ago, when some of the undergraduates destroyed some valuable statuary in the Library.  Here the writer states that the Dean first announced that criminal proceedings would be taken, and then, on discovering that the offenders were “highly connected,” found himself “converted to the opinion that mercy is preferable to stern justice, and charity to the strict letter of the law.”  The facts are that the punishment awarded to the offenders was deliberated on and determined on by the Governing Body, consisting of the Dean, the Canons, and some twenty Senior Students; that their deliberations were most assuredly in no way affected by any thoughts of the offenders being “highly connected”; and that, when all was over, we had the satisfaction of seeing ourselves roundly abused in the papers on both sides, and charged with having been too lenient, and also with having been too severe.
The third instance occurred the other night.  Some undergraduates were making a disturbance, and the Junior Censor “made his appearance in person upon the scene of riot,” and “was contumeliously handled.”  Here the only statement of any real importance, the alleged assault by Christ Church men on the Junior Censor, is untrue.  The fact is that nearly all the disturbers were out-College men, and, though it is true that the Censor was struck by a stone thrown from a window, the unenviable distinction of having thrown it belongs to no member of the House.  I doubt if we have one single man here who would be capable of so base and cowardly an act.
The writer then gives us a curious account of the present constitution of the House.  The Dean, whom he calls “the right reverend gentleman,” is, “in a kind of way, master
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The Life and Letters of Lewis Carroll (Rev. C. L. Dodgson) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.