The Master of the College, or “Head of the House,” is a D.D. who has been a Fellow.—Bristed’s Five Years in an Eng. Univ., Ed. 2d, p. 16.
The heads of houses [are] styled, according to the usage of the college, President, Master, Principal, Provost, Warden, or Rector. —Oxford Guide, 1847, p. xiii.
Written often simply Head.
The “Head,” as he is called generically, of an Oxford college, is a greater man than the uninitiated suppose.—De Quincey’s Life and Manners, p. 244.
The new Head was a gentleman of most commanding personal appearance.—Bristed’s Five Years in an Eng. Univ., Ed. 2d, p. 87.
HEADSHIP. The office and place of head or president of a college.
Most of the college Headships are not at the disposal of the Crown.—Bristed’s Five Years in an Eng. Univ., Ed. 2d, note, p. 89, and errata.
The Headships of the colleges are, with the exception of Worcester, filled by one chosen by the Fellows from among themselves, or one who has been a Fellow.—Oxford Guide, Ed. 1847, p. xiv.
HEADS OUT. At Princeton College, the cry when anything occurs in the Campus. Used, also, to give the alarm when a professor or tutor is about to interrupt a spree.
See CAMPUS.
HEBDOMADAL BOARD. At Oxford, the local governing authority of the University, composed of the Heads of colleges and the two Proctors, and expressing itself through the Vice-Chancellor. An institution of Charles I.’s time, it has possessed, since the year 1631, “the sole initiative power in the legislation of the University, and the chief share in its administration.” Its meetings are held weekly, whence the name.—Oxford Guide. Literary World, Vol. XII., p. 223.
HIGH-GO. A merry frolic, usually with drinking.
Songs of Scholars in revelling roundelays,
Belched out with hickups at bacchanal
Go,
Bellowed, till heaven’s high concave
rebound the lays,
Are all for college carousals too low.
Of dullness quite tired, with merriment
fired,
And fully inspired with amity’s
glow,
With hate-drowning wine, boys, and punch
all divine, boys,
The Juniors combine, boys, in friendly
HIGH-GO.
Glossology, by William
Biglow, inserted in Buckingham’s
Reminiscences, Vol.
II. pp. 281-284.
He it was who broached the idea of a high-go, as being requisite to give us a rank among the classes in college. D.A. White’s Address before Soc. of the Alumni of Harv. Univ., Aug. 27, 1844, p. 35.
This word is now seldom used; the words High and Go are, however, often used separately, with the same meaning; as the compound. The phrase to get high, i.e. to become intoxicated, is allied with the above expression.
Or men “get high” by
drinking abstract toddies?
Childe Harvard, p.
71.