to report to you at this time, and of course I
comply, though I would have preferred to put it off
till I could make a better showing; for indeed
I have been so pertinaciously hindered and obstructed
at every turn by the faculty that it would be
difficult to prove that the University is really in
any better shape now than it was when I first took
charge. By advice, I turned my earliest attention
to the Greek department. I told the Greek
professor I had concluded to drop the use of Greek-
written character because it is so hard to spell
with, and so impossible to read after you get
it spelt. Let us draw the curtain there.
I saw by what followed that nothing but early neglect
saved him from being a very profane man.
I ordered the professor of mathematics to simplify
the whole system, because the way it was I couldn’t
understand it, and I didn’t want things going
on in the college in what was practically a clandestine
fashion. I told him to drop the conundrum
system; it was not suited to the dignity of a college,
which should deal in facts, not guesses and suppositions;
we didn’t want any more cases of if A and
B stand at opposite poles of the earth’s
surface and C at the equator of Jupiter, at what variations
of angle will the left limb of the moon appear to these
different parties?—I said you just let
that thing alone; it’s plenty time to get
in a sweat about it when it happens; as like as not
it ain’t going to do any harm, anyway. His
reception of these instructions bordered on insubordination,
insomuch that I felt obliged to take his number
and report him. I found the astronomer of
the University gadding around after comets and other
such odds and ends—tramps and derelicts
of the skies. I told him pretty plainly that
we couldn’t have that. I told him it was
no economy to go on piling up and piling up raw
material in the way of new stars and comets and
asteroids that we couldn’t ever have any use
for till we had worked off the old stock.
At bottom I don’t really mind comets so
much, but somehow I have always been down on asteroids.
There is nothing mature about them; I wouldn’t
sit up nights the way that man does if I could
get a basketful of them. He said it was the
bast line of goods he had; he said he could trade them
to Rochester for comets, and trade the comets
to Harvard for nebulae, and trade the nebula to
the Smithsonian for flint hatchets. I felt obliged
to stop this thing on the spot; I said we couldn’t
have the University turned into an astronomical
junk shop. And while I was at it I thought
I might as well make the reform complete; the astronomer
is extraordinarily mutinous, and so, with your approval,
I will transfer him to the law department and put
one of the law students in his place. A boy
will be more biddable, more tractable, also cheaper.
It is true he cannot be intrusted with important work
at first, but he can comb the skies for nebulae
till he gets his hand in. I have other changes
in mind, but as they are in the nature of surprises