Progress of Education in Virginia; Colleges in Virginia, Part III [pp. 401-409]

Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 24, Issue 6

SOUTHERN LITERARY MESSENGER. A MAGAZINE DEVOTED TO LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. RICHMOND, JUNE, 1857. PROGRESS OF EDUCATION IN VIRGINIA. THE UNITERSITY-THE COLLEGES-THE MILITARY INSTITTET. " Sequel,' (April No., p. 246,) seems to think that this " breaking in" operation had been performed by a different power. He says: "Now it is one of the chief excellencies of our own University, that its system broke in upon the illiberal systems which precedent had established." So doctors will disagree. But we must break off just here, lest the author of the "Sequel" may think that we are trying to get up a quarrel between him and the Superintendent, as he seems to think we tried to do, between the University and the Institute, in our article of March last. Now, in all sincerity, we would like to know from this writer, how he can torture any sentence of that article so as to make it even tend "to stimulate unkind feelings between" these two public institutions. We deny the charge, as a forced and wrongful construction of language. No motive so unworthy called forth any word or sentence in that article. The writer of the "Sequel" thinks that some one of several motives may have called forth the review of the " Introductory Address," in which we took the liberty of indulging, to wit: "the absorbing interest of the great cause of educational progress in Virginia," or " the merit of the Lecture itself," or " a desire on the part of the reviewer to give utterance to some unkind feeling!' Beginning now with these several hypothetical motives in reverse order, we The Superintendent of the V. M. Ilastitute published an " Introductory Address" at the opening of the current session, in which he assumed, for his abnormal institution, certain claims to which we chose to demur, as will be found set forth in the March number of this mag. azine. In the April number, a Sequel to the "Address" appears,-whether sanctioned at "Head-quarters" or not, we are not informed. In the " Sequel," we are verily glad to find the claims of the Superintendent greatly softened down. It seems that his friends who enlist under his banner, are not yet prepared to extend the Protectorate of his military establishment quite so far as he is himself disposed to di. We were especially struck with the deference paid to the University, by the writer of the "Sequel." If he is a man-, atarms, he seems to have thought it quite within the sphere of his dignity to doff his military chapeau in the presence of that magnificent institution. Its pride of pre-eminence he would by no means wound. But the Superintendent himself is not so entirely deferential, as will be seen by looking into the Introductory Address, (pp. 13, 14,) or into the March number of the Messenger, (p. 162.) He says also, that the 3lilitary Institute "at once broke in upon the established systems of college education as they had come down from the monastic institutions of Europe." But the author of the VOL. XXIV-26 _ - - - - - - - - - - - - --------------------

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Progress of Education in Virginia; Colleges in Virginia, Part III [pp. 401-409]
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Southern literary messenger; devoted to every department of literature and the fine arts. / Volume 24, Issue 6

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"Progress of Education in Virginia; Colleges in Virginia, Part III [pp. 401-409]." In the digital collection Making of America Journal Articles. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/acf2679.0024.006. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 25, 2025.
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