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A WILLIAMS ANTHOLOGY

OF THIS FIRST EDITION OF "A WILLIAMS ANTHOLOGY" 600 COPIES HAVE BEEN PRINTED FOR CIRCULATION AMONG SUBSCRIBERS, AND THE TYPE DISTRIBUTED THIS COPY IS NUMBER 15

A Collection of the verse and
Prose of Williams College

1798-1910

COMPILED BY

EDWIN PARTRIDGE LEHMAN

JULIAN PARK

EDITORS OF THE LITERARY MONTHLY

1910

WILLIAMSTOWN, MASS.

Privately Printed

1910

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INTRODUCTION

THE present work owes its existence to a conviction on the part of its editors that much material published by past Williams undergraduates in past and present literary periodicals of the college, deserves a resurrection from the threatening oblivion of musty library shelves. That this conviction has been justified by the quality of the verse and prose herein published, the editors believe; and they therefore submit this volume to the public without undue fear as to its reception, adding only the caution that its readers remember always the tender age of the writers of these pages.

The purpose of the editors was to collect material which might be adjudged to possess real literary merit; but in some cases in which the historical interest attaching to the production, either by reason of its subject or by reason of the fame attained in later years by its author, is obvious, this rule has been waived. Among such exceptions may be cited that of the Resolutions addressed to President Adams by the students, and copied herein. from the pages of the Vidette. The matter has been arranged in the order of class seniority, with two exceptions. It has seemed fitting to the editors to begin the work with that immortal song, “The Mountains"; the second exception is that of the series of biographical sketches entitled "Nine Williams Alumni," which for obvious reasons were published as a whole.

The editors burrowed through all files of the college publications which the college library contains, files which are reasonably complete. In such a mass of material, some ninety volumes, it will be astounding indeed if some creditable work has not been passed inadvertently over. If such a mistake has occurred it is at least pardonable. The editors

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