315 75 17MB
English Pages 410 Year 1874
5
GERMAN UNIVERSITIES:
NARRATIVE OF PERSONAL EXPERIENCE TOGETHER WITH
RECENT STATISTICAL INFORMATION, PRACTICAL SUGGESTIONS, AND A- COMPARISON OF THE GERMAN ENGLISH AND AMERICAN SYSTEMS OF HIGHER EDUCATION.
BY
JAMES MORGAN HART
NEW YORK AND LONDON G. P.
PUTNAM'S SONS
Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year eighteen hundred and seventy-four,
BY G. P.
PUTNAM'S SONS,
In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington.
Press of
G. P. Putnam's. Sons
New York
TO
GEORGE HAVEN PUTNAM, WHOSE STEADFAST WISH HAS BEEN FATHER TO THE AUTHOR'S THOUGHT, THIS BOOK
IS
INSCRIBED, IN FRIENDLY
REMEMBRANCE OF THE
GEORGIA AUGUSTA,
1861-2.
PREFACE Much
has been published in a fugitive form upon the fruitful topic of university life in Germany. One man has taken up the lecture-system, another the dueling, a third the manners and customs of the instructors or of the students.
But no one,
I
be-
lieve, has told, in a plain, straightforward narrative, how he himself passed his time at the university,
what he studied, and what he accomplished. It seemed to me, therefore, that I might do the cause of education in America some service, by offering my own experience as a sample of German student-
Had my career in Gottingen been an extraordinary one, full of exciting episodes, I should have hesitated to make it public. But in the average.
life
was so uneventful, so like the associates, I have deemed it fit to serve
precisely because lives
of
my
model
as a
it
for illustration, not imitation,
have had throughout but one to communicate facts and impressions from
basis for digression.
aim
:
and as a
I
which the reader might draw
his
own
inferences.
Even those portions of the Personal Narrative which assume the form of argument are intended to remove prejudices, not to state final conclusions.
PREFACE.
vi
The General Remarks must they stand.
If
abide the verdict as
they contain aught that is erroneous is not the place for correc-
or distorted, the present
can only say that I have striven faithfully Should the to make them both accurate and just. tion.
I
my
reader be disposed to regard
German
estimate of the
Universities as extravagant, of the English
as too unfavorable, I
delivered
would
by von Sybel,
Foreign Universities." entitled
Vortr'age
refer
in 1868,
him to an oration
upon
"
German and
forms part of a volume
It
und Aufsatze,
recently published
under the auspices of the Allgemeiner Verein fur deutsche Literatur. is
certainly the last
The renowned historian, who man to be taxed with blind, un-
reasoning patriotism, approaches the subject from a different side, yet his views bear such close resemblance, both in form and in spirit, to those set forth in the present
work, that, to escape the imputation
of unfair borrowing, tnat
I
I feel
bound
to state explicitly
did not read the oration, in fact was not
aware of
its
existence, until
my own
manuscript had
passed entirely into the hands of the printer. After all, there can be but one opinion as to the merits of the several university systems of England, France
and Germany. It
work
may is
not be superfluous to add that the present
not an attack upon the American College.
Although holding that the
German method of
PREFACE. Higher Education
is
far
be very sorry to see
vii
above our own,
that
I
should
method adopted
at
and in the lump. Before taking decided towards the expansion of our colleges into steps quasi universities, it will be advisable for us to cononce,
sider thoroughly
what a university
really
accomplishes, what
it
upon which
the relations that
it
rests,
nation at large.
it
what
upon
all
these
clear
be only tinkering, not reform.
have succeeded
in
my wish
is
If I
throwing any light upon the sub-
abundantly
realized. J.
NEW
and
points, "innova-
tion, I fear, will
ject,
it
holds to the
we have formed
Until
stable conceptions
is,
does not accomplish, the basis
YORK, August,
1874.
M. H.
CONTENTS. PART
PERSONAL NARRATIVE.
I.
PACK.
CHAPTER. I.
II.
in. IV. v. vi.
vn. viii.
ix.
x. xi. XII.
First Impressions of Gottingen,
Attacking German, Matriculation and Lectures,
Auf der
-----..... -------... in
The Pandects, The American Colony
xiv.
Examination,
PART
ill.
iv.
v.
vi.
vn. vin. IX.
What
is
Commers,
-
-
-
-
-
Privatdocenten,
Students, Discipline,
Comparison with English Universities, Comparison with American Colleges, Statistics of
German
Practical Hints
84 100
104 137
149 158 172
192
217
GENERAL REMARKS.
II.
a University
Professors,
35
65
122 -
-----------?----------------------------Birthdays,
Spurting," Final Agony of Preparation,
The
I.
...
Anniversary of Battle of Leipsic
xin.
II.
-
German,
Removal to Berlin Umsatteln, The Institutes, Wiesbaden
"
-
-
-
Mensur,
Daylight Idlesse,
i
19
-
-
-
-
-
276 287
313 321
-
Universities,
249 264
-
-
338 356
-
383
GERMAN
UNIVERSITIES.
CHAPTER
I.
First Impressions of G'bttingen. the last, if I a quiet Saturday afternoon in the month of August, 1861, remember aright took my first stroll " around the wall " of the town of
ON I
Gottingen.
I little
imagined that the quaint group of
rather scraggy looking houses then unrolling itself
before
my
for three
eyes for the
long years.
I
first
time was to be
my home
had reached Gottingen
late the
preceding night, having traveled through by the express from Basel, Switzerland. been, of course, a fatiguing one. before
I
had been able
prolonged
refreshing me,
to get to bed,
had done something
rest I
still
felt
day
The journey had It was midnight and although a in
the
disposed to take
way
of
life easily.
The weather was suited to my mood. The summer of 1 86 r was very hot and dry throughout Europe, causing the foliage to turn and
mon
fall
much sooner than com-
on that particular afternoon, a cool breeze rustled among the fast withering linden tops, and ;
whispered already of autumn and early winter. The sober colors of the houses and garden walls, the gen-
GERMAN
UNIVERSITIES.
tameness of the North German landscape visible
eral
from the summit of the wall, the comparative insignificance of the surrounding hills, the entire atmosphere of the place to which transplanted, disposed
me
I
had been suddenly
My
to reflection.
sense of
was not wounded by the perception ugliness, nor was there any thing in the
the picturesque
of positive state of
my
personal affairs to call forth a feeling of
was simply in a mood for revery. My first year abroad had been passed in Geneva, on the borders of the glorious lake, and in sight of the still more sadness
I
;
Mont Blanc;
glorious
I
had just finished a pedestrian
many weeks through the Upper Alps, had seen the beauties of Chamounix, the Bernese Oberland
tour of all
and Zermatt, had risked my neck more than once on Small wonder, then, that the conglacier and arete.
was
trast
that
I
striking, not to say oppressive
was accustomed
warm glow
of
ance, the rocks, I
was
Switzerland
my in
;
I
missed
all
eyes upon, the rich, its
summer
radi-
and eternal snows, and blue waters.
to adjust
surroundings,
to feast
my
my faculties
of perception to novel
habits of thought to a fresh phase
The very walk over which I directed my footsteps was something wholly strange and unexof
life.
pected, something without an analogy in
experience.
town
of
my previous Gottingen was, in the Middle Ages, a
some importance, and
strongly fortified, for those days,
This
wall,
erected
before
in
consequence earth wall. an by
the era of artillery,
is
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.
?
nothing more than a rampart of earth completely encircling the town, deflecting here and there from the line of the circle because of inequalities in the
ground, but without any of those salient and
re-
entering angles which are the characteristic features of
modern
artillery walls.
It is
useless for the pur-
The Hanoverian troops, on their retreat through from Hanover to Langensalza, in 1866, did not even make an attempt to hold the poses of defense.
town, although it lay directly in the line of the Prussian advance from the north, and although
checking that advance for only a few hours might have enabled them to break through the intercepting force on the south. The wall is simply a promenade, about twenty-five or thirty feet wide at the top, and
averaging fifteen lindens on each
feet in
height.
side, the
There
winter, the wall, being high
under
foot.
its
row
summer;
of
in
and exposed to the rays
entire length,
is always dry the walk by eminence of Gottingen asks another to take a walk, he means,
It is
when one man
a
branches of which over-
arch so as to form a shaded avenue in
of the sun throughout
is
;
"around the wall," unless he some excursion into the country. The wall
as a matter of course, specifies
been broken through in five places for the entrance of the country roads. The quondam ditch or moat running around the wall outside is entirely
has
dry, except for a short distance,
enlarged into a sort of pond, and
where is
it
has been
used for vege-
GERMAN table
park.
and
fruit
UNIVERSITIES.
gardens, or converted into a public the town do not abut against
The houses of
the wall, but stand back, generally at
the intervening space
The time occupied
in
is
some
up making the
circuit of the wall
forty-five minutes of average walking.
is
distance;
into house gardens.
cut
Go when
you will, morning, afternoon, or evening, by rain or by shine, in the nipping frost of winter or the oppressive heat
of
summer, you may be sure of
meeting promenaders out for a stroll grave professors snatching a few minutes of relaxation from theii :
manuscripts, and looking as meek and helpless out in the open air as a policeman off duty; schoolboys tumbling one another down the sloping grassy sides of the wall
;
gay
Corps-studenten, in
knots of three or
four, gaudy with top-boots and Cerevis-mutzen (bee* caps), each carrying the inevitable cane, with which
himself in
he keeps
fencing
practice
by cutting
graceful Lufthiebe (blows in the air) at an imaginary antagonist; maidens of the intensest German type, plain featured but erect and hearty, stepping briskly, and looking neither to right nor to left ; or, perhaps,
an entire family mit Kind
dog and Philistia
ztnd Kegel, that is to say,
"the
and father and mother," escaped from the of rickety stairs and low-ceilinged shops to
I
inhale the free breath of nature.
1
Although thirteen eventful years have since elapsed, have still a vivid impression of my first walk around
the wall
There were very few
strollers out, for
it
was
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.
5
the middle of the long vacation and all the students and many of the professors were away. My companion, the landlady to whom I was recommended by a
kinsman who had recently left Gottingen to return home, chatted away volubly in the purest Hanoverian.
Is there
any thing, by the way, so exasper-
ating as one's first attempt at conversation in a foreign
language, the abortive, frantic efforts to convey one's ideas, the utter inability to follow the thread of
own
the simplest narrative
Is there
?
any thing so humiliyour com-
ating as the consciousness that, although
panion is evidently using the shortest phrases and most every-day words, in fact a sort of baby talk adapted to your undeveloped mental capacities, you, in spite of all your book-learning and private lessons at so
much an
in ten?
hour, cannot catch
Yet, tyro as
detected a difference a Saxon,
was
I
;
my
in
more than one
German
teacher in
idea
conversation,
I
Geneva had been
and he had certainly not spoken as
my land-
lady was then speaking, while the contrast to the jargon of Switzerland, and to the broad sing-song of the Rhini;
region through which
was full,
still
more
I
evident.
had hurried the day previous, The vowels were clear and
the Umlauts pure, the consonants sharp
;
there
was no apocope of letters and syllables, no running of words together the general intonation of the voice ;
was graciously modulated. tinguishing each word as
I it
had no
was
difficulty in dis-
uttered, although
might not have the faintest conception of
its
I
meaning
GERMAN
UNIVERSITIES.
had gathered from various sources, that Hanover in which to begin one's study of Ger-
I
was the prov nce :
man to
the best advantage.
My very first day's experi-
ence only corroborated the belief, which has not been shaken by years of subsequent study and travel. The cultivated classes throughout
Germany speak
sub-
same language. Even in Vienna, the professors and men of letters do not differ much, either in their choice of words or in their accent, from stantially the
^heir colleagues in Berlin or in Heidelberg. difference
exists,
and
is
plainly
perceptible to the classes, the
But among the uncultivated variations of speech and accent amount trained ear.
Along the Rhine, folk speaks in a
when
first
in Suabia, Bavaria,
language
Still the
to dialects.
and Austria, the
that is almost unintelligible
The grounds upon which I base my Hanover are briefly these. In the first
heard.
preference for
Hanoverian pronunciation conforms more any other to the printed form of the word, more precise, it does not confound e.g., Feuerwiih
place, the
closely than it is
Worter with
Peter,
Warter, Thur with Thier.
I
do
not pretend, of course, to settle in this off-hand way the competing claims of the various German dialects ;
there are grave reasons
the
why we may,
Saxon pronunciation as This
perhaps, regard
historically the
most cor-
a matter for the professed philologist but the foreigner, who has to grope his way the best
rect.
he can,
who
sounds, and
is
;
has to train both ear and throat to strange to derive the greater part of his knowl-
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN. edge from books, will find to begin his studies
among
than any other, speaks as
it
it
7
a decided advantage
a population that, more writes and writes as it
speaks.
In the next place, the Hanoverians generally use good grammar. There are, of course, uneducated
persons
who make an
occasional slip;
but in the
main, the foreigner may take for granted that whatever he hears he can repeat with safety. We, of the
English-speaking race, are apt to overlook the importance of this point our own language is so bare of grammatical inflections, that we have really lost ;
an adequate sense of their significance. A few very gross vulgarisms aside, such as went for gone, done for did, there is almost no bad grammar in English, how-
much we may be plagued with bad
But style. German, the importance of a correct knowledge of words, cases, government of prepositions, agreement of adjective and noun, is ten times as great. To the ever in
foreigner in
Germany,
then,
w ho has r
were, to struggle with dictionary
thing at once, as
it
and grammar,
makes a material
or not he
it
to learn every
resides in a
difference whether
community whose utterances he
may look upon, for practical purposes, as infallible, whether or not he has to unlearn in his room what he has learned on the street.
It
is
a mistake to imagine
that one's dealings in a foreign country are exclu
sively with the cultivated classes; tact
one comes in con
with shopkeepers, waiters, servants of
all
kinds,
GERMAN
UNIVERSITIES.
communications are corrupt, one's own manners will suffer. In Berlin, for instance, one
and
if
their
often hears
some such expression as, Ich hale Ihnen The advanced student of German will
nicht gesehen.
not be misled by such a gross blunder; but the tyro, has not yet fully unraveled the perplexities ot
who
the dative
and accusative
bewilderment. of every help
;
cases, could scarcely escape In learning a language, one has need it is no small comfort, then, to con-
verse with even a servant girl or a boot-black and feel
a
reasonable
grammar sentence.
is
degree of assurance
that
one's
not becoming infected at every other all in all, there is no section of
Taken
Germany where
the foreigner can converse so safely
with any and every body as he can in the kingdom (now province) of Hanover. Mr. Bristed,* in his introductory chapter, entitled "First Impressions of Cambridge," has suggested rather than described the general features of an English university town. The reader can construct
from them a tolerably clear picture of what Cambridge or Oxford must be, the grandiose character of its architecture, the half-monkish official garb of the students and dons, the pervading tone of scholasticism.
Both Cambridge and Oxford are simply con-
geries or clusters of colleges, each college doing about
the same
work
;
neither
sense of the term.
is
a university in the true
But reserving the discussion
* Five Years in an English University.
of
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.
9
another place, I shall deal for the pres^ ent exclusively with externals, with buildings, if the this point for
reader prefer this expression.
No two
same species can be imagined more diverse than an English and a Ger-
man
institutions of the
Were
to
push the antithesis to its extreme limits, I might say that the former was all body, all bricks and mortar the latter, no body and university.
I
;
The Englishman German university town
all soul.
or American
scarcely realize the fact that
He
institution of learning.
no
the
for it
is
we
call
visits a
time
will
the seat of a great
can see nothing
;
there
is
no chapel, no huge
visible sign of the university,
buildings, whether
who
first
them dormitories or quad-
rangles, no campus. There is no rallying place oi professors and students, where he can stand and, letting his
This life
is
in the
fessors I
eye sweep around on every side, say: He may even pass his entire
the university.
town and never once
and students assembled
body of
see the in
one
dwell upon this distinction, because
important one.
The reader who wishes
notion of the character of a dismiss from his
mind
all
German
prejudices,
pro-
place. it
is
an
to get a just
university
must
any expectation may have led
of finding what his early associations
him
to consider as the
of learning. tingen for the
my mind
As first
I
conspicuous features in a seat
walked around the wall of Got-
time, the predominating thought in
was: Where
is
the university
?
I
could find
GERMAN
ro
UNIVERSITIES.
no tangible evidences of
its
existence,
its
reality.
what questions I could in my imperfect German, and paying strict attention to the answers,
Putting
I
could make out that the
dome
starting-place of our walk, by the
an observatory;
to the
left,
near the
Geismar Gate, was
considerably farther on,
in
close
proximity to the railway station, was a large building the inscription
bearing
"Theatrum Anatomicum,"
evidently the medical school
moat by the
side of the wall,
was no
glass-houses, that
This was
garden. detect
in
my
all
first
still
;
further on, in the
was an arrangement
of
evidently a botanical of the university that I could
tour
less
of the
great
Gottingen
promenade.
Having come plan beyond
to
Germany without any
that of learning the
somewhat with
iarizing myself
afford to take things as
future explanations.
I
definite
language and famil-
the literature,
I
could
found them and await
The Americans
at
that time
studying at Gottingen were all absent on one or another summer excursion, so that I was a stranger in a strange land. What with puzzling over German
Grammar and in the county,
taking short walks every afternoon time did not hang too heavy on my
week an Englishman same house returned unexpectedly, having cut short his trip. Those who have never
hands.
Fortunately, in about a
residing in the
tried the
experiment of settling in a foreign country and among utter strangers, with the most imperfect
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.
II
knowledge of the language and the ways of the people, can scarcely appreciate the discomforts of the
few days. My landlady was the most obliging and attentive one in the world, and had had more than one first
American lish first
and
I
in her friendly care.
knew very
little
Still,
German,
she
knew no Eng-
so that
life
for the
week was a half-amusing, half-provoking comedy The return of Mr. E then, was for me
of errors.
,
a bit of good luck; I had at last some one with whom to converse freely and from whom to get need-
Having already passed four or five semesters in the place, he was thoroughly familiar with shops, and streets, and university life, and had leisure to pilot me around and tell me what to do. The university lectures, I learned, would not be resumed until the third week in October, so that I
ful information.
had
fully a
German.
month and a
We worked
lectures for the
I
up my
together over the catalogue of
coming term,
out one or more that
attempt to hear.
half in which to get
it
in the attempt to pick
might be worth
learned a good
my
many
while to
peculiari-
university language for instance, that a pro" " or " lectures," he " reads fessor never " instructs " hear." I do not "
ties of
;
;
the students
learned
study," they
also that instruction
in
a
German
E
university runs
was studysharply ing chemistry, consequently he could give me no information about lectures or professors in other departments; he did not even know half of them by
in
defined
channels.
GERMAN
12
UNIVERSITIES.
name, and could not venture an opinion as to theii " Wait respective merits. All that he could say was,
H
He's a Philolog, and can perhaps tell you what you wish to know." At all events, E 's guidance enabled me to until
gets back.
myself with the general aspects of the
familiarize
town and the location of the university buildings. university town.
The population
The
neither
are
streets
and
crooked,
German
serve as the type of the
may
Gottingen
very
is
about
12,000.
nor very
straight
no one runs directly through the
in general, they are tolerably wide. The houses are plain and poorly built. The frame work is of wood, the outer walls being filled in with a sort
town;
of
mud
that
is
mixed with a good deal of straw after the
it
consistency; painted. For a cheap better than might be give
mode
tory, built
since
town
(or
was
small.
my
in
it
is
it
to is
much
The number of The handsomest day) the Labora-
under the supervision of Wohler himself,
deceased.
light blue stone, is
is
is
has dried,
of building,
supposed.
stone and brick buildings
building in
mud
It
is
a
large
and perfectly
structure, built
fire-proof.
the centre of the university, so far as
said to have a centre.
of
The Aula it
can be
a small but not inelegant looking building, somewhat after the Grecian order, standing on a small open place or square not far
from
It is
the centre of the town.
In
this
Aula new
students are matriculated and the University Court
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.^ holds
its
sessions
it
;
13
also contains the general offices
of the university, such as the treasurer's, and, last
but not
least,
the Career, where unruly students are
confined for a fortnight or
less, for
minor
offenses
;
graver ones are punished by relegation or by expulsion.
Lectures on chemistry were delivered in the laboratory; those on medicine, in the Theatrum Anatomi-
cum
;
all
the others, including theology, law and
philosophy, in the university sense of that term, were held in the so-called Collegten-haus, a short row ot
buildings that had once been private dwellings, but had been converted into lecture rooms.
new
In 1865 the
Collegien-haus
was opened, a large
and elegant building constructed for the especial purpose, just out of the cal
Garden.
By
separated from
it
Wende
Gate, near the Botani-
the side of the old Collegien-haus>
by an arched way, stands the
cele
brated university library, one of the best in Europe the building is nothing more than an old church, ;
adapted to secular uses and enlarged here and there by irregular extensions or wings. In the arched way between the lecture rooms and the library stood the Schwarzes Brett (black board), a long board painted black and having a wire screen in front. On this
board were posted
university instruction,
all
announcements relating
announcements of lectures
changes in lectures, of degrees conferred upon dents, and the like.
to
01
stu-
GERMAN
14
UNIVERSITIES.
Besides the buildings that are other,
minor ones
I
have described, there over the town
sea ttered
;
the
headquarters of the agricultural department are even located about two miles out of town, on a model farm near the village of Wende. It is needless to go deeper into details; said already
a
German
enough
to
make
it
have
I
clear to the reader that
and out-
university, as far as buildings
ward show are concerned, is made up of disjecta memThere is a bond of vital union, a very strong
bra.
one
too,
but
it is
to the senses.
wholly spiritual
;
it
does not appeal
In architectural display,
I
am
confi-
dent that the most unimportant college at Oxford or
Cambridge will surpass any university in Germany. The new life that I was leading dawned upon me very
pleasantly.
many weeks,
The weather continued
permitting E
fine
for
and myself to take long Sometimes our landlady,
walks every afternoon. Frau H accompanied us sometimes, even, she made up a small party of her friends for our benefit. ,
;
The Germans are very fond of walking, but look upon it much more sensibly than the English do they ;
regard it as a pleasure, a relaxation, not as so many miles to be covered, so many ditches to be leaped in an hour. Old and young, men and women, go out for a stroll
whenever they can
able weather.
The roads
in
the by-paths easy to follow.
find the time and favor-
Germany are good, and Around every town in
the land, at distances varying from one mile to
two
01
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN. three, lie scattered here
15
and there ten or a dozen
vil-
lages or gardens where the pedestrian can sit down to in most rest and refresh himself with beer or coffee ;
warm supper even can be
of these places a
any
fine
On
had.
day in spring, summer, or autumn, one can
see an entire
German
family, parents, grandparents
wending their way to some Garten or Muhle> where they will meet other likeminded families ancj pass the afternoon and part of perhaps, children,
all
the evening in recreation
pins
),
the
women
;
the
men
roll
Kegel (nine-
knit and gossip over their coffee,
roam through the fields. Enjoyment is and unrestrained; there are no "roughs" in simple Germany. Now and then one reads in the newspapers of a murder or a robbery in the neighborhood of the children
Berlin or Vienna
but such deeds are perpetrated only obscure, degraded localities. Such a thing as very the breaking up of a pleasure party by wanton, mali;
in
"roughs" is an unheard-of occurrence. The scenery around Gottingen is not grand nor very
cious
beautiful, but
it is
enough, coming
pleasant.
as
I
At
first I
thought
it
did direct from the Alps.
tame This
feeling of disappointment, however, soon wore away, and I began to conceive a decided liking for my new home. Gottingen lies in a broad, fertile valley the ;
hill to
the east, called the Rhons or the
Kehr
(
both
proper names of men who formerly lived there), stands quite near the town, and slopes away to z height of three or four hundred feet
;
the hill to the
GERMAN west, crossed in is
much
farther
Leine, a narrow,
UNIVERSITIES. by the
zig-zag
away and much
muddy
so covered
although
it is
that
visible only in a
The
valley
is
higher.
up by
from Cassel,
The
little
river
would be called
stream, that
America a creek, flows through
it is
railroad
in
-the
middle of the town,
mills
and other buildings
few places.
uncommonly
and, in the neigh-
level,
borhood of the town, rather marshy. A small branch of the Leine flows around the town in a detour. The water in this branch land,
and
fertilize
the
soil,
for
opportunity
Gottingen
is
The
feet
higher than
the
partly
skating.
to
the
give
The land
Gottingese an
in the district of
both Grossgutsbesitz and Kleingut, that
say, there are ings.
a few
is
allowed to overflow in winter, partly to
is
is to
both large estates and small peasant-hold-
peasantry, Bauern, as a class, are industrious
and wealthy, although by no means as wealthy as their In the immefamous brethren of Sachsen-Altenburg. diate vicinity of the town, the land farther out, there are
rye and barley.
One
cultivation impressed as
immense
is
fields of
feature of the
me
given up to grass
German method
prevails also in France.
I
mean
;
the
the total
absence of fences, those wretched snake-like black that disfigure
of
as being not only practical but
enhancing materially the beauty of the landscape
same feature
;
wheat, buckwheat,
trails
the face of the country in America.
I
have walked for miles in every direction from Gottingen, over meadows, through fields of wheat and rye, but I cannot remember once encountering a fence.
Some
of
FIRST IMPRESSIONS OF GOTTINGEN.
town are surrounded by them behind him, the
the gardens just outside of the
high walls
;
but after he has
17
left
pedestrian finds that he has an unobstructed sweep of vision.
The boundary
marked
at
In this
way
the the
lines of farms
and
estates
are
stones sunk in the
ground. by Germans not only save themselves the
angles
trouble and expense of building fences, but they preserve the
horses, will
aspect of the terrain.
natural
when put out
Cattle, sheep
to graze, are not allowed to
but are kept in herds by
men and
enclosed by a slight temporary fence.
and
roam
at
dogs, or else
Not even along
the great royal chaussee that follows the valley of the
Leine from Witzenhausen through Gottingen and Nord-
heim
to the city of
rate the road
Hanover,
from the
fields
;
is
there any thing to sepa-
only a small shallow ditch
side, and two rows of monotonous Lombardy poplars blending into one in the dim distance. The valley of the Leine has always been a thorough-
on each
fare
between the region of the Weser and the region of Germany, Franconia and Thuringia. During the
central
Middle Ages, when the castles raised their
"
fist-law
"
was
in force,
numerous
frowning battlements along the
hills
that line the valley, principally along the eastern ridge.
The remains
of two of these knightly burgs, or robber exist in the
neighborhood of Gottingen, namely the Gleichen and the Plesse. The former is
strongholds,
five
by
still
or six miles to the south of the town; far
the
more frequented of the two,
is
the latter,
about four
miles in the opposite direction, near the village of
Wende,
GERMAN
IS
The
UNIVERSITIES.
ruins are on a detached spur of the eastern ridge,
and overlook the plain from an elevation of several hundred feet. The path leads up from the small concert garden at Marise Spring, through a charming grove of
The
beeches and maples. in
most
places,
still
outer walls of the castle are,
standing,
plan can be easily recognized. intact. if I
It
and the general ground-
The
old tower
is
was roofed-in with a stained-glass roof
remember
rightly.
The
almost in 1862,
platform of the castle
is
a
on a warm summer afternoon, and affords an extensive view of the smiling plains below and the
cosy retreat
long, high western ridge directly opposite.
CHAPTER
II.
Attacking German.
WAS
I
now ready
for the winter's work, namely, the
formal investment of that Gibraltar ycleped
German
On
language.
reaching Gottingen,
enough of German to
The
nothing.
three
book-work, that
I
knew
the just
practically
months' instruction, exclusively
had received
I
that
realize
knew
I
at
Geneva was
scattered
winds during a long pedestrian tour through the Alps; scarcely any thing remained of the lessons but the uncertain remembrance of a few paradigms of nouns to the
The
and verbs.
unknown
to
me
;
spirit
I
the average American in Otto,
Woodbury
of
the
language was wholly
was neither better nor worse graduate
off
than
who has been passed
or Comfort, and has read an act or
twoofWilhelmTell.
As weeks
do
the opening of the off, I
in the
had a
fair
fall
term was
still
six or
seven
opportunity of trying what I could
way of preparation
for understanding lectures.
But before beginning the account, it will be advisable to Bay a few words about my novel abode. Continuing the plan which had worked so well in Geneva, I determined to live, for the first few months at least, in a family
where
I
should have the privilege of speaking
GERMAN
20
UNIVERSITIES.
The landlady, Frau and hearing German continually. was the only one who pretended to give what we
H
,
call
German
"boarding."
board
his breakfast,
that
was not merely
I
led
and
my
during
strictly that
rolls
observed, never
lives by himself, in his own room, takes and generally his supper, there, but dines
at the table d'h6te of a hotel or
then,
it
man
each
;
students, be
of a
coffee,
German
life,
winter in Gottingen
My
student.
was brought
dinner and supper, we,
The
restaurant.
first
to
breakfast,
my room by
the
myself and the other boarders, two Americans and an Englishman, had ir servant
;
i. e.
the dining-room with our landlady. month for " full board," while the
a
his
room by
We
much
paid so
German student
hires
the semester, and keeps a book-account for
whatever he orders, paying up at the end of every week or month.
Yet the rooms that we had were other student.
more
typical than
was a
ence.
It
facing
on the
wall as
it
mar road
like those of every
The one occupied by E
my
own,
I
.
being rather
shall describe
it
in prefer-
large square room, the two front street,
sloped
down
the side to
into the town.
windows
window overlooking
make an entrance
the
for the Geis-
Off to one side was the sleep-
Neither room ing-room, one half the size of the study. was carpeted. In one corner of the room, near the door, stood the inevitable
Ofen,
ing almost to the ceiling. is
to
a big stove of porcelain reach-
The German
theory of heating
have a large stove of massive porcelain, in which
your servant makes a rousing
fire in
the morning
;
after
A TTA CKING GERMAN.
2
1
and nothing is left but the glimthe door and the clapper are made fast.
the blaze has died out,
mering
The
coals,
stove
then supposed to hold
is
its
a uniform temperature in the room. generally is
wood
;
heat and maintain
The
used
fuel
dear and coal comparatively cheap, the former
room and
ferred for
has
its
is
even in Leipsic and Berlin, where wood
parlor stoves.
advantages and
its
is
pre-
This plan of heating
drawbacks.
eco-
It is rather
nomical, and
it
certain time
besides saving one the trouble of raking
;
secures a uniform temperature for a
and adding fresh fuel every few Hours, it dispenses with dust and ashes. The disadvantages are that the air in the room is not properly renewed, and also that the stove cools
down
so gradually that, before the inmate
is
aware,
On
the temperature has dropped several degrees.
the
whole, I prefer the American base-burner.
Another indispensable dent's
room
is
of three parts
article of furniture
This consists
the Secretar, or secretary. :
the lower, a set
middle, a sort of door that can be
in a stu-
of drawers let
in
;
the
down, disclosing
a
fascinating arrangement of pigeon-holes and very small
drawers for storing away
letters
up above, a cupboard. The ceiling of E 's room was scored
generally
"
and papers and
';
traps
;
direction.
These marks,
I
of old sabre-wounds, that had been
former inmate.
As
in reaching out for
top of the
left
there
the ceiling was rather low, a
Hochquart would be apt
room with
in
every
was informed, were the scars
by the tall
man
to graze the
the point of his sabre or his Schl'd-
GERMAN
22
The former
ger.
UNIVERSITIES.
inmate, judged by the
tokens of his existence that he had himself and
his
visitors
in
left,
pretty
number of
must have kept
thorough practice.
Against the wall, in the corner opposite the stove,
In a third corner was the equally inevi-
and gloves.
upon 'which the student lies off to enjoy after-dinner pipe and coffee. Over the sofa hung
table his
hung
instruments of destruction, with masks
a pair of the
sofa,
a picture of the Brunswick Corps, representing, in lithograph, the
Commers perhaps
members of
at
(celebration)
Mariae
the corps holding their annual
Spring.
some place
Some
are
in
the
sitting
country,
around a
grouped picturesquely on the grass, others again are standing; but every one has a long pipe in one hand, and a Deckel-schoppen (large beer-glass with a table, others are
cover) in the other.
E
was not a member of the
corps, but he had been for some time a Conkneipant,
i.
e.,
one who attends the weekly meetings when he feels disposed, and joins in the revelry the picture, then, was a ;
souvenir of his old friends.
Around
this large picture
were grouped many smaller ones, all likenesses of German and American students. Scattered around the room were "
"
pipe-bowls, stems, ash-cups,
stoppers
(curious
little
arms and legs of porcelain for plugging the pipes), and the other paraphernalia of smoking. articles
ents, will
by
were
gifts.
the way,
is
The German plan a curious one.
Nearly
all
these
of making pres-
Jones and Smith, we
suppose, agree to dedicate (dedicireti) to each other.
They
select
two
articles of
exactly the same kind and
ATTACKING GERMAN. value, say
two porcelain pipe-bowls
;
23
each pays for the
and has the inscription put on Jones to his dear In. S.) sm. The Smith, or Smith to his dear Jones (J.
other,
:
advantage of the system
you get a keepsake of you have put yourself
that
is
your friend without feeling that
Each man
under obligations. What books E
gives as
good
as
he
gets.
possessed were stacked up in a E of shelves under the sabres.
rather rickety set
was an industrious student, but, being a chemist, was not supposed to have need of a large library. His helps to study were in the laboratory, in the shape of apparatus. in a university
Every student
I
town occupies a room
The room may be
the one that I have described.
or smaller,
may be
may be more or not vary. The
its
larger
furniture
but the general features do
less elegant,
point to which
I
desire to call especial
every student, no matter how straitened circumstances, has a study and a sleeping room exclu-
attention in
located front or back,
like
is
this
:
sively to himself
" ;
chumming
" is
unknown
except occasionally in the large cities, Berlin
in
Germany, and Vienna,
where the disproportionately high rents force a few of But the poorer students to take apartments in common. even in Berlin and Vienna, chumming
The
a last resort.
superiority of the
looked upon German system
is
as is
more manly, it conduces to indepenincalculable dence of study and prevents much waste of time. One who shares his room with a chum is often at the mercy ;
it
is
of bores ; he can turn
not his chum's.
away
Besides,
his
if
own
visitors perhaps, but
two or more students wish
GERMAN
UNIVERSITIES.
any time to work up a subject
at
Germans frequently
fashion, as the
the cooperative
after
do, they can accom-
plish the object by simply meeting at each other's rooms.
But
thorough research, study that
really independent,
to tell in after
life,
own sanctum.
one's
There
no royal road
is
to learning, at least to learning
a living language.
German, for ure-house from which each one
with
tilled
making the
truth
is
first
volume might
for the natives
approaches to German
there
;
is
my
it
"
be
The
easier.
easy, not even
and eludes the
Speaking with the experience of thirteen years,
grasp.
ses
easily
a subtle, lurking spirit in the
language that always baffles the vision
feel
much
sensible, others absurd,
German never can be made
that
a vast treas-
carries off only so
some
the schemes,
all
is
instance,
A
as his shoulders will bear.
lor
is
can be done only in the privacy of
duty to warn the reader against
or works entitled
out a Master." smattering of
man who
I
"
German
in Thirty
all
"
I
easy cour-
Lessons With-
doubt whether such a thing as a is desirable or even possible. The
German
thinks that he can
"
"
get
up
German
in a
month
or so, as he might French, will speedily discover his mis-
Permit
take.
me
to
quote, with reference to this very
view of the case, one of Klopstock's Odes which well
known
as
it
should be
is
not so
:
Dass Keine, welche lebt, mit Deutschlands Sprache sicb In den zu kiihnen Wettstreit wage !
damit
mit ihrer Kraft es sage,
Sie
ist
An
mannigfalt'ge: Uranlage.
ich's kurz,
A TTA CKING GERMAN.
25
Zu immer neuer und doch deutscher Wendung was wir
reich
;
selbst in jenen
grauen Jahren, Da Tacitus uns torschte, waren Gesondert, ungemischt, und nur sich selber gleich. 1st,
:
Nothing
is
farther
dissertation either
way
of learning
namely
from
the language or
upon
it.
After
to set about the
:
purpose than to write a
my
there
all
work
best
upon the
only one way,
is
resolutely, to take plenty
of time, and never to grow weary, especially of writing exercises.
many Americans who
Scarcely one of the
were contemporary with myself in Gottingen seemed to
German grammar.
devote enough time to the study of
The common mar was
belief
was that one
quite sufficient
Woodbury, for mar and trust
;
instance,
after
set of lessons in
you had
you might
lay aside your
to reading for further progress.
the general feeling of impatience, there
motive that prompts to such a course
;
gram-
finished Otto or
is
gram-
Besides
a practical
nine of every ten
Americans who study in Germany regard a knowledge of the language as only the
means
to
some
ulteridr object,
generally a knowlege of chemistry or medicine.
It is
not
surprising, then, that they reduce their preliminary study
to a
minimum,
in order that they
may
begin what they
consider their real work as soon as possible. satisfied with learning
enough grammar
connection of words in a sentence their science,
they
know by
unimportant. 3
;
the technical
which are to them the actual practice
;
They read a play
all
all
They
are
to recognize the
words of
important ones,
others are relatively
or two of Schiller,
some
GERMAN
26
UNIVERSITIES.
of Goethe's poems, perhaps a few of Uhland's or Heine's.
Of
the language as an entirety, of
German
literature as a
body of thought, they have but a very inadequate conception. It
seems to
me
that this
ber of Americans
who
is
to
The num-
be regretted.
finish their studies in
Germany
is
Is it asking already large, and grows from year to year. too much to expect from them, on their return, sound
general notions of
German
and thought, some Germany has been
literature
familiarity with the steps by which
conducted to her present pinnacle of greatness? At all events, is it not a shame that many a Ph. D., who has passed two or three years in the land of Lessing, should be beaten by his stay-at-home brother or sister in
attempting to explain the mysteries of an easy play by Kotzebue or Benedix ?
As
for myself, I took a serious view of the question,
and resolved to master the language as far as in me lay. In one respect, certainly, my plan differed from that of every one before me,
else.
Knowing
was
that there
at least a
year
decided to spend six months with the grammar, before venturing upon any course of reading. This
may seem
I
strange, if not paradoxical
a language without reading
its
;
ho\v can
authors?
one learn
Easily enough.
Text-books of grammar, phrase-books give models of forms and sentences
;
the beginner, for
whom
the form
every thing, can learn more from a good grammar than from the best reading that is to say, he will get, in a
is
;
condensed and a more available shape, what
lies scat-
ATTACKING GERMAN. tered over
many pages
exercises constructed
of an ordinary book.
By
writing
the express purpose, he can
for
train himself in the use of the very in
27
modes of expression
which he may be weakest. Let me give an example The most perplexing features of the German
or two.
language are the so called passive voice, the government of the prepositions, the separable and inseparable verbs, the use of the particles of motion, kin and her.
It is
not
so difficult to glide over these peculiarities as they arise in reading;
the beginner can translate after a fashion,
making out the meaning by the aid of the context. But it is a much more serious undertaking to master them so as to use them, five
and
as
it
is
consecutive sentences in
not be involved, the shortest
them once
to learn
to
for
all,
impossible to put together
German way
in
which they
will
out of the difficulty
is
by writing and committing
a great number of model sentences in which
memory
the same principles are applied again and again. It is
of
guage, to
little
German, or indeed
avail in
commit
rules to
memory,
in
any lan-
unless the student has
an example for every rule and every modification of a rule at his tongue's end, ready for use at any
and
This result can be attained only
in every place.
through a generous
moment
outlay of
time and patience, and
incessant drill in certain standard forms, what a French-
man might
call cadres
of expression.
It is
a
common
mistake to suppose that the beginner must acquire a large less,
stock of will
words;
answer
for
hundred, perhaps even ordinary conversation and
fifteen all
GERMAN
28
The
writing.
first
UNIVERSITIES.
and chief thing
is
to learn
how
to
hundred words together, to assign each proper place in the sentence and to show its
put these fifteen
one to
its
grammatical relations to other words. not sooner, the student
may
That done, but vocab-
begin to enlarge his
ulary.
Another point has been too much overlooked, namely, the importance, not to say the necessity, of translating
copiously from the mother
There
is
of a foreign language.
The
labor, I
the
foreign.
seizing the spirit
am
aware,
is
im-
be found to yield the largest returns. one thing to be able, grammar and dictionary in
mense, but It is
into
tongue
probably no other means of
it
will
hand, to pick your way through a quite another to read
German book
;
it
is
looking out a word here and
it off,
there perhaps, but feeling that
all
the idioms, the forms
of thought, are familiar to you, that you yourself might
have expressed your own ideas after very nearly the same fashion.
It is the
final stage
and when he has reached
of the student's progress,
he may well exult, for he is in possession of a new power. But this cheering result is not the work of a week or a month it can be attained it
;
only by unremitting and well directed efforts. The way to it leads through composition and translation from the
mother tongue.
On many
lation will coincide
;
points composition and trans-
they both have the advantage of
breaking up one's habits of thinking and forcing them into
new
would
By attempting to write .as a German we acquire the habit of using German words
channels.
write,
ATTACKING GERMAN.
29
with the exactest knowledge of their meaning,
tom ourselves
we
accus-
do
to the use of particles of thought that
not exist in English, but which cannot be omitted from
German
the
we
phrase,
are
made
to feel the
importance
of correct grammar, not as something foreign to selves,
The advantage of translaEach man's range of
of connecting single words. tion over free composition
words and ideas
is
this.
is
When we
limited.
our mother tongue, we are liable to If
we
our-
but as the only tolerable or even intelligible way
fall
compose, even
in
into a sort of rut.
write in a foreign language, this natural tendency
is only increased by the constant temptation to use the most familiar words and phrases we are apt to say what we have to say in the shortest and easiest way possible, ;
so as to avoid trouble.
from which
it
we undertake
is
to
We
fall
into a school-boy style
almost impossible to escape.
But when
we
translate the writings of a stranger,
have before us work of a higher order we are held to reproduce, to the best of our ability, words, ideas and ;
sentiments
that
lie
our own
outside
narrow sphere.
Instead of merely working up old material,
we
enlarge
our capacity of expression in both languages. I trust that
the reader does not take
pleaching than just
given him
But he can is
at practising.
may sound
The
strange
rest assured that
it
is
me
six
*3
at
and impracticable. and
my own personal experience. months of my stay in Gottingen, I
that could
be better
sincerely meant,
the fruit of
first
to
advice that I have
be called a German book.
It
During the read nothing
seemed
to
me
GERMAN
30
profanation, as
it
UNIVERSITIES.
were, to stumble through Goethe or
hunting up every other word in the dictionary,
Schiller,
succumb-
striving to seize the poetry of the original yet
ing to every paltry irregular verb or preposition governing different cases.
dise Lost."
was too much
It
like parsing the
persuaded that
I felt
it
"
Para-
would be better
in
the long run to wait until I had developed myself into
somewhat of a German, before intruding precincts
German
of
The
art.
into the sacred
reader will have the
opportunity, in a subsequent place, of judging
whether
the experiment succeeded.
So
down
I settled
long months
I
all
many
in Ollendorf, until this last
ous,
the exercises in
and then mastered Plate.
known
in
cipal of the
six
grammar and grammars. I Woodbury and Otto, and a good
wrote
well
For
to an unmerciful "grind."
toiled over
America
as
grew insufferably tediThis work is not so
should be
it
;
the author, prin-
Commercial Academy of Bremen,
thor-
is
oughly familiar with both languages, and has treated certain voice,
subjects, e.
the separable verbs, the passive
and the German
phrase, better ians.*
tion
g.,
and more
Woodbury
I
substitutes
for
prepositions.
grammars, which 1 also
participial
found chiefly valuable for the collec-
of idiomatic phrases illustrating
German
the
fully than the other grammar-
Besides
I literally
"
the use
these
swallowed
of
the
English-German "
word
for
word,
consulted incessantly Heyse's Schulgrammatik der
*It was not until my return that I became acquainted with Dr. Arnold's German Exercises. They are the best of the kind in existence.
ATTACKING GERMAN. book written
deutschen Sprache, a in the
31
for the use of pupils
upper classes of the gymnasia. But my hardest in translating from English into German.
work was Here
I tried
my hand
from Hawthorne's
London
Times.
"
at
all
sorts of books and styles, " to leaders from the
Marble Faun
plan was to translate a few passages
My
from one book, enough to seize the peculiarities of the author's style and diction, and then pass to another. In
my old copy-books and manuscripts, blurred and corrected in places so as to be scarcely legible, it is
looking over
easy for
me now
to see that, notwithstanding the help of
grammar and teacher, I wrote a good deal of rubbish, clumsy, un-German sentences that no native would think of putting on paper.
But with
all their
these exercises answered their purpose
;
imperfections,
they gave
me
a
better insight into the peculiarities of the language than
could have got in any other way. There was scarcely an English idiom that I did not attempt to "upset" into I
German
after a fashion.
Permit
me
English text
one amusing incident. In the happened to be working upon
to narrate
that
I
occurred the phrase "he said, by the way." The expres" " I had left blank, not finding any sion by the way equivalent in the dictionary.
"why
don't you translate:
"But," said
my
auf dem Wege?"
It
teacher,
was
in
vain I tried to convey the idea of the English, how the " " word " way was not used in a literal sense, like road,"
but in a figurative sense, to denote something thrown as
it
were,
something
incidental.
What
misled
in,
the
GERMAN
32
UNIVERSITIES.
teacher was the circumstance that the person speaking
was actually
in
motion
then, the phrase
at the time described
must be auf dem Wege.
of course,
;
I felt instinc-
was wrong but how hit upon a word or We an idiom that would convey the idea exactly?
tively that he
;
talked to and
fro, I
exhausted
teacher his patience, until
we
vocabulary and the
my
sat confronting
as disconcerted as a bridal couple after their
All at once a light, as the "
a
tallow-light,"
German
each other
first
quarrel.
students would say,
dawned upon me.
I
bethought
me
of
the French phrase en passant, and flourished it in triumph " Ach so ! (with the delicate sneer that at my teacher. so
can be made to suggest in German).
En passant ! Na
nun, naturlich j BEILAUFIG wollen Sie sagen sulted
my
one word.
watch
A
there,
way
as insured
The
we had spent
and furthermore
my
its
"
English scholar.
I
con-
but then the word
had been got
never being forgotten
losing sight of
teacher,
it
"
ten minutes in finding
liberal outlay of time,
was
danger of
;
/
;
in such a
there was
no
beil'dufig.
by the way," was not a particularly good At that time -in his third or fourth
good philologist, but had read very little English and had never had an opportunity of hearSo far from regarding ing or of speaking the language. semester, he was a
this as
sider
it
a disadvantage,
of talking
my
I
a positive gain.
German even
wants in
my own
considered It
forced
in
my
then and
still
con-
into the position
lessons, of explaining
phraseology.
cult passage or peculiar
it
me
Whenever any
all
diffi-
idiom occurred, as the above,
I
A TTA CKING GERMAN: had
33
to give the sense of the entire context
by "beating
around the bush," by stating what the thing was not, until the teacher could gather from my broken utterances what it
really
was /
when
then,
rect rendering
when
the answer came,
was reached,
it
made
its
the corIt
impression.
did not go in by one ear and out by the other, the mind was ready to receive and retain it. Judging from the experiences of "
crack
the
"
first
my
friends, I
teachers in
am
disposed to look upon
Germany with some
lish at the
In
mistrust.
place, they are apt to cultivate their
expense of the pupil's German.
own Eng-
In the next
place, the pupil, finding the teacher thoroughly prepared
on
all
he
is
points, lapses into a state altogether too passive
content to
sit
and
;
listen to explanations, to take
every thing for granted, to rely upon the teacher to do .
After
the thinking. to train
all,
the chief result to be aimed at
and develop the
faculties, to acquire the
German mem-
of expressing one's self in German, to get a
ory and turn of thought, as
it
were.
This accomplished,
the rest will follow as a matter of course, in
with patience
week or the
The more The
;
but whether a certain word
next,
is
haste at
is
habit
due time and is
learned one
a matter of comparative indifference.
first,
the less speed at
last.
reader need not infer from the above account that
I
read absolutely no
I
skimmed
German
German during
the
first
six
the papers every day for news from
leaders were too heavy for
are so at the present day
!
my
months
home
taste, in fact
-
they
and read short pieces of
poetry and an occasional story in the
Gartenlaube or
GERMAN
34 Ueber
Land und Meer.
whatever looked like
UNIVERSITIES. But
kept carefully in abeyance
I
literature.
This plan of devoting one's
self exclusively to
grammar
by Matthew Arnold * upon the aim and methods of linguistic study, opinions moreover with which I heartily agree.
may seem
to conflict with the opinions expressed
Matthew Arnold
"
An immense development of and an immense use of Latin and
says
grammatical studies,
:
Greek composition, take so much of the in nine cases out of ten
Greek and Latin
he has not any sense at all of and ends his
literature as literature,
His verbal scholarship and life to drop, ard
studies without getting any.
composition he
his
then
all
would have been
is
lost.
Greek and Laun
far
more
likely to stick
by him."
But
was apparent rather than real. I regarded studies and translations strictly as a
this conflict
my
pretty sure in after
he had ever caught the notion of them,
if
literature,
is
Greek and Latin
his
pupil's time, that
grammatical
means
to
an end, and merely crowded them into a period
of six months instead of letting them prolong themselves
over a year and a
half.
It
seemed
to me,
and
to me, that such a plan after all saves time.
still
No
seems
sooner,
however, did translation and grammar threaten to become a mere drudgery, a mere tread-mill round without progress,
than
I
dropped them
forever, as
any thing more
than incidental work, and took up reading, literature
Mr. Arnold's sense of the term, as the reader
will
in the sequel. *
Higher Schools and Universities in Germany,
p. 183.
in
learn
(Edition of 1874).
CHAPTER Matriculation
Deeming
III. j
and
Lectures.
advisable to preserve a certain unity of sub-
it
remarks upon the study of German grammar into the preceding chapter, in order to dispose ject, I
have thrown
all
of them, although thereby making that chapter overlap
my
was not through with early spring, but I was matricu-
by several months.
the present
grammar-travail until
I
lated in October.
A German has
that
university
university
for is
is
the one institution in the world
motto:
its
a law unto
Time
itself,
himself, each student revolves
own
is
NOT money.
each professor
on
his
own
is
axis
The
a law unto
and
at his
English and Americans have formed
rate of speed.
not a few queer notions of university picture to themselves a
town
life
in
Germany. They
like Gottingen, for instance,
where everybody is running a break-neck race scholarly fame, where days are months and hours
as a place for
days, where minutes are emphatically the gold-dust of time.
The
truth
is
that
no one hurries or gets
into a
feaze over any thing, the university itself setting a
example.
The academic
called the winter
year
is
good
divided into two terms,
and the summer semesters.
The
winter
semester covers nominally five months, from October
GERMAN
36
March
i5th to
are whittled
weeks
at
5th
is
off,
reality,
so to speak,
both beginning and end
and there
is
a pause of two
Christmas, so that the actual working time
over four months.
is little 1
In
i5th.
UNIVERSITIES.
the spring vacation.
From March The summer
i5th to April
semester then
runs to August i5th, but practically the work the
first
over by
is
of that month.
Supposing yourself to be a tyro in such matters, and 1 5th of October to be drawing near, you are naturally But you will impatient to be matriculated and at work. the
discover that the older students are not yet back, and, on consulting the "Black Board," you see no
There
of lectures. 1 5th,
is
no hurry.
A
day or two
perhaps, a general announcement
candidates
that
effect
for
announcement after the
affixed, to the
is
matriculation
may present themselves at the Aula on such and such days of the The ceremony
week, at certain hours. In the
first
place,
is
a simple one.
you proceed to the secretary's " " documents entitling you
deposit there your
For a German,
sion.
tance
;
he
is
this is
not ^admitted unless he
is
able to produce
examen\
is
final
examination {Abiturienten-
the "university holds no extrance-examina-
tion, this is the
only guarantee
it
can have that those
seeking admission are properly qualified.
*Or
a certificate
gymnasium or Realschule and has
passed satisfactorily the
As
and
a matter of some impor-
certain papers, the principal one of which that he has attended a
office
to admis-
But
in the
admitted only under very grave conditions and restrictions.
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES. case of a foreigner, the utmost liberality
is
%
Ten
37
displayed.
years ago, while Gottingen was a Hanoverian uni-
versity, the only It
his passport.
document required of a foreigner was is the same to this day in Leipsic,
Heidelberg, and the South Prussian universities are a
German
universities.
stricter
trifle
;
The
in the case of
Americans, they generally expect a diploma of Bachelor of Arts or the like, but they can scarcely be said to exact I
it.
doubt whether any German university would refuse
admit any foreign candidate who showed by his siz and bearing that he was really a young man able to loci t after himself, and not a mere boy. Besides, it would b* to
easy to evade the Prussian requirements,
if
they
wer>*
by first entering a non-Prussian univerand after remaining there a semester 01 sity, say Leipsic, an honorable dismissal (Abgangszeugniss) two, procuring and then removing to Berlin or Bonn. By virtue of the strictly enforced,
parity
existing
among
the
universities of
student in good standing in one
is
Germany, a
entitled to admission
But the Germans know perfectly well that any they can afford to be liberal toward foreigners. They other.
to
when a young man puts himself and to the trouble expense of a visit to Germany, the chances are that he means to do well. The mere fact of take
his
it
for granted that
coming
cate
is
a compliment to them, which they recipro-
by making things easy
for him.
Foreigners do not
interfere with the course of instruction, while they
lend eclat to the university and help to swell
There
is
nothing
4
selfish
its
do
income.
or exclusive about the higher ;
.
GERMAN
38
UNIVERSITIES.
Germany although intended for Germans, it is open to all who choose to avail themselves of it, capacious enough to accommodate every type of mind, education in
;
and absolutely
from dwarfing
free
restrictions.
The
made
to feel
newly matriculated student, the Fuchs, from the ^
But
start that
he
is
his
am digressing.
I
own
The next
to visit the treasurer (Quaestor)
step in matriculation
is
and pay the matriculation
These vary somewhat with the
fees.
but are nowhere excessive.
is
master.*
different universities,
In Gottingen they amounted
In exchange for your fees you get two weighty documents, the a b c of student life your The former Anmeldungs-buch) and your student card. to
about
five dollars.
:
varies in size
and shape
dungs-bogen
as
(in Berlin they
distinguished from
book or merely folded
sheet,
buch\ but whether
answers the same purpose
it
be your record of work done.
it is
to
self
a large, stout book,
like
used the Anmel-
a copy-book
;
each page
for a semester, and there are eight or ten pages in
being the estimated
you
will
book.
remain
;
The page
if is
maximum number
for
the
of semesters that
you hear, another you have paid the
lectures that
treasurer's certificate
tificates that
all,
is
that
you study longer, you can get a fresh ruled in vertical columns, one for the
names of the courses of lecture-fees, a third
;
Imagine to your-
that
and a fourth
for the professor's cer-
you have attended the course, entered
the beginning and at the end of the semesters. * The applicant has also to sign a pledge that he will not of any secret political society.
at
The
become a member
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES. modus operand* tures
the
you
will hear,
you yourself write the
You
column.
left-hand
After deciding what lec-
as follows.
is
then
get
official title in
the
you
and
if
Quaestor
This
to affix his teste in the second column. to a seat,
39
entitles
the course happens to be a popular
one, attended by large numbers, the sooner you secure
your seat the better.
you make your some hour in
visit
engagement.
If
the
After
upon
"
"
hearing
a week or two,
the professor himself, selecting
forenoon when he has no
official
you wish to conform rigorously to
eti-
you must appear in grand toilet, i. e., in dress and kid-gloves, although the chances are ninety-nine
|uette,
:oat in a
hundred that
in so
sor himself in wrapper
ing a long pipe.
doing you
and
will
slippers,
Your appearance
catch the profes-
unshaven and smok-
in
grand
toilet is
an
intimation that you not merely wish to have your attend-
ance at lectures
what
"
but that you
certified,
and take the
know
"
what
is
liberty of presenting yourself to him.
as gentleman to gentleman.
Whether you remain to chat book for certifi-
for a few minutes or simply present your
depend upon the manner of the professor some instructors make it a point to detain the
cation, will
himself
;
student for about ten minutes, others regard the
affair as
be disposed of in the quickest manner something possible, and scarcely even ask the student to sit down. to
With regard to the second
certification, given at the close
no
any time not too long before the end of the semester will do you can even wait until the next semester or still later, in fact of the lecture course, there
is
fixed rule
;
;
GERMAN
40
you need not go
by
UNIVERSITIES.
in person, but
can send the book around
your servant-girl or your boot-black.
The
certifying to attendance at lectures has lapsed into
Every now and then a professor, inspired
in empty form. '.i/ith
unwonted
zeal for his vocation, tries to
make
it
a
means of enforcing attendance, of preventing " cutting." But such isolated attempts speedily die out and are foryou show yourself two or three times at the a dozen times at the end of the semester, and beginning gotten
if
;
attendance
your
is
although you may have
"
cut
"
a matter
as
certified
of
As an item of my own personal
experience, I can state
that Professor Gneist of Berlin certified to
ance at his lectures on the Institutes,
had not been
The sor's
attend-
{flrissig besucht),
if
proof of a student's diligence is not the profescertificate but ability to pass a searching examination.
real
In a large call
inside his
my
he knew anything, that lecture-room within a month.
although he must have known, I
course,
the entire intervening time*
city, like Berlin, it is
upon your professor; the
not even necessary to
latter
remains for a few
minutes after every lecture during the first week or two, so as to give the students an opportunity of coming for-
ward and presenting
The
student-card,
peculiarly
German
lated, not only is sity register,
their Anmeldungs-bucher. like
the
institution.
your name entered
is
a
are matricu-
in the general univer-
but you must be inscribed under some one of
the four general faculties, viz.
philosophy,
Anmeldungs-buch,
When you
You
:
theology, law, medicine,
then receive a card, not
much
larger
MA TRICULA TION AND
LECTURES.
41
On
than an ordinary visiting card, of stout pasteboard. the face of the card
is
placed your name, Herr N. N., au\
(from) such and such a place, student in such a faculty.
On
the reverse
"is
a printed announcement, couched in
German
the knottiest of
none but the
sentences, that
accomplished scholar of both English and
German can
you are always to carry this card about you on your person, and produce it whenever it may be demanded by the university or town police, under untie, to the effect that
penalty of a fine of twenty Silver Groschen (50 cents).
This simple card
is
has, at least did
own, as Gottingen
its
have in the days of which
I write,
pro-
card secures you against all municipal arrest. are member of a special corporation, and as such are this
ducing
You
In a university
your Legitimation.
that has a complete jurisdiction of
amenable only to the university court neither civil nor criminal action can be brought against you in the ordinary courts, but must be laid before the university court in ;
the
first
instance.
If this
body should find you guilty of it would then surrender
a crime or a grave misdemeanor,
you
to the
or locked
you
is
to
Section, the
German
You cannot be
arrested
Supreme Court, Criminal
equivalent to our Circuit Court.
up by a town policeman
keep you
;
all
he can do with
for a few minutes in custody, until
finds a University Pedell (beadle) to take I
hope
to
be able to speak more
he
in
charge.
at length in
another
you
place of this curious relic of mediaevalism.
Your card in
your
in
hand, in
*4
your pocket and your Anmeldungsbuck
company with
ten or twelve other candi-
GERMAN
42
dates,
UNIVERSITIES.
you are then ushered into the august presence of
the Rector magnificus* or Chancellor of the University.
You
men, only looking a
The in
as othei
uncomfortable in his dress-coat.
trifle
makes a short harangue, of which, if you are the backward condition that I was, you will probably rector
understand one word in is
man much
probably find him to be a
will
that he
men
five,
but the substance of which
rejoiced to see so
is
aspirants to the
many promising young
higher
culture imparted
official
name
by the
of the university),
Georgia Augusta (the and that he hopes you will be good fellows and make the most of your time and opportunities. In token of which, each candidate in turn shakes hands with him. You are
then ushered out, to
have
just got their
make room
for a fresh
squad who
books and cards.
The ceremony is
ove.r; you are a German student, or a Germany, at last, ready to absorb all the knowledge and Bildung that your Alma Mater deals out
student
in
with lavish hand.
If
you happen
to
be of an amiable,
convivial turn of mind, your spirits will be buoyant
;
you
your privilege and duty to celebrate the " " occasion by dedicating a bowl of punch to your elder
will
consider
it
brethren and compatriots the ordeal
You and
by
they
who have helped you through
you where to go and what to do. then make an afternoon of it, driving
telling will
out to the Gleichen or the Plesse to enjoy the scenery,
and indulge
in coffee in the
*Prorector, in universities corporation.
open
air,
where the sovereign
and on your
is
return,
the nominal head of th
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
43
you can make a night of it at Fritz's Should you wake up the next or the Universitatskneipe.
if still
unsatisfied,
morning with a headache, a Jammer or a Kater, you can derive consolation from two circumstances first, that it :
is
only what has happened to thousands before you and
happen to thousands after you next, that you have fairly and honorably initiated yourself into student-life.
will
;
You know now what might
felicitously
dam
latin
be a student, as Victor Hugo express it, avant d'avoir crache du it is
to
la boutique (fun professeur.
Having habituated yourself dignity, the next step
whom you
is
are to "hear."
you might suppose.
your new
to the sense of
to decide
This
upon
the professors with
will
not be so easy as
Unless you have come to the uni-
versity with a preconceived plan of study, you will find
yourself embarrassed by the wealth from which you are to
Fortunately the professors give you ample time
choose. for
making a
The the will
1
suitable selection.
university opens nominally,
5th of October.
One
it
may be assumed, on
professor announces that he
begin to read on the i8th, another on the 2oth, in fact, I have known one professor
a third on the 25th
;
to begin his course
on the pth of November.
fessor,
it
has been already observed,
the main point
is
is
Each pro-
a law unto himself;
that he read at least one course of lec-
tures each semester,
on a subject of
his
own
selection, for
which he has properly qualified himself, and that he cover about so
much ground.
stops early,
is
Whether he begins
a matter in his
own
discretion.
late
and
This
is
GERMAN UNIVERSITIES.
44
not indifference or sloth on the part of the professors,
but rather a deliberate forecasting of time and labor.
Where
the
work
is
heavy and the
not waste an hour.
will
wide, the professor
field
Vangerow,
for instance, in lec-
Heidelberg on the Pandects, used to begin on the very first day after the nominal opening day, and conturing at
tinue, averaging three hours daily
two weeks
until
v Each course of lectures prices varying with the
week.
Thus a
throughout the winter,
had nominally
after the semester
closed,
paid for separately, the
is
number of hours occupied
single course, as
four or five hours a week,
it
is
called,
in the
one taking
charged about $5 a double one of ten or a week, would cost $10. twelve hours course,
The
is
;
usual double courses are those on the Pandects, on
Anatomy and Physiology, and on Chemistry. est number of courses (double and single) taken in any one semester (my
fifth)
was
The
high-
that I have
four, aggregating
twenty-five hours a week, for which I paid between $25
and $30, a small
price, in
view of the quantity and
quality of the instruction.
Lecture-fees are paid to the Quaestor, and not to the professor direct, although this latter eventually receives
them, or the greater part of them, from the Quaestor.
The new-comer
will
be
puzzled
at
the
distinction
between lectures publice, privatim, and privatissime. lic
lectures are those held
by a professor
on some minor topic of general sian universities least
each professor
one such lecture a term.
interest.
is
Pub-
gratuitously,
In the Prus-
held to announce at
The
privatim lectures
MA TRICULA TION AND
LECTURES.
45
are the ordinary ones, for which fees are paid and which
A
are regarded as the substance of university teaching. lecture privatissime is nothing more than our private
and times for which are settled by between the professor and the student. The agreement fees for it are not paid to the quaestor, and the lecture lesson, the terms
or lesson, I
not entered in the Anmeldungsbuch. have used more than once the expression ** a course is
of lectures
"
to
guard against misapprehension, it may be advisable to stop and explain at length. By a course of lectures in a German university is meant ;
a series of lectures on one subject, delivered by one
man, during one semester.
A German
university has,
strictly speaking, no course of instruction ; there are
classes, the students are not
standing by
no
arranged according to their
years, there are no recitations, there
is
no
grading, until the candidate presents himself at the end of three or four years for his doctor's degree, when the quality of his attainments is briefly and
roughly indicated by the wording of the diploma. More of this hereafter. For the present it will be suffi-
on a footing of perfect equality in the eye of university, and that theoretically each one is free to select such lectures in cient to say that all students stand
his
case
faculty as he is
somewhat
sees
fit
different.
to hear.
Practically, the
While there
is
no
curri-
culum, no routine of studies and hours, through which all students have to pass, as in our colleges and, to a less extent, in the
English universities,
still
there are
GERMAN
46
UNIVERSITIES.
certain limitations to the freedom of "hearing,"
are occasioned by the nature of
young man
all
attends the university, he
which
When
study. is
supposed have some definite object in view; he wishes to
a tc
fit
himself for becoming a theologian, or a lawyer, or a physician, or an historian, or a teacher in the public In other schools, or a chemist, or a mathematician. words, he
is
to get his professional outfit.
But
this
of itself implies the pursuance of a certain routine or
order in study.
The primary or fundamental branches first, before the student can take up
must be mastered the
more advanced.
In medicine, for instance, he can-
not understand pathology, without
So
anatomy and physiology.
having studied knowl-
in chemistry, a
edge of general organic and inorganic chemistry required before passing to analysis.
is
In law, the rou-
and History of Roman Legislation (Aeussere Rechtsgeschichte], then the Pandects and Doctrine of Inheritance, then Criminal and
tine
is
to take
Ecclesiastical
up the
Institutes
Law, before venturing upon such matand theories
ters as the Practica (practical exercises)
of Procedure.
But
this is
something altogether erent from a curriculum in which mathematics, sics,
metaphysics, history,
pursued simultaneously.
diff-
clas-
and the natural sciences are It
is
nothing more or
less
than conformity to the organic law of development. Furthermore, it is not formally obligatory upon the I do not say student, but left to his own good sense. that a professor of pathology or of chemistry
would
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
47
not refuse to admit into his clinique or his analytical laboratory a student who had neglected to qualify
himself in anatomy or in general chemistry. In all probability the professor would, and very properly.
But
in
which
I
the
and
philosophical
am more
familiar,
the utmost freedom
is
I
legal faculties, with
can assert confidently that One can " hear " the
allowed.
Pandects before the Institutes, Criminal Law before Stuthe Law of Inheritance, as I myself have done. dents generally follow a certain routine, but not so
much because
it is
octroye, as
the easiest and best
way
because they find
it
to be
to a right understanding of
the subject.
Not having any
inspirations after medical, theologiat that time, in fact not having attainments or cal, legal any plan of study at all beyond mastering the lan*
guage and
had myself entered in the philas being the one that offered the
literature,
I
osophical faculty, widest range of lectures from which to select. Under a countryman who had been purthe pilotage of H ,
suing classical studies for of what the
German
two
years,
I
went the rounds
students call hospitiren,
dropping into a lecture to see how you like the lecturer. This practice prevails to a considerable extent at the i. e.,
university, at least at the beginning of a semester. is
practically the only,
way
that
It
newly matriculated
students have of deciding between rival lecturers or of selecting some lecture that is not embraced in the
ordinary routine of study.
On
this, as
on so many
GERMAN
48
UNIVERSITIES.
Germans display a great deal of practical The student is free to roam about for two or
points, the sense.
three weeks, but at the end of that time
it is
expected
come to a decision and settle down either to steady work or to steady idleness. Consequently, if you should attend regularly a certain course of him that he
of lectures, occupying a seat and taking notes, without presenting your Anmeldungsbuch to the professor, you would probably be waited upon by the beadle, at
your room, and interrogated as to your studies, what you had paid for, what you intended to pay for, and the like. In other words, your freedom of hospitiren not
will
be
suffered
to
amount
to
unmistakable
"sponging." availed myself pretty thoroughly of the hospitirenprivilege, attending one or two lectures in every I
course delivered upon subjects connected in any way with letters. The philosophical faculty covers every thing
that
is
not law, medicine, or theology.
It
embraces consequently the exact sciences, mathematics,
physics, chemistry,
and the
like,
the descriptive
sciences, botany, physiology, geology, the historical sciences, political history, political
the humanities, that wissenschaft, Oriental
modern and
is,
economy,
finance,
Latin and Greek, Alterthums-
and general philology, and the
languages, as they are taught philologically
critically.
The
field, therefore, is
immense, and
often overlaps those of the other faculties.
Thus the
medical student, being held to a general knowledge
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
49
of chemistry, botany, and comparative physiology and anatomy, has to pass at least three semesters under the philosophical faculty, although enrolled in
Hebrew, as a study in
the medical.
linguistics, is not
regarded as a part of theology proper, but the professor of
Hebrew
is
a
Candidates
faculty.
member for
of the philosophical orders, by the way, are
obliged to master the outlines of at the
Hebrew grammar
gymnasium, before entering the university.
the other hand, students
who
On
obtain the degree of
Ph. D. for studies in history and political economy are
examined
in certain legal topics, viz.
:
Institutes,
romische Rechtsgechichte, and deutsche Rechts-und Verfassungsgeschichte, that
tion
is,
the history of
and constitutional forms
in
Roman
Germany.
would cover nearly two semesters in the The German theory is that no one is
become an historian or an grades,
who
legisla-
This
legal faculty.
qualified to
office-holder of the higher
has not an insight at least into the ele-
ments of jurisprudence.
making my selection of lectures, I was determined by one simple consideration which of the many distinguished men whom I heard would be likely I decided upon two, to teach me the most German. about as opposite in manner and substance as can In
:
Ernst Curtius, now professor in well be imagined who lectured on Greek Art, and Ritter, since Berlin, :
deceased,
who
Philosophy. 5
the History of Modern a comparatively young then Curtius,
lectured on
GERMAN
50
UNIVERSITIES.
man, had an energetic and rapid, but very distinct As his lectures were to a large extent enunciation. the analysis and criticism of the remains of Greek art,
such as temples,
friezes, statues, intaglios,
and the
judged that the subject itself would not only be interesting and profitable, but that the prints which
like, I
were passed around the class during the lecture would give me at least a visible image of what the lecturer
was speaking about. I made no attempt to take notes. In fact, had I been even a much better German scholar enough. The auditors generally seemed to listen rather than to write, and to use their pens only for noting down than
I
was,
I
could not have written
leading principles and important
fast
facts.
I
contented
myself with jotting down now and then a word or a phrase that I could arrest .in the general flow of the language, with a view to studying over it at my rooms. The chief good that the lectures of Professor
Curtius did
me was
to train
my ear
day by day to the
flow of very rapid and very elegant German. This point, it seems to me, has not been sufficiently attended
one thing to read a work in the privacy and of quiet your own room, but it is quite another to an hour to the same author as the words for listen to.
It is
come
fast
and warm from his
not catch at there,
first
Even if you do lips. more than a thought or two here and
and the body of the discourse sounds as the
tangled maze of a
symphony does
in music,
are training your perceptive facul-
still
you
to the uninitiated
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
5
1
ties far more than you are apt to suspect. Both ear and brain are on the stretch, you put forth your best in short, efforts to seize and hold the fleeting breath ;
you work under
pressure, whereas in your room you
are apt to dilly-dally over your books, to it
were, for
want of outside stimulus.
course, does not exclude reading
and the one supplements the
;
fall asleep,
as
Hearing, of
both are necessary But I take the
other.
liberty of calling especial attention to the importance
of hearing
German
that only too
many English and Americans
neglect
element of training.
this ^
well delivered, in view of the fact
Professor Ritter was, as
opposite of his colleague. deliberately,
from
have intimated, the exact He spoke very slowly and
full notes,
ing intonation, so that write
I
it
down every word.
with a mild, almost dron-
was
possible, even for me, to
In his lectures, then,
pen industriously, and succeeded
I
used
my making an exThis it was act reproduction of the professor's text.
my
practice to take to
lecture hour,
my room
in
immediately after the
which was from four to
five in the after-
noon, spending the interval to tea time in going over it
again,
grammar and
dictionary in hand, and writing
the translations of words and phrases on the margin
The reader may perhaps doubt of one's writing down correctly expres-
and between the the possibility
lines.
sions which he does not understand at the time.
But
language where the pronunciation conforms so closely to the spelling, and the words are run togethel in a
GERMAN
52
so
little,
as
is
UNIVERSITIES.
the case in
German, the
feat is not at all
difficult, provided the lecturer reads slowly
enough to the ear as a well rounded unit.
each word strike
let
German
emphatically a language of terminations and prefixes, which give the ear a chance to Besides,
rest
is
and the pen a chance
to abbreviate.
,
heit, keit, schaft,
ung, mss, ling, thum,
fach, fait, sam, bar,
called separable
and the
entire
and inseparable
the reader that during the
first
It
will suf-
such syllables as
fice to call the reader's attention to
tg, lich, isch, los,
group of the so
prefixes.
I
two months
can assure certainly
were, between one and two hundred pages by mere sound, generally unable to recognize the connection between two succes-
wrote down, from dictation as
I
sive
it
words, unless they happened to stand in the
simplest grammatical relation, and nearly always unable to follow the transition from sentence to sentence.
My feelings "
during the process were somewhat akin,
suppose, to those of the compositor
I
copy
"
who
sets
up
in a foreign language.
Besides a general knowledge of German, I made one valuable acquisition through Professor Ritter's lectures, to wit, an acquaintance with the vocabulary of abstract and philosophical terms. This, it is well known, is the most difficult part of the language.
Our
abstract terms
are taken from the Latin and
Greek, as they are in French, so that the reader is
familiar with their
easily
recognize them
meaning in
in
who
one language can All that an
the other.
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
53
Englishman or an American needs to prepare himself for reading a French treatise on art, or science, or history
is
a slight knowledge of the pronouns and irregIt is only where concrete terms come in
ular verbs. question, house,
names of
dog and the
objects
and things, such as bread, two languages diverge.
like, that the
These concrete terms with the English.
in
German
coincide generally
But the abstract terms have been
developed by means of suffixes and prefixes from German root-forms, and cannot be comprehended without an insight into the genius of the language. I
mean such words
niss
memory,
as Einbildung imagination, Gedacht-
Vernunft
Begriff conception.
reason,
Geschichte
Furthermore, the
history,
German abstract
terms are not always the exact equivalents of the
English words employed to translate them in the dictionary.
Thus the German word
Urtheil,
given in the
vocabularies as denoting judgment, covers only that
word
as
it
may be used
in the sense of opinion, the
product of the faculty of judging; the faculty itself This is only one exis designated by Vrtheilskraft.
The beginner will find himself tripped up continually, by these abstract terms they are hard to understand and harder still to rememample out of thousands.
;
ber and/apply. They really represent more of the genius of the language than any mere inflectional or syntactic peculiarities.
These
latter will
become
of
themselves a matter of routine, but the derivation of words, especially of abstract terms, calls for the most
GERMAN
54
UNIVERSITIES. what the Ger-
delicate appreciation of the formative,
mans
elements of the language. As a means of acquiring this appreciation, I can heartily recommend a course of lectures on the history of call the building
philosophy.
A
course upon pure speculative philbe altogether too difficult for the
osophy would But a course something beginner.
like the
one
delivered by Professor Ritter, beginning with
spersed with short,
Roger Kant and Hegel, intereasy biographical and historical
me
to blend sufficiently the abstract
Bacon and coming down notices,
seems to
and the concrete.
to
The hearer
gets the proper play of
abstract terms, while the very effort of writing
down one by one
them
meaning, or at least the exact shade of meaning, and afterward patiently educing the sense with the help of his dicin ignorance of their
tionary or of his teacher, fixes them firmly in the
At all events, the lecturer should speak memory. and with the clearest articulation. slowly
The lecture-system of Germany has been
extolled
*
and decried with equal injustice. Like every other system of man's invention, it is confessedly imperfect.
One who
attends lectures
is
not necessarily on the
road to knowledge, one who lectures is not necessarily wiser or more interesting than a printed book. But taken the
all in all, I
lecturer
think that
it
works
well.
an opportunity of revising
It
his
gives
own
and incorporating fresh knowledge every course of lectures can be made as it were a new studies
;
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
55
which is not usually practicable with a book. It gives the hearer the ripest fruits printed of research direct from the investigator himself, it edition,
quickens the faculties of apprehension and stimulates
subsequent study and collateral reading.
Say what
they will, the devotees of the Socratic method will
never succeed in arguing the personal element in the It is well enough to lecture-system out of existence.
b; made to
feel that
gain to be
made
you are wrong, but some one
to feel that
it
is
a higher
else is right,
you are catching from his lips the thoughts over which he has spent days and years of patient
and
that
toil.
There are as many
Germany all
different styles of lecturing in
as there are different professors.
They can
be reduced, however, under three general cate-
gories
:
the system of dictating everything, the sys-
tem of dictating part and explaining
part, the
system
of rapid delivery. By the first is meant that plan in pursuance of which the professor reads off the entire lecture at a uniform rate of speed, slow
enough
hearers, unless they should be very clumsy writers, to take down every or nearly every word. Under the second system, the professor dic-
to allow his
tates a
paragraph
at a time,
reading so slowly that his it, and even pausing and
hearers cannot help catching repeating,
ence
and
if
he should see that any one in the audi and then proceeds to comment rapidly
is at fault,
in a colloquial tone
upon what has
just been die-
GERMAN
56
Under
tated.
the
the third system, that of rapid delivery,
instructor speaks
to impress his students, to arouse
and stimulate them, than "
they can carry home
more popular
the fashion of our public
after
aiming more
.ecturers,
UNIVERSITIES.
them something
to give
black on white."
on
lecturers
Many
political history or
connected with literary history are delivered
that
of the
on topics
in this style,
especially where the professor can take for granted that his hearers have some previous knowledge, so that his
remarks are as
But
theme.
it
were the novel presentment of an old
in general
it
may be
wherever exact, positive information
safely asserted that is
to
be conveyed, and exact
as for instance in law, or in the descriptive
sciences, there the only systems followed are the first
and
the second.
Lectures are usually delivered with what
is
called tem-
"
on time." Tempus, or pus, which is emphatically not " the academic quarter," as it is otherwise styled, denotes that
a lecture announced,
begun
until ten or fifteen
e.
g.,
for ten o'clock, is not
one.
It
The
minutes after the hour.
reason for this apparent procrastination
is
a practical
not unfrequently happens that the lecturer, to
save the time and trouble of going to and fro between his
home and
the Collegien-haus, will secure two successive
hours for two lectures.
Still, it is
not desirable to read
one hundred and twenty minutes on a stretch; the pause, then,
chance to "
is
very opportune, giving the lecturer a
rest his voice.
academic quarter
" is
But the chief
utility
of the
for the students themselves.
As
MA TRICULA TION AND many
LECTURES.
57
of them have three or four lectures in succession,
perhaps in different buildings, the pause enables them
make
the transition without inconvenience.
Besides,
to
it is
really a blessing in disguise to be able to idle ten minutes
between each two hours.
what
-
One who knows by
actual
to attend lectures every
day in the week, to or even from from nine o'clock one, say eight to one, as I was circumstanced on the Saturdays of my last trial
it is
winter semester (1863-1864), will appreciate the relief
by such brief respites. To fingers grown stiff and numb from constant writing, to brains become hot afforded
and confused, the " quarter comes as a positive boon you put on your hat and hasten into the open air for a "
;
short
meet your friends and acquaintances and chat about every-day matters. Still, not-
stroll, to
have a
little
all its
withstanding
advantages, the academic quarter
not infrequently reduced to very narrow dects are considered the faculty, that
is
"
to say, they
heaviest
"
whom
The Pan-
limits.
lecture in the legal
never occupy
than twelve
less
hours a week through the winter semester. with
Mommsen,*
heard them in Gottingen, began at
I
is
five
minutes past nine, read without interruption until ten minutes past ten, then made a pause of
and continued
until five or ten
five
minutes only,
minutes past eleven.
As
one could do to keep up From the moment he entered the room until
he read rapidly, with him.
it
was
all
that
he rose from his desk to leave, there was not a pause, *
A
cousin of the celebrated historian in Berlin.
GERMAN
58
UNIVERSITIES.
every pen traveled over the paper in feverish haste. "
"
the worst
grind
But
under Vangerow,
at Heidelberg,
This celebrated lecturer was in the
deceased.
since
was
habit of reading
also
on the Pandects
from nine to
half past ten, then making a pause of fifteen minutes, and
reading on until one o'clock, and even lecture
is
later.
opened with the stereotyped formula,
Every Melne Herren (Gentlemen)
!
The
professors have their
private meeting-room, from which they proceed to the lecture-room. In my day, there was the utmost license at
The
Gcttingen with regard to smoking.
on the all
stairs
and
and
times,
even in the lecture-rooms themselves In Berlin, the rule
nntil the entrance of the professor.
was
different
;
students smoked
in the entries of the Collegien-haus at
smoking was not permitted any where
within the University buildings.
As
a rule, a university lecture
ward enunciation of
a simple, straightfor-
is
fact or opinion,
You
at brilliancy of style.
without any attempt
are seated with a dozen or
two or three dozen other young
men
like yourself,
smok-
The ing, perhaps, and chatting with your neighbor. bench on which you sit is hard and uncomfortable, the elevated bench before you
is
inscribed with
all
sorts of
devices and names, the legacy of former generations.
Your pen, ink and paper door opens across the
softly, the
are spread out before you.
form of the lecturer moves quietly
room and ascends the rostrum.
Without pre-
amble, without prelude, the hour's work begins.
Hemn
The
Thomas von Aquino, sah
in
Meim
der vernunftigen
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES. Seele den Jibchsten
Grad
der weltlichen Dinge
broken
The
off the
lecturer has simply
day before.
I
can not truthfully say that could be called is
resumed where he had
have listened to lectures by but
different professors in different universities,
many
sor
(Thomas
as the climax of things
Aquinas regarded the rational soul earthly).
59
not so
much
I
have ever heard one that
The aim
brilliant.
I
of a
German
profes-
even persuade The substance of his dis-
to arouse or interest or
his hearers, as to teach them.
The is the unfolding of truth, grave, solid truth. utmost that he permits himself is an occasional touch of
course
humor, when the subject in his lectures
will
bear
it.
Thus, Zachariae,
on Criminal Law, was rather fond of show-
ing up certain infractions of the criminal code in their
ludicrous aspects, and expatiating upon the comically
quaint nomenclature of the Carolina, or Code of Criminal Procedure century.
of
enacted by Charles V. in the sixteenth
One phrase
rolling
with
out
in particular
gusto
he never grew weary
Idem^
:
so
ein
Weibsbild.
New whom
Gneist, in Berlin, lectured to his students about as a
York lawyer argues a motion before a judge with
on easy terms, feeling confident that he has the court already on his side. Mommsen was always intensely he
is
earnest, speaking
energetically
and almost sharply
at
meaning upon his lecture that I have ever
times, in his anxiety to impress his
hearers.
But by
heard, in
Germany
Vangerow.
far the ablest
or at home, was one delivered by
Happening
October, 1864,
to
I profited
be
in
Heidelberg on a
by the occasion
to
visit in
hospitircn
GERMAN
60
UNIVERSITIES.
The
with the then most prominent jurist in Germany. subject was thoroughly
time in
familiar to me, as I
off a
few weeks
The auditorium was
later.
there could not have been
crowded,
two hundred
at the
examination at Gottingen,
my
preparation for
full
which came
was
much
less
than
but the silence and
students present,
Seated on a small raised plat-
attention were profound.
form near the center of the room, the lecturer spoke for an hour and a half in an easy, clear, sustained voice, without pause and without break, on one of the most
complicated points in
Roman Law.
not even a schedule, only a
slip
He had no
notes,
of paper, on which were
written one or two references to passages to be cited from
the Digest
and
logical
yet the ideas
;
and words came
and well placed
ing from a printed book. the a,
German
y
ft.
were read-
The
spirit delights to style,
forth as clear
as if the lecturer
subject was one which develop after the I, A, i, a
in all sorts of
main and subsidiary
paragraphs, with minor and modifying clauses, exceptions, qualifications,
notes, into
and the
like.
and
reservations, references to foot
But the lecturer had such an insight
and such a grasp of his subject to be nothing less than the
seemed
process of organic evolution
out of his brain.
;
it
"his
discourse
easy, spontaneous
seemed
There was no
eloquence, no outburst of
that
grow of itself brilliancy, no flight of
humor
to
or sarcasm; the lec-
would scarcely have been intelligible to one not But it was a masterly didactic familiar with the study. ture
statement of the clear, crystalline truths of the law, intro-
MA TRICULA TION AND LECTURES.
61
ducing nothing superfluous, omitting nothing necessary
and putting everything arguments of it
men
for sustained
like
in the right place.
Webster and
power and absolute
Only the best
O 'Conor
could equal
logical coherency.
I
heard from Heidelberg students that Vangerow lectured in this fashion from three to four hours daily through the winter,
and from two
term.
If
faculty
we add
to three hours through the
to this his duties as
and president of the Collegium
references, his unremitting activity
regret to say
kind,
A
legal
for
government I as an author, and
domestic troubles of the most painful
we need not wonder
that one of such prodigious
powers should sink into the grave while of
summer
dean of the
still
in the
prime
life.
The paper used for taking notes is of a peculiar German student rarely if ever has what we call a
book or a copy-book.
He
the page varies in
size,
note-
uses the so called Pandecten
Collegienpapier, plain, white
or
kind.
but
writing-paper, unruled; is
generally what book-
publishers designate as lexicon-octavo untrimmed.
Six
or eight sheets (twelve or sixteen pages) are stitched The Heft, before together at the back, making a Heft.
put under a press of which the face is smaller than the face of the page. This blocks out by indentation
it is
sold, is
a sort of inner page, leaving a wide margin.
page alone
is
The
inner
used for writing in the lecture-hour; the
reserved for subsequent corrections and addi-
margin
is
tions.
At the end of the semester, the Hefte of any one
course can be bound up in a volume for preservation.
6
GERMAN
62
The advantages
UNIVERSITIES.
of this paper are that
it
enables the
student to dispense with an armful qf cumbersome note-
books
he has only to carry as many Hefte
at
a time as
and prevents the
he has separate lectures to attend
In buying a note-book, the student
waste of paper.
runs the risk of getting one either too small or too large
;
but with the Pandectenpapier, he has only to add a
Heft from time
to time,
and he can
long as the Hefte are unbound.
me
a matter of surprise to
also intercalate as
has always been
It
that the Pandectenpapier has
not been introduced into our American colleges.
It is
most practical method of taking notes.
The
by
far the
Hefte are carried
in
a small black
leather portfolio
(Mappe), just large enough to hold three or four at a
and
enough to be rolled up and carried The notes are always conveniently under the arm. time,
flexible
written in ink.
The inkstand
bottomed, as with iron,
us,
generally used
in the pocket, the point is protected
A
it.
lecture-room for the
not
flat-
but terminates in a sharp point of
which can be thrust into the desk.
that screws over
is
When
carried
by a capsule of horn
stranger visiting a university
first
time would be puzzled to
account for the innumerable round holes punched in the desks
of the
;
a naturalist might call them fossil foot-prints
Bubo maximus.
The conduct is
propriety
tures
in
of the students during the lecture-hout
itself.
different
One might
attend hundreds of lec-
universities, without
disorder or. whispering.
The
first
witnessing any
attempt to create
MA TRICULA T1ON AND LECTURES.
63
such disturbances as disgrace the halls of our colleges
would be punished by the summary expulsion of
To an American
offenders.
German respect. tutorial
universities will appear
lax in
more than one
There are no chapel-services, no marks, no The student is free to live where supervision.
he pleases, his movements are unfettered. whatever else the university may wink at, it never
and
as
rates disrespect
student
is
and disorder
treated as a
and duty.
If
man
he does not
can hear another versity,
the
all
faculty, the discipline in the
;
if
in the lecture-room.
But tole-
The
having a sense of propriety
like a particular professor,
he does not
he can go elsewhere.
If
like
he
a particular uni-
he does not
feel
disposed
on a particular day, he can stay away. But if he attends, he is expected to conduct himself as in all to attend
respects a man. in
There have been,
some of the German
I
universities.
admit, distuibances
But they were not
mere boyish freaks, but political demonstrations instituted for some special purpose and usually backed up by a clique in the faculty
The most
notable
itself
and by outside sympathy.
instances were
Bohemian demonstrations
the
Anti-German,
at Prague, ten or fifteen years
of two sets of ago, which brought about the appointment the German, professors in all the departments, one for the othei for the Czechish students.
The German
student, however, has one privilege which
the American has not; he can manifest his wishes by
scraping his feet on the
too
fast,
or
fails to
floor.
If a professor lectures
satisexplain a point to the complete
GERMAN
64
UNIVERSITIES.
faction of his hearers, or instantly
good
will
course all
is
hear three or four pairs of shoes at is
know
students
the
that the
a heavy one, in which the professor has need
the time he can get, they are not so apt to inter-
minutes. "
longer, but
"
time of
I
must
the professor
is
me
"
I
have heard
for detaining
Mommsen
much
much
inferior
" talk,"
appearance, are
Even to
in Berlin
and
our recently con-
structed halls, while in places like Halle, Tubingen,
tilation
:
grace.
lecture-rooms, in their general
unattractive, not to say cheerless.
burg
say
you one moment But where
merely indulging in explanatory
Leipsic, they are
five
finish this subject to-day."
usually cut short without
The
should exceed
grace
More than once
Gentlemen, excuse
is
in
to lecturing over the hour, the
Where
varies.
rupt, unless the
he
always taken by the professor
With regard
part.
practice
of
you
This hint
work.
he lectures over the hour,
if
Mar-
the want of venand Gottingen ten years ago is shocking. Still, one soon becomes used to the
minor discomforts of dingy windows, hard benches, and close air, and learns to take comfort in the world of ideas.
CHAPTER
der Mensur.
Auf
ONEroomday
T
,
IV.
New
of
York, dropped into
before dinner, saying
see a first-class
Mensur
this
:
my
Don't you wish to
afternoon
As a graduate
?
of a respectable American college, there was the pre-
must recognize the obvious connection between Mensur and mensuration yet my rushlight of sumption that
I
;
mathematical experience was the
German
term, which,
it
is
to
insufficient
illuminate
perhaps needless to
state,
had not come up my grammatical studies. Did it mean a surveying party, or a mathematical " " I had to a delicious triangles ? concourse of orgie, round of
in the
upon my better initiated countryman for an explanation, and learned that Mensur was the student-word for
call
the dueling ground, that
and hence
is
by extension
ally desirous to
to say, the area for the duel
measured
itself.
off,
Natur-
get a practical insight into the modus
operandi of this peculiar act of student
concerning which
I
had heard so much,
invitation as unceremoniously as
himself was not a
life
member
it
I
in
Germany,
accepted the
was given.
T
of a Corps or Verbindung, but
having spent three or four semesters in Gottingen, was
on terms of easy acquaintance with many corps-students.
GERMAN
66
We
UNIVERSITIES.
arranged to meet in his room immediately after
when
dinner,
I
should be presented to S
"Hanoverians," who was went his way to So T
work on
From
my the
to
,
of the
conduct us to the Mensur.
the Laboratory, and I resumed
translations.
windows of
E
's
room, which faced on the
leading out through the Geismar Gate, I had
street
watched almost every other day students in numbers flocking past with Schl ger daylight,
and
gloves, even in
and learned that they were on
dueling ground. prised me, as I
The openness
their
way
broad to the
of their movements sur-
had seen more than one picture of the by University beadles, and sup-
arrest of dueling parties
posed, before coming to Gottingen, that encounters of the kind were kept as secret as possible.
The
winter
was what might be called a star-season. There has always been a good deal of fighting in Gottingen, o'f 1
86 1
2
perhaps more than at any other university in proportion to the number of students. But this my first winter in the place was a remarkable one.
There was an unusual
number of
veterans, big, heavy, scarred fighting-cocks,
among
the corps, and especially
all
phalians.
The
lishment of a
comers, berg,
chief casus
new
belli,
among
however, was the estab-
corps, the Normans,
among whom
the West-
by some new
were two brothers from Heidel-
named Mendelssohn, relatives, I believe, of the The bantling, as might have been
celebrated composer.
expected, had to undergo a baptism of "blood and iron."
The rowing
at
one time was prodigious.
Whenever the
A UF DER MENSUR. Normans returned from
their
67
Kneipe in the evening, they
were beset by the students of the other corps, chaffed and huffed, all
and challenged
fighting
men,
right
in fact, in
and
a fight," this was no great hardship.
sohn was be
it
said,
But as they were
left.
"
Western parlance,
their leader, their
The
elder Mendels-
Haupthahn, and,
performed his duties manfully.
two or three duels a week
spoiling for
to his credit
After fighting
throughout the winter, and
escaping without a scratch, he got the consilium abeundt
from the University Court and had to shades of private
life,
pleasantnesses
to the
leaving twenty or thirty slight
" still
retire
pending.
"
un-
Others of the Normans
were also relegated, and the corps in consequence was broken up. There were grounds for suspecting that it
:
became too great an eye-sore to the University judge. But all through the winter months the Paukerei was kept up, and one could see dozens of students going
about with bandaged cheeks and noses. On the particular day of which I now write, the event was to tie a duel
between Mendelssohn and
Von
H
,
the leader of the
Bremensians.
At two o'clock found him and
I
made my appearance
at T.'s
room, and
his friend S. quietly discussing coffee
and
by the
cigars after the
approved German fashion.
way, was a
good-looking, bespectacled young man,
tall,
S.,
his manners and anything but a "rower," to judge by
had the pleasure of meeting him by the merest chance in Vienna, during the summer of 1872, actions.
I
GERMAN
68
and learned
that he
UNIVERSITIES.
had become a manufacturer.
At the
university he was a student of chemistry.
When up the
and
the cigars
coffee
Kurze Geismar
at
an end, we strolled
and out of the gate along were preceded and followed by other
We
the chaussee.
were
street
students in knots of three or four, at wide intervals, to
avoid the appearance of a crowd.
After issuing from
the gate, I observed younger students, Fuchse, stationed on each side of the road every hundred feet, acting as
scouts or sentries to give warning in case of the approach
of a Pedell* or other suspicious looking person. S. as
Having
our escort, we passed without exciting comment.
Under ordinary
circumstances, a duel
world, a private affair of the duelists
;
for the outside
no one but the immediate backers
permitted to attend.
is
is,
But a duel fought
under the sanction of the S. C., the Senioren Convent,
/'.