The Days of a Man i 9 n 



University, and the Rev. Henry Osborn Taylor of 

 New York, student of medieval religion. 

 The con- Personally I have felt that talks to young people 

 duct of on tne con duct of life formed an important part of 

 my own duties. During the many years of my 

 presidency I made to the graduating class a special 

 address containing some lessons, moral, social, or 

 political. Several of these talks I published in 1892, 

 as already indicated, under the title, "The Care and 

 Culture of Men." This book being favorably 

 received, it met with a large sale. In 1905 other 

 similar addresses were gathered together in a volume 

 called "The Voice of the Scholar." But the entire 

 unsold part of the edition, together with the plates, 

 was burned in the earthquake-fire of 1906. 

 Beacon Still other discourses of this kind, some on com- 



Bookiets mencement days, but more of them on various 

 occasions, were published as separate booklets by the 

 Beacon Press in Boston. Most of these I gave first 

 as extempore talks at different places in the East, 

 writing them out on the train while on my way back. 

 Their titles follow: 



The Call of the Twentieth The Call of the Nation 



Century Ulrich von Hutten 



The Religion of a Sensible The Human Harvest 



American College and the Man 



Life's Enthusiasms The Heredity of Richard Roe 



The Blood of the Nation The Story of a Good Woman 



The Higher Sacrifice Unseen Empire 



The Philosophy of Hope America's Conquest of Europe 



The Strength of Being Clean War and the Breed 

 The Innumerable Company 



In one of my Commencement speeches never 

 published I said : 



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