310 PROF. WILLIAMSON’S ADDRESS, ETC. 
ting those fields of research that we know to be so bound- 
less, and the cry of ‘‘ Tedet me vite” will never be heard 
from any of us. 
That great intellectual results may crown your labours 
is my earnest wish. Though I would not teach that intel- 
lect affords any title to eternal life, I cannot believe that, 
other things being equal, the giant mind of a Newton and 
that of a clown will occupy the same level in the great 
day of account. That a man who, besides being a good 
and faithful follower of his Lord, has fostered his intellect, 
benefiting his fellow men and glorifying his God, will not 
find such culture influencing his condition in a future 
world, constitutes no part of my religious creed. 
