IV AND WHERE TO FIND IT 109 



name, I must callfPhysical Geography. I What 

 mean is that which the Germans call 

 It is a description of the earth, of its place and ^ 

 relation to other bodies ; of its general structure, 

 and of its great features winds, tides, mountains, 

 plains: of the chief forms of the vegetable and 

 animal worlds, of the varieties of man. It is 

 the peg upon which the greatest quantity of useful 

 and entertaining scientific information can be 



^ 



^LiteraturejB not upon the College programme ; 

 but I hope some day to see it there. For litera- 

 ture is (the greatest of all sources of refined 

 pleasure, and one~bT iEe great uses of a liberal 

 education is to^naHe^usTo^enjoy tHaTpIeasufe. \ 

 There is scope enough for the purposes of liberal 

 education in the study of the rich treasures of our 

 own language alone. All that is needed is 

 direction, and the cultivation of a refined taste by 

 attention to sound criticism. But there is no reason 

 why French and German should not be mastered 

 sufficiently to read what is worth reading in 

 those languages with pleasure and with profit. __ 



And finally, by and by, we must have History'; 

 treated not as a succession of battles and 

 dynasties ; not as a series of biographies ; not as 

 evidence that Providence has always been on the 

 side of either Whigs or Tories ; but as the develop- 

 menJLpf man m times past, and in other conditions 

 thanjjux ow.n. 



