A Williams Anthology - A Collection of the Verse and Prose of Williams College, 1798-1910 by Unknown
page 25 of 234 (10%)
page 25 of 234 (10%)
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yard, and kicked about in a very promiscuous fashion; the freshmen and
sophomores generally had a match of what was by courtesy called base-ball. The only intercollegiate contest of which I had any recollection, and as it seems the first ever to take place, was a ball game at Pittsfield between Williams and Amherst. Amherst was the challenging party, and the college by vote selected its team with much care and went forth to the contest with strong hopes. The game was not lacking in excitement. It was none of your new-fangled, umpire-ridden matches: the modern type of base-ball had not, of course, been invented. Foul balls were unknown, the sphere could be knocked toward any quarter of the earth or sky; runners between bases could be pelted with it by any of the outfielders. I think that the score stood something like 60 to 40, and it was not in favor of Williams. It was a melancholy company that trailed homeward after this contest past the Lanesboro pond; but since then I understand that times have changed. [Dr. Gladden has embodied his college reminiscences more fully in his recent volume _Recollections_, wherein is told also the story of "The Mountains." (Houghton Mifflin Company, 1909.)] _Literary Monthly_, 1893. [Footnote 1: October, 1893.] [Footnote 2: Demolished in 1908.] TO THE MOUNTAINS OF WILLIAMSTOWN |
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