Fuller, Bartholomew, 1829-1882
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Fellow Members
Before entering upon the duties of the office to which your kind
partiality has elevated me, It devolves upon me in accordance with the
requirements of our Constitution to address you on some suitable subject. I am
perfectly conscious of my inability to discharge this pleasing, though in many
respects responsible duty in a manner befitting the high dignity of the station
which I now for a time occupy, and well aware that this my imperfect effort is
not worthy to fill
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archives beside those of the talented and gifted individuals who have from time
to time administered to you from this place words of warning, of reproof or of
encouragement.
Your memories still with pleasure recall the past and your breasts
swell with just pride when you recur to those occasions when
Kerr
in his clear, eloquent, earnest
manner exhorted you to show yourselves men. When
Hill
in
mild, persuasive tones bade you be up and doing or, to descend to still more
recent times, when my my
immediate
predecessor
in a chaste and elegant address taught you that
"action, action, action"
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should still be
our motto. The subject which I propose for the foundation of a few, brief
remarks though trite is yet profitable and ofttimes necessary, and as examples
of the great good which has resulted to nations as well as individuals from the
exercise of it can but be familiar to you all, it will be less surprising that
I have chosen "Unanimity of Action".
Bear with me Gentlemen, if for a very brief space I address myself
particularly to the members of my own class. Fellow Members of the Senior
Class, an important change has taken place in us within the short period of a
few months. Those to whom it was our privilege to listen and upon whose accents
we have so often hung with the livliest emotions of pleasure have gone hence to
mingle with us no more. Upon us has devolved the conduct of the Hall, the
administration of the laws, and the heavy responsibility which of necessity
attaches to those, who by their position, are rightly considered exemplars.
Shall it be said of us when we too in our turn have left these halls
endeared to us by so many pleasing recollections and hallowing associations,
that we finished our course with honor and delivered into the hands of our
successors the reputation of our
Society untarnished? Or shall it be said that we "Knew
our duty but we did it not? that we to whom many an eye, which has not been
permitted to see the things which ours have seen,
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is turned in anxious expectation, we, to whom
all
with reason look for examples of diligence and faithfulness in the discharge of
our duties, have been recreant? Gentlemen it rests with you to answer these
questions, to realise the hopes concieved respecting you.
Nor while I thus urge upon my classmates the necessity of action,
would I have you Fellow Members, of the lower classes to remain inactive. The
character of our debates the lethargy and supineness which each succeeding
night is exhibited here have been animadverted upon freely and frequently
enough. It becomes us then to redeam the character
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the debates, to awake from this lethargy, to arouse from this supineness which
has for so long a time deadened our faculties and weakened our energies. But
can this be effected? Can we hope in the short space of one session or one year
to counteract the evil which has so long been brewing? The answer is plain it
can be done, but in one way only. It cannot be
accomplished by individual effort, but it
may be
secured by unanimity of action.
It is true of nations, but pre-eminently so of literary institutions
like ours that "in union there is strength". We are connected by ties
stronger than these of men friendship for we owe to one-another "the
performance of all duties that may be required of us in a social capacity"
"From the very nature of our union" it is declared "we must all
participate in the honor or share in the disgrace of each individual
member" How
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important then is concert of
action, that those whom in a very short while we shall admit to all the
privileges of membership in this body, and who will henceforth
"participate in our honor or share in our disgrace" should behold us
as a society united, behold us in a spirit of generous emulation entering
fearlessly the arena of debate, all sectional or party feeling banished, behold
us in our discussions exercising a mild forbearance and not retorting with
malignant asperity.
We have many, very many causes for self-gratulation in that for a
number of years past we have not been rent by contending factions, those who
once did sow the dragon's teeth have passed from this scene of action to
display their capacities in a wider field. We are fortunate in that our lives
have fallen unto us in more pleasant places and more peaceful times, let us
then not "look mournfully into the past" for we wish not to recall
it, but let us "wisely improve the present for it is ours".
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In conclusion Fellow Members allow me to return my thanks for the
honor which you have done me, and to assure you that the duties of my office
shall be discharged with fidelity and zeal. And I must ask of each and all a
hearty co-operation with me in the administration of our laws.