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			<title> <hi rend="bold">"The
				Dangers of a College Life," Class Composition of Bartholomew Fuller [Fall 1848]:</hi> Electronic Edition.</title> 
		  <author> Fuller, Bartholomew, 1829-1882 </author> 
		  <editor>Erika Lindemann</editor> 
		  <funder>Funding from the State Library of North Carolina supported the
			 electronic publication of this title.</funder> 
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			 <resp>Text transcribed by</resp> 
			 <name>Erika Lindemann</name> 
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		  <edition>First Edition, 
			 <date>2005</date> </edition> 
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		  <publisher>The University Library, University of North Carolina at
			 Chapel Hill </publisher> 
		  <pubPlace>Chapel Hill, North Carolina</pubPlace> 
		  <date>2005</date> 
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			 <p>© This work is the property of the University of North Carolina at
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		  <title type="monograph"> <hi rend="italics">True and Candid
			 Compositions: The Lives and Writings of Antebellum Students in North
			 Carolina</hi> </title> 
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			 <resp>written by</resp> 
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				<title type="collection"> Bartholomew Fuller Papers (#3621-z),
				  Southern Historical Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
				  </title> 
			 	<title type="document"> "The
			 		Dangers of a College Life," Class Composition of Bartholomew Fuller, [Fall
				  1848]</title> 
				<author>Fuller, Bartholomew, 1829-1882</author> 
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			 <extent> 3 pages, 4 page images</extent> 
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				<date value="1848-09">[1848]</date> 
				<publisher>Southern Historical Collection, University of North
				  Carolina at Chapel Hill</publisher> 
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				<note type="call number">Call number 3621-z (Southern Historical
				  Collection, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill)</note> 
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				<item id="topic_concat281">Education/UNC Student Life</item> 
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		  <date>2005-05-31,</date> 
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  <text id="mss04-19"> 
	 <front> 
		<div1 type="doc_summary" id="doc_sum04-19"> 
		  <head>Document Summary</head> 
		  <p>Fuller's composition argues that young men in college must guard
			 against extravagance, "spreeing," and profanity.</p> 
		</div1> 
	 </front> 
	 <body> 
		<div1 type="composition"> <pb id="mss04-19-cv" n="cover"/><pb id="mss04-19-p01" n="1"/> 
			<head> "The
				Dangers of a College Life," Class Composition of 
			 <name id="BF" key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Bartholomew Fuller</name>, [Fall 1848]<ref id="ref743" type="source" target="note743" rend="sup">1</ref></head> 
		  <head type="original" rend="center"> The "Dangers of a College Life" </head> 
		  <p> The dangers to which a young man is exposed during that part of his
			 life which he passes in college, are numerous and difficult to oppose with a
			 firm, unyielding spirit. After he has left the place, where till that time he
			 has been under the supervision of those, whose duty it was to watch over and
			 guide his erring steps and to guard well the disposition to contract vices of
			 every kind; he feels himself at liberty as he thinks to act
			 <hi rend="underscore">for</hi> himself, and the consequence in most cases,
			 <add hand="BF" rend="sup">is</add> a departure from those principles of moral
			 conduct, which have been instilled into his mind from early youth. If he could
			 realize, that the habits contracted at college will follow him through
			 subsequent life, and perhaps in more aggravated forms; he would more readily
			 recognise the duty to guard well himself lest he should yield to
		  	temptation.–  There is danger of extravagance. This is to be shunned with
			 diligence as it is of an increasing and insinuating kind. Surrounded with
			 kindred spirits, each indulgence paves the way for a greater until he quiets
			 his upbraiding conscience with the soothing argument, that it is necessary to
			 keep<pb id="mss04-19-p02" n="2"/> up appearances—There is another danger
			 to which he should present an invincible front—that which is called in
			 common parlance "spreeing". this habit from its apparently harmless
			 character, is readily contracted, and it appears in a short time to be a very
			 creditable thing, to disturb the faculty and his fellow-students with noise and
			 annoyances of different kinds—This vice should especially be avoided on
			 account of its prolific nature, it begets many others, which when expanded
			 under the fostering care they are likely to recieve, become of as great
		  	importance as the parent vice.– Among its offspring may be enumerated,
			 idleness, disrespect towards superiors, a general spirit of insubordination and
			 a neglect of duties, which while they render him more prone to indulge in
			 aberrations from the path of rectitude, debilitate and enslave the mind, fasten
			 it upon the common things of the world, and if at any-time, tired of such
			 groveling occupations, <add rend="sup" hand="BF">it </add>would soar above the
			 sphere in which it has been so long confined, it finds its pinions
			 shackled—and as the moth flitting around a candle, after a few feeble
			 flutterings, dies, so the mind after a few vigorous exertions sinks again into
			 the same supineness and inanity as before; and if it thinks at all of lifting
			 itself, it is only as one thinks of an impossibility—The mass of evil
			 habits, which which a long course of indulgence has heaped up
			 <pb id="mss04-19-p03" n="3"/>around the once noble powers, prevents the jewel
		  	from sparkling with its primitive brilliance.–  It is thus that we may
			 imagine one who though having <add hand="BF" rend="sup">recieved</add> the
			 highest honor of college, is yet a slave to the most pernicious
			 habits—his fine intellect becoming day by day less bright, and suffering
			 himself to be led on by the syren voice of temptation, until in the mediocre
			 man you would fail to recognise the talented scholar to whom all once conceded
		  	the first might.–<ref id="ref744" target="note744" type="info" rend="sup">2</ref> </p>
		  
		  <p>Profanity too he should put far from him. This vice is often
			 produced by peculiar circumstances—with some it seems to be one of the
			 qualifications of a man, there is one other which I am sorry to add is
			 drunkeness—Oh that anyone should ascribe such qualities to these the
			 worst of all sins! Vices which is indulged will corrupt the noblest nature, and
			 which if persisted in <add hand="BF" rend="sup">by anyone</add>, will draw down
			 upon him the everlasting burnings of the fire that is not quenched, and the
			 every gnawing tortures of the worm which dieth not. </p> 
		</div1> 
	 </body> 
	 <back> 
		<div1 type="notes"> 
		  <note id="note743" target="ref743" type="source"> 
		  	<p>1. <xref url="http://www.lib.unc.edu/mss/inv/f/Fuller,Bartholomew.html">Bartholomew Fuller Papers, SHC</xref>. The composition is written on
				three of four pages measuring 8 3/4 by 9 5/8 inches. On the verso of the last
				page 
				<name key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Fuller</name> has written "Dangers of a College/Life–/
				
				<name key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Barth<add hand="BF" rend="sup">w</add> Fuller</name>/ N<hi rend="sup">o </hi>3." A second hand has written "[<name key="name0001146" reg="University of North Carolina" type="organization">UNC</name> Class of 1851]" underneath 
				<name key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Fuller's</name> endorsement and "[1851?]" in the upper
				right corner of page one. The composition confidently can be dated Fall 1848 on
				the evidence of 
				<name key="pn0000622" reg="Green, William Mercer" type="person">William Mercer Green's</name> grade book. 
				<name key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Fuller</name> is there listed among the fifty-five students in 
				<name key="pn0000622" reg="Green, William Mercer" type="person">Green's</name>"Sophomore Class in Composition July to Dec
				1848." At the end of the class roster 
				<name key="pn0000622" reg="Green, William Mercer" type="person">Green</name> has written nine possible titles for the semester's
				composition assignments. The number three appears to the left of "Dangers
				of College Life," this number corresponding to the number 
				<name key="pn0000552" reg="Fuller, Bartholomew" type="person">Fuller</name> wrote on his composition.</p> </note> 
		  <note id="note744" target="ref744" type="info"> 
			 <p>2. "Mite" or "might" men were students earning
				first, second, or third distinction.</p> </note> 
		</div1> 
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