Birthday Congratulations. |
University of Migigan. |
Secretary's Office, Ann Arbor, November 16, 1885. |
Professor Asa Gray, M. D., LL. D., Cambridge, Mass.: |
My Dear Sir: |
The Senate of the University of Michigan wish, as a body, to be represented among the many friends who will join in paying their respects to you on your approaching seventy-fifth birthday, and to that end has adopted a congratulatory address, of which I have the honor, as Secretary of the University Senate, herewith to transmit to you a copy,
At the same time, allow me to recall the privilege I had, more than a quarter of a century ago, of sitting under your instruction, and personally to extend to you my most cordial greetings and congratulations.
Very respectively yours, |
W. H. Pettee. |
[Congratulatory Address, adopted by the Senate of the University of Michigan, November 9, 1885.] |
To Professor Asa Gray, M. D., LL. D.: |
The Senate of the University of Michigan, mindful of the approach of the seventy-fifth anniversary of your birth, take great pleasure in sending you their greetings on the occasion. We congratulate you that life and health and usefulness have been prolonged till three-quarters of a century have passed over your head. We entertain the hope that many years of activity yet remain.
With our congratulations we beg to give expression to a lively sentiment of gratitude for services rendered to your chosen science during a long and devoted life. You found the science of botany barred by a hedge of technicalities against the approach of the common student. You have made it the delight and inspiration of the youth of the land. You have subjected the science of botany in its higher departments to lucid and masterly exposition. Many of the comprehensive and critical reviews of the American flora have proceeded from your pen. The botanical pages of the American Journal of Science reveal labors sufficient in volume and value to fill and honor a lifetime. And those labors are yours. We hail you as the Nestor of American botany. Few of us there are who do not feel gratefully proud to testify our personal obligations to you for aid and inspiration in our earlier studies; and none of us fail to appreciate the services and honor which you have rendered to education and cultivated scholarship. We recall the catholic spirit and breadth of view with which you have treated questions of the interpretation and philosophy of science. We thank you for your acute but just and conservative criticisms and estimates of the doctrine of evolution through natural selection, at a time when the doctrine was new and rising into overshadowing importance which filled many honest minds with apprehension. We thank you again fur stepping to the defense of fundamental religious truth through the power of the very philosophy which so many thought sent into the world to destroy religion. But for all that you have done we do not release you from service. We expect you to serve yet many years the cause of education and sacred truth; and we expect to concede you the highest honors of all for the labors which, we trust, are to adorn the last quarter of your century.
With us the pleasure of these congratulations is quite peculiar, since we can hail you as an ex-professor in our University. Your memory readily reverts to the crude infancy of this institution, when your name was chosen, to stand first in its list of professors. You recall your actual participation in the labors of our early organizers; and we trust that while your recognized gifts of mind and heart found early employment in a broader field than was offered in Michigan, you have never ceased to entertain an interest in the University which you aided to inaugurate, and have some personal satisfaction in seeing the slender shoot of 1838 grown to the dimensions of the sturdy oak of 1885.
Accept, Respected Sir,
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DR. GRAY'S REPLY. |
Cambridge, Mass., November 20, 1885. |
Prof. W. H. Pettee, Secretary of the Senate the University of Michigan: |
Dear Sir |
I can not well say how deeply I was touched and gratified by the Congratulatory Address from the Senate of your University, which I found on my table on the morning of my seventy-fifth birthday, accompanied by your official aud friendly note. I was particularly impressed with the breadth of its survey of the labors of my life, and with the discriminating reference to some of them which would escape ordinary notice. I beg you to convey to the Senate my grateful acknowledgement of the very kind notice thus taken of my endeavors. I recognize, moreover, the fitness of its intimation that I should make the most of the few years that may perhaps remain. I am happy to be able to declare that my appetite for work is as yet unabated; also that labor is still attended with joy rather than with the sorrow which the Psalmist contemplates.
I am much pleased that, although a deserter from the ranks before the war began, I am generously recognized as an ex-professor of the University of Michigan. I suppose that the only direct service I ever rendered it was that of getting together, when in Europe in 1838-9, the books which were the small foundation of its library. I well remember the gratified feeling with which, long afterwards, I incidentally heard that the first President of the University, on viewing this slender collection, expressed the opinion that the books had been well selected for the purpose.
I have never ceased to be particularly interested in the University in which I expected to pass my life. I regret that circumstances have hitherto almost wholly prevented me from personally verifying the impressions which I have received of the amplitude of its appliances for the higher education and of the worthy and efficient use that is made of them. I am, indeed, glad that I have lived to see the acorn which was planted in my youth develop into the “long-surviving oak,” vigorous and beneficent in its youth, and rich in the promise of future years. May its leaf never wither nor its fruitage fail.
Please convey to the Senate my heartiest thanks for such “kind remembrance and cordial greetings,” and believe me to be
Very truly yours, | Asa Gray. |
LINES | ||
On Dr. Asa Gray's Seventy-fifth Birthday, November 18, 1885. | ||
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George E. Davenport | ||
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TO A. G. | ||
On his Seventy-fifth Birthday. | ||
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November 18, 1885. | James Russell Lowell. | |
———— | ||
TO DR. ASA GRAY | ||
November 18, 1810–1885 | ||
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Charlotte Fiske Bates |