Page:Transactions NZ Institute Volume 16.djvu/45

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Anniversary Address.
xxxix.

many who otherwise would have but little inclination or opportunity for independent study, and the general taste will be elevated. At the same time let each man who has the ability add something original, in his own department of information, whether pertaining to science or literature, to the common stock of knowledge.

It is thus that we, who have derived so rich an inheritance from the toils, the attempts, and even the failures of our ancestors, may, in our turn, labour to lay up a store for our descendants which shall make them nobler, wiser, and more enlightened than ourselves; thus, that each generation may rise superior to those which have gone before; thus, that the dreams of the Past may become the realities of the Present and the starting-point for the Future. In the words of the poet,—

Thy far-off children shall possess
That flying gleam of rainbow happiness:
Each wish unfilled, impracticable plan,
Goes to the forging of the force of man;
Thro' thy blind craving novel powers they gain,
And the slow race develops in its pain.
See their new joy, begotten of thy woe,
When what thy soul desired their soul shall know;
Thy heights unclimbed shall be their wonted way,
Thy hope their memory and thy dream their day.