Page:University of Calcutta Convocation Addresses Vol 3 (1899-1906).djvu/15

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.

The 11th February, 1899

The Hon’ble Sir Francis William Maclean, Kt., K.C., K.C.I.E., M.A.

Vice-Chancellor

Your Excellency and Gentlemen,

The quality of diffidence is one not generally attributed to the members of the profession to which for so many years I have had the honour to belong; but I am speaking with every sincerity when I say that it is with a feeling of considerable misgiving that I rise to address you this afternoon. I have, in comparison with nearly every member of my present audience, had so limited an experience of India, and possess so slight a knowledge of the aims, the ambitions, and even the necessities of her people, and am so little versed in her educational requirements and demands, that I feel but poorly qualified to address you in the character of your Vice-Chancellor, and this feeling is the more intensified when I recall the names of the many distinguished men who, in by-gone days, have filled this chair. But, sir, be that as it may, I am satisfied that I am addressing an audience which will be sympathetic in its bearing, and lenient in its criticisms. Many of my predecessors, doubtless, have on occasions similar to the