Abstract

Sir Robert Falconer, during the whole of his life from boyhood onward, lived within the walls of colleges and universities. It is difficult indeed to imagine what kind of life he might have lived had fortune denied him the boon of an academic training. Whatever his calling, it is safe to assume that he would have managed to interpret its duties in terms closely related to those of the college professor. He had a passion to know and to be—to understand more clearly the enigma of life, and to make his own life conform more closely to the ideals dictated by his conscience and an instructed reason. Any other kind of human interest seemed to him subordinate and incidental.

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