) The Commoner. ii TONE 24, 1910 C"' n advocate of the strenuous life and a mighty hunter b elephants and trusts. Mr. Bryan, to judge from last night, is an advocate of the re ligious life, and a mighty hunter against trusts and trickery, and against the degrading theory of the monkey origin of man. "Mr. Bryan is now on his way to the great world missionary confer ence in Edinburgh next month as one of thirty-six delegates "from the great Presbyterian church of North America. He made a pause in his journey to deliver his lecture, en titled 'The Prince of Peace The lecture, like the lecturer,1 is a great traveler. It first saw the light in 1904, and has since been a light to ma'ny audiences in many lands from Canada to Cairo, from Mexico to Manila, from New Jersey to old .Jeru salem, from Bombay until its latest, but I hope not its last, scintillation in Belfast. "I had the pleasure of meeting Mr. Bryan on his way through Belfast on his way to his latest, though per haps not his last, presidential cam paign. He seems to me to be one .of those men who, like good wine if there be such, which many doubt improve by age or get younger the more strenuous the life they lead. I admit I only saw him for a few minutes coming off the Ardros san boat, and then he seemed to me a, much older man than he appeared last night, and I can scarcely imag ine that a run from Ardrossan to Belfast would have taken the fresh ness out of such a seasoned voyager. ii, may be that the anxieties of the coming fight .might have- imparted some lines in his. face. ' .- "At any rate, when he ascended the platform of the Assembly hall I could scarcely imagine that the hale, hearty, and jocund-looking- gentleman who beamed on us in the full play of evening dress was the same gentleman whom I met only a year or two ago. As I looked at him I . could not help imagining that he must have discovered the secret of happiness, as well as the secret of perpetual youth, or at least of that jocundity which is supposed to be a special attribute of youth. "In my younger days, when my mind and eye were filled with por traits and caricatures of Abraham Lincoln, I regarded all-Americans as lank, livery, cadaverous-looking gen tlemen, with firm, half-shaven jaws, surmounting a chin decorated with a goatee that seemed to be like nothing on earth that I had been accustomed to. Ago destroys the illusions or delusions of youth. It has been my good fortune to meet hundreds of Americans in my mature years, but if I may judge from them, the Yan kee body and beard that I associated with Americans in my youth are as extinct as the Dodo. The majority of Americans that I have met have been representatives of strong, vigor ous manhood, rotund, rubicund, well lined and well livered, with whom good digestion seemed to wait on appetite, and health on both. . "Mr. Bryan is one of those. He looks every inch a man, from the sole of his boots to the top of his head. He seems to carry a fine head on substantial shoulders and body; a man on whom cares and life sat lightly, a man who is nefther wearied of the world, nor worried by it, a man who looks the optimist he says he is. And what he says on that point I have no hesitation in be lieving. "Coming to the lecture, It Is diffi cult to .characterize it. It was practi cally a sermon, relieved by touches of humor, but punctuated by ap plause which the audience found it impossible to resist. It was really a defense and vindication of Chris tian belief, thought and life, present ed from tho point of view of a be liever, with all tho force of intellec tual and moral conviction, with a freshness of illustration and forci bleness of presentation that was not only captivating, but convincing. As to the oratory, its great charm was that one never thought of oratory at all. It seemed just like a simple talk, words and ideas flowed as from a limitless fountain, smooth and clear, and without any apparent effort. Listening to Mr. Bryan one could not help recalling memories of our own John Bright. No one who heard that great orator could fail to bo impressed by the beauty of the lan guage, the limpid clearness of tho sentences, the pleasant play of voice and features, the fprcefulness and ease of the delivery and the sim plicity with which great truths were pressed homo by arguments, illustra tions, facts, and experience that it was only when the orator sat down and one had time to take a compre hensive view of the whole matter and manner that he began to realize the full brilliancy of the orator and the beauty and charm of the oration. So was it with me last night. I could think of nothing for the mo ment but the charm of the delivery, tho freshness of the Illustrations, the beauty and forcefulness of tho thought and the expression. It was only when all was over, and I had time to contemplate the lecture as a' whole, that I was able fully to realize that I had been listening to one of the greatest orators of the age, discussing the greatest theme that could interest humanity with a nobility of thought and feeling, with a1 beautiful simplicity and ease that was. the perfection of art, and with a manifest sincerity and earn estness that elevated alike the lec turer and the lecture." A LAYMAN'S SERMON The high-toned and stimulating address which Mr. Bryan delivered in the Bradford Mechanics' Institute is a good assurance that the star to which Emerson advised us to hitch our wagons has not suffered from the comets. Probably every nation In turn has produced some fine enthu siast to keep in view this beacon of all mankind's wanderings. Since the death of Mr. Gladstone the dic tates of idealism have been rather at a discount on the public platforms of this country, and at the first blush it seems a little strange that the ac cents should be evoked anew by the representative of a country which is commonly thought of as embodying to an unparalleled extent the wor ship of the almighty dollar. Yet here is, of course, nothing new in the paradox. More than sixty years have passed since Emerson urged the Young American to obey his heart and be the nobility of the land. The same community which has produced the Vanderbilts and the Rockefellers also nourished that greatest of the modern transcendentalists and such a unique example of democratic statesmanship as Abraham Lincoln. Mr. Bryan, too, proclaims himself on the side of the angels, and no one could listen to his earnest de fense of generous ideas enforced by many a shrewd and pregnant saying without feeling him to be a man of Insight and conviction. Such testimony is no small matter. Here is one who bears all the lineaments of a strong- man, who has seen the life of communities In many lands, has participated, at close quarters in t vicissitudes of his own, and his verdict is soberly but firmly optimis tic and altruistic. Such an assur ance can not fall to bring encourage ment to some who in their narrower range aro apt to bo sicklied o'er with tho pale cast of thought. And leav ing aside tho factor of personality, aro not tho evidences which Mr. Bryan cites for belief In a sure if gradual betterment irrefutable the spread of education, tho democrati sation of government, the sharpening of tho moral sense among individuals and communities? Tho spread of those vivifying ideas among larger bodies sometimes seems to lower tho average expression of them; but, of course, it is a real gain that tho judgments of what is right and fair in society and what it behooves a man to bo and to do should no long er bo confined to speakers and writ ers bonr in tho broadcloth, but should circulate through warehouse and workshop. That is tho tendency of tho age, and, as Mr. Bryan con tends, It can not fail to be of promise for progress in tho best sense. In tho endeavor to attach a string to his kite to frame a working rule of good citizenship Mr. Bryan sup plied a corrective to the mercantile view of life, an error which is not confined to any class. Ho is enough of an American to believe that tho dollars do matter considerably, but too much of a humanist to believo in the millennium through a redis tribution of them. An Edison may bring within reach of the commu nity facilities and benefits which aro almost priceless, measured in coin of tho realm; so may a great sur geon like Lister or a great entrepre neur like Lesseps. The worth of the services which individuals may ren der to the community is in some In stances Incalculable. But quite cer tainly these magnificent donors are the exceptions, and Mr. .Bryan recom mends as the only safe rule in mon etary matters the resolve to give good value for all that is received. This Ideal of service running over tho bushel will, he conceives, reduce the main chance to its proper pro portions. It is Mazzini's counsel over agalp, that democracy will be aved not by insisting on its rights, out on its duties, and the message Is no doubt timely. It leaves aside the difficult question whether there is any just and reliable measure of ox change between the utility of service rendered and the means of material enjoyment, but it does so by pro pounding a doctrine which If faith fully followed would render the oth er superfluous, it Is still,. of course, a counsel of perfection, but therein It certainly does not differ from all tho Utopias of the political perfec tionists. The socialistic state would assuredly fall to pieces very speedily unless in the great majority of in stances its component officials ob served Mr. Bryan's principle to give better than they got. Its advocates reply that the knowledge that they were working for the common good would be a sufficient inducement to guarantee that result. It is a very comfortable assurance; but although It may bo true, as Mr. Bryan argues, that a change of vision may sudden ly transfigure the whole motive and mood of a man, such conversions do not commonly come about by acts of parliament, fn all the history of the world hitherto they have been the response of his intuitions to some call of the mind or the spirit, some recognition of tho worth of an ideal. The Yorkshire Observer. A Paper From Your Own State at Special Price Discreet "May I may I kiss you, dear?" Said he. "First I want one thing made cleaT," Said she. "Have you e'er kissed maid before, Or tried?" No," he answered she was sure He lied. Then, with willing lips, she whis pered. "Well, - I Yes, you may, since you don't kiss I And tell."-r-Boston Transcript. 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