THE HESPERIAN grateful shade. A lawyer, more than the member of any other profession, is a public servant in name or fact, and there is nothing so incongruous in calling upon him to speak to his profession at any time or place, or upon any'occasion. The reason of this is the universality of the law ; it touches not all the transactions and affairs, but all only the issues of lifo. Tho laws of God, inscrutable and past finding out ; tho laws of nature, un bending and inflexible, holding countless worlds in their firm embrace ; tho laws of man, changeable and capricious, and yet so admirable as to command tho veneration of centuries, are so closely related and inter woven, that tho student of tho law is the observer of the universe. Hooker's apostrophe to the law has been the subject of deserved admiration; uOf law there can be no less acknowledged than that her seat is tho bosom of God, her voice is tho harmony of the world. All thing in Heaven and earth do her homage ; tho very least as feeling her care, tho greatest as not exempted from her power ; both angels and men, and creatures of what condition soever, though each in different sort and manner, yet all with uniform consent, admiring her as the mother of their peace and joy." When we eliminate from our consideration natural and supernatural laws, and shut-up our minds to human laws in their applica tion to nations, persons and things, then we begin to realize the ubiquity of law, and per ceive that it touches every point in the hor izon of lifo. It affects our health, security and comfort, and protects life, liberty and property. It environs man at every point ; it sits by the cradle, and follows the hearse ; it meets us at coming, and protects our nakodness and helpless infancy in its mother ly arms ; it leads us forward until the first duty is laid upon our shoulders, with a gen tle hand and duo regard for our weakness ; it follows us through all tho stages of lifo until we journey toward our home beyond the sun, and at tho last hour, tho minister of the law and of tho gospel stand by the same bedside, tho one inditing tho last bequest, and tho otherjirvoking tho last bonediction. Tho eloquent testimony of Sir John Davy is worthy of romberanco : "Why may wo not proceed and afiirni confidently that tho profession of tho law is to bo preferred before all other human professions and sci ences, as being most noblo for the matter and subject thereof, most necessary for tho common and continued use thereof, and most meritiorius for the good effects it doth produce in the commonwealth ? For what is tho matter and subject of our profession but justice, tho lady and queen of all moral virtues, and what are our professors of tho law but her counsellors, her secretaries, her interpreters?" The character of our profession depends upon ourselves. If wo dignify our calling our calling will enoble us. If we, however, bemoan, belittle and degrade our profession, then wo can expect that others will take us at our valuation , The bar in some measure is accountable for tho mean estimate in which it is held, not because of its truth, but because it often fails to uphold a brother when assailed. If trickery, artifice and man ipulation were always unsparingly condem med, instead of laughed at, if the bar al ways defended its members, from insinua tion and innuendo in tho absence of exact information to the contrary, if instead of countenancing the covert slanderer, "willing to wound, yet afraid to strike," it chal lenged the libeller to the proof, and was as sensitive to a brother's reputation as its own honor, then would the standing of the bar be elevated in the eyes of the people. The lawyer has always been the object of more or less dislike. The ancient Egyptians ex pressly forbade advocates to plead in their courts on the ground that they darkened the adminstration of the laws. Milton mentions that the Muscovites had no lawyers, but every man pleads his own cause. Sir Thomas Moore makes the absence of lawyers a char acteristic of his Utopia for they wore con sidered a class of people whose profession is . ! f I I . 1 (i i ' : l H