i. THE HESPERIAN STUDENT. 1 3 W pruning tVom thi'lr huge tushes. Hut Plu to and Shukspuaro thoy cannot overleap. The greatest ol tlitn gorge at those res. tam-uuts ol' Hie m'nd. A sentence from tho lultor is the text lor a now philosophy. They cannot ho too deep lor it. Ami the current is swift too. Like Uasslus' "Tlilo in tlu1 Mtltilrc of niuii. Which. InkiMi nt I lii' tluod. IoiiuV on to fortune;" Hut thoy must lv careful of tho undertows. Tlioy can analyze, but thoy must he euro, fill to guide the analysis, not bo guided by it Else they will be led into a discussion upon merits similar to those of the com mon one, "Is art or nature superior V" Wo like his analysis of tho character of the Prince, in Hamlet. And then his pic ture of Ophelia is beyond our ideas of beauty and decorum. I could wish to transplant in this article his conversation concerning Hamlet: but when we read his talk with Aurclia concerning Ophelia, there is a sweetness that breathes like a Min. timed day in Indian summer, sudden. ly flavored by the gentleness, of a mellow, southern breeze, rippling the nut-brown haves listlessly. " Decorum, like tho thin crape upon her bosom, cannot conceal the motions of her heart, but, on thocontrary, it betrays them." " Decorum, like tho crape upon her bosom," conveys a delica cy of manner that the mildness of the moon could not soften. And it is in one of these confidential chats that she tells him what he really is. " A hen we hear you expounding Shaks- e ,1US Ume t()() f(jr rel,ect pearo you appear to nave come amongst Us from the council chamber of the gods, whole you have attended their delibera tions about the formation of mankind. Hut when we see your conduct with your arch of his nobility. Gives no ollenco when censuring. Ami it is this mildness of manner that puts upon him the court, donee of all the women. They all dote on him. Ho doubtless possessed a lino llguro; and that with his goodness of heart, loads tho sex captive so far as friendship is con corned. When sick in tho clergyman's house, to return to tho robbing accident, tho fair amazon kept intruding herself upon him. During his inactivity in tho sick chamber, his fancies found free play. Fantasy would mount above pain, were it not so frail; and oven as it was, at intervals it grapples with and knuckles over it. It was in those intervals that Wilholm's im- agination lloated llag-free into tho other of the to-morrow. And wo think a shadow of a plot can here be discerned, in his sen timental allusions to the fair amazon. "In youth and in sleep, may not the image of (-nning destiny hover round us, and become mysteriously visible to our unim peded sight? may it not bo possi ble for us to enjoy a foretaste of the fruits which we one day hope to gather?" This sentence contains more grandeur of appli cation, and a broader significance than that of a mere sentiment of a love-sick youth; but we must nevertheless allow that it bears on his future with more pres sure than the first reading of it will allow. It is only in the finis of tho book that wo can see an immediate application of it. n i..... .:..... ..... ... ...!...: i , i ut uiis nun- urn iui lunuuiiim uiiuu ms ac tions in regard to tho company. He now impatiently perceives that he had done wrong in bearing the whole burden of tho company. But he could not yet see that nature of our success in life then is, that all have a work to Perform. The result of this work always depends upon the skill of tho author and the character of his sur roundings. The beauty of a statue requires that there shall be good material, suitable in struments and correct application. The tools must vary from the heavy sledge used in tho quarry, to tho delicate chisel employed in giving expression to the Up. Each must bo wrought to Its purpose. The artist must know how to round every curve precisely to its required fullness, and he must bo careful lest he bedim the intelligence of the eye. The task of ev ery man is similar, only men are his in struments ami his reputation in his statue. Ho who would make it most beautiful must educate, to a certain extent, all around him. He must grade and temper his impL-montj until they are adapted to his designs. The grounding thought, then, for every one who rises in tho esti mation of the populace, is that he must return some suitable reward to those whose good opinion he enjoys. May no one bo so deceived as to suppose that ho can acquire a reputation without return ing an equivalent. For this is truly a bar tering age. Reputations are bought and sold as well as every thing else; yet thoy are not always to be obtained for money. Wo may be obliged to part with some thing far more valuable. Each one may choose such a leputatiou as he desires, for they are as common and as various even as the articles at the shop of the pawn broker. The article sought may be a penknife, a finger ring, or it may be a princely diamond. The choice is with the purchaser alone. It may cost him a trifle, it may cost him a life of bondage. tilt' P.illlSI- lllv III "SiillM-ivi. ,,ir..i,.i,.r ..ill- ('..Hint r.l'.ltll I iiw T f.jmljl imtftli.iiiui ... t... I J -"" ..".: ll. J . I v,r"s " vicus ' exaggerated forms;" the very earliest child ol creation irazuijr .,., ,,,, . ,, ,,... ., r . ... ; ... , f. ,.b land that in the height ol our youthful. w ... ,.ge as,,,,, si. men, unit unifying i c,ltic.lik(, uiuhusia!,ln ,mu pm1(wllV wu Is it necessary then to indicate tho impor. :, 1 !"'"" '1' lu lions and tho asses. asMIIIK. lomls ,, Wl. (lo ol ah ' U1 Jtance uttomling the duo consideration ol no-snrcp aim me cicpunuis arou it you, i iw i .i . .i c -i i .i , , ,, . .. ' ,. .. , ' 'bear, and that the failure of anything do and addressing then, confidingly a- your ; , f, hi. equals, merely because they were present puars a OUr ()wn fni,L J -inn rr moving iikc yourseii. This was a true likeness (if him up to j that time. He was conscious of it, thorn: h: ' . ., i ..II , . i A Reputation. as In- says, I have been accustomed irom . my youth to direct the eyes of my soul In youth our imagination is more rather to interior than to extoriorobjocts." j active and our fancy pictures nioro bri"ht- (tll 1)0 COlltilltU-cl.) This is simply the universal experience of all true culture. We must stand aside, as f this choice? We need only to ask, not now much are we able to pay, but how much will wo pay? How many there arc of good ability who have been willing to pro Her only a paltry sum! How many there are, though they have yielded to the vile and contemptible necessity of pawn ing all their jewels for an insignificant amount, they are ever unable to redeem them! From those t vo classes of mis fortunes we have the field from which the jly than in middle or old age, because wo have not yet experienced the uiiL'oncrous ;. ...I. :t.. .i... ,i... ...i .i... i i i I...H .... .i ii ..... ,. . . I .. i.v, ,, mu ui-u .iiiiim.-iiuimiiMiiiii jit-nun me com snocr irom (iisappoint- iritv ambitious can select. Hut with the horsemen in chase pass us by, leaving usjinent. For this reason the ideal of our ! idea of selection is also connected the oblivious as before to the enchantment and future is more imperfect in youth than in i idea of approval from others Coiiso excitement that spurs them on. We Irav- .aHer life. A worthy reputation, to the Iqncntlv in tho very adoption of 'a certain el through ii landscape of mortality, fill young man, is as a changing mirage. It course we solicit the masses to sanction mine against custom, try at odds with lit-, ever flees before him yet also pursues , preference. The policy, then, is man nature, and at ihe end find our hands, him. He looks back and sees what he ifest that we should pursue such a line of empty; but with a great commissary at might have enjoyed, he looks forward and conduct as will command the support of ..ur beck, that sharpens its own ollicere, . sees what he may enjoy, and what embar- J the multitude. But in order to -ain that ami replenishes its own cupboard. Fads rasses him more than anything else is that J encouragement our work must fully merit ifll lliwl lllt'Mf lllllilll Mw till! Il'lllllilll Itllt 1.1 1 1 I ll.'lltll.. .... ,.!.. .1 .1 .1 . i . ".'. '""' mh ins ..M.a.w,,:.,,, i.uuiy vermeil ami uiai n HccilUso men arc nalui-nllv (.llUli ill ill. 1 .-...?.. .'j. illlil .j. t.il-..l j.l.l ... ..it ir.w.jl l'.... ....... ..1.1 ... ! ' """J iniouin.3, iiiiiiiuu i. iixiiii win ii-. iu- jiiwu nil iiiui-n ill i' lis SCKIIIII1 1110. Willi as. casion calls on them; only we do it in a oases upon the desert. less conscious milliner. Oblivious to the In consideration of these ihiiiirs wu urn C2 '-- - iiciossily, or at least only able to see the future use indistinctly, we gather, and gather, and seem useless, but are actually gathering ourselves up, strengthening our. selves. His last conversation with Jarno, and subsequent anger and contempt at his worldliness, show plainly that ho was bound in and in by the sentiments. Af fection was to him more than fame. "An agreeable, mild and natural manner does wonders, and such a person possesses a thousand resources for retaining the at tachmouts which he has once formed," is the key to all of his present conduct. He would make and keep friendship for his own ; would make it the keystone to the too apt to think that it would be better if man coiild form a correct ideal of his fu lure. Rut such has wisely been placed beyond his reach, since if it were other wise, he would lose all pleasures in the imagination which is the mainstay of the mind. Although his horizon is unde fined, still he does not act as one com pletely blinded; for his dim vision can gather enough light to make him restive. His restlessness in connection with his selfishness causes him to load a life of ease and pleasure and if possible to rise above his fellowb, while his love and respect for mankind compels him, in a manner, to study their happiness and welfare. The and a result of this sellishnoss is preju ice. This prejudice warps, their rea son ami prevents their adopting that which is equitable and just. Men despise to see one whom they have been wont to consider an inferior, or at most an equal, take a sudden start and rise above them. It burns them to the quick. And ho who strives for promotion must, in the very act, tighten the cords of bias and discontent by which ho is bound to every heart in the throng. From this very cause, many a pen lies idle, while the hand that should guide it is tied hard and lifeless to the plow. Many a mind, like a cool fountaiii.shaded with delightful foliage which should gladden the heart and moisten the tongue of many a traveler, is trampled and polluted by tho common herd. From this very cause also, in our later day of boasted advancement, a man llnds it exceedingly dilllcull, not only to be elected to certain positions, hut even to receive the nomination upon some w. ty ticket, unless ho Is preeminently pi!. llled for tho position, unless ho is va superior to the charge, or unless lie js willing to take upon himself a multitude of brands, which, like ancient sores upon tho back of a dog, Irritated and bleeding by fond expression of his own restlessness, feed upon Ills very vitals till ho dies. Thi prejudice against many things worthy t,, guide men is a characteristic of a low mnl enfeebled mind that scarcvly over rise above the circle of its own prepossession. In order thai our minds may have the greatest growth, they must be unbiased towards others, others must be unpreju diced towards us. A foot that is pressed into a wooden shoo for a considerable length of time, can never acquire that symmetry of form or that strength it otli. crwise would. A man who is alllicted with some contagious disease would best not attempt to heal the sick, lest ho spread the contagion wider ami wider. Rut let him first cure himself, then he may more easi ly grapple with the distressing plague. So if a man wishes to receive the prai.- of others, lot him first learn to perceive tho praiseworthy deeds of others, and by this he will learn to do those things which will also bo worthy of praise. Rut from the trilling jealousies and the contumelious bickerings, so much tou nectcd with the progress of every one, there are still happier means of escape During the great siege of Paris the in vested citizens found communication with the army for some lime entirely cut olV. The telegraph was stripped of its current by the sword of the iiucoinproinisiiii;. Prussian. The ingenuity of the French man was thoroughly tried, yet found equal to the work. He quietly constnuis his balloon, at mid day rises far above the sulloring city and sails away with impu-nit-. Tho Gorman batteries were mil cal culated nor were they accustomed to shoot so high. So may every one ascend who has the skill to plan or the intrepidity to arise. Such, however, is the Might of ge nius only. He who must be content to take slower means of advancement ami less hazardous ascent, must til himself lor warding well directed blows. Although he 11113 WH he prepared for receiving an attack, yet he must not expect to light his way through the world. A man is not liable to engage with banditti, unless he passes through the places they inhabit. Mon, it is true, are naturall sel fish, and it is well that it is so, but tiny are also moved by worthier motives. A there is something of evil in every man. so there are noble feelings in every breast Many a man has been forced to surrender his purse. It has often been returned be cause of the small sum it contained or at least divided with the pitiful traveler. He who cannot appreciate the good in others is not worthy, nor can he obtain, their ap plause. And he who is continually belntr stirred by some implon-dug circumstance which he attributes to the cursednes-. of his race, is not entitled to a place in Ha ndlist of his kind. On the contrary he wno gains an iiilliionce must be magnani mous in every sense of the term. He must not only be liberal with his moans, but also with his opinions. He must ex pect to attract the good wilJ of those around him He must be the confer ol attraction in the circle in which ho moves , fp.: pj "-------iiiMitiryw8MMMWffl.WtttittillBi t