WKBSSO rzz2jMtmm I!)-; KnrrouiAiiS. VOI VII told Unit tnio suliolurship demands Hie in vostigation of ovcry hypothesis to its lit most limit. Hut society sitys and requests that Iho energies of a student should ho turned in a practical as well as in a theoret ical direction. It imperatively demands, that knowledge derived from I lie text hook should he made practical. To learn, is one thing; to practice, another. Hut the labilities for gaining the practi cal part of an education in our American colleges, are limited. The text-hook is forever thrust before the eyes of the stu dent. He is drilled upon formula and verso until he liecomes, as it were, a walk ing dictionary. And when ho lias com pleted a course of this unconditional cramming, he feels more like a worn-out convict from a penitentiary, titan a man about to enter energoliclv into the arena of a useful and puhlic life. To overcome this tendency, the student is compelled, aside from his theoretical study, to rely upon his inventive genius for those means thai will afford practical, in.-Uruclion So in connection with all colleges there have sprung up societies ami associations, having for their direct purpose the cultivation of those talents that a college curriculum has ever failed to develop. Of all his enterprises perhaps the Liter aiy Society has hoen Iho most useful. Mere at once is an open field for the dis play and the acquisition of many intel. Icctual endowments, ami with this advan tage in the hands of the students w mo much surprised to see occasiouly the lit tle interest that is manifest in these assoc iations. Yet spo.ik to a student, who has withdrawn from society or fails in hi- .society duties, and he, will suv that his lessons demand his undivided attention and thai ho has no time for society work. Il is true and the mistake is almost una iahlo. The- close theoretical studios of tho University, arc such that for a student to excel in his class, lie must devote hi lime to thu studies of his course, lor those students who excel in litelary exercises, as a general ntlo, seldom figure conspici. ously in Hie ininuto perfections of the text hook. Hut oven if t!;oy do fail here, though they dare sacrifice the class-room to the interests of a literary society, for them there is one consolation, that in so doing, they are acquiring a knowledge of the practical allairs of life. Men edu catod in such a curriculum, arc far from being an educational drudge upon tliemiir ket. Their thought is accompanied with action, and ever motion glows with the sparkling lire Unit it contains, and every word echoes and reverberates through out tho laud. There is honor, there is praise in a complete and effectual tri umph over study in detail. Hut lar above this there towers in solitary grand our and admiration, the thought that as a student you have mastered what you have learned. TtIK STUDY OK KNCLISM M'I'KltATUKK. In none of the college courses, we up piehend, is there a stud' more pleasant or profitable to most students than that of English Literature. When pursued as tiie nature of the brunch requires, llie text book serves merely as a guide, for by a close adherence to it, a satisfactory knowl edge ol Iho study cannot be gained. The various authors must bo critically studied in their own writings, with such aid as is furnished by the essays of our standard critics. Hut this- work, to he well done, requires considerable time. Two, or oven three tonus may be profita ble duvulml to il, yutat present, with the exception, perhaps, of a single course, only the fall term is provided. Tho wish, expressed by I'rof. Howard, to give another term to this study, has mot with general approval from tho mem bers of his class. It is hoped that. Iho fac ulty can so accommodate those students who may wish to spend another term in this brunch, Unit thoy will not bo at the disadvantage! of taking it as an additional sluily.