i m THE HESPERIAN STUDENT. cal orator, had no hesitation in pointing his periods so na to It'll against tho pnrtylio felt liimself bound to depre ciate. Keltic shows us in litis matter wherein Green 1ms been unjustly criticised. An historinn, wo havo recently been told, 1ms no business to linvo any stylo at all; if ever he dares to bronk out into criticism, or attempts any dra mntic or picturesque reproduction of tlio past, ho is at once to bo distrusted. His sacied duty, it has been main nined, is to bo uniformly dull, to be the mcro recorder of bald facts and dates, to rigidly suppress every tendency logo beyond the role or lite chronicler and annalist. In the scienco ir geology itself one of the most useful of the hard-maids of history hud the legitimate exeicisc of the imagination, tho reconstructive faculty, been for. bidden, and the researches of its devotees been contlntd to the mere tabulation of minerals and fossils, all pro gress beyond a mere catalogue would have been impossi ble. On the other hand by the aid of one of tho most wonderful of human faculties, what stupendous advances have been i cached us to tho past history of our globe, even when all allowance is made for tho (lights of tin. fettered fancy. In tho case of the historian it may take he form ot tho splendid pauarama of Gibbon,'thc teeming style of Maeuley, tho exhaustive analysis and graphic portraiture ofCarlylc, or the intensely sympathetic reali zation of Green. To work ho held always to bo his duty. Indeed he never ceased working. Years before, ho had truly, though half lightly forecast his o.vn epitaph, "Ho died learning." DRAMA-GREEK AND ENOEIS1I. It is a notcwoithy fact that the Greek drama altaiucd its highest degree of excellence in tho half-century fol. lowing thohattlo of Sal amis. Tho war that had called into being all thu energies of Athens ended in her proud triumph, leaving a country no longer oppresed by do mestic tvrants or devastated by barbarians. Her vast and varied powers Intellectual and Bplrllual as well as physical, awnkencd in this stiugglo for life, aro at its close concentrated Into ono great force and directed to a singlo cml the perfection of tho fine arts. Within this period sculpture passed through its several phases or austerity, of finished graco and had already taken upon ftseir eleganco, tho efTeminatc beauty of decay. Thus also had the Greek drama, this combination of all arts, exhibited in rapid succession tho colossal grandeur or iEschylus, tho perfection in form, the spotless purity of Sophocles and finally tho refinement, tho scepticism, the immorality of Euripides. Tho English drama has its source on the forces set fico by tho Protlstant Reformation. In a period of thirty six years extending from Marlowe to Ford, doubtlass tho most actlvo ago in modern times, tHIs drama had ex hausted all avaliablo resources, having passed through tho difleicnt stages .or growth analogous to those or tho Greek. Tho fact that tho English drama lias a religious origin points to no principal upon which on explanation oflt may be grounded. Bo far from being rcligiouB it has not oven a moral purpose Shakespeare has been called tho great teacher of morality. Ho teaches how ever, by hying bare tho wlmlc b"lng of man in its vilest us well us noblest forms. Nay, more, ho delights in vill. any as in vlrluo and his setiso of justice is extremely vague. That the object of tragedy Is to make men wiser and better was never conceived by Shakcppcaro and perhaps by nono of his contempories. Tho Greek drama is rollglous in its origin and its essential object is the inculcation of moral principles. Tho prevailing idea is that tho fato whoso decrees aro irrcvocablo against wh'ch even the gods may strugglo in vain. Tills idea is more rromluact in JSschylus and Sophocles than In the later tragedians Tho man who is ''hateful to tho gods' may bo unconscious of unlit and upright in Inten tion, yet, as in tho caso ol Edipus, he is driven uninten tionally to tho commission of horrid crime. The religion of the Greeks was moro intimately con nected with tho aflairs of lifo than that of tho moderns; yet it was a religion that fettered not a single faculty of their being. To tho Greeks this is a world of joy Human nature is in harmony with lh3 dtvlno order of things not yet mobile, discordant, fallen from grace. Justice is meted out to each man in life. Thcro is no need of reward or punnishment beyond the tomb heuco tic efforts to make this lifo enjoyable by adorning it witli all that is elevating and ennobling in the arts, hence also that quiet contentment whoso spirit is th re pose of sculptur. Christianity, on the contrary, exhibits this world as a scarely possible desert with a beautiful home at tho end. Life is a constant struggto with nlsl erablo enemies as tho still moro powerful demons, invisi ble, omnipresent hence tho tumult of modern life. The soul or the Greek is an ever tranquil lake with Its bosom open to tho sunny sky, while that of tho Christian is visited by tempests that rage flercoly over Its surface and wreck all earthly hopes upon tho Irocky shore. But thespirit of the storm is tho atmosphere of painting, and of tho English drama. DcQulncy has explained tho dlffcrenco be'wccn tho ancient and modern drama by the statomcut lit a novel form or tho principle of nrt as a species of imitation. Mechanic art may bo distinguished by tho expression "(tUm jn eodem" and flue art by "Idem in alio." Tho first alms at convoying tho same impression as tho thing imitated thought iimilar means; tho Becond effects tho same thought a liferent medium. For oxamplo, if wo represent a particular baltlo by wax-work, making move ments to correspond mechanically with the original wo havo simply mechanic art; but flno art, If wo produco tho sumo effect through music, painting or acting. Art becomes less real, tho moro it differs from tho thing im itated. Tho most natural form of tragody is prose; but as the iambic mensuro is tho natural languago of pas sion, only the tragic parts must ho metrical. Even the English play, however, is idealized to a certain oxtcnt; henco tho iambic is rognhtrly used. To idealize still further, as In the climax or passion or in representing a play within a play, rhymo is employed. Idealization in tho Grcok drama is perfect; henco it is removed toJanlnunlto distance. This is accomplished by tho use or complex metres, especially in the lyric parts, dancing and singing or the chorus and perhaps olso of tho actors, the mask and cotliwrnui, decoration, tho ro liglous spirit, participations of gods, and finally tho great slzo of tho stage. Thus it appears that while tho English tragedy Is kin dred In llii nrt nf iinlnitn n..r.i.-i t i . ., w, ,,..,,,,,,,, wliuU i uiuurvuns ciurcspunus B3 :