THE HESPERIAN STUDENT cation as in other department? of activity, and tha the friendly rivalry of different colleges existing side by side will surely benefit the students and the University. Of course the matter of increased ex pense in running two separate institutions is a mere question of arithmetic which need not be dwelt upon. Scrubby, half-starved colleges are springing into ex istence fast enough in the state without legeslative help, and what we need is the firm establishment of one symmetrical University worthy of the name, that shall be capable of commanding the respect of all the ' educators of this land. OMTIOISM. This department has been created by tlic new board of odltors. It will be limited to no special line, but will cons vey our impressions, such as they are, on a great variety or subjects. We do not intend to enter largely into the discussion of magazine and newspaper writers. Hence you will look in vain for a complete unit faithful analysis of every novel which is Irom time to time hurled upon the uufoi lunate world. Wo are patriotic, to a certain degree conscientious, and from a sense of duty we have gone through Logic, Calculus, Greek Prose Composts Hon, but as for that indefineublc mass of something called current literature, wo confess we have not yet sufficient courage for such a ta9k. It would be butter for the res spective makers of this, following Hoi ace's suggestion, to, let the creations of their brains, or sometime abortions cool for nine years in their bookcases, but since this is disregarded, they must take the chance of haviug thtm cool throughout alt time in the world's book-cases. But to return to the question of our province, we shall simply attempt to express the ideas called forth by all that passes before our sight; the nature of these will be determined by the scopeof our power of vision. By thus vaguely generalizing wo hope to avoid criticism, for what ever we say will surely fall under some head embraced hi such a field, while if we attempted to carrj out some particular phase, failing in this, wo would bring reproach upon ourselves. We shall not attempt to formulate a new system of criticism. Those who would like to hear a statement of tie duties of critics, wo refer to Lowell, Matthew Ar nold, and Carlylc. The substance of their remarks is to get as near the truth as possible, an excellent rule in ul things. Wc shall endeavor to follow this, thinking it is nearly as good us one we could make otuselves. For we lay no claim to originality. Why should a mau labor to prove himself unlike his fellows, when he can not be other than the samo? Even the dillerence b I ween Shakes pcateand the so called common man is in extent not in kiud. Ic the former, to be sure, the powers of the mind and 'soul are so delicately sensitive, so keenly alive to im pression, that all things from the blade of grass up to theslollar systems, and in the mental and spiritua vroilds, write themselves upon his brain, while in the latter these faculties, though they exUt, are sluggish nud dormaut. Were they not there, Shakgspeare would not bo loJiim great. For all great men ora but an expanded edition of other men. It could not bu otherwise. For we have no alllnity for the things that are not like us. What delights man is to find himself in others, or rathor to discover what he 1 as in a more perfected form olscs where, aR manifested by "IlcrosWorship Finally then we lay down no platform to tho princis pies of which we attempt to make the world conform, but lather, like a true conservative, we shall try to cohs form to the world. Il is now become the fashion when one wishes to inis press a m-ral which ho has evolved, to attach a series of persons and events and cnll tho product a novel. The intention may bo good, but when tho moral is worn nut and the story Hat and insipid, it is putting a great aflllc Hon upon the public without reason. If such pooplo must moralize, they would create less suffering by states ing in so many words what the moral is, then cease, and not torture us by spinning out to such elaborate length a stale, much abused truth. There can be no objection to ono moralizing ifho call It by tho right name, but when ho assumes to write a novel, and, in his solicitude for the moral, leaves the novel out, au injury is done, deceit is practiced. A novel is supposed to show some just insight into life, to be the work of one who, seeing farther and deeper than wc, can solve for us some of these social problems; in fact to bo tho product of pow er, but when it is reduced to a Sunday School tract with shadows lor characters, and echoes of truth foi real tjuth, it is time for the friends of tho novel to come to the rescue. The ethical writings of Carlylo -in ! Emer son have produced such an echo that it resounds through out the whole earth, rolls on like a mighty river, engulf ing everything, literature, art, science. The novel has suffered most severely, it is astonishing, the amount of these that are written professedly to teach something. Unfortunately it takes force even to make a moral of weight, and the mero uttariug a principle caught from someone else, fails to teach. Not shadows, bit, realities convince It is to bo hoped that this mania like tho Romantic maula produced in Germany by tho "Sorrows of Werther" will cease bufore literature Is made to suffer permanently. The Notre Damn Scholastic in its Jan 5th number, es says to annihilate Carlylc. It first settles his position as "flat in the mud", then proceeds to quote from lh Ohroniclu, asserting ho had "lack of faith, faith in tho truth, faith in man". Concerning tho first statement, it certainly has the virtue of being startling and novel. As a piece of iheloric, the figure is very effective, it sure ly indicates a very abject condition, but Tor the sound ness of the judgment, it mu6t be admitted that the writer's mind was wandering, and had failed to comprehend the situation. We would advise him to make rhetoric his calling, as it seems to be his forte, and let the latter fieldi viz. judgment, alone. Now in regard totlio next charge' that he had "lack of faith in truth", it seems strange that one who was continually asserting that truth will prevail, Mint shauib and deceits must give away before it, that the old oternal verifies always have ruled and always will, should regard these as empty, meaningless words. Take this sentence of his, "tho true past departs not, nothing that was worthy in tho past departs. No truth or goodnehs realized by man ever dies or can die', this seems, to show some belief iu tho Btrcngth of truth. The thought a found all through his writings. Of course ifour friend t.