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蓝色雨



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 The Social Value of the College-Bred

WHAT USE is a college training? We who have had it seldom hear the question raised鈥攚e might be a little nonplussed to answer it offhand. A certain amount of meditation has brought me to this as the pithiest reply which I myself can give: The best claim that a college education can possibly make on your respect, the best thing it can aspire to accomplish for you, is this: that it should help you to know a good man when you see him. This is as true of women's as of men's colleges; but that it is neither a joke nor a one-sided abstraction I shall now endeavor to show.

What talk do we commonly hear about the contrast between college education and the education which business or technical or professional schools confer? The college education is called higher because it is supposed to be so general and so disinterested. At the "schools" you get a relatively narrow practical skill, you are told, whereas the "colleges" give you the more liberal culture, the broader outlook, the historical perspective, the philosophic atmosphere, or something which phrases of that sort try to express. You are made into an efficient instrument for doing a definite thing, you hear, at the schools; but, apart from that, you may remain a crude and smoky kind of petroleum, incapable of spreading light. The universities and colleges, on the other hand, although they may leave you less efficient for this or that practical task, suffuse your whole mentality with something more important than skill. They redeem you, make you well-bred; they make "good company" of you mentally. If they find you with a naturally boorish or caddish mind, they cannot leave you so, as a technical school may leave you. This, at least, is pretended; this is what we hear among college-trained people when they compare their education with every other sort. Now, exactly how much does this signify?

It is certain, to begin with, that the narrowest trade or professional training does something more for a man than to make a skilful practical tool of him鈥攊t makes him also a judge of other men's skill. Whether his trade be pleading at the bar or surgery or plastering or plumbing, it develops a critical sense in him for that sort of occupation. He understands the difference between second-rate and first-rate work in his whole branch of industry; he gets to know a good job in his own line as soon as he sees it; and getting to know this in his own line, he gets a faint sense of what good work may mean anyhow, that may, if circumstances favor, spread into his judgments elsewhere. Sound work, clean work, finished work; feeble work, slack work, sham work鈥攖hese words express an identical contrast in many different departments of activity. In so far forth, then, even the humblest manual trade may beget in one a certain small degree of power to judge of good work generally.

Now, what is supposed to be the line of us who have the higher college training? Is there any broader line鈥攕ince our education claims primarily not to be "narrow"鈥攊n which we also are made good judges between what is first-rate and what is second-rate only? What is especially taught in the colleges has long been known by the name of the "humanities," and these are often identified with Greek and Latin. But it is only as literatures, not as languages, that Greek and Latin have any general humanity-value; so that in a broad sense the humanities mean literature primarily, and in a still broader sense the study of masterpieces in almost any field of human endeavor. Literature keeps the primacy; for it not only consists of masterpieces but is largely about masterpieces, being little more than an appreciative chronicle of human master-strokes, so far as it takes the form of criticism and history. You can give humanistic value to almost anything by reaching it historically. Geology, economics, mechanics, are humanities when taught with reference to the successive achievements of the geniuses to which these sciences owe their being. Not taught thus, literature remains grammar, art a catalogue, history a list of dates, and natural science a sheet of formulas and weights and measures.

The sifting of human creations! 鈥攏othing less than this is what we ought to mean by the humanities. Essentially this means biography; what our colleges should teach is, therefore, biographical history, that not of politics merely, but of anything and everything so far as human efforts and conquests are factors that have played their part. Studying in this way, we learn what types of activity have stood the test of time; we acquire standards of the excellent and durable. All our arts and sciences and institutions are but so many quests of perfection on the part of men; and when we see how diverse the types of excellence may be, how various the tests, how flexible the adaptations, we gain a richer sense of what the terms "better" and "worse" may signify in general. Our critical sensibilities grow both more acute and less fanatical. We sympathize with men's mistakes even in the act of penetrating them; we feel the pathos of lost causes and misguided epochs even while we applaud what overcame them.

Such words are vague and such ideas are inadequate, but their meaning is unmistakable. What the colleges鈥攖eaching humanities by examples which may be special, but which must be typical and pregnant鈥攕hould at least try to give us, is a general sense of what, under various disguises, superiority has always signified and may still signify. The feeling for a good human job anywhere, the admiration of the really admirable the disesteem of what is cheap and trashy and impermanent鈥攖his is what we call the critical sense, the sense for ideal values. It is the better part of what men know as wisdom. Some of us are wise in this way naturally and by genius; some of us never become so. But to have spent one's youth at college, in contact with the choice and rare and precious, and yet still to be a blind prig or vulgarian, unable to scent out human excellence or to divine it amid its accidents, to know it only when ticketed and labeled and forced on us by others, this indeed should be accounted the very calamity and shipwreck of a higher education.

The sense for human superiority ought, then, to be considered our line, as boring subways is the engineer's line and the surgeon's is appendicitis. Our colleges ought to have lit up in us a lasting relish for the better kind of man, a loss of appetite for mediocrities, and a disgust for cheapjacks. We ought to smell, as it were, the difference of quality in men and their proposals when we enter the world of affairs about us. Expertness in this might well atone for some of our ignorance of dynamos. The best claim we can make for the higher education, the best single phrase in which we can tell what it ought to do for us, is then, exactly what I said: it should enable us to know a good man when we see him.

That the phrase is anything but an empty epigram follows, from the fact that if you ask in what line it is most important that a democracy like ours should have its sons and daughters skilful, you see that it is this line more than any other. "The people in their wisdom"鈥攖his is the kind of wisdom most needed by the people. Democracy is on its trial, and no one knows how it will stand the ordeal. Abounding about us are pessimistic prophets. Fickleness and violence used to be, but are no longer, the vices which they charge to democracy. What its critics now affirm is that its preferences are inveterately for the inferior. So it was in the beginning, they say, and so it will be world without end. Vulgarity enthroned and institutionalized, elbowing everything superior from the highway, this, they tell us, is our irremediable destiny; and picture-papers of European continent are already drawing Uncle Sam with hog instead of the eagle for his heraldic emblem. The privileged aristocracies of the foretime, with all their iniquities, did at least preserve some taste for higher human quality and honor certain forms of refinement by their enduring traditions. But when democracy is sovereign, its doubters say, nobility will form a sort of invisible church, and sincerity and refinement, stripped of honor, precedence, and favor, will have to vegetate on sufferance in private corners. They will have no general influence. They will be harmless eccentricities.

Now, who can be absolutely certain that this may not be the career of democracy? Nothing future is quite secure; states enough have inwardly rotted鈥攁nd democracy as a whole may undergo self-poisoning. But, on the other hand, democracy is a kind of religion, and we are bound not to admit its failure. Faiths and utopias are the noblest exercise of human reason, and no one with a spark of reason in him will sit down fatalistically before the croaker's picture. The best of us are filled with the contrary vision of a democracy stumbling through every error till its institutions glow with justice and its customs shine with beauty. Our better men shall show the way and we shall follow them; so we are brought round again to the mission of the higher education in helping us to know the better kind of man whenever we see him.

The notion that a people can run itself and its affairs anonymously is now well known to be the silliest of absurdities. Mankind does nothing save through initiatives on the part of inventors, great or small, and imitation by the rest of us鈥攖hese are the sole factors active in human progress. Individuals of genius show the way, and set the patterns, which common people then adopt and follow. The rivalry of the patterns is the history of the world. Our democratic problem thus is statable in ultra-simple terms: Who are the kind of men from whom our majorities shall take their cue? Whom shall they treat as rightful leaders? We and our leaders are the x and the y of the equation here; all other historic circumstances, be they economical, political, or intellectual, are only the background of occasion on which the living drama works itself out between us.

In this very simple way does the value of our educated class define itself. We more than others should be able to divine the worthier and better leaders. The terms here are monstrously simplified, of course, but such a bird's-eye view lets us immediately take our bearings. In our democracy, where everything else is so shifting, we alumni and alumnae of the colleges are the only permanent presence that corresponds to the aristocracy in older countries. We have continuous traditions, as they have; our motto, too, is noblesse oblige; and, unlike them, we stand for ideal interests solely, for we have corporate selfishness and wield no powers of corruption. We ought to have our own class-consciousness. "Les intellectuels"! What prouder club-name could there be than this one, used ironically by the party of "red blood," the party of every stupid prejudice and passion, during the anti-Dreyfus craze, to satirize the men in France who still retained some critical sense and judgment! Critical sense, it has to be confessed, is not an exciting term, hardly a banner to carry in processions. Affections for old habit, currents of self-interest, and gales of passion are the forces that keep the human ship moving; and the pressure of the judicious pilot's hand upon the tiller is relatively insignificant energy. But the affections, passions and interests are shifting, successive, and distraught; they blow in alternation while the Pilot's hand is steadfast. He knows the compass, and, with all the leeways lie is obliged to tack toward, he always makes some headway. A small force if it never lets up will accumulate effects more considerable than those of much greater forces if these work inconsistently. The ceaseless whisper of the more permanent Ideals, the steady tug of truth and justice, give them but time, must warp the world in their direction.

This bird's-eye view of the general steering function of the college-bred amid the driftings of democracy ought to help us to a wider vision of what our colleges themselves should aim at. If we are to be the yeast-cake for democracy's dough, if we are to make it rise with culture's preferences, we must see to it that culture spreads broad sails. We must shake the old double reefs out of the canvas into the wind and sunshine, and let in every modern subject, sure that any subject will prove humanistic, if its setting be kept only wide enough.

Stevenson says somewhere to his reader: "You think you are just making this bargain, but you are really laying down a link in the policy of mankind." Well, your technical school should enable you to make your bargain splendidly; but Your College Should Show You just the place of that kind of bargain鈥攁 pretty poor place, possibly鈥攊n the whole policy of mankind. That is the kind of liberal outlook, of perspective, of atmosphere, which should surround every subject as a college deals with it.

We of the colleges must eradicate a curious notion which numbers of good people have about such ancient seats of learning as Harvard. To many ignorant outsiders, that name suggests little more than a kind of sterilized conceit and incapacity for being pleased. In Edith Wyatt's exquisite book of Chicago sketches called Every One his Own Way there is a couple who stand for culture in the sense of exclusiveness: Richard Elliot and his feminine counterpart鈥攆eeble caricatures of mankind, unable to know any good thing when they see it, incapable of enjoyment unless a printed label gives them leave. Possibly this type of culture may exist near Cambridge and Boston, there may be specimens there, for priggishness is just like painter's colic or any other trade-disease. But every good college makes its students immune against this malady, of which the microbe haunts the neighborhood printed pages. It does so by its general tone being too hearty for the microbe's life. Real culture lives by sympathies and admirations, not by dislikes and disdain鈥攗nder all misleading wrappings it pounces unerringly upon the human core. If a college, through the inferior human influences that have grown regnant there, fails to catch the robuster tone, its failure is colossal, for its social function stops: democracy gives it a wide berth, turns toward it a deaf ear.

"Tone," to be sure, is a terribly vague word to use, but there is no other, and this whole meditation is over questions of tone. By their tone are all things human either lost or saved. If democracy is to be saved it must catch the higher, healthier tone. If we are to impress it with our preferences, we ourselves must use the proper tone, which we, in turn, must have caught from our own teachers. It all reverts in the end to the action of innumerable imitative individuals upon each other and to the question of whose tone has the highest spreading power. As a class, we college graduates should look to it that ours has spreading power. It ought to have the highest spreading power.

In our essential function of indicating the better men, we now have formidable competitors outside. McClure's Magazine, the American Magazine, Collier's Weekly, and, in its fashion, the World's Work, constitute together a real popular university along this very line. It would be a pity if any future historian were to have to write words like these: "By the middle of the twentieth century the higher institutions of learning had lost all influence over public opinion in the United States. But the mission of raising the tone of democracy, which they had proved themselves so lamentably unfitted to exert, was assumed with rare enthusiasm and prosecuted with extraordinary skill and success by a new educational power; and for the clarification of their human sympathies and elevation of their human preferences, the people at large acquired the habit of resorting exclusively to the guidance of certain private literary adventures, commonly designated in the market by the affectionate name of ten-cent magazines."

Must not we of the colleges see to it that no historian shall ever say anything like this? Vague as the phrase of knowing a good man when you see him may be, diffuse and indefinite as one must leave its application, is there any other formula that describes so well the result at which our institutions ought to aim? If they do that, they do the best thing conceivable. If they fail to do it, they fail in very deed. It surely is a fine synthetic formula. If our faculty and graduates could once collectively come to realize it as the great underlying purpose toward which they have always been more or less obscurely groping, a great clearness would be shed over many of their problems; and, as for their influence in the midst of our social system, it would embark upon a new career of strength.

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的社会的价值学院-繁殖



什么使用是学院训练? 我们谁有有它很少听到问题凸起的鈥斘颐莔ight是少量nonplussed到答案它即时的.某一沉思的数量带来我到这同样地pithiest答复哪个我我自己能弹性: 最好的要求那学院教育能可能地制造在你的尊敬, 最好的东西它能热望到完成为了你, 是这: 那它应该帮助你到知道好男人就在那个时候你看他.这是女人的同样地的男人的学院的同样地真实的; 若非它是两者都不笑话也不一面的提取我将现在努力到表示.

什么谈话做我们一般听说对比在中间学院教育和教育哪个商业或技术的或专业人员学校商议? 学院教育是喊声更高的ad. 因为它是假定的到是因而普通因此无私的.在"学校" 你获得相关地狭窄部分实际的技能, 你是告述, 然而"学院" 弹性你更多的自由主义者文化, 宽的景色, 历史的透视, 哲学的大气, 或什么的那种类的哪个短语设法急速的.你是已制成的到生效的工具为了做明确的东西, 你听到, 在学校; 但是, 除那, 你可能保持天然的和冒烟的一种石油, 伸展光.大学的无能力的和学院, 另一方面, 虽然他们可能离开你较少生效的为了这或那实际的任务, 充满你的全部智力有某事更多的重要的比技能.他们履行你, 制造你有教养的; 他们制造"好公司" 你精神上.的如果他们查找你有自然地农民的或下流的头脑, 他们不能离开你因而, 同样地技术的学校可能离开你.这, 至少, 是假装的; 这是什么我们听到之中学院-火车人就在那个时候他们比较他们的教育有每隔种类.现在, 正确地如何许多的做这表示?

它是确定的, 首先, 那狭窄部分贸易或专业人员训练做某事更多的为了男人比到制造他的巧妙的实际的工具鈥斔圃焖财兰燮渌哪腥说募寄?是否他的贸易是状书受到公开审问或外科或涂抹灰泥或铅工业, 它发展评论的官能在他为了那有几分地职业.他懂差异在中间二流的和第一流的插进工业的他的全部枝; 他到达知道幸运事在他的自己的线立刻他看它; 和到达知道这在他的自己的线, 他获得什么好工作的昏晕官能可能低劣的无论如何, 那可能, 如果环境有利于, 伸展到他的判断在别处.声音工作, 清洁的工作, 完成的工作; 虚弱的工作, 松弛工作, 佯装工作鈥? 这些字急速的同一的对比在活跃.的多数不同的部到这个程度往前, 然后, 平的humblest手册贸易可能招致成为一体某一能力的小的度到评价好工作一般.

现在, 什么是假定的到是我们谁的线有更高的学院训练? 是在那里任何的宽的线鈥斪源游颐堑慕逃笫紫炔坏绞?狭窄部分"鈥斣谀母鑫颐且彩且阎瞥傻暮檬渴窃谥屑涫裁词堑谝涣鞯暮褪裁词嵌鞯奈ㄒ坏? 什么是特别教在学院长的是知名的名叫"人性," 和. 这些是时常视...为一体希腊的和拉丁文.但是它是唯一的同样地文学, 不同样地语言, 那希腊的和拉丁文有任何的普通人性-价值; 所以在宽的官能人性低劣的文学首先, 和在杰作的寂静宽的官能学习在人努力.文学保持首位的几乎任何的原野; 为了它不唯一的组成杰作但是是主要地关于杰作, 存在少许更多的比人的欣赏的编年史主人-击, 只要它拿批评的形状和历史.你能弹性人文主义的价值到几乎任何事在达到它historically.地质学, 经济学, 机械学, 是人性就在那个时候教关于天才的继承的成就到哪个. 这些科学欠他们的存在.不教因而, 文学残余文法, 艺术目录, 历史一列日期, 和自然科学一张公式和重量和尺寸.

详审人创造的! 鈥斀鼋稣馐鞘裁次颐怯Ω玫土拥脑谌诵?本质上这方法传记; 什么我们的学院应该讲授是, 因此, 传记的历史, 政治仅仅的那不, 但是任何事的和每件事只要人努力和征服是因素那有播放他们的部分.学习这样, 我们学习活跃的什么类型有站立时间的测试; 我们获得卓越的的标准和持久的.全部的我们的艺术和科学和事业是但是因而尽善尽美的多数寻求在男人的部分; 和就在那个时候我们看优秀的如何不同的类型可能是, 如何不同的测试, 如何柔韧性适应, 什么学期的我们财物增加更富有的官能"较好的" 和"较坏者" 可能表示通常.我们的评论的感性生长两者更多的敏锐的和较少狂热的.我们同意的男人的错误平的在敏锐的他们的幕; 我们摸失去的原因的痛苦和被误导的新纪元平的当我们拍手喝彩什么克服他们.

这样的字是含糊的和这样的想法是不充分的, 但是他们的意义是明白的.什么学院鈥斀萄诵栽诶幽母隹赡苁翘厥? 但是哪个必须是典型的和怀孕的鈥斢Ω弥辽偕璺ǖ晕颐? 是什么的普通官能, 在不同的之下假装, 优越总是表示和可能寂静表示.触觉为了好人工作无论何处, 真正地令人倾佩的的钦佩轻视什么的是便宜的和碎屑的和暂时的鈥斦馐鞘裁次颐呛吧缆鄣墓倌? 官能为了理想价值.它是什么男人的较好的部分知道我们的同样地智慧.一些是英明的这样自然地和在天才; 我们决不的一些变成因而.但是到有花费一个的青春在学院, 在联系有选择和稀罕的和宝贵的, 可是寂静到是瞎的正经的人或俗物, 无资格的到气味外面的人优秀或到神的它amid它的意外事件, 到知道它唯一的就在那个时候票和标签和被迫的在我们在其他的, 这真正地应该是计算很灾难和更高的教育.的船舶失事

官能为了人优越应当, 然后, 到是考虑过的我们的线, 同样地钻地铁是工程师的线和外科医生的是阑尾炎.我们的学院应该有点着向上在我们永久的意味为了较好的一种男人, 食欲的损失为了平常, 和厌恶为了cheapjacks.我们应该气味, 宛如, 质量的差异在男人和他们的方案就在那个时候事务关于我们.的我们输入世界Expertness在这might好赎回我们的无知的发电机.最好的要求我们的一些能走向更高的教育, 最好的单一的短语在哪个我们能告诉什么它应该有效我们, 是然后, 正确地什么我说: 它应该使能够我们到知道好男人就在那个时候我们看他.

那短语是决不空的警句跟随, 从事实那如果你询问在什么线它是最多的重要的那民主政治象我们的应该有它的儿子和女儿巧妙的, 你看那它是这线更多的比任何的其他的. "人在他们的智慧"鈥斦馐且恢种腔圩疃嗟男枰谌?民主政治是在它的试验, 和没有人知道如何它将停止严酷考验.丰富的关于我们是悲观的先知.浮躁和暴力使用到是, 但是是不再, 恶习哪个他们负荷到民主政治.什么它的批评家现在断言是那它的参数选择是根深蒂固地为了下等的.因而它是起初, 他们说, 因此它将是永远.粗俗为王和使制度化或习俗化, 肘每件事长者从公路, 这, 他们告诉我们, 是我们的不能治疗的命运; 和画-纸欧洲的大陆的是已经图画山姆大叔有肥猪代替鹰为了已往的他的纹章学的象征.有特权的贵族, 有全部的他们的不公正, 做至少保存一些品尝为了更高的人质量和精致的名誉确定的窗体在他们的持久的传统.但是就在那个时候民主政治是君主, 它的doubters说, 高尚将形状一种看不见的教堂, 和诚挚和精致, 剥夺名誉, 优先, 和有利于, 将有到生长在忍耐私下角落.他们将有没有普通影响.他们将是无害的古怪.

现在, 谁能是完全地确定的那这可能不是民主政治的事业? 无未来是相当保证; 情形足够的有在内部地腐烂鈥敽兔裰髡巫芴迳峡赡芫约?中毒但是, 另一方面, 民主政治是一种宗教, 和我们是跃进不到容许它的失败.信任和乌托邦是人理由的高贵的练习, 和没有人有理由的火花在他将坐下fatalistically我们的在前嘎声的人的画.最好的是少女有民主政治的相反的视力绊倒穿过每一的错误直到它的事业发光有正义和它的进口税阳光有美.我们的较好的男人将表示路和我们将跟随他们; 因而我们是带来圆又到更高的教育的使命在帮助我们到知道较好的一种男人无论何时我们看他.

概念那人能运行它本身和它的事务不具名地是现在好知名的到是silliest荒谬.人类的做无保存穿过主动在发明家的部分, 伟大的或小的, 和模仿在其余者我们的鈥? 这些是单独的因素活动的在天才表示路的人发展.个人, 和设置模范, 哪个平民然后采用和跟随.模范的竞争是世界.我们的民主的问题因而的历史是statable在过激的-简单的学期: 谁是一种男人从谁我们的多数将拿他们的暗示? 谁将他们宴请同样地公正的领导者? 我们和我们的领导者是x和y相等在这里的; 全部的其他的著名的环境, 是他们节约的, 政治的, 或智力的, 是场合的唯一的背景在哪个生活戏剧工作它本身外面的在中间我们.

在这很简单的路做我们的受过教育的班级的价值定义它本身.我们更多的比其他的应该是能的到神的worthier和较好的领导者.学期在这里是monstrously简化, 当然, 但是这样的鸟瞰图查看让我们立即拿我们的关系.在我们的民主政治, 什么地方每件事别的是因而移动, 我们男毕业生和学院的女毕业生是唯一的永久的出席那相应贵族在年长的国家.我们有连续的传统, 同样地他们有; 我们的座右铭, 也, 是地位高则责任重; 和, 不象的他们, 我们代表理想兴趣单独地, 为了我们有社团的自私自利和挥腐败.我们的没有能力应该有我们的自己的班级-清醒"Les intellectuels"! 什么自豪的俱乐部-名字可能在那里是比这一个, 使用说反话地在的党"红色血," 每一的愚蠢的偏见的党和激情, 期间反对者-Dreyfus狂热, 到讽刺男人在法国谁寂静保持一些评论的官能和判断! 评论的官能, 它到是公开承认的, 是不令人兴奋的学期, 刚刚旗帜到进位在队伍.友爱为了年老的习惯, 利己主义的当前的, 和激情的大风是力量那保持人船移动; 和明智的飞行员的手的压在耕者是相关地无关紧要的精力.但是友爱, 激情和兴趣是移动, 继承的, 和发狂的; 他们偶然来访交替当飞行员的手是坚定的.他知道指南针, 和, 有全部的灵活性躺是施恩到大头钉向, 他总是制造一些进展.小的力量如果它决不停止将积聚效果更多的相当的比许多的大于力量的. 那些如果更多的永久的理想的. 这些工作不一致地.不停的耳语, 稳固的挣扎事实的和正义, 弹性他们但是时间, 必须弯曲世界在他们的方向.

普通操纵功能的的这鸟瞰图查看学院-繁殖amid民主政治的漂流的应该帮助我们到什么我们的学院自己的宽的视力应该瞄准.如果我们是到是酵母-蛋糕为了民主政治的生面团, 如果我们是到达到目标上升有文化的参数选择, 我们必须负责它那文化伸展宽的航行.我们必须摇动的年老的两倍暗礁外面的画布迎风和阳光, 和放进每一的现代的题目, 有把握那任何的题目将证明人文主义的, 如果它的设置是保持唯一的宽的足够的.

史蒂文森说某处到他的读者: "你想你是正好制造这契约, 但是你是真正地产卵数向下的链环在人类.的政策" 好, 你的技术的学校应该使能够你到制造你的契约壮观地; 但是你的学院应该那的表示你正好地方一种契约鈥攁漂亮的贫穷的地方, 可能地鈥斣谌死?那的全部政策是一种自由主义者景色, 透视的, 大气的, 哪个应该包围每一的题目同样地学院安排它.

学院的我们必须消除好人的好奇的概念哪个民数记有知识同样地的关于这样的远古的座Harvard.到多数无知的outsiders, 那名字建议少许更多的比一种杀菌自负和无能力为了存在高兴的.在Edith Wyatt芝加哥略图喊声每一的一个他的自己的路的优美的书那儿有对谁代表文化在的官能exclusiveness: 理查德Elliot和他的妇女的副本鈥斎死嗟男槿醯穆? 无资格的到知道任何的好东西就在那个时候他们看它, 享乐的无能力的除非文化的印刷的标签弹性他们离开.可能地这类型可能存在亲近的剑桥和波士顿, 在那里可能是范例在那里, 为了priggishness是正好象画家的结肠的或任何的其他的贸易-疾病但是每一的好学院制造它的学生免疫的相反这疾病, 哪个微生物的haunts邻近印刷的页.它做因而在它的普通音调存在也衷心的为了微生物的生命.真的文化以...为生交感作用和钦佩, 不在讨厌和轻蔑鈥斣谌康囊孜蠼獾陌爸剿峦幌薰У卦谌舜判?如果学院, 穿过下等的人影响那有长大的统治的在那里, 未能捕捉健康的音调, 它的失败是巨大的, 为了它的社会的功能停止: 民主政治弹性它宽的泊位, 转动向它聋的耳朵.

"音调," 到是有把握, 是可怕地含糊的字到使用, 但是那儿有没有其他的, 和这全部沉思是音调.的结束问题在他们的音调是全部的东西人任一失去的或保存.如果民主政治是到是保存它必须捕捉更高的, healthier音调.如果我们是到打记号它有我们的参数选择, 我们我们自己必须使用适当的音调, 哪个我们, 依次, 必须有抓住从我们的自己的教师.它全部的回复最后到无数的模仿的个人的动作在彼此和针对论题谁的音调的高度伸展能力.同样地班级, 我们学院毕业生应该照应它那我们的伸展能力.它应该有高度伸展能力.

在的我们的本质的功能指出较好的男人, 我们现在有强大的竞争者外面. McClure杂志, 美国人杂志, 矿工的每周, 和, 在它的样子, 世界的工作, 制定共同真的通俗的大学往前这很线.它would是遗憾即便要未来历史学家是到有到书写字象. 这些: "在第二十世纪更高的事业的知识的中间有失去的全部的影响结束舆论在联合的情形.但是升起音调的民主政治的使命, 哪个他们有证明自己因而哀伤地不适合的到尽, 是假定的有稀罕的狂热和告发有非常的技能和成功在新的教育的能力; 和为了他们的人交感作用的澄清和他们的人参数选择的上升, 人未被捕的已获得的习惯求助排外地到确定的私人的文学的冒险的指导, 一般指明在市场在便宜的杂志.的亲爱的名字"

必须学院的不我们负责它那没有历史学家将曾经说任何事象这? 博学的好男人的含糊的同样地短语就在那个时候你看他可能是, 散播和不定的同样地一个必须离开它的请求, 是在那里任何的其他的公式那描写因而好结果在哪个我们的事业应该目标? 如果他们做那, 他们做最好的东西可能的.如果他们未能做它, 他们失败很行为.它的确地是美好的合成的公式.如果我们的才能和毕业生可能一次全体地想起实现它同样地伟大的含糊的目的向哪个他们有总是是或多或少obscurely探索的, 伟大的晴朗would是流出他们的问题的结束多数; 和, 至于他们的影响在我们的社会的系统的中间, 它would上船在力.的新的事业

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