♦ KNOW^LEDGE 



[JcLT 3, 1885. 



blackguardly louts, : 



til.' 



Hd 1, 



.sinwularly jil i.stlc ■ -ill iiiii.t \' 1: i: - : "f a hund 

 Ityidd.s"to siiiToui.din- iuiln ■, , ■■. win- 

 to the action of oaust'S u li i,-h -•, i ::j:, ,. .M , y, ,- 

 littk• effect upon it. ^\-l..T.tl,.' I...y . ■ t,. 'r, 

 it is nearly always— n::y. I' -r viy "■,■, n |., 1 



evil ; where the tone among the boys of a school is l;-. 

 one may be well assured that they are under the influf 

 of pood men. 



The lesson it teaches is of 

 jiiorally, and nationally. — 



I MYSTERIES AND MORALITIES. 



I By Edwaeu Clodd. 



I. 



THE Revised Yer<i..n of the Scriptures, now com- 

 p'.t^il le. ill- i-Mie ..f the Old Testament, which 

 -I 111- Mine wilt ]<i diii-ir of being nicknamed the 

 (':ilier-lierr_v Uil'l.' i-^ :i I'eeofrnition of the possible 

 nu])erfection~ > : ' ' ' ; : - i^ ■[ have preceded it, 



1 as also of the i; .■ ; ■ , : ■ i' j nf the most ancient 

 tests, the oldi - ■ I ' litively modern, on 



comparison of ' : '; : //":.• is based. The 





1 the 



atment of these 

 ; than theories 

 e their abiding- 



influenced by 

 ■J leive better 



looksellers, the wisdom of cheap editions 



re will always be a large jr 

 lake theii' tone from the clin 

 will bo among the good fellov, 

 tliiit w;ir ; but they will sink i 

 -.iks, bullies, and cow 



• d. 



irked < 



a of the .splendid tune pre- 

 vailing there. The lad.s were neither bullies nor cowarl':. 



licle— an account the interest of 

 e student of human progress than 



lowlel-e of the events: 



