THE CROWNING YEARS 321 



liivi when the lines of history draw in, and the 

 critic will have the proper perspective ? I believe 

 no great worker ever thought less about it. 

 Through inexorable labour, through constant sacri- 

 fice, through storms of painful obloquy, he has lived 

 his ideals, if he has made mistakes — been mortal. 

 Those ideals are an enduring contribution to the 

 good. The first, the motto of his young days, 

 w^as Iini:>avidi j^^^ogreclimnur — *'Let us march on 

 fearlessly." The second, the motto of his later 

 years, was: "The good, the true, and the beautiful, 

 are the ideals, yea the gods, of our Monistic 

 philosophy." 



21 



