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THOMAS H. HUXLEY

THAT man, I think, has a liberal education whose body has been

so trained in youth that it is the ready servant of his will, and does with ease and pleasure all that, as a mechanism, it is capable of; whose intellect is a clear, cold, logic engine, with all its parts of equal strength and in smooth running order, ready, like a steam engine, to be turned to any kind of work and to spin the gossamers as well as forge the anchors of the mind; whose mind is stored with the knowledge of the great fundamental truths of nature and the laws of her operations; one who, no stunted ascetic, is full of life and fire, but whose passions have been trained to come to heel by a vigorous will, the servant of a tender conscience; one who has learned to love all beauty, whether of nature or of art, to hate all vileness, and to esteem others as himself.

-THOMAS HENRY HUXLEY

HUXLEY

HAT was a great group of thinkers to which Huxley belonged. The Mutual Admiration Society forms the sunshine in which souls grow-great men come in groups

Sir Francis Galton says there were fourteen men in Greece in the time of Pericles, who made Athens possible. A man alone is only a part of a man.

Praxiteles by himself could have done nothing. Ictinus might have drawn the plans for the Parthenon, but without Pericles, the noble building would have remained forever the stuff which dreams are made of. And they do say that without Aspasia, Pericles would have been a mere dreamer of dreams, and Walter Savage Landor overheard enough of their conversation to prove it.

William Morris and seven men working with him formed the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and gave the workers and doers of the world an impetus they yet feel. Concord and Cambridge had seven men who induced the Muses to come to America and take out papers.

These men of the Barbizon School tinted the entire art world: Millet, Rousseau,

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