James Thomson.

5. Mankind in the aggregate is always wiser than any single man, because its experience is derived from a larger range of observation and experience, and because the springs that feed it drain a wider region both of time and space.—Lowell.

6. Whatever is fated, that will take place.—Emerson.

7. Whenever it is proved that a man broke one of the Ten Commandments, it is roundly replied that in his day there were only nine.—Stephen.

8. The market-place and the factory owe much to thinkers, just as the branches bowing down with ripe fruit owe much to the roots working in silence and darkness.—Hillis.

9. I myself must mix with action lest I wither by despair.—Tennyson.

10. The Lone Wolf must have sprung and missed his hold, for Mowgli heard the snap of his teeth and then a yelp as the Sambhur knocked him over with his forefoot.—Kipling.

11. The poorest and the richest students are equally welcome here, provided that with their poverty or their wealth they bring capacity, ambition, and purity.—C. W. Eliot.

12.

In the elder days of art,