FRIDAY THE 20th-CMITURI Rzybiantok (Taken from Stendhalfs "History of Painting in Italy" and trans lated into English by Francis Klo6lspelo The world has never seen anything more novel than a body of twenty-eight million men speaking the same language and laugh ing at the same things. How long, in the arts, will our character lie buried under imitation? re, the greatest people that ever existed (yes, even after 1815), we imitate the tiny tribes of Greece, which alto gether could scarcely number two or three mi.— lion inhabitants. When shall I see a people reared solely upon a rec— ognition of the useful and the harmful,' without talk of Jeft, breeks, Romans? Moreover, without our being aware of it t this revolution has already begun. We think of our gelvet as faithfOlwor ehipers of the ancients; butvre have too much sense to accept their Standar : oSi with all the conseqUences t in consid.b orations of huaian beauty* i Here, as oleeWhsre, we how two baliefis and two' reitgiono e With the ppo• i icus4outo gtooth, derlAS t4e! last' two thousand Sores in the: number of ideas in vi;culationthuman heads have lost the faculty of being logiCal* THE HIGHACRES COLLEGIAN Women, in our society, (deny that love ' as we will scarcely voice a ,experience it toady... detailed opinion on beauty; its a modern affection. otherwise a woman of wit at is one of the most would be in a decidedlY ;curious and unexpected perpleXing Situation. In ifruits of the advance the museum she *Wow in civilization. the statue of Meleager; and if this Meloooor, which 4Modern love, that beau sculptors understands4Y Itiful plant shining from regard as a perfact - model kar t like the manchineel, of male beaUty, should ivrith the glitter of its walk into her salon with !enticing fruit, wilich so the face he haT7Ed exactlyhtften conceal the deadli— the mind indicated by that lest poisOn.4. 4 face, he would be clumsy, and even ridicUlous. The sentiments of well— bred persons simply are no longer the same as among the Greeks••• r Among the ancients, the great passion, after their ardor for the fatherland, was a form of love it would be ridiculous even to name; among us, at times the passion is love, and in default of love what we can find that most resembles love. I rea—. lize that our clever men, even those who have a soul, give many a moment to ambition, either pub. lie honors or the pleasuret of vanity. I know too that they have few intense interests, and that rather their lives go by in an amused indifference. Then the arts decline; but from time to time public events do away With indifference. 2n the tkidst of all this, tt iS the tender passions that direct taste... . I do not believe that even the most zealous enthusi— ast for the ancients can NOVEMBER 7 1958 (EditOris notelmanchineel— a poisonous tropical tree, having a milky juice and apple—shaped fruit.) Ott eiliKr tiabaltallsow ißomantic ArtOrts Year lbook 24 VW PICTURE IN LIBRARY Our thanks to Professor jAndrew Kafka, who recently Idonated a picture of the !Hundred Great Books to the IHighacres Library* It is ;an interesting and welcome laddition to our Campus* !This picture is also a !timely donation, for the iHighacres Campus is again (sponsoring an informal !adult evening course on ;Great Literature, and among the 5 books tenta- Itively selected for this + year's course are two from ithe 0 1 '00 Books list, • BOSidars nPrtmeipies of 'Human Knowledge", and iblentels "Divine Comedy". t Mr. Robert Hutchins and a I group of scholars from St. !John's College in Maryland selected tba 100 books as •a tasis far their liberal Arts