GOOD TASTE—AND NO VEL READING , There is no objection to a little dessert after a hearty dinner, and should be none to a little in dulgence in novel reading on the part of the col lege student who has done justice to a meal of mathematics and applied science. But lemon ice would be, although pleasant, scarely a nourishing article for steady diet. Just so with the novel. This is to be a lay sermon on novels, by one who is no critic by profession, but who lias rav aged the whole list of authors from old Cap Col lier up (or down ?) to Ibsen and come to certain conclusions which are offered for what they arc worth. There is development in appreciation for fiction just as in any other faculty of intellect or sense, and this development is bound to be up ward if one 'gives it opportunity. The same is true in many other fields, People with an un cultured ear for music actually prefer “After the Ball” to “Schubert’s Serenade,” and think it af fectation for others to express a preference for classical music. But if they should study music for years themselves, their own convictions would become the same, inevitably and sincerely. So in art. Any child would prefer a colored chromo presented by some Sarsaparilla fakir, to an etch ing by Gefome, but not so a person of refined taste. Good taste is a real virtue. Even savages have it in some things, for we arc told that in the best circles of the Cannibal Islands chides and cigarette fiends aic excluded from the cuisine. Prof. Bryce, in the American Commonwealth, after applauding highly various characteristics of the American people, deplores their proneness to admire quantity rather than quality, and to pre fer bizarre effects to genuine accomplishments, It is gratifying to feel, however, that in science, art and literature, we are becoming more thor ough day by day. What are the characteristics of the best novels ? A hard question. It is easier to answer what arc the best novels. In this, individual preference THE FREE LANCE. must have much influence. I have tried to think what ten novels I should pick out if I were con demned to have no other reading in the lines of fiction for the rest of my life. Here they are : “Les Miserables,” Victor Hugo; “Robison Cru soe,” Defoe; “The Newcomes,” Thackeray; “David Copperficld,” Dickens; “Lorna Doone,” Blackstone; *‘lvan hoe,” Scott; “The Deerslay cr,” Cooper; “Plain Tales from the Hills,” Kip ling; “The Master of Ballantrae,” Stevenson; “Tess of the D’Urbervillcs,” Thos Hardy. Nothing in this list by George Elliot, or Tol stoi or Ibsen, or Sarah Grand, I am sorry, but I must get in my ten favorites. I couldn’t include anything from the last three mentioned in the best hundred novels. But I think “Les Misera bles ” the greatest work of fiction ever written and so do three people out of four who have read it. Robert Louis Stevenson and Thackeray are the writers of the best English prose ever put to gether, and Rudyard Kipling is the writer of the most graphic short stories ever imagined in all the world’s history. If lie shall try some day he may write a greater novel than “Les Miserables.” “Trilby,” is a splendid story but not one of the ten. The fiction of the new papers and maga zines to-day is good but none of it, I think, im mortal. Conan Doyle, Stanley Weyman, and Mark Twain, for instance. Popular fiction “Mr. Barnes of New York,” and E. P. Roe’s works, sell but they are not literature. Try to read one of them a second time and see how disgusted you become. Apply the same test to “Les Misera bles,” or even “Robison Crusoe,” and learn the difference. This whole subject of the best fiction is an in teresting one, and a debatable one. No doubt the Free Lance would welcome contributions on FROM A MILITARY POINT OF VIEW. The fact that we are related to the militia of the State through the law which makes cadet captains Quisquis