Humanly Speaking
no room. They were in the rough; they had to be made over into a new kind of citizen. This material has often been of the most unpromising appearance. It has often seemed to superficial
highest possibilities in t
ts that many of his fellow citizens may be rather dreary brethren, but so were many of the kings of whom nothing is remembered but their names and dates. Only now and then is one seen who is every inch a king. But such a p
is a spent force. He will see great inequalities in wealth and position. He will be struck by the fact that autocratic powers are wielded which
ly democratic. The distinctive thing in an aristocracy is not the fact that certain people enjoy privileges. It lies in the fact that these privilege
hronicled in the newspapers, and their names are familiar. But it does not occur to the average man that they are anything more than fortunate persons who emerged from the crowd
n regard to the objects of his admiration. They have done what he would like to do, and what he hopes to be able to do