wide latitude, but great variation, in
ritual and worship; that the political
story of all the progressive nations
has been one long agitation for re-
forms, and that no reform can ever be
final; that reform must succeed re-
form until the end of time, -- reforms
being in their nature neither more
nor less than those readjustments to
new conditions which are involved
in all social development. A wider
survey of experience would make it
clear that art has many manners,
and that no manner is supreme and
none final.
A long experience gives a man
poise, balance, and steadiness; he has
seen many things come and go, and
he is neither paralysed by depression
when society goes wrong, nor irra-
tionally elated when it goes right.
He is perfectly aware that his party
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