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Conservative's Consolations

wise acceptance of the laws of evidence. These things are not less valuable for being undervalued. "At the present time," says the most acute of American critics, Mr. Brownell, "it is quite generally imagined that we should gain rather than lose by having Raphael without the Church, and Rembrandt without the Bible." The same notion, less clearly defined, is prevalent concerning Milton and Dante. We had grown weary of large and compelling backgrounds until the Great War focussed our emotions. We are impatient still of large and compelling traditions. The tendency is to localization and analysis.

The new and facile experiments in verse, which have some notable exponents, are interesting and indecisive. Midway between the enthusiasm of the experimenters (which is not contagious) and the ribald gibes of the disaffected (which are not convincing) the con-

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