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but to put our knowledge in practice is too often esteemed servile, or eschewed as mere drudgery. Useful activities flatter pride, and gratify the imagination, too little. But of what avail, ordinarily, is the possession of truth, unless as light to direct us in the ways of beneficent labor, for ourselves and for our fellow men? There are, indeed, objects of knowledge which elevate the soul in the mere act of contemplation; but, in most cases, if what we learn is brought into no definite relation to the practice of life, the acquisition is barren, and the labor of making it apparently a loss of time and strength. This is no censure upon the course of learning as a process of mental discipline; for this in itself is one of the most productive forms of human activity. EXCUSE. Song, they say, should be a king, Crowned and throned by lightning-legions Only they may dare to sing Who can hear their voices ring Through the echoing thunder-regions. Yet, below the mountain's crest, Chime the valley-bells to heaven; If we may not grasp the best, Deeper, closer, be our quest For the good that Fate has given. Parching in its fever pain, Many a tortured life is thirsting For a cooling draught to drain, Though it flash no purple vein From the mellow grape-heart bursting. Must our sun-struck gaze despise Starry isles in light embosomed? Must we close our scornful eyes Where the valley lily lies, Just because the rose has blossomed? Though the lark, God's perfect strain, Steep his song in sunlit splendor; Though the nightingale's sweet pain With divine despair, enchain Dew-soft darks in silence tender; Not the less, from Song's excess, Sings the blackbird late and early: Nor the bobolink's trill the less Laughs for very happiness, Gurgling through its gateways pearly. Though we reach not heavenly heights, Where the sun-crowned souls sit peerless, Let us wing our farthest flights Underneath the lower lights;-- Soar and sing, unfettered, fearless-- Sings as bubbling water flows-- Sing as smiles the summer sunny. Royal is the perfect rose, Yet, from many a bud that blows, Bees may drain a drop of honey. AMERICAN WOMEN. A great deal has been said and written in this age and country on the subject of what is technically called _woman's rights_; and, in the
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