THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAX, PORTLAND, MARCH 13, 1921 IDEAL LIFE DECLARED INSTINCTIVE DESIRE AND WISH OF EACH NORMAL HUMAN BEING Every Truth of Nature That Will Help Him to Do It Said to Be of Great Value to RaceTwo Radically Different Views of Relationship Between God and Man Cited Both Called Orthodox. Sermon-lecture by 1 W. Rogers, na tional president of the Theosophtcal so elty before the Portland Theosophlcal society during bis via it Last week. I '. t TO LIVE an Ideal life Is the in stinctive desire of the human be ing1. Every truth of nature that 'will help him to do It is of very great value to the race and we cannot spend time more wisely than in carefully studying the fundamental principles of our being. We all strive, with some degree of success, to establish a con sistent relationship between our ideals and our lives between precept and practice but our success must nec essarily be largely dependent upon our understanding of our relationship to the source of all life and the method by which Its sublimity may become an individual possession. Within the world of Christian thought and philosophy there are two radically different views of the rela tionship between Cod and man. They are equally orthodox equally author itative; and jet profoundly important results depend upon whether we ac cept and shape our lives by the one or by the ohter other. One of these views Is commonly known as that of God transcendant. The other is known as that of God Immanent. At first thought this may sonnd like metaphysical abstractions with no relationship to the practical af fairs of physical life. But careful consideration will 6how that they present ideas as opposite as the poles of the earth and that these ideas have profound and far-reaching Influence in the world of men. That view known as transcendence Is that God and man are beings apart from each other; that the relationship 1 that which exists between the in ventor and the machine. It is an an thropomorphic view of the supreme being , and it translates spiritual truths in terms of the literal and the materialistic It is widespread in western civilization and is quite rat "orally found side by side with that literal interpretation of the Bible that obscures truth and destroys beauty tit mistaking allegory for history. The opposing view Is that of God Immanent. Immanence differs from transcendence as the clear light of day differs from the baffling shad ows of the night. It is the view that tho supreme being is not apart from his universe, but is within it; Indeed, that he is his universe, and jet more than his universe; for the idea of Immanence includes all the sublimity signified by the word "transcend ence." while rejecting only the ma terializing tendency and limitations with which the dogmatic use of that word has invested it. Of course it is nearly as impossible to express spiritual truths in phys ical language as for the finite to com prehend the infinite. All attempts only emphasize our helplessness. In the effort to describe immanence, or j in-being, we can only declare that A we nean that the universe is an ex ' piession of God, an actual emination, j a literal portion, is the supremo be r t ins, but not all of the supreme being, 1 as hands are part of the body and I jet not the body; an emination, even j as the clouds are an emination of the i ocean; and that man. as part of the universe, is as literally a portion of the supreme being as the raindrops are literally a portion of the sea. They " will become again the sea, but are ' for the time being far from home and . are in no sense at that time the sea. There Is an actual separatoion In what we call space and yet there re 4 mains an inalienable- relationship In nature between them. Regarded as S Individual drops, they have lost the jrrandeur. tho power and the func tion of the sea. Tet each is a minia ture sea. Each has the very essence and actual nature of the sea, and each will ultimately return to the sea. And thus it is In the relationship between God and man from the view point of immanence. As the raindrop Is to the ocean in the material world, the finite being is to the supreme being In tho spiritual world. The soul is literally a spark from the divine life, raying outward into material realms and ultimately returning with a rich harvest of experience to its source. The conception of God Im manent, therefore, accepts most liter ally the great truth that "In him wa live and move and have our being. Wo are Inseparable from him. We are divine fragments of the one life. We km srods in tha making. There is no exaggeration In the tatement that these two views are equally orthodox. In western civili sation there, may be ten who believe in transcendence only for every one who believes that Immanence alone represents the truth of nature. But the minority have the scholars and thinkers with them. The Encyclope dia Brttannica says: The conception, of God as wholly external to man, a purely mechanical theory of creation, is throughout Cliristendom regarded as false to the teaching of the New Testament as also to Christian experience. Whence came that misleading "me chanical theory of creation" that is largely responsible for the unfortu nate materialism of the west? From the ignorance and intolerance of the monks of the middle ages, whose mental poverty was as dire as their physical poverty, and whose theology was as bare and dreary and mate rialistic as their cells of stone. If we go back to the early Christian period we shall discover that . the Christian Fathers held the view of Immanence. Indeed, go back to the Old Testament account of cosmog ony and we read of man that "In his own Image created ne nim. image is defined as a reflection, a likeness In what does that likeness consist? Since God is wholly immaterial it cannot refer to physical characteris tics. It can mean only that in spirit ual essence. In power, in wisdom, in compassion, man is an image of God. The difficulty with those who hold that widespread western view which is antagonistic to immanence 1s that instead of thinking of man aa a re flection or Image of God, they think of God as a reflection and extension of the best characteristics of man. It is this grand old Christian idea of the immanence of God that the theosophlst has in mind when he as serts that all human beings are es sentially divine; that each of us is an embryo god. It is a conception of the soul that is In harmony with all the scriptures, with ancient and modern philosophy and with the working hy potheses of science, for it Is insepara bly associated with the idea of evolu lon; and it was proclaimed In many forms by the Christ himself when he spoke from the hills of Galilee. Now if the immanence of God is a truth of nature we shall be able to establish the fact by an analysis of man. We shall find inherent in him the qualities of a god. Accustomed as we are to looking at the shadow side of human nature It will at first seem startling to declare that an gelic attributes are common property. And yet it Is unquestionably true that when we penetrate the exterior strata of tne nnman Deing mat con tains the unpleasant and repulsive which Is but a phase of evolution, as scaffolding n "Sly but necessary phase of architecture we find the moil conclusive evidence of the in herent divinity of man. Convincing I noticed wrong or an injustice becauce proof of this is his recogniton of his I the unity of all life has been recog- i imperfection. Were he less than an embryo god ho would be blind to hi faults. Emerson says something like this: Granted that we are base, but how do we know that we are base?" In that sentence the Ameri can philosopher shows man's divinity. Only the divine can comprehend dl vinity. That, which is below the divine level cannot see Its imperfec tions. A tiger does not think of him self as being cruel. A horse does not censure- himself for being ignorant. A pig has no remorse about his greed. tsut man recognizes his cruelty, ad mits his ignorance and apologizes for his .greed; and in all this ho proves his innate divinity But man does more than recognize his imperfections. To "this evidence of his divinity he adds proof that he is a god in the making by his efforts to transcend imperfection. The whole history of evolution is but a striving for perfection. It is what has been called "the divine urge." It is the water of evolution seeking its source as the raindrop returns to the sea. It is the spiritual gravity that proves the oneness of all life. Now, this old and beautiful truth of the Immanence of God will enable us to get a correct understanding of what Inspiration Is. To live an in spired life we must, of course, com prehend inspiration. The common view of inspiration is that with which most of us became familiar in our childhood days. It assumed that only writers of the Christian scriptures, the prophets, the saints and the seers were inspired. That belief goes naturally with the purely mechanical theory of crea tion." The relationship between God and man becomes that of autocrat and subject. He "made" men as men make toys. Some he fashioned to be prophets and saints. Others he made to be ignoramuses and villains! There was a gulf between God and man and the seer was the link'acroBs., He was something unique, not in the natural order, but different from the human mass. He was supposed to be di vinely inspired because bo was set apart to speak for God, as a prime minister speaks for a king. To have suggested that the inspired person spoke less than the whole truth on any subject, or himself comprehended but a fragment of truth, would have been considered blasphemous. This seer of the transcendence Idea had little to do with worldly things. He dealt with the future rather than the present. His visions were not re lated to the work-a-day world. This life seemed to be of questionable value a fleeting sorrow to be toler ated as a child gets through with the measles, a period of existence not to bo enjoyed, but rather the transitory stage of unavoidable evil that will be followed in due course with the re turn of appetite and life that is worth while! Special inspiration is consistent only with "a purely mechanical the ory of creation." If that illogical and unscientific conception of the uni verse is thrown aside the old view of inspiration must go with It. What, then, is inspiration and what id the InFPired life? Inspiration Is the influx of the di vine life into the human being and It becomes possible in exact proportion that we comprehend the oneness of all life and strive to escape the thraldom and self-interest. Inspira tion is an intensification of the di vine force that is within all human beings not a creation of what does not exist, but an evolution of what is there, as a Fpark may be fanned into flame. When one is Inspired the god within has been aroused, compre hension of the unity of all life has dawned, compassion is born and we behold the phenomenon of the human evolving toward the superhuman. In spiration, then, is not dependent on a special act of God, but on a special effort of man. and it indicates the stage of evolution that he has at tained. The old idea that divine inspiration is a monopoly of religious writers and wurKers, or saints and seers. Is as narrow as the theology of the monks of medieval times. The truth is that all whose greatness and goodness mane tnem channels for the divine force are inspired. All whose love of their fellowmen has moved them to accept hardship and poverty and pain In helping to lighten the sorrows of the world have lived the inspired life. It is no more possible to limit Inspiration than it is to define God. Religious activities do not monopo lize it. Who Is (he truly religious man.' ho who lives to serve the world. He who enlightens mankind. He who feeds the hungry and lifts the fallen. He who fights the battles of the oppressed. He who lives In advance of his times and in exchange for his brave opinions accepts pay ment in the coin of calumny. He who gives his life for a principle, even through mistaken judgment, in a bad cause. Whether famous or obscure, whether respectablo or despised, whether accepting the highest of re ligions or rejecting them all, they are the truly religious they are all in the galaxy of the great. buakespeare did not write scrip ture, but he was as certainly inspired as any saint.. He comprehended the soul. He "held the mirror up to na ture" and it reflected every height and depth of human emotion. He filled his stage with the actors of his Intellect and they moved the world to laughter or to tears. He preached a hundred sermons in a single play He stimulated Imagination, he quick ened sympathy and enabled men to think the thoughts and live the lives of other men. Poet, artist, dramatist, philosopher, marvelous interpreter of nature, greater than genius nothing less than inspiration can explain him Wagner will serve as another il lustration. His art demonstrates this natural truth of inspiration in an other way. He brought some por. tion of the wondrous harmony and regal grandeur of a higher plane into physical life. The music of Wagner has a kinship with the majesty of the stars. It lifts the consciousness to higher realms. Why does it elevate and ennoble us? Because it arouses In some degree the consciousness of our relationship to the one life. It awakens the inner god to temporary cognition of his own greatness. It is as though a prince, suffering from a lapse of memory, had become a wan dering outcast. But suddenly some incident that stirs the depths of his being a familiar landscape, a glimpse of a palace, a bugle call brings tem porary recollection and be becomes aware of hie rank and station, aware that he is a member of a royal house hold and has all along been a prince of the realm. He may slip back in a moment into forgetfulness. But think how even a flash of the truth must have thrilled him. And so it is with the soul encased In a physical body. It has Identified Itself with Its pres ent environment, but such music my lessen the illusion. In the same sense that the prophets were in spired Wagner was Inspired. Some portion of the divine life flowed through him and drew men upwards. All the poete- who have moved the heart and awakened the imagination of mankind are examples of the in spired life. The. God that speaks through them is the same God that speaks through the recognized sav iors of the world. The spirit of protest flashed out against aa un-1 nlzed and the welfare of the stranger has become the heart's concern. We need not go to ancient history to una inspired lives. They are all about us. We ' need not even go aoroaa in our search. Lowell, among otners, comes instantly to mind as an example. He gave voice to eternal truths. Such lives are inspired. Such people are the messengrs of God. Tho old Idea that only those who are engaged in some distinctly re ligious activity can live the Inspired life is utterly inconsistent with the belief in the immanence of God, and is at war with the principles of evo lution. All activities of the business and political world play a necessary pant In the evolution of intellect and compassion, without which there can be no religion. There is still linger irg in the world too much of the tendency to regard the life of thc. pny&icai pianes as comparatively un important. Those who give their en tire attention to a future heaven are likely to stumble over the simplest duties of earth. This world is as important as any world and this life is as sacred as any life. In physical existence we are getting precisely the lessons we require for evolving the virtues that will make heaven at all possible and enable us to comprehend and enjoy it. The physical plane is aa necessarv to the heaven life as the primary school Is necessary to the i university, and it is just as divine as any other plane. No department of human experience is higher or lower than another. Tbey are simply mu tually dependent No method of human perception or cognition is more important or sacred than an other. We truly say that intuition Is higher than intellect. And -et until intellect Is sufficiently evolved to hold impulse in check, intuition can rot act. The higher is dependent on the lower. The mind of the surgeon is higher than the nerves of his body. Yet his expert life-saving knowledge waits upon his nerve control. Until he controls the lower, the higher is useless. Just so It Is with Intellect and intuition. Until Intellect is evolved and used, intuition can- be but poorly and uncertainly expressed Now. nobody will deny that business and political life develop the Intel lecL They are therefore essential parts of the divine plan for the evolution of the souL Tea. the physical life is very Im portant. The life after the loss of the material body may be bliss in eed for those who have lived up to their highest ideals here, but none the less the kingdom of heaven is within us and we may know it now To work as the selfish work, but only for the welfare of the race; to play heroic role in the life-drama of Ibis, our world: to evolve every vir- ue and faculty that pnyslcal ltie can express; to win the love of new friends by our unselfishness and obility: to hold the love of old frlende by our loyalty and our faith; this also is heaven, and a heaven hat is here. We may look even In the political field for the inspired life, and we find it in such men as Mazzini and Washington, 'n Franklin and Lincoln. They had visions of a happier human ity on earth, and their personal in terests were forgotten In the effort to give those visions tangible form and to work them out in the terms of material success. They were all 'cspired. Political action can be Just sb sacred as ecclesiastical action. All the forces that work toward freedom. Justice, equality and brotherhood are divine forces. But we may go farther than to declare that the inspired life is to be found in the business and political realms. It is equally true that in spiration is consistent even with the forces of destruction. To a remark able degree the inspired life has characterized the great Iconoclasts. Luther. Bradlaugh, Besant, Ingersoll, Blavatsky they are some of the heroic figures among the destroyers of outgrown theories and beliefs. Some of them are too recent to have taken the place in history to which they are entitled, for the iconoclast of one age is likely to be the saint or hero of the next. The world regards Luther and Blavatsky as represent ing different degrees of usefulness and beneficence only because of the different periods o time that sepa rate them from usl The radicalism of Luther In the sixteenth century has became the ultra conservatism of thn twentieth. These great iconoclasts were benefi cent destroyers. They swept away the nbselets and cleared the path for progress. They stimulated thought. They worked against that mental inertia, which characterizes the man who permits others to think for him. "It Is a noble thing to destroy slavery and free men s bodies. It Is a nomer thing to destroy superstition and free men's souls.' Every era muBt have the icono clasts the destroyers. There would be tio progress without them, for de struction Is as necessary as construc tion. Consider how a city changes In a generation. . Mechanics' shop are torn down that manufactorle mav be built. Hovels are cleared awar that mansions may appear. Where the old tenements stood fairer structures rise. The very knolls and dales yield to the transforming hand of man. Rivers change their course, lakes appear, new landscapes come Into being. A constant, almost im perceptible change goes on until in time the filthy streets have become boulevards, the dingy houses have vanished, and we look upon a city of parks and palaces. The old, the Inadequate, has disappeared. The new, the necessary, has arrived. But the new order could not be until the old order was destroyed. The two wings of the Angel of Progress are destruction and construction. Of course the iconoclasts have al ways been misunderstood and de nounced as fanatical and dangerous. The conservative majority never wishes to move on. They prefer the security of that which is to the un certainty of that which they have not seen; and so they argue against prog ress and persecute its advocates. They insist that a religious belief that served their ancestors well is good enough for them. It is as though an ultra-conservative of a past generation should have said to a progressive: "These old houses are well enough. They serve the pur pose. You are an impractical vision ary. Tou prate of buildings wltn wide windows hat will make in teriors marvelously light. Tou spec ulate upon systems of ventilation that are mere dre-ama You hint at a better method of heating than the use of stoves. You even believe that in illumination we- can discard oil lamps. Tou actually advocate dis placing all the blessings of our glori ous civilization with these fantastic things! You are not only Impracti cal you are sacreligious. Tou would destroy our ancestral homes with their sacred memories. You are at tacking the most precious things of life. Let well enough alone. Keep on the safe side. These old houses may be somewhat dark and damp, but what was good enough for our fathers Is good enough-for us! It represents their highest conceptions of architecture. I'd rather Bleep in this cellar of a room with its one dear old, window a foot square and. have rheumatism all my life than to be false to the highest ideals of my fathers!" The iconoclasts axe the pioneers of the mental and moral world. They destroy the useless. They clear the field so that better building becomes possible. Tbey are ambassadors of God, even when not aware of their own divinity, and none the less so because some of them have ques tioned his very existence. The icono clast has a close relationship to the martyr. He "is the center of a storm of human passion. He proclaims un-1 popular truth. Because it Is unpop ular his reputation, his liberty, his life, are in peril. Because it is truth It lays the foundation on which the future happiness of mankind rests. He shapes the destiny of an ungrate ful world and all of the organized forces of society are against him. Whether his activities are religious or political, he is equally the Inspired messenger of God. Lowell puts it concisely In six lines: Right forever en a scaffold; Wrong- forever on a throne; But the scaffold shapes tbs future And within the dim unknown Standeth God, within the shadow. Keeping watch above His own I Martyrdom is the logical outcome of Iconociasm, To some degree every Iconoclast must become the martyr. The higher his work the greater will be his sacrifice and the mightier will be his inspiration. To those who deny immortality the heroism of the mar tyr who goes to the stake may seem a foolish sacrifice, but his death is undying testimony to the truth of a greater life. It is evidence that the human being is greater than his physical existence is so great, so divine, that at a certain stage of his evolution he cannot be false to a principle. He has reached a point where "life at any price" becomes contemptible and impossible, just be cause of his awakened divinity, and he can continue to realize his divin ity only by uncompromising loyalty to truth. To retain his life by deny ing truth would be to lose more than life. Emerson, says: Though love repine and reason chafe. There came a voice without reply "Tis man's perdition to be safe. When for the truth he ought to die." The distinguishing characteristic of the Inspired life is the spirit of sacrifice Whoever possesses that belongs o the nobility of nature, to kinshin in God. whether he wears the rags of a mendicant or the robes of a king. There is no stronger evi dence of the immanence of God and the truth that his spirit flows through and inspires thousands out side the list of the religious writers and speakers, than Is furnished by th"e iconoclast and the martyr, who are necessarily the antagonists of the accepted ideas of their day. They rep resent the most godlike qualities and the highest ide&ls known among men. Through such personalities divinity speaks, the supreme life. flows, the divine fire is kindled in others, and that miracle of miracles Is wrought the transformation of the common place Into the sublime. Who can grasp the tremendous sig nificance of the literal divinity of man and the mighty truth that he is a god in the making? Behind him lie the conquered fields of his past evo lution. Before him stretches the 11 Hmiitable future where his battles for wisdom, power and compassion shall be fought in the starlit temples of the gods! THE LITERARY PBRISCOP& 1 N' MISS ETHEL R. SAWYER, Director of Training Class. Library Asso ciation of Portland. OW that planting time is com ing on our thoughts turn fondly to seeds and things. Earth yearnings arise in us and everyone who can beg or buy a bucket of dirt and a window box begins a series, of Intensive farming experiments. Let us not at this time forget to pay due honor to one source of our spring de Ifght. those public servants who scat- sprini oir of hope of a fine crop of votes in the fall. J. P. McEvoy has set down our feelings in appropriate verse in his "Slams of Life" "with malice for all and charity toward none." I know I have a congressman Id Washington. D. C. For now and then he conies around To get a vote from me: Ho proudly shakes me by the hand Aud asks about my needs. And when he goes to Washington He sends me garden seeds. Whenever there's a bill tor which I'd like to have him vote, I trust in him and tell him so By 'telegram or note; And he gets every one, I know, And every one he reads. For always when the Spring- has come. He sends me garden seeds. The other day T wrote to him "We put our faith In you To make the league of nations safe If Wilson puts it through." His answer came right back to me: "Appreciate your needs . Am sending In tomorrow's mail Some lovely garden seeds." I am glad I have a congressman la Washington. D. C. His legislative efforts there Mean oh so much to me! He is my representative. For me his bosom bleeds. And always when the Spring has come He sends me garden seeds. Radishes and lettuces. Tomatoeses. cucumbersca. Such lovely garden seedsl In spite of the recent boom in poetry products we can t get roucn in the way of income tax from the younger versifiers. According to air Ernest Hodder Williams, president of Hodder & Stoughton, London, and vice-president of George H. Doran Publishing company, publishers still count themselves lucky if they sell 300 copies of the work of & highly praised young poet. Whiting Williams, author of What's on the Worker's Mind," is Rio mere arm-chair economist, nor he even content to be a swivel-chair theorist. To gather material for his book he spent seven months at naro labor in steel mill, coal mine and other labor centers. Since writing his books he has addressed 11 cham bers of commerce, 10 national organi zations of manufacturers, while carrying on his regular courses on the management of labor In the Harvard business school. Now If he really had his eyes and ears open during all these months he should have much of value to tell us, al though, of course, the most crushing weight that Is on some workers' minds the fear of dependency for themselves or their families can never be really known by any one who comes, however sincerely, as temporary laborer, buoyed up by the knowledge that whatever he may suffer, bis family is cared for. Hilda Conkling, our 9-year-old poetess, has been announced as the winner of the Touchstone Magazine noetrv contest for February. Finan daily that means $50. Professionally (can you call poetry a profession these days) it is interesting, because these poems were submitted anony mously, of course, and there were several distinguished adult poets par ticipating in the competition. Floyd Dell it seems Is "slight and a little shy," "Don't tell them." he begs, "because I still like to think I'm shocking some one, and I still like to think I'm one of them; but the younger generation takes away my breath. Why! When I read F. Scott Fitzgerald I went to the mir ror and looked at mj-self to see how many hairs there were left, and said, "Good Lord, can It be you're getting middle-aged!" Well, if the young people In Fitzgerald's "This side of Parad'se" are a faithful representa tion of actual 'boys and girls in our world, we elderly monitors had better move up within shouting distance of the times. Protect the innocence of youth! Why, goodness me, It's we innocent old things who need pro tection from the sophistication of youth. They won't leave us a single illusion soon! F. P. A., in the 'ntroduct'on of C. L. Edson's "The gentle art of Column ing," says that column-conducting is the pleasantest job In the world. 'HJiven a set of morning papers, any child able to frame a coherent sen tence and to rhyme in simple couplets, can begin to write a column. In a day or two the public will bee-in to help The Oregon Bools and Tract Depot Now Located at 266 'j Alder St, BIBLES, TRACTS AND CHRIS TIAN LITERATURE ON SALE FREE READING ROOM Just Received New Shipment of Chafers Works ' Phone Aut. 520-43 him; then he Is an editor andi a con ductor, and the public does most of his work for. him:" Now, if there is one sort of work that we aspire to do it is that chief job of a good ex ecutive getting some one else to do the work. But we don t find it easy as F. P. A. makes out. For some time now we have been running more or less of a column In these pages and we can assure you the work is mostly achieved by the sweat from one individual brow. Somebody's shirking. Theodore Maynard, the English poet, came to visit us last spring and likes America so much that he is "staying on." He has been visiting his parents in Canada and now is bringing out a new volume of poems, ,"The Last Knight" and a first novel entitled, "The Divine Adven ture." An account of what is probably the first novel ever written is contained in W. C. Summers' "Silver Age of Latin Literature." Fragments only of the story remain, but it seems to have originally been a voluminous work by Gaius Petronius, the master of ceremonies of Nero's court. Surely you remember the noble Petronius in "Quo Vadis" who opened his views and departed with dignity to the Blj-sian Fields when tho Neronian favor was withdrawn. This work "The Satirae," is an exciting and in volved story of Roman high-life and is supposedly the sole forerunner of modern realistic fiction that classic literature affords. Just one hundred years ago last month John Keats died in Rome. A young man of 24, very short in sta ture and dreamy of gaze, with bronze- brown hair and luminous hazel eyes he had published in 1820 a wonder ful little volume of thirteen poems, eight of which, at. least, are master pieces of English verse. Utterly out of place in the England of his time, lashed by the critics, and sick to death with love, as well as with bodily ills, be yet felt sufficiently conscious of his own achievements to say Just at the end, "I think I shall be among tho English poets after my death." They say that the Macmillan com pany has offered a $100 prize for the best rhymed review of Wells' "Out line of History." Now there's an Idea for a little extra money on the side and we ask only that If one of our readers wins the prize he (or she) will play fair and give us half. Balanced ration for week-end read ing: "Breakers and Granite," by John Gould Fletcher. "Kim," by Rudj-ard Kipling. "The Behaviour of Crowds," by Everett D. Martin. BECKER "Literary Review." He who makes no mistakes does nothing. He who makes many mistakes loses his Job. Booker Washington. ' ' Read a book for Religious Book Week, March 13-20th. The Feast of Lanterns, by Louis Jordan Mlln. Fred A. Stokes Company, New York City. Our author knows her China inti mately. She gave proof of this in "Mr. Wu" and other stories, and gives new evidence of her wonderful talent in the present novel, "The Feast of Lanterns." In the latter we are treated to sym pathetic colorful ' tone pictures of Chinese womanhood and girlhood, also domestic peace. Chinese manhood peeps in only occasionally, while Chi nese virtues, the love of home and purity of Chinese family life ever are extolled. The novel opens in China about 30 or 35 years ago, and the principal characters are members of the aristo cratic clan or family of Ch'eng. An old proverb had predicted that some day a girl of this clan would save China in a time of great need and peril. For many years mothers of the family had given birth to sons, and daughters of the Ch'eng house unless legally adopted were non-existent. Here is one sample paragraph as to the excellence of Chinere virtue, etc.: All Chinese home life starts with one great underlying advantage physical beauty. And It has many others. Every Chinese is born into surroundings of pre eminent beauty beauty of form, beauty of color, beauty of exquisite juxtapositions natural beauty and beauty of all things that are made into beauty, and Into an al most untainted atmosphere of good taste and intrinsic kindliness. Consciously or unconsciously, every Chi nese is a sincere lover of nature and of everything lovely. No other people has so stern and uncompromising a sense or jus tice, so ready a sense of humor, more bal ance, more unflinching loyalty or less ex aggerated estimate of the Importance of self. It is a proud people without vanity: a self-reliant, strong people, lacking bru tality; suave without affectation, dignified without self-assertion; free from ridicu lousness, industrious, contented, hard working dreamers who, too. are shrewdly practical, honest above all other races. home-keeping, home-loving: first of all peoples in Its love of children and In its chivalrous treatment and Just estimate of womanhood. The clan or Ch eng had ail these characteristics indeed few Chinese lack them. From these extracts it will be ob served that our author has fallen in love with China and Chinese, and that she writes in the idealistic sense. The head of the Ch'eng clan and house is Ch'eng Shao Tun, a widow and a stern ruler in her own right. She had borne her lord seven sons, but she was possessed of two great sorrows: the death of her husband and because she had borne him no daughter. Ch'eng Yun was one of six sisters and the niece of a score of aunts. She was on terms of intimacy with the illustrious empress-dowager. Her favorite was her youngest son and idol, Ch'eng Chu-po. To conserve and serve China was this aristocratic widow's religion. She was prone to fits of furious anger over trifles. The time comes when the young man, Ch'eng Chu-po, must by the cus toms of his clan, get a wife and rear familj'. The idea is repugnant to him, as he does not wish to leave his mother. He had never loved a girl. One sunny day Ch eng Chu-po set out to celebrate1 the feast of lanterns ne of the big events in the Chinese calendar. A procession approaches, as guard to an illustrious girl of blue blood one Sing Tzu and the anchor ite Chu-po sees her and loves her. Sing Tzu is a girl of wonderful beauty. , Chu-po makes an Impas sioned pma. to his mother that he may marry Sing Tzu. and after a stern re fusal the mother relents and the two lovers are married. The wedding is a state affair. But no girl comes of this marriage and the, dowager-ruler is furiously angry J When a baby boy is born the dowa ger is not mollified. She wants a granddaughter. The dowager-mother sends Chu-po to England to get an Englsh educa tion and to learn the ways of white people. The Ch'eng clan and others are worried over Russian plots to ab sorb Manchuria and Japanese plots to seize Corea. Cholera visits China and kills many of the Ch'eng chieftains. Chu-po, who alone is left to the dowa ger, is summoned home, but at Hong kong the cholera kills him. Tzu dies of a broken heart. Tzu's son is named Ch'eng Lo Yuet and when he comes of age the stern grandmother finds him a wife. Hua Foh Tien, a maiden of a noble clan. Suppose further lineage is omitted? On page 128 there are 304 pages n the novel it is announced that at length a granddaughter is born to the dowager-ruler, and the baby is named Tien Tzu. She is the real hero ine of the novel. She grows up as a girl of wondrous beauty and intellec tual gifts and accomplishments. When Bhe reaches her tenth year she is sent ....... , , . v ..... I : fo 'T -.:: i liin ,i.-...r.lM j L mm ! Arthur James Balfour, author ' of Essays, Speculative svod Political." with a slave girl named Mung Pann to England to receive her education. In describing what happened to Tien Tzu in England the novel is at its best. An English lover appears, Jack Selwyn, Lord Ashford, and he kisses her. to Tien Tzu's great distaste. Tien Tzu knows that she is being reared and educated to serve China. Is she to become the wife of a white hus band, or is she to go home to China and do as all the honorable women of her clan have done? I MARCH 13-20 "A campaign to promote a wider interest in religious books." This store Interprets religion as concerned with every thing thaf helps humanity. Here are some of the topics that will be featured this week, and you are cordially Invited to come and browse, whether you wish to buy or not: Social and World Problems Educational Methods and Reform Christianizing . America Labor Problems Reconstruction Personal Religious Life Books of Comfort Immortality -Bible Stories Methods of Church Work Our book department and show windows have been fiven over this week to fitting displays for the occasion, t will be well worth a few moments of your time to come in and look around. NOTE: The Judges in the Book Contest have not yet been able to arrive at a decision on account of the gen eral excellence of the manuscripts submitted. However, the winners wilt surely be announced in this space next week, as the manuscripts are now in the hands of the Judges: MISS JESSIE HODGE MILLARD, Children's Supervisor, Portland Public Library. MRS. J. F. HILL,, President Parent-Testrher Council. MR JAMES K. BROCK. WAY Scout Executive. The J. K. Gill Co. Third and Alder Streets v The Mirrors of Downing Street. Illus trated, o. P. Putnam's Sons, New York City. Whoever the author of this power fully written but slightly pessimistic book, is, he shows decided ability in expressing frank opinions that are worth while and skill in making these opinions readable. The author signs himself as "A gen tleman with a duster" and presents word portraits of noted people as if these were shown on a mirror. Our author asserts that this mirror is dustj-. because the people who are mirrored perform dusty actions and obscure themselves from public view. Therefore, our author - procures a duster and removes the dust from the mirror, so that all may see. The mirror is BritlRh and mostlv political one. Word portraits are printed of these British notables: Premier Lloyd George, Lord Carnock, Lord Fisher, Herbert Asquith, Lord Northcliffe, Arthur J. Balfour, the late Lord Kitchener. Lord Robert Cecil, Winston Churchill, orLd Hal- dane, Lord Rhondda, Lord Inverforth and Lord Leverhulme. In writing about these notables our author is more often personal and critical than laudatory. He writes in that strain, he says, to show these idols the errors of their ways, in the hope that they repent for the sake of sick and ailing England that needs men. We are told that Lloyd George has in him "the soul of an eagle force striving to rise above the earth on sparrows' wings. Lloyd George also has "lost his old fire and is tired out." Mr. Asquith is ungrateful to friends and lacks decision at critical mo ments. Lord Northcliffe suffers from pessimism due to some organic' trou ble, and while he is a tremendous driving force, he apes Napoleon, .is too fond of the limelight and succeeds largely because "other men work for him." Arthur J. Balfour has harmful aloofness of character and has an artificial manner. Lord Kitchener was a driving force, a maker of a machine that made others work and "stupid" and "selfish." Lord Robert Cecil is a dreamer and not a doer. Lord Haldane is the martyr and hero who really won the late war as far as England is concerned. The late Lord Fisher was the real naval hero who checkmated Germany. Our author is someone over the Atlantic who has a wide and Inti mate acquaintance with English statesmen and political and social conditions over there. His great cry for England Is "nobler living." Kssays Speculative and Political, by Arthur .lames Ballour. ueurge it. uoran co.. New York city. , Mr. Balfour is on nf the most cele brated and experienced of English statesmen, and during the late war he occupied a responsible position in the government of his country. His life work is stamped on the far-flung history of the British empire. These ten essays have been col lected by Mr. Balfour during the last dozen years and have appeared In va rious publications. They are ably written, with that charm and polish of which Mr. Balfour is master. The titles are: "Decadence," "Beauty and the Criticism of Beauty," "Berg son's 'Creative Evolution,"' "Francis Bacon," "Psychical Research," "Anglo-German Relations." a paper writ ten for "Nord und Sud." 1912: "Treitschke's view of German World Policy." 1916: "The 'Freedom of the Seas." addressed to the American pub. lie in 1916: "The Foundations of a Durable Peace," a British reply of January. 1917, and "A Brief Note on Zionism." Mr. Balfour writes In cultured Eng. llsh style, and uses carefully chosen words. His paragraphs are long. The Strength of the Pines, by Edlsen War shall. Little, Brown 4i Co., Boston. Bold, strong and rugged in recital, this is a splendid out-of-doors novel, reflecting the mountain folk of south ern Oregon. Wild folk who have little respect for law and order and who believe in enforcing demands by rifle fire are pictured In these 308 pages. Bruce Duncan as he thought his name was hurries from his eastern home to the Oregon mountains on re ceipt of word that his old playmate and sister, Linda, was In peril from outlaws. Bruce learns that his real name Is Bruce Folger and that a blood feud over the possession of lands exists between the Folgerj and Turners. . The Turners try t kill Bruce and there is a succession of fights, rifle shots and bloodshed. A giant grizzly bear comes upon the scene and is a principal actor In the mountain drama. Of course there Is a love tale. Ihe novel is a healthy, worthy ad dition to novels picturing Oregon's - out of doors. Mind Adrift, by Daniel Wright Klttredse. b. . snorey. Seattle. It is as If Edgar Allen Poe had sud denly come to life and had written a morbid tale of dark realism like this. It contains S3 pages. The hero of the little book is Plunkett Treen, M. D.. but who had never practiced medicine. He was fabulously rich and in his time a dia mond rival of Cecil Rhodes, the South African diamond king. At the open ing of the story Mr. Treen is a passen ger on a steamer going from this country to Egypt, and he behaves so quetrly and talks so wildly about the "hounds of custom" that he Is placed under restraint, charged with insan ity. Occasionally the book Is ram bling and confused. Decidedly a strange message. A First Book in American lllntory. by Charles A. Bard and William c. Bg ley. Tho MacMlllan Co., New York city. Clearly Illustrated and printed, this book on elementary history ought to get glad welcome In the school room. It begins with tho arrival of Colum bus, and concludes with the end of the world war In November, 191S. The text of the book is patriotically American, and the general story is told in fair, honest fashion, with no partisan bias. Many of the objections raised to previous histories of this sort are not to be found within thei-o pages. The little book is cordially commended to the attention of school authorities. America Triumphant I'nder God and His Christ, by Kilty Clieatuam. u. r, ul nam's Sons, New York City. Written In reverent Rtyle and with choice of words that compel the read er's attention, this little book of S4 pages gives a message that has rest ful, soothing Influence. It dips into metaphysics, and has several refer ences to writings by Mrs. Augusta E. Stetson of New York city. There are 84 pages. The Sirth Sense, by Stephen McKenna. Ueorge H. Doran Co., New York city. Quite an able philosophical English novel, and attractively told. Two of the characters, Rawnsley and Gart side., speculate on the sixth sense, or an Intensified smell sense, beyond or dinary seeing, hearing, smelling and touching (p. 76). The characters have manv adventures, ana tnev travel tar. g HE sense of pleasure which buying a good g book arouses comes from the memory of past delights. Often a man will smile as he turns the pages of an Oxford book for past experi ence tells him what to anticipate. t-A selection of those recently issued. RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN EUROPEAN THOUGHT Edited by F. S. Marvin Af. $3.00 Twelve essays by noted scholars summarizing the work of the leading European thinkers in the Ust fifty yean. GREAT BRITAIN AND THE UNITED STATES 1 'By J. Travis Mills Wet 2.50 A critical review of their historical relations in lectures delivered to men of the American Army of Occupation in Germany. TUTORS UNTO CHRIST Sjp Alfred E Gar vie W f2-25 An interesting introduction to the study of religions. THE AMERICAN SUPREME COURT 'By Herbert A. Smith Tf $i0 A reasoned summary of the Supreme Court's work in inter-sute cases and its signifies nr in the settling of inter national disputes. ROMAN ESSAYS AND INTERPRETATIONS "By W. Warde Fowler 5.65 A book for the folklorist and student of religion u well u the clawing. STUDIES IN HISTORY AND POLITICS 'By H. A. L Fisher 5.65 Delightful essays largely fnirriricil in character from the pen of the present British Minister of Fdiirarinn. MEDALS OF THE RENAISSANCE - 'By G. F. Hni Vet -25.00 Covers the entire field of merlslTir art m the fifteenth and and sixteenth centuries valuable alike as a referenos work and for ha fine illustrations which figure for tha most part pieces not previously illustrated. tAt all booksellers or from the pubKshert. OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS atmtriam branch 35 WEST JSkd STREET, NEW YORE 'Jfio, standard of textuaf crccTcnce.