willingness even to endure drudgery if he may go on to the making of these.
More urgent, too, grows the vision of beautiful things gained through drama, books, drawings, and life. These strive to come forth, as it were. They feed the impulse that will project them. It is clear that this is a natural process. It is also clear that success and progress depends largely from the first on the health and vigour of bodily organs. Now these are weakened by disease. They are weakened, too, by systems of training or teaching that ignore the final aim of self-projection.
"But," it may be argued, "the majority of people must always be hewers of wood and drawers of water. They must be 'hands' always. They must serve machines, not make 'projects.'" This prophecy is really only a tradition. In every department of life science is making possible a new economy—a mode of dealing even with debris and refuse that makes these valuable as raw material.
It is not likely, then, that the greatest wealth of all, human brain power, will be dammed back and cast under for ever. Sooner or later the time must come when such a course must be looked upon as a kind of race mutilation. When the depressing influences of dirt and disease have been swept away, the