come to the summer courses where the problems of the day are freely and fearlessly discussed. A whole month of fraternal life which, for most of them, is the dawn of a new moral sense in their lives. Then the pupils of the permanent yearly school are chosen, but not for their knowledge — for the quality of their souls.
Thus may an old market-town become a place where the future of the nation is annually prepared with true hearts and open minds, and to be imbued with new impulses and ideals.