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 which he does not impart it. The continuous miracle is that he manages to impart it with only a line here and there in the familiar grand style of the masters, and these remain, one suspects, by his inadvertence as in his salutation to a tawny headed warrior:

These are lines that the old masters would recognize as in their style; but the heroic ecstasy lives too in the new style of his own:

Or consider his salute: "To Him That Was Crucified":

In nothing does a man measure himself more decisively than in his judgment of other men. Whit-