Judge, 1920-07-31 · page 35 of 36
Judge — July 31, 1920 — page 35: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1920-07-31. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
📄 Transcribed text from this page (OCR, searchable)
Machine-transcribed from the original scan — historical spelling and the odd misread are preserved.
HUNDREDS uusttavors fm =" The Ideal Life When Shakespeare, with his deep insight into human nature, pictured the ideal life, he did not select his characters from among the dwellers in cities, or place them in the environ- ment of the crowded haunts of men with their fetid and rancid atmosphere of moral and physical corruption, their cheap estimates of human worth, their sordid aims, that have ever 1 made every big city a festering sore on the body politic, and a menace to humanity. No, when Shakespeare—seer as well as sage, who has illuminated with the brilliancy of the noonday sun every point of morals, of manners, of statecraft, of social philosophy, of taste, of the conduct of life— hows us the conditions under which a nearly perfect state of society is possible, he sclects as his stage the Forest of Arden, remote from the untruth, hypocrisy, ignorance and viol of a society pursuing its own selfish aims, and within the sylvan shades of this Arcadia a fascinating company of exiles realize a mode and conception of life that is ideal in its democ- racy because each member of the happy band is an aristocrat in the sense of nobility of heart and char- acter. “As You Like It” describes a life that would please everyone. Rich in its revelations of the mysteries of human nature and the philosophy of life, Shakespeare seems to have transfused much of the wisdom of past ages into his cwn all-combining mind. ‘This great comedy, word for word as the great master wrote it, together with everything else that he wrote, exactly as it came from his pen, is found in this De Luxe Edition of SHAKESPEARE’S COMPLETE WORKS fn Dnsxpargatey, Edition A Liberal Education HalfthePublisher’s Price higher walks of life you must know ‘ sining and re too for his viv mara worsen, found tn Uh MENTS. mal Ne ‘ ’ teemin GLOSSARIES e r i nd th CRITICAL NOTES 3 all vi 1 wan f pean ex {NATORY NOTES text. EXPLAD NATOR) f Brunswick Subscription Co., st 418 Brunawick Bldg., New York iy" Other Interesting Features 40 SUPERB ILLUSTRATIONS nat moons bays ample oorsinn IN COLOR “nT depicting famous scenes in Shakespeare's plays, and hun- ‘ dreds of text illustrations reproduced from rare wood cuts Binding. Rich silk-finished purp! _ with [used in books published in Shakespeare's time, are fea- titles in gold. tures altogether unique and found in no other edition. Occupation Address...