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A NEW PHILOSOPHER

mistake not, the great oases in the general desert of discussion over abstract things. The question of the relations of the finite individual to the Absolute is one of the major questions subject to our previous observation concerning impossible solutions. Brought face to face with it, the true philosopher turns mythologist. As Mr. Webb aptly quotes in this connection, "Without a parable spake He not unto them." One remembers Royce's famous myth of the map of England reproduced upon the map of England ad infinitum, and setting it beside this one little sentence of Mr. Webb's about Dante and the soul, one is tempted to give the palm to Mr. Webb. One suspects that Plato would claim him as a mythologist after his own heart. But at any rate, it is clear that in the future he may have to be reckoned with among the few who from generation to generation supplement man's daily bread with a pittance of vision. James has gone from us, Bosanquet and Bergson belong to the generation of Mr. Webb's teachers. It is to be hoped that Mr. Webb, relieved of the restrictions of the Gifford programme, may soon give us a measure of the powers of which we here have a foretaste, and take a place dmong the leaders of thought in his generation which is only waiting to be occupied.

Lincoln MacVeagh