his specialty as a rule amounts to little and preserves date for the hospital, the jail, or the asylum. It was being out of proper balance, to become a ready candi- through life a distorted view of things, having never It is axiomatic that to protect one from injurious all learned when we read the Arabian Nights. As Dr. ber that created the irresistible desire to look in, as we attract attention. their specialties upon a foundation of general harmon- decline and failure. Unbalanced, inharmonious devel- resistance to it. The stunted nature is thrown out some way, and if he does taste of the forbidden joy he Zimmermann says, the desire to conceal serves only to influence. A hot-house plant or a hot-house child will But that is not all. While stimulating desire and acquired a proper sense of proportion. ious education. The specialist who knows nothing but opment is the surest road to mental and moral in- Bluebeard's prohibition from opening a certain cham- forced abstinence from it also impairs the power of an artificial restraint, his nature will be stunted in capacity. The greatest specialists are those who build attracting attention to the object of desire, the en- influence by the weather one must be hardened to such is extremely likely to go to excess and, his whole nature of balance, and thus prepared for more ready moral pecting that they are enjoyable, will be constantly under