Frederick Warde on Shakespeare.
The Pacific Monthly
Volume t MAI^GH Number 6
1899
TEN CENTS A COPY .* ..* & J- «* ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
THE PACIFIC MONTHLY PUBLISHING COMPANY PUBLISHERS j» > & > %* J*. Jt _jt PORTLAND, OREGON
- CJUJEN speak of dreaming as if it were, a phenome- non . of night and sleep. They should kno c w better. <All results achieved by us" are self -promised, and all self-promises are made in dreams avjakc, 'Dreaming is the result of labor, the ivine that sustains us in act. We learn to t love labor, not for itself but
• for the opportunity it furnishes us for dreaming, which is the great under-monotone of [real life, unheard,un- noticed, because of its constancy. Living is dream- ing. Only in the grave are there no dreams.
LEW WALLACE.