登陆注册
15454700000027

第27章 CHAPTER IX(3)

Merely in bodily strength he is superior to all. The stories of antiquity, which were deemed fables, may be fables historically, but search has shown that they are not intrinsically fables. Man of flesh and blood is capable of all that Ajax, all that Hercules did. Feats in modern days have surpassed these, as when Webb swam the Channel; mythology contains nothing equal to that. The difference does not end here. Animals think to a certain extent, but if their conceptions be ever so clever, not having hands they cannot execute them.

I myself maintain that the mind of man is practically infinite.

It can understand anything brought before it. It has not the power of its own motion to bring everything before it, but when anything is brought it is understood. It is like sitting in a room with one window; you cannot compel everything to pass the window, but whatever does pass is seen. It is like a magnifying glass, which magnifies and explains everything brought into its focus. The mind of man is infinite. Beyond this, man has a soul. I do not use this word in the common sense which circumstances have given to it. I use it as the only term to express that inner consciousness which aspires. These brief reasons show that the analogy is imperfect, and that therefore, although an ideal animal--a horse, a dog, a lion--must die, it does not follow that an ideal man must. He has a body possessed of exceptional recuperative powers, which, under proper conditions, continually repairs itself. He has a mind by which he can select remedies, and select his course and carefully restore the waste of tissue. He has a soul, as yet, it seems to me, lying in abeyance, by the aid of which he may yet discover things now deemed supernatural.

Considering these things I am obliged by facts and incontrovert-ible argument to conclude that death is not inevitable to the ideal man. He is shaped for a species of physical immortality. The beauty of form of the ideal human being indicates immortality--the contour, the curve, the outline answer to the idea of life. In the course of ages united effort long continued may eliminate those causes of decay which have grown up in ages past, and after that has been done advance farther and improve the natural state. As a river brings down suspended particles of sand, and depositing them at its mouth forms a delta and a new country; as the air and the rain and the heat of the sun desiccate the rocks and slowly wear down mountains into sand, so the united action of the human race, continued through centuries, may build up the ideal man and woman.

Each individual labouring in his day through geological time in front must produce an effect. The instance of Sparta, where so much was done in a few centuries, is almost proof of it.

The truth is, we die through our ancestors; we are murdered by our ancestors. Their dead hands stretch forth from the tomb and drag us down to their mouldering bones. We in our turn are now at this moment preparing death for our unborn posterity. This day those that die do not die in the sense of old age, they are slain. Nothing has been accumulated for our benefit in ages past. All the labour and the toil of so many millions continued through such vistas of time, down to those millions who at this hour are rushing to and fro in London, has accumulated nothing for us. Nothing for our good. The only things that have been stored up have been for our evil and destruction, diseases and weaknesses crossed and cultivated and rendered almost part and parcel of our very bones. Now let us begin to roll back the tide of death, and to set our faces steadily to a future of life. It should be the sacred and sworn duty of every one, once at least during lifetime, to do something in person towards this end. It would be a delight and pleasure to me to do something every day, were it ever so minute. To reflect that another human being, if at a distance of ten thousand years from the year 1883, would enjoy one hour's more life, in the sense of fulness of life, in consequence of anything I had done in my little span, would be to me a peace of soul.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 国宝疑踪

    国宝疑踪

    彭晔,一个混迹商场的古董商人,精通古董鉴定,喜欢钻研神秘文化,因为一次离奇的交易,引发一场惊心动魄、九死一生的探险之旅。传承千年的楚巫后裔、深埋地底的古代建筑、群山深处的神秘墓局,揭开一场跨越千年的探寻,数代人的心血,只为一睹湮没于历史深处的真相。
  • 圣道

    圣道

    异界为尊,我若为王,欢迎支持,书号2447626,大家把网址换一下就可以了,或者每个作者的下方,都有我的推荐,手机书城的朋友,帮忙转告下哈,我们这本书再会!天上有天九重天重重游神仙地下有地十八层层层荡鬼魂人间有鬼又有神只是凡人分不清天能悬多久地将飘何处神来鬼去无踪迹人心岂能测天机天机玄妙妙不可言天意神奇奇中有缘天旋旋地转转万千年人茫茫世苍苍成云烟神来鬼去寻常事传到人间成奇谈本人读书群正式发布,群号91213661,VIP群94253598。呼……等了好久,终于有读者兄弟给我创建了一个群了,感谢!群内可以找本人联系,催文也可以,又或者为以后的剧情,提出自己的想法,本人会仔细斟酌,从而采纳的。(玄幻作者群:群号:16360756!来者请报笔名作者名!)
  • 咒灵宅男

    咒灵宅男

    宅男们也会有不同于一般人的灵异故事,一个名叫咒灵的神秘人出现后,一切的事情都变得不同了起来。梦画的出现……邪母子像的现世…………历史的车轮又开始了重复运转。江鸟希书友群180081254新浪微博:江鸟希
  • 情路萧萧

    情路萧萧

    说好的三年合约,期满就能走人的····尼玛!每次早上一粒的药,什么时候又成了每次一粒的维生素!整人也不带这样的·····怎么办?········好象是自已先爱上的他······
  • 武欲斗天

    武欲斗天

    天海苍苍,地海无霜,欲与天斗,冥原莽莽,渡万年如一日,回首过望,佛门,人道,魔世,邪玉,世态炎凉,人心妥测,即便是玉,也会破碎,任你天赋无双,也不过是那茫茫大海中的一叶孤舟,想要到达彼岸,唯有奋勇向前,不顾一切,毅然决然的踏上那披满荆棘的天道,问天下之大,谁主浮沉?答天下之大,吾,定主浮沉!
  • 小心,撞鬼女友

    小心,撞鬼女友

    他对她说的最多的一句话“又撞鬼了”,她对他说的最多的一句话“帮帮我”。她霉运连连,却是整个苏城最受宠的女人。因为她的男人,不仅帅气多金,还能随时带她捉鬼装逼。
  • 龙异战神

    龙异战神

    “没有废材,废的异能,只有放弃自己的人”一个身份神秘,从小受人欺辱的主角。有着完全无用的异能,但靠着自己的毅力坚持着,一次机遇让他从一个人人轻蔑的废材变成一个天才。
  • 宫心传之梨殇

    宫心传之梨殇

    飞花流转,瑞雪映红颜香消如烟,玉石碾化前缘缘深缘浅,似水柔情如梦如幻花非薄颜,遥望明月星天落红依旧,东风已过境迁似缘非缘,梨落静庭泪阑珊
  • 生活品味

    生活品味

    我们中小学生必须要加强阅读量,以便提高自己的语文素养和写作能力,以便广开视野和见识,促进身心素质不断地健康成长。但是,现在各种各样的读物卷帙浩繁,而广大中小学生时间又十分有限,因此,找到适合自己阅读的读物,才能够轻松快速地达到阅读的效果。
  • 荒古神纪

    荒古神纪

    一个人独断了万古,斩断了神话,消失于世间只为寻找唯一的真相。历史中消失的岁月在哪里可以再见?再现荒天帝的创奇!