3) ia dad He 4 ¥ you can enjoy the sun and MY RELIGION Helen, Keller i Copyright by Doubleday, Doran & Co. 5 amie ng Se Sn, flowers and music where there is nothing except darkness and fl silence you have proved the Mystic Sense—Helen Keller 4 Cam RA a WNU Service (Continued from last week.) CHAPTER II .. My impressions of my first contact with the writings of the great Swed- ish seer of the Eighteenth Century, which came about thirty years ago, will seem without meaning unless I go back to my first questionings about God. As a little child I naturally wanted to know who made everything in the world and I was told that Na- ture (they called it Mother Nature) had made earth and sky and water and all living creatures. This satis- fied me for a time, and I was happy among the rosetrees of my mother’s garden, or on the bank of a river, or out in the daisy-pranked fields, where | my teacher told me true “Arabian Nights” tales about seeds and flowers, birds and insects and the fishes in the river. Like other children, I be- lieved that every object I touched | was alive and self-conscious, and I supposed we were all Mother Nature’s children. But as I grew older, I be- gan to reason about the parts of Nature I could touch. Obviously, I am using mature words and the ideas of later years to make intelligible the groping, half-formed, ever-shifting impressions of childhood. I noticed a difference between the way human beings did their work and the way the wonders of Nature were wrought. I saw that puppies, flowers, stones, babies, and thunder-storms were not just put together as my mother mixed her hot cakes. There was an order and sequence of things in field and wood that puzzled me, and at the same time there was a confusion in | the elements which at times terrified me. The wanton destruction of the beautiful and the ugly, the useful and the obnoxious, the righteous and the wicked by earthquake or flood or tor=: nado I could not understand. How could such a blind mass of irrespon- sible forces create an keep alive, al- | ways renewing what was destroyed, and keep up an unfailing succession of spring, summer, autumn, and winter, seedtime and harvest, day and night, tides and generations of men? Somehow I sensed that Nature was no more concerned with me or those 1 loved than with a twig or a fly, and of God, Himself a Spirit everywhere at once, the Creator dwelling in all the universe out over continents and seas to Greece, despite a blind, deaf, and stumbling body, sent another exulting emotion rushing over -me. I had broken through my limitations and found in touch an eye. 1 could read the thoughts of wise men—thoughis which had for ages survived their mortal life, and could possess them as part of myself. If this were true, how much more could God, the un- circumscribed Spirit, cancel the harms of nature — accident, pain, destruc- tion, and reach out to xis children. Deafness and blindness, then, were of no real account. They were to be relegated to the outer circle of my life. Of course I did not sense any such process with my child mind; but I did know that I, the real I, could leave the library and visit any place I wanted to, mentally, and I was happy. That was the little seed from which grew my interest ir spiritual subjects. I was not at that time especially enthusiastic about the Bible stories, except the story of the gentle Nazar- ene The accounts of creation and the driving out of Adam and Eve from Eden for eating a particular fruit, the Floed and all the wrath and ven- geance of the Lord seemed to me very similar to the Greek and Roman myths I had read—and there were very few gods and goddesses I could i admire. I was disappointed not to find in the Bible that my good aunt held up to me as a Divine Book, a likeness of the Being whose face shone so benign, beautiful, and radiant in my heart. She told me tales out of the Apoca- lypse, and still I felt a void I could not explain. What could I see in a war between God and dragons and horned beasts? How could I asso- ciate the eternal torture of those cast into the lake of fire with the God whom Christ declared to be love? Why, I wondered, should one particu- lar City of God be described with pavements of gold and walls of pre- cious stones when heaven must be full of everything else just as magnifi- cent—mountains, fields, oceans, and the sweet, fruitful earth, restful to the feet? The touching story of Christ, healing the sick; giving new light to the blind and speech to mute lips stirred me to the depths; but how could I worship three persons—the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost? Was that not the sort of false wor- | ship so terribly punished in Old Testa- ment days? Such were the bewildered, dissatis- fied thoughts on the Bible which possessed my mind when there came into my life one of the friends I loved most, Mr. John Hitz, who had for a long period held the position at i Washington of Consul-General for this awoke in me something akin to ! resentment—*“the fine inneuendo by which the Soul makes its enormous claim,” and declares that it has a prerogative of control over the course of events and things. Turning away from Nature, I in. | quired about God, and again I was baffled. Friends tried to tell me He was the Creator, and that He was everywhere, that He knew all the needs, joys, and sorrows of every human life, and nothing happened without His foreknowledge and provi- dence. Some with a generous dispo- sition said He was merciful to all, and caused His sun to shine on the just and the unjust alike. I was drawn irresistibly to such a glorious, lo#- able Being, and I longed really to understand something about Him. Then I met Phillips Brooks, and he helped me, with his simple soul-stir- ring words, to grasp the central truth that God is Love, and that His Love . is the “Light of all men.” But I could not form any clear idea of the relation between this Divine Love and the material world. I lost myself many times in shadows and uncertainties, wandering back and forth between the Light which was #80 ineffably reassuring and the chaos and darkness of nature that seemed so real as not to be gainsaid. One day I was made radiantly happy and brought nearer to a sense of God when “I watched” an exquisite but- terfly, just out of its cocoon, drying its wings in the sun, and afterward felt it fluttering over a bunch of trail- ing arbutus. Someone told me how the ancient Egyptians had looked upon the butterfly as an emblem of immortality. I was delighted. It seemed to me as it should be, that such beautiful forms of life should have in them a lesson about things still more lovely. Nevertheless, the same buzz-saw continued to worry me until one day a sudden flash of intui- tion reevaled an infinite wonder te me. I had been sitting quietly in the library for half an hour. I turned to my teacher and said, “Such a strange thing has happened! I have been far away all this time, and I haven't left the room.” “What do you mean, Helen?” she asked, surprised. “Why,” I cried, “I have been in Athens.” Scarcely were the words out of my mouth when a bright, amazing realization seemed to catch my mind and set it ablaze. I per- . ceived the realness of my soul and its sheer independence of all condi- tions of place and body. It was clear to me that it was because I was a spirit that I had so vividly “seen” and felt a place thousands of miles away. Space was nothing te spirit! In that néw consciousness shone the Presgnes. Switzerland in this county. After- ward he was superintendent of the Volta Bureau in Washington, which Dr. Bell founded with the Volta Prize money he received for invent- | This bureau was ! C ¢ { dead. But his noble philosophy and | | | ing the telephone. established for the purpose of collect- | ing. and distributing information about the deaf, and publishing a ! magazine in their behalf, The Annals ef the Deaf, which is now called The Folta Review. I met Mr. Hitz first in 1893, when I was about thirteen years old, and that was the beginning of an affec- tionate and beautiful friendship which 1 cherish among the dearest memories of my life. He was always deeply interested in all I did—my studies, my girlish joys and dreams, my struggle through college and my work for the blind. He was one of the few who fully appreciated m_ teacher and the peculiar significance of her work not only to me, but to all the world. His letters bore testimony to his af- fection for her and his understand- ing of what she was to me—a light in all dark places. He visited us often ip Boston and Cambridge, and every time my teacher and I stopped over in Washington on our way to or from my southern home, we had delight- ful trips with him. After my teacher and I settled down in Wrentham, Mass., he spent six weeks with us every summer un- til the year before he died. He loved to take me out walking early in the morning while the dew lay upon grass and tree and the air was joyous with birdsongs. We wandered through still woods, fragrant meadows, past the picturesque stone walls of Wren- tham, and always he brought me closer to the beauty and the deep meaning of Nature. As he talked, the great world shone for me in the glory of immortality. He stimulated in me the love of Nature that is so pre- cious a part of the music in my silence and the light in my darkness. It is sweet as I write to recall the flowers and the laughing brooks and the shin- ing, balmy moments of stillness in which we had joy together. Each day I beheld through his eyes a new and charming landscape, . “wrapped in exquisite showers” of fancy and spiritual beauty. We would often pause that I might feel the swaying of the trees, the bending of the fiow- ers, and the waving of the corn, and he would say, “the wind that puts all this life into Nature is a marvelous symbol of the spirit of God.” On my fourteenth birthday he pre- dented me with a gold watch he had worn for more than thirty years, and I have never been separated from it since, except one time when it was gent ‘to Switzerland: for some parts that were worn out. Curiously enough, it was not made for the blind in the first place. It once belonged to a German ambassador who had it fixed #0. that he could keep jmportant ap: simultaneously. The" |' fact that my little soul could reach comforting the sorrowful, : pointments exactly. He was obliged to call upon a high dignitary of the Kaiser, and it was not etiquette to look ‘at the watch, nor was it eti- quette to stay too long. So the Am- bassador went to a jeweler and gave him instructions about making the watch so that he could slip his hand into his pocket and “feel” the time. It has a crystal face, and a gold hand on the back, which is connected with the minute hand, and goes with it and stops with it. There are also gold points around the rim of the watch which indicate the hours. I wear it always against my heart, and it ticks for me as faithfully as my friend himself worked for me and loved me. He whose love it keeps ever before me has been gone nearly twenty years, but I have the sweet consciousness that each tick is bring- ing me nearer and nearer to him. Truly a treasure above price, link- ing time and eternity! Mr. Hitz and I corresponded for ! many years. He learned the Braille . system so that I could read myself his long and frequent letters. These let- | | | ters are a record of spiritual kinship which it comforts me to read over when I long for the touch of his hand and the wise, inspiring words with which he encouraged me in my tasks. His first and last thought was to les- sen the obstacles I encountered. He quickly perceived my hunger for books I could read on subjects that particularly interested me, and how limited were the embossed books within my reach. For eight years he devoted a part of each day to copy- ing whatever he thought would give me pleasure—stories, biographies of great men, poetry, and studies of Nature. When, after reading “Heaven and Hell,” I expressed a wish to know more of Swedenborg’s writings, he laboriously compiled books of explanations and extracts to facilitate my reading. All this he aec- complished in addition to his duties as superintendent of the Volta Bureau and his extensive correspondence! In his letters he often referred to “the quiet morning hours before breakfast” he spent transcribing for me, and his “joy of being in daily touch with his innigst geliebte Tochter Helena.” Many friends have done wonderful things for me, but nothing like Mr. Hitz’s untiring effort to share with me the inner sunshine and peace which filled his silent years. Each year I was drawn closer to him, and he wrote to me more constantly as the days passed. Then came a great . sorrow—separation from the friend I | loved best next to my teacher. I had | been visiting my mother, and was ; on my way back to Wrentham. As | usual, I stopped in Washington, and | Mr. Hitz came to the train to meet me. He was full of joy as he em- braced me, saying how impatiently he was leading me from the train, he had awaited my coming. Then, as he ! | had a sudden attack of heart trouble, he took my hand, and I still feel his pressure when I think of that dark | I could not have borne the loss | intimate and tender | time. of such an friend if I had thought he was indeed certainty of the life to come braced | who believes in God and lives right me with an unwavering faith that we | should meet again in a world happier and more beautiful than anything of my dreaming. With me remains al- ways the helpful memory of his rare personality. He was a man of lofty character, a man of rich spiritual gifts. His heart was pure and warm, full of childlike faith in the best he saw in his fellow-creatures, and he was al- ways doing for other people some- thing lovely ‘and dear. In all his ways he kept the Commandment, “Love thy neighbor as thyself.” At eighty years of age he had the heart of an evergreen, and his inexhaustible power of enjoyment lifted him far above the average of humanity. remained young with the young, He was never old to me, and I was never with difficulty on his fingers, and he was so hard of hearing I had often to repeat a sentence six times with my imperfect speech before he could understand me. But our love covered a multitude of difficulties, and our intercourse was always worth every effort it cost us. . As we talked thus, Mr. Hitz came to realize fully my hunger for litera- ture I could read on subjects that especially interested me. He himself had grown deaf, and that enabled him to see the distorted angle of my thoughts with regard to the world of my senses, He told me that if I would only try to put myself in the place of those with sight and hearing and divine their impressions of things, they could unite their senses with mine more and more and thus won- outer world. - He showed me how I could find a key to their life, and give them a chance to explore my own with understanding. He put into my hands a copy of Swedenborg’s “Heaven and Hell” in raised letters, He said he knew I would not under- stand much of it at first, but it was fine exercise for my mind, and would satisfy me with a likeness of a God as lovable as the one in my heart. He told me always to remember that it is easier to see what is good than what is true in a. difficult book. For, as Swedenborg put it, “Good is like a little flame which gives light, and causes man to see, perceive, and be- lieve.” When I began “Heaven and Hell” I was as little aware of the new joy coming into my life as I had been years before when I stood on the piazza steps awaiting my teacher. Impelled only by the curiosity of a young girl who loves to read, I ‘deaf and blind to him. He spelled derfully increase my enjoyment of -the and passed away. Just before the end + i i | | | i i | | ! i 1 { i He | i f and ear. i ful longing for a fuller sense-life into i I i ! at every turn. ‘ a vivid consciousness of the complete . being within me. Each day comes to opened that big book, and lo, my fin- gers lighted upon a paragraph in the preface about a blind woman whose darkness. was illumined with ‘beauti- ful truths from Swedenborg’s writ- ings. She believed that they im- parted a light to her mind which more than compensated her for the loss of earthly light. She never doubted that there was a spiritual body within the material one with perfect senses, and that after a few dark years the eyes within her eyes would open to a world infinitely more wonderful, complete, and satisfying than this. My heart gave a joyous bound. Here was a faith that em- phasized what I felt so keenly—the separateness between soul and body, between a realm I could picture as a whole and the chaos of fragmentary things and irrational contingencies which my limited physical senses met I let myself go, as healthy, happy youth will, and tried to puzzle out the long words and the weighty thoughts of the Swedish sage. Somehow I sensed the likeness of Him whom I loved as the One and Only. and I wanted to understand more. The words Love and Wisdom seemed to carees my fingers from paragraph to paragraph, and these two words re- leased in me new forces to stimulate my somewhat indolent nature and urge me forward evermore. I came back to the book from time to time, picking up a line here and a line there, “precept upon precept,” one glimpse then another of the Divine Word hidden under the clouds of literal statement. As I realized the meaning of what I read, my soul seemed to expand and gain confidence amid the difficulties which beset me. The descriptions of the other world bore me far, far over measureless regions bathed in superhuman beauty and strangeness, where angels’ robes flash, where great lives and creative minds cast a splendor upon darkest circumstances, where events and mighty combats sweep by endlessly, where the night is lit to eternal day by the Smile of God. I glowed through and through as I sat in that atmos- phere of the soul and watched men and women of robler mould pass in majestic procession. For the first time immortality put on intelligibility for me, and earth wore new curves of loveliness and significance. I was glad to discover that th~ City of God was not a stupid affair of glass streets and sapphire walls, but a sys- tematic treasury of wise, helpful thoughts and noble influences. Grad- ually I came to see that I could use the Bible, which had so baffled me, as an instrument for digging out pre- cious truths, just as I could use my hindered, halting body for the high behests of my spirit. I had been told by narrow people that all who were not Christians would be punished, and naturally my soul revolted, since I knew of wonder- ful men who had lived and died for truth as they saw it in the pagan lands. But in “Heaven and Hell” I found that “Jesus” stands for Divine Good, Good wrought into deeds, and “Christ” Divine Truth, sending forth new thought, new life and joy into the minds of men; therefore no one is ever condemned. So I grew to ; womanhood, and as unaccontably as | Conrad found in English the lan- | . guage of his choice, I took more and | more to the New Church doctrines as | my religion. No one encouraged me ! in this choice, and I cannot explain | it any more than anyone else. I can only say that the Word of God freed | from the blots and stains of barbarous | creeds has been at once the joy and good of my life, wonderfully linked with my growing appreciation of my teacher’s work and my own responsi- bilities of service, hours of struggle | and solitude, hours of deepest joy, ! harsh truths faced squarel; and high | dreams held dearer than the pleasant . baits of ease and complaisance. Those truths have been to my faculties what light, color, and music are to the eye They have lifted my wist- me with both hands full of possibili- ties, and in its brief course I discern all the verities and realities of my existence, the bliss of growth, the glory of action, the spirit of beauty. CHAPTER III Do I hear someone say, “But is not deaf and blind Helen Keller liable to be imposed upon by those whose opinions or dogmas or political ideals are confined to a small minority?” Before considering Swedenborg's claims, which have astonished the world since they were made, I should like to lay before the reader the opinions of well-known writers who were conversant with his works, but who have had no affilbations with the church which treasures his religious teachings. It will be remembered that Emer- son chose Swedenborg as one of his “Representative Men.” He says: “This man, who appeared to his contemporaries a visionary and elixir of moonbeams, no doubt led the most real life of any man then in the world. . A colossal soul, he lies vast abroad on his times, uncom- prehended by them, and requires a long focal distance to be seen.” It should be noted in passing that Emer- son had no eye for Swedenborg’s helt or mind for his Bible symbolism. Thomas Carllyle was a canny Scot not. likely to be led astray, This is his estimate of Swedenborg: “A man of great and indisputable cultivation, strong, mathematical in- tellect, and the most pious, seraphic turn of mind; a man beautiful, lov- able, and tragicgl tome. . . . More truths are confessed in his writings than in those of any other man. . . . One of the loftiest minds in the realm. of mind. . One of the spiritual suns that will shine brighter as the vears go on.” Elbert Hubbard’s comparison be- tween Swedenborg and Shakespeare is of special interest, as he approaches the subject from an entirely differen® mental angle: “They are Titans both. In the presence of such giants, small men seem to wither and blow away. Swe- | denborg was cast in heroic mould, and no man since history began ever compassed in himself so much phy- sical science, and, with it all on his ! sEirit with sor The smile. wee thats back, made such daring voyages into the clouds. The men who soar high- est and know most about another No man of his time was so compe- tent a scientist as’ Swedenborg, and : bef i : no man before or since has mapped | of many great men, and they: also so minutely the Heavenly Kingdom. “Shakespeare’s feet were never really off the ground. His excursion in ‘The Tempest’ was only in a cap- tured balloon. Ariel and Caliban he secured out of an old book of fables. “Shakespeare knew little about physics; economics and sociology never trouble him; he had small Latin and less Greek; he never trav- elled, and the histery of the rocke was to him a blank. “Swedenborg anticipated Darwin in a dozen ways; he knew the classic languages and most of the modern: he traveled everywhere; he was a practical economist, and the best civi’ angineer of his day.” Henry Jamas said: “Emanuel Swe- denborg had the sanest and most far- reaching intellect this age has known,” and Henry Ward Beecher was no less sweeping in his asser- tion, “No one can know the theology a true man’s picture, gracious and wise, endowed with the strength of ‘heroes and the beauty of womanhood. It shall hang in my inmost chamber, and when I retire thither, it shall filk my soul with grandeur and warm it with sacred fire.” The picture was painted and hung in the palace hall. The king gazed on it with rapt de- light, until suddenly he discerned a. strange meaning that puzzled him.. The form was that of his most grace- ful courtier, perfect in every line! The bearing was that of a humble: attendant who filled the cup for him; the brow was that of a priest in holy vision; the eye was that of the wan-- dering minstrel who charmed his tired’ . of his wife, sc sweet and constant. of the Nineteenth Century who har ° : A . other appears on the screen of imagi-- notread Swedenborg.” There are others who bear interest- ing witness to the impression left upon them by Swedenborg’s teach- ings. Among them was Elizabeth Barrett Browning, whose beauty of soul and exquisite poetry excited such admiration everywhere. “To my mind,” she says, “the only light that has been cast on the other life is found in Swedenborg’s philosophy. It explains much that was incomprehen- sible.” Samuel Taylor Coleridge, whom the Encyclopedia Britannica notes as “one of the most remarkable poets and thinkers,” pays this tribute to one who has been hastily called by some a madman: : “I can venture to assert, as a mor- alist, Swedenborg is above all praise; and that, as a naturalist, psycholo- gist, and theologian, he has strong and varied claims on the gratitude and admiration of the professional and philosophical faculties. . . Thrice happy should we be if the learned teachers of to-day were gifted with a like madness!” 4k Such estimates ' by these distin. guished men and women are helpful in forming some idea of the person- ality and commanding genius Swed- Thus was the picture graced with allt world usually know little about this, | their charms, and they also were glor-- ified in a new light. So the picture of Swedenbor; seems to gather unto itself gleams of nobility from the lives: gain a new significance from the com- parison. In science, literature, and’ philosophy there are those who stand! like "heralds on. mountaintops pro-- claiming a new day, of which they catch the first rays. There are pa- triots who deliver their country from: a cruel yoke or lead the people to a: truer freedom. There are those who search the treasuries of earth and discover new stores of light and heat; there are those who reveal countless: stars and distant planets, and still others who sail many seas and find—- not a Northwest Passage, but an America. Finally, in religion there are leaders w’ o teach millions by ex-- ample or precept, who destroy idola- try or who auken the temple or church from superstitions and hypoc- risy; and again others, like Wesley, who pour love into the coldness of an unspiritual age. So one impressive figure after an. nation when we contemplate Sweden- borg. There is Michael Angelo who- saw an angel in the stone and “carved it with many a sharp incision until: he caught the vision.” But Sweden-- borg’s inner eyes were opened to be-- hold living angels, and out of the lit- eral truths of the Word of God, which: are its stones, he carved heavenly" messages of love and help from God: to His children. Another touch is piven to the pie-- ture when we think of Beethoven, Mozart, and Wagner, pouring into the world harmonies that lifted men’s hearts to heaven, while Swedenborg perceived the divine harmony in the universe, and, as he said, actually heard sweetest music sung by angelic: multitudes. From our childhood we have been. familiar with the characters of Na- poleon, Wellington, Washington, and: Grant, and the fearful battles they took part in. But it was Swedenborg’s- lot to witness war between the forces- of good and evil in the spiritual . world; and, armed with the weapons: enborg possessed. Any defect there ' may be in my own judgment of him is evidently not due to my physical limitations. Measured by those who are scholars themselves, and others who are esteemed for spiritual gifts, ' enter intellectually into the mysteries he is proclaimed to have had an amaz- ingly well-trained intellect—trained, . spiritual philosophy which liberated: i as Emerson observes, “to work with astronomic precision.” If he had been ; an illiterate man, no matter how won- derful his experience, and how au- thentic his claims, he could not long have stood his ground before the piti- less battery of competent inquiry. But here is a scholar far ahead of his time, mastering the arts and sci- ences, writing akle and voluminous works on every wonder of Nature | from the tiny lichen on the rocks to | the most complex structure of the ! and : Kant ‘were philosophers of bril- brain, always , reserving a splendid balance on dizzy heights of learning where he must needs climb alone; and then with the same audacity, calm- ness, and composure, feeling his peri- lous way over the deeps and abysses of the spirit-world and revealing with , fearless authority the delicate yet un- breakable links between mind and matter, eternity and .ime, God and man, Three of my dear friends have had something to say. and they would not have said it of a lunatic or an intol- erant fanatic. I knew Dr. Edward Everett Hale longest, and I always marvelled at his freshness of interest in all things and the variety of sub- jects upon which he deeply pondered. {t was he who passed this judgment: “Swedenborgianism has done the liberating work of the last century. The wave Swedenborg started last to this day. The statements of his re- ligious works have revolutionized the- ology.” Like all who love. Bishop Brooks, i realize what weight and significance his public utterances carry with them. His opinion on this subject is surely deserving of consideration: “I have the profoundest honour for the character and work of Emanuel Swedenborg. . . . I have from time to time gained much from his writings. It is impossible to say a little on so great a theme. Yes, in a true sense, we are all New Churchmen, with new light, new hopes, and new communion with God in Christ.” Whittier said, “There is one grana and beautiful idea underlying all his revelations about the future life.” Another way to appreciate Sweden- porg, the man, is to compare him with other great world leaders. There is a story out of ancient times that a king left his council chamber weary and disheartened. He called for Iliff the artist and commanded: “Paint me | i | | , ginning from the of heaven—the new doctrines of the- Word—and the sword of earth—the- truths of Nature—he is the greatest. champion of genuine Christianity in: twenty centuries. Alexander I of Russia set the serfs. free, and Lincoln abolished Negro slavery in the United States. Over the temple of religion Swedenborg; saw written, “Ncw it is permitted to. of faith,” and he gave mankind a: their minds and overthrew the power of ecclesiastical despotism. What Agassiz did in zoology ana. paleontology, Karl Marx in econom- ics and Darwin in evolution, Sweden- borg did in religion. With massive arguments and thundering anathe- mas he sent a continent’s literature of pessimism, condemnation, and insin- - cerity crashing down into the abyss. . Aristotle, Plato, Francis Bacon, . liant genius who sought long and pa- tiently for the Causes of all things. Mot only has .ur seer been justly called “the Swedish Aristotle,” but he - has declared that he was permitted, to enter conscicusly into the very’! World of Causes and live in its Light: for twenty-nine years, : Columbus’s uadaunted faith was : realized in the discovery of a newt | continent, and Cortez “stood on a:. peak in Darien” with the Pacific im-|- mense upon his vision. Now we have - before us an explorer who travelled '* through the “undiscovered country,”:” heard its language with his ears, con-.. versed with its inhabitants, and de-:. scribed to our world, “from things| i heard and seen,” its life and climate and civilization. For example, in his; “Heaven and Hell” he wrote: : “When a man’s acts are disclosed, to him after «cath, the angels to. whom is given the office of searching] look into his face and the search is: extended through the whole body, be- i fingers of each { hand, and thus proceeding through | the whole. Because I wondered as to; | i the reason of this, it was made known | i to me, namely, that as all things of the thought and will are inseribed on the brain, for their beginnings are. | there, so ‘also they are inscribed on: the whole body; since all the things: of thought will extend thither from’ their beginnings, and there terminate, ; a8 in their ultimates. . . . From these things it may be evident what is meant by the book of man's life, spoken of in the Word, namely this, that all things, both what he has! thought and what he has done, are insribed on the whole man, and ap- pear as if read in a book when they are called forth from the memory, . and as if presented to sight when the spirit is viewed in the light of" heaven.” . (Continued next week.)