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inanition if fed on but one kind of food, however congenial, yet lives if he has all in succession, so is it with complex man. Learn retrenchment from the starving oyster, who spends his last energies in a new pearly layer suited to his shrunken form. As animals which have no organs of special sense know not light or sound as we do, yet shrink from a hand or candle because their whole bodies are dimly conscious, thus we have a glimmering perception of infinite truths and existences which we cannot grasp or fully know because our minds have no special organs for them. The prick in the butterfly's wing will be in the full-grown insect a great blemish. The speck in thy child's nature, if fondly overlooked now, will become a wide rent traversing all his virtues. As mineral poisons kill, because by their strong affinity they decompose the blood and form new stony substances, so the soul possessed by too strong an affinity for gold petrifies. Our principles are central forces, our desires tangential; it requires both to describe the curve of life. The slightest inclination of a standing body virtually narrows its base; the least departure from integrity lessens our foundation. The pyramid, broad-based, yet heaven-pointed, is the firmest figure. Most characters are inconsistent, unsymmetrical, and have a base wanting extent in some direction. Be not over-curious in assigning causes or predicting consequences; the same diagonal may be formed by various combining forces. Through water the musical sound is not transmitted, only the harsh material noise. In air the noise is heard very near, the musical sounds only are transmitted. Be thankful, poets and prophets, when you live in an element such that your uncomely features are known only to your own village. "Do not sing its fundamental note too loud near a delicate glass, or it will break," whispered my friend to me, as he saw me gazing at this lovely being. Seek the golden mean of life. Like the temperate regions, it has but few thorny plants. Be doubly careful of those to whom nature has been a niggard. The oak and the palm take their own forms under all circumstances; the fungi seem to owe theirs to outward influences. It is a poor plant that crisps quickly into wood. It is a meagre character which runs perpetually into prejudices. As light suffers from no change of medium when it falls perpendicularly, so the consequences of a perfectly upright
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