und it to
be a man with a torch in his hand who was very much occupied in
searching for something.
"Have you lost anything?" asked Gud.
"No," replied the man, "but I am looking for something."
"I shall be glad to assist you," offered Gud, "and my dog here is very
good in locating lost articles; so if you will kindly tell us what you
are looking for we will help you find it."
"I am looking," replied the man, "for creation's dawn and the end of all
things. I also wish to find the unknowable first cause and the eternal
varieties and the limits of space. I am searching for the cause of hope,
the reason for despair, the explanation of love and the excuse for
crime. I am seeking a reason for all that is, and a cause for all that
ever was and an accurate prophesy of all that ever will be. I am also
hunting for the fundamental principles, the absolute truth, the laws of
nature, the theories of science, the hypotheses of metaphysics, the
interpretations of creeds, the aims of arts and the melodies of songs
that have never been sung. And I do wish so to locate all the unknown
stars, and trace all the lost comets, and determine what kept the
heavens in order before the law of gravitation was enacted. But most of
all I want to find out why my wife thinks I am a fool to be out here
looking for these things."
"If you do not object to a little operation," said Gud, "I can find all
these things for you and show you where they all are."
Then without waiting for the man to reply, Gud caused a deep sleep to
fall upon him, and straightway Gud opened up the man's skull and took
out his brains and laid them upon a platter.
When the man awoke he looked upon his own brains and saw that they were
very much like calf's brains, except that they were more convoluted and
sutured.
"And why is this platter set before me?" demanded the man as he stood
there gazing upon his own brains.
"Because," replied Gud, "therein lies what you were looking for, and you
need search no further, for it is all there and much more besides."
"So, so," said the man, "I see it all, and now I shall go home to my
wife and find if a child has been born unto her while I have been away."
"Then," said Gud, "would you give me your torch, since you will not be
needing it longer?"
The man did so; and after he had gone, Gud took the torch and set the
darkness on fire.
Chapter LXVII
Once more Gud walked along the Impossible Curve, which had no
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