The Growth of Thought eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 58 pages of information about The Growth of Thought.

The Growth of Thought eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 58 pages of information about The Growth of Thought.

“Even so, the torch of hellish flames
Becomes a leading light to heaven: 
And so corruption’s self becomes
To bread of life the living leaven.”

All analogies point to a still increasing vigor in the growth of the kingdom of heaven.  If the mustard tree is never seen growing, but only to have grown; yet the greater the tree, the greater its power of daily making large growth, without its growing being perceived.

All considerations indicate the power of each to do something to forward the consummation.  No member of society is so insignificant, that his spiritual life does not affect the health of the whole.  The obscurest, who cherishes a preference of ideal wealth over material riches and sensual delights, does something towards forming a sane public sentiment, just as surely as the tenant of the humblest city dwelling, who keeps clean his own premises, does something towards promoting the general health.

It is well to review the progress made in estimating life—­to impress our minds with its existence as a reality; because mind and enterprize just now tend so strongly to the material and mechanical, that we might be tempted to doubt, whether any other improvement were to be thought of.  If so, we might well enough stop where we are.  But we shall contemplate with most satisfaction our multiplied facilities for manufacturing, transportation, fertilizing the earth, and conveying intelligence, if we see in the whole a store, from which we may draw with good effect for promoting general welfare, whenever the true end of these means shall be earnestly studied.  Otherwise the discovery, how to make two kernels of corn grow where one grew before, would all redound to the tyranny of fashion, and only foreshadow an increase of artificial wants, quite up to the increased supply; so that want would still be as close treading on our heels as ever.

But if we yet scarce attain to longer life, better health, or more content, than fell to the lot of our fathers, with their simpler arts and manner, because we are forgetting to discriminate between true and false wants—­between real and imaginary happiness:  the true voice of history still is, not that the material means must always thus fall short of their legitimate end; but that, though the material and the mechanical travel first and fastest, the moral and the spiritual are following after.  These in due time will reveal the meaning and the value of our stored acquisitions.

Dr. Franklin calculated, that the labor of all for three or four hours a day, would furnish all the necessaries and all the conveniences of life; supposing men freed from the exactions of an arbitrary fashion.  If he was near correctness, his time must be abundant in our day, when the productiveness of machinery, and skill in the arts, are so much improved.  Then it is within existing possibilities, that every mind be thoroughly cultivated; and every body taxed

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The Growth of Thought from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.