GENERAL REMARKS CONCLUSION. 93 



garden, in the waters of every ri\n.ilet, there are worlds 

 teeming with life, and numberless as are the stars of the 

 firmament. The one suggests to us, that above and 

 beyond all that is visible to man, there may be regions 

 of creation wliich sweep immeasiu*ably along, and carry 

 the impress of the Ahnighty's hand to the remotest 

 scenes of the Universe — the other, that within and 

 beneath all that minuteness which the aided eye of man 

 is able to explore, there may be a world of invisible 

 beings ; and that could we draw aside the mysterious 

 veil which shrouds it from our senses, we might behold 

 a theatre of as many wonders as Astronomy can unfold; 

 a Universe within the compass of a point, so small as to 

 elude all the powers of the miscroscope, but where the 

 Almighty Ruler of all things finds room for the ex- 

 ercise of HIS attributes, where he can raise another me- 

 chanism of worlds, and fill and animate them all with 

 e^ddences of his glory ! 



