APPENDIX. 411 



thought which is shelled off by every thing when once we see how 

 much all things love each other. 



And is not this to be applied to practice, and to higher thought? 

 Will not man, when put together, be found to be the variegated 

 landscape of a new earth ? Will not his chances then first be deve- 

 loped? Will not his problems become parts of a pictorial human 

 life, which in point of reality, and unquestionableness, will take 

 rank with land and sea, with the skies, and the verdurous earth? 

 We dare not answer the question in the negative, until the experi- 

 ment of association, successful, so far, in every other sphere, has 

 been tried in this crowning matter of human development and hap- 

 piness. Observe, however, that the putting together of man, is not 

 a mechanical, but a human or religious act. 



Note to p. 378. 

 It seems very evident that disease has as many centres in the 

 human organism, as there are great spheres of its powers. There 

 are diseases which spring from the body, and others that emanate 

 from the mind. In short, as there are hepatic, pulmonary and ce- 

 rebral complaints, both idiopathic and sympathetic, so there are 

 others of the reason, imagination, senses, equally following this two. 

 fold distribution. It is probable that disease can only be cured by 

 attacking it in its own centres : bodily disease by drugs and bodily 

 means, and spiritual diseases by their appropriate administrations. 

 Thus where a disease from the mind is sympathetically felt in the 

 body considered as the extremity of the mind, phrenopathic means 

 will cure it: but these can only relieve the mental symptoms, not 

 the root of the mischief, if the malady be primary in the body 

 itself. 





THE END. 



