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In followmg the guidance of these first things in matter and power the writer may seem to have trenched upon holy ground, and some devout minds may think him un devout, but he has learned to regard all things holy where Nature gives the imprint of her flying feet and her sensi tive touch. 'he sees no occasion to fear rebuke for pressing thought into the presence of Him whose only perfect rev elation of Himself can be made through His works, and if human thought is an image in the likeness of Divinity, the highest evidence of Sonship can be gained only by thus entering into fellowship with the Great Father. Sackcloth and ashes may be put on as symbols of worship, but a smiling face and a cheerful confidence in the dailv provi dence of material forces are far more becoming the wor shiper and a better evidence of fellowship between the human and divine than any form of sacrifice, or any sym bols of humility.
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