0 My&lJL^ iSAm.JR.lXi-lN^r-0 "See further wherein this strong Trshna centres ! This foul frame of flesh and blood and bone that is so dear to us I Its very being- is pretence and falsehood ! Unknowing- in its nature, yet it knows ; composed of many, yet appearing one ; foul everywhere and yet seeming- so fair ; it is not dead, nor is it yet alive. I have no love for this old house of mine, an open thoroughfare for ceaseless winds, overspread with cobwebs feig-ning" shape of nerves, running' with filthy drains in all its parts, painted with blood, plastered with things impure, raftered with bones belonging to the burning place by right and only borrowed thence for a brief while, and undermined withal and shaken by the leg-ion vermin of disease. 0 Muni!, I would leave it and go forth before it falls about me of itself. I do not understand why men should love this false and faithless friend that follows 'not one step to help the soul when it sets forth on its last long-/-lonely^ and lightless way, though this same soul did nurse and nourish it so lovingly, so carefully, day after day, even from infancy unto old age. False friend !, it is our friend only so long- as we provide it with good meats and drinks ! I will have naught to do with it, or wealth or kingship or desires. But a few days and Time shall sweep them all away. "When I go over silently in mind the various stages in the life of this unstable frame of ours, my love for it is lost without return. Think of the helplessness, the ailments and the thirst, the dumbness, non-intelligence, greed, restlessness, and piteousness of infancy, its fits of crying, cruelty, and rage. It seems to me that not in ^ter life, in youth or manhood or old age, are our sensations and our cares so keen as during child-hood. A life of ceaseless terror is the child's, and of restraint from parents, teachers, and from elder children, and ever are its wishes thwarted everywhere. They are not wise that say childhood is happy