Tracks Of A Rolling Stone - Henry J. Coke (novels in english .TXT) 📗
- Author: Henry J. Coke
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'I Corrected Him, And Thus Replied:
'"Do You Remember A Bend Near Some Willows, Where You Wanted
To Cross Yesterday?"
'"Yes."
'"About Two Hours Higher Up The River?"
'"I Remember."
'"Would You Know The Place Again?"
'"Yes."
'"Are You Sure?
'"Yes, Yes."
'"You Will See Me By Daylight In The Morning. When I Start,
You Will Take My Mare, My Clothes, And Some Food; Make For
That Place And Wait Till I Come. I Will Cross There."
'"All Right."
'"Keep Me In Sight As Long As You Can. Don't Forget The
Food."
'It Will Be Gathered From My Words That Definite Instructions
Were Deemed Necessary; And The Inference - At Least It Was
Mine - Will Follow, That If A Mistake Were Possible Samson
Would Avail Himself Of It. The Night Was Before Me. The
River Had Yet To Be Crossed. But, Strange As It Now Seems To
Me, I Had No Misgivings! My Heart Never Failed Me. My
Prayer Had Been Heard. I Had Been Saved. How, I Knew Not.
But This I Knew, My Trust Was Complete. I Record This As A
Curious Psychological Occurrence; For It Supported Me With
Unfailing Energy Through The Severe Trial Which I Had Yet To
Undergo.'
Chapter 26 Pg 137
Reflect. Let Us Then Pause To Consider This Hourly
Experience Of Human Beings - This Remarkable Efficacy Of
Prayer. There Can Hardly Be A Contemplative Mind To Which,
With All Its Difficulties, The Inquiry Is Not Familiar.
To Begin With, 'To Pray Is To Expect A Miracle.' 'Prayer In
Its Very Essence,' Says A Thoughtful Writer, 'Implies A
Belief In The Possible Intervention Of A Power Which Is Above
Nature.' How Was It In My Case? What Was The Essence Of My
Belief? Nothing Less Than This: That God Would Have
Permitted The Laws Of Nature, Ordained By His Infinite Wisdom
To Fulfil His Omniscient Designs And Pursue Their Natural
Course In Accordance With His Will, Had Not My Request
Persuaded Him To Suspend Those Laws In My Favour.
The Very Belief In His Omniscience And Omnipotence Subverts
The Spirit Of Such A Prayer. It Is On The Perfection Of God
That Malebranche Bases His Argument That 'Dieu N'agit Pas Par
Des Volontes Particulieres.' Yet Every Prayer Affects To
Interfere With The Divine Purposes.
It May Here Be Urged That The Divine Purposes Are Beyond Our
Comprehension. God's Purposes May, In Spite Of The
Inconceivability, Admit The Efficacy Of Prayer As A Link In
The Chain Of Causation; Or, As Dr. Mozely Holds, It May Be
That 'A Miracle Is Not An Anomaly Or Irregularity, But Part
Of The System Of The Universe.' We Will Not Entangle
Ourselves In The Abstruse Metaphysical Problem Which Such
Hypotheses Involve, But Turn For Our Answer To What We Do
Know - To The History Of This World, To The Daily Life Of
Man. If The Sun Rises On The Evil As Well As On The Good, If
The Wicked 'Become Old, Yea, Are Mighty In Power,' Still, The
Lightning, The Plague, The Falling Chimney-Pot, Smite The
Good As Well As The Evil. Even The Dumb Animal Is Not
Spared. 'If,' Says Huxley, 'Our Ears Were Sharp Enough To
Hear All The Cries Of Pain That Are Uttered In The Earth By
Man And Beasts We Should Be Deafened By One Continuous
Scream.' 'If There Are Any Marks At All Of Special Design In
Creation,' Writes John Stuart Mill, 'One Of The Things Most
Evidently Designed Is That A Large Proportion Of All Animals
Should Pass Their Existence In Tormenting And Devouring Other
Animals. They Have Been Lavishly Fitted Out With The
Instruments For That Purpose.' Is It Credible, Then, That
The Almighty Being Who, As We Assume, Hears This Continuous
Scream - Animal-Prayer, As We May Call It - And Not Only Pays
No Heed To It, But Lavishly Fits Out Animals With Instruments
For Tormenting And Devouring One Another, That Such A Being
Should Suspend The Laws Of Gravitation And Physiology, Should
Perform A Miracle Equal To That Of Arresting The Sun - For
All Miracles Are Equipollent - Simply To Prolong The Brief
And Useless Existence Of Such A Thing As Man, Of One Man Out
Of The Myriads Who Shriek, And - Shriek In Vain?
To Pray Is To Expect A Miracle. Then Comes The Further
Chapter 26 Pg 138Question: Is This Not To Expect What Never Yet Has Happened?
The Only Proof Of Any Miracle Is The Interpretation The
Witness Or Witnesses Put Upon What They Have Seen.
(Traditional Miracles - Miracles That Others Have Been Told,
That Others Have Seen - We Need Not Trouble Our Heads About.)
What That Proof Has Been Worth Hitherto Has Been Commented
Upon Too Often To Need Attention Here. Nor Does The Weakness
Of The Evidence For Miracles Depend Solely On The Fact That
It Rests, In The First Instance, On The Senses, Which May Be
Deceived; Or Upon Inference, Which May Be Erroneous. It Is
Not Merely That The Infallibility Of Human Testimony
Discredits The Miracles Of The Past. The Impossibility That
Human Knowledge, That Science, Can Ever Exhaust The
Possibilities Of Nature, Precludes The Immediate Reference To
The Supernatural For All Time. It Is Pure Sophistry To
Argue, As Do Canon Row And Other Defenders Of Miracles, That
'The Laws Of Nature Are No More Violated By The Performance
Of A Miracle Than They Are By The Activities Of A Man.' If
These Arguments Of The Special Pleaders Had Any Force At All,
It Would Simply Amount To This: 'The Activities Of Man'
Being A Part Of Nature, We Have No Evidence Of A Supernatural
Being, Which Is The Sole Raison D'etre Of Miracle.
Yet Thousands Of Men In These Days Who Admit The Force Of
These Objections Continue, In Spite Of Them, To Pray.
Huxley, The Foremost Of 'Agnostics,' Speaks With The Utmost
Respect Of His Friend Charles Kingsley's Conviction From
Experience Of The Efficacy Of Prayer. And Huxley Himself
Repeatedly Assures Us, In Some Form Or Other, That 'The
Possibilities Of "May Be" Are To Me Infinite.' The Puzzle
Is, In Truth, On A Par With That Most Insolvable Of All
Puzzles - Free Will Or Determinism. Reason And The Instinct
Of Conscience Are In Both Cases Irreconcilable. We Are
Conscious That We Are Always Free To Choose, Though Not To
Act; But Reason Will Have It That This Is A Delusion. There
Is No Logical Clue To The Impasse. Still, Reason
Notwithstanding, We Take Our Freedom (Within Limits) For
Granted, And With Like Inconsequence We Pray.
It Must, I Think, Be Admitted That The Belief, Delusive Or
Warranted, Is Efficacious In Itself. Whether Generated In
The Brain By The Nerve Centres, Or Whatever May Be Its
Origin, A Force Coincident With It Is Diffused Throughout The
Nervous System, Which Converts The Subject Of It, Just
Paralysed By Despair, Into A Vigorous Agent, Or, If You Will,
Automaton.
Now, Those Who Admit This Much Argue, With No Little Force,
That The Efficacy Of Prayer Is Limited To Its Reaction Upon
Ourselves. Prayer, As Already Observed, Implies Belief In
Supernatural Intervention. Such Belief Is Competent To Beget
Hope, And With It Courage, Energy, And Effort. Suppose
Contrition And Remorse Induce The Sufferer To Pray For Divine
Aid And Mercy, Suppose Suffering Is The Natural Penalty Of
Chapter 26 Pg 139His Or Her Own Misdeeds, And Suppose The Contrition And The
Prayer Lead To Resistance Of Similar Temptations, And Hence
To Greater Happiness, - Can It Be Said That The Power To
Resist Temptation Or Endure The Penalty Are Due To
Supernatural Aid? Or Must We Not Infer That The Fear Of The
Consequences Of Vice Or Folly, Together With An Earnest
Desire And Intention To Amend, Were Adequate In Themselves To
Account For The Good Results?
Reason Compels Us To The Latter Conclusion. But What Then?
Would This Prove Prayer To Be Delusive? Not Necessarily.
That The Laws Of Nature (As Argued Above) Are Not Violated By
Miracle, Is A Mere Perversion Of The Accepted Meaning Of
'Miracle,' An Ignoratio Elenchi. But In The Case Of Prayer
That Does Not Ask For The Abrogation Of Nature's Laws, It
Ceases To Be A Miracle That We Pray For Or Expect: For Are
Not The Laws Of The Mind Also Laws Of Nature? And Can We
Explain Them Any More Than We Can Explain Physical Laws? A
Psychologist Can Formulate The Mental Law Of Association, But
He Can No More Explain It Than Newton Could Explain The Laws
Of Attraction And Repulsion Which Pervade The World Of
Matter. We Do Not Know, We Cannot Know, What The Conditions
Of Our Spiritual Being Are. The State Of Mind Induced By
Prayer May, In Accordance With Some Mental Law, Be Essential
To Certain Modes Of Spiritual Energy, Specially Conducive To
The Highest Of All Moral Or Spiritual Results: Taken In This
Sense, Prayer May Ask, Not The Suspension, But The Enactment,
Of Some Natural Law.
Let It, However, Be Granted, For Argument's Sake, That The
Belief In The Efficacy Of Prayer Is Delusive, And That The
Beneficial Effects Of The Belief - The Exalted State Of Mind,
The Enhanced Power To Endure Suffering And Resist Temptation,
The Happiness Inseparable From The Assurance That God Hears,
And Can And Will Befriend Us - Let It Be Granted That All
This Is Due To Sheer Hallucination, Is This An Argument
Against Prayer? Surely Not. For, In The First Place, The
Incontestable Fact That Belief Does Produce These Effects Is
For Us An Ultimate Fact As Little Capable Of Explanation As
Any Physical Law Whatever; And May, Therefore, For Aught We
Know, Or Ever Can Know, Be Ordained By A Supreme Being.
Secondly, All The Beneficial Effects, Including Happiness,
Are As Real In Themselves As If The Belief Were No Delusion.
It May Be Said That A 'Fool's Paradise' Is Liable To Be
Turned Into A Hell Of Disappointment; And That We Pay The
Penalty Of Building Happiness On False Foundations. This Is
True In A Great Measure; But It Is Absolutely Without Truth
As Regards Our Belief In Prayer, For The Simple Reason That
If Death Dispel The Delusion, It At The Same Time Dispels The
Deluded. However Great The Mistake, It Can Never Be Found
Out. But They Who Make It Will Have Been The Better And The
Happier While They Lived.
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