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Chapter 51

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man of all ages is a selfish animal, and unreasonable in his selfishness. it takes every one of us in turn many a shrewd fall, in our wrestlings with the world to convince us that we are not to have everything our own[81] way. we are conscious in our inmost souls that man is the rightful lord of creation; and, starting from this eternal principle, and ignoring, each man-child of us in turn, the qualifying truth that it is to man in general, including women, and not to one man in particular, that the earth has been given, we set about asserting our kingships each in his own way, and proclaiming ourselves kings from our own little ant-hills of thrones. and then come the struggles and the down-fallings, and some of us learn our lesson, and some learn it not. but what lesson? that we have been dreaming in the golden hours when the vision of a kingdom rose before us? that there is in short, no kingdom at all, or that, if there be, we are no heirs of it?

no—i take it that, while we make nothing better than that out of our lesson, we shall go on spelling at it and stumbling over it, through all the days of our life, till we make our last stumble, and take our final header out of this riddle of a world, which we once dreamed we were to rule over, exclaiming “vanitas vanitatum” to the end. but man’s spirit will never be satisfied without a kingdom, and was never intended to be satisfied so; and a wiser than solomon tells us, day by day, that our kingdom is about us here, and that we may rise up and pass in when we will at the shining gates which he holds open, for that it is his, and we are joint heirs of it with him.

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