paltry few thousand years? Oh; the supercilious doubters! They ever
strive to clip the upward daring wings of the spirit。
A person deprived of one or more senses is not; as many seem to think;
turned out into a trackless wilderness without landmark or guide。 The
blind man carries with him into his dark environment all the faculties
essential to the apprehension of the visible world whose door is closed
behind him。 He finds his surroundings everywhere homogeneous with those
of the sunlit world; for there is an inexhaustible ocean of likenesses
between the world within; and the world without; and these likenesses;
these correspondences; he finds equal to every exigency his life offers。
The necessity of some such thing as correspondence or symbolism appears
more and more urgent as we consider the duties that religion and
philosophy enjoin upon us。
The blind are expected to read the Bible as a means of attaining
spiritual happiness。 Now; the Bible is filled throughout with references
to clouds; stars; colours; and beauty; and often the mention of these is
essential to the meaning of the parable or the message in which they
occur。 Here one must needs see the inconsistency of people who believe
in the Bible; and yet deny us a right to talk about what we do not see;
and for that matter what _they_ do not see; either。 Who shall forbid my
heart to sing: 〃Yea; he did fly upon the wings of the wind。 He made
darkness his secret place; his pavilion round about him were dark waters
and thick clouds of the skies〃?
Philosophy constantly points out the untrustworthiness of the five
senses and the important work of reason which corrects the errors of
sight and reveals its illusions。 If we cannot depend on five senses; how
much less may we rely on three! What ground have we for discarding
light; sound; and colour as an integral part of our world? How are we to
know that they have ceased to exist for us? We must take their reality
for granted; even as the philosopher assumes the reality of the world
without being able to see it physically as a whole。
Ancient philosophy offers an argument which seems still valid。 There is
in the blind as in the seeing an Absolute which gives truth to what we
know to be true; order to what is orderly; beauty to the beautiful;