XX
IF THE
study of medicine is to be continued in a way that gives
benefit to mankind, a place must be found for what I have tried to
indicate in these chapters: the “thinking together” of the whole human
organism, in both sickness and health, with the forces, substances and
processes in the external world. Only thus can a bridge be built
between the trend of natural science, which becomes more and more
exclusively diagnostic and the attempt to provide therapeutic methods
and preparations. In order, however, to do this successfully, we must
first acquire a general view and conception of man, must illuminate
him, as it were, through spiritual science, from the point where man
as he is today stands in a certain relation to the outside world. This
relation is most highly evolved in the interplay of the external
senses with the environment and they have relatively little to do with
the internal physical processes of our bodies, as for instance the
sense activities of the eye. But as soon as we enter the domain of the
lower senses such as smell and taste, we at once perceive how what is
external in man connects itself inwardly with the surrounding world.
For up to a certain point, man's digestion is nothing but a
transformation and continuation of sense-activity. Up to the point
where the foodstuffs are passed from the intestinal process to the
action of lymph and blood formation — all that occurs is
fundamentally a metamorphosis of sense-activity, which is the more
organic in its manifestations the lower its evolutionary grade. So
that up to the point I have denoted, we must recognise that the
digestive process is a continuation of the sense of taste.
Now if such a fact were estimated at its true value, the ground would
be prepared, first of all for a whole system of dietetics, and then
for the recognition of wholesome and necessary methods of treatment in
this region. Gradually, too, we should be able to recognise injuries
and impairments there. Consider, for instance, the following fact.
Follow the operation of — for example — ammoniac salt on the human
organism. The adherent of current natural science will say that salts
of ammonia, if administered in the form of salmiac, act primarily on
what such current theory obliges him to call — the muscular motoric
nervous system of the heart.
But this whole nervous system which is supposed to be motoric is an
absurdity. As I have sufficiently emphasised, there is no difference
between the sensory and the motor nerves. The whole conception of such
a distinction is absurd. The matter in question is entirely different.
So long as the ammoniac salts retain their efficacy — let us say
within the area of the body between the processes of taste and of
blood formation — there is also a continuous process of taste in the
interior of the organism. This continued process of taste is at the
same time a process in the astral body and releases a reflex action in
that body, which is manifested in perspiration. If you can accept the
whole of the earlier stages of our digestive activities as a continued
process of taste, you will see right into the very core of the
sebaceous process, and to some extent of the urinary excretion as
well. For let me ask you to consider this: if we observe the main
activity of this area, we find that essentially it has to do with an
absorption of foodstuffs taken into the body secretion of the
organism. That is the essence of what happens. All the processes in
question reduce themselves — more or less — to this dissolving
effect of the bodily fluids upon the foodstuffs. And this dissolving
process has its counter-process, which consists in the special
activities of the liver and the spleen. Thus in our earlier
discussions the hepatic and splenetic activities had to be associated,
in the main, with aqueous and fluid activities. But, in contrast to
the dissolving effect in the first region of the digestive process,
the liver's action operates as encapsulation, encirclement and
re-transformation of what has been done in the first part of the
digestive process. One may obtain a picture of what happens if one
looks at the effect produced by throwing a handful of salt into warm
water. The salt disperses and dissolves — this is an image of the
action in the digestive tract, until the foodstuffs are absorbed into
the blood-vessels and lymph channels. Now let me place beside the salt
and water, some little globules of quicksilver, with their imperative
urge to roundness, to completion, to organising and shaping. This is
an image of the action which begins after the absorption of foodstuffs
into the blood and lymph channels, and is controlled from the liver,
with its close association with man's astral body.
We must look into the processes of life from this standpoint. For then
we pass naturally to the study of the external world as revealed, for
instance, in the structure of salt and of mercury formation
respectively. We can read from the facts of the external world the
gist of what must happen within the organism. But man must always be
observed in connection with this external world.
Now follow further these ammoniacal salts; and note that if they pass
into the formation of the blood, they have an alkalising effect. They
have gone far enough on their appointed path to extend their operation
into the upper human sphere from the lower, and to provoke reactions
in that upper sphere. The significant fact here is, however, the
complete reversal of processes that takes place. What happens may be
stated as follows. The upper sphere in man is normally urged to act
through sense perception in the lower digestive tracts, that is, to
perceive through the sense of taste; but now the whole process is
reversed — the lower sphere inclines more towards conscious
perception, and the upper inclines towards that which works upon
perception. The result is that whereas formerly there was a reflex
action, which I have characterised as proceeding from the astral body,
there is now a reflex action from below, that is to say, of an action
which originates in the upper sphere. So that — to use a technical
term — the ciliary epithelia, for instance, vibrate more rapidly and
the pulmonary secretion increases. There is a reversed action. At
first, the dissolving process stimulates the liver's activity, and
then, through this encapsulating hepatic activity, the dissolving
operation of the region above the liver — namely of the lungs — is
called into action, with the secretion of the upper organs instead of
the dissolution in the lower. That is the path in the human organism;
from the intake of the substance, through dissolution or liquefaction,
through saline processes to formative processes and concurrently, the
processes of dispersal which are comparable to combustion and
evaporation. Now let us think on the one hand of drops of quicksilver,
and boiling liquid on the other, in constant evaporation, giving forth
steam — which we might term phosphoric-sulphurous action, a process
in which, as it were, inorganic matter is kindled. Then one has the
activity developed in the opposite group of organs, that is to say in
the lower sphere, but also in all that is associated with the lungs in
the upper man.
If we have grasped the main currents of this internal activity, we
have the key to what it can incorporate from the external world. If
you will call to mind our very recent lectures, you will realise that
all the stages of dental formation are a very peripheral activity of
the human organism. They soon, therefore, become wholly external,
tending to mineralisation, as has been pointed out. I hope this term
will not be misunderstood; there has been, I think, some
misinterpretation. I said that because the process of dental formation
is so extremely peripheral, it is justifiable to use external
technique, including the mechanics of dentistry because other forms of
external help are impracticable, if the trend to mineralisation has
gone too far, and the teeth are decaying. In such cases, it is only
possible to apply mechanical treatment to what has mineralised
externally. And mechanics here include all manner of dental repairs.
Such external aid is necessary and justifiable if the teeth have
become defective beyond the point at which they can no longer get what
they need from within. But care must be taken of the supply from
within of this process of fluorine formation which the whole organism
also needs. When the teeth cannot carry out their fluorine activity, a
substitute must be created for the process of fluorine in the
organism. The replacement can be supplied in a certain way, but we
must duly consider the reversal process — which has just been
outlined.
What is the reality of this whole emergence of the teeth? It is
nothing less than a movement of the mineralising process from within
outwards. When the second teeth are all through the gums, this pushing
outward of the mineralisation has reached completion. It is opposed by
the process of sexualisation, which again drives from outside,
inwards; and these two opposite processes act and counteract one
another, as in a rhythm. In the same measure as the process of
dentition becomes complete, the process of sexualisation proceeds
apace at the opposite pole. And in recognising this you will also
become aware of another process directed inwards and backwards, and
also a polar opposite to dental formation and function, and actually
closely associated with it; namely the peristaltic motion of the
intestines. Here, then, are two intimately connected processes. Thus
all that appertains to intestinal peristalsis is closely associated
with what on the other hand builds up the teeth. This peristaltic
movement is inwardly connected with the utilisation of fluorine in the
human organism. It may be said that whenever the intestinal
peristalsis proceeds more rapidly and with greater vigour than is
consonant with any individual constitution, there is a reactive effect
detrimental to the teeth and especially to all the normal function of
fluorine in the human organism. So it will be necessary, in cases
where the teeth are extremely defective, for the dentist to suggest a
slackening of the whole intestinal function. This may be done
externally by prescribing rest, should this be practicable for the
patient, or by the administration of sedatives to the digestion, thus
diminishing the vigour of the intestinal movements somewhat, though
not to any great extent.
The regulation of these functions is of special significance; it is
promoted by means of the limb exercises which I have already mentioned
These exercises follow regular rules and apply to arms, hands, legs and
feet. Especially beneficial is the control of movement through
eurhythmy — because eurhythmy permeates movements with soul. If
however the gymnastic exercises lie too much in the merely
physiological realm, the pendulum swings too far on the other side and
the results may easily be the reverse of what is desired. This is the
reason why, for example, the excessive amount of ordinary dance
movements that many young girls are expected to undergo may react
harmfully on dental formation, and why one need not ask why girls who
dance so much have, as a rule, more defective teeth than boys. The
point is that dancing should not be exaggerated and should be
permeated with soul. And what of the hands? The movements proper to
knitting and crochet work can be and often are performed to excess,
and in such cases we find results diametrically opposed to the
benefits which a sound employment of this handicraft can bring to
mankind.
Thus even in the sphere of mechanical ostensible movement there is a
reversal of processes. In the first place the dental process is a
reversal of the digestive. Moreover the human power of locomotion, of
forward movement from place to place, in the external world, is a
reversal of the movement interiorised in the process of digestion. It
means very much for the constitutional health of mankind that man
moves forwards, but that the digestive processes are mainly directed
from front to rear. This is extremely important, and it is possible to
do something for the alleviation of inert digestive processes, by
accustoming the patient to practise walking backwards, as a form of
gymnastics. There will be a stimulating effect on the function in
question. Such empirical observations, based on collections of case
notes, become coherent and unite into an understandable totality, if
we turn the light of spiritual science upon the whole constitution of
man.
Another point may be brought to your attention. There is no doubt
whatever of the remarkable effect of Nux Vomica on man. On what does
the action of nux vomica depend? Let us observe its action under
special circumstances, and we shall have a glimpse into its inherent
operations. Study the effect of an administration of nux vomica in
what is known as a “hangover”; this will give you the key to its
effect. There is a real reversal of all human organic activity under
the after-effects of alcohol. For a “hangover” is the continuation of
a process which is vividly at work in the upper digestive tract. It
occurs if the natural internal activities following indulgence in
wine, beer, or champagne, which are normal up to the incorporation of
these substances in the formation of blood and lymph, pass the
boundary line and affect these latter processes. If that occurs, the
regions of the human organism which have as their proper office the
liquefaction and dissolution are changed into a kind of sense organ,
and instead of the man turning his main sense attention and activity
to the world without, and communicating with that external world, and
all the phenomena of earth, he is obliged through the damage done by
drinking to perceive his own interior. For his own organism now
contains processes strongly resembling those of the whole external
world. Beyond the intestinal activities, into the very lymph and blood
activity there has been inserted an internal replica of the earth's
processes, an external world in miniature, an external world within
the organism. The man thus makes himself inwardly into an external
world, and most painfully and unpleasantly perceives inside himself
that which does not disturb in the least if perceived in the external
environment. For the human interior is not adapted to become an earth
in miniature, but should withdraw from the earth's processes. The man
however, in such conditions, makes a little earth in his own interior;
something which would be far better placed, if it could be removed
outside into full observation and surrounded with the apparatus of
sense perception. He is now, however, compelled to perceive and
receive sensation by means of an interior, so to speak “turned inside
out.”
Nux vomica counteracts all these phenomena, by suppressing the
sensitivity to this artificially external-internal state, until
natural recuperation asserts itself, which is generally soon after
excessive alcoholic indulgences. By suppressing this sensitivity, the
interiorised external process is not disturbed; and nux vomica has a
healthy effect, by modifying and reducing the continuation of the
metamorphosed process of taste. When much modified, this metamorphosed
process of taste no longer acts disturbingly on what lies beyond it.
Thus some measure of cure is brought about.
Now, assume that the exact contrary occurs. Instead of an enhancement
of the continued process of taste — namely of liquefaction — the
process is weakened, so that the food substances are insufficiently
dissolved. Assume the following: instead of the liquefaction of
food-intake at the normal rate and amount, and instead of the food
being taken up into the saline process, the interior of man proves too
weak to carry this through. In this case the upper digestive tract
works in the same way as though nux vomica were administered; it
operates by itself, with the help of another process; and the
insufficiently dissolved foodstuffs will try to adapt themselves to
this change. They cannot pass over the boundary between the activity
that causes taste, and the activity that builds up the blood, and they
therefore seek an outlet in the opposite direction. Thus that
condition arises which can be combated by quickening the dissolving
process, whereas it is slowed down through the effect of nux vomica.
And all that seeks the wrong outlet may be combated by administering
Thuya. There you have the polar opposition between nux vomica and
thuya, developed out of the functions of human nature itself. This is
another proof of the need to regard constantly the totality of the
human constitution, for these inherent polarities of the human
organism are of inestimable significance.
All the activities whose trend is to force the processes of the lower
organic sphere of mankind into the upper, are enhanced during sleep.
It is necessary to take great care in describing sleep. Sleep is
indeed one of the best of remedies, but only if employed to the right
amount, neither too much nor too little, so that it suits the
particular human individuality. Too much more sleep than the
individual in question can sustain — is not curative, but toxic.
During a too long spell of sleep, the internal barrier to which
reference has been made lets through a continuous infiltration; too
much passes through from the first digestive area into the region of
blood and lymph formation. Man is exposed to this danger
quite generally; the lower organic sphere is in a permanent state of
sleep, so that man is always in danger of harmful effects on the blood
through the processes of the lower organic sphere. But man also
carries the antidote to this toxic process; an antidote proportioned
to the normal conditions of our organism. The normal human organism
tends to auto-intoxication through sleep; but this tendency is
counterpoised and held in leash through the iron content of the blood.
For iron is first and foremost the metal of most importance to the
interior of man. Iron operates so as to restore the balance in case of
an excessive impact of the first process on the other. Just as
diseases can be understood through the deficiency in the blood, from
the points just emphasised, you will have a curative effect on the
organism if you administer iron in much diluted form, so that it is
truly akin to the continuous homeopathising process of the upper human
sphere; you will help the organism to master the disturbing processes
which pass upwards from below. The other essential metallic processes
of importance to man, are, as you have seen, replaced by our human
functions themselves.
In this connection I want once more briefly, to recapitulate the
conclusions to be drawn from the whole spirit of these lectures. Today
we have again referred to the blood and lymph formative processes in
man. This activity is polar to what arises in the mineralising process
in the case of copper. There is thus an affinity between these
processes and the metal copper. We must clearly realise that these
processes belong to the lower organic sphere, although in its
uppermost portion; and that the affinity with copper is such as to
constitute a powerful attraction towards the copper-forming force
itself, as we find it upon the earth. For all that appertains to the
lower organic sphere in man, has kinship with the telluric processes.
Therefore, if we aim at influencing that region by the administration
of copper, we should make it a golden rule to administer copper here
in low potencies, so that its action resembles that in the telluric
sphere, and of course not in doses large enough to cause harm.
A similar kinship as between the inner process of blood and lymph
formation and copper, is present between all processes leading the
outer digestive process into the internal metabolism that forms blood
and lymph, with the liver on the one hand and the metal mercury on the
other. Just as the former process has affinity to copper, so the
other process is akin to quicksilver or mercury. But we must remember
the spherical, i.e., rounded, and balancing qualities of quicksilver;
it is therefore linked up with the interactions between these two
processes. But the processes which man must unfold in order that not
too much digestive matter should pass into the blood, and which are
activated by the effects of nux vomica and combated by the effects of
thuya, are in their turn regulated by the forces of silver.
Thus we have the field clear before us, and are in a position to
examine external nature according to these constituents, conceiving
it, so to say, as a human being spread out and displayed, so that we
are able to fit man into the environment, whether in health or
disease; for the lower organic sphere is in particularly close
connection with the environment. The processes which ascend from the
lower to the upper sphere in man, through their kinship with the
forces of copper, are regulated and balanced by copper's opponent:
iron. Thus iron is an absolute necessity for man; there must always
be a surplus of ferrous processes, to use a chemical term. All other
metallic processes are present within us as processes: mankind is as
it were a sevenfold metal. Iron alone is within us in its typical iron
state; the other metals are only present as processes.
Just as all that collaborates with blood and lymph formation in our
organs is akin to copper, so all that opens outwards from lungs to
larynx, with its starting point in the lungs, is akin to iron.
Furthermore, the regions associated with those portions of the brain
which serve internal functions, which in fact are more similar to the
digestive activity of the brain, and correspond alternately with the
transitional processes from the intestines to the channels of lymph
and blood: — these are allied with the processes that form tin. These
tin-formative processes have the effect, so to speak, of ensouling and
regulating the digestive functions in the particular tracts and stages
mentioned. Finally all that is more connected with the nerve fibres,
and the organs of the upper human sphere that may be regarded as
continuations of the senses, have lead as their affinity; and this
also corresponds to the liquid secretions or excretions, whether
sebaceous or urinary.
Such are the affinities and correspondences illuminating the nature of
man, and at the same time indicating how we can extract remedial
effects from counter-processes in the substances of the external
world. But we must keep one point quite clearly in our minds.
Spiritual Science must point out particularly that so-called “mental
diseases” in many respects have their main seat in the bodily organs,
whilst, concurrently, “organic diseases” are closely interwoven with
spiritual and soul factors. This is a chapter of peculiar difficulty.
The materialism of today explores and handles so-called physical
sickness on wholly chemical or mechanical lines, treating man more or
less as an apparatus. At the same time, in its diagnosis of so-called
mental sickness, it is reduced to a mere description of psychical
symptoms, because this contemporary materialism has lost any
comprehensive view of the connection between the soul and spiritual
nature on the one hand, and the bodily and physical nature on the
other.
This close association reveals itself particularly if we study
concrete cases of the interplay between the soul state and the bodily
health condition. Let us inquire into what promotes mental diseases.
If an individual falls ill, subjective symptoms appear at first, pains,
unusual sensations, etc. These manifestations which are most
conspicuous in acute cases and change their nature if the condition
becomes chronic, are the initial actions of the soul and spirit, in
response to any organic injury; soul and spirit withdraw from the
organ in question. The pain that is felt is the retirement or
withdrawal of ego and astral body from the physical and etheric
bodies. This process may coincide with a withdrawal of the etheric
body from the physical; but the main and essential origin of pain is
located in the ego and astral body. As a rule the ego is still strong
enough to be aware of the whole subjective counter-process, the
conscious counter-process of what happens in the bodily organs. If a
illness becomes chronic, the process gradually falls away from the
ego, so to speak, and as a result the soul's processes are restricted
to the astral body, and the ego no longer shares in the sufferings of
the astral together with the etheric body. And so organic disease may
become chronic, the acute condition become permanent. Here we have to
do with soul symptoms, which withdraw from consciousness. If we are to
become symptomatologists we must go below the surface in man. Instead
of asking the patients how they feel, and where they suffer pain, we
should inquire whether they sleep well and are ready for work. That is
to say, in chronic states of illness, we must look for symptoms in
conditions which cover greater spaces of time and are related to man's
general development; whereas in acute illnesses we may consider
momentary subjective sensations as significant. In chronic cases, we
should have more regard to the whole course of the life in question,
than to the individual clinical symptoms.
Ordinary physical illness of chronic type arises if the whole morbid
condition can be so retained in some organ that the astral and etheric
bodies can both take their due share of the organic effects and
contribute as much force to the parts in question as is necessary. The
patient may be of an individual constitution able to endure an
irregular function of the astral body, working through the etheric
into the organ affected. If such is the case, and the patient is able
to bear such abnormal operation of the astral body on the liver, for
instance, and to carry it beyond a certain critical point, so that, as
it were, the liver ceases to feel that the astral body operates
abnormally: the organ recovers, but at the cost of habituation to
abnormal and irregular action of the astral body. If such action goes
on long enough, it begins to choose the other way into the soul
sphere: what the liver should take up into the physical body is
shifted into the soul region, and we have the symptoms of depression.
Thus, if the man surmounts chronic illness beyond a certain point of
abnormal relation with the astral body, a disposition has been
established towards so-called mental disease.
To regard the subject in this light would bring us further than the
mere pathological description. There is much talk today of the
irregular course of concepts, of the irregular course of will action,
and so forth. But so long as science does not know how the remarkable
collaboration of liver, spleen and other abdominal organs actually
support what finally emerges in its highest soul form as the human
will, so long will it fail to discover the relevant physical
correspondence for pathography. It should be possible to introduce the
physical treatment in so-called mental cases. It seems indeed
paradoxical that it should be left for spiritual science to advocate
physical treatment for so-called mental diseases and to emphasise the
importance of the soul as a factor in the cure of bodily ills. But
this apparent paradox is due to the powerful antithesis between the
upper and lower spheres in man. With this reversal is connected what
happens if the sensory activity set in train from outside, becomes an
internal sensory activity, as in the continued process of taste,
mentioned above; or again, as in cases where what is within discharges
itself externally through the vibration of the ciliary epithelia, or
in the tendency to such epithelia vibration. In the interactions of the
upper and lower bodily spheres lies a clue which can show the way to
certain results, if it be read aright.
Now, my friends, I have tried to put many considerations on many
subjects before you, in these twenty lectures. Before I began the
course, I told myself, in viewing all the subject matter, that it
would be a difficult thing to do for where could one begin? If one
were to start with the elementary facts, it would be impossible to get
very far in the allotted space and time; no farther, in fact, than
would furnish a guide, or a rough guiding thread. If, on the other
hand, one starts at the apex, so to speak, with purely occult facts,
it becomes almost impossible to build any bridge to the medical
science of today. This would require even more time for explanation
and argument. And indeed, whereever the far-reaching ravages of
materialism have been recognised today, one also sees the need to
counteract these injuries from another approach. I beg of you to take
what I say in the most friendly spirit, and not as propaganda or as
ex parte statements. I do not wish to “take sides,” but simply to put
before you the facts as they really are. One thing alone may and must
be stated: in reviewing contemporary medicine of the allopathic
school, we become aware of one inevitable consequence of that path,
namely, the tendency to judge the sick person according to certain
by-effects of the disease, as exemplified in the bacterial theory; the
diversion to secondary issues. If bacteriology were treated as an aid
on the way to knowledge, it would be of great service; much may be
learnt from the specific types of micro-organisms, regarding the
illness in question, for each specific kind of bacillus appears under
the influence of quite definite primary causes. There is always
opportunity for verifying this. But this pronounced tendency to take
what is secondary for what is primary and basic as shown, for
instance, in the investigation of the effects of bacteria on the
separate human organs — instead of the study of the totality of the
human organism, as a potential soil for bacteria, is an error which
not only makes its appearance in the accepted bacteriology of
allopathic medicine, but lies implicit in the whole attitude and point
of view. In this way harm is done which it would be superfluous to
enumerate in detail, as you will have had ample occasion to perceive it
for yourselves.
On the other hand, however, I must ask you to forgive me if I point
out that a scrutiny of homeopathic medicine does not always furnish
satisfactory results. True, homeopathy attempts to handle the human
being as a whole; it forms a comprehensive picture of all the
symptoms, and attempts to build a bridge to therapy. But the
professional literature of homeopathy brings to light something else
calling for comment. At the first glance one is almost in despair, for
especially in the therapeutic literature, we find the remedies
enumerated one after another and each recommended for an entire legion
of illnesses. It is never easy to discover specific indications from
the literature, for everything is beneficial for so very much! I will
admit that for the present, perhaps, this is unavoidable. But it is
also a source of danger. And this danger can only be avoided if we
proceed as we have sought to do here, even if on elementary lines, and
by indications rather than in detail. Therefore I have selected
elementary facts as the content of these lectures, and not — so to
speak — the very summit of the finished structure. This can only be
remedied if through such an inner study of human and extra-human
nature one ascends to the narrowing of the compass of a medicinal
remedy, to its delimitation. But this can only come about if we not
only study the effects of a remedy on both the sick and the healthy,
but gradually endeavour to view the whole universe as an integral
unity, and man as involved in it. For example — as I tried to show
yesterday — we should trace the whole antimonising process, in order
to learn the effects of antimony in the external world, and to
correlate these results with the effects of antimony within the human
interior. Through this method, certain circumscribed areas — so to
speak — are defined in the external world, which then have their
interconnections with man.
Such were the reasons why I put the elementary considerations into the
foreground of these twenty lectures. Nature—therapy, since it
instinctively tries to revive in man the remedial forces contained in
himself, makes it necessary to point out the true origin of these
forces. Their true basis and origin is the interaction of the telluric
with the extra-telluric sphere. And nature-therapy must above all
avoid drifting into materialism; for we have come to such a pass today
that every party programme, so to speak, has a materialistic tendency.
This is a feature common to all of them. And thus there is an urgent
need for a spiritualisation of this whole field. The world of today,
however, very much opposes these things. It is in fact essential that
the cure for materialism should appear in the very field of medicine
represented by experts and specialists. For what has been attempted
here and is perhaps even now in its first stage of development, must
not be confused with any furtherance of dilettantism. I attach the
greatest importance to the co-operation of those who are able to
testify to our effort to work on proper scientific lines: to their
co-operation and support in fighting the very harmful prejudice
against us on the score of encouraging dilettantism in any direction.
We have already availed ourselves of all the achievements of modern
science and taken them into account. There is but little desire,
however, to see our actual aims and intentions.
This is the note on which this series of lectures can fitly close. It
may induce you to regard the series with all indulgence as a
beginning, an introduction; and, in the outset of this introduction,
as I said to myself, it was indeed hard, for the reasons already
recapitulated, to know where best to begin. But now, my friends, that
we have reached the end of this beginning, I confess that it is harder
still to conclude. Yes, indeed, not to tell you all that there is yet
to say — is more painful still.
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