olume somewhat formally; is it not sacred; if the word have any meaning at all? And; as I read; no interruption can befall me。 The note of a lin; the humming of a bee; these are the sounds about my sanctuary。 The page scarce rustles as it turns。
VI
Of how many dwellings can it be said that no word of anger is ever heard beneath its roof; and that no unkindly feeling ever exists between the inmates? Most men's experience would seem to justify them in declaring that; throughout the inhabited world; no such house exists。 I; knowing at all events of one; admit the possibility that there may be more; yet I feel that it is to hazard a conjecture; I cannot point with certainty to any other instance; nor in all my secular life (I speak as one who has quitted the world) could I have named a single example。
It is so difficult for human beings to live together; nay; it is so difficult for them to associate; however transitorily; and even under the most favourable conditions; without some shadow of mutual offence。 Consider the differences of task and of habit; the conflict of prejudices; the divergence of opinions (though that is probably the same thing); selves between any two persons brought into more than casual contact; and think how much self…subdual is implicit whenever; for more than an hour or two; they co…exist in seeming harmony。 Man is not made for peaceful intercourse with his fellows; he is by nature self…assertive; monly aggressive; always critical in a