Discourses On Human Nature Human Life And the Nature of Religion

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Its fervid brow, its toiling hand, its weary step ; what do they mean ? It was in the power of God to provide for us, as he has provided for the beasts of the field and the fowls of heaven : so that human hands should neither toil nor spin. He who appointed the high hills as a refuge for the wild goats, and the rocks for the conies, might as easily have caused marble cities and hamlets of enduring granite, to have been productions of nature's grand masonry. In secret forges and by eternal fires..., might every instrument of convenience and elegance have been fashioned ; the winds might have woven soft fabrics upon every tree, and a table of abundance might have been spread in every wilder- ness and by every seashore. For the animal races it is spread. Why is it not for man ? Why is it especially ordained as the lot of man, that in the sweat of his brow he shall eat his bread ? Be ye sure that it hath a meaning. The curse, so much dreaded in the primeval of innocence and freedom of nature, falls not causeless on the earth.

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